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Earth Sciences Sector Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts on Vulnerable Infrastructure on Vulnerable Infrastructure (ground technology) (ground technology) L. Trichtchenko, D.H. Boteler L. Trichtchenko, D.H. Boteler Geomagnetic Laboratory Geomagnetic Laboratory Natural Resources Canada Natural Resources Canada presented by presented by R. Pirjola R. Pirjola FMI, Finland FMI, Finland
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Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Feb 03, 2016

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Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts on Vulnerable Infrastructure (ground technology) L. Trichtchenko, D.H. Boteler Geomagnetic Laboratory Natural Resources Canada presented by R. Pirjola FMI, Finland. OUTLINE OUR CONCERN: GROUND INFRASTRUCTURE. Introduction Cost of the problem - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Earth Sciences Sector

Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts on Vulnerable Infrastructureon Vulnerable Infrastructure

(ground technology) (ground technology)

L. Trichtchenko, D.H. BotelerL. Trichtchenko, D.H. BotelerGeomagnetic LaboratoryGeomagnetic Laboratory

Natural Resources CanadaNatural Resources Canadapresented bypresented by

R. PirjolaR. PirjolaFMI, FinlandFMI, Finland

Page 2: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

OUTLINEOUR CONCERN: GROUND INFRASTRUCTURE

Introduction Cost of the problem

QuestionsWhere the effect might occur? When it will happen?How large it might be?

AnswersClimatologyForecasts Case studies

Page 3: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Power Systems: immediate response to GICMarch 1989 storm: Direct costs Hydro-Quebec > 10 M$PSE&G New Jersey ~ 8M$http://www.magazine.noaa.gov/stories/mag131.htmPipelines:

Direct effect on pipeline testing 2-5M$/yearhttp://ops.dot.gov/whatsnew/2002/Gas_IMP_reg_eval_DRAFT_062102.htmcumulative response, enhanced corrosionDirect cost of corrosion rapture in one pipeline in North America ~100M$http://www.corrosion-doctors.org/Pipeline/Introduction.htm

Directional Drilling, magnetic surveyingDirect response to magnetic variationsAirborne magnetic survey $100 per acre (~ 500 acres/day) http://www.estcp.org/Technology/MM-0031-VFS.cfm

Directional drilling~ $60 to $300 per meter http://www.frtr.gov/matrix2/section4/4-36.html

INTRODUCTION $$$$$$$$

Page 4: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

DMSP Images of aurora on 30 October 2003

UK

North America

Europe

1.Where the effect might occur?Geographic location

Page 5: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

?3. When it will happen? BIG QUESTION

Forecasts are mostly qualitative“in the next two-three days something can be expected…”

SOMETIMES FORECASTS ARE BETTER (SEE BELOW FOR OCTOBER 2003),OTHER TIMES ARE FAR FROM BEING GOOD

Page 6: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

3. How large it might be? Time, Location, System-dependent

Case 1:Magnetic storm April 2001Range 700 mV-1600mVCanadian pipeline

Case 2:Magnetic storm November 2004Range 4000mV, Australian pipeline

INDUSTRY STANDARDS

Potential of -0.850 V to –1.150 V at the pipe steel/earth interface

Safe range 500 mV

Page 7: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Statistical (climatological) telluric hazard assessment for pipelines in Canada

Need: request from industry and government

Page 8: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

StepsPart I geophysical• Statistics of geomagnetic variations• Establishment of activity levels for different locations• Local layered earth models/possible evaluation• Statistics of telluric variations• Telluric activity levels• Production of statistical maps

Part II industry-specific• Modelling the pipeline and corrosion protection system• Assessing the “weak points” of given pipeline

Part III complete assessmentIntegrate pipeline and telluric assessments together

Page 9: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Part I geophysical• Statistics of geomagnetic variations• Establishment of activity levels for different locations• Local layered earth models/possible evaluation• Statistics of telluric variations• Telluric activity levels• Production of statistical maps

Page 10: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Geomagnetic Activity- Hourly Range Index usedAnnual HRX, Y,Z Auroral Zone Annual HRX,Y,Z Sub-Auroral Zone

Activity Levels:Quiet level:chosen 40 nT (95% time in Ottawa)Unsettled: 300nT (95% in Yellowknife)Active: 600 nTStormy: above 600 nT

Page 11: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Assessment of annual geomagnetic activity based on hourly range index

Page 12: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Area of interest: auroral zone (red circle)Only one magnetic observatory: YKC (Yellowknife)

Page 13: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Layered Earth models of area give surface impedances(plot below),

Question: do these models give any difference in statistical evaluation of telluric activity

Combined with geomagnetic data to model telluric activity

Page 14: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Telluric Activity: Hourly Standard Deviation (HSD) and Hourly Maximum Amplitude (HMA) Indices were established

Quiet level chosen 20 mV\km (95% time in Ottawa)Unsettled 140 mV per km (95% in Yellowknife)Active 300 mV per kmStormy above 300 mV per km

Hours of exceedance above certain levels

Statistically Zone 4 and 5 are the same,Thus only two surface models (4,5)did not give significant differences.

Page 15: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Results of this work became part of Canadian Atlas of Hazards (together with landslides, floods, seismic activity)

Geomagnetic activity map

Page 16: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Telluric activity map

Results of this work became part of Canadian Atlas of Hazards (together with landslides, floods, seismic activity)

Page 17: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Zoom-in option, major pipeline and power systems are also shown

Results of this work became part of Canadian Atlas of Hazards (together with landslides, floods, seismic activity)

Page 18: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Part II industry-specific• Modelling the pipeline and corrosion protection system• Assessing the “weak points” of given pipelineProblem:Specifications of pipeline and corrosion protection system

are proprietary information

Generic results are shown.

Page 19: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Y - parallel admittanceZ - series impedanceE – driving electric field

DSTL model of pipeline appliedColor-coded is pipe-to-soil potential difference (PSP)

distribution along the pipeline increased where there is non-uniformity in pipeline electrical conductivity

HIGH PSP

LOW PSP

N

S

“GENERIC” PSP DISTRIBUTION ALONG PIPELINE

Page 20: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Part III complete assessmentIntegrate pipeline and telluric assessments together

Page 21: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Part III complete assessmentIntegrate pipeline and telluric assessments together

Page 22: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

Part III complete assessmentIntegrate pipeline and telluric assessments together

Page 23: Towards Reducing the Space Weather Impacts

CONCLUSIONS

Assessment of space weather hazards can be done in two stages

1. Space weather environment (general, using scientific, open data)

2. Assessment of infrastructure vulnerability (requires specific, proprietary information)

References:

P.Fernberg, L.Trichtchenko, D. Boteler and L. McKee, Telluric hazard assessment for northern pipelines. Paper 07654, NACE International, Houston, 2007 (open publication).

D. Boteler, L. Trichtchenko, P. Fernberg, Report to private company, will be open to general public in 2008