Quantifying Fire Risk Index in Chemical Industry Using Statistical Modeling Procedure
Hyewon Jung, Seungil Ahn, Seungho Choi, Yeseul Jeon
Published: 2025/9/26
Abstract
Fire incident reports contain detailed textual narratives that capture causal factors often overlooked in structured records, while financial damage amounts provide measurable outcomes of these events. Integrating these two sources of information is essential for uncovering interpretable links between descriptive causes and their economic consequences. To this end, we develop a data-driven framework that constructs a composite Risk Index, enabling systematic quantification of how specific keywords relate to property damage amounts. This index facilitates both the identification of high-impact terms and the aggregation of risks across semantically related clusters, thereby offering a principled measure of fire-related financial risk. Using more than a decade of Korean fire investigation reports on the chemical industry classified as Special Buildings (2013 through 2024), we employ topic modeling and network-based embedding to estimate semantic similarities from interactions among words and subsequently apply Lasso regression to quantify their associations with property damage amounts, thereby estimate fire risk index. This approach enables us to assess fire risk not only at the level of individual terms but also within their broader textual context, where highly interactive related words provide insights into collective patterns of hazard representation and their potential impact on expected losses. The analysis highlights several domains of risk, including hazardous chemical leakage, unsafe storage practices, equipment and facility malfunctions, and environmentally induced ignition. The results demonstrate that text-derived indices provide interpretable and practically relevant insights, bridging unstructured narratives with structured loss information and offering a basis for evidence-based fire risk assessment and management.