Category Archives: my PUBLIC PRESENCE

Posts inspired by my own public appearances

Resilience in road projects – 3R

This simplified resilience assessment for road projects was presented at the XVIth World Winter Service and Road Resilience Congress in Calgary in February 2022. We call this method the 3R-method because we use three Rs, robustness, redundancy and recovery as a measure of resilience.

A resilience tool for roads

Norway has been using risk and vulnerability analysis for community planning for some 30 years now, ever since the term societal safety and security was coined in the mid-90s. The Norwegian Planning and Building code requires that all development projects, including roads, undergo a risk and vulnerability assessment in order to investigate the impact a project might have on societal safety and security.

While risk and vulnerability assessments are used in road planning in Norway on a regular basis, the Norwegian Public Roads Administration or NPRA for short needed a tool that was specifically tailored towards roads, and the particulars of the Norwegian road network. Consequently, a simplified resilience assessment was developed for assessing road projects in Norway. The method is called the 3R-method because we use three criteria, robustness, redundancy and recovery as a measure of resilience. The three critera can be visualized very similar to some of my previous research that I have described in earlier posts.

Robustness, resilience and recovery

A sparse transportation network

Norway’s transportation network is in large part a sparse network, with few links and few modes. I like to say that much of mainland Europe has what I call a free network, whereas Norway has what I call a constrained network. Much of the country is served by road only, and more often than not only one road. If disrupted, there are few if any alternatives.

Types of transport networks, based on the availability of modes

Thus, for societal safety and security, roads become crucial. This is why the NPRA developed this method. It is a qualitative assessment, done by an expert group.

3R explained

The idea behind 3R is to first determine the importance of the road project, be it local, regional or national, and then score the level of impact of the project on robustness, redundancy and recovery on a scale ranging from very negative to very positive. These individual scores are added up to total score, thus allowing for comparison of project alternatives, which could be minor differences within the same project proposal, or totally different project proposals.

Conducting 3R is done in four steps

Now, the score itself is not the final answer. What is more important, since this is a qualitative assessment, are the verbal arguments describing the impact, because they provide the actual decision support. That narrative is what matters most.

Level of importance

When it comes to importance, this is what separates local from regional from national. The issue here is to determine which critical services and businesses that are affected by the road project and how far the impact reaches. In our assessment criteria we decided that a project should support the military and in particular military supply routes in order to be nationally important.

Level of impact

In order to determine the level of impact and finding the right score, below are some of the key questions that we use. Robustness relates to the physical state of the road and the ability to withstand stress, be it natural hazards or traffic load. Redundancy relates to the existence of alternatives, and not merely the existence but also their suitability. Recovery relates to how quickly a disruption can be repaired in the short term and reconstructed in the long run.

Looking at Robustness one question may be what standard we are building, for example two-lane highway versus a four or six lane motorway. Looking at Redundancy one question might be to what degree we are introducing new links in the network, are we just bypassing a troublesome location or are there impacts beyond the project area. Looking at Recovery one question is whether a previously narrow and winding road is now replaced by a complex system of bridges and tunnels with a traffic control system added. That is not easily replaced.

Conclusion

Having used 3R for a couple of years now, we have found that the method is a highly flexible and multi-purpose tool. It can be used for new projects, existing infrastructure and value engineering.

3R adds value to the more traditional risk and vulnerability analysis. Specifically, it shows how robustness, redundancy and recovery interact in forming resilience.

3R is a holistic tool that highlights how all choices made early in the project can affect the performance of the road and how the road project contributes to societal safety and security or resilience, positively or negatively, depending on the actual design choices.

Presentation slides

Reference

Husdal, J., Petkovic, G. (2022) A simplified resilience approach for assessing road projects in Norway. Paper presented at the XVI WORLD WINTER SERVICE AND ROAD RESILIENCE CONGRESS, Calgary, Canada, February 7-11, 2022.

Related posts

husdal.com: Analysing road vulnerability in Norway

Supply Chain Risk 2011

What is supply chain risk? What are typical supply chain risks? This is the 2011 version of my annual lecture on Supply Chain Risk for the MSc in Supply Chain Management and Industrial Logistics at Molde University College, Norway, held today, and this is the fourth consecutive year that I am giving this lecture. The lecture is meant to highlight some of the current literature on supply chain risk and to suggest further reading materials. It is a selection- quite an extensive selection, actually – of the more than 400 articles, books and book chapters I have piled up in my office shelves, and in a way this lecture is a broad literature review of anything connected to supply chain risk. While the main topics are the same, there are always new things I include, so even if you have seen the 2008 lecture and the 2009 lecture and the 2010 lecture on supply chain risk, this year’s is a bit different…again.

