Tsunami: A technology blunder 
 
As thousands perish due to the gigantic killer wave,
fingers point at forecasting agencies, ill-equipped to
predict such calamities. 
Shrikanth G 

Tuesday, December 28, 2004 

 
CHENNAI: If technology and tsunami had gone hand in
hand on December 26, 2004, may be more than 12,000
lives would have been saved all across South-East
Asia. The killer tsunami that also struck South India,
claimed more than 7000 lives and scores are still
missing till reports last came in. 

Worst hit was Tamil Nadu and Port Blair. In Chennai's
Marina beach, scores of people have perished.
Thousands have disappeared in Cuddalore, Nagapatnam,
and Kanyakumari. Even as people in Chennai come into
grips of this mindless fury of nature, questions are
being asked about the role metrological agencies play
in forecasting such calamities in advance.


Tsunami Warning Systems (TWS) has been in vogue since
the 1960's and has been in use in the Pacific Ocean in
the US island of Hawaii. The TWS in Honolulu
commissioned in 1965 by the Intergovernmental
Oceanographic Commission (IOC) is the fruition of
efforts by various countries and predictions are
arrived by collaborating with other centers in Chile,
France, Japan, and Russia. 

The TWS predicts an impending Tsunami by closely
monitoring the seismic movements and the corresponding
sea level increase after significant earthquakes. Over
the years the historical data of tsunamis in Pacific
Ocean has also been mapped and managed by the
Novosibirsk Tsunami Laboratory at the Russian Academy
of Sciences enabling the coastal cities in the West to
survive a tsunami attack. Unfortunately, the killer
tsunami that stuck the Asian countries is out of the
Pacific TWS network. If any of the South East Asian
countries had deployed similar TWS systems and
networked other Asian geographies, fatalities would
have been on a lesser scale.


Need better forecasting
The metrological agencies across the countries
spanning Thailand, Malaysia, India had grossly failed
in sensing wave patterns in the aftermath of the
Sumatra earthquake. Even a simple common sense
approach that earthquakes were followed by heightened
oceanic activity is missing from the forecasting
agencies in predicting this calamity. While
earthquakes cannot be predicted in all cases, tidal
activities can. While, some put the blame game on the
met agencies one has to also factor that seas
surrounding South India are not known for violent
behavior and hence, nobody might have imagined such a
thing will actually happen here. Notwithstanding, all
countries, which have a huge coastline, have to
implement TWS that not only predicts tsunamis, but
also at the same time can give valuable insights on
post seismic tidal activities.


The need for TWS in India is most pressing,
considering the mind-boggling speed and violence of
the tsunami. For instance, tsunamis can reach speeds
of 497 miles per hour when it hits land. During the
tsunami that hit Chile in 1960, the waves reached
Japan within 24 hours, which is 10,439 miles from
Chile. The tsunami that hit south India clearly
demonstrates that coastal regions are vulnerable to
such calamities and an earthquake in any one of the
hundreds of islands in the Indian Ocean region might
trigger tsunamis in the future. Irrespective of the
future tsunami threats, India should learn from the
current crisis and adopt a strategy for reacting to
such calamities in the future.


The IT impact
It would be rather crude to ponder over the question
as to whether Chennai will loose its IT sheen due to
the impact of the natural calamity. While the loss of
men and material is appalling, the larger impact will
set in the days ahead. At this point in time, most of
the IT heads we spoke to said that it is business as
usual and that they will in some way help or
contribute towards the relief operations. 

However, if there is a sequel to the tsunami in
Chennai, then most companies will surely look beyond
the human angle. For instance, the Old Mahabalipuram
Road that runs parallel to the Bay of Bengal is home
to major IT companies like Cognizant, Infosys and TCS
among others. As the sea is actually, a good distance
away from these IT companies, they are an unlikely
target for tsunamis. But, Chennai can lose its
impression of being a 'safe place' to set up disaster
recovery sites (DRS) as bigger tsunamis than this, can
travel many miles inland. 

Despite the very low threat perception right now, the
fear of tsunamis re-occurring anytime will gain
credence. This probably will prompt the companies to
move DRS sites, which are near coastal areas in
Chennai. However, an immediate fallout on IT is
unlikely as some in the industry draw analogy to the
Silicon Valley in California, which itself is situated
in an earthquake prone area. With IT and other
economic consequences being secondary, at this point
in time, one can only hope that Chennai and other
parts of the state and country, will pull through one
of the most tragic human disasters to occur in the
recent times.

CyberMedia News

 



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Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. www.ppi-india.uni.cc
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