ASSESSING VOLCANIC HAZARDS AND RISKS TO AVIATION
A methodology for assessing long-term volcanic threats to aviation was developed as part of the rationale for a National Volcano Early Warning System (http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1164/). For each US volcano, an aviation threat score was calculated as the product of ratings given to 4 hazard factors (maximum Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) of previous eruptions, explosive eruptions of VEI>3 within past 500 yr, major explosive activity of VEI>4 within past 5000 yr, eruption recurrence intervals) and 2 exposure factors (proximity to major airports, daily passenger traffic in the region). Cascades volcanoes have the highest individual aviation threat scores because of high passenger loads along conterminous US air routes, but Alaska has higher cumulative aviation threat because of the greater number of active volcanoes in that region. The NVEWS methodology estimates unmitigated risk—i.e., does not factor in how efforts like volcano monitoring and ash-dispersion forecasts help to reduce risk by providing the basis for more effective ash avoidance. Prevented losses related to encounters that do not occur because of effective ash avoidance practices are notoriously hard to quantify, but nevertheless motivate efforts to improve volcano monitoring, ash-cloud detection, forecasts of cloud movement, and communication of warning messages.