Integrating household survey with inoperability input–output model of critical infrastructure systems: A case study of Hurricane Sandy

Author:

Santos Joost1ORCID,Meng Sisi2ORCID,Mozumder Pallab3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Engineering Management and Systems Engineering The George Washington University Washington District of Columbia USA

2. University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Indiana USA

3. Florida International University Miami Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractCritical infrastructures are ubiquitous and their interdependencies have become more complex leading to their uncertain behaviors in the aftermath of disasters. The article develops an integrated economic input–output model that incorporates household‐level survey data from Hurricane Sandy, which made its landfall in 2012. In this survey, 427 respondents who were living in the state of New Jersey during Hurricane Sandy were used in the study. The integration of their responses allowed us to show the probability and duration of various types of critical infrastructure failures due to a catastrophic hurricane event and estimate the economic losses across different sectors. The percentage of disruption and recovery period for various infrastructure systems were extracted from the survey, which were then utilized in the economic input–output model comprising of 71 economic sectors. Sectors were then ranked according to: (i) inoperability, the percentage in which a sector is disrupted relative to its ideal level, and (ii) economic loss, the monetary worth of business interruption caused by the disaster. With the combined infrastructure disruptions in the state of New Jersey, the model estimated an economic loss of $36 billion, which is consistent with published estimates. Results from this article can provide insights for future disaster preparedness and resilience planning.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality

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4. Beeson E. &De Poto T.(2012 November 1).Price tag of Sandy's damage to N.J. businesses could reach $30B. nj.com.https://www.nj.com/news/2012/11/price_tag_of_sandys_damage_to.html

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