Disasters Explained: Tsunamis
Tsunamis can destroy lives, homes, crops and roads in the blink of an eye. Learn more about what they are, what causes them and what the effects are.
Two decades on, the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami remains one of the deadliest sudden onset emergencies in modern history. The scale of the destruction and human toll was vast.
The tsunami affected over 2.5 million people across 14 countries around the Indian Ocean. A quarter of a million people were killed and nearly two million left homeless.
People on the nearest coastlines of Indonesia, Thailand, India and Sri Lanka faced the brunt of the destruction. Whole communities were devastated. People lost loved ones, homes, and livelihoods. People as far away as Somalia, the Seychelles, and South Africa were affected.
The tsunami was triggered by a ‘megathrust earthquake’ measuring 9.1 magnitude causing a 1,200km section of the earth’s crust to shift beneath the Indian Ocean.
It struck at 8am in the morning and remains the third most powerful earthquake ever recorded.
Walls of water reaching 20m high and travelling up to 800km per hour over deep water, hit parts of Aceh, Indonesia. In some places, the waves spread 3km inland, carrying debris and seawater with them. They devastated everything they hit, and retreating waters eroded whole shorelines.
ShelterBox was founded in 2000 so we were a relatively new and small charity when the tsunami hit in 2004.
Our response to the Boxing Day tsunami was the largest in our history at the time. Working alongside Rotary, we supported tens of thousands of people in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, and the Maldives with emergency shelter. We started with 200 boxes and many more followed.
Whist we no longer offer aid in boxes, it’s how we worked at the time to provide emergency shelter around the world. We packed and sent thousands of boxes of aid from our then headquarters in Helston, Cornwall. Each box contained a tent, toolkit, ground sheet, water filter, and mosquito net, as well as kitchen pots and pans, hats and gloves.
For the first time in our history, we recruited ShelterBox volunteers to travel with our boxes and make sure affected families received them.
We appealed for blue-light staff – firefighters and healthcare workers – and within days we had a first team of four people ready to travel to Sri Lanka.
With the help of local volunteers, the newly formed ShelterBox volunteers began distributing boxes to people who needed them most.
The response changed the way we worked. These were the first ShelterBox Response Team (SRT) volunteers. They are now an established and essential part of ShelterBox responses around the world.
Our work supporting people after the tsunami was only possible because of a massive surge of support from incredible people in Cornwall but also across the whole of the UK and abroad, wanting to donate or volunteer to support people affected.
When disasters strike without warning, emergency shelter can be the difference between life and death. Being prepared means we are ready and can reach people more quickly and efficiently.
Help us have shelter aid ready to go in warehouses around the world.
Together, we can make sure more people have emergency shelter and other essential items to survive and recover after disaster.
Tsunamis can destroy lives, homes, crops and roads in the blink of an eye. Learn more about what they are, what causes them and what the effects are.
Read why we no longer use the term ‘natural disasters’, the definition of a disaster, and how we have come to change our language.
Donate today to provide shelter and emergency aid items to families in urgent need.