Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards

Regional volcanic threat assessments provide a large-scale comparable vision of the threat posed by multiple volcanoes. They are useful for prioritising risk-mitigation actions and are required by local through international agencies, industries and governments to prioritise where further study and...

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Main Authors: Jenkins, Susanna F., Biass, Sébastien, Williams, George T., Hayes, Josh L., Tennant, Eleanor, Yang, Qingyuan, Burgos, Vanesa, Meredith, Elinor S., Lerner, Geoffrey A., Syarifuddin, Magfira, Verolino, Andrea
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161123
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-161123
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes
Data Set
Explosive Volcanism
spellingShingle Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes
Data Set
Explosive Volcanism
Jenkins, Susanna F.
Biass, Sébastien
Williams, George T.
Hayes, Josh L.
Tennant, Eleanor
Yang, Qingyuan
Burgos, Vanesa
Meredith, Elinor S.
Lerner, Geoffrey A.
Syarifuddin, Magfira
Verolino, Andrea
Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards
description Regional volcanic threat assessments provide a large-scale comparable vision of the threat posed by multiple volcanoes. They are useful for prioritising risk-mitigation actions and are required by local through international agencies, industries and governments to prioritise where further study and support could be focussed. Most regional volcanic threat studies have oversimplified volcanic hazards and their associated impacts by relying on concentric radii as proxies for hazard footprints and by focussing only on population exposure. We have developed and applied a new approach that quantifies and ranks exposure to multiple volcanic hazards for 40 high-threat volcanoes in Southeast Asia. For each of our 40 volcanoes, hazard spatial extent, and intensity where appropriate, was probabilistically modelled for four volcanic hazards across three eruption scenarios, giving 697g€¯080 individual hazard footprints plus 15g€¯240 probabilistic hazard outputs. These outputs were overlain with open-access datasets across five exposure categories using an open-source Python geographic information system (GIS) framework developed for this study (https://github.com/vharg/VolcGIS, last access: 5 April 2022). All study outputs - more than 6500 GeoTIFF files and 70 independent estimates of exposure to volcanic hazards across 40 volcanoes - are provided in the "Data availability"section in user-friendly format. Calculated exposure values were used to rank each of the 40 volcanoes in terms of the threat they pose to surrounding communities. Results highlight that the island of Java in Indonesia has the highest median exposure to volcanic hazards, with Merapi consistently ranking as the highest-threat volcano. Hazard seasonality, as a result of varying wind conditions affecting tephra dispersal, leads to increased exposure values during the peak rainy season (January, February) in Java but the dry season (January through April) in the Philippines. A key aim of our study was to highlight volcanoes that may have been overlooked perhaps because they have not been frequently or recently active but that have the potential to affect large numbers of people and assets. It is not intended to replace official hazard and risk information provided by the individual country or volcano organisations. Rather, this study and the tools developed provide a road map for future multi-source regional volcanic exposure assessments with the possibility to extend the assessment to other geographic regions and/or towards impact and loss.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Jenkins, Susanna F.
Biass, Sébastien
Williams, George T.
Hayes, Josh L.
Tennant, Eleanor
Yang, Qingyuan
Burgos, Vanesa
Meredith, Elinor S.
Lerner, Geoffrey A.
Syarifuddin, Magfira
Verolino, Andrea
format Article
author Jenkins, Susanna F.
Biass, Sébastien
Williams, George T.
Hayes, Josh L.
Tennant, Eleanor
Yang, Qingyuan
Burgos, Vanesa
Meredith, Elinor S.
Lerner, Geoffrey A.
Syarifuddin, Magfira
Verolino, Andrea
author_sort Jenkins, Susanna F.
title Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards
title_short Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards
title_full Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards
title_fullStr Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards
title_sort evaluating and ranking southeast asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161123
_version_ 1743119540546437120
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1611232022-08-20T20:11:11Z Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards Jenkins, Susanna F. Biass, Sébastien Williams, George T. Hayes, Josh L. Tennant, Eleanor Yang, Qingyuan Burgos, Vanesa Meredith, Elinor S. Lerner, Geoffrey A. Syarifuddin, Magfira Verolino, Andrea Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes Data Set Explosive Volcanism Regional volcanic threat assessments provide a large-scale comparable vision of the threat posed by multiple volcanoes. They are useful for prioritising risk-mitigation actions and are required by local through international agencies, industries and governments to prioritise where further study and support could be focussed. Most regional volcanic threat studies have oversimplified volcanic hazards and their associated impacts by relying on concentric radii as proxies for hazard footprints and by focussing only on population exposure. We have developed and applied a new approach that quantifies and ranks exposure to multiple volcanic hazards for 40 high-threat volcanoes in Southeast Asia. For each of our 40 volcanoes, hazard spatial extent, and intensity where appropriate, was probabilistically modelled for four volcanic hazards across three eruption scenarios, giving 697g€¯080 individual hazard footprints plus 15g€¯240 probabilistic hazard outputs. These outputs were overlain with open-access datasets across five exposure categories using an open-source Python geographic information system (GIS) framework developed for this study (https://github.com/vharg/VolcGIS, last access: 5 April 2022). All study outputs - more than 6500 GeoTIFF files and 70 independent estimates of exposure to volcanic hazards across 40 volcanoes - are provided in the "Data availability"section in user-friendly format. Calculated exposure values were used to rank each of the 40 volcanoes in terms of the threat they pose to surrounding communities. Results highlight that the island of Java in Indonesia has the highest median exposure to volcanic hazards, with Merapi consistently ranking as the highest-threat volcano. Hazard seasonality, as a result of varying wind conditions affecting tephra dispersal, leads to increased exposure values during the peak rainy season (January, February) in Java but the dry season (January through April) in the Philippines. A key aim of our study was to highlight volcanoes that may have been overlooked perhaps because they have not been frequently or recently active but that have the potential to affect large numbers of people and assets. It is not intended to replace official hazard and risk information provided by the individual country or volcano organisations. Rather, this study and the tools developed provide a road map for future multi-source regional volcanic exposure assessments with the possibility to extend the assessment to other geographic regions and/or towards impact and loss. Ministry of Education (MOE) National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version This research was supported by the Earth Observatory of Singapore via its funding from the National Research Foundation Singapore and the Singapore Ministry of Education under the Research Centres of Excellence initiative and comprises EOS contribution number 412. Support was provided to Susanna F. Jenkins and Josh L. Hayes by the AXA Research Fund as part of a Joint Research Initiative on Volcanic Risk in Asia and to Susanna F. Jenkins, Qingyuan Yang and Geoffrey A. Lerner by Singapore's National Research Foundation (project number: NRF2018NRF-NSFC003ES-010). 2022-08-16T06:32:18Z 2022-08-16T06:32:18Z 2022 Journal Article Jenkins, S. F., Biass, S., Williams, G. T., Hayes, J. L., Tennant, E., Yang, Q., Burgos, V., Meredith, E. S., Lerner, G. A., Syarifuddin, M. & Verolino, A. (2022). Evaluating and ranking Southeast Asia's exposure to explosive volcanic hazards. Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, 22(4), 1233-1265. https://dx.doi.org/10.5194/nhess-22-1233-2022 1561-8633 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161123 10.5194/nhess-22-1233-2022 2-s2.0-85128777052 4 22 1233 1265 en NRF2018NRF-NSFC003ES-010 Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences © 2022 Author(s). Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. application/pdf