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Avalanche Danger Scale North American Development Work. Grant Statham, Mountain Risk Specialist. Since 2005 with the United States. Who is it for? What comprises avalanche danger? What process is used in analysis?. The Problem with the Avalanche Danger Scale. CONSEQUENCE is absent
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Avalanche Danger Scale North American Development Work Grant Statham, Mountain Risk Specialist
Since 2005 with the United States • Who is it for? • What comprises avalanche danger? • What process is used in analysis?
The Problem with the Avalanche Danger Scale • CONSEQUENCE is absent • PROBABILITY terms are vague • MITIGATION advice is weak
CONCLUSION . . . • It is a poor evaluation and communication tool for both professionals and the public • Our forecasting and communication systems do not fit within a modern risk framework The problem is not just the danger scale, but also the theory behind it
We require • Technical model for avalanche forecasting • (based on RISK THEORY) 2. Communication model for public bulletins (based on the TECHNICAL MODEL and FOCUS TESTED)
RISK THEORY AVALANCHE HAZARD Probability Consequence
SNOW STABILTY RATING SYSTEM CAA, 2002 OGRS
Stability vs. Danger Feb 8 - 11, 2006 Selkirk Mountains, BC
Avalanche Activity: The latest report of a large deep slab avalanche was a size 4.0 from the north face of Sifton that fractured 2-3m deep, 300m wide and ran on glacial ice. This avalanche ran full path for 2 km including 500m over flat terrain. STABILITY Fair Good Good DANGER Considerable Considerable Moderate
Stability and Terrain Choices COAST Good Good Good
Stability and Terrain Choices ROCKIES Good Good Good
Terrain list – February 2003 Roger Atkins, 2004
Terrain list – February 2004 Roger Atkins, 2004
So where do we account for consequence? • Professionals = Intuitive and discussion based • Public = Buried inside lengthy text messages
What represents consequence? • Avalanche size • Avalanche character
AVALANCHE HAZARD Probability Consequence
Lets start from the foundations of avalanche forecasting Decomposition
AVALANCHE HAZARD Probability Consequence
AVALANCHE HAZARD Probability Consequence
AVALANCHE HAZARD Probability Consequence
Foundations FORECASTING ACTIVITY SCALE CONFIDENCE AVALANCHES SNOWPACK TERRAIN WEATHER
Cognitive, Inductive Reasoning FORECASTING ACTIVITY SCALE CONFIDENCE AVALANCHES SNOWPACK TERRAIN WEATHER
Sensitivity to Triggering AVALANCHE HAZARD Probability Spatial Distribution Consequence
Discrete choices necessary (subjective probability assessment) Sensitivity to Triggering AVALANCHE HAZARD Probability Spatial Distribution Consequence Avalanche Size Avalanche Character
AVALANCHE HAZARD Likelihood of Triggering Destructive Potential
CONFIDENCE • Degree: Low → High • Factors: • Anomalies • Unusual events • Unprecedented events or conditions • Amount of data • Quality of data • Spatial scale • Temporal scale • Spatial variability • Temporal variability • Lingering instability • State of knowledge • Forecaster’s experience levels
Avalanche Hazard Sensitivity to Triggering Triggering Likelihood Spatial Distribution Destructive Potential Size Character Confidence
Avalanche Hazard Sensitivity to Triggering Triggering Likelihood Spatial Distribution Destructive Potential Size Character Conclusion (activity specific) Confidence Avalanche danger rating is only a conclusion
Conclusion and Communication 5 - EXTREME 4 -HIGH 3 -CONSIDERABLE Likelihood of Triggering 2 - MODERATE 1 - LOW Destructive Potential
RISK THEORY Probability x Consequencex Exposure =RISK
AVALANCHE RISK THEORY Likelihood of Triggering x Destructive Potential Avalanche Hazard (danger scale)
AVALANCHE RISK THEORY Likelihood of Triggering x Destructive Potentialx Exposure = RISK Avalanche Hazard (danger scale)
Public understanding of avalanche danger requires • Better methods of describing forecasting processes • Use of RISK THEORY as a framework for avalanche forecasting • Consistent understanding and application by professionals • Basis for public education and communication Danger levels are only a communication strategy
THANKYOU! Roger Atkins Clair Israelson Greg Johnson Brad White Bruce McMahon Karl Birkeland Janet Kallem Doug Abromeit Knox Williams Ethan Green Larry Stanier Chris Stethem John Kelly Ilya Storm Bruce Tremper Mark Moore Susan Hairsine Pascal Haegeli Alan Jones John Kelly