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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Google urges governments to share disaster data
by Staff Writers
Sendai, Japan (AFP) July 2, 2012


Google on Monday urged governments to get better at sharing information to allow citizens and first responders to make better use of the Internet during natural disasters.

At a conference in quake-prone Japan, Rachel Whetstone, the firm's senior vice president of public policy and communications, said some countries hesitate over disclosing data.

She said this prevents civil society from creating new services to help citizens in need.

"We certainly have found access to data has enormously improved many of our products, including maps," she said at Google's "Big Tent" conference, designed to discuss issues related to the Internet and society.

Roughly 430 participants gathered for the first "Big Tent" in Asia, held in this northern city, which was badly hit by the deadly earthquake and tsunami in March 2011.

"We are still seeing quite a few governments globally who are quite closed with their data. If we could have... greater access to that data, I think we could do even more amazing things," Whetstone said.

Tokyo was criticised for not publishing data it had as reactors at Fukushima went into meltdown, spreading radiation over a large area and forcing tens of thousands of people from their homes.

Public officials have said they were worried about sowing panic with information that was not readily understandable.

Engineers at the Google event also complained how Japan initially released radiation contamination data in PDF format, making it difficult for scientists around the world to easily edit and analyse them.

The global rush to access the data also caused the science ministry's servers to crash, prompting private IT firms and academics to scramble to help disseminate the data in easy-to-use formats with English translations.

"Scientists were very eager to attack this data if it could be organised," Brian McClendon, Google vice president of technology.

Google strengthened its disaster response operations after Hurricane Katrina hit the southern United States in 2005.

The IT giant offered "person finder" services in Japan to help reunite families along Japan's northern Pacific coasts which were hit by the 9.0-magnitude quake and subsequent deadly tsunami, triggering the Fukushima nuclear meltdown.

It also actively mapped areas hit by the tsunami, publishing photos of communities before and after the natural disaster.

But useful data from governments around the world in crises are difficult to collect, McClendon said.

"One of the challenges we have discovered in Katrina remains today, which is open data and being able to get it and deploy it and lay it on top of other data. It is what really makes a difference," he said.

Masaakira James Kondo, country manager for Twitter Japan, said he is now helping the Japanese government draft new guidelines for releasing information in crisis situations.

"There are not a lot of examples, where an earthquake of this scale hit a high-income nation that has Internet readily available," Kondo said.

"The government probably was the single entity that lost the public trust the most," he said.

The chaos in Japan after the triple disaster was amplified by fear of unknown health effects from the nuclear crisis, said Margareta Wahlstrom, UN special representative for disaster risk reduction.

Experts at the conference also stressed the importance of keeping a free flow of information on the Internet, even if it risked possible distribution of false information.

Meanwhile, consumers of information must also be educated to maximise the benefit of IT in disasters, said Wahlstrom of the United Nations.

"There is enormous work to do with the users -- communities, individuals, organisations, local governments -- about how to apply this data, and what to do with the knowledge actually at their fingertips today," she said.

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Japan business sentiment improves, risks remain
Tokyo (AFP) July 2, 2012 - Sentiment among large Japanese manufacturers improved in the quarter ended June, the Bank of Japan said Monday, although confidence remained weak amid a lumbering economic recovery.

Large manufacturers' sentiment rose to "minus one" from "minus four" in the previous quarter, according to the central bank's Tankan survey, offering some positive news for the world's third-biggest economy.

The figures represent the percentage of firms saying business conditions are good minus those saying they are bad, and are a key measure used by the BoJ in formulating monetary policy.

The result was better than the median forecast for "minus three" in a poll of economists by Dow Jones Newswires, and came after the central bank gave an upbeat outlook for Japan's economy, although Europe remained a key risk factor.

Maiko Noguchi, senior economist at Daiwa Securities said the Tankan "was positive as it shows that economic recovery is proceeding steadily".

Greater erosion in business confidence would have heaped pressure on the BoJ for further easing measures, she said, "but today's result will take the pressure off and make it possible for the bank to 'wait and see' before taking more action".

Last month, the central bank held off fresh easing steps, holding key interest rates steady at between zero and 0.1 percent and leaving unchanged a 70 trillion yen ($877 billion) asset purchase programme.

Japan has seen a mixed bag of economic data lately, with domestic demand and the employment picture improving, while factory output tumbled 3.1 percent in May amid a slump overseas, particularly in the eurozone.

The health of the 17-nation bloc has significant implications for Japan, which is a major exporter to Europe and holds large amounts of its public debt.

A flight by investors from the euro has also helped push up the value of the yen, making Japanese goods relatively more expensive overseas, after the unit hit record highs against the dollar late last year.

But huge reconstruction-related spending in Japan following the March 2011 quake-tsunami disasters and a government subsidy for eco-friendly vehicles have helped prop up the economy.

"Manufacturers' confidence unexpectedly improved despite a levelling-off in production and the yen's renewed strength," Naoki Murakami, chief economist at brokerage Monex, said in a note.

"We don't see signs that ripples from a slowdown in the global economy are reaching Japan. (The Tankan results) endorsed the Bank of Japan's judgement that the Japanese economy is on a recovery path."

However Tokyo has warned that the eurozone crisis is a major hurdle to Japan's recovery, while Premier Yoshihiko Noda said at the weekend his nation's huge public borrowing means it faces similar risks as debt-plagued Europe.

In the Tankan survey, sentiment among large non-manufacturing firms also improved, rising to "plus eight" from "plus five".

Large manufacturers expect further improvement in the next survey and are forecasting an average 10.1 percent profit rise in the current fiscal year, the bank said.

Big non-manufacturers, by contrast, expect a 1.8 percent decline in profits, according to the survey based on data from nearly 10,800 companies.



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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
20 killed as fuel truck crash in China sparks fire
Beijing (AFP) June 29, 2012
At least 20 people in China were killed Friday when two trucks collided and sent petrol into a timber mill below the road, causing a massive blaze, authorities said. The accident happened before dawn near the southern city of Guangzhou, according to a statement posted on the microblog of the city government's official news portal. It said 20 people had been confirmed killed - most of th ... read more


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