26 Jun 2018

Euralarm, the European association representing the electronic fire and security Industry, has carried out a European study on false alarms. It has been published as a paperback by the academic editor Eric Schmidt Verlag and is also available on Amazon.

The study on false alarms has been conducted by a task group of Euralarm, the European association representing the fire safety and security industry. The group consists of experts in the field of fire safety technologies with Sebastian Festag from Hekatron acting as chairman of the task group. The study focuses on false alarm data collection and analysis from fire detection and fire alarm systems in selected European countries.

Establishing true cost of false alarms

The impact of budget cuts and a perceived high rate of false alarms have lead in some European countries to changes on the typical reaction of fire services. In some countries for example, verification is required before intervention forces are deployed, in order to avoid unjustified costs.

This calculation is however limited to the impact of false alarms on fire services alone: it could lead to an increase of the risk to lives and inflict more cost in overall to society. The study seeks to establish the true cost of false alarms, from country to country.

Recommendations and strategies to reduce false alarms

Through its scientific approach, the study offers a clarification of false alarms as a phenomenon. It includes a description of the processes to initiate fire service intervention, formulas to calculate false alarm ratios, as well as a methodology of the overall analysis. This allows for a precise picture of the situation in selected European countries regarding false alarm: Germany, Great Britain/England, Switzerland, Sweden and Austria/Vorarlberg, are covered in the study.

The study also contains recommendations and strategies to reduce false alarms, which are based on carefully examined statistics on fires and, in particular, the number of fire alarms due to detection of actual fires by fire alarm systems, as compared to the false alarm rate.

The Euralarm task force argues that the topic of false alarms must be increasingly integrated into fire protection and fire alarm strategies: handling false alarms must become an active part of the management of a site. The Euralarm study gives recommendations to realise this.