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25/12/2005 | White House unveils plan to fight tsunamis

John Heilprin

Hoping to protect U.S. shores from being hammered by a tsunami, the White House directed federal agencies Friday to increase earthquake and volcano monitoring systems, deep ocean buoys and other high-tech means of alerting oceanside communities.

 

The tsunami plan was requested by President Bush and Congress after an earthquake on Dec. 26, 2004, caused a massive tsunami in the Indian Ocean. It killed or left missing at least 216,000 people in 11 Indian Ocean countries, and “demonstrated international vulnerability,” said John Marburger, Bush’s top science adviser.

“Tsunamis are low-probability but high-impact events,” he said.
The tsunami rose a massive 30 feet. Sumatra was the hardest hit, losing about 128,000 people. But the great wave also traveled around the world, and was recorded as far away as Peru and northeastern Canada.

Marburger, who directs the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, said U.S.-led improvements in tsunami detection and warning since a year ago made people safer at home and work,
and the new plan will further reduce risks to life and property.

Congress appropriated $24 million in May for a better U.S. tsunami system.

An international tsunami expert, however, said more high-tech warning buoys won’t make a difference unless more cities and towns prepare, so people know where to seek shelter. He also urged more land-use planning to avoid building schools and hospitals near ocean shores.

“If we’re talking about saving lives, we’re really talking about preparing local communities,” said Harry Yeh, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Oregon State University in Corvallis.
“When a tsunami happens, it will take 30 minutes or less. So how you can rely on a top-down official warning system from the buoy?”

Specifically, the plan written by the president’s National Science and Technology Council directs federal agencies to:
• Develop risk assessments of the potential tsunami hazards for all U.S. coastal regions.

• Increase the number of tsunami buoys, tide gauge and seismic sensors feeding real-time data into computer models to improve tsunami forecasting and warning systems along Pacific, Atlantic, Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico coastlines.

• Give technical help to improve warning systems for tsunamis and other hazards in the Indian Ocean.

• Encourage communities to develop tsunami response plans, and to build and plan in ways that can reduce the effect of a future tsunami.

In the past year, scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have led efforts to expand the U.S. tsunami detection network.

NOAA Administrator Conrad Lautenbacher has pushed to grow the network from six to now 10 tsunami buoys. Located off the Aleutian Islands, the Washington and Oregon coasts and South America, the buoys send warning signals if they sense a change in sea level.

That network was first developed more than a half-century ago. In 1946, a tsunami starting in the Aleutian Islands struck Hawaii, killing more than 150 people. In response came Hawaii’s warning system and, in 1949, its Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.

The Olympian (Estados Unidos)

 



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