Waterloo Region Record

Warning system might have saved lives in tsunami

Prototype stalled in testing phase for years

- STEPHEN WRIGHT

MAKASSAR, INDONESIA — An early warning system that might have prevented some deaths in the tsunami that hit an Indonesian island on Friday has been stalled in the testing phase for years.

The high-tech system of sea floor sensors, data-laden sound waves and fiberoptic cable was meant to replace a system set up after an earthquake and tsunami killed nearly 250,000 people in the region in 2004. But interagenc­y wrangling and delays in getting just 1 billion rupiah ($69,000 US) to complete the project mean the system hasn’t moved beyond a prototype developed with $3 million from the U.S. National Science Foundation. It is too late for central Sulawesi, where walls of water up to six metres high and a magnitude 7.5 earthquake killed more than 800 people in the cities of Palu and Donggala, tragically highlighti­ng the weaknesses of the existing warning system and low public awareness about how to respond to warnings.

“To me this is a tragedy for science, even more so a tragedy for the Indonesian people as the residents of Sulawesi are discoverin­g right now,” said Louise Comfort, a University of Pittsburgh expert in disaster management who has led the U.S. side of the project, which also involves engineers from the Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institute and Indonesian scientists and disaster experts. “It’s a heartbreak to watch when there is a well-designed sensor network that could provide critical informatio­n,” she said.

After a 2004 tsunami killed 230,000 people in a dozen countries, more than half of them in the Indonesian province of Aceh, a concerted internatio­nal effort was launched to improve tsunami warning capabiliti­es, particular­ly in the Indian Ocean and for Indonesia, one of world’s most earthquake and tsunami-prone countries.

The backbone of Indonesia’s tsunami warning system today is a network of 134 tidal gauge stations augmented by land-based seismograp­hs, sirens in about 55 locations and a system to disseminat­e warnings by text message.

 ?? ARIMACS WILANDER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman is rescued Sunday from a damaged house after an earthquake and a tsunami in Palu, Indonesia. .
ARIMACS WILANDER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman is rescued Sunday from a damaged house after an earthquake and a tsunami in Palu, Indonesia. .

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