Title: Assessment of Critical Infrastructure System Interdependencies
1Assessment of Critical Infrastructure System
Interdependencies
PHD Dissertation Proposal
- Ping Chen
- Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
- Carnegie Mellon University
- 2005-09-18
2Motivation
- Infrastructure Systems
- Function collaboratively and synergistically
- Produce/distribute a continuous flow of essential
goods/services - Interact with peoples daily life and everyday
economic activities. - Information and communications, physical
distribution, energy, banking and finance, and
vital human services PCCIP 2003 - Pros and Cons of Rapidly Growing Interdependence
- Enable the provision of advanced, efficient and
convenient service - More vulnerable than before interdependence-induc
ed threat - Potential threats come from multiple facets
inside or outside natural or manmade - Further efficiencies might be difficult to
realize because of tradeoffs with induced
vulnerabilities Heller 2002
3Research Questions
- Given the current status of knowledge about
infrastructure interdependence which is confined
to the realm of qualitative analysis, what would
be effective and feasible measures that can
quantitatively represent their interdependencies?
- What kind of model is able to estimate the
interdependency using the measures defined above
and how does one build it? - How does one validate whether the proposed model
is effective for representing the interdependency
effect and what are the uncertainties in this
model? - How could the derived model inform us about the
vulnerability of individual infrastructure
sectors?
4Overview of Approach and Defined Tasks
- Task 1 Review Current Knowledge on
Infrastructure Interdependence and Propose
Quantitative Measurement Strategy - Task 2 Review and Evaluate Interdependence
Modeling Methods - Task 3 Develop Resilient Supply Driven
Infrastructure Interdependence Modeling Method - Task 4 Apply and Interpret Revised
Infrastructure Interdependence Model - Task 5 Analyze Model Uncertainty and Verify
Model Soundness - Task 6 Assess Interdependence Induced Critical
Infrastructure Vulnerability
5Task 1 Current State of Knowledge on
Infrastructure Interdependence
Examples of Infrastructure Interdependence
Six Dimensions of Infrastructure Interdependence
Source Rinaldi et al, Identifying,
Understanding, and Analyzing Critical
Infrastructure Interdependence
6Proposed Interdependence Measurement Strategy
- Consequence Measurement vs. Dimensional
Measurement - Indicators (1) economic loss (2) inoperability
Haimes 2001 - Identified major connection type Physical
interconnections through supply chain linkages - Total consequences measurement (direct
indirect) - Two dependence-related disruption type
Type I Demand-driven
Type II Supply-driven
Direction of Physical Connection, from Supply
Sector to Demand Sector
Interconnected Infrastructure Sector
Initially Disrupted Sector
7Task 2 Review and Evaluation of Relevant
Modeling Methods
Industry-to-Industry Transaction Data in Detail
8Effects of Generating 1 million Final Demand in
Power Generation Sector
Effects of Providing 1 million Primary Input in
Power Generation Sector
- Ghosh IO Model
- v (0, 0, ,0, 1, 0,0)
- Leontief IO Model
- c (0, 0, ,0, 1, 0,0)
9Current Status of Extending EIO Model to
Demand-Driven Infrastructure Interdependence
Modeling
- c - the demand-side perturbation vector
- A - the interdependency matrix
- q - the accumulated inoperability vector
Telecommunication
Transportation
Water
Power
Power
Supposed Interruption in the transportation
sector by 10
Transportation
Example
Water
Telecommunication
Haimes and Jiang 2001 Haimes, Y. Y., Jiang,
P. Leontief-based model of risk in complex
interconnected infrastructures, (2001)
10Extending Ghosh Model to Supply-Driven
Interdependence Model?
Ghosh Model Reexamination Power Generation
Perturbation
11Extending Ghosh Model to Supply-Driven
Interdependence Model? (cont)
- Difficulty and Limitation?
