Risk‐based thinking for extreme events: What do terrorism and climate change have in common?

Author:

Stewart Mark1

Affiliation:

1. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Technology Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractTerrorism and climate change debates are often characterized by worst‐case thinking, cost neglect, probability neglect, and avoidance of the notion of acceptable risk. This is not unexpected when dealing with extreme events. However, it can result in a frightened public, costly policy outcomes, and wasteful expenditures. The paper will describe how risk‐based approaches are well suited to infrastructure decision‐making for extreme events. Risk management concepts will be illustrated with current research of risk‐based assessment of climate adaptation engineering strategies including designing new houses in Australia subject to cyclones and extreme wind events. It will be shown that small improvements to house designs at a one‐off cost of several thousand dollars per house can reduce damage risks by 70%–80% and achieve billions of dollars of net benefit for community resilience—this helps offset some the predicted adverse effects of climate change for a modest cost. The effect of risk perceptions, insurance, and economic incentives is explored for another climate adaption measure. The paper will also highlight that there is much to be optimistic about the future, and in the ability of risk‐based thinking to meet many challenges.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference31 articles.

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3. ATSE. (2022).Building a resilient Australia. Position Statement Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering.

4. The Impact of Post‐9/11 Airport Security Measures on the Demand for Air Travel

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