India to add 100 more earthquake observatories by 2026: Jitendra Singh

August 21, 2021 08:54 pm | Updated 08:54 pm IST - New Delhi

File: Union Minister for State for Science & Technology and Earth Sciences Jitendra Singh

File: Union Minister for State for Science & Technology and Earth Sciences Jitendra Singh

India will add 100 more earthquake observatories by 2026, Science and Technology Minister Jitendra Singh said on Saturday.

Mr.Singh said that India is going to have 35 more earthquake observatories by the end of this year. Addressing the inaugural ceremony of the Joint Scientific Assembly of International Association of Geomagnetism and Aeronomy (IAGA) - International Association of Seismology and Physics of the Earth's Interior (IASPEI), he said the Indian subcontinent is considered as one of the world's most disaster-prone areas in terms of earthquakes, landslides, cyclones, floods, and tsunamis and the government is taking all necessary steps to meet these challenges.

"India is going to have 35 more earthquake observatories by the end of this year and 100 more such observatories in the next five years," the Union minister said.

He said in the last six-and-a-half decades since Independence, the country had only 115 earthquake observatories but now with Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the helm, there is going to be a quantum leap in the number of earthquake observatories in the country.

Mr. Singh said the importance of geology as a recognised science of the composition, structure and processes, which govern our planet, has probably reached its zenith today as human society grapples with challenges at multiple levels of interactions with the Mother Earth.

The minister expressed hope that the Joint Scientific Assembly of IAGA-IASPEI will act as a catalyst in bringing on board a greater number of researchers and practitioners from a global community to work on issues related to rendering science to society.

He said “it is a fitting environment for the two scientific communities to come together to forward research in their niche as well as pursue new avenues of cross-disciplinary investigations.” The minister said “the linkage between the deep earth structure and geomagnetism, and the role of fluids in earthquake nucleation are a few examples to emphasise the significance of the Joint Scientific Assembly of these two associations to promote cross-disciplinary research.” The IAGA and IASPEI have come together to hold a joint assembly in 2021, which is being hosted by the CSIR-NGRI with the support of the Ministry of Earth Sciences.

He impressed upon India's commitment to support various projects of earth system science to quantify the seismic hazard for better land use and urban planning and creating disaster-resilient infrastructures for reducing risks and ultimately paving way to sustainable development.

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