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Supply Chain Risk 2010

What is supply chain risk? What are typical supply chain risks? This is the 2010 version of my lecture on Supply Chain Risk for the MSc in Supply Chain Management and Industrial Logistics at Molde University College, Norway, held today, and this is the third consecutive year that I am giving this lecture. The lecture is meant to highlight some of the current literature on supply chain risk and to suggest further reading materials. You will not know everything there is to know about supply chain risk after the lecture, but you will know where to find it. Each year the lecture is improved from the previous year, and while the main topics are the same, there are always new things I include, so even if you have seen the 2008 lecture and the 2009 lecture on supply chain risk, this year’s is very different…again.

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ISCRiM 2010

I am currently attending the 2010 seminar of the International Supply Chain Risk Management Network (ISCRiM) here in the UK, which is why there won’t be too many – if any – posts from me this week. ISCRiM is perhaps the network for the elite among supply chain risk researchers, and since the seminar is open to invited guests and members only, and since I am not a member, I feel honored to have been invited into this distinguished circle of academics and professionals.

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WCTR 2010

Are “bad” locations synonymous with “bad” logistics? That is the title of my presentation at the World Conference on Transport Research, WCTR 2010, in Lisbon, Portugal, this week. Norway, unlike much of central Europe, has a very sparse transportation network with few mode options (rail, road, sea or air) and few link options within each mode. How does that impact on logistics operations and how do Norwegian freight carriers handle transportation disruptions?

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How Norwegian freight carriers handle disruptions

Transportation networks, and in particular road networks are an integral part of supply chains, and in regions with sparse networks this road network becomes very important, since in a possible worst-case scenario no suitable alternative exists for deliveries to or from these communities. How are the supply chains of companies located in sparse transportation networks affected by transportation disruptions? What are typical disruptions in certain locations or for certain types of business, and how do businesses and carriers counter supply chain disruptions? Are bad locations synonymous with bad logistics?

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Risk and Vulnerability in Virtual Enterprise Networks

A month ago I posted on my first publication, a book chapter on A Conceptual Framework for Risk and Vulnerability in Virtual Enterprise Networks in Managing Risk in Virtual Enterprise Networks: Implementing Supply Chain Principles, edited by Stavros Ponis from NTUA in Athens, Greece, and published by IGI Global. A month ago, the book was merely announced on the publisher’s website, now it is fully present. Not only do I have the honor of opening the book by being the first chapter, but  – as I just found out – I also have the honor of having the free sample chapter for download…making my thoughts available for criticism for the whole Internet world, not just the inquisitive  reader who stumbles upon this book in the university library and decides to read it.

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Supply Chain Risk – 2009 Lecture

Supply Chain Risk – The dark side of supply chain management.  What is (supply chain) risk? What are typical supply chain risks? This lecture will highlight some of most influential research into supply chain risk, both past research and current research. Last year I gave a guest lecture on supply chain risk at Molde University College, Norway. This year, in 2009, I was asked to do the same lecture, and I said yes. Since I have come one year further in my research into supply chain risk, naturally I have discovered many new references, and so the 2009 version is a bit different from the 2008 version. The basic theme is the same, but many details and figures have changed.  I have also been asked to give a lecture in 2010, so you may want to skip this post, and go straight to the 2010 version of my lecture on supply chain risk.

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Risks in virtual enterprise networks and supply chains

It is not unusual for suppliers in a supply chain to come together and act as a Virtual Enterprise Network (VEN) and today’s supply chains exhibit many VEN-like features. Is managing risks in Virtual Enterprise Networks different from managing risks in supply chains? With this in mind I submitted a paper to MITIP2009, the 11th International Conference on the Modern Information Technology in the Innovation Processes of the Industrial Enterprises, to be held in Bergamo, Italy, in October.

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Avbrudd – Forsyningskjedens mørke side

Selv om kostnadsreduserende tiltak og outsourcing kan ha klare fordeler har det å gi slipp på kontrollen med forsyningskjeden sine utfordringer. Vi møtte forsker Jan Husdal i Møreforsking Molde som blant annet jobber med sårbarhetsanalyser og risikohåndtering i forsyningskjeder. Denne artikkelen er hentet fra Logistikk & Ledelse nummer 3/2009. Les hele artikkelen her.

For my English readers:
This is an interview with me in a Norwegian trade journal for Logistics Management.

 

Er rassikring lønnsomt?

Rassikring av veger har en klar samfunnsøkonomisk nytteverdi, men hvor stor er den? De største gevinstene er knyttet til å unngå omkjøring, skape trygghet og redusere antall ulykker. Hvordan måler man dette i kroner? Spørsmålet er viktig og angår mange lokalsamfunn i dette fylket. Analyser viser at selve omkjøringskostnadene kan variere fra drøyt 200 kr/time og opp til 80.000 kr/time, avhengig av sted, trafikkmengde, trafikksammensetning og omkjøringsmuligheter.

