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Swiss expert spearheads quake surveillance

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  • Swiss expert spearheads quake surveillance

    Swissinfo / Neue Zürcher Zeitung AG
    Dienstag, 18. Januar 2005

    Swiss expert spearheads quake surveillance


    The head of the Swiss Seismological Service says early-warning
    systems are needed to prevent disasters like the Asian tsunami from
    happening again.

    As the World Conference on Disaster Reduction gets underway in
    Japan, Domenico Giardini talks to swissinfo about the challenges
    facing the international community following the catastrophe.

    Millions of people were caught off-guard on December 26, when an
    undersea quake off the coast of Sumatra sent killer waves crashing
    into coastlines across southeast Asia.

    Here in Switzerland, the national seismological service relies on a
    network of monitoring stations to localise and measure the magnitude
    of earthquakes deep beneath the country's surface.

    The organisation also forms part of a wider, worldwide network of
    observation centres, including the European-Mediterranean
    Seismological Centre and the Federation of Digital Broadband
    Seismograph Networks (FDSN).

    Giardini, who heads both the Swiss service and the FDSN, says local
    and international alert systems play an integral role in saving
    lives.

    swissinfo: How does the international community of seismologists work
    together to monitor the earth's activity?
    Domenico Giardini: Before the earthquake on December 26, we had two
    meetings on our agenda - this week's World Conference on Disaster
    Reduction in Kobe, Japan, and the 3rd Earth Observation Summit, which
    is due to take place next month in Brussels.

    Originally, the meeting in Kobe aimed to come up with a ten-year
    action plan to improve the gathering and distribution of information
    about our planet. But after the quake off the coast of Sumatra, the
    focus of the meeting's agenda shifted to include a special session on
    the tsunami. Countries will also be discussing the creation of
    early-warning systems in the Indian Ocean, as well as the
    Mediterranean and the Atlantic.

    swissinfo: How would such a system work?
    D.G.: We would have to create a network of seismic sensors and
    install ways to measure underwater landslides, which can also cause
    major tidal waves. We would also employ instruments that can measure
    the energy of such waves. That said, a global-warning system is not
    enough... local-alert systems also need to be established to keep
    at-risk populations informed about seismic activity.

    swissinfo: What is Switzerland's role in the seismological field?
    D.G.: In cooperation with the Swiss Agency for Development and
    Cooperation (SDC), we work a lot with developing countries, such as
    Armenia, Georgia, Chile and Colombia, to maintain
    earthquake-surveillance systems. We're also in the process of
    establishing a national monitoring network in Tajikistan, as well as
    a surveillance system at Egypt's Aswan Dam.

    We're also studying the possibility of providing similar support to
    other developing nations and we're looking into ways of improving the
    protection of the Swiss abroad. For example, an automatic-alert
    network using the Short Messaging System (SMS) might be an option.

    swissinfo: What gaps need to be filled here in Switzerland?
    D.G.: The alarm systems and protection measures against natural
    disasters are very advanced in this country. But we lack ways of
    preventing tidal waves on our big lakes from causing serious damage...
    and that danger exists. For example, the 1601 earthquake in Lucerne
    caused waves that were two to three metres high.

    Tidal waves can also be caused by landslides, and cities like Geneva
    and Zurich, which lie at the end of large lakes, could experience
    major damage should a landslide occur.

    swissinfo-interview: Frédéric Burnand
    From: Baghdasarian
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