Transcript Document

The Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning
System : A Progress Report.
Patricio A. Bernal, Executive Secretary IOC
Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission
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UN role
Define the proper scale of the problem and its
solution.
The system must be:
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Fully owned by the Indian Ocean Rim countries
Based on international multilateral cooperation
Based on the open and free exchange of data
Protect all countries in the Indian Ocean Basin
Transparent and accountable to all members
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How does it function?
Is based on the joint operation of international
networks of detection connected with national
tsunami warning centres
UN governance provided under the IOC
Each nation is responsible for issuing warnings
in their territory and protect its own population.
National centres must have strong links with
emergency preparedness authorities (national,
provincial and local)
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Where are we now?
A single system being planned
All countries of the Indian Ocean participate
Tsunami advisory information provided from centres
in Hawaii and Tokyo.
National focal points designated in 14 nations
Governance of UN/IOC accepted in Paris
Full scope of the task recognized: multi-nation (27),
multi-year (>3)
Beyond the emergency: transition to reconstruction
and development phase.
Joint UN implementation: IOC,WMO,ISDR,UNDP
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Timeline 2005
Ja F M A M J Jul A S O N D Ja F
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Implementation Interim System IOC-WMO-ISDR
Implementation full system 2005-2006
•Jan 25-26: China-ASEAN Beijing Workshop
•Jan 28-29: Ministerial Meeting, Phuket, Thailand
•Feb 16: EOS III/GEOSS, Brussels
•Feb 22-24 Tokyo Seminar senior Officers Affected countries.
•Feb 28-March 2: Workshop NHK and Asian Broadcasting Union
•March 3-8: IOC 1st Regional Technical Coordination Meeting, Paris
•March 6-19: JICA/ADRC training course, Tokyo
•March 14-16: WMO GTS workshop, Jakarta, Indonesia
•April 14-16: IOC 2nd Regional Coordination Meeting, Mauritius
•June 21 IOC General Assembly, Paris: Formal establishment IOTWS
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Implementation
Fast-track, based on existing networks seismographic
and sea-level.
CTBTO broadcasting data experimentally
Sea-level GLOSS network being upgraded
Communication channels being provided through
existing operators (GTS of WMO)
Plans for full-fledged system to be completed: technical
group been convened
Interim solution operating in October or before
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SEISMOGRAPHIC NETWORK
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Indian Ocean GLOSS
WHITE CROSS retransmission to PTWC via
GTS
Select station from map for data display.
There are 9 GLOSS sites with hourly real-time data, 11 additional sites with hourly fast
delivery data, 10 sites with hourly data later than 1999, 2 sites with hourly data before 1999,
15 sites with monthly data later than 1999, and 8 sites with monthly data before 1999.
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Deep Sea P Sensor
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Deep-sea pressure sensors (Germany)
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Suggested global distribution of deep sea
pressure sensors (to be defined)
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Suggested improvement of seismographic
network in Indonesia (Germany)
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Suggested placement of new seismographic
and deep sea pressure sensors (India)
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Suggested real-time sea level stations
(India)
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Surface Currents (India)
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Beyond the immediate response:
Planning the extension to Global Coverage
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Caribbean Region (IOCARIBE)
South West Pacific (Australia)
South-China Sea (WESTPAC/ASEAN)
Mediterranean: France, Spain Portugal
Algeria
• Strengthening of the Pacific System,
Atlantic/Caribbean (USA, Senate Bill 50)
• ITSU October 2005 (Valparaíso, Chile)
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Beyond the immediate response:
Multi-hazard platform
• Storm – surges (IOC, WMO, JCOMM-)
• Tropical storms (WMO, JCOMM)
• Improving Storm and cyclones track forecasts
(IOC, WMO, JCOMM)
• Ice Hazard (IOC, WMO, JCOMM)
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Issues requiring support
• Donor Coordination: Financial pledges to project
extending Tsunami coverage to the 27 nations of
Indian Ocean Rim beyond 2005 and to a multihazard platform (TSU-REG-05/CSS10 – Region)
• Deep-sea pressure sensors technology (DART’s
availability).
• Facilitating free exchange of national data for the
protection of life and property.
• Communication channels for increased number of
instrumental platforms (Geo-stationary Meteo Sats.)
• Support for the establishment of an IOC Operational
Centre for disaster management
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