Tag: risk

  • Legislation for protection against earthquakes

    Legislation for protection against earthquakes


    During the government meeting on Wednesday, Romanias Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă said that Romania is a country with a high seismic risk, adding that the procedures under which certain construction companies can get certified in various fields of activity must be soon implemented. Furthermore, the Prime Minister says that certain regulations must be adopted forcing construction companies to assume responsibility regarding the earthquake-resistant structure of a building.


    The Prime Minister gave assurances that the government would carry on its efforts in the field of assessing the seismic risk and the measures to be implemented by the Executive and the local authorities for all the programmes and projects aimed at reinforcing the infrastructure


    In the meantime the Romanian Ministry of Development is already running the National Programme for the Consolidation of the Buildings with High Seismic Risk, which has this year been earmarked 40 million Euros worth of budgetary credits and 100 million Euros in commitment appropriation with a 100% funding.


    That means that neither the owners of the aforementioned buildings, nor the local authorities will have to reimburse the money used for their consolidation. According to official data, applications for the structural reinforcement of 400 such buildings have been registered since the beginning of the year. According to Development Minister Cseke Atilla, the first 50 projects have already been selected for funding within the National Programme for the Consolidation of the Buildings with High Seismic Risk.


    Education institutions, social-cultural buildings, blocks of flats, administrative buildings and healthcare units all over Romania have been included on the list of those eligible for funding. The sum for their structural reinforcement accounts for 148 million Euros. Furthermore, on Wednesday the government decided to submit for Parliament approval a bill aimed at banning the rent of apartments in blocks of flats included in vulnerable buildings. The ban will be lifted only after the reinforcement construction has ended.


    According to the Development Minister, after the aforementioned law has come into effect the rent contracts are to be terminated within 30 days at the most.


    Also on Wednesday, the Executive in Bucharest endorsed an emergency ordinance on a programme entitled Safe and Healthy Schools, which proposes a simplified procedure for the introduction of vulnerable schools into the aforementioned investment programme. The list is to be drawn up by the Ministry of Education and will be submitted to the Ministry of Regional Development. According to official figures, besides the buildings to be reinforced through the National Consolidation Programme, the Ministry is funding the reinforcement of another 251 buildings through the National Plan of Recovery and Resilience (PNRR) and of another 57 buildings through the National Investment Company.


    (bill)


  • How would Bucharest look like in the case of a major earthquake?

    How would Bucharest look like in the case of a major earthquake?


    A 7.4-degree earthquake on the Richer scale occurred
    in eastern Romania’s Vrancea seismic area on March 4, 1977, at 21:21 hrs local
    time, at a depth of 94 kilometres. The seismic movement was strongly felt
    across the country, mainly in the south and east. The tremor was also felt in neighbouring
    countries, Serbia, Bulgaria and Hungary, but also in other countries in central and
    southern Europe, as well as Russia, in an area north of Sankt Petersburg.


    In the ’77 quake, just
    as Romanians label it when they reminisce the catastrophe, from memories or by
    hearsay, of the country’s 40 counties, 23 were seriously hit. The tremor
    claimed the lives of 1,578 people. Over 11, 300 people were injured, of whom
    1,424 eventually lost their lives, that is 90% of the total number of the
    deceased. Almost 7,600 people were injured in Bucharest alone! Back then, icons
    of Romanian cultural and artistic life were among the dead: actor Toma Caragiu,
    television director Alexandru Bocăneț, vocalist Doina Badea, literary historian
    Mihai Gafița and prose writer Alexandru Ivasiuc.


    In Romania’s capital city, most
    of the deaths occurred in the wake of the total or partial collapse of more
    than 30 buildings, medium or high-level block of flats, some of them iconic for
    the city’s architecture. Also, a hotel and a wing of the Chemistry Faculty
    collapsed, as well as the Transport Ministry’s IT Centre. The Bucharest West thermal
    power plant was a whisker away from exploding, because a ceiling collapsed and a
    fire broke out. Many other buildings in Bucharest were severely or moderately
    hit.


    The devastating earthquakes that
    hit Turkey and Syria in early February and their dismal aftermath, but also the
    tremor that hit Romania in early March 1977 prompted the Romanians to reach the
    worrying conclusion that no lesson has been learned as regards the impending
    necessity to consolidate the buildings assessed according to various degrees of
    seismic risk!


