26/06/2026 13:31 - Tecnologia
On June 24, 2026, at 6:04 PM local time, two powerful earthquakes of magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5 shook Venezuela with only 39 seconds between them. The epicenter was located near San Felipe, Yaracuy State, approximately 200 km (125 miles) from Caracas, the nation's capital. The provisional toll stands at more than 235 fatalities and 4,300 injured, according to official figures.
However, amid the tragedy, a notification sent by Google's Android Earthquake Alerts System to Android phones managed to warn thousands of people before the impact. In locations like Macaracuay, east of Caracas, residents received the alert approximately 30 seconds before feeling the seismic movement—a crucial time margin that allowed them to evacuate buildings and seek shelter.
The Android Earthquake Alerts System is an early warning system developed by Google for Android devices. It doesn't predict earthquakes—it detects them almost the moment they occur, using a network of millions of smartphones as distributed seismographs.
Its operation is based on detecting two types of seismic waves:
When a phone at rest detects P waves, it automatically sends its location and data to Google's servers. Upon receiving signals from multiple devices, the system confirms the event, calculates the epicenter, estimates magnitude, and sends alerts to devices in the risk zone before the destructive S waves arrive. Internet communication speed exceeds that of surface seismic waves, creating those crucial seconds of margin.
The system issues two types of notifications:
Additionally, the platform displays standardized safety recommendations, such as the “Drop, Cover, and Hold On” protocol.
The technology's effectiveness was captured in survivors' accounts:
“Yesterday, that's exactly what happened: as soon as our phones started receiving the signal, we went out to the street, right before the tremor.”
“It gave us time to get out. We didn't start feeling it until we were already outside.”
Google's system takes on vital importance in a country like Venezuela, which currently lacks a national seismic early warning system. The Venezuelan Foundation for Seismological Research (Fuvisis) is the official agency responsible, but it only has stations to record earthquakes after they occur, without the capacity to warn the population in advance.
This institutional limitation, combined with the Caribbean region's seismic threat and the precarious condition of many buildings, highlights the importance of publicly accessible technological tools.
To receive these life-or-death notifications, users must meet certain requirements:
The service is completely free and many devices come with the feature enabled by default. According to a study published in the journal Science in 2025, the system detects an average of 312 earthquakes per month globally.
Alfredo S. Quiroga