The Natural Hazards Review project will develop a framework and best practice approach to characterise natural hazards and seek to improve methodologies where current approaches are inefficient. This is to improve energy system infrastructure design and the project is intended to share knowledge of natural hazards across sectors.The project will be completed in three stages. Phase one will focus on a gap analysis. Phase two will look at developing a series of improved methodologies from the gaps identified in phase one, and phase three will demonstrate how to apply these methodologies. Finally, phase 3 will develop a “how to” guide for use by project engineers.
This document contains a slide set from the Launch Event oin November 2019, and sets the context for the outputs of the project known as “Natural Hazards Characterisation Technical Volumes and Case Studies.” It provides:The background context to the project and the project outputsWhy the subject matters and action is requiredA navigation aid to the suite of documents, what they individually contain, and how they fit togetherThe target audience; infrastructure owners, operators, asset managers, developers, investors, regulators and insurersBroader relevance and read across into transport,The built environment, and civil emergency planning and response to the impact of natural hazardsLearning from the execution of this 5-year project relevant to investing and realising the benefits from complex, collaborative R&DGuidance on where to find more
This document contains a slide set from the Launch Event oin November 2019, and sets the context for the outputs of the project known as “Natural Hazards Characterisation Technical Volumes and Case Studies.” It provides:The background context to the project and the project outputsWhy the subject matters and action is requiredA navigation aid to the suite of documents, what they individually contain, and how they fit togetherThe target audience; infrastructure owners, operators, asset managers, developers, investors, regulators and insurersBroader relevance and read across into transport,The built environment, and civil emergency planning and response to the impact of natural hazardsLearning from the execution of this 5-year project relevant to investing and realising the benefits from complex, collaborative R&DGuidance on where to find more