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| | | Tsunami warning systems |
Maintained by IOC
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| The swiftness with which the intensely destructive power of a tsunami can be visited upon geographically vulnerable coastal communities presents an awesome challenge to the national agencies and local authorities charged with emergency and natural disaster planning and operations. However, detecting and tracking a tsunami is a complicated task, one that requires the cooperation of the scientific community, as well as international cooperation between the states that are at risk. The tsunamis caused by earthquakes in 1960 (SE Pacific) and 1964 (NE Pacific) resulted in numerous human casualties and millions of dollars in damage to property and infrastructure in at least 4 countries. These disasters resulted in the establishment of the Tsunami Warning System (TWS) in the Pacific in 1965 under the leadership of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC), and hosted by the American's regional Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) in Honolulu, Hawai'i. The TWS is an international collaboration and has been designed to issue a confirmed tsunami warning less than an hour after the occurrence of a potentially tsunamogenic earthquake. The regional warning systems of Chile, France, Japan, the USA and the Russian Federation all contribute to the operations of the TWS. | | | Although tsunamis are a relatively infrequently occurring natural disaster, and 85% of these events happen in the Pacific, the Indian Ocean tsunamis (26 December 2004) that hit 11 nations, caused billions of dollars in damage and claimed over 150,000 lives clearly demonstrated that a vigilant warning system is necessary not only for the Pacific region, but for all the vulnerable regions of the world's oceans, including: both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean, Caribbean and Black Seas and in the Indian Ocean. In some of these regions, efforts have already been launched for the establishment of warning systems in these areas. IOC/ITSU, who operate the TWS in the Pacific provides information and guidance, and shares knowledge and experience with the IOC Member States of these regions. NOAA has taken on the task of increased capabilities for rapid dissemination of warnings in the near term to a longer-term goal of designing and putting in place a global tsunami warning and mitigation system. | | Photo title: Tsunami buoy deployed by the research vessel Ronald H Brown | | Photo credit: NOAA | | | | The first element of a tsunami warning system is monitoring: seismic monitoring and corresponding sea level monitoring. Another necessary element of a warning system is accessible data on previous tsunamis that can be referenced against the results of the seismic and sea level monitoring. Accordingly, the Historical Tsunami Database for the Pacific has been established and is maintained by the Novosibirsk Tsunami Laboratory of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Finally, a coordinated routine of communication between monitoring stations, the warning centre and at-risk states must exist to ensure the efficient information delivery of a tsunami warning system. The products of a tsunami warning system are accurate assessments and timely warnings, and while these products are fundamental to any disaster mitigation planning, a warning system represents only the first step on the precipitous road to tsunami preparedness. However, the more reliable and detailed the data from the warning system is, the more confident and precise the civil authorities charged with drafting and implementing corresponding emergency measures can be.
See More... | | |  | | Photo title: Aceh, Indonesia following the tsunami | | Photo credit: NBC.com | | | | |
 | | | |  | Update from U.N. Secretary-General on Tsunami
Press Conference by Kofi Annan 07 January 2005 |  |
| | Informative page updated daily. Outlines actions by all UN agencies to address the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami. | |
Read more at http://www.un.org/News/ossg/hilites.htm.
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