UW News

July 30, 2015

Four West Coast universities funded for earthquake early warning system

UW News

A recent article in The New Yorker triggered widespread discussion, and some panic, about the risk of a huge earthquake off the Pacific Northwest coast. While the seismic hazard is real, the article’s tone may have been overly fatalistic, and left out new preparation tools now under construction.

map with concentric circles

A sample warning, with a countdown of the number of seconds until the strong shaking reaches the user.Pacific Northwest Seismic Network

The U.S. Geological Survey today announced $5 million in funding that will allow the University of Washington and three other institutions to help transition the prototype ShakeAlert earthquake early warning system, under development since 2005, into a public-facing tool.

“The impression you got from the article was that the only advance warning you’d ever get would be barking dogs,” said Paul Bodin, a UW research professor of Earth and space sciences. Bodin manages the Pacific Northwest’s earthquake early warning system, a tool set to launch within the next few years.

The new award provides funds to the UW, the University of Oregon, the University of California, Berkeley, and the California Institute of Technology to help develop a coast-wide system that would detect the first tremors and alert people, seconds or minutes in advance, of incoming ground shaking.

The newly awarded funds were included in President Obama’s budget earlier this year, and Congress subsequently approved funding that is being distributed this week. The award includes $4 million shared between the four universities, as well as $1 million in USGS funds for about 150 new and upgraded sensors that will improve the speed and reliability of the West Coast network.

“This will allow us to continue developing and expanding the country’s first earthquake early warning system,” said John Vidale, a UW professor of Earth and space sciences and director of the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network, which includes the UW and University of Oregon. “This is just part of what we need to have a fully operational system, but it is an important step in the right direction.”

The California prototype gave some warning of the Napa earthquake in August 2014. The Pacific Northwest prototype, which currently operates separately, recruited its first test users in February. About two dozen agencies and businesses get alerts delivered to their computers and have begun thinking about how they could integrate earthquake alerts into their operations plans.

When finished, in as soon as three years depending on future funding, the warning system will give Seattle and Portland as much as three or four minutes’ warning for a big offshore quake, and as much as 30 seconds for an earthquake on one of the onshore faults. The warning times depend on the epicenter and depth of the quake, the person’s location and the processing time through the seismic network.

In Washington and Oregon, the federal funding will support:

  • An additional staff position to fully integrate the current Pacific Northwest prototype system into the West Coast-wide USGS ShakeAlert system
  • Improving collaboration with Canadian seismologists who are monitoring seismicity north of the border
  • Gradually expanding the Pacific Northwest test user group, which now includes about 20 regional agencies and businesses
  • Extending the regional ShakeAlert magnitude estimates to include the largest Pacific Northwest earthquakes, past magnitude 8, using GPS-based methods
  • Speeding up a portion of the older data communication infrastructure to improve warning times
  • Upgrading 59 of the current 144 contributing seismic stations, distributed between the two states, to improve speed and reliability
  • Planning future station deployments

The federal funding will speed up recent progress on the Pacific Northwest portion of the warning system. The regional network has carried out testing, equipment upgrades and algorithm development to make the warnings faster and more reliable. In the past year, with startup funding from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the UW-based team has built and installed about a dozen new sensors to improve coverage along the coast.

The University of Oregon recently used state funding to add 15 seismometers to the network, which the university will maintain. The entire network benefits from closely spaced, high-quality sensors in seismically active areas.

The UW and its academic partners are also working with a California company to turn the ShakeAlert warnings from a computer-based display into a mobile app.

The fully operational network will require about $16.1 million each year to maintain and run. Vidale testified in Congress earlier this year in support of full funding for the earthquake early warning system. The Washington project has received support from Sen. Patty Murray, Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-3rd District) and Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-6th District).

“This award from USGS is an important down payment that provides a crucial step toward developing the type of warning system that has saved lives in Japan,” Vidale said.

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For more information, contact Vidale at 310-210-2131 or vidale@uw.edu; Pacific Northwest Seismic Network communications manager Bill Steele at 206-685-5880 or bill@ess.washington.edu. In Oregon, contact seismologist Doug Toomey at drt@uoregon.edu.

Adapted from the USGS press release: “USGS Awards $4 Million to Support Earthquake Early Warning System in California and Pacific Northwest.”

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