As an island nation we love our coastlines – we live by them, holiday to them, fish from them. But this does not come without its risks. Sitting at the conjunction of two tectonic plates and with bragging rights of the 9th longest coastline in the world, we are in constant threat of tsunamis.
As soon as a large offshore earthquake occurs, tsunami scientists are racing the clock trying to determine if there is a tsunami and if so, where and when will it hit. The RCET programme is developing tools to rapidly fill this information gap and go a step further to forecast how a tsunami will ‘evolve’, meaning before the tsunami even arrives, we know exactly when, where and how it will travel around the coastline as well as what the impacts will be and importantly, when it will abate and people can go safely home.
Bill discusses how the programme is pulling from multiple and creative data sources to build this picture in the vast void of the Pacific Ocean where our risk is high and our eyes are few.