    Here is architect Ştefan Dumitraşcu, speaking about the present-day situation in Bucharest.


    When I held
    the position of chief architect at the Municipality, for two and a half years,
    these buildings were identified and more than 180 of them had been going through
    a technical expertise so that solution could be found, for their safeguarding
    or consolidation. Moreover, two and a half years ago, through the Municipal Administration
    of the Seismic Risk Consolidation Works Administration, as part of the General
    Council in Bucharest municipal city there were 81 construction sites, especially
    created for such works. Unfortunately, because of changes in administration and
    because of a different mindset, as we speak, we have zero consolidation
    building sites.


    Mostly in the capital city’s
    central area, a great number of old constructions, built before 1977, are very
    fragile, because decades have passed and no renovation works have carried
    whatsoever, let alone anti-seismic consolidation. That is why, according to
    Stefan Dumitraşcu, we’re running out of time.


    We are, however,
    in the eleventh hour, maybe in the twelfth hour, if we want to make sense of
    what we must do. A consolidation operation cannot be completed overnight, it is
    a building site that lasts for a year, a year and a half, for a building
    erected in 1940, let’s say, an eight or ten-story building located on the
    Magheru Boulevard or Voctoria Road, two of the capital city’s most significant
    thoroughfares. As I was saying, on one hand, we can educate the people, in a bid
    to find the right alternative solutions for regrouping, helping and intervening,
    in the case of an earthquake. Everybody is unanimous in admitting that a major
    tremor in the Capital city will occur, and it will occur, that’s for sure, and
    it’s out of the question, with us, like, on a fine spring afternoon, going out
    in the park and waiting for the army to show up, carrying products from the
    State reserve and giving us a bottle of water each, and a can of meat. No way!
    Something like that must be very seriously organized and we also need to have a
    competent management at the Municipality, so that consolidation works can be
    resumed as soon as possible.


    The prefect of the Capital
    city, Toni Greblă, also cautioned that it was not the lack of funding that hindered
    the buildings anti-seismic rehabilitation, but


    …The
    carelessness of some of the administration officials who do not have a proper
    preparation of the projects enabling the start of the buildings’ rehabilitation
    and their anti-seismic consolidation. In the last 15 years, no municipal city
    can complain, and at that, especially Bucharest municipal city, that they did
    not have money earmarked for the rehabilitation of buildings. Year after year,
    funds provided by the Development Ministry remain unspent, and that, because we
    are unable to work in order to develop projects for the anti-seismic
    consolidation, and implement them.

    The consolidation of the
    buildings assessed for seismic risk can be fully financed from the budget but
    also through the Recovery and Resilience Plan for Romania, after registration is
    made for a dedicated digital platform. Waiting for their buildings to be
    consolidated, could the Romanians know, at least, what the country’s safest
    cities are, in the case of a strong earthquake? Attempting an answer to the
    question is a seismologist with the National Research-Development Institute for
    Earth Physics, Mihail Diaconescu.


    Of course we
    can know that, but I’m not so sure how sound that would be. What are we going
    to do, migrate to those cities, all of us, and depopulate part of the country? ʺ
    The thing is, construction and consolidation works should be carried, for all
    that has been affected in time. The moment we set about building something, not
    us, as natural persons, but as the State, as construction companies, we need to
    comply with the construction code. If that construction code is complied with, the
    danger does not exist anymore, that of the house crumbling on us.


    So, as we speak, how would
    Bucharest look like, in the case of a major earthquake? Far worse than 46 years
    ago, possibly. According to data provided by the Development Ministry, in
    Romania, there are 2,687 buildings assessed according to various degrees of
    seismic risk. Most of them a rein Bucharest, of which several hundred are 1st
    and 2nd-degree buildings according to their seismic risk potential.


    However, the situation is far
    worse. According to a survey carried by the Bucharest Municipal City’s
    Emergency Situations Committee, should an earthquake happen, having the same
    intensity as that in 1977, in Bucharest, 23,000 buildings could suffer serious
    damage. Of those, 1,000 could collapse, partially or totally. (EN)

  • January 14, 2022 UPDATE

    January 14, 2022 UPDATE

    ENERGY The
    Romanian government is planning an emergency order within the coalition formed
    by the National Liberal Party, the Social Democratic Party and the Democratic
    Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania, to support the citizens affected by the
    rise in electricity and natural gas prices. This announcement was made by prime
    minister Nicolae Ciucă after a meeting of the three-party council for social
    dialogue. He said protection measures will expand beyond 1st April based on a
    special bill. Trade unions say electricity and natural gas prices should be
    capped at the level of December 2020, before deregulation, both at the
    producers’ end, and at the suppliers’ end, for at least another six months,
    even a year. They say the cap should be uniform for the population and small
    businesses.


