Author:
Choi Wooil,Park Jae-Woo,Kim Jinhwan
Abstract
Abstract. After the 2016 Gyeongju earthquake and the 2017 Pohang
earthquake struck the Korean peninsula, securing financial stability
regarding earthquake risks has become an important issue in South Korea. Many domestic
researchers are currently studying potential earthquake risk. However,
empirical analyses and statistical approaches are ambiguous in the case of
South Korea because no major earthquake has ever occurred on the Korean peninsula
since the Korean Meteorological Agency started monitoring earthquakes in 1978.
This study focuses on evaluating possible losses due to earthquake risk in
Seoul, the capital of South Korea, by using a catastrophe model methodology
integrated with GIS (Geographic Information Systems). Building
information, such as structure and location, is taken from the building
registration database and the replacement cost for buildings is obtained from
insurance information. As the seismic design code in the KBC (Korea Building
Code) is similar to the seismic design code of the UBC (Uniform Building Code),
the damage functions provided by HAZUS-Multi-hazard (HAZUS-MH) are used to assess the damage
state of each building in event of an earthquake. A total of 12 earthquake scenarios
are evaluated by considering the distribution and characteristics of active
fault zones on the Korean peninsula and damages, with total loss amounts are
calculated for each of the scenarios. The results of this study show that
loss amounts due to potential earthquakes are significantly lower than those
of previous studies. The challenge of this study is to implement an
earthquake response spectrum and to reflect the actual asset value of buildings
in Seoul.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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