Evaluation of the risk and the evacuation policy in the case of a tsunami in the city of Iquique, Chile
Authored by Ignacio A Solis, Pedro Gazmuri
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1007/s11069-017-2876-5
Sponsors:
Chilean National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICYT)
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Abstract
The low seismic activity in the north of Chile has caused a significant
accumulation of energy throughout the last two centuries. It is
estimated that the energy stored could cause an earthquake of magnitude
higher than 8.5 M-w. This earthquake poses a threat of tsunami to the
coastal zone. The city of Iquique is at great risk due to the high
demographic density and the long distances between the coastline and the
safety zone. An agent-based simulation model has been developed with the
objective of quantifying the answer of Iquique's population under the
threat of a tsunami. The model was validated through face validation,
sensitivity analysis, and statistical analysis. Two evacuation policies
were tested: the current evacuation policy and a policy that combines
vertical and horizontal evacuation. The results show that in the diurnal
scenario the current evacuation policy does not allow evacuating on time
around 40\% of Iquique's population and that the risk may be reduced to
33\% by incorporating vertical evacuation. This results are based on the
time limit established by local authorities that stipulates a time of 20
min to reach the safety zone. Additionally, we consider an analysis of
the simulation model combined with a flooding model. Our results show
that the number of people at risk because of a tsunami is much lower
than the estimates based on the criteria defined by local authorities.
Considering an evacuation policy that combines vertical and horizontal
evacuation, it is possible to evacuate over 1500 people more than with
the current evacuation policy.
Tags
Agent-based models
Validation
Tsunami
Earthquake
Vertical evacuation