Pacific Ocean Tsunami warnings (
SAME code:
TSW) for most of the
Pacific Ocean are issued by the
Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC), operated by the United States
NOAA in
Ewa Beach, Hawaii. NOAA's
National Tsunami Warning Center (NTWC) in
Palmer, Alaska issues warnings for North America, including Alaska, British Columbia, Oregon, California, the Gulf of Mexico, and the East coast. The PTWC was established in 1949, following the 1946
Aleutian Island earthquake and a tsunami that resulted in 165 casualties on Hawaii and in Alaska; NTWC was founded in 1967. International coordination is achieved through the International Coordination Group for the Tsunami Warning System in the Pacific, established by the
Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of
UNESCO.
Chile In 2005, Chile started to implement the Integrated Plate boundary Observatory Chile (IPOC) which in the following years become a network of 14 multiparameter stations for monitoring the 600-km seismic distance between
Antofagasta and
Arica. Each station was provided with broadband
seismometer,
accelerometer,
GPS antenna. In four cases, it was installed a short-base
tiltmeter (pendulum). Some stations were ubicated underground at a depth of 3–4 meters. The network completed the
tidal gauge of the
Hydrographic and Oceanographic Service of the Chilean Navy.
Indian Ocean (ICG/IOTWMS) After the
2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami which killed almost 250,000 people, a
United Nations conference was held in January 2005 in
Kobe,
Japan, and decided that as an initial step towards an
International Early Warning Programme, the UN should establish an
Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning System. This resulted in a warning system for Indonesia and other affected areas. Indonesia's system fell out of service in 2012 because the detection buoys were no longer operational. Tsunami prediction was then limited to detection of seismic activity, with no system to predict tsunamis based on volcanic eruptions. Indonesia was hit by tsunamis in
September and
December 2018. The December 2018 tsunami was caused by a volcano. Sea level sensors were then installed by the Indonesian government to fill the prediction gap.
North Eastern Atlantic, the Mediterranean and Connected Seas (ICG/NEAMTWS) The First United Session of the Inter-governmental Coordination Group for the Tsunami Early Warning and Mitigation System in the North Eastern Atlantic, the Mediterranean and connected Seas (ICG/NEAMTWS), established by the
Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of
UNESCO Assembly during its 23rd Session in June 2005, through Resolution XXIII.14, took place in
Rome on 21 and 22 November 2005. The meeting, hosted by the Government of Italy (the
Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the
Italian Ministry for the Environment and Protection of Land and Sea), was attended by more than 150 participants from 24 countries, 13 organizations and numerous observers.
Caribbean A Caribbean-wide tsunami warning system was planned to be instituted by the year 2010, by representatives of
Caribbean nations who met in
Panama City in March 2008.
Panama's last major tsunami killed 4,500 people in 1882.
Barbados has said it will review or test its tsunami protocol in February 2010 as a regional pilot. ==Regional warning systems==