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Japanese exports rise for 2nd month after tsunami
Posted on 23. Oct, 2011 by admin in Blog News
Japan says that exports rose 2.4 percent in September compared with a
year earlier, marking the second consecutive month of growth. Read More Japanese exports rise for 2nd month after tsunami
Latin Americans evacuate, but no tsunami damage
Posted on 11. Mar, 2011 by admin in Blog News
Islanders and coastal residents along Latin America’s Pacific seaboard moved to higher ground Friday as a precaution against possible tsunami following the superquake that bashed northeastern Japan with huge waves. Read More Latin Americans evacuate, but no tsunami damage
Norway gives 1m to tsunami and Merapi victims
Posted on 10. Nov, 2010 by admin in Blog News
Norway announced US$1 million of assistance recently for the emergency relief efforts in disaster-affected areas. Read More Norway gives 1m to tsunami and Merapi victims
Tsunami death toll nears 450
Posted on 31. Oct, 2010 by admin in Blog News
The death toll from Monday’s tsunami that devastated the Mentawai
Islands, West Sumatra has reached 449 as of 12:24 local time on Sunday,
an official said Read More Tsunami death toll nears 450
Indonesia struggles as tsunami, volcano tolls rise
Posted on 27. Oct, 2010 by admin in Blog News
Helicopters with emergency
supplies finally landed Wednesday on remote Indonesian islands
slammed by a tsunami that killed more than 300 people, while
elsewhere in the archipelago the toll from a … Read More Indonesia struggles as tsunami, volcano tolls rise
Tsunami survivors without tents
Posted on 27. Oct, 2010 by admin in Blog News
Hundreds of survivors of tsunami killer wave that swept Mentawai Island off
West Sumatra have sought refuge at a hill on nearby Pagai Island without
tents that will protect them from chilling … Read More Tsunami survivors without tents
Mentawai tsunami kills 108 scores more missing
Posted on 26. Oct, 2010 by admin in Blog News
A tsunami that pounded several of the Mentawai Islands in West Sumatra
killed at least 108 people left more than 500 people missing, Mentawai
Legislative Council Speaker Hendri Dori said Tuesday. Read More Mentawai tsunami kills 108 scores more missing
Joint tsunami alert system to be ready by 2011
Posted on 16. Apr, 2010 by admin in Blog News
The 28 countries touching the Indian Ocean will form a joint tsunami alert network in 2011, which will compliment and eventually replace the current warning systems operated by the United States an
Tsunami warning lifted Waves reach Japan, Russia
Posted on 28. Feb, 2010 by admin in Blog News
The tsunami from Chile’s deadly earthquake hit
Japan’s main islands and the shores of Russia on Sunday, but the
smaller-than-expected waves prompted the lifting of a Pacific-wide
alert.
Tsunami Hits Coastal Communities Across Southeast Asia, Killing an Estimated 275,000 People
Posted on 13. Dec, 2009 by admin in Blog News
On December 26, 2004 the Asian Tsunami hit the coastal regions of Southeast Asia. It was the result of the second largest and longest lasting underwater earthquake ever recorded, and has since been referred to as the single worst tsunami on record.
The earthquake that generated this tsunami reached a magnitude of 9.3 on the Richter scale and lasted for between 500 and 600 seconds. The wave caused by this quake did massive damage to parts of Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, and Thailand, with crests reaching a maximum height of 100 feet.
The damage that resulted from this tsunami was extensive. Repairs to the area are ongoing, and are estimated to take five to ten years to complete. Widespread damage to local infrastructure, shortages of food and water, and the potential for disease create additional risks. 186,983 people where killed, and 14,100 where reported missing. A further 1,126,900 people were rendered homeless, requiring massive relief efforts to ensure that those that survived the tsunami did not suffer from other causes, resulting from the extensive damage created by the wave.
The social impact of this tsunami was significant as well. Tourism to the area was quashed: travelers no longer wanted to visit the Southeast Asian coasts. Local families where devastated; many lost the major income earners, and in some cases whole families where completely wiped out.
There was a massive economic impact as a result of this tsunami. The local infrastructure, including roads, utilities, and food supplies where totally destroyed or extensively damaged requiring much needed and very costly repairs. The coastal fishing communities lost laborers, as well as boats, traps and other gear. It was estimated that 66% of the total fishing fleet was wiped out. Shipping through the Malacca Straights was affected by changing depths, the drifting of shipping buoys, and the shifting or movement of old shipwrecks. Salt from the sea water contaminated local fresh water supplies and farm land, in some cases rendering it useless for what may become many years. Seven billion dollars in financial aid was pumped into the area by the international community. Even now tourism has only just begun to return to the region.
To think that something as simple as a very large wave could cause damage of such a magnitude is beyond what most people can begin to imagine. Most of us think little about the possible consequences that could ensue when Mother Nature decides to make a change. In this day and age, with our complex information systems, and huge data storage requirements it is easy to see why being prepared and taking every reasonable precaution makes economic sense, and is socially responsible.
