The Emergency Response Centre Agency of Finland is part of the Pan-European Mobile Emergency Apps (PEMEA) project, organised by the European Emergency Number Association EENA. According to Emergency Traffic Specialist Dan Berlin from the Emergency Response Centre Agency, the project has created an architecture which will enable European emergency applications to operate across national borders. The PEMEA architecture will be introduced step by step in different countries. Finland is already on board in the first phase.
“With the help of the new architecture, emergency calls made in Europe using the 112 Suomi application will be directed to the local emergency response centre along with the caller’s exact location data. The local emergency response centre will be able to see if the caller’s location data comes from a foreign phone number. These features will start working once PEMEA has been adopted in the country,” Berlin says.
PEMEA is the architecture behind the application, so it is not actually visible to the app users. Users do not need to make any changes to the application’s settings. The most important thing is to recognise the emergency and make an emergency call using the 112 Suomi application.
“This improvement will certainly be a great relief to tourists as it can be difficult to communicate your location during an emergency in a foreign country. There is often a big language barrier between the caller and the emergency response centre operator, which makes it more difficult to determine the caller’s location. We are glad that now the Finnish emergency response centre operators will be able to tell if the call comes from another country’s emergency application,” Berlin says.
The 112 Suomi mobile application project was carried out in cooperation with Deveryware, core service provider for PEMEA. Digia Plc, partner of the Emergency Response Centre Agency, took care of the app-related set-ups.