A Wellington household should expect multi‑day power cuts, patchy mobile coverage, and limited access to news or emergency updates after a major earthquake. The most important actions are preparing multiple light sources, independent power options, and redundant communication methods.
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1. Maintain reliable light sources
Power cuts may last days. NEMA emphasises that you may need to find supplies in the dark.
Essential items
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Multiple torches (one per person if possible).
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Headlamps for hands‑free use.
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Battery‑powered lanterns for room lighting.
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Glow sticks for safe, temporary light.
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Spare batteries in multiple sizes.
Best practices:
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Store lights where they can be reached without power.
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Test batteries every 6–12 months.
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Avoid candles if possible (fire risk after earthquakes).
2. Prepare backup power options
Power outages affect cooking, heating, charging, and payments (EFTPOS/ATMs may not work).
Portable power
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Power banks (fully charged).
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High‑capacity battery packs for phones, radios, and small devices.
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Solar chargers (slow but reliable over days).
Household backup
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Gas barbecue or camp stove for cooking.
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Spare gas canisters (stored safely).
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Car charger for phones and power banks.
Safety
3. Ensure redundant communication methods
Staying informed is critical. NEMA recommends having multiple ways to receive updates.
Essential communication tools
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Battery‑powered or solar radio (AM/FM).
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List of local emergency radio stations.
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Charged mobile phones + power banks.
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Emergency Mobile Alerts enabled on all phones.
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Written contact list (in case phones die).
Why this matters
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Mobile networks may be overloaded or damaged.
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Radio is often the first restored communication channel.
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Emergency Mobile Alerts do not require mobile data.
4. Plan for information access when the internet fails
Internet and cellular data may be unavailable for days.
What to prepare
Pre‑download:
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Offline maps (Google Maps offline areas).
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Local hazard info (tsunami zones, evacuation routes).
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Key documents (insurance, ID scans).
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Keep a hard‑copy household emergency plan.
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Know where to find community information hubs once activated.
5. Protect devices and reduce power use during outages
Power‑saving strategies
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Switch phones to battery saver mode immediately.
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Turn off Bluetooth, Wi‑Fi, and background apps.
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Use airplane mode when not actively checking messages.
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Charge devices only when necessary.
Device protection
6. Include light, power and comms in your Grab Bag
NEMA recommends grab bags for fast evacuation.
7. Strengthen community connections
Talking to neighbours helps coordinate shared resources like gas barbecues or radios.
Ask who has: