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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Alert system to get review

John Heilprin Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The U.S. weather agency didn’t have the phone numbers nor staff to alert all Indian Ocean coastal countries when it saw the first signs that tsunamis could be heading their way, its top official said Thursday. He cautioned that the Caribbean and Atlantic also lack an early-warning system.

In the face of stern questioning by some in Congress over whether enough was done, the head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said his agency did all it was responsible for doing in warning 26 countries in the Pacific.

“We cannot watch tsunamis in the Indian Ocean,” said Conrad C. Lautenbacher, the Commerce Department’s undersecretary for oceans and atmosphere and a retired Navy vice admiral, noting that no warning system exists for all 11 countries where the death toll has now topped 117,000.

“Folks out there tried to contact people that they thought would be interested. … They did what they thought at the time were the most prudent things to do,” he said. “If we can improve it, believe me, we will improve it.”

In an interview with the Associated Press, Lautenbacher said he had ordered an internal review of its response to the quake and tsunamis. He said he also has asked NOAA staff to look at creating a “rapid reaction” emergency team and a more global warning system.

Lautenbacher said the chances of a major earthquake in the Atlantic Ocean “are small, but they’re not zero.”

“There is the potential of tsunami damage” in the Caribbean, he said, “and we believe that (warning) coverage should be extended to those areas as well.”

In the past 150 years, the Caribbean has had more than 50 tsunamis and the Atlantic more than 30, about half off the U.S. and Canadian coasts but none since 1964, NOAA figures show.

Some scientists had urged both the Clinton and Bush administrations to create a tsunami warning system in the Atlantic and the Caribbean, but they say nothing much happened.

Fifteen minutes after Sunday’s quake near Sumatra, NOAA fired off a bulletin from Hawaii to 26 Pacific nations that now make up the International Coordination Group for the Tsunami Warning System, alerting them of the quake but saying they faced no threat of a tsunami.

Fifty minutes later, the U.S. agency upgraded the severity of the quake and again said there was no tsunami threat in the Pacific, but identified the possibility of a tsunami near the quake’s epicenter in the Indian Ocean.

After nearly another half hour, NOAA contacted emergency officials in Australia as a backstop, knowing they would quickly contact their counterparts in Indonesia. It wasn’t until 2 ½ hours after the quake that NOAA officials learned from Internet news reports that a destructive tsunami had hit Sri Lanka.