Revised estimates of the potential impact from an earthquake off
Japan's southern coast show much of the country's Pacific shore could
be inundated by a tsunami more than 34 meters (112 feet) high.
A
government-commissioned panel of experts says a tsunami unleashed by a
magnitude-9.0 earthquake in he Nankai trough, which runs east of
Japan's main island of Honshu to the southern island of Kyushu, could
top 34 meters.
An earlier forecast in 2003 put the potential maximum height of such a tsunami at less than 20 meters (66 feet).
The
revisions, contained in a report released Saturday and posted on a
overnment website, are based on new research following last March's
magnitude-9.0 earthquake and tsunami, which devastated a long stretch
of Japan's northeastern coast and killed about 19,000 people.
Last
year's catastrophe, and the ensuing crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi
nuclear power plant, has prompted sweping reviews of Japan's disaster
preparedness, and criticism over apparent failures to take into account
potential risks.
The tsunami knocked out power at the 40-year-old
coastal nuclear plant, leading to the worst nuclear disaster since
Chernobyl in 1986. Tens of thousands of residents have had to leave the
aea, and it's unclear whether some will ever be able to move back.
The Fukushima plant was designed to withstand a 6-meter (20-foot) tsunami. The actual surge was 14 meters (45 feet) high.
In
other unsettling news, another government report shows that a strong
earthquake hitting the Tokyo Bay region could shake the Tokyo-Yokohama
metropolitan area - home to more than 33 million people - at the
maximum seismic intensity of 7 on the Japanese scale.
The report,
issued Friday by the Ministry of Education, came in the form of mapping
that shows that much of the Tokyo region would likely experience severe
shaking from a magnitude-7.3 earthquake inside Tokyo Bay.
The
study prompted calls for Tokyoites to be better prepared for such
disasters. Although they live with the constant threat of a major
earthquake that experts have long said is overdue for the region, not
all living in the region keep recommended water and other supplies on
hand.
A report in the newspaper Asahi Shimbun listed troubles
that might be expected from a major quake, such as electricity outages
that could persist for more than a week and water supply disruptions
that could last for nearly a month, based on government estimates.
The
revised tsunami forecast for a possible Nankai earthquake says Tokyo
could expect waves up to 2.3 meters (7.6 feet) high. But at the coastal
town of Kuroshio, on the island of Shikoku, the tsunami could top 34
meters (112 feet), it shows.
The computer modeling for the revised forecasts assumes a high tide for the highest estimates.
Source : The Jakarta Post
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