(Sify News) 
 
How the tsunami warning system works 
 
By Richard Ingham in Paris 
Wednesday, 05 January , 2005, 10:29 
 
A tsunami alert system is a combination of real-time
sensors, data-crunching computers, orbiting satellites
-- and the nuts-and-bolts task of training the public
to respond to warnings. 
This mix of silicon and psychology is already in place
in the Pacific Ocean and will be the format for
providing the Indian Ocean with its own early-warning
system, experts say. 

The first political steps towards setting up a
regional warning network are likely to be taken at a
major summit in Jakarta on Thursday to discuss the
relief effort for the December 26 disaster. 
 

That will be followed up with technical work among
large countries at the final day of a UN-sponsored
World Conference on Disaster Reduction, taking place
in Kobe, Japan, from January 18-22, the organisers
told AFP Tuesday. 

"A tsunami early warning system is not a top-down,
instrument-only initiative," Reid Basher of the UN's
International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (ISDR)
told AFP in an interview from Bonn. 

"The biggest challenge is how to get the message
across to people at risk and to get them to respond."
The matrix for the Indian Ocean network is the Tsunami
Warning System (TWS), operating in the Pacific since
1968. 

When an earthquake occurs, participating states send
seismic data to a centre based in Hawaii, which
assesses whether the temblor's location and severity
could generate a tsunami. 

If so, it sends out a warning of an imminent hazard,
detailing the wave's predicted arrival at estimated
coastal locations within a given time. This
information is supplemented by tidal gauges, buoys and
pressure sensors that are scattered around coastlines
and on the ocean floor. 

These detect the passage of a big wave and radio the
data back to the national and regional centre, thus
fine-tuning knowledge as to the size of the wave, its
direction and speed. If no wave is detected, the
warning is cancelled. 

In many countries, setting up the system of
seismographs and wave monitors will be the biggest
expense, said Basher. 

"In many places, the existing instruments are used for
scientific research or as historical gauges of sea
levels. They have to be upgraded, so that they provide
real fast, real-time monitoring." 

But hi tech is only one phase of a tsunami alert
system. A country may well receive an early warning,
several hours or more before a Great Wave strikes. 

But to make use of it, that country has to have an
efficient national alert system, with equipment which
functions, with competent officials and a public
trained to respond swiftly and without panic, Basher
said. 

 

It means carrying out awareness campaigns in homes,
schools, hospitals and businesses in vulnerable
regions. 

This is the time-honoured business of using posters,
radio and TV messages and carrying out occasional
training exercises, advising people to evacuate to
higher ground, not to head to the beach to watch the
incoming wave and to stay tuned to local media until
the emergency is over. 

For a monitoring system to operate in the Indian
Ocean, "at least four or five countries" would be
needed to pool their efforts. Fewer than that means
there would be insufficient coverage of the region,
said Basher. He put costs at "at least a few million"
dollars per country per year. 

Such investment is worth it, says Frank Gonzalez, a
tsunami researcher at the US National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration's Pacific Marine
Environmental Laboratory in Seattle. "The commitment
needed is not insignificant for a country or an
international community, but there is no doubt in my
mind that tens of thousands of lives would have been
saved in Asia," he said last week. 

The Indian Ocean is not the only place to be lacking a
tsunami alert. The system is also absent in the
Mediterranean and Atlantic, both of which are
vulnerable to rare but potentially murderous giant
waves, according to scientists. 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 


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