4.6 Article

Analysis and characterisation of extreme wind gust hazards in New South Wales, Australia

Journal

NATURAL HAZARDS
Volume 117, Issue 1, Pages 875-895

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11069-023-05887-1

Keywords

Extreme wind gust; Hazard assessment; Exceedance; Generalised Pareto distribution

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Extreme wind gusts cause significant socioeconomic damage. It is challenging to analyze these rare and localized events using either modeling or empirical approaches. A 23-year long data record from 29 automatic weather stations in eastern Australia was used to study the distribution, frequency, and average recurrence intervals of extreme gusts. The study confirms the dominant role of thunderstorms in producing the most extreme gusts in the region and shows that wind risk varies strongly with distance from the coast.
Extreme wind gusts cause major socioeconomic damage, and the rarity and localised nature of those events make their analysis challenging by either modelling or empirical approaches. A 23-year long data record from 29 automatic weather stations located in New South Wales (eastern Australia) is used to study the distribution, frequency and average recurrence intervals (ARIs) of extreme gusts via a peaks-over-threshold approach. We distinguish between gust events generated by synoptic phenomena (e.g. cyclones and frontal systems), hereafter called synoptic events, and convective phenomena (i.e. thunderstorms), hereafter called convective events, using the wind time series. For synoptic events the frequency of gusts > 25 m/s decreases systematically inland from the coast, in contrast to convective gusts which are more uniformly distributed geographically and occur more often than synoptic gusts at nearly all inland locations. At inland locations the most extreme wind gusts are likewise dominated by convective events, whereas at coastal stations both gust types have similar intensities at low ARIs but convective events again dominate at the highest ARIs. Extreme gust directions were found to be predominantly westerly at inland locations and southerly at coastal ones, with more variable direction for convective than synoptic events. This study confirms the dominant role of thunderstorms in producing the most extreme gusts in the region, and shows that wind risk varies strongly with distance from the coast.

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