Evidence-Based Analysis of Search and Rescue Operations Following the Great East Japan Earthquake

Author:

Koresawa Atsushi,

Abstract

The March 11, 2011 earthquake off Japan’s northeast (Tohoku) Pacific coast and the resulting gigantic tsunamis took the lives of nearly 18,000 people in the devastated coastal communities. In the immediate aftermath of the disaster, now called Great East Japan Earthquake, search and rescue (SAR) for those who were trapped in tsunami waters and debris and who were missing was the top priority in the integrated emergency response. Eventually, SAR operations were performed on an unprecedented scale and complexity. This being the case, a strong interest in the details of these activities has surfaced and frequent enquiries have often been made both from within Japan and from overseas. Still, few studies have been conducted to-date on how SAR operations were performed and what lessons have been learned as a result. By analyzing the experiences of fire service rescue workers, this paper identifies challenges and gaps that the SAR system – institutions, policy frameworks and instruments, skills and techniques, equipment, etc. – could not fully deal with. This paper also looks at the lessons learned to examine the reasons behind them and to explore ways forward that may enable us to be better prepared for future disasters of a similar kind.

Publisher

Fuji Technology Press Ltd.

Subject

Engineering (miscellaneous),Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality

Reference23 articles.

1. The Extreme Disaster Management Headquarters, “About the 2011 Earthquake off the Pacific Coast of Tohoku” (in Japanese), http://www.kantei.go.jp/saigai/pdf/201303261700jisin.pdf [accessed March 27, 2013]

2. H. Nakachi, N. Maki, and H. Hayashi, “Proposal on the Effective Use of Relief Helicopters Based on Experience in the Great East Japan Earthquake,” Journal of Disaster Research, Vol.7, No.sp, pp. 500-510, 2012.

3. N. Takanashi, “Actualities of Rescue Activities at the Time of Disasters: How Many Lives Did Fire Service Save?,” Monthly FESC, June 2013, Fire Equipment and Safety Center of Japan (in Japanese).

4. L.-R. Sheu, B.-J. Shih, and C.-W. Wu, “The Search and Rescue Operation in Collapsed Buildings Caused by Earthquakes – A Case Study,” 2000 Proceedings of the 17th ISARC, pp. 1-4, 2000, http://www.iaarc.org/publications/fulltext/isarc2000-183_TC1.pdf [accessed March 27, 2013]

5. United States Fire Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency, “Search and Rescue Operations Following the Northridge Earthquake: Technical Rescue Incident Report,” 1994.

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