Italian quake ruling rattles global science community
Court convicts group of scientists of manslaughter for inadequate quake information
By Andre Mayer, CBC News
Posted: Oct 24, 2012 5:22 AM ET
Last Updated: Oct 24, 2012 12:37 PM ET
An Italian court has found six scientists and one ex-government official guilty of inadequately warning civilians of the seriousness of seismic activity in the Abruzzo region prior to the 2009 earthquake in L'Aquila, which killed over 300 people. (Marco Di Lauro/Getty Images)
Related
Related Stories
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
Earthquake experts say an Italian court’s decision to convict a group of scientists of manslaughter in relation to a 2009 earthquake is likely to send a chill through the global scientific community.
“It’s a travesty,” says Canadian earthquake expert Gail Atkinson. "I think that, unfortunately, what it will result in is seismologists and other scientists being afraid to say anything at all.”
The court ruled on Monday that six scientists and one ex-government official were guilty of manslaughter for failing to adequately warn Italians about a deadly 2009 earthquake in L'Aquila, in the Abruzzo region. Each defendant was sentenced to six years in prison.
The decision aroused rancour in the scientific community.
On Tuesday, an editorial in the esteemed journal Nature stated that the “verdict is perverse and the sentence ludicrous.”
'It’s a travesty... what it will result in is seismologists and other scientists being afraid to say anything at all.”'— Gail Atkinson, Canada Research Chair in Earthquake Hazards and Ground Motions
On the same day, four top Italian disaster experts quit their jobs, saying the ruling will make it impossible for them to perform their duties.
Chill in science community
That feeling of reticence extended beyond Italy’s borders.
“I just think scientists are going to be reluctant to deal with the problem, particularly government scientists,” says John Clague, a professor in the department of earth sciences at Simon Fraser University and a member of the Royal Society of Canada.
“Academics like myself, we’re going to be very guarded about the words we use” to talk about seismic activity in any particular geographical region.
The 6.3-magnitude quake on April 6, 2009, killed 309 people, injured about 1,500 others and laid waste to most of the buildings in the medieval town of L'Aquila.
Since the beginning of the 13-month trial, seismologists around the world have stressed that given current technology, there is no way to accurately forecast an earthquake.
In an interview with Nature at the outset of the trial last September, Italian prosecutor Fabio Picuti acknowledged this fact, saying, “I’m not crazy. I know they can’t predict earthquakes.”
When the trial started, Judge Giuseppe Romano Gargarella said that the defendants “gave inexact, incomplete and contradictory information” about whether a series of small tremors in the six months prior to the 2009 disaster were significant enough to issue a quake warning.
'Risk communication'
But others said the crux of the trial was not earthquake prediction, but risk communication.
In a blog post for Scientific American, journalist David Ropeik wrote that none of the scientists on the Great Risks commission, the national government body that evaluates the potential for natural disasters, actually spoke with the public about the possibility of an earthquake.
A firefighter assesses the damage after a 6.0 magnitude earthquake in Finale Emilia on May 20, 2012. It was the strongest quake to hit Italy in three years. (Giorgio Benvenuti/Reuters)That task fell to Bernardo De Bernardinis, a government official who was not a seismologist, and who tried to assuage public concern by glibly suggesting they relax with a glass of wine. De Bernardinis was among the defendants in the case.
Other defendants included Franco Barberi, head of the Great Risks Commission and Enzo Boschi, the head of the national Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology at the time.
While there is no way to accurately predict a quake, Ropeik writes that “the scientists did a horrible job of communicating.”
Facing the public
In the months preceding the 2009 earthquake, the area had experienced a so-called “swarm” of seismological events, the biggest of which hit a magnitude of 4.3. This swarm increased the probability that a larger quake could follow, but the actual chance of it happening had only marginally increased.
Atkinson, a University of Western Ontario earth sciences professor and Canada Research Chair on earthquake hazards, says that scientists aren't really cut out for public relations.
“I think that the difficulty is that when scientists speak, they like to equivocate,” says Atkinson.
“They say things like, ‘There’s a two per cent chance that there could be a large earthquake, but a 98 per cent chance that there won’t be,' " said Atkinson. "And that’s not really what the public wants to hear.
"The public wants the scientists to say there will be one or there won’t be one. And I think it’s hard for the public to understand that a scientist can’t say that.”
Michael Bostock, a University of British Columbia professor of seismology, says that there needs to be a clearer definition of roles for scientists.
He says that the role of scientists should be “to provide objective information about natural hazards” to civic officials, whose role in turn should be “to weigh the benefits of protective actions against the costs of sending out alarms,” as well as conveying the information to the public.
Clague concedes the Italian scientists did a weak job of communicating the seismic peril, but wonders whether a more ominous warning would have altered people’s behavior.
“What if they had said that, within a week, there might be a devastating earthquake? Would it have changed public behaviour? I doubt it, because you can’t predict these things with any certainty at all,” says Clague.
“That would have just put people in a more anxious state.”
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Nigel Wright has resigned as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's chief of staff, following revelations he wrote a $90,000 cheque to repay living expenses claimed by Senator Mike Duffy. more »
- Jeep driver apologizes after stunt kills Edmonton woman
- A man claiming to be the driver of a Jeep that struck and killed a spectator at a charity event in Edmonton says he is sorry for what happened. more »
- Senior Pakistani politician Zahra Shahid shot dead
- Voting in Karachi goes ahead a day after gunmen killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
- US Virgin Islands environment head arrested for drug trafficking
- Federal agents have arrested the top enforcement officer for the U.S. Virgin Islands environment agency on drug trafficking charges after he was allegedly caught with a cache of cocaine on a government patrol boat. more »
Must Watch
Latest World News Headlines
- Canadian military gear stranded in Afghanistan
- A team of 15 Canadian soldiers has been dispatched to Kandahar on a month-long assignment to assess whether dozens of military containers are still seaworthy enough to be brought home. more »
- Iran hangs 2 men convicted of spying
- Iran's state radio says authorities have executed two men convicted of spying for Israel's Mossad and the American CIA spy agency. more »
- US Virgin Islands environment head arrested for drug trafficking
- Federal agents have arrested the top enforcement officer for the U.S. Virgin Islands environment agency on drug trafficking charges after he was allegedly caught with a cache of cocaine on a government patrol boat. more »
- Senior Pakistani politician Zahra Shahid shot dead
- Voting in Karachi goes ahead a day after gunmen killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
The National
The Current
- Why thousands of people want a one-way trip to Mars May. 17, 2013 4:08 PM Nearly 80,000 people are eager to blast off on a one-way colonizing mission to Mars - but some experts believe no one is likely to get off the ground.
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- Jeep driver apologizes after stunt kills Edmonton woman
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- Astronaut Chris Hadfield adjusts to 'earthling' life
- Email is proof Senate greenlit expenses, Brazeau says
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford cancels weekly radio show
- Senior Pakistani politician Zahra Shahid shot dead
- Iran hangs 2 men convicted of spying