    FOREIGN POLICY The EU hopes to convince the Russian president Vladimir Putin through
    dialogue to give up his intentions to attack Ukraine, but it is also preparing
    tough sanctions to discourage Russia, the EU foreign ministers convening in
    Brest, France concluded on Friday. According to Radio Romania’s correspondent
    in Paris, the French foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, whose country is
    holding the rotating presidency of the EU Council, said Europeans are united
    and determined to make their voice heard. The EU foreign ministers are
    preparing sanctions against Moscow, and new talks on the matter are scheduled
    to take place in Brussels on January 24. Romania was represented in Brest by
    foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu who, according to the Foreign Ministry, pleaded
    for a number of elements that best reflect Romania’s interests. He said the
    EU’s partnership with NATO and the US must be clearly emphasised, and stressed
    the importance of presenting appropriately the current security situation in
    the Eastern Neighbourhood, including the Black Sea region.


    COVID-19 Romania reported on Friday almost 9,900 new Covid cases, 60% more than a
    week ago, as well as 30 deaths, including three recorded earlier. Some 450
    Covid patients are in intensive care. 230 outpatient centres are now available
    across the country for the persons infected with Covid to check their health
    condition and receive free antiviral medicine based on daytime hospitalisation,
    irrespective of whether they have health insurance. Health minister Alexandru
    Rafila says it is very important for patients to use these centres, unless they
    are in critical situation, thus lowering pressure on hospitals.


    LIST The National Committee for Emergency Situations updated the list of
    high COVID risk countries. All countries in the EU and the European Economic Area
    remain in the red tier, along with non-EU countries like Turkey, Israel and the
    US. South Africa, Brazil and India are no longer included in the red list. Among
    Romania’s neighbouring countries Serbia is on the yellow list, whereas Ukraine
    and the Republic of Moldova are now in the green tier. The new list takes
    effect on January 16.


    CULTURE DAY Romania’s National
    Culture Day is again celebrated this year through numerous concerts,
    performances, exhibitions, guided tours and workshops. We have a sacred
    duty. To honour our personalities, our works of art and our national
    heritage, said culture minister Lucian Romaşcanu, adding: I’m
    encouraging all Romanians, of all ages, to continue to respect their history,
    national identity and traditions, for they are the only visiting card that
    never loses its currency. National Culture Day has been celebrated for
    the last 12 years on 15th January, on the anniversary of the birth of national
    poet Mihai Eminescu. As part of the programme of events held this year, the
    Romanian Academy Friday hosted a special event attended by leading local
    cultural figures. (tr. A.M.P., C.M.)

  • July 18, 2021 UPDATE

    July 18, 2021 UPDATE

    COVID-19 The number of coronavirus infections in Romania remains low, with 44 new cases reported on Sunday out of 18,800 tests conducted in 24 hours. One new COVID-related death was also reported, and 30 patients are in intensive care. In related news, the European Commissioner for Health Stella Kyriakides, who was recently on a visit to Romania, urged the authorities to step up the vaccine rollout, to protect against the new coronavirus variants. Since 27 December 2020, when the vaccination campaign began in Romania, over 9.2 million vaccine doses have been given to more than 4.8 million people. Around 4.7 million people are fully vaccinated at present.



    RISK A new list of high epidemiological risk countries took effect in Romania on Sunday. Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands are on the red list, while Greece, one of the holiday destinations of choice for Romanians, is now in the yellow zone. On arriving in Romania, travellers who are fully vaccinated are not required to isolate, regardless of the country from which they come. All persons without a full vaccine travelling from a red-list country will have to follow the 14-day quarantine requirement, while those coming from a yellow-list country are only required to quarantine if they dont have a negative PCR test or proof of having recovered from the disease.



