Summary
The term resilience has been used in very different fields of knowledge for many decades. In the electricity sector, the adverse impact of natural and man-made hazards on critical infrastructures has resulted in governments, regulators, utilities, and other interested stakeholders seeking to formalise a framework to oversee and enhance resilience. In essence, such formalisation aims to define strategies to improve the ability of a critical infrastructure to anticipate and prepare for critical situations, to absorb impacts of hazards, prevent deterioration in service to the point of failure, to respond to and recover rapidly from disruptions, and to make adaptations that strive to provide continued essential services under a new condition.
Additional informations
Publication type | Reference Papers |
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Reference | RP_306_1 |
Publication year | |
Publisher | CIGRE |
File size | 82 KB |
Pages number | 3 |
Price for non member | Free |
Price for member | Free |
Authors
SALZARD, TANCHAROEN, KLIMENKO, SILVANT, Kwon, SCHRÖDER