The input-output approach proposed by Wassily Leontief is regarded as a key tool for the quantitative analysis of the interdependencies between different interconnected sectors within an economy, especially in today's highly interactive networks of producers/ service providers. In recent years, Leontief's model was also extended in order to assess their resilience to critical events, such as a disruption affecting some sectors and propagating through others according to their vulnerability, reaction times and centrality to the overall economy. In this context, a key factor towards the mitigation of monetary losses is represented by preparedness which, to a large extent, is associated with: (1) the availability of inventories; and (2) the ability to ensure extended continuity of product/service delivery in spite of the temporary, partial, or complete inoperability of some sectors. In this paper - building on an approach based on the dynamic inoperability input-output model with inventory (originally proposed in Barker and Santos 2010) - we formulate an optimization problem and propose an algorithm to determine how a proper sizing of each sector's cumulative inventory level can enhance the overall resilience to selected critical events.

Evaluating the Resilience of Critical Infrastructures Assessing Interdependencies and Economic Impact: The Role of Inventories / L. Galbusera, I. Azzini, O. Jonkeren, S. Ntalampiras, G. Giannopoulos - In: Vulnerability, Uncertainty, and Risk: Quantification, Mitigation, and Management / [a cura di] M. Beer, S.-K. Au, J.W. Hall. - [s.l] : American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), 2014. - ISBN 9780784413609. - pp. 695-703 (( convegno 2nd International Conference on Vulnerability and Risk Analysis and Management, ICVRAM 2014 and the 6th International Symposium on Uncertainty Modeling and Analysis, ISUMA 2014 tenutosi a Liverpool nel 2014 [10.1061/9780784413609.071].

Evaluating the Resilience of Critical Infrastructures Assessing Interdependencies and Economic Impact: The Role of Inventories

S. Ntalampiras;
2014

Abstract

The input-output approach proposed by Wassily Leontief is regarded as a key tool for the quantitative analysis of the interdependencies between different interconnected sectors within an economy, especially in today's highly interactive networks of producers/ service providers. In recent years, Leontief's model was also extended in order to assess their resilience to critical events, such as a disruption affecting some sectors and propagating through others according to their vulnerability, reaction times and centrality to the overall economy. In this context, a key factor towards the mitigation of monetary losses is represented by preparedness which, to a large extent, is associated with: (1) the availability of inventories; and (2) the ability to ensure extended continuity of product/service delivery in spite of the temporary, partial, or complete inoperability of some sectors. In this paper - building on an approach based on the dynamic inoperability input-output model with inventory (originally proposed in Barker and Santos 2010) - we formulate an optimization problem and propose an algorithm to determine how a proper sizing of each sector's cumulative inventory level can enhance the overall resilience to selected critical events.
input-output analysis; optimization.; preparedness; resilience; Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality
Settore INF/01 - Informatica
2014
Environmental Change Institute of the University of Oxford
Institute for Risk and Uncertainty of the University of Liverpool
The Council on Disaster Risk Management (CDRM) of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)
Virtual Engineering Centre of the University of Liverpool
Book Part (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/615073
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