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Zydekitten
05-29-2007, 02:02 PM
From today's NY Times and very interesting:

May 29, 2007

Can Science Outwit Storms Like Katrina?

By JOHN SCHWARTZ (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/john_schwartz/index.html?inline=nyt-per)

Stand atop any levee in the New Orleans area, and one question will offer itself, unbidden, to the mind: Is this pile of dirt tall enough to stand up to the next storm?

The answer is complex, and a wary city has been waiting to hear it. After the New Orleans hurricane protection system failed under the onslaught of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the Army Corps of Engineers (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/a/army_corps_of_engineers/index.html?inline=nyt-org) rethought the way it assesses hurricane risk. It devised new, flexible computer models and ran countless simulations on Defense Department supercomputers to help it understand what kind of storms the region can expect, how the current protection system might perform against them, and what defenses will be needed in the future.

Skeptics say the corps has bitten off more than its supercomputers can chew. And in fact, the effort to produce what the corps calls its risk and reliability report has long passed its original deadline of June 1, 2006. Last week, its publication was delayed yet again, into mid-June.

If all goes as planned, the color-coded maps and tables in the report will also help residents know whether their living rooms are likely to be wet or dry in the storms to come — and even whether they want to commit to staying in their city or pull up stakes.

Ed Link, director of the official corps investigation into the levee failures and a professor of engineering at the University of Maryland (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/university_of_maryland/index.html?inline=nyt-org), said that while “everyone’s frustrated with how long it’s taken, especially us,” the agency would deliver the report only “when we have confidence that it’s the right information.”

“Misinformation is a whole lot worse than no information,” Dr. Link said.

The new methods employed by the corps have already been adopted by the other government agencies most interested in hurricanes (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/h/hurricanes_and_tropical_storms/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier) and flooding: the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/f/federal_emergency_management_agency/index.html?inline=nyt-org), which runs the National Flood Insurance Program and will use the data in its flood maps.

It is the first time all three agencies have agreed on a common method of assessing such risks for the Gulf Coast. Eventually, Dr. Link suggested, it may be used by all of them nationwide.

The corps has all but completed the initial work of patching the damage done to the network of levees, floodwalls, gates and pumps. But as some work continues, there has been a lull in moving on to the next major step: raising the level of protection to meet the challenge of a 100-year storm, the kind of hurricane that might have a 1-in-100 chance of occurring in any given year.

The new report will provide the estimates of the kind of storms that could be expected at intervals of up to 500 years, and the damage and flooding they can be expected to produce. And it will help to develop proposals for protection systems against the strongest storms. The report is an important prelude to the design process.

Walter O. Baumy Jr., the chief of the engineering division for the New Orleans district of the corps, said the agency had not been sitting around waiting for the report, but had been designing structures for the next round of building based on the best estimates available. If necessary, he went on, the designs will be altered “when those numbers get finalized.”

Col. Jeffrey A. Bedey, commander of the corps’ Hurricane Protection Office in New Orleans, said the extra time had allowed the corps to learn from the mistakes of the past. “There’s a tremendous opportunity,” he said, “to show this isn’t the same old corps.”

No one disputes that the old way of doing business did not work. The New Orleans levees and floodwalls were built to withstand a hypothetical storm called the standard project hurricane, a model developed with the Weather Bureau beginning in 1959 and based largely on data drawn from previous storms.

The standard project hurricane was a hypothetical construct that may have been the state of the art at the time, but is “very simplistic” by today’s standards, Dr. Link said. The old model was limited by the shortage of data on older storms and is essentially a static set of values, Dr. Link said, adding, “You pull a hurricane out of a box and you stick it down at landfall.”

That did not show the complex behavior of a real storm, which produces surge and waves that have profound effects on coastal areas in the days before it actually hits land.

After Hurricane Katrina, an outside panel from the American Society of Civil Engineers pushed the corps to come up with a new system based less on history than on the broader range of statistical probabilities — the kind of tools commonly used today to determine, for example, how a building will fare in an earthquake.

“Without a statistically valid approach” to evaluating risk that goes beyond the old methods, the panel wrote to the corps in March 2006, “no rational hurricane protection system can result.” The chairman, David E. Daniel, president of the University of Texas at Dallas, said the effort “may well represent the most complex risk analysis ever undertaken for a major metropolitan area.”

The work has been done under the supervision of Donald T. Resio at the corps’ Engineer Research and Development Center in Vicksburg, Miss. Dr. Resio, a computer scientist with a sunny, professional air, works in the ephemeral world of code and screens in a place that has its roots in soil, steel and concrete.

He had been working on long-term risk assessment projects with NOAA and FEMA and academic and industry experts when the storms came, and he approached the leadership of the corps and offered to adapt the work his team had been doing to the urgent task at hand. “I went to headquarters,” he recalled, “and said, ‘If you want this done right, this is how it can be done.’ ”

He recalled saying something else as well: “I told them, ‘It’s difficult; it’s tedious.’ ”

Since then, he said, “we’ve been burning 80-, 100-hour weeks for so long we’ve lost track of them.”

