The terrifying images of smoke and flames devouring a renowned historic area in Hawaii have shaken up people in the United States, but in Greece, they are a near-annual occurrence. This year, the most horrific scenes were on the island of Rhodes, but even as Greeks absorbed the news about the latest national tragedy of 2023, there were also some hopeful signs.
The Wall Street Journal published an article this week titled ‘The Fire in Maui and the Lesson of Greece’. Author Costas Synolakis began by noting, “Athens learned the lessons of a 2018 blaze that killed 104. In Rhodes last month, only one person died.”
He then asks, “What went wrong in Maui? Last week a fire burned the historic city of Lahaina to the ground and killed at least 93 people, the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century. Some local politicians have called the fire the worst natural disaster in Hawaii’s history and compared it with the 1960 tsunami in Hilo, although a 1946 tsunami in Hilo, caused by an earthquake in Alaska, killed 158. Critics are questioning the emergency response and the effectiveness of evacuations. As in other disasters, comparisons with practices elsewhere are helpful and provide perspective.”
He chose to compare Maui and Rhodes, “an island roughly the same length and width as Maui. Its economy depends almost entirely on tourism, with about 2.5 million visitors in 2022, about the same number as Maui. Maui is a typical tropical Polynesian island; Rhodes is subtropical, and by Eastern Mediterranean standards, quite wooded and wet.”
Synolakis continued: “Last month several fires broke out in Rhodes, and there were big differences in crisis management. In Maui, about 11,000 tourists were evacuated, mainly from two locales. In Rhodes, between 20,000 and 30,000 people were evacuated from 12 locales in a single day. The fires in Maui burned for two days, and in Rhodes for about eight. In Rhodes, about 1,500 were evacuated from beaches, in Maui fewer than 20. In Rhodes, local residents, the Red Cross, and Greek Civil Protection delivered humanitarian supplies to evacuees. In Maui, some survivors reportedly had to buy their own mattresses and pillows.”
Most importantly, “in Rhodes, there was only one casualty, a volunteer firefighter. There were evacuation orders from the Greek emergency communications service, known as 112. In addition to being a single emergency number like 911, the 112 service encompasses a national integrated public alert and warning system, which provides emergency information to the public through mobile and landline telephones. The service doesn’t require an app or subscription; the messages go to all cellphones in an area at risk, in Greek and in English.”
It is hard to believe about the place in the United States, but “in Maui, many people didn’t receive timely warnings from the local system, which ‘relied on a series of sometimes confusing social media posts,’ according to the Associated Press,” Synolakis writes, adding, “some survivors have reported receiving no warning messages before the fire reached them, while others said messages appeared and then disappeared from their mobile phones and they couldn’t find instructions.”
Synolakis then cited a recent Greek incident with truly tragic consequences: “Compare what happened in Lahaina with another Greek fire, in Mati, in 2018. Photos of the disasters are eerily similar. In both cases, apparently, winds descended from the mountains with speeds up to about 60 miles an hour in Mati and 80 in Lahaina. In Mati, the fire took about half an hour to spread about half a mile from the nearest highway east of the town to the sea. There was no warning, and 104 people were killed. In Lahaina, there was some semblance of warning, and the fire took a bit less time to spread about a quarter-mile from the local highway, west toward the beach. In both cases, firefighting resources were spread thin, as responders were fighting other fires.”
“In Lahaina, all of its about 1,800 buildings completely burned; in Mati, fewer than 300 did. In both places, people were burned in their cars, in Mati some because of flawed crisis traffic management that directed drivers to the inferno, while in Lahaina possibly because of delays in evacuation and confusion,” the article noted.
Synolakis, a professor of engineering at the University of Southern California, has studied and written about such occurrences: “Similar conclusions could have been drawn from the Camp Fire in Paradise, Calif., in 2018, as I argued in these pages. There are no obvious excuses yet for not foreseeing the consequences of a fire attacking Lahaina, with descending strong winds in dry conditions.”
Read more at thenationalherald.com
RELATED TOPICS: Greece, Greek tourism news, Tourism in Greece, Greek islands, Hotels in Greece, Travel to Greece, Greek destinations, Greek travel market, Greek tourism statistics, Greek tourism report
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