Browsing by Author "Meidl, Rachel A."
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Item Disentangling Circular Economy, Sustainability and Waste Management Principles(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2021) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem FERC and PHMSA Sign Memorandum of Understanding: Is it the Silver Bullet to Expedited LNG Application Reviews?(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2018) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem How High-Income Countries Can Contribute to a More Sustainable Plastics Economy: Using the “What We Know Works” Approach(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2021) Havas, Vilma; Staal, Brita; Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Hurricane Risk Assessment of Petroleum Infrastructure in a Changing Climate(Frontiers, 2020) Sichani, Majid Ebad; Anarde, Katherine A.; Capshaw, Kendall M.; Padgett, Jamie E.; Meidl, Rachel A.; Hassanzadeh, Pedram; Loch-Temzelides, Ted P.; Bedient, Philip B.Hurricanes threaten the petroleum industry in the United States and are expected to be influenced by climate change. This study presents an integrated framework for hurricane risk assessment of petroleum infrastructure under changing climatic conditions, calculating risk in terms of monetary loss. Variants of two synthetic probabilistic storms and one historical storm (Hurricane Ike) are simulated using the SWAN+ADCIRC model, representing a range of potential scenarios of impacts of a changing climate on hurricane forward speed and sea-level rise given uncertainties in climate projections. Model outputs inform an infrastructure impact and cascading economic loss analysis that incorporates various sources of uncertainty to estimate five types of losses sustained by petroleum facilities in surge events: land value loss, process-unit damage loss, cost of spill clean-up and repair of aboveground storage tanks, productivity loss, and civil fines. The proposed risk assessment framework is applied as a case study to seven refineries along the Houston Ship Channel (HSC), a densely-industrialized corridor in Texas. The results reveal that either an increase in mean sea level or a decrease in storm forward speed increases the maximum water elevations in the HSC for storms that produce maximum wind setup in Galveston Bay (FEMA 33 and FEMA 36), resulting in larger economic loss estimates. The role of refinery features such as storage capacity and average elevation of the refinery and its critical equipment in the refinery response to hurricane hazards is studied, and the probability distribution of refinery total loss and the loss risk profile in different hurricane scenarios are discussed. Loss estimates are presented, demonstrating the effects of hurricane forward speed and sea level on the losses for the refineries as well as the HSC. Such a framework can enable hurricane risk assessment and loss estimation for petroleum infrastructure to inform future policies and risk mitigation strategies. Potential policy implications for a region like the HSC are highlighted herein as an illustration.Item Is the Foundation of the Circular Plastics Economy About to Go Up in Flames? A Cross-Atlantic, Interdisciplinary Perspective in Europe and the U.S.(2020) Meidl, Rachel A.; Havas, Vilma; Staal, Brita; Brooks, Amy; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Is There a Correlation between Vapor Pressure and the Severity of Crude Oil Transportation Incidents?(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2019) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Measuring the True Cost of Sustainability: A Case Study in a Green Energy Approach(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2020) Meidl, Rachel A.; Yedinak, Emily; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Plastic Waste Management: Are We on the Right Path to Sustainability?(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2018) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Plastics and the Precautionary Principle(2019) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Policy Considerations for Energy Infrastructure Resilience(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2020) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Post-Boston Incident: A PHMSA Enterprise Opportunity for Continuous Improvement(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2018) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Recommendations for Realizing the Full Potential of Nanotechnology and Carbon Nanotubes as the Energy Sector Transitions(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2021) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Recommendations for Realizing the Full Potential of Nanotechnology and Carbon Nanotubes in the Energy Transition(2021) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Solar’s Bright Future Faces a Cloudy Reality: What About All the Waste?(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2022) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem The Advanced Carbon Economy: A Sustainable Hydrogen Pathway(2021) Meidl, Rachel A.; Medlock, Kenneth B. III; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem The Future of Plastics Sustainability: Advanced Recycling(2021) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Waste Management and the Energy Transition: The Path to Sustainability and a Circular Economy(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, 2021) Meidl, Rachel A.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Waste Management of Alternative Energy Supply Chains(2022) Meidl, Rachel A.; Foss, Michelle Michot; Li, Ju; James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy