IERA - Himal
Integrated
Earthquake
Risk
Assessment for the
Himalayan Region
Project Leader
Prof. Dr. Marcus Nüsser
Dr. Ing. Bijan Khazai, CEDIM, Karlsruhe
Project Team
Dipl. Geogr. Johannes Anhorn
Dipl. Phys. Julia Schaper, CEDIM, Karlsruhe
Duration:
2013
Funding:
Heidelberg Karlsruhe Research Partnership (HEiKA)
Project Number: 12-28
The Himalayan ranges are one of the most seismically active and landslide-prone regions in the world. Given the systemic vulnerability and the low level of preparedness of exposed populations in the high mountains of South Asia, we seek to understand how earthquakes, as natural drivers, affect dynamic and often highly vulnerable livelihoods within the context of rapid population growth and urbanization.
The proposed project integrates the assessment of direct physical damage (i.e., damage to housing stock) and the socio-economic dimensions of specific vulnerability taking into account dynamic interactions among hazards and development processes such as urbanization and rapid population growth. This integrated approach will focus on the development of a comprehensive assessment methodology for the evaluation of earthquake in the Himalayan region, based on a detailed investigation in one case study area
The proposed study design allows to move from classical approaches in modeling natural hazards, which have tended to be organized into discipline-based and relatively 'watertight stovepipes' of inquiry, into a more systemic and integrative approach accounting for interactions between hazards, engineered systems and society.
An indicator-based vulnerability and resilience index will be developed for Nepal based on detailed case studies using state-of-the-art remote sensing
technique, probabilistic multi-variable modeling and field surveying. The results allow for a socio-economic comparison of places and their relative
potential for harm or loss. The key findings will result in the development of a framework for integrated earthquake risk assessment.
The competences and expertise of the involved institutions CEDIM and SAI allows to bridge the gap between natural and social sciences in the emerging field
of disaster mitigation and risk reduction.
The project is part of the Nature, Society and Technology (NST) research bridge.
Cooperation
IERA-Himal has a formal collaboration agreement with the Earthquakes and Megacities Initiative (EMI) Kathmandu to share various exposure, hazard, vulnerability and risk data as well as knowledge findings and outcomes from the project. Read more...
Kathmandu Valley 1883 (J.C. White, 1883).
Kathmandu Valley 2011 (M. Nüsser, 2011).
Structural vulnerability in dynamic urban settings (J. Anhorn, 2012).
Partners
Cooperation