EGU26-20711, updated on 14 Mar 2026
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20711
EGU General Assembly 2026
© Author(s) 2026. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Wednesday, 06 May, 12:05–12:15 (CEST)
 
Room 1.15/16
Towards Public Earthquake Early Warning in Switzerland, Greece, Romania, and Croatia
Thomas Planès1, John Clinton1, Maren Boese1, Frederick Massin1, Billy Burgoa5, Alexandru Marmureanu2, Mihai Anghel2, Christian Neagoe2, Dragos Ene2, Elena Manea2, Christos Evangelidis3, Kostas Boukouras3, Katarina Zailac4, Marin Secanj4, Josip Stipcevic4, and Iva Dasovic4
Thomas Planès et al.
  • 1Swiss Seismological Service, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
  • 2National Institute for Earth Physics (NIEP), Magurele, Romania
  • 3National Observatory of Athens, Athens, Greece
  • 4Department of Geophysics, Faculty of Science, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
  • 5Independant Consultant, La Paz, Bolivia

EEW is in operation in many places around the globe, but no country in Europe currently offers a public alert system despite significant seismic risk. Recently, the Swiss Seismological Service (SED) at ETH Zurich, in collaboration with local agencies, has rolled out public EEW systems across Central America using their internally developed algorithms and mobile phone application. The ETH-SED SeisComP EEW (ESE) system consists of two algorithms - the point source Virtual Seismologist (VS) and the Finite fault rupture detector (Finder). The mobile phone application relies on Firecloud messaging and Apple Push Notifications and is available for Android and iOS users. It has proven reliable to send low-latency alerts to several hundred of thousand users.

We are currently installing and testing the ESE system in Europe in countries where the earthquake hazard ranges from moderate (Switzerland-SED) to high (Greece-NOA, Romania-NIEP, Croatia-UniZG). Here, we present the developments undertaken over the last year in those countries and report on the algorithm performance and alert distribution for recent events. We discuss the remaining challenges and communication strategies towards public release.

This work has benefited from funding within the TRANSFORM² project, European Commission project number 101188365 (HORIZON-INFRA-2024-DEV-01-01 call); and from the Seconds Matter project, SNSF-MAPS project numbers IZ11Z0230881 and F-RO-CH-2024-0263.

How to cite: Planès, T., Clinton, J., Boese, M., Massin, F., Burgoa, B., Marmureanu, A., Anghel, M., Neagoe, C., Ene, D., Manea, E., Evangelidis, C., Boukouras, K., Zailac, K., Secanj, M., Stipcevic, J., and Dasovic, I.: Towards Public Earthquake Early Warning in Switzerland, Greece, Romania, and Croatia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20711, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20711, 2026.