Guidelines for volcano-observatory operations during crises: recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meeting

Abstract In November 2019, the fourth Volcano Observatory Best Practices workshop was held in Mexico City as a series of talks, discussions, and panels. Volcanologists from around the world offered suggestions for ways to optimize volcano-observatory crisis operations. By crisis, we mean unrest that...

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Main Authors: J. B. Lowenstern, K. Wallace, S. Barsotti, L. Sandri, W. Stovall, B. Bernard, E. Privitera, J.-C. Komorowski, N. Fournier, C. Balagizi, E. Garaebiti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2022-01-01
Series:Journal of Applied Volcanology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13617-021-00112-9
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author J. B. Lowenstern
K. Wallace
S. Barsotti
L. Sandri
W. Stovall
B. Bernard
E. Privitera
J.-C. Komorowski
N. Fournier
C. Balagizi
E. Garaebiti
author_facet J. B. Lowenstern
K. Wallace
S. Barsotti
L. Sandri
W. Stovall
B. Bernard
E. Privitera
J.-C. Komorowski
N. Fournier
C. Balagizi
E. Garaebiti
author_sort J. B. Lowenstern
collection DOAJ
description Abstract In November 2019, the fourth Volcano Observatory Best Practices workshop was held in Mexico City as a series of talks, discussions, and panels. Volcanologists from around the world offered suggestions for ways to optimize volcano-observatory crisis operations. By crisis, we mean unrest that may or may not lead to eruption, the eruption itself, or its aftermath, all of which require analysis and communications by the observatory. During a crisis, the priority of the observatory should be to acquire, process, analyze, and interpret data in a timely manner. A primary goal is to communicate effectively with the authorities in charge of civil protection. Crisis operations should rely upon exhaustive planning in the years prior to any actual unrest or eruptions. Ideally, nearly everything that observatories do during a crisis should be envisioned, prepared, and practiced prior to the actual event. Pre-existing agreements and exercises with academic and government collaborators will minimize confusion about roles and responsibilities. In the situation where planning is unfinished, observatories should prioritize close ties and communications with the land and civil-defense authorities near the most threatening volcanoes. To a large extent, volcanic crises become social crises, and any volcano observatory should have a communication strategy, a lead communicator, regular status updates, and a network of colleagues outside the observatory who can provide similar messaging to a public that desires consistent and authoritative information. Checklists permit tired observatory staff to fulfill their duties without forgetting key communications, data streams, or protocols that need regular fulfilment (Bretton et al. Volcanic Unrest. Advances in Volcanology, 2018; Newhall et al. Bull Volcanol 64:3–20, 2020). Observatory leaders need to manage staff workload to prevent exhaustion and ensure that expertise is available as needed. Event trees and regular group discussions encourage multi-disciplinary thinking, consideration of disparate viewpoints, and documentation of all group decisions and consensus. Though regulations, roles and responsibilities differ around the world, scientists can justify their actions in the wake of an eruption if they document their work, are thoughtful and conscientious in their deliberations, and carry out protocols and procedures developed prior to volcanic unrest. This paper also contains six case studies of volcanic eruptions or observatory actions that illustrate some of the topics discussed herein. Specifically, we discuss Ambae (Vanuatu) in 2017–2018, Kīlauea (USA) in 2018, Etna (Italy) in 2018, Bárðarbunga (Iceland) in 2014, Cotopaxi (Ecuador) in 2015, and global data sharing to prepare for eruptions at Nyiragongo (Democratic Republic of Congo). A Spanish-language version of this manuscript is provided as Additional file 1.
