Presentation: Global Death and Construction
Date
2003-03-21
Authors
Environmental Science Institute
Bilham, Roger
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Environmental Science Institute
Abstract
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Description
Our planet has consistently delivered no surprises: the relentless motion of the world's tectonic plates during the past 3 millennia are identical to those of the past 3 million years. Hence the distribution and frequency of past earthquakes are a fairly reliable indicator of future earthquakes. Studies of historical earthquakes combined with modern seismological estimates of their rupture parameters point to a grim seismic future for our new urban planet. With the exception of rare mid-continent earthquakes, we can forecast where most of the world's future earthquakes will occur, yet history tells us that we will not relocate our cities to avoid seismic damage. Clearly we must make buildings that resist collapse when they are shaken. The last two centuries provide guidance on how to construct buildings guaranteed to collapse under even modest shaking. The culprit is often faulty construction rather than faulty design. We are about to initiate urban society's largest housing project – a global "era of construction". The dwellings for our doubled future population are on the drawing board today. We have the engineering know-how to design buildings that don't kill people: we have the seismological knowledge that future earthquakes are unavoidable, and we have an enormous building program ahead. Prudence suggests that these three concepts be merged, yet more than half of the super-cities most vulnerable to seismic shaking lie in the world's poorest countries.