When you travel, you always need to be aware of emergency situations. We’ve gone over what to do if you’re out of town (or are planning to be out of town) and there’s a hurricane headed your way. But you never know when a hotel fire, terrorist situation, or natural disaster may strike right where you are.
Local and federal governments in the US want to be able to give people the information they’ll need during an emergency situation. They’ve set up emergency alerts that can be played on TVs, radios and phones during an emergency. To ensure this system works, they coordinate testing these alert systems here and there. In fact, today at 2:20pm ET, there will be a nationwide emergency alert test on cell phones, wireless devices, radios and TVs
IMPORTANT: On Wednesday, Oct. 4th at 2:20 p.m. ET, there will be a nationwide emergency alert test on cell phones, wireless devices, radios, and TVs.
This is a standard test that occurs at least once every three years. No action is needed.
Info & FAQs: https://t.co/KKyrIr4e03 pic.twitter.com/xDW92DwcAy
— FEMA (@fema) October 2, 2023
Coordinating these emergency alerts is a smart idea and I hope, if there ever was such an issue, that they’d work. However, as a tangent, I recently found a map that shows all the current emergency and disaster situations currently happening around the world.
Now, if you’ve been reading our blog for a while, you know that I love oddball maps. I’ve written about many of them in the past:
- The funniest map of Disney World I’ve ever seen
- Map shows where you’d be if you dug a hole straight through earth
- 15 maps that will blow your mind
But this map isn’t meant to be quirky or funny. It’s made by the Hungarian National Association of Radio Distress-Signalling and Infocommunications (RSOE). They operate this map, called the Emergency and Disaster Information Service (EDIS) with the objective to monitor, document and analyze all kind of emergency or disaster events worldwide.
“We process data of several organizations, authorities and trusted media to obtain reliable information using the speed and the data spectrum of the internet. Our services include the displaying of gathered information on various user interfaces and the notification of customers on selected events.”
This is the entire map at once:
And if you click on that event, you get some of the details:
From https://rsoe-edis.org/eventList/details/484071/0:
Some of the information may not be a “life or death” emergency, but still interesting and important to know. Such as “persistent thick fog” in France.
They also give information of what’s happening in Ukraine:
But anyway, as a map geek, I found it a pretty interesting site.
You can go directly to the map if you click here.
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