380 likes | 465 Views
PSHA developments in low seismicity regions: Case history of the UK . RMW Musson. Outline. Part One – Early hazard studies in the UK for strategic facilities Part Two – The evolution of “national” models Part Three – Towards the future. PART ONE. Early NPPs in the UK.
E N D
PSHA developments in low seismicity regions: Case history of the UK RMW Musson
Outline • Part One – Early hazard studies in the UK for strategic facilities • Part Two – The evolution of “national” models • Part Three – Towards the future
Early NPPs in the UK • First operating civil reactors started in 1956 • Ten sites operating between 1956 and 1979 • None of these were designed against earthquakes; the UK was considered aseismic • Ironically, some sites were close to significant historical epicentres!
Browitt, Burton & Lidster (1976) • It did: • Provide the first modern reassessment of historical British earthquakes from original sources • Query conventional wisdom concerning earthquakes and the GGF • It did not: • Assess parameters in a transparent way • Calculate hazard, except …
Burton & Browitt (1976) • Estimated 100 year event as ~ 5.0 mb • Selected some “comparable accelerograms” from Californian earthquakes
1979 - Irving • First use of recognisable PSHA in UK for nuclear industry - influential • Assumed spatial uniformity of seismicity • “Average” hazard ~ 0.25 g at 10-4 ann. prob. • 1982 update – split UK into ten source zones on a purely geographical basis • “Without recourse to tectonic regionalization it can be concluded … that the rough regional boundaries … can be used to rank regions in order of their seismic density per unit area …”
Busy years: 1981-1984 • Around 1979-1980 it was realised that UK seismicity had been neglected • Last published UK earthquake catalogue was 1924! • Four major initiatives to revaluate historical earthquakes: • Principia Mechanica Ltd • Soil Mechanics Ltd • Imperial College • BGS • UK seismic monitoring capability expanded at the same time
NPP studies: 1980s • Recognisable PSHA studies for individual NPP sites began in early 1980s • Earliest studies undertaken by private consultants • Several of these combined into a consortium which they referred to as the Seismic Hazard Working Party (SHWP) • Majority of site-specific NPP PSHA studies done by SHWP in 1980s and 1990s • Others by BGS and Halcrow
SHWP practice • SHWP used a characteristic methodology: • Extensive background research • Conservative decision making • Exclusive use of Ms magnitudes • Single attenuation model • Simple geometric source models • Regional b values • Gamma distribution for activity rates • This never varied in line with developments elsewhere
Sample SHWP source model Redrawn from SHWP (1987)
Regulatory environment • Oversight given to what was then the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate (NII) now the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) • NPP operators expected to submit a formal safety case to demonstrate that hazard at the site had been adequately characterised • This would be assessed as part of the periodic review of safety • Retrospective studies undertaken for pre-1980 build
Benchmarks • Hazard usually expressed as PGA with annual probability of 10-4 and associated response spectrum (usually fixed shape) • Conservatism expected • Some cognitive anchoring – since Irving, 0.25 g was regarded as “average”
Hydrocarbons • Offshore hydrocarbon exploration industry also became interested in seismic hazard after 1980 • Early site-specific hazard study for a shore facility in Scotland • Burton, McGonigle & Neilson (1981) • Hazard calculated by extreme value methods • Funding for expansion of UK monitoring network • Included two sea-bottom stations at Beryl and Statfjord
Evolution of PSHA models • Since the 1970s, there has been a discernible trend towards greater use of geological information • Generally considered difficult because of a lack of clear correlations between seismicity and surface geology • Earliest studies were purely based on seismicity
1976 – Lilwall • Based on extreme values (Milne and Davenport 1969) • Therefore no tectonic input
Phases of deformation Argued by Muir Wood (1989) that seismicity relates to phases of Quaternary deformation
Arup (1993) model • Regional PSHA for UK • Developed logic tree with three sub models: • Uniform • Seismicity-based • Neotectonic (after Muir Wood)
2007 – Musson & Sargeant • UK national hazard map for Eurocode 8 • First attempt to create model starting with seismotectonic regionalisation • Based on seismotectonic model of Chadwick et al (1996) • Zones represent “the surface projections of subsurface volumes of characteristic upper crustal geological structure” • Seismogenic homogeneity maintained by subdividing or merging zones as needed
A new start for nuclear • No new nuclear build in the UK after 1995 • Government decision to resume NPP construction taken in 2006 • First stage was site selection – mostly existing sites • Seismicity not an exclusionary criterion • New PSHA studies required - no question of returning to old hazard methodologies
New regulation? • Regulatory environment unchanged • ONR committed to maintaining standards • Has appointed a standing panel of experts to assess cases • “The UK system … has a goal‐setting approach in which safety objectives and outcomes are set out through legislation, but [the] operators of the plant are responsible for identifying the specific technical measures and procedures necessary to meet these objectives.” • i.e. NOT a prescriptive approach
Lessons from Japan • ONR report at http://www.hse.gov.uk/nuclear/fukushima/final-report.pdf • “Our considerations of the events in Japan, and the possible lessons for the UK, has not revealed any significant weaknesses in the UK nuclear licensing regime.”
Stress testing • In response to a request from the Council of the European Union, a specification for stress tests for nuclear power stations was developed, and the ONR directed that these test should be undertaken by the nuclear industry in the UK.
STF-2 • Stress Test Finding STF-2 states that “The nuclear industry should establish a research programme to review the Seismic Hazard Working Party (SHWP) methodology against the latest approaches … • … This should include a gap analysis comparing the SHWP methodology with more recent approaches such as those developed by the Senior Seismic Hazard Analysis Committee (SSHAC)” • Work in progress!