Incidents involving networks delivering essential services to society across two or more countries are witnessed in the everyday life of citizens whenever exceptional weather conditions disrupt transport, power or telecommunication systems close to a border. Yet it proved to be more difficult than initially envisaged to compile a list of major transboundary incidents informed by official and reliable sources. It proved equally challenging to account for current examples of governance arrangements providing joint assistance to population, businesses, and services across borders in Europe. The study makes an effort to provide first a conceptual framework for defining cross-border impacts, building on existing classifications of interdependencies and types of impacts available in literature. It then illustrates risk assessment and management methods and discusses the need to complement the latter with a resilience approach. Reasons for embracing resilience thinking are the increasing complexity of networks and the environment in which they operate, the dynamicity of both threats and systemic vulnerability of those and of sectors that depend on them for their own functioning. Because of such complexity and dynamicity not all threats, failures and impacts can be fully envisaged and anticipated. Therefore, avoiding catastrophic modes of failure and recovering in the smoothest possible way, which are the essence of resilience, become key concerns for utilities’ providers and for society at large.
Cross-border impacts on Networks due to natural hazards
S. Menoni;A. Faiella;V. Gazzola;M. P. Boni;
2023-01-01
Abstract
Incidents involving networks delivering essential services to society across two or more countries are witnessed in the everyday life of citizens whenever exceptional weather conditions disrupt transport, power or telecommunication systems close to a border. Yet it proved to be more difficult than initially envisaged to compile a list of major transboundary incidents informed by official and reliable sources. It proved equally challenging to account for current examples of governance arrangements providing joint assistance to population, businesses, and services across borders in Europe. The study makes an effort to provide first a conceptual framework for defining cross-border impacts, building on existing classifications of interdependencies and types of impacts available in literature. It then illustrates risk assessment and management methods and discusses the need to complement the latter with a resilience approach. Reasons for embracing resilience thinking are the increasing complexity of networks and the environment in which they operate, the dynamicity of both threats and systemic vulnerability of those and of sectors that depend on them for their own functioning. Because of such complexity and dynamicity not all threats, failures and impacts can be fully envisaged and anticipated. Therefore, avoiding catastrophic modes of failure and recovering in the smoothest possible way, which are the essence of resilience, become key concerns for utilities’ providers and for society at large.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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