    AID The people in the parts of Alba County (central-western Romania) affected by flash floods may receive financial aid from the government as of Monday, the PM Florin Cîţu promised on Sunday. He visited the area affected by flooding, together with the interior minister Lucian Bode, and the defence minister Nicolae Ciucă. Record amounts of precipitations have been reported in the region over the past few days, with 223 litres of rainwater per square metre within 5 hours causing unprecedented flooding in that part of the country. Minister Bode emphasised that the most important thing is that there are no victims, and mentioned that nearly 300 people have been evacuated. Also according to the interior minister, over 120 homes were destroyed, national roads were obstructed and water supply disrupted. Meanwhile, private persons, volunteers and Red Cross representatives were involved in distributing water, food and other supplies.



    FLOODS The death toll of the devastating flooding in Germany reached 156 on Sunday, bringing the total number of deaths in Western Europe up to at least 183, AFP reports. In Germany, people have been urged to stay away from basements and underground garages and passage ways, and authorities warned that flooded roads are a danger to citizens. Chancellor Angela Merkel described the situation as a ‘national tragedy and promised state aid for reconstruction and repair works. These efforts are expected to cost several billion euros. In Austria, fire fighters are in standby in the regions of Salzburg and Tirol, while the town of Hallein is under water. ‘Unfortunately, the heavy rainfalls and storms have caused severe damage in several parts of Austria,’ PM Sebastian Kurz has tweeted.



    PESTICIDE Several batches of ice-cream have been recalled from the Romanian market. The products contained small amounts of a carcinogen. The European Commission decided that products containing the additive locust bean gum (E410) contaminated with ethylene oxide must be withdrawn from the EU market even if the pesticide is not detected. After 3 emergency meetings held on the 29 and 30 June and on 13 July, the Commission also decided that the products already purchased by consumers should be recalled.



    VISIT The president of the Republic of Moldova Maia Sandu will be on an official visit to Georgia on 19-20 July, MOLDPRES reports. The Moldovan president will attend an international conference in Batumi, entitled ‘Three states – one choice: Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine on the move. The event aims to improve cooperation between the 3 EU associated partners. In Batumi, Maia Sandu will have meetings with her Georgian counterpart Salome Zourabichvili, with the Ukrainian PM Volodimir Zelenski, and with the president of the European Council, Charles Michel.



    TENNIS Horia Tecău (Romania) / Kevin Krawietz (Germany) were defeated by Tim Puetz (Germany) / Michael Venus (New Zealand), 6-3, 6-7 (3), 10-8, on Sunday, in the doubles final of the Hamburg tennis tournament. Tecău and Krawietz played their 4th final, and the only title they won together was in June, in the Halle tournament. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • January 15, 2021

    January 15, 2021

    VACCINATION The president of Romania Klaus Iohannis received
    the Covid 19 vaccine on Friday, at the Central Military Hospital in Bucharest. He
    subsequently said the vaccine is safe and efficient, and immunisation and
    compliance with the protection rules will help us overcome the pandemic. The 2nd
    phase of the vaccination programme started today in Romania. It targets the
    high-risk population and workers in key sectors. Since
    the start of the pandemic, Romania has reported more than 688,000 coronavirus
    infections. Over 619,000 patients have recovered and more than 17,000 died. Over
    3,300 new cases and 63 deaths were reported on Friday, and 1,091 patients are
    in intensive care.



    CORRUPTION Liviu Dragnea, former president of the Social Democratic Party and former Chamber of Deputies speaker, has been charged with influenced peddling in another corruption-related case, concerning his presence at the US president Donald Trumps inauguration in Washington in early 2017. Prosecutors claim the former Social Democratic chief received undue benefits for himself and his party, in the amount of 380,000 US dollars, consisting in the travel package, political consultancy and various lobby services. In the same case, his former adviser and Romanias consul general in Bonn, Gheorghe Dimitrescu is also accused of influence peddling. Liviu Dragnea is currently serving a prison sentence for inciting abuse of office. In 2019 he was sentenced to 3 and a half years in a case involving fictitious employment contracts in Teleorman County.



    GOVERNMENT The government of Romania is holding an online meeting today. On Thursday the finance minister Alexandru Nazare said the Cabinet was preparing a reform of state-owned companies, and that on Friday loss and debt reduction targets will be presented, as well as means to monitor their activity. The state budget bill for this year is to be finalized at the end of this month.



