Title: Diapositive 1
1RISK ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES FOR LANDSLIDES
Jean-Philippe MALET Olivier MAQUAIRE CNRS CERG
. Welcome to Paris!
Final Meeting, Brussels, 26 January 2009
2Diversity of landslide types
Soil spreading
Fall
Toppling
Mudflow
Debris flow
Definition of a landslide Movement of a slope
(mass of rock, of soil or of debris) controlled
by gravity. Three main mechanisms of movement are
distinguished fall, sliding and flow type
processes.
3Some statistics on landslides
- - A major threat to human life, property,
infrastructure and natural environment - - On average, landslides are responsible for ca.
17 of all fatalities from natural hazards
worldwide (CRED, 2005) - - The socio-economic impact of landslides is
underestimated because landslides are usually not
separated from other natural hazard triggers,
such as extreme precipitation, earthquakes or
floods. - - In the last century, Europe has experienced the
second highest number of fatalities and the
highest economic losses caused by landslides
compared to other continents - - at least 16,000 people have lost their lives
because of landslides - - the material losses amounted to over 1700
mill. in Europe - The European countries the most affected are
- Italy, Spain, Greece, Switzerland, Austria, UK,
France, Norway, Sweden.
4The landslide risk assessment framework
(Fell et al., 2005)
5Landslide risk analysis and landslide risk
assessment
International terminology available
Landslide RAM A method based on the use of
available information to estimate the risk to
individuals, property or the environment, from
landslide hazards. A landslide RAMs generally
contain the following steps 1/ definition of
threat (danger) 2/ estimation of probability of
spatial occurrence (susceptibility) 3/ estimation
of temporal probability of an event of a given
magnitude (hazard) 4/ evaluation of the
vulnerability of the element(s) at risk 5/
consequence identification 6/ risk estimation.
It includes also the process of making a
decision recommendation based on
criteria/thresholds (tolerable/acceptable
risks).
Source ISSMGE-ISRM-IAEG JTC-1 Joint Technical
Committee on Landslides and Engineered Slopes,
2006
6Review of current landslide RAMs for EU27
- Questionnaire and litterature review
- ? 71 questionnaires / 30 answers
- success rate 43
? 27 questions, 4 themes
- General information about
- risk assessment
- Description of the RAM
- Data Landslide inventory, conditioning factors,
triggering factors, damages
- Output documents
7Review of current landslide RAMs for EU27
- Landslide RAMs available for 18 EU Member States
Switzerland
- Official RAM 5 countries
- (France, Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, Austria)
- RAM in development 9 countries
- (Belgium, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Hungaria,
Ireland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, and
United-Kingdom) - RAM used by RD institutes / private companies
4 countries - (Germany, Greece, Poland, and Portugal)
- No RAM 6 countries
- (Denmark, Germany, Latvia, Lituania, Malta,
Netherlands) - Information missing Luxembourg, Finland
8Review of current landslide RAMs for EU27
- RAMSOIL Report fact sheet describing the status
of landslide RAMs per country
Countries with an official RAM used in practice
Countries with an official RAM in development
Countries with local RAMs used by research
institutes or private companies
9Common characteristics of the landslide RAMs
All RAMs susceptibility zoning
- Location, volume and classification of existing
landslides - Location, volume and classification
of potential landslides - Areas with a potential
to experience landsliding in the future (travel
distance head retreat)
Landslide inventory map
Landslide susceptibility map
Some RAMs hazard zoning
Estimated temporal frequency (annual
probability) Intensity frequency relationships
Landslide hazard map
All RAMs risk zoning
Elements at risk Vulnerabillity Spatial and
temporal probability Potential damage
Landslide risk map
10Common characteristics of each landslide RAMs
- Input data
- Topography derived slope classes
- Soil map
- Bedrock map (eg. lithology)
- Landcover
- Occurrence density of landslides
- Data processing qual. approach
- Field geomorphologic analysis
- Combination of index maps
- Output information (documents)
- Geomorphological map
- S / H / R maps (often, 3 classes of H / R)
- Techniques
- Inventory (historical archives,
- field observations, aerial photo-
11Example of a landslide RAM French PPR
methodology
- PPR Plan de Prévention des Risques (1995)
- Philosophy
