(a)
In general
The Administrator, through the National Weather Service and in consultation with other relevant Administration offices, shall operate a program to provide tsunami detection, forecasting, and warnings for the Pacific and Arctic Ocean regions and for the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, and Gulf of Mexico region.
(b)
Components
The program under this section shall—
(1)
include the tsunami warning centers established under subsection (d);
(2)
utilize and maintain an array of robust tsunami detection technologies;
(3)
maintain detection equipment in operational condition to fulfill the detection, forecasting, and warning requirements of this chapter;
(4)
provide tsunami forecasting capability based on models and measurements, including tsunami inundation models and maps for use in increasing the preparedness of communities, including through the TsunamiReady program;
(5)
maintain data quality and management systems to support the requirements of the program;
(6)
include a cooperative effort among the Administration, the United States Geological Survey, and the National Science Foundation under which the Geological Survey and the National Science Foundation shall provide rapid and reliable seismic information to the Administration from international and domestic seismic networks;
(7)
provide a capability for the dissemination of warnings to at-risk States and tsunami communities through rapid and reliable notification to government officials and the public, including utilization of and coordination with existing Federal warning systems, including the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Weather Radio All Hazards Program;
(8)
allow, as practicable, for integration of tsunami detection technologies with other environmental observing technologies; and
(9)
include any technology the Administrator considers appropriate to fulfill the objectives of the program under this section.
(c)
System areas
The program under this section shall operate—
(1)
a Pacific tsunami warning system capable of forecasting tsunami anywhere in the Pacific and Arctic Ocean regions and providing adequate warnings; and
(2)
an Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, and Gulf of Mexico tsunami warning system capable of forecasting tsunami and providing adequate warnings in areas of the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, and Gulf of Mexico that are determined—
(A)
to be geologically active, or to have significant potential for geological activity; and
(B)
to pose significant risks of tsunami for States along the coastal areas of the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, or Gulf of Mexico.
(d)
Tsunami warning centers
(1)
In general
The Administrator, through the National Weather Service, shall maintain or establish—
(A)
a Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii;
(B)
a West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center in Alaska; and
(C)
any additional forecast and warning centers determined by the National Weather Service to be necessary.
(2)
Responsibilities
The responsibilities of each tsunami warning center shall include—
(A)
continuously monitoring data from seismological, deep ocean, and tidal monitoring stations;
(B)
evaluating earthquakes that have the potential to generate tsunami;
(C)
evaluating deep ocean buoy data and tidal monitoring stations for indications of tsunami resulting from earthquakes and other sources;
(D)
disseminating forecasts and tsunami warning bulletins to Federal, State, and local government officials and the public;
(E)
coordinating with the tsunami hazard mitigation program described in section
3204 of this title to ensure ongoing sharing of information between forecasters and emergency management officials; and
(F)
making data gathered under this chapter and post-warning analyses conducted by the National Weather Service or other relevant Administration offices available to researchers.
(e)
Transfer of technology; maintenance and upgrades
(1)
In general
In carrying out this section, the National Weather Service, in consultation with other relevant Administration offices, shall—
(A)
develop requirements for the equipment used to forecast tsunami, which shall include provisions for multipurpose detection platforms, reliability and performance metrics, and to the maximum extent practicable how the equipment will be integrated with other United States and global ocean and coastal observation systems, the global earth observing system of systems, global seismic networks, and the Advanced National Seismic System;
(B)
develop and execute a plan for the transfer of technology from ongoing research described in section
3205 of this title into the program under this section; and
(C)
ensure that maintaining operational tsunami detection equipment is the highest priority within the program carried out under this chapter.
(2)
Report to Congress
(A)
Not later than 1 year after January 12, 2007, the National Weather Service, in consultation with other relevant Administration offices, shall transmit to Congress a report on how the tsunami forecast system under this section will be integrated with other United States and global ocean and coastal observation systems, the global earth observing system of systems, global seismic networks, and the Advanced National Seismic System.
(B)
Not later than 3 years after January 12, 2007, the National Weather Service, in consultation with other relevant Administration offices, shall transmit a report to Congress on how technology developed under section
3205 of this title is being transferred into the program under this section.
(f)
Federal cooperation
When deploying and maintaining tsunami detection technologies, the Administrator shall seek the assistance and assets of other appropriate Federal agencies.
(g)
Annual equipment certification
At the same time Congress receives the budget justification documents in support of the President’s annual budget request for each fiscal year, the Administrator shall transmit to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on Science of the House of Representatives a certification that—
(1)
identifies the tsunami detection equipment deployed pursuant to this chapter, as of December 31 of the preceding calendar year;
(2)
certifies which equipment is operational as of December 31 of the preceding calendar year;
(3)
in the case of any piece of such equipment that is not operational as of such date, identifies that equipment and describes the mitigation strategy that is in place—
(A)
to repair or replace that piece of equipment within a reasonable period of time; or
(B)
to otherwise ensure adequate tsunami detection coverage;
(4)
identifies any equipment that is being developed or constructed to carry out this chapter but which has not yet been deployed, if the Administration has entered into a contract for that equipment prior to December 31 of the preceding calendar year, and provides a schedule for the deployment of that equipment; and
(5)
certifies that the Administrator expects the equipment described in paragraph (4) to meet the requirements, cost, and schedule provided in that contract.
(h)
Congressional notifications
The Administrator shall notify the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on Science of the House of Representatives within 30 days of—
(1)
impaired regional forecasting capabilities due to equipment or system failures; and
(2)
significant contractor failures or delays in completing work associated with the tsunami forecasting and warning system.
(i)
Report
Not later than January 31, 2010, the Comptroller General of the United States shall transmit a report to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on Science of the House of Representatives that—
(1)
evaluates the current status of the tsunami detection, forecasting, and warning system and the tsunami hazard mitigation program established under this chapter, including progress toward tsunami inundation mapping of all coastal areas vulnerable to tsunami and whether there has been any degradation of services as a result of the expansion of the program;
(2)
evaluates the National Weather Service’s ability to achieve continued improvements in the delivery of tsunami detection, forecasting, and warning services by assessing policies and plans for the evolution of modernization systems, models, and computational abilities (including the adoption of new technologies); and
(3)
lists the contributions of funding or other resources to the program by other Federal agencies, particularly agencies participating in the program.
(j)
External review
The Administrator shall enter into an arrangement with the National Academy of Sciences to review the tsunami detection, forecast, and warning program established under this chapter to assess further modernization and coverage needs, as well as long-term operational reliability issues, taking into account measures implemented under this chapter. The review shall also include an assessment of how well the forecast equipment has been integrated into other United States and global ocean and coastal observation systems and the global earth observing system of systems. Not later than 2 years after January 12, 2007, the Administrator shall transmit a report containing the National Academy of Sciences’ recommendations, the Administrator’s responses to the recommendations, including those where the Administrator disagrees with the Academy, a timetable to implement the accepted recommendations, and the cost of implementing all the Academy’s recommendations, to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on Science of the House of Representatives.
(k)
Report
Not later than 3 months after January 12, 2007, the Administrator shall establish a process for monitoring and certifying contractor performance in carrying out the requirements of any contract to construct or deploy tsunami detection equipment, including procedures and penalties to be imposed in cases of significant contractor failure or negligence.