    CULTURE Romania celebrates today 171 years since the birth of poet Mihai Eminescu, with online events or events without a live audience. As a tribute to Romanias greatest poet, January 15 was declared the National Culture Day, aimed at promoting culture, arts and academic effort. This day has been celebrated since 2010 in Romania, the neighbouring Republic of Moldova, and in the Romanian communities abroad. Diplomatic and consular missions as well as Romanian cultural institutes abroad are hosting special events devoted to this day. In turn, Radio Romania will celebrate Mihai Eminescus role in the national and world culture, with special shows, interviews, documentaries and festive events.



    INNOVATION Only 14.6% of the companies with at least 10 employees in Romania reported any innovation activity in 2016-2018, which places the country last in the EU, according to a survey made public by the Eurostat today. At EU level, 50.3% of companies had innovation activities in the respective period, with the highest number of innovative enterprises reported in Estonia, Cyprus, Belgium and Germany. Bottom of the list are Romania, Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria. In Romania, the share of companies conducting innovative activities rose from 10% in 2016 to 14.6% in 2018.



    INAUGURATION In the US, president elect Joe Bidens team has cancelled a train trip and a rehearsal for the inauguration ceremony due on January 20, over concerns for Bidens security. Washington mobilised police forces and the National Guard, amid information pointing to attempts to organise armed protests to prevent the Biden administration from taking office. According to Radio Romanias correspondent, the FBI is looking into large-scale and disquieting online activity related to possible violence at the inauguration ceremony. Over 200 suspects tied to the US Capitol riots of January 6 have been identified so far, and more than 100 have been arrested. Trumps impeachment procedure has been moved to the Senate, but debates are set to begin after the inauguration of the new president. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • October 13, 2020 UPDATE

    October 13, 2020 UPDATE

    COVID-19 Romania is in a difficult stage, in a second wave of the COVID-19
    pandemic, which is reported in most European countries as well, and it is vital for us to reverse this negative trend,
    president Klaus Iohannis told a press conference on Tuesday night.Without a collective effort, overcoming this unprecedented crisis will
    be impossible, the head of state added. He once again called on citizens to be
    cautious and observe current regulations. The appeal comes as the number of
    coronavirus infection cases is on the rise in Romania. The health minister Nelu Tataru announced
    on Tuesday at the end of a National Committee for Emergencies meeting that the
    state of alert in Romania will be
    extended by another 30 days as of October 15. In turn, the head of the
    Department for Emergencies Raed Arafat announced new measures to contain
    the coronavirus pandemic. Face covering will be worn in crowded areas with
    under 3 infections per thousand people, and over this level face masks will be
    compulsory outdoors.
    Arafat also announced that all private events (weddings, anniversaries and so
    on) are banned across the country. 3,109 new cases were reported on Tuesday, out of 26,718 tests conducted
    nationwide, the Strategic Communication group announced.Another
    68 SARS-COV-2 patients died, taking the death toll to 5,535. Since the start of
    the pandemic, over 160,000 cases have been confirmed in Romania, with more than
    120,000 patients having recovered.




    ECONOMY The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has improved slightly its estimates on the Romanian economy in 2020 and 2021, according to the latest World Economic Outlook report, made public on Tuesday. While in April the IMF estimated a 5% economic contraction this year, the new forecasts point to a 4.8% drop and a 4.6% growth rate in 2021. The IMF estimates are more optimistic than those released by the World Bank, which last week predicted a 5.7% contraction for Romania in 2020. For next year however the WB expects a 4.9% growth. Also, according to the IMF, the unemployment rate in Romania will rise to 7.9% this year, which is significantly lower than the 10.1% estimated in April.



    BONUS The Chamber of Deputies Tuesday passed a bill concerning bonuses for teaching staff and other school personnel exposed to COVID-19 infection risks. The bill, endorsed in an emergency procedure, will be sent to the president for promulgation. The bonus amounts to around 400 euro per month for teachers and 300 euro per month for school personnel, and will be paid throughout the state of emergency and alert.



    COMMUNICATIONS Vlad Stoica was appointed by Parliament on Tuesday as head of the National Communication Regulatory Authority (ANCOM), with 283 votes in favour and 36 against. Three other candidates were considered for the post. Vlad Stoica, former chief of staff for ex-PM Victor Ponta in 2013-2015, is replacing Sorin Grindeanu, who stepped down in order to become vice-president of the Social Democratic Party. Under current legislation, Grindeanu had to choose between the 2 positions, which are incompatible.