(ved Svein Bråthen, Jan Husdal og Jens Rekdal, Høgskolen i Molde og Møreforsking Molde)

Denne kronikken stod på trykk i Romsdals Budstikke 24.11.2008 og det er gjort mindre justeringer i teksten  for å tilpasse den til denne bloggen.

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Supply Chain Disruptions – Does Location Matter?

How are companies located in sparse transport networks affected by supply chain disruptions? Here is a copy of the paper I presented at TRB2009, the Transportation Research Board 88th Annual Meeting, in Washington, DC, 11-15 January 2009. The paper was presented in a poster session and included as a full paper in the conference proceedings.  For your convenience, both the paper and the poster are included below.

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Risk – the dark side of supply chain management

What is Supply Chain Rrisk? Supply Chains are exposed to a variety of risks that are unique to each supply chain. These risks are related to actions and events that are inside and outside of the supply chain. Supply Chain Risk Analysis seeks to identify these risks, their sources and drivers, and their impact on the supply chain. Supply Chain Risk Management seeks to establish mitigative and contingent strategies for how to deal with the identified risks and their potential impact on the supply chain.

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Risikohåndtering i forsyningskjeder

Dette er et foredrag jeg holdt på konferansen Transport og Logistikk, 15.oktober 2008. Foredraget “Risikohåndtering i forsyningskjeder” var en del av programmet omkring Logistikkutfordringer. Dette var første gang jeg foredrog om supply chain risk på norsk, og det var spennende. Jeg var også veldig tidlig i min egen forskning innenfor dette feltet og mange av tankene har modnet betydelig siden den gang, hvis jeg sammenligner med min siste forelesning om supply chain risk ved Høgskolen i Molde.

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Supply Chain Disruptions – Does location matter?

In regions or countries with sparse transportation networks or few transportation mode choices the structure or design of the supply chain, along with the organization and preparedness become important factors in determining if a company has an favorable or a unfavorable location. In locations with a sparse transportation network there are maybe not so many options as to setting up the supply chain; the supply chain is in fact constrained by a certain physical location. Does this make it more susceptible to disruptions?

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Transport Network Vulnerability Metrics

Transport network vulnerability is a relatively new field of research and to this date no commonly agreed definition or quantifiable expression of what vulnerability is exists within the academic community. The following paper presents a review of road network vulnerability, seeking to synthesize different terminologies and metrics, among which: reliability, vulnerability, resilience, flexibility, robustness, and adaptive capacity.

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The vulnerability of road networks in a cost-benefit perspective

A reliable transportation network represents a net benefit to society, and conversely, a vulnerable network represents a net cost to society. Hence, vulnerability ought to be an important parameter for decision-support in cost-benefit analyses, in order to establish a link between the terms reliability and vulnerability vis-à-vis costs and benefits. A multi-criteria analysis approach is suggested as an appropriate methodology for analyzing the monetary and non-monetary effects of vulnerability. Looking beyond the science of vulnerability assessments, this paper discusses some of the network attributes that influence the vulnerability of transportation networks, influences that can be described as structure-related, nature-related or traffic-related attributes. The influences of the individual attributes are then examined as possible candidates for measuring of the vulnerability of the transportation network.

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Reliability and vulnerability versus costs and benefits

Looking beyond the science of vulnerability assessments, this paper discusses some of the network attributes that influence the vulnerability of transport networks, influences that can be described as structure-related, nature-related or traffic-related attributes. The paper introduces vulnerability as a parameter for decision-support in cost-benefit analyses, by seeking to establish a link between the terms reliability and vulnerability vis-a-vis costs and benefits.

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Reliability and vulnerability versus costs and benefits

Issues of reliability and vulnerability are mormally not considered a matter of evaluation in traditional cost-benefit analyses. Consequently, traditional cost-benefit analyses are lacking decision variables that may be important. This paper looks beyond the abstract science of vulnerability assessments, and discusses some of the factual influences and network attributes that contribute to the vulnerability of transport networks. The influences of the individual attributes are then examined as a measure of the vulnerability of a transport network. Although reliability can be defined by absolute numbers, vulnerability, by its very nature can not. The paper further outlines a framework for developing a methodology that to incorporate reliability and vulnerability as parameters for decision-support in a cost-benefit analysis. In doing so, this paper seeks to establish a link between the terms reliability/vulnerability and cost/benefit and seeks to describe reliability and vulnerability in terms of cost and benefit. Cost-benefit evaluations are part of many decision making processes, and it is argued that vulnerability assessments likewise should play an important role as input to these processes.

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Reliability and vulnerability in road development projects

Few will question that the sender, the recipient, the freight hauler or society in general, experience additional costs when goods or persons cannot reach their destinations in time or space. Consequently, it should be obvious that a reliable transportation network represents a benefit to society. Equally, a vulnerable network would represent a net cost to society. Why then, is the reliability, or conversely, the vulnerability, of the transportation network not a matter of evaluation in traditional cost-benefit analyses?

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