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Explore the latest technical designs in tsunami warning systems, emphasizing the importance of effective communication through ICTs. Discover the challenges and solutions in bridging the physical and symbolic worlds to ensure timely warnings and actions in hazardous situations.
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Current Technical Designs for Tsunami Warning Systems: Sri Lanka Rohan Samarajiva
Physical and symbolic worlds, absent linking technologies Mediated interpersonal Physical world where hazards occur Symbolic world where action originates
The physical, the symbolic & their linking through ICTs, simplified Physical world where hazards occur Warnings Mediated interpersonal Mass media Symbolic world where action originates Warnings
Physical world of hazards, symbolic worlds, link technologies & institutions that work imperfectly Warning Center Hazard detection & monitoring system Physical world where hazards occur Warnings Mediated interpersonal Symbolic world where action originates Mass media Last mile: Our focus Information & communication technology & institutions
Effective warning: multiple pathways Tsunami hazard detection (International/regional) Assessment and issuance of warning (National center) First responders (incl. CBOs) Media Communities; families; individuals
Tsunami waves & communication waves • Point-to-point communication networks are inherently vulnerable to congestion • No design can be congestion proof • Congestion can be managed, not avoided • Point-to-multipoint is the only real option • Cell broadcast vs SMS
Tsunami waves & communication waves • In a community-based (versus direct to households) model, avoiding congestion is essential • Keeping ahead of the congestion by acting fast; if possible use priority channels • Targeted point-to-multipoint media • Addressable satellite radio (Disaster Warning, Response and Recovery) • 10 second from activation to alert
Key elements of the LIRNEasia/Sarvodaya design • Improve hazard detection & monitoring • What can we do at village level? • Not tsunami detection; but ability to identify & communicate abnormal phenomena • Villagers as active participant, not just passive recipients • Improve transmission of warnings • Really up to the government • But we can supplement • How to alert a village when the radios and TVs are off and the police are far away
Key elements • Improve preparedness to receive warnings and act appropriately • Last-mile problem; fully within Sarvodaya’s Grama Swarajya concept • Partly a communication problem • Solutions are customized for each village • Partly a question of the mind • Preparedness through training and drills • Identification of hazards and preparing responses through training and simulations • Marking out evacuation paths, etc. • Partly a law and order problem • Village self governance in collaboration with police
First phase • How village organization matters • Can better organized villages take decisions faster and take right action? • How training matters • “Disaster preparedness through knowledge and participation” • Availability of [two-way] ICT (free of congestion, with redundancy) is a necessary condition • Need to know what works and what appropriate mixes are
QUADRANT 1 QUADRANT 2 QUADRANT 3 QUADRANT 4
Partners and responsibilities • LIRNEasia: Research design and project management • IDRC: Funding • TVEAP: Training of trainers; evaluation • Sarvodaya Shanti Sena: Trainers and evaluators • Sarvodaya DMC: Hazard info hub • Sarvodaya tech services: Telecenters using VSATs; maintenance of equipment
Partners and responsibilities • WorldSpace: DWRR • Mobile operator (Dialog) and software partner (MicroImage): Multi-lingual SMS on Java; priority SMS? • London School of Economics (Dr Gordon Gow): CAP and international best practices
Our objectives • Generate research findings as quickly as possible (even though project runs until November 2007) • Use those findings to provide appropriate ICTs and training to • All 226 tsunami-affected villages • All 15,000 Sarvodaya villages • All ~30,000 villages in our country