Truck Shipment Risks for Assessing Hazardous Materials - A New Paradigm Incorporating Safety and Security

Year
2004
Author(s)
Dr. Arthur Greenberg - Battelle Memorial Institute
Dr. Thomas I. McSweeney - Battelle Memorial Institute
John Allen - Battelle Memorial Institute
Mark Lepofsky - Battelle Memorial Institute
Mark Abkowitz - Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN
File Attachment
2-2_275.pdf311.19 KB
Abstract
Recent terrorist events, most notably September 11, 2001, have taught us that transportation risk management must be performed with a different lens to accommodate terrorism scenarios that would have previously been considered unlikely to warrant serious attention. Given these circumstances, a new paradigm is needed for managing the risks associated with highway transport of hazardous materials. In particular, this paradigm must: 1) more explicitly consider security threat and vulnerability, and 2) integrate security considerations into an overall framework for addressing natural and man-made disasters, be they accidental or planned. This paper summarizes the results of a study sponsored by the U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration for the purpose of exploring how a paradigm might evolve in which both safety and security risks can be evaluated as a systematic, integrated process. The work was directed at developing a methodology for assessing the impacts of hazardous materials safety and security incident consequences when transported by highway. This included consideration of the manner in which these materials could be involved in initiating events as well as potential outcomes under a variety of release conditions. The methodology is subsequently applied to various classes of hazardous materials to establish an economic profile of the impacts that might be expected if a major release were to occur. The paper concludes with a discussion of the findings and implications associated with this effort.