BBC Information

Google has admitted its earthquake early warning system did not precisely alert individuals throughout Turkey’s lethal quake of 2023.
Ten million individuals inside 98 miles of the epicentre may have been despatched Google’s highest degree alert – giving as much as 35 seconds of warning to search out security.
As an alternative, solely 469 “Take Motion” warnings had been despatched out for the primary 7.8 magnitude quake.
Google advised the BBC half 1,000,000 individuals had been despatched a decrease degree warning, which is designed for “gentle shaking”, and doesn’t alert customers in the identical outstanding means.
The tech big beforehand advised the BBC the system had “carried out properly” after an investigation in 2023.
The alerts system is on the market in slightly below 100 nations – and is described by Google as a “international security internet” usually working in nations with no different warning system.
Google’s system, named Android Earthquake Alerts (AEA), is run by the Silicon Valley agency – not particular person nations.
The system works on Android gadgets, which make up greater than 70% of the telephones in Turkey.
Greater than 55,000 individuals died when two main earthquakes hit south-east Turkey on 6 February 2023, greater than 100,000 had been injured. Many had been asleep in buildings that collapsed round them when the tremors hit.
Google’s early warning system was in place and stay on the day of the quakes – nonetheless it underestimated how sturdy the earthquakes had been.
“We proceed to enhance the system primarily based on what we study in every earthquake”, a Google spokesperson mentioned.
The way it works
Google’s system, is ready to detect shaking from an unlimited variety of cellphones that use the Android working system.
As a result of earthquakes transfer comparatively slowly by means of the earth, a warning can then be despatched out.
Google’s most severe warning known as “Take Motion”, which units off a loud alarm on a person’s telephone – overriding a Do Not Disturb setting – and protecting their display.
That is the warning that’s imagined to be despatched to individuals when stronger shaking is detected that might threaten human life.
AEA additionally has a much less severe “Be Conscious” warning, designed to tell customers of potential lighter shaking – a warning that doesn’t override a tool on Do Not Disturb.
The Take Motion alert was particularly essential in Turkey as a result of catastrophic shaking and since the primary earthquake struck at 04:17, when many customers would have been asleep. Solely the extra severe alert would have woken them.
Within the months after the earthquake the BBC wished to talk to customers who had been given this warning – initially with goals to showcase the effectiveness of the expertise.
However regardless of talking to individuals in cities and cities throughout the zone impacted by the earthquake, over a interval of months, we could not discover anybody who had obtained a extra severe Take Motion notification earlier than the quake struck.
We revealed our findings later that 12 months.
Google researchers have written within the Science journal particulars of what went mistaken, citing “limitations to the detection algorithms”.
For the primary earthquake, the system estimated the shaking at between 4.5 and 4.9 on the second magnitude scale (MMS) when it was really a 7.8.
A second massive earthquake later that day was additionally underestimated, with the system this time sending Take Motion alerts to eight,158 telephones and Be Conscious alerts to only underneath 4 million customers.
After the earthquake Google’s researchers modified the algorithm, and simulated the primary earthquake once more.
This time, the system generated 10 million Take Motion alerts to these at most danger – and an additional 67 million Be Conscious alerts to these residing additional away from the epicentre
“Each earthquake early warning system grapples with the identical problem – tuning algorithms for giant magnitude occasions,” Google advised the BBC.
However Elizabeth Reddy, assistant professor at Colorado Faculty of Mines, says it’s regarding it took greater than two years to get this data.
“I am actually pissed off that it took so lengthy,” she mentioned
“We’re not speaking about somewhat occasion – individuals died – and we did not see a efficiency of this warning in the way in which we want.”
Google says the system is meant to be supplementary and isn’t a substitute for nationwide methods.
Nevertheless some scientists fear nations are putting an excessive amount of religion in tech that has not been absolutely examined.
“I believe being very clear about how properly it really works is completely essential,” Harold Tobin, director of the Pacific Northwest Seismic Community, advised the BBC.
“Would some locations make the calculation that Google’s doing it, so we do not have to?”
Google researchers say post-event evaluation has higher improved the system – and AEA has pushed out alerts in 98 nations.
The BBC has requested Google how AEA carried out throughout the 2025 earthquake in Myanmar, however has but to obtain a response.
