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Correlating Power Outage Spread with Infrastructure Interdependencies During Hurricanes

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arxiv 2407.09962 v1 pith:4DDJ5I3Q submitted 2024-07-13 cs.IR

Correlating Power Outage Spread with Infrastructure Interdependencies During Hurricanes

classification cs.IR
keywords infrastructurepowercriticalhurricanesoutageoutagesanalysisareas
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Power outages caused by extreme weather events, such as hurricanes, can significantly disrupt essential services and delay recovery efforts, underscoring the importance of enhancing our infrastructure's resilience. This study investigates the spread of power outages during hurricanes by analyzing the correlation between the network of critical infrastructure and outage propagation. We leveraged datasets from Hurricanemapping.com, the North American Energy Resilience Model Interdependency Analysis (NAERM-IA), and historical power outage data from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)'s EAGLE-I system. Our analysis reveals a consistent positive correlation between the extent of critical infrastructure components accessible within a certain number of steps (k-hop distance) from initial impact areas and the occurrence of power outages in broader regions. This insight suggests that understanding the interconnectedness among critical infrastructure elements is key to identifying areas indirectly affected by extreme weather events.

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