Tag Archives: earthquake

To ShakeAlert or Not to ShakeAlert: Finding the Cash to Pay for Earthquake Warnings

State won’t pay for early warning system it approved this year

by Brian Leubitz

On September 24, Governor Brown signed SB 135 by Sen. Alex Padilla to create the so-called “ShakeAlert” earthquake early warning system. You would think that a great boon for earthquake damage prevention, right? Well, there’s a catch in the bill, it cannot be paid for by the general fund:

The Office of Emergency Services shall identify funding for the system described in subdivision (a) through single or multiple sources of revenue that shall be limited to federal funds, funds from revenue bonds, local funds, and private grants. The Office of Emergency Services shall not identify the General Fund as a funding source for the purpose of establishing the system described in subdivision (a), beyond the components or programs that are currently funded. (SB 135 Bill Text. Sec 8587 (c))

This is part of a more general discussion on the use of external funding mechanisms and the rise of the beggar state. Relying on private contributions is no way to run a sustainable government. We can’t be at the whim of every random billionaire with a foundation. But more specific to this issue, these limitations minimize the importance of the system.  ShakeAlert won’t give us hours, but the 30-ish seconds that it can provide can save lives. The system is no longer just a far-out concept: it really works.

In Japan, an alert network established in 2007 offered several seconds of advanced warning to 52 million people prior to a magnitude 9.0 quake that struck in 2011. And last year, sirens rang out in Mexico City around 30 seconds before a magnitude 7.4 earthquake rocked the region. “Japan and Mexico already have these systems. Even Turkey, Taiwan, and Romania have some early warning infrastructure in place,” Allen says. “Needless to say, we’re quite far behind.” (The Verge)

The Verge article about our preparedness is well worth a full read. It lays bare our national failures in this area. Despite our own state’s lack of funding for ShakeAlert, no other state has even gone so far. And given the rise of fracking-induced earthquakes, a national system seems wise.

Somehow the state needs to come up with the $80mil over five years to create the system, but delays could cost a lot more.

Is an Earthquake Early Warning System Real?

SOS 4905Sen. Alex Padilla hopes to give Californians some very valuable seconds

by Brian Leubitz

On the East Coast, their major disasters give a bit of notice that they are coming. Hurricane tracking isn’t perfect, but at the very least, those living along the coast have some time to decide whether they want to evacuate. Earthquakes, not so much.

The technology for earthquake detection currently maxes out at about 60 seconds of warning. But for a big earthquake, that warning could save quite a few lives. Sen. Alex Padilla is pushing a bill to set up such a system in California, and apparently this is very real.

“A fully developed earthquake early warning system would provide Californians critical seconds to take cover, assist loved ones, or pull over safely to the side of the road.  It could allow time to stop a train and power down other critical infrastructure,” said Senator Alex Padilla.

“An earthquake early warning would speed the response of critical public safety personnel by quickly identifying areas hardest hit by the quake,” Padilla said. “California is going to have an earthquake early warning system, the question is whether we have one before or after the next big quake,” added Padilla.

The bill, SB 135, was passed out of the Senate Governmental Organization Committee, and next heads to the Natural Resources Committee. Current cost estimates are running well under $100 million, which seems like quite the bargain.

Disaster Roulette in Orange County

By Jack Eidt and Jerry Collamer, wilderutopia.com

Why They Call it Disaster

The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Western Regional Director told me point blank, one month ago, after me peppering him with San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station (SONGS) post-reactor meltdown scenarios:

“That’s why they call it Disaster.”

Disaster: the past-present tense of our here and now, when we’re not careful.  Disaster can be avoided, if you just don’t go there.  Yet our human nature is to go, to build, to deny the omnipotent laws of nature, then suffer that all too familiar consequence – Disaster.

That’s what Mr. FEMA / Mr. Disaster was getting at.  FEMA and First-Responders, don’t prevent Disaster.  They mop up after.  But Disaster can be preempted, or avoided entirely just by doing the right thing: utilize good common sense.

An official with Southern California Edison says the seaside plant has an outer shell made of concrete 4-feet thick and is designed to capture an unexpected release of radiation. (Mark Boster, Los Angeles Times / March 15, 2011)

It Can’t Happen Here?

Yesterday’s Los Angeles Times and Orange County Register published the reassuring words of Southern California Edison (SCE) officials and academic seismologists, claiming quake-meltdown-disaster could never happen here.  The plant is designed for a 7.0 temblor and Japan’s 8.9 and the associated tsunami are “highly unlikely.”

Consider, however, a study from 2008 by the California Energy Commission called “An Assessment of California’s Nuclear Power Plants, AB 1632 Report.”  It states that the region could experience larger and more frequent earthquakes than had been anticipated when the plant was designed, due to the late discovery of underground “blind thrust” faults. It goes on to recommend further study to characterize the seismic hazard, since less is known about the seismic setting than more fully studied Diablo Canyon in Central California.

The uncertainties are with regard to “continuity, structure and earthquake potential” of the nearby South Coast Offshore Fault Zone, and the faulting that connects to the Los Angeles (Newport-Inglewood Fault) and San Diego (Rose Canyon Fault) regions.  There is also the potenial for as yet undiscovered blind thrust faults near the plant.  A Long-Term Seismic Program is recommended to consider the as yet not-fully-considered.

At the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, they also claimed “It won’t happen here.”  The latter plant was designed for only a 7.9 quake as the “worst case scenario.”

As well, a study from the Electric Power Research Institute admits: “The Richter scale alone does not capture the dangers or risks posed by specific quakes.”  Multiple, unforeseen disasters, quake, tsunami, floods, loss of both primary and backup power, pose the real dangers to an undertaking as complicated and dangerous as nuclear fission.

The California Energy Commission study also mentioned submarine landslides could generate large local tsunamis, a fact not fully understood when SONGS was built.  While some consider the 30-foot-high reinforced concrete “tsunami wall” as invincible, others have questioned its durability.  Sadly, the walls protecting the Fukushima Daiichi facilities did not stop the backup generators from being flooded, causing the fail.

What have the SCE engineers and academic seismologists not fully considered here, when the Big One hits?

San Onofre Earthquake – What If?

Consider SONGS’ precarious seating arrangement: on sand – over a fault – at water’s edge.  Then consider its age.

A SONGS 7.5 earthquake scenario:

1) SONGS sinks into its suddenly liquified sand base / liquefaction

2) Tsunami like ocean occurrence overwhelms SONGS’ crumbling sea wall, swamping the cracking, steaming, radiating, eternally hot hell-hole that was moments before SONGS

3) Remains too hot to handle for 50,000 years, or longer. But who’s counting?

Are we prepared for that?

Or something half that?

Or a third that?

Or a quarter that?

It Can Happen

Test Model: Japan – July 16, 2007.

Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Facility in Niigata Prefecture on the northwest coast of Japan falls victim to a 6.8 shaker.  Built over a fault, in an earthquake prone region, at waters edge.  Though damage to the facility was limited and “less than expected,” radioacive iodine did escape from a leaking pipe.  Ground motion caused water to slosh in the spent nuclear fuel storage pool and spill into the nuclear plant’s reactor buildings.  Contaminated water leaked into the Sea of Japan from damaged conduits.  SCE uses both pools and dry cask storage.  A loss of cooling event could be precipitated by an earthquake or terrorist event; SCE claims they are safe.

And now the ongoing post-quake-tsunami crisis at Fukushima.

Most asked question post Japanese disaster:

“Why did you build it there?”

The engineers planned and built SONGS (before super seismic hazard mapping computer models, before they knew there was a fault sleeping beneath it) designed it to last until 2013.  Not 2014, 2015, 2016, or 2020 (as it has recently been approved for).

So who’ya gonna trust?  The engineers who created SONGS?  Building it to a 2013 end date – or SONGS owner-operator Edison, working to extend SONGS’ shaky, aged existence to 2020 or longer – on sand, over a fault, at water’s edge?

Remember Mr. FEMA’s tutorial:

“That’s why they call it, Disaster.”

Using common sense is the antidote to a SONGS disaster: 2013-end-date, game over.

See the related story: “San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station: Scariest Workplace in the USA” by Jerry Collamer.

Jack Eidt and Jerry Collamer are founders of Wild Heritage Planners, based in Southern California.

Wednesday Open Thread

• The CDP’s Rules Committee is going to be having a meeting to discuss, primarily, the CDP’s Endorsement Process on August 17. It’s a system that truly needs reform.

• A quick reminder about the CDP’s Rural Caucus Questions for the Chair Candidates. The time has been extended out to August 15th. They will send the questions to all of the candidates for Chair.

• Some funny stuff from the Prop 8 Donor roll. For months there have been no donations from Chino Hills, and then on July 24, there were 3 donations of $5,000+. Then on July 28, 2 more $5K+ donations.  Guess what else happened the next day? Yup, an earthquake centered in Chino Hills.  If you follow your typical right-wing logic, isn’t this the deities being enraged with Prop 8?  Just sayin’

Anything else?

[UPDATE] by Robert – I will be on KRXA 540 AM tomorrow morning at 8 to discuss California politics, including Arnold’s latest act of right-wing desperation.

Government Works: The Non-Event That Was Yesterday’s Earthquake

Sara Robinson, one of my favorite bloggers, had a really fantastic post at the CAF blog about why we have responsible government to thank for the relative lack of damage to the 5.4 earthquake that hit Southern California yesterday.

The fact that Los Angeles returned to normal (as if anything in Los Angeles can ever be considered normal) within just a few hours is one of those invisible but important lessons in the collective power of a functioning government — the kind of non-controvertible, essential fact that conservatives tend to gloss right over when they talk about shrinking government until they can drown it in a bathtub.

California’s seismic codes are serious, strict, and effective. The state has been working on them for 80 years now, refining them through the years after every major quake to incorporate new knowledge and engineering practices. (A major revision this year has recently sent all the state’s architects, engineers, and contractors back to school yet again.) To see the results of this ongoing effort, consider the 1931 Long Beach quake, a 6.4 shaker that damn near flattened Long Beach, killed 120 people, and caused over $40 million (in 1931 dollars) in property damage. And then reflect on the fact that in 1989, it took a quake eleven times bigger — the 7.1 Loma Prieta quake — to create a comparable amount of damage.

That’s how effective the improvements have been. These days, most new structures are hardened to the point that you’d need at least a 7.0 (well over 10 times the size of today’s quake) before things seriously started shaking apart. In many parts of the planet, a 5.8 quake would be enough to level towns, collapse bridges, and take out decades’ worth of infrastructure. In LA and SF, all that happens is a few people lose their phones and power for a few hours.

It really is remarkable what serious attention to building codes has done.  Not too long ago yesterday’s earthquake would have been a disaster – today it’s a blip.  California has recognized the problem, taken steps to constantly improve and innovate, and made sure that the regulations stayed stringent, so that developers would just have to find other means to reduce costs.  The fact that the epicenter was around Chino Hills and Diamond Bar, relatively new areas with new buildings that were constructed according to the strictest building codes, was only a further testament to that.  The after-action reports from the 1989 San Francisco quake and the 1994 Northridge quake were taken seriously and applied in this case.

Diane at Cab Drollery has more:

Now, when the “big one” hits Southern California (the prediction is one with a magnitude 7.8 occurring along the San Andreas fault), we won’t be so lucky, especially with respect to damage. Knowing that, local authorities hold regular emergency drills so that the human devastation can be minimized. One such drill is scheduled for this November and involves a consortium of cities and services.

All of this shows why Grover Norquist was wrong, deadly wrong, with his ideal of shrinking government until it fits in a bathtub and then drowning it. When government does what it is supposed to do, real security for citizens is enhanced.

We have a group of Norquist followers here in this state called the California Republican Party.  And we have to be vigilant that they don’t roll back government in response to budget shortfalls in ways that make the state far less safe.  For instance, in Dan Weintraub’s think piece today trying to envision what he considers an imminent budget, this part is worrying:

• It is going to include some borrowing. That’s not exactly going out on a limb, given the recent history of this governor and these legislators […]

Lawmakers, for instance, might find a way to tap into local government funds, despite a voter-approved initiative that makes that option more difficult than before. Also, the governor’s proposal to borrow against future state lottery earnings, an idea he calls “a gift from the future,” is still very much alive. I would not be surprised if a scaled-down version of the governor’s plan emerged as part of this package.

Local governments are already cash-strapped and have no margin for error if their funding is raided.  And some of that money goes to infrastructure improvements.  Just yesterday, Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell claimed that 150,000 bridges nationwide are in need of repair or replacement.  You can add municipal buildings, roads, and a host of other issues.  If California doesn’t address this structural revenue deficit, despite the strict building codes there will arise a time when the earth moves on top of buildings that should have been replaced, or creaking infrastructure that should have been repaired.  Yesterday was a triumph – but that could be reversed.

5.6 Earthquake Near San Jose


There was a mid-sized quake in the Bay Area just a couple of hours ago, measuring 5.6 on the Richter scale, on the Calaveras fault just east of San Jose. Apparently some people felt it as far as Marin County and Stockton, but I felt nothing out here in Davis. Here’s the USGS’s report:

Additionally, here’s a cool map, also from the USGS, that shows the likelihood of aftershocks in California (with any luck this will update automatically, but we’ll see):

And for those of you in earthquake country (or anywhere prone to natural disasters), this series of diaries on disaster preparedness by AlphaGeek at daily kos is a must-read, and covers all the bases.

Be safe, people.