South Pacific tsunami raises fresh questions about warning systems
THAILAND: A tsunami early warning system would have been of little
use for the thousands of people in the Solomon Islands hit by deadly
waves, since they had only minutes to escape, an American earthquake
expert said.
An Australian official meanwhile acknowledged that a tsunami warning
issued for the Queensland coast was undermined by widespread panic and a
lack of clear information about whether the waves were actually headed
their way.
âWe got the emergency people together and we were trying to
ascertain, âIs there really a tsunami coming, if so how big is it, and
how far are we going to need to encourage people to leave the
coastline?ââ Queensland Premier Peter Beattie told the Seven Network on
Tuesday.
âWe couldnât get that information. ... We didnât know the extent of
the problem. We were shooting blind,â Beattie said.
Critics said Mondayâs tsunami, which killed at least 28 people,
exposed the limitations of a warning system that supporters have
championed as the best means of avoiding a repeat of the 2004 Indian
Ocean disaster.
That disaster, which left some 230,000 people dead or missing in a
dozen countries, prompted the United Nations and six governmental
donors, including the United States, to create a US$130 million (euro97
million) Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning and Mitigation System, which is
expected to be operational at the end of 2008.
Indonesia, which was hit hardest by the 2004 disaster, is in the
process of installing dozens of tidal gauges and deep-ocean tsunami
monitoring buoys to detect tsunami waves as well as more than 150
seismometers to detect earthquakes.
The United Nationsâ Michael Rottmann, special coordinator for the
tsunami early warning system in Indonesia, told The Associated Press on
Tuesday that he is confident the system will alert most people within 10
minutes of an undersea temblor.
âI think a lot of lives can be saved if you have a warning in less
than 10 minutes,â Rottmann said, noting that it took 15 minutes for
waves from the 2004 quake to reach the coastline of Sumatra. âIf you
have five minutes and you have a reliable warning, you can get very far.
You could go up into a hill or get away from the beach.â
Yet critics of the early warning system are not confident.
U.S. earthquake expert Kerry Sieh, who has studied the 2004 disaster,
said coastal communities near a quake epicenter would be better off
putting their resources into disaster response education and efforts to
permanently relocate vulnerable communities to higher ground rather than
counting on an alert system to save them.
âWhen you have a tsunami coming in so quickly after an earthquake, it
doesnât do much good to have an early warning system,â he said. âIt
could still be valuable for people who are at greater distances. That is
the main reason for a warning system in the Pacific.â
Sieh said the South Pacific tsunami was a perfect example of the
âlimitsâ of such a system, since witnesses reported that a wall of water
5 meters (16 feet) high plowed into the Solomonsâ shores within about
five minutes of the quake.
Bangkok, Wednesday, AP |