TOKYO: Earthquake-prone Japan will start issuing several seconds’ warning of approaching big earthquakes from Monday in the hope of reducing casualties and damage, although some fear the new system will lead to panic.
One thousand seismometers around the country will monitor the advancing waves of tremors and prompt warnings through TV and radio if the quake is a strong one likely to collapse walls and break windows.
Experts say the system, the first of its kind in the world, could save lives as it gives people time to hide under a table or in a doorway before an earthquake hits.
It could also prompt trains, elevators and factories to stop operating, limiting damage in Japan, where 20 per cent of the world’s big quakes are recorded and where Tokyo is said to be long overdue for a major tremor.
However, private radio stations have elected not to join the scheme for six months, amid concerns it might spark panic in trains, theatres, stores and other places where crowds gather.
“If an alert was issued to subway passengers during rush hours for example, it could create huge chaos,” said Takehiko Yamamura, the president of the Disaster Prevention System Institute, a private think tank.
“If someone is driving a car at 100 kph on a highway and receives an alert through radio and others on the same highway don’t get the information, what will happen?” he said.
But the Japanese government, which has been testing the system for more than a year, says the risk of deaths and damage from quakes means it is worth going ahead.
Japan still recalls with horror a quake in 1923 that killed more than 140,000 people in Tokyo, many in blazes sparked by cooking fires, while a 7.2 magnitude quake in the western port city of Kobe killed more than 6,400 people in 1995.
The Tokyo city government has said an earthquake in the capital of a similar magnitude to the Kobe one could kill more than 7,000 people and injure close to 160,000.
“The warning system is not omnipotent. This is not a system to predict or prevent earthquakes,” said Toshihiro Shimoyama, a seismologist at the meteorological agency. “It can alert people only several seconds to dozens of seconds before tremors actually reach the areas they live in.”—Reuters