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Published byCameron Wilson Modified over 9 years ago
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Or, Why the ‘Fly-Over’ States are More Important than We Thought
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Phyllis Steckel, RG Earthquake Insight LLC Washington, Mo.
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Earthquake Risks in the Central US Hazards Risks Ground-shaking Liquefaction Lateral spreading Slumping Landslides Aftershocks Direct loss of life & property Business interruption Uninsured losses Loss of infrastructure Loss of market Loss of market share
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“Fly-Over States” East & West Coasts have Most population Economic power Political heavyweights International gateways Technology centers “Emerging” incubators
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“Fly-Over States” Unique process facilities and industrial resources Critical transportation corridors National well-being depends on Central US
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Key Commodities
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New Madrid Area Corporation’s largest soybean seed production plant $60M investment, built in 2011 50-acre footprint; 129- acre site 65 employees
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New Madrid Area Primary aluminum – North America’s largest foil producer Electrical and cable supply markets Foundry alloy for vehicle wheels, hubs, & gas pump nozzles
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New Madrid Area Coal-fired power plant On banks of Mississippi River Third-largest electric utility in Missouri
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Southeast Missouri City-owned power plant Coal-fired Straddles liquefaction features from 1811-12 earthquakes
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‘Swamp east’ Missouri
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Little River Drainage District LRDD formed by landowners many other drainage districts! Designed and built 1908- 1928 infrastructure Many engineers & workers from Panama Canal project
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Little River Drainage District
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Diverts runoff from the Ozarks to the Mississippi Channelized surface waters between the Mississippi and the St. Francis rivers Productive industrialized agriculture now
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“The Delta” of Missouri & Arkansas Water table near surface Near-flat surface topography Shows evidence of past uplifts & downdrops from earthquakes
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Northeast Arkansas Mini-mills steel recycling Second-largest steel producing area in the US Mostly structural steel New $1.1B+ steel “super project” begun in 2013
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Northeast Arkansas Steel industry suppliers Arkansas Aeroplex – one of longest runways in US Engineered drainages
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Regional Critical Facilities Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant – located in floodplain Opened in 1952 as only US- owned uranium enrichment facility Owned by US Dept of Energy; privately operated Closure, decontamination & demolition in progress
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Regional Critical Facilities Critical National Geospatial Intelligence Agency facilities are located in St. Louis and Arnold, Mo.
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Critical Transportation Air transport & logistics Railroad Trucking River barge Pipeline
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Air Transport Memphis: world’s busiest cargo airport Cargo super-hub ‘America’s Distribution Center’ FedEx (30,000+) in MEM 17% of Memphis workers in transportation – highest in the country
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Critical Rail Transportation Rail transport system at/near capacity Critical concentration in central US Memphis Intermodal serves 26% US population, 30% of US output
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Critical Highway Transportation Memphis, Little Rock, & St. Louis: busiest east-west trucking corridors in US Interstates 55, 44, 64, 57, 70, 40 Hundreds of trucking terminals
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Critical River Transportation Moves commodities within one-third of US Memphis is fourth- largest inland port in US St. Louis is second- largest by ton-miles
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Critical River Transportation Memphis #1 in foreign import tonnage ~20,000+ jobs ~$10B+ economic impact Coal, grain, ores, steel, cotton,
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Critical Pipeline Transportation
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Critical Inventory Exposure Memphis inventories surgical supplies, house- hold goods, auto parts, pharmaceuticals, etc. Order by midnight, next- day delivery Headquarters & customers elsewhere
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‘Fly-Over’ States Critical Much of the country’s inventory and resources are located in or travel through the central US.
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Much of the country’s inventory and resources are exposed to earthquake hazards and earthquake risks that are generally unrecognized.
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Sustainable Disaster Recovery Depends on recognizing potential big-picture impacts Depends on leadership to take action to mitigate big-picture impacts
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Phyllis Steckel psteckel@charter.net
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