The Jerusalem Post

Israeli missile-alert technology saves lives in Chile earthquake

Timely evacuation carried out with Netanya-based Evigilo

- • By MICHAEL ZEFF

An Israeli company, Evigilo, is behind Sunday’s mass evacuation from an earthquake in Chile, which likely saved thousands of lives from the temblor and subsequent tsunami that hit the country’s southern coast.

After a 7.7-magnitude earthquake was registered on Sunday by Chile’s naval oceanograp­hic service, Chile’s National Emergency Office ordered an evacuation of more than 4,000 residents and tourists from the nearby coastal areas in anticipati­on of a potential tsunami. The timely warning and evacuation alert were issued via the software platform of Netanya-based Evigilo to thousands of cellphones in the threatened area.

“Our company specialize­s in mass notificati­on and we have the ability to spread countless messages in seconds through any platform with a

digital signal,” eVigilo CEO Lior Shalev told

The Jerusalem Post. “Our platform is especially suitable for emergency situations and national crises. We have the ability to receive real-time signals from various sensors and convert them to different types of alerts – from cellular notificati­ons, to activating sirens or taking over television broadcasts – in accordance with the client’s needs.”

According to Shalev, eVigilo – founded in 2009 – aspires to provide a life-saving solution to the alarming increase in rocket fire directed at Israeli civilians from the Gaza Strip. After going through rigorous testing by the IDF that far exceeded industry testing benchmarks, the company’s software was introduced into the IDF Home Front Command.

“All the alert systems used by the IDF Home Front Command today, including their official app, are ours. A similar system was installed in Chile by us in 2012, following a 8.8-magnitude earthquake that hit in 2010 and a tsunami that claimed the lives of more than 560 individual­s,” Shalev told the Post.

According to Shalev, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet issued a government tender following the 2010 catastroph­e for companies offering solutions that would minimize the casualties of natural disasters. With the help of an Israeli businessma­n living in Chile, eVigilo applied for the government tender and won the bid.

Two years after the deployment of eVigilo’s system in Chile, an 8.3 Richter scale earthquake hit the country. This time, due to early warning, the disaster claimed the lives of only five victims. According to Chile’s National Emergency Office, Sunday’s earthquake ended with no reports of deaths or injuries, and the tsunami warning has since been lifted.

“The messages went out in time,” was the first thing that Bachelet said in a press conference after the tsunami. To Shalev, this is a testament to eVigilo’s credit and proof that their solution saved lives.

“Our software gets signals from sensors – in Israel these are IDF sensors that detect launches made in Gaza; in Chile these are underwater seismic sensors – and knows how to analyze them at high speed. It then decides which areas are under threat and issues mass alerts to anyone within the danger zone,” Shalev explained.

According to eVigilo, this ability to make distinctio­ns between geographic areas and even municipal precincts that are at risk and those that aren’t also saves government­s, municipali­ties and authoritie­s money and resources. Knowing what can happen, when and exactly where helps in faster recovery and allows for better control of the authoritie­s’ time and resource allocation­s.

“You don’t want to alert anyone who isn’t under threat so as to avoid ‘boy who cried wolf’ scenarios in the future. In Israel, they used to activate the sirens for an entire city, sending everyone to the shelters, but now, they know exactly which neighborho­ods and zones to alert. Yesterday in Chile, the seismic warnings were applicable only to the southern coastal strip, and so only people who were there got the alerts,” Shalev said.

Since its establishm­ent and proven field results in Israel and Chile, eVigilo has gained significan­t recognitio­n by the internatio­nal community. The Israeli company was selected by the EU Commission to co-develop a multi-channel alert system for tsunamis in Europe. •

 ?? (Juan Gonzalez/Reuters) ?? LIFEGUARDS WALK across an evacuated beach in Penco, Chile, on Sunday during a tsunami alert following an earthquake on Chiloé Island.
(Juan Gonzalez/Reuters) LIFEGUARDS WALK across an evacuated beach in Penco, Chile, on Sunday during a tsunami alert following an earthquake on Chiloé Island.

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