4.7 Article

A benchmarking exercise for environmental contours

Journal

OCEAN ENGINEERING
Volume 236, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.oceaneng.2021.109504

Keywords

Environmental contour; Metocean extremes; Joint distribution; Extreme response; Structural reliability

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration [DE-NA0003525]

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This paper presents the results of an open benchmarking exercise where different environmental contour methods were blindly compared. The analysis showed significant differences between contours derived via different methods, with variability mainly arising from different joint distribution models and contour construction methods. The highest wave height value along a contour and the number of metocean data points outside a contour differed significantly between submissions.
Environmental contours are used to simplify the process of design response analysis. A wide variety of contour methods exist; however, there have been a very limited number of comparisons of these methods to date. This paper is the output of an open benchmarking exercise, in which contributors developed contours based on their preferred methods and submitted them for a blind comparison study. The exercise had two components- one, focusing on the robustness of contour methods across different offshore sites and, the other, focusing on characterizing sampling uncertainty. Nine teams of researchers contributed to the benchmark. The analysis of the submitted contours highlighted significant differences between contours derived via different methods. For example, the highest wave height value along a contour varied by as much as a factor of two between some submissions while the number of metocean data points or observations that fell outside a contour deviated by an order of magnitude between the contributions (even for contours with a return period shorter than the duration of the record). These differences arose from both different joint distribution models and different contour construction methods, however, variability from joint distribution models appeared to be higher than variability from contour construction methods.

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