- Less applications of supply-driven model than
demand-driven model - Tracing forward impact is harder than backward
impact substitution, backup ability, etc - How to consider pre-planned risk mitigation
actions - More Constraints on applying Ghosh-based Supply
Driven Model - Critical supply sectors bottleneck effect
- Various effects from different levels
Interdependence - The worst consequences of cascading disruption
under constrained supplies
12Infrastructure Dependence Survey
- Objective
- Supplement the information from the economic
dependence data - Acquire professional assessment on
interdependence - Consider the practical experiences
- Surveyed Sectors
- Water Plant (PA and AZ)
- Power Plant (PA)
- Response Rate
- Water Plant (16/64 25)
- Power Plant (1/20 5)
13Infrastructure Dependence Survey (cont)
- Sample Question Assume that you have your
normal operation at your water supply plant, but
that the input from one of these infrastructure
sectors is completely cut off, due to a strike,
accident or other disruptions. What is your
estimation of the longest time that your normal
water supply could continue based only on your
normal inventory or back up (e.g. by using your
own electric generation capacity) with a
disruption from one of the following
infrastructure sectors?
4
3
2
1
Point
5
14Interdependence Evaluation from Practitioners
Box Plot of Survey Responses (median, 1st
quarter, 3rd quarter)
95 Confidence Interval (mean) Plot of Survey
Response
15Interdependence Evaluation from Practitioners
Responded Impact Assessment vs. Direct Requirement
Responded Impact Assessment vs. Direct Supply
16Summary from Evaluations of Existing
Interdependence Model
- EIO model, both Leontief and Ghosh model provide
good bases for extending to infrastructure
interdependence model - Meanwhile, both models are criticized for the
assumption of fixed coefficients, supply driven
model is suffered more than the demand driven
model because of bottleneck effect - The distribution of the survey data is close to
the output of the supply-driven model rather than
the demand-driven model - The survey data provides a different information
source other than the economic interconnections
and it evaluates the sectors empirical ability
on offsetting the negative effect of supply
unavailability - For measuring the all-around impact that is
proposed, the survey data can supplement the
economic input output data to form a more
resilient supply driven infrastructure
interdependence model
17Task 3 Develop Resilient Supply-Constrained
Infrastructure Interdependence Modeling Method
- Phase I Establish Industry-to-Industry Direct
Supply Matrix -
- Phase II Formulate Supply Constrained (SC)
Economic Interdependence Matrix Improved by
Empirical Evaluation - Phase III Derive Supply Constrained Total Impact
Estimation Model
A Direct Requirement Matrix the vector of
output from each sector
B Direct Supply Matrix S Empirical
Interdependence Matrix
(1) Economic Loss Impact
(2) Inoperability Impact
18Phase II Revised Supply Constrained
Interdependence Model (SCIM)
- Method 1 Simple Weight Updated SCIM Multiplier
-
- Method 2 Bayesian Method Updated SCIM Multiplier
-
- Method 3 Empirical Knowledge Based Inoperability
Estimation SCIM Multiplier
19Task 4 Apply and Interpret Revised
Infrastructure Interdependence Model
- Scenario 1 General Inter-infrastructure Impact
- Estimate the chain disruptions among
infrastructure sectors and non-infrastructure
sectors for hypothetically generated
perturbations. - Scenario 2 Energy Security Concern
- Estimate the influence on the entire economic
sectors as the result of reduced amount of
imported gasoline - Relevant energy security cases need to be further
collected and adapted to fit the data requirement
of the proposed model - Scenario 3 Transportation Access Connectivity
- Apply the decomposed SCIM on regional
transportation interruption events, such as labor
strike - Compare the impact from curtailed transportation
accesses on adjacent states - Potential data sources
- Transportation Satellite Account (TSA)
- Regional I-O Multiplier System (RIMS II)
20Task 5 Analyze Model Uncertainty and Verify
Model Soundness
- Interdependence Model Uncertainty
- Survey uncertainty
- EIO-LCA Uncertainty Analysis Experience
- Old data
- Incomplete data
- Aggregation
- Imports
- Validation Case Collection and Validation Process
- Validation Case Requirement
- Report of economic loss of infrastructure sector
in continuous days during disruption events - EIO-LCA Validation Experience
- Comparison of the relative impact on different
sectors would be more reliable and representative
