1161st General Monthly Meeting
The Australian Tsunami Warning System - Protecting Australia from Waves of Destruction
Dr Dale Dominey-Howes, Natural Hazards Research Laboratory, Risk Management Group, School of Safety Science, UNSW
Date: Wednesday, 4th June, 2008
Time: 6:30 for 7:00 pm
Venue: Conference Room 1, Darlington Centre, City Road
ABSTRACT
The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami (2004 IOT) disaster although catastrophic, only had minor effects on the coasts of Australia. Prior to this event, few had considered the risk that this hazard type might present to Australia. Since the occurrence of the 2004 IOT, the Australian Federal government has committed almost $70 million to the development and deployment of an Australian Tsunami Warning System (ATWS) to help safeguard Australia from future potentially damaging tsunami. In addition, State and Territory Emergency Services are spending additional funds on tsunami research and community risk management. This talk will outline current state-of-the-art tsunami science being undertaken in Australia. We will examine the geological and historical record of tsunamis that have affected Australia, consider those regions capable of generating tsunamis that would be damaging to our coasts and explore the current important research questions that still need to be answered.
The talk will also describe the structure and function of the Australian Tsunami Warning System and consider how it performed following the April 2nd 2007 Solomon Island tsunami that triggered the first warning from the ATWS. The talk will conclude by asking, "has the deployment of the ATWS made Australian coastal communities safe from future tsunamis?"
Enquiries: Prof. P.A. Williams
email: P.Williams@uws.edu.au
or phone the Society details on Introduction page.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Dr Dale Dominey-Howes FGS FRGS is an expert in natural hazards, risk and vulnerability and disaster management. Dale graduated with a BSc (Honours) from London University and was awarded his PhD in natural hazards from Coventry University (UK). Dale held an European Union Postgraduate Scholarship to undertake his PhD which was on the geological and historical records and effects of tsunami in the Aegean Sea region of Greece. Dale's PhD was undertaken in collaboration with the National Observatory of Athens, Greece. Since graduating, Dale has worked on tsunami, volcanic hazards, tropical cyclones, earthquakes and coastal floods in the Mediterranean, Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Ocean areas. He is particularly interested in the interaction between risk and vulnerability and loss reduction and disaster management.
From 2000 to 2005, Dale was the elected Secretary and Treasurer of the International Society for the Prevention and Mitigation of Natural Hazards. In 1999, he was nominated and then selected as one of the Most Outstanding Young Research Scientists in the 1999 British Parliament, Showcase of the Best of British Science at the House of Commons London. Dale is presently a senior lecturer in Natural Hazards in the School of Risk and Safety Sciences at the University of New South Wales. Since 2005 he has also been providing scientific support to the state and federal governments in their development and deployment of the Australian Tsunami Warning System.