    AIR QUALITY The National Air Quality Monitoring Network is extending further to an investment of roughly 17 million euro, which will also cover the set up of an air quality forecast system. Most of the amount comes from the EU under the Large Infrastructure Operational Programme, Priority 4, the Romanian minister for the environment, waters and forestry Costel Alexe said on Tuesday. The National Air Quality Monitoring Network currently consists in 148 stations, 8 of them in Bucharest. Under the financing agreement signed on Tuesday, the Network will be extended by 60 stations. An air quality forecast system will also be implemented. The system, accessible to the public on a daily basis, will provide information on air pollutant levels for 24, 48 or 72 hours anywhere in the country. (translated by A.M. Popescu)

  • How Predictable Are Earthquakes?

    How Predictable Are Earthquakes?

    This statement belongs to honorary
    director of the Earth Physics Institute, Gheorghe Marmureanu, who recalled that
    Vrancea, the most seismically active area of Romania, produces annually 8 to 12
    earthquakes of around 4 points on the Richter scale. According to Gheorghe Marmureanu, Vrancea is unique in the world.






    Gheorghe Marmureanu: I looked
    at Vrancea, which is a special system, totally different from anything in the
    world, even if you could say that the Hindukush in the Himalayas is similar. It
    may have strong earthquakes at great depth, but they don’t have the same
    manifestation. There is something similar in the north east of Colombia. I
    looked at everything that occurred in the last 600 years in Romania. For the
    last 300 years of activity I saw what earthquakes caused loss of life and
    material goods – in the 312 years I have analyzed there were 5 great
    earthquakes that caused loss of life and damage.






    A tremor closer to the surface, meaning
    less than 100 km, has effects towards Bucharest, Bulgaria and Serbia, they are
    tremors directing destructive energy in those directions. Deeper tremors get
    directed mostly towards Moldova and Ukraine. There is an alternation of surface
    and deep tremors, and by this logic, Marmureanu said that a quake oriented towards
    the northwest would occur sometime in 2040, because the one in March 1977 was a
    surface tremor. There is the possibility that it will not occur even then,
    because in 1986 in Vrancea there was a 6.9 magnitude earthquake that did not do
    any damage, but released a lot of energy. The Earth is a living system, in
    continuous transformation, says Gheorghe Marmureanu.






    Gheorghe Marmureanu: We have the great African rift, developing
    day by day. The waters in the Red Sea have already run into the rift. Africa
    will one day break up, as it shifts upwards. The south and east of Africa will
    dislocate and form another continent with Madagascar. We don’t see it, but
    America moves further away from Europe every year by 45 to 55 mm. Everything is
    alive. Below us, between 110 to 200 km and 3000 km, there is magma. Magma is
    not still, it moves. The upper magma cools, the lower magma is hot, there are
    convection currents in some places from left to right, in other places from
    right to left. Above the magma are tectonic plates. There are 16 tectonic
    plates, and at the places they meet, across their thickness, which is 80 to 100
    km, there are non-linear phenomena that cannot be controlled.






    Earthquakes have different causes, 98% of them are tectonic and
    superficial. The tectonic plates, which have various thickness and sizes,
    interact. The greatest tectonic plate is the Pacific one, the Eurasian one,
    which runs from the mid-Atlantic to the Barents Sea, next to others such as the
    Philippine one, the Pacific plate, the North American plate, and all these
    float on magma, a melting substance where earthquakes cannot occur, because for
    earthquakes a crystalline structure is needed, as explained by Gheorghe
    Marmureanu. Earthquakes need a crystalline structure, a structure that can
    store potential energy that it releases later. In Romania, tremors do not occur
    because one plate slides against another, it is a system of continental
    collision. So how predictable earthquakes really are?






    Gheorghe Marmureanu: Earthquakes are earthquakes. If they would
    be predictable they would be controllable, which we cannot do in fact. They
    occur anywhere and anytime on this earth.






    However, Romania has set up a system of real time tremor warning.
    Professor Marmureanu said about this system:






    Gheorghe Marmureanu: Our system has been granted an award by the
    European Community, it is a system that allows for the magnitude of the tremor
    to be established in four seconds. If the system reveals a 7-egree tremor, then
    all users go on alert, all the areas with a major risk in case of earthquake.
    It is the only system in the world, aside from the Japanese one.








    In the event of an earthquake, at risk installations get blocked
    automatically, and 30 seconds before the earthquake occurs, state institutions
    and the Committee for States of Emergency get alerted.