The model uses chains of computer programs, each feeding into the other some of the data from historical storms and hypothetical future storms, setting up ranges of intensity, size, path, forward speed and other variables. These factors, blended together, produce data on the kinds of wind, storm surge and waves that can be expected to strike the shore, and how much rain can be expected. All of those elements of the model are then applied to the digital re-creations of local geography and the man-made structures of the region.

Now, Dr. Resio said, “we have come miles this year in our understanding of hurricane behavior and hurricane probability in the Gulf of Mexico.”

Dr. Link said the group had found, for example, that storms in the Gulf do not behave randomly and come to shore anywhere, but are likeliest to follow certain sets of paths — with New Orleans getting more than a random share of storms. And though much hurricane analysis relies on the handy Saffir-Simpson scale of storm strength, the size of a storm can be as important as its intensity in producing surge and waves. Despite its destructiveness, Katrina was just a Category 3 storm when it hit Mississippi, with winds that hit New Orleans only in the range of Category 1 or 2, but because it was more powerful when it was farther out in the Gulf, it generated a battering surge near 30 feet in some areas.

Most important, Dr. Link said, the new method lays the groundwork for finding the best way to protect a coast, and moves away from the old habit of evaluating projects largely on the basis of cost-benefit analysis. He added that the model was flexible enough to incorporate new information in the future, as global climate change (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/science/topics/globalwarming/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier) affects hurricanes.

The biggest remaining question about the effort, however, is whether it will be accurate. Much of the delay has come down to attempts to reduce the levels of uncertainty throughout the series of calculations.

Robert S. Young, a coastal geologist at Western Carolina University, said the project, while worthy, would not succeed because there is still precious little data on the behavior of storms in the Gulf. Given the variability of nature, he said, devising a predictive model “is nearly impossible.”

“All of the modeling and prediction they’re doing is just guesswork,” he went on. “I’m not sure that is better than nothing.”

Orrin H. Pilkey, an emeritus professor of geology at Duke University (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/d/duke_university/index.html?inline=nyt-org), said “undue confidence in these models” could lead to a false sense of security about the hurricane protection system.

Dr. Link acknowledges that it is hard to come up with meaningful data but says it is important to try.

“You can wring your hands and say, ‘Woe is me!,’ ” he said, or “use the best projections that you can and try to inform yourself.”

The dispute is familiar to anyone who works in the world of complex computer modeling. Francine Berman, director of the San Diego Supercomputer Center, said the data should be rich, the model should be accurate and the computer should be powerful to provide truly useful information that can be validated.

“At the end of the day, a bad model is just interesting math,” she said. “These complex models are incredibly hard to get right. The first time out, it’s very unlikely that you’re going to get an accurate enough model, but you have to start with the best representational model you can come up with and iteratively improve it over years, decades — even centuries.”

An enormous amount of the recent work of the risk and reliability team has been translating the data into a form that the average person can understand. Donald E. Powell, President Bush’s coordinator for Gulf Coast rebuilding, said in an interview that he tells corps officials, “Put it in language my mama can understand.”

But the ultimate message is likely to be that despite the billions of dollars being spent to improve hurricane protection for New Orleans, it remains a city in the cross hairs for dangerous storms. Dr. Daniel, the University of Texas at Dallas president, said, “It doesn’t take a sophisticated risk analysis tool to say it’s a risky place.”

BigDag
05-29-2007, 02:16 PM
Interesting, but not very comforting, especially in the near-term.

The beginning of hurricane season used to give me a sense of excitement; having gone through a dozen or more storms of various intensities over the years, it seemed to be routine; track it, board up, stock up, wait it out, get your power back, patch up what was damanged, and move on.

But now, after Ivan & especially Katrina, the prospect scares the living shit outta me.

Corona
05-30-2007, 06:00 AM
I feel sick everytime I hear the H word and I don't even live in an H territory. I can only imagine what the locals feel in H cities. This year scares the living hell out of me too....but we gotta think positive right? The city and her people need us to think as positive as possible.....and send as much karma and prayers her way.

Zydekitten
05-30-2007, 03:31 PM
I agree with you Lis - it's just a really deep sinking feeling when June 1 rolls around . . . however, I AM glad to read that the Corps of Engineers has recognized where they've fallen down in the past and are working hard to use technology in better predicting storms and their impact.

breambob
05-30-2007, 04:41 PM
Here are a couple of good articles.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/29/science/29stor.html?ex=1338177600&en=769c4613e2cf149e&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Note here that if the levees and floodwalls had been built to spec, none of the flooding would have happened. Blame whomever, but the blueprints don't mean jackpoot unless the job gets done right in the first place.

