4.4 Article

Climate Change Influence on Priority Setting for Transportation Infrastructure Assets

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFRASTRUCTURE SYSTEMS
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages 36-46

Publisher

ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)IS.1943-555X.0000094

Keywords

Assets; Transportation management; Planning; Risk management; Uncertainty principles; Decision making; Climate change; Scenario analysis; Asset management; Multicriteria decision analysis; Transportation planning; Risk management; Deep uncertainty; Robust decision making

Funding

  1. FHWA [136780]

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Transportation infrastructure could be vulnerable to local manifestations of global climate change, such as storm frequencies and durations of seasons. To adapt, transportation agencies need methodologies for reprioritizing their assets subject to the new sources of vulnerability. Prioritizing assets is nontrivial when criteria assessments and owner/operator preferences are considered in conjunction with the possible climate scenarios. Few efforts to date have addressed these scenarios in a priority setting for infrastructure asset management in the literature. This paper extends a scenario-based multicriteria decision framework that can assist decision makers in effectively allocating limited resources to adapt transportation assets to a changing climate. The framework is demonstrated with one of the most susceptible metropolitan transportation systems in the United States, the Hampton Roads region in coastal southeastern Virginia. First, the high-level goals of a long-range transportation plans are used in a traditional multicriteria analysis to generate a baseline prioritization of assets. Next, several scenarios that incorporate and combine a variety of climate conditions are identified. Finally, the scenarios are used to adjust the initial criteria weighting, which results in several reprioritizations of the assets. The results help to identify the most influential scenarios and characterize the sensitivity of the baseline prioritization across multiple scenarios. With these results, additional scientific and investigative efforts can be focused effectively to study and understand the influential scenarios. DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)IS.1943-555X.0000094. (c) 2013 American Society of Civil Engineers.

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