地震避難指南
What is an Earthquake?
An earthquake is when the ground shakes violently. Large earthquakes are very dangerous because they may destroy buildings.
In recent weeks, Taiwan’s eastern region has experienced multiple earthquakes with magnitudes ranging from 5 to 6. Please carefully review the following guidelines to minimize potential damage.
What to do when an earthquake strikes
If you’re near a table:
Hide under the table and hold onto its legs for stability.
If there’s no table nearby:
Crouch down next to a sturdy pillar or wall, and protect your head and neck with a backpack.
If you’re in an elevator:
Press all floor buttons, crouch down, and exit the elevator as soon as the door opens. If the door doesn’t open, press the emergency button for help.
What to do after the earthquake stops
- Stay calm, don’t rush to exits. Follow staff instructions for orderly evacuation.
- Keep away from glass doors, windows, or hanging light fixtures.
- Use a backpack or your hands to protect your head and neck while moving.
- Avoid using elevators. Evacuate through safety doors and staircases.
If trapped in a collapsed building
- Stop bleeding if injured. Don’t remove objects stuck in you.
- Cover mouth and nose to slow breathing initially, avoiding inhaling toxic dust.
- Communication systems may fail initially. Save phone battery, wait a while before calling 119 for help.
- If phone dies, use nearby hard objects to tap on sturdy walls or metal to attract rescuers’ attention. Don’t scream and waste energy.
DON’T PANIC
Light earthquakes are quite frequent in Taiwan - almost every day.
Be Prepared
Central Weather Administration sends out emergency alerts via cellular network seconds before major earthquake strikes. You may additionally subscribe to mobile app push notifications for better preparedness.