PA43C-2191
International Database of Volcanic Ash Impacts

Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Cheryl Cameron1, Thomas M Wilson2, Susanna Jenkins3, Kristi Wallace4, Sarah Brown3, Graham Leonard5, Natalia Deligne5 and Carol Stewart6, (1)State of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK, United States, (2)University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand, (3)University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom, (4)USGS Alaska Science Center, Anchorage, AK, United States, (5)GNS Science-Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences Ltd, Lower Hutt, New Zealand, (6)Massey University, Palmeston North, New Zealand
Abstract:
Volcanic ash creates extensive impacts to people and property, yet we lack a global ash impacts catalog to organize, distribute, and archive this important information. Critical impact information is often stored in ephemeral news articles or other isolated resources, which cannot be queried or located easily. A global ash impacts database would improve 1) warning messages, 2) public and lifeline emergency preparation, and 3) eruption response and recovery. Ashfall can have varying consequences, such as disabling critical lifeline infrastructure (e.g. electrical generation and transmission, water supplies, telecommunications, aircraft and airports) or merely creating limited and expensive inconvenience to local communities. Impacts to the aviation sector can be a far-reaching global issue. The international volcanic ash impacts community formed a committee to develop a database to catalog the impacts of volcanic ash. We identify three user populations for this database: 1) research teams, who would use the database to assist in systematic collection, recording, and storage of ash impact data, and to prioritize impact assessment trips and lab experiments 2) volcanic risk assessment scientists who rely on impact data for assessments (especially vulnerability/fragility assessments); a complete dataset would have utility for global, regional, national and local scale risk assessments, and 3) citizen science volcanic hazard reporting. Publication of an international ash impacts database will encourage standardization and development of best practices for collecting and reporting impact information. Data entered will be highly categorized, searchable, and open source. Systematic cataloging of impact data will allow users to query the data and extract valuable information to aid in the development of improved emergency preparedness, response and recovery measures.