- Qualitative approach
- Based on expert judgment of the scientist
- Use of available data reports no specific
investigation - Scale of work1/10.000 (or 1/5000 in urban zones)
- Procedure
- Inventory of processes (type, activity, age,
magnitude) - Inventory of exposed elements major stakes
- Hazard map analysis of the type of processes,
their activity, magnitude and frequency - Risk map hazard map x inventory of major
stakes - Criteria reference event of 100 years
12Towards harmonization of landslide RAM at
International level
- Guidelines on Landslide Susceptibility, Hazard
and Risk Zoning (2006) - JTC-1 Working Group (Leader J. Corominas, UPC,
Barcelona)
- Terms and procedures already harmonised
- Definitions and common terminology
- Information on what should be included in
landslide susceptibility and hazard zoning and
risk zoning schemes - Definition of levels of zoning and suggested
scales of zoning maps taking into account the
needs of the users - General methodology for a landslide QRA
- Terms and procedures to harmonize
- Criteria thresholds for H R quantification
- for each landslide type
- Number of classes of H R
13Towards harmonization of landslide RAM at
International level
- Recommended types and levels of zoning and map
scales
14Towards harmonization of landslide RAM at
International level
- Certainly possible to harmonize
- - Criteria and thresholds for frequency
estimation (return period, annual probability) - Criteria and thresholds for intensity estimation
Slovenia (Komac et al., 2006)
Switzerland (Lateltin et al., 2005)
15Towards harmonization of landslide RAM at
International level
- Certainly possible to harmonize
- - Number of classes in the outputs maps
- Legend of the maps (color choice)
Switzerland (Lateltin et al., 2005)
Austria (Huebl, 2005)
4 classes
3 classes
16Towards harmonization of landslide RAM at
International level
- Impossible to harmonize
- - Tolerance criteria and value judgements
(by definition different for each country) - Tolerable vs. Acceptable risk
ALARP principle If possibility of loss of life
is high, probability of phenomenon should be
low Higher risk than acceptable will be
tolerated if control or reduction of risk is not
possible Higher risk is tolerated for existing
slope than for planned projects Higher risk is
tolerated for natural slope than for engineered
slopes Tolerable risk may vary from country to
country
17Towards harmonization of landslide RAM at
International level
- The way forward creation of a Pan-European map
of areas at risk of landslides - (Conclusions of the Expert Meeting on Guidelines
for Mapping Areas at Risk of Landslides in
Europe animated by JRC, October 2007, Ispra)
18Proposition of a Tiered approach
- Tier 1 approach
- Generic landslide susceptibility map using a
heuristic weighting-rating model - - Slope angle (SRTM data, 90x90 m)
- - Land Cover (from Corine)
- - Soil Parent (rock?) material (from 11M EuSoil
database) - - Climate date (rainfall totals) 12 x 12 km
daily values from PRUDENCE - - European earthquake catalogue
Mapping unit grid approach of 90m Mapping scale
11M
- Tier 2 approach
- Landslide susceptibility map (by types) using a
multivariate statistical model - Predicted variable landslide occurrence
landslide inventory needed! - Predicting conditionning variables
- - Tier 1 data
- - Second order topographical attributes (from
SRTM data, 90x90 m or better if available) - - Bedrock / Engineering soil database
(including hydraulic geotechnical properties) - - European major discontinuities (faults)
- - Soil moisture maps
- - Daily climate date (rainfall totals) 12 x
12 km values from PRUDENCE - - PGA data (from ESPON GSHAP project)
Mapping unit municipality or catchment Mapping
scale 1250,000
- Possible Tier 3 approach
- Landslide susceptibility/hazard map using a
process-based model - ? Focus only on the high-susceptible areas
identified by Tier 2
Mapping unit catchment Mapping scale 110,000
19Proposition of a Tiered approach
- Method for the Tier 1 assessment is being tested
(ex. of France)
Output maps Landslide susceptibility for some
departments
Input data Conditionning factors
(Malet et al., 2008)
20Conclusions
- Landslide RAMs are available in 18 European
Member States (because of the impacts of
landslides on lives, infrastructures and the
environment) - A framework for landslide risk
analysis, assessment and management is available
at International level - Most of the items in
the landslide RAMs are harmonized (eg.
International guidelines are available)
Harmonized
Not harmonized
21THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION
. Welcome to Paris!