Abstract

Abstract. Probabilistic hazard assessments are a fundamental tool for assessing the threats posed by hazards to communities and are important for underpinning evidence-based decision-making regarding risk mitigation activities. Indonesia has been the focus of intense tsunami risk mitigation efforts following the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, but this has been largely concentrated on the Sunda Arc with little attention to other tsunami prone areas of the country such as eastern Indonesia. We present the first nationally consistent probabilistic tsunami hazard assessment (PTHA) for Indonesia. This assessment produces time-independent forecasts of tsunami hazards at the coast using data from tsunami generated by local, regional and distant earthquake sources. The methodology is based on the established monte carlo approach to probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA) and has been adapted to tsunami. We account for sources of epistemic and aleatory uncertainty in the analysis through the use of logic trees and sampling probability density functions. For short return periods (100 years) the highest tsunami hazard is the west coast of Sumatra, south coast of Java and the north coast of Papua. For longer return periods (500–2500 years), the tsunami hazard is highest along the Sunda Arc, reflecting the larger maximum magnitudes. The annual probability of experiencing a tsunami with a height of > 0.5 m at the coast is greater than 10% for Sumatra, Java, the Sunda islands (Bali, Lombok, Flores, Sumba) and north Papua. The annual probability of experiencing a tsunami with a height of > 3.0 m, which would cause significant inundation and fatalities, is 1–10% in Sumatra, Java, Bali, Lombok and north Papua, and 0.1–1% for north Sulawesi, Seram and Flores. The results of this national-scale hazard assessment provide evidence for disaster managers to prioritise regions for risk mitigation activities and/or more detailed hazard or risk assessment.

Highlights

  • Indonesia has the third highest population exposure to tsunami in the World, with an estimated 5.5 million people at risk of once-in-500-years tsunami (UNISDR, 2013; Lovholt et al, 2014)

  • This study developed the first national probabilistic tsunami hazard assessment for Indonesia and provides forecasts of long-term tsunami hazard at the coastline from earthquake sources

  • Results show that the annual probability of experiencing a tsunami with a height of > 0.5 m at the coast is greater than 10 % for Sumatra, Java, Sunda islands (Bali, Lombok, Flores, Sumba) and north Papua

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Summary

Introduction

Indonesia has the third highest population exposure to tsunami in the World, with an estimated 5.5 million people at risk of once-in-500-years tsunami (UNISDR, 2013; Lovholt et al, 2014). The creation of the Indonesian tsunami early warning system (InaTEWS) has provided a platform to disseminate warnings less than five minutes after an earthquake (Lauterjung et al, 2010; Steinmetz et al, 2010; Strunz et al, 2011), albeit with a scenario database that exists only for the Sunda Arc and not other parts of Indonesia Despite this large amount of work, there is still no nationally consistent assessment of tsunami hazard or risk, as most of the previously mentioned work has focused on the Sunda Arc. Despite this large amount of work, there is still no nationally consistent assessment of tsunami hazard or risk, as most of the previously mentioned work has focused on the Sunda Arc

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