NH23A-3858:
Coastal flooding as a parameter in multi-criteria analysis for industrial site selection

Tuesday, 16 December 2014
Christina Christina1, Constantine Memos2 and Danae Diakoulaki1, (1)National Technical University of Athens (NTUA), Lab. of Industrial and Energy Economics, Dept. of Chemical Engineering, Div. II, Marousi Athens, Greece, (2)National Technical University of Athens (NTUA), Lad. of Harbor Works, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Marousi Athens, Greece
Abstract:
Natural hazards can trigger major industrial accidents, which apart from affecting industrial installations may cause a series of accidents with serious impacts on human health and the environment far beyond the site boundary. Such accidents, also called Na-Tech (natural – technical) accidents, deserve particular attention since they can cause release of hazardous substances possibly resulting in severe environmental pollution, explosions and/or fires. There are different kinds of natural events or, in general terms, of natural causes of industrial accidents, such as landslides, hurricanes, high winds, tsunamis, lightning, cold/hot temperature, floods, heavy rains etc that have caused accidents. The scope of this paper is to examine the coastal flooding as a parameter in causing an industrial accident, such as the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan, and the critical role of this parameter in industrial site selection.

Land use planning is a complex procedure that requires multi-criteria decision analysis involving economic, environmental and social parameters. In this context the parameter of a natural hazard occurrence, such as coastal flooding, for industrial site selection should be set by the decision makers. In this paper it is evaluated the influence that has in the outcome of a multi-criteria decision analysis for industrial spatial planning the parameter of an accident risk triggered by coastal flooding. The latter is analyzed in the context of both sea-and-inland induced flooding.