Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy

Evacuation planning and management represent a key aspect of volcanic crises because they can increase people's protection as well as minimize potential impacts on the economy, properties and infrastructure of the affected area. We present an agent-based simulation tool that assesses the effect...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bonadonna, Costanza, Asgary, Ali, Romerio, Franco, Zulemyan, Tais, Frischknecht, Corine, Cristiani, Chiara, Rosi, Mauro, Gregg, Chris E., Biass, Sebastien, Pistolesi, Marco, Menoni, Scira, Ricciardi, Antonio
Other Authors: Earth Observatory of Singapore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162997
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-162997
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1629972022-11-19T23:31:03Z Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy Bonadonna, Costanza Asgary, Ali Romerio, Franco Zulemyan, Tais Frischknecht, Corine Cristiani, Chiara Rosi, Mauro Gregg, Chris E. Biass, Sebastien Pistolesi, Marco Menoni, Scira Ricciardi, Antonio Earth Observatory of Singapore Science::Geology Vulcano Hazard Assessment Evacuation planning and management represent a key aspect of volcanic crises because they can increase people's protection as well as minimize potential impacts on the economy, properties and infrastructure of the affected area. We present an agent-based simulation tool that assesses the effectiveness of different evacuation scenarios using the small island of Vulcano (southern Italy) as a case study. Simulation results show that the overall time needed to evacuate people should be analysed together with the percentage of people evacuated as a function of time and that a simultaneous evacuation on Vulcano is more efficient than a staged evacuation. For example, during the touristic (high) season between July and August, even though the overall duration is similar for both evacuation strategies, after ∼6h about 96% of people would be evacuated with a simultaneous evacuation, while only 86% would be evacuated with a staged evacuation. We also present a model to assess the economic impact of evacuation as a function of evacuation duration and of the starting period with respect to the touristic season. It reveals that if an evacuation lasting 3 to 6 months was initiated at the beginning or at the end of the touristic season (i.e. June or November), it would cause a very different economic impact on the tourism industry (about 78%-88% and 2%-7% of the total annual turnover, respectively). Our results show how the assessment of evacuation scenarios that consider human and economic impact carried out in a pre-disaster context helps authorities develop evacuation plans and make informed decisions outside the highly stressful time period that characterizes crises. Published version This research has been supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (project nos. 200021-129997 and IZSEZ0_181030), the CERG-C programme of the University of Geneva and the Ontario Research Fund (ADERSIM). 2022-11-15T01:50:59Z 2022-11-15T01:50:59Z 2022 Journal Article Bonadonna, C., Asgary, A., Romerio, F., Zulemyan, T., Frischknecht, C., Cristiani, C., Rosi, M., Gregg, C. E., Biass, S., Pistolesi, M., Menoni, S. & Ricciardi, A. (2022). Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy. Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, 22(3), 1083-1108. https://dx.doi.org/10.5194/nhess-22-1083-2022 1561-8633 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162997 10.5194/nhess-22-1083-2022 2-s2.0-85127960989 3 22 1083 1108 en Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences © Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Geology
Vulcano
Hazard Assessment
spellingShingle Science::Geology
Vulcano
Hazard Assessment
Bonadonna, Costanza
Asgary, Ali
Romerio, Franco
Zulemyan, Tais
Frischknecht, Corine
Cristiani, Chiara
Rosi, Mauro
Gregg, Chris E.
Biass, Sebastien
Pistolesi, Marco
Menoni, Scira
Ricciardi, Antonio
Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy
description Evacuation planning and management represent a key aspect of volcanic crises because they can increase people's protection as well as minimize potential impacts on the economy, properties and infrastructure of the affected area. We present an agent-based simulation tool that assesses the effectiveness of different evacuation scenarios using the small island of Vulcano (southern Italy) as a case study. Simulation results show that the overall time needed to evacuate people should be analysed together with the percentage of people evacuated as a function of time and that a simultaneous evacuation on Vulcano is more efficient than a staged evacuation. For example, during the touristic (high) season between July and August, even though the overall duration is similar for both evacuation strategies, after ∼6h about 96% of people would be evacuated with a simultaneous evacuation, while only 86% would be evacuated with a staged evacuation. We also present a model to assess the economic impact of evacuation as a function of evacuation duration and of the starting period with respect to the touristic season. It reveals that if an evacuation lasting 3 to 6 months was initiated at the beginning or at the end of the touristic season (i.e. June or November), it would cause a very different economic impact on the tourism industry (about 78%-88% and 2%-7% of the total annual turnover, respectively). Our results show how the assessment of evacuation scenarios that consider human and economic impact carried out in a pre-disaster context helps authorities develop evacuation plans and make informed decisions outside the highly stressful time period that characterizes crises.
author2 Earth Observatory of Singapore
author_facet Earth Observatory of Singapore
Bonadonna, Costanza
Asgary, Ali
Romerio, Franco
Zulemyan, Tais
Frischknecht, Corine
Cristiani, Chiara
Rosi, Mauro
Gregg, Chris E.
Biass, Sebastien
Pistolesi, Marco
Menoni, Scira
Ricciardi, Antonio
format Article
author Bonadonna, Costanza
Asgary, Ali
Romerio, Franco
Zulemyan, Tais
Frischknecht, Corine
Cristiani, Chiara
Rosi, Mauro
Gregg, Chris E.
Biass, Sebastien
Pistolesi, Marco
Menoni, Scira
Ricciardi, Antonio
author_sort Bonadonna, Costanza
title Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy
title_short Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy
title_full Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy
title_fullStr Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of Vulcano, Italy
title_sort assessing the effectiveness and the economic impact of evacuation: the case of the island of vulcano, italy
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162997
_version_ 1751548491338874880