And remember ABCNBCFOXCBSCNN and the other "reporting" done in the first few days after the storm? It was crap on top of crap, as we are learning. The agenda and motives behind this cannot be described as journalism, IMO, it wasn't even "news":

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/05/katrina_what_the_media_missed.html

BigDag
05-31-2007, 02:33 PM
I thought this was interesting...

http://apnews.excite.com/article/20070531/D8PFHFOO2.html

ohio
05-31-2007, 06:35 PM
Here are a couple of good articles.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/29/science/29stor.html?ex=1338177600&en=769c4613e2cf149e&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Note here that if the levees and floodwalls had been built to spec, none of the flooding would have happened. Blame whomever, but the blueprints don't mean jackpoot unless the job gets done right in the first place.

And remember ABCNBCFOXCBSCNN and the other "reporting" done in the first few days after the storm? It was crap on top of crap, as we are learning. The agenda and motives behind this cannot be described as journalism, IMO, it wasn't even "news":

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/05/katrina_what_the_media_missed.html
The second one was interesting indeed, Mac.

breambob
05-31-2007, 06:52 PM
I thought this was interesting...

http://apnews.excite.com/article/20070531/D8PFHFOO2.html

TY, ohio. I'd like to note that the remedial work on the levees since K has been just about the only thing that has gone well and close to schedule. Is it enough? I doubt it. But it is work getting done, I suppose...

So BigDag. How are things at Dauphin Island?
We started family vacations there in '67, on through '99. We got EVACed just ahead of Camille, missed a couple of years after Frederick. Big love and a soft spot for DI, best birding I've ever done. And Bayou La Batre is so close for the bestest, freshest seafood in the world.

BigDag
06-01-2007, 07:09 AM
TY, ohio. I'd like to note that the remedial work on the levees since K has been just about the only thing that has gone well and close to schedule. Is it enough? I doubt it. But it is work getting done, I suppose...

So BigDag. How are things at Dauphin Island?
We started family vacations there in '67, on through '99. We got EVACed just ahead of Camille, missed a couple of years after Frederick. Big love and a soft spot for DI, best birding I've ever done. And Bayou La Batre is so close for the bestest, freshest seafood in the world.

Dauphin Island took very big hits from both Ivan & Katrina. The west end is still all torn up, and probably will be left to the elements. The east end is still functioning. Much of the geography has changed as the sands have disappeared or shifted, although there's always projects in motion to fortify the island and protect the residents. But it's about the only part of the central gulf coast that is not choked with condos or resorts or casinos, so it's still a peaceful place to get away from it all. As is the case with all barrier islands, it is very much at risk. Even smaller storms can do lots of damage.

Bayou La Batre was hammered hard by Katrina. Many of the local fishermen lost their boats, homes and livelihoods, but they are a resilient bunch and are working back toward normalcy. The annual "Blessing Of The Fleet" held recently was a big success, and there are plans to rejuvenate the small downtown area with new buildings, businesses and parks.

A good many people don't realize the scope of Katrina's fury; it's very unusual that one storm literally wipes clean such a large area. But I saw this article in the Times-Picayune this morning, which not only offers an explanation of Katrina's breadth, but gives credence to those who claim that the wind destroyed their property before the storm surge arrived:

University of South Alabama hurricane expert Dr. Keith Blackwell used microwave satellite images to see beneath the fuzzy cloud top over Katrina's huge structure to determine that the storm was in the midst of an eyewall replacement cycle when it came ashore.

The result, Blackwell concludes, is that in the early morning hours of Aug. 29, 2005, two separate eye walls slammed ashore. The first, wider and slightly weaker, hit Louisiana and Mississippi and stretched east into Alabama. The second, compact inner ring, with more intense winds, followed slowly behind over the eastern Louisiana and western Mississippi coasts. And that explains why such heavy damage extended well out from the center of the storm.

The instrument packages dropped into the center of Katrina by hurricane chase planes recorded winds between 140 mph and 145 mph at 1,500 feet, the equivalent of 105 mph sustained winds with higher gusts on the ground.

Double eyewalls often form in intense hurricanes like Katrina, but usually last only a day or two.

"If residents of eastern Jackson County near Pascagoula had known about this outer eyewall, or even the possibility that such a thing could occur in the hours before Katrina's eye made landfall, then their focus may have shifted from the New Orleans and western Mississippi coastline areas to their own safety," Blackwell said.

Understanding the location of the second eyewall also might have alerted coastal residents that intense winds would hit them hours in advance of even heavier winds accompanying Katrina's inner eye.

Blackwell said his findings also could help explain why residents have insisted to their insurance companies that wind destroyed their homes well before storm surge water washed away the remaining debris.

995webmaster
06-01-2007, 09:27 AM
I feel sick everytime I hear the H word and I don't even live in an H territory. I can only imagine what the locals feel in H cities. This year scares the living hell out of me too....but we gotta think positive right? The city and her people need us to think as positive as possible.....and send as much karma and prayers her way.

Thanks for saying that Corona. It is definitely a stressful time.

Sometimes I'd just like break from hearing about it... thinking about it... It's mentally exhausting.

ibjamn
06-01-2007, 10:26 AM
It's mentally exhausting.

yes, it is..

breambob
06-01-2007, 08:02 PM
TY Dag. I'll be back to DI, the sooner the better.