than comparison of absolute impact with the real
occurrence
21Task 6 Assess Interdependence Induced Critical
Infrastructure Vulnerability
- Dependence induced vulnerability sources from
both demand-driven disruption threats and
supply-constraint disruption threats - Different order of independence offer different
effect on vulnerability - Two influential factors that are identified to
assess vulnerability - The probability of initializing disruptions on
various sectors - The total impact of the implementation of initial
disruptions on the sector of interest directly
and indirectly - Proposed vulnerability measurement
- Sensitivity Analysis on Pi and Rm
Rm The vulnerability assessed on infrastructure
sector m (m1,..,n) Pi The probability for the
formation of initial disruption in source i Cim
The consequence of the occurrence of an initial
disruption from source i on the assessed
sector m n The number of infrastructure
sectors
22Expected Contributions
- Consequence measurement has been proposed that
can feasibly and effectively measure
infrastructure interdependence - Demand-driven and supply-constrained interruption
types are used to categorize various supply chain
related interruption occurrences - Empirical Supply-Driven Infrastructure
Interdependence Model (EMSD-IIM) has been
developed that can assess both direct and
indirect disruption impacts - The empirical evaluation of interdependences has
been, for the first time, quantitatively
incorporated to count the risk-mitigation
capacity of these sectors in assessing
interdependence effect - The proposed interdependence induced
vulnerability measurement considers the
occurrence of two interruption types. In
addition, the contribution to the overall
vulnerability from various level interdependences
can be adjusted
23TimeLine
24 25Motivation
- Infrastructure Systems
- Infrastructure systems are generally manmade
systems that function collaboratively and
synergistically to produce and distribute a
continuous flow of essential goods and services
that interact with peoples daily life and
everyday economic activities. Heller 2002 - Information and communications, physical
distribution, energy, banking and finance, and
vital human services PCCIP 2003 - Infrastructure Interdependence Histories
- 1999 June, WA, SCADA system failure, Pipeline
system shutdown for one year - 2001 Early, CA, electricity outage, total loss
over 1billion - 2001 July 19, Baltimore Tunnel Train Derailment
and Fire - 2001 Sep 11, NY WTC Terrorist Attack
- Pros and Cons of Rapidly Growing Interdependence
- Enable these infrastructure sectors to provide
more advanced, efficient and convenient service
for use - Threats on infrastructure sectors come from
multiple facets inside or outside natural or
manmade, etc. - Infrastructures now become more vulnerable than
before because of interdependence-induced threat - Further efficiencies might be difficult to
realize because of tradeoffs with induced
vulnerabilities Heller 2002
26- Leontief IO Model
- c (0, 0, ,0, 1, 0,0)
- output
- Application
- Energy Consumption Estimation
- Environmental Implication (www.eiolca.net)
- Ghosh IO Model
- v (0, 0, ,0, 1, 0,0)
- output
- Application
- International Comparisons, Forward Linkages, and
Key Sectors - Sectoral Impact Studies
Final Demand Power Generation and Supply
(million)
Primary Input Power Generation and Supply
(million)
27Task 3 Develop Resilient Supply-Constrained
Infrastructure Interdependence Modeling Method
- Phase I Establish Industry-to-Industry Direct
Supply Matrix -
- Phase II Formulate Supply Constrained (SC)
Economic Interdependence Matrix Improved by
Empirical Evaluation - Phase III Derive Supply Constrained Total Impact
Estimation Model
A Direct Requirement Matrix the vector of
output from each sector
B Direct Supply Matrix S Empirical
Interdependence Matrix
(1) Economic Loss Impact
(2) Inoperability Impact
28Output identity
Final Demand
Fixed Input Coefficients
Primary Input
Fixed Output Coefficients
Input identity
29Preliminary Result and Analysis (Simple Weight
Method)
1. Direct Supply Matrix
2. Survey Response
Dependence Multiplier (Direct Supply vs. Adjusted
Direct Supply)
Survey Response Normalization
3. Simple Weight Updated Coefficients ( )
30Preliminary Result and Analysis (Simple Weight
Method) (cont)
31Review and Evaluation of Relevant Modeling
Methods (cont)
Output identity
Final Demand
Fixed Input Coefficients
Primary Input
Fixed Output Coefficients
Input identity
32Extending Ghosh Model to Supply-Driven
Interdependence Model?
Example Perturbation Sector Power Generation
and Supply Perturbation Scale Inoperability
10