AWWA J100 2021
$76.92
AWWA J100-21 Risk and Resilience Management of Water and Wastewater Systems
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
AWWA | 2021 |
This standard is an American National Standard, as designated by the American National Standards Institute, and falls under the jurisdiction of theAmerican Water Works Association (AWWA). This jurisdiction is exercised by the AWWA J100 Risk and Resilience Management Standards Committee. This standard is aligned with the intent of National Homeland Security Policy, including the National Infrastructure Protection Plan (NIPP), National Incident Management System (NIMS), and National Response Framework (NRF). This standard can be applied to the evaluation of risk and support risk reduction and/or resilience improvement in water and wastewater utilities. The J100 methodology may also enable the decision-makers in a wide variety of infrastructures, other facilities, and operational organizations. The same methodology has been successfully applied in settings as diverse as nuclear power plants, electricity distribution, roads and bridges, and emergency response dispatch.
PDF Catalog
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7 | Foreword I. Introduction. I.A. Background. The AWWA Management Standards Program is designed to serve water, wastewater, and reuse utilities* and their customers, owners, service providers, and government regulators. The standards developed under the program are intended to improv I.B. History. The first edition of this standard was approved by the AWWA Board of Directors on January 17, 2010 and approved by ANSI on May 4, 2010. It was reaffirmed on June 9, 2013. This second edition was approved by the AWWA Board of Directors on Jan |
11 | I.C. Acceptance. No applicable information for this standard. II. Special Issues II.A. Advisory Information on Application of Standards. The J100 Standard is divided into two basic parts: (1) the Main Body of the standard and (2) the Appendices. Additional information that is advisory in nature, educational, and/or provides illustrati II.B. Possible Topics for Future Standards. Future revisions to the standard may include requirements and considerations for the following topical areas related to this standard: II.C. SAFETY Act Designation. The Support Anti-terrorism by Fostering Effective Technologies Act of 2002 (“SAFETY Act”) was enacted in the wake of the attacks of September 11, 2001. The SAFETY Act was created in part because of the extraordinarily large l |
12 | III. Use of This Standard III.A. Purchaser Options and Alternatives. There is no applicable information in this section. III.B. Modification to Standard. No applicable information for this section. III.C. Risk Assessment Technical Considerations and Comments. The fundamental methodology used in J100-10 is clarified but unchanged in J100-20, although many detailed improvements and clarifications have been included. Three aspects of the methodology at |
14 | IV. Major Revisions. The major changes made to the standard in this revision include the following: |
15 | V. Comments. If you have any comments or questions about this standard, please contact AWWA Engineering and Technical Services at 303.794.7711, FAX at 303.795.7603, write to the department at 6666 West Quincy Avenue, Denver, CO 80235-3098, or e-mail at st |
17 | AWWA Standard SECTION 1: GENERAL Sec. 1.1 Scope and Purpose Sec. 1.2 Jurisdiction |
18 | Sec. 1.3 Application SECTION 2: DEFINITIONS |
24 | SECTION 3: REFERENCES |
25 | SECTION 4: REQUIREMENTS 4.1 Asset Characterization |
27 | 4.2 Threat Characterization |
36 | 4.4 Vulnerability Analysis |
37 | 4.5 Threat Analysis |
46 | 4.6 Risk and Resilience Analysis |
53 | SECTION 5: PROCESS CONTROL |
54 | SECTION 6: VERIFICATION Sec. 6.3 Document Review Process |
55 | APPENDIX A Threat Background and Guidance for Threat Selection |
56 | Table A1. Examples of resources related to selected adversary categories (see notea below) |
57 | Table A2 Example motives and objectives for various adversaries |
58 | Table A3 Terrorist tactics* |
59 | Table A4 Factors that contribute to the attractiveness of a target* |
60 | Table A5 Local, regional, and national sources of information on threats |
63 | Table A7 J100 natural disaster reference threats |
64 | Table A8 J100 Dependency and natural threats |
83 | Expanded Bibliography |