Trisha Shetty (Editor)

2012 Pernik earthquake

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Magnitude
  
5.6 Mw

Type
  
Dip-slip

Casualties
  
1 (indirect)

Depth
  
10 km (6.2 mi)

Max. intensity
  
VI (Strong)

Date
  
22 May 2012

2012 Pernik earthquake httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Areas affected
  
Pernik Province, Bulgaria

Similar
  
1977 Vrancea earthquake, 2012 Haida Gwaii ear, 2012 Visayas earthquake, 2012 Indian Ocean ea, 2012 Guatemala earthquake

The 2012 Pernik earthquake was a 5.6 Mw magnitude earthquake, which struck 24 km (15 miles) west of Bulgaria's capital Sofia and 9 km (6 miles) north-northwest of the provincial center Pernik on 22 May 2012 at 3:00 am local time (00:00 UTC) at a depth of 9.4 kilometers (5.8 mi).

Contents

ImpactEdit

An emergency was declared in Pernik in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake. Mayors from nearby villages reported no significant damage. Many residents in Sofia were reported to have fled their homes and gathered in the streets. Xinhua journalists in the capital reported that Internet connectivity had been cut off.

According to the civil defense office, there were widespread reports of toppled chimneys, cracked walls and broken windows in the Pernik area, where a state of emergency was declared for 24 hours. One of the tall chimneys of the city's Republika Power Plant partially collapsed during the tremor, and as a result the capacity has been temporarily reduced.

CasualtiesEdit

A 59-year-old woman from Kyustendil had a heart attack and was listed as the only indirect casualty.

AftermathEdit

The Bulgarian government initially sent 14 teams to the area to assess the damage, and their first reports concluded that around 60% of all homes have been affected. At least 150 people have been relocated to temporary shelters, and several schools and kindergartens in the area would have to be demolished or rebuilt. A total of 14,000 buildings were eventually inspected, and approximately 50 of them will be torn down. Initial estimates put the damage costs in the capital Sofia at around 1.3 million leva (around 660,000 euro), while the city of Pernik suffered at least 20 million leva (around 10.2 million euro).

References

2012 Pernik earthquake Wikipedia