Nature Vesuvio Article - 12 October 1995

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The following was taken from the WWW server of Nature, with the friendly permission of Macmillan Publishers Ltd.


Row erupts over evacuation plans for Mount Vesuvius
London. Members of an Italian government commission given responsibility for setting up a contingency plan for the possible eruption of Mount Vesuvius have fallen out over the final report, which one member describes as being over-ambitious and scientifically flawed, and thus unworkable.
Giuseppe Luongo, professor of physical volcanology at the University of Naples, says the plan claims that volcanologists can predict an eruption within 20 days. But he argues that the plan is based on flawed data and was drawn up without peer review, and with virtually no input from the local population.
"I am sad to see millions of taxpayer dollars being wasted on producing [this plan], and also regret that its authors appear ignorant of current scientific literature on the subject", says Luongo, a former director of the Vesuvius Observatory. "I would like to know who are these scientists who think they can issue a volcanic eruption forecast 20 days in advance. In my experience of similar volcanoes ó for example, Mount St Helens in 1980 and Pinatubo in 1991 ó scientists are very reluctant to issue such forecasts without objective data."
The plan, issued by the Department of Civil Protection at the end of last month, assumes that volcano monitoring stations will remain operational up to a few days preceding an eruption. Luongo says that it apparently makes no allowances for false alarms, and fails to outline a clear chain of command. Furthermore, the plan was developed using the 1631 eruption of Vesuvius as a template, and Luongo says such an assumption could be a mistake as that eruption, which killed several thousand people, remains highly controversial among volcanologists.
But Lucia Givetta, director of the Vesuvius Observatory and a member of the commission, disagrees. She says that the volcano has always emitted distinct, characteristic precursor signals before an eruption. The most recent eruption ó which took place during the Second World War in 1944 ó was accurately predicted by one of her predecessors, Giuseppe Imbi, "using just one instrument", she says. "Unfortunately, the soldiers didn't listen to him, and no countermeasures were taken."
Givetta says the commission's data are no secret, as they are unchanged from the previous commission's report in 1992. "It has been extensively discussed and debated. This plan was not just born yesterday, it is the result of almost five years' hard work."
Nevertheless Luongo, despite being the only member of the five-person commission to vote against the plan, claims to have the support of many volcanologists at Italian universities who, he claims, are unable to speak out openly. One who did so ó Flavio Dobran, a former professor of volcanology at the universities of Rome and Pisa ó claims to have had his research grant terminated after publishing a paper (see Nature 367, 551ñ554; 1994) that defied the orthodox government view by suggesting that an outpouring from Vesuvius could destroy everything within a 7-km radius, an area occupied by 1 million people.
Dobran, who has now set up his independent research group, the Association for Global Volcanic and Environmental Systems Simulation (GVES), points out that the plan apparently fails to prioritize categories of evacuees, and does not explain how different communities are expected to reach emergency transport stations in the event of seismic activity and ground deformation.
The plan assumes 600,000 people would be evacuated within a week, on 40 trains running daily. The plan appears to assume that trains and buses will run according to a fixed timetable. "This does not even happen under normal circumstances," he points out.
Dobran says the government's plan is preoccupied with trying to predict an eruption, when it should be concerned with disaster management and risk communication. He is now engaged in a project called Vesuvius 2000, a public education/consultation exercise. He is thus critical of plans to evacuate people in risk zones to destinations at great distances from Vesuvius.
"Evacuating 600,000 people is no joke," he says. "It raises many questions, such as the threat to a lifestyle, culture and centuries of traditions. The population should be educated in the different risk scenarios posed by a potential eruption and then be given the choice to decide how it wants to react." But Givetta says these are political issues and should not concern scientists. "Our job is to get the science as accurate as possible. The rest we leave to politicians.
Ehsan Masood
Nature © Macmillan Publishers Ltd. 1995 Registered No.785998 England.


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