Bangkok Post

JAPAN’S VAUNTED ALERT SYSTEM RUNS UP AGAINST LIMITS OF TECHNOLOGY

Residents complain they have no time to find shelter even when the missile and earthquake warnings they receive are legitimate

- By Shingo Ito

On Jan 5, as Tokyo’s commuters were struggling back to work after their long New Year break, blaring sirens from every phone pierced the sleepy atmosphere: “strong” earthquake coming. The message delivered via the country’s alert system, part of its much-hyped J-Alert mechanism, warned of a big one directly hitting the Japanese capital - potentiall­y on the scale of the devastatin­g 2011 earthquake that wrought massive destructio­n.

Millions braced for impact... but it never came. It turned out that the system, which aims to give a precious few seconds to find shelter before a major earthquake strikes, had been tricked by an unusual seismologi­cal coincidenc­e.

Two minor tremors struck at almost exactly the same time in separate locations, making the alert system mistakenly believe a massive jolt was on its way, the meteorolog­ical agency admitted.

Even Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was caught off-guard — with TV footage showing him checking his phone as alarms echoed in his office ahead of a cabinet meeting.

It was not the first false alarm for the system, a major component of Japan’s J-Alert launched with great fanfare in 2007 as a way to save lives in a country constantly under threat of earthquake­s and — more recently — North Korean missiles.

Several countries have introduced similar early warning systems for major earthquake­s, with most focused on a particular, quakeprone area.

But Japan’s system is unique in its breadth of coverage, said Issei Suganuma, a scientific officer at the meteorolog­ical agency.

“Our system covers the entire country with some 1,000 observatio­n points across the nation,” he said proudly.

At the agency’s Tokyo headquarte­rs, at least seven uniformed officers keep watch around the clock in the earthquake observatio­n room.

Large screens hang on the walls showing realtime seismic waveform data.

In the case of a cataclysmi­c earthquake, they detect initial minor tremors through seismomete­rs and immediatel­y warn local government­s via J-Alert seconds before the first strong jolt is felt.

The agency also directly sends SMS messages and whooping alarms to local residents’ phones.

Broadcaste­rs receive signals to flash breaking news alerts and bullet train services are immediatel­y suspended.

When the 9.0-magnitude earthquake hit Japan in 2011, the system successful­ly warned residents between six and 40 seconds before the first major jolt.

The J-Alert system also warns of missiles, particular­ly relevant during a rise in tensions with North Korea last year.

In the case of a missile launch, US spy satellites or Japanese Aegis ships detect the initial signals and transmit them to Japan’s defence ministry.

The ministry swiftly plots the course and speed of the missiles before the prime minister’s office triggers the system, issuing a warning between two and five minutes before they fly over the country.

With the 2020 Tokyo Olympics looming and 40 million tourists expected to visit, the government has started providing alerts in multiple languages through a “safety tips” app.

But J-Alert has also faced criticism. In addition to technical difficulti­es that can result in false alarms, many feel the warnings do not come soon enough.

When North Korean missiles flew over Japan in August and September, residents complained there was no time to find shelter.

“We were told to go inside a stable building or undergroun­d, but how can we find such places in a few minutes?” said Atsuko Koide, 64, a housewife in Akita, northern Japan.

“It’s especially useless for elderly people who can’t move quickly,” Ms Koide said.

A government survey conducted last year found just five percent of respondent­s actually evacuated or took protective measures in response to the missile warnings.

Some respondent­s said they had no time or did not know where to go, while others said evacuation was pointless.

“J-Alert alone is not good enough,” said Mitsuru Fukuda, professor of risk management at Nihon University in Tokyo.

“It is clear that there is a limit to what the country and local government­s can do,” Mr Fukuda said.

Mr Fukuda urged authoritie­s to raise people’s awareness of the measures they can take to protect themselves before government help arrives, saying: “It is individual­s who decide and act after a warning.”

Following the false alarm earlier this year, the meteorolog­ical agency has introduced a new analysis tool to avoid mistaking multiple smaller quakes for a single big one.

However, agency officer Suganuma acknowledg­ed the system’s limitation­s.

“Since we have to issue a warning in quite a limited time, sometimes things may not go as planned.... It’s hard to achieve 100 percent for sure,” he said.

 ??  ?? PREPARED FOR ACTION: Residents, office and shop workers at and around the Roppongi Hills shopping complex taking part in a disaster drill in Tokyo.
PREPARED FOR ACTION: Residents, office and shop workers at and around the Roppongi Hills shopping complex taking part in a disaster drill in Tokyo.
 ??  ?? GETTING IN SUPPLIES: Left and right, residents respond in a disaster drill to warnings from Japan’s J-Alert system, launched with great fanfare in 2007 as a way to save lives in a country constantly under threat of earthquake­s and North Korean missiles.
GETTING IN SUPPLIES: Left and right, residents respond in a disaster drill to warnings from Japan’s J-Alert system, launched with great fanfare in 2007 as a way to save lives in a country constantly under threat of earthquake­s and North Korean missiles.
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