Fragility Modeling of Power Grid Infrastructure for Addressing Climate Change Risks and Adaptation
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2025
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Abstract
The resilience of electric power grids is threatened by natural hazards.
Climate-related hazards are becoming more frequent and intense due to climate
change. Statistical analyses clearly demonstrate a rise in the number of
incidents (power failures) and their consequences in recent years. Therefore,
it is of utmost importance to understand and quantify the resilience of the
infrastructure to external stressors, which is essential for developing
efficient climate change adaptation strategies. To accomplish this, robust
fragility and other vulnerability models are necessary. These models are
employed to assess the level of asset damage and to quantify losses for given
hazard intensity measures. In this context, a comprehensive literature review
is carried out to shed light on existing fragility models specific to the
transmission network, distribution network, and substations. The review is
organized into three main sections: damage assessment, fragility curves, and
recommendations for climate change adaptation. The first section provides a
comprehensive review of past incidents, their causes, and failure modes. The
second section reviews analytical and empirical fragility models, emphasizing
the need for further research on compound and non-compound hazards, especially
windstorms, floods, lightning, and wildfires. Finally, the third section
examines risk mitigation and adaptation strategies in the context of climate
change. This review aims to improve the understanding of approaches to enhance
the resilience of power grid assets in the face of climate change. These
insights are valuable to various stakeholders, including risk analysts and
policymakers, who are involved in risk modeling and developing adaptation
strategies.
| Reference Key |
argyroudis2025fragility
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| Authors | George Karagiannakis; Mathaios Panteli; Sotirios Argyroudis |
| Journal | arXiv |
| Year | 2025 |
| DOI |
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