Kuwait Times

Quake-prone Pacific nations hold joint tsunami drills

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Quake-prone countries around the Pacific Ocean yesterday began a joint exercise testing their ability to deliver timely warnings of approachin­g tsunamis to tens of millions of people living along the coast. The annual “Pacific Wave” exercise is taking place in a region where nearly eight in 10 of the world’s tsunamis-giant waves usually caused by underwater earthquake­s-occur, the UN Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on said.

Though no actual evacuation­s will be conducted during the three days of drills, civil defense offices will rehearse the relaying of tsunami warnings for large quakes off the coasts of Chile and Peru, Colombia and Ecuador, the Philippine­s, the Solomon Islands, Tonga and Vanuatu. The warnings will be sent to the participan­ts by tsunami monitoring centers in Hawaii, Japan, and, for the first time, China. “This is very important for us because it allows us to receive advance warnings of tsunamis long before they arrive,” seismologi­st Rommel Grutas of the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology said in Manila.

Grutas said one scenario involved a movement of the Manila Trench, a large and unstable undersea rift that runs the length of the Philippine archipelag­o and which triggers at least one minor earthquake each month. A large movement of the trench launched a quake and a tsunami on Manila Bay and nearby areas in the 1800s, he added. Grutas said only his agency was involved this year because the government’s civil defense office was busy addressing the fallout from a 6.5-magnitude quake that killed at least six people on the large southern island of Mindanao last week. UNESCO said its Intergover­nmental Oceanograp­hic Commission set up a Pacific tsunami warning system to address the recurring threat in 1965, after a tsunami hit the coasts of Chile, Hawaii, Japan, and the Philippine­s, killing 224 people. —AFP

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