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spelling doaj.art-3d33873d1a4f494490b6bbf71f40bb492022-12-21T21:20:05ZengBMCJournal of Applied Volcanology2191-50402022-01-0111112410.1186/s13617-021-00112-9Guidelines for volcano-observatory operations during crises: recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meetingJ. B. Lowenstern0K. Wallace1S. Barsotti2L. Sandri3W. Stovall4B. Bernard5E. Privitera6J.-C. Komorowski7N. Fournier8C. Balagizi9E. Garaebiti10U.S. Geological Survey, Volcano Science CenterU.S. Geological Survey, Volcano Science CenterIcelandic Met OfficeIstituto Nazionale di Geofisica e VulcanologiaU.S. Geological Survey, Volcano Science CenterInstituto Geofísico, Escuela Politécnica NacionalIstituto Nazionale di Geofisica e VulcanologiaUniversité de Paris, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, CNRSGNS ScienceGoma Volcano ObservatoryVanuatu Meteorology and Geo-Hazards DepartmentAbstract In November 2019, the fourth Volcano Observatory Best Practices workshop was held in Mexico City as a series of talks, discussions, and panels. Volcanologists from around the world offered suggestions for ways to optimize volcano-observatory crisis operations. By crisis, we mean unrest that may or may not lead to eruption, the eruption itself, or its aftermath, all of which require analysis and communications by the observatory. During a crisis, the priority of the observatory should be to acquire, process, analyze, and interpret data in a timely manner. A primary goal is to communicate effectively with the authorities in charge of civil protection. Crisis operations should rely upon exhaustive planning in the years prior to any actual unrest or eruptions. Ideally, nearly everything that observatories do during a crisis should be envisioned, prepared, and practiced prior to the actual event. Pre-existing agreements and exercises with academic and government collaborators will minimize confusion about roles and responsibilities. In the situation where planning is unfinished, observatories should prioritize close ties and communications with the land and civil-defense authorities near the most threatening volcanoes. To a large extent, volcanic crises become social crises, and any volcano observatory should have a communication strategy, a lead communicator, regular status updates, and a network of colleagues outside the observatory who can provide similar messaging to a public that desires consistent and authoritative information. Checklists permit tired observatory staff to fulfill their duties without forgetting key communications, data streams, or protocols that need regular fulfilment (Bretton et al. Volcanic Unrest. Advances in Volcanology, 2018; Newhall et al. Bull Volcanol 64:3–20, 2020). Observatory leaders need to manage staff workload to prevent exhaustion and ensure that expertise is available as needed. Event trees and regular group discussions encourage multi-disciplinary thinking, consideration of disparate viewpoints, and documentation of all group decisions and consensus. Though regulations, roles and responsibilities differ around the world, scientists can justify their actions in the wake of an eruption if they document their work, are thoughtful and conscientious in their deliberations, and carry out protocols and procedures developed prior to volcanic unrest. This paper also contains six case studies of volcanic eruptions or observatory actions that illustrate some of the topics discussed herein. Specifically, we discuss Ambae (Vanuatu) in 2017–2018, Kīlauea (USA) in 2018, Etna (Italy) in 2018, Bárðarbunga (Iceland) in 2014, Cotopaxi (Ecuador) in 2015, and global data sharing to prepare for eruptions at Nyiragongo (Democratic Republic of Congo). A Spanish-language version of this manuscript is provided as Additional file 1.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13617-021-00112-9VolcanoObservatoryCrisisEruptionProtocolsCommunications
spellingShingle J. B. Lowenstern
K. Wallace
S. Barsotti
L. Sandri
W. Stovall
B. Bernard
E. Privitera
J.-C. Komorowski
N. Fournier
C. Balagizi
E. Garaebiti
Guidelines for volcano-observatory operations during crises: recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meeting
Journal of Applied Volcanology
Volcano
Observatory
Crisis
Eruption
Protocols
Communications
title Guidelines for volcano-observatory operations during crises: recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meeting
title_full Guidelines for volcano-observatory operations during crises: recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meeting
title_fullStr Guidelines for volcano-observatory operations during crises: recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meeting
title_full_unstemmed Guidelines for volcano-observatory operations during crises: recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meeting
title_short Guidelines for volcano-observatory operations during crises: recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meeting
title_sort guidelines for volcano observatory operations during crises recommendations from the 2019 volcano observatory best practices meeting
topic Volcano
Observatory
Crisis
Eruption
Protocols
Communications
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13617-021-00112-9
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