Indonesia’s Tsunami-Detection Buoys Haven’t Worked In Years 

Indonesia’s Tsunami-Detection Buoys Haven’t Worked In Years 

After an earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia on Friday left more than 800 people dead, a spokesperson for the nation’s board of national disaster affairs revealed that a critical part of its warning and detection system hasn’t been working for years.

Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, spokesperson for the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB), said a network of 22 early-detection buoys haven’t been operational since 2012, ABC News reported.

The buoys, which communicate with seafloor sensors, are supposed to send tsunami warnings to the Indonesian Agency for Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics, but are now ineffective due to vandalism and a lack of funding, according to the report.

“The tide gauges are operating, but they are limited in providing any advance warning,” Louise Comfort, a disaster management expert, told the Associated Press.

“None of the 22 buoys are functioning. In the Sulawesi incident, BMKG (the meteorology and geophysics agency) canceled the tsunami warning too soon, because it did not have data from Palu. This is the data the tsunami detection system could provide.”

BMKG reportedly sent out a tsunami warning on Friday evening after the earthquake, but lifted it 34 minutes later.

Efforts to create better advance tsunami warning systems started after 230,000 people died in a 2004 tsunami, with a majority of those deaths occurring in Indonesia. The buoys were among those efforts — Germany and the US reportedly provided 12 of them.

However, an earthquake that hit an Indonesian island in 2016 revealed that none of the buoys were working.

The buoys have been stalled in a prototype phase for years, reportedly failing to receive the funding needed because of budget cuts and a failure for agencies to agree on project decisions. The buoys reportedly cost hundreds of thousands of dollars each on top of the funding needed to maintain their operations.

“Now we have no buoys in Indonesia,” Iyan Turyana, an ocean engineer at BPPT, Indonesia’s Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology, told Phys.org in an article published in January 2017. “They are all damaged. Where do you live in Indonesia? Jakarta! It’s OK. But if you live in Padang, if you live in Bengkulu, your life is very dangerous.”

[ABC News]


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