Archived signal

Earthquake KONA

Observation: Local outlets report a seismic event off the Kona coast with immediate hazard assessments and economic impact on agriculture. Interpretation: this is a localized disaster-and-recovery attention spike focused on safety and infrastructure disruption.

Local News / Civic EventLocal & CivicUnited StatesLOW

Trend Saturation Meter

Is this trend still worth making?

Status: Saturated

Saturated

Saturation score 80/100

Too saturated. Skip or niche down.

The window is narrow and competition pressure is already elevated.

Related signal activity: High

Publishing window: Nearly closed

Competition pressure: High

When is the best time to post?

No Tsunami, Real Damage: Kona’s Earthquake Isn’t Over for Farmers

EXPIRING SOON

PublishedJul 10, 2026 12:50 ET

Estimated valid untilJul 11, 2026 04:11 ET (15 hours)

00h 13m 39s remaining

Publish immediately if the angle is still relevant.

Estimated from signal freshness and longevity score. Use as a publishing urgency guide, not a guarantee.

Quick Answer

Why is this signal trending now?

Rapid publication of hazard-clearance (no tsunami) plus follow-up stories about water-system damage and business recovery created a concentrated local-information event.

Why does it matter?

Local communities, utilities, tourism operators and businesses need to respond to infrastructure damage and public-safety concerns; recovery and economic-impact reporting will drive search and local-service demand.

What content can creators make?

Local officials and utilities are treating the earthquake like a social-media moment instead of an infrastructure crisis — immediate, named reporting must connect the 'no tsunami' headline to concrete water-system and farm impacts. If reporters only parrot the all-clear, displaced businesses and coffee farmers lose claims windows and recovery leverage.

Who should care?

Local reporter / community desk

When is the best time to post?

00h 13m 39s remaining. Publish immediately if the angle is still relevant. Estimated valid until Jul 11, 2026 04:11 ET.

Why This Is Trending

High confidence

earthquake kona appears to be trending because recent related news is clustering around: No tsunami threat to Hawaiʻi after 4.6M earthquake off Kona Coast of Big Island - Maui Now; Business Monday: Big Island companies continue to recover from Kona low storms and earthquake - Big Island Now

Google Trends / Thu, 9 Jul 2026 23:30:00 -0700

Evidence Behind the Signal

  • No tsunami threat to Hawaiʻi after 4.6M earthquake off Kona Coast of Big Island - Maui Now
  • Business Monday: Big Island companies continue to recover from Kona low storms and earthquake - Big Island Now

What This Signal Means

Local communities, utilities, tourism operators and businesses need to respond to infrastructure damage and public-safety concerns; recovery and economic-impact reporting will drive search and local-service demand.

Signal type: Local News / Civic Event / Category: Local & Civic / Region: United States

Best Content Opportunity

Content potential 86/100

One-line recommendation: Publish a focused analysis that pairs the ‘no tsunami’ clearance with on-the-ground utility and farm-impact reporting, naming recovery timelines and whom locals should contact — expose the gap between reassuring headlines and lived damage.

Best content angle: Local officials and utilities are treating the earthquake like a social-media moment instead of an infrastructure crisis — immediate, named reporting must connect the 'no tsunami' headline to concrete water-system and farm impacts. If reporters only parrot the all-clear, displaced businesses and coffee farmers lose claims windows and recovery leverage.

Best for: Local reporter / community desk

Alternative angles

  • A rolling local-impact tracker that lists road closures, water-system status, and small-business relief contacts.
  • A human-impact feature on coffee farms’ water-system damage and what recovery timelines look like.

Title ideas

  • No Tsunami, Real Damage: Kona’s Earthquake Isn’t Over for Farmers
  • Officials Say ‘No Tsunami’ — But Kona’s Water Systems Need Answers
  • Why The ‘All Clear’ Headline Hides the Real Economic Hit in Kona

Evidence Sources

Source and Freshness

Trend traffic estimate
200+
Traffic tier
LOW
Traffic source
Google Trends
Category
Local & Civic
Region
United States
Collected
Thu, 9 Jul 2026 23:30:00 -0700

Audience Psychology

Concern and practical information-seeking—residents and travelers want confirmation of safety, status of utilities and travel advisories; observers seek human-impact stories about livelihoods (e.g., coffee farms).

Possible Next Development

Updates on utility restoration, official aftershock advisories, agricultural-impact assessments, tourism advisories and potential relief/funding stories; traffic shifts from hazard to recovery coverage.

Caveat

Magnitude and secondary-impact reporting can evolve; initial reports may emphasize local effects while national attention declines unless damage proves widespread.

Signal Status

Decision
PUBLISH
Score
86
Risk
MEDIUM
Publish Angle
Local officials and utilities are treating the earthquake like a social-media moment instead of an infrastructure crisis — immediate, named reporting must connect the 'no tsunami' headline to concrete water-system and farm impacts. If reporters only parrot the all-clear, displaced businesses and coffee farmers lose claims windows and recovery leverage.
Content Score
86

Related Signals

Platform-ready post drafts

Human-like: 91/100

‘No tsunami’ headlines are useful — but officials and utilities must stop treating the quake like a headline and start treating it like an infrastructure crisis. Coffee farms report water-system damage; delayed repair timelines cost livelihoods and claims. Name the restoration ETA and the relief contacts or you’re just amplifying platitudes.

Why this draft works
  • Attention score: 92
  • Psychological trigger score: 89
  • Character count: 342
  • Length status: OK
  • Primary hook: Concrete Stakes
  • Secondary hooks: Loss Aversion, Status Threat
  • Tone: Urgent, civic-minded
  • Intended reaction: Local shares, replies from officials and businesses
  • Why it works: Names affected parties (coffee farms, utilities), cites concrete costs (livelihoods, claims windows), and pressures officials for specific restoration timelines — drives community engagement and accountability.
  • Evidence in draft: ['"No tsunami threat"', '"coffee farms"', '"water-system damage"']
  • Human voice notes: Community-first, accountability tone that demands practical details.
  • Reaction mechanism: Callout of reassuring headlines without follow-through on recovery specifics.
  • First sentence type: Callout
  • Question type: Concrete Stakes
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Frequently Asked Questions

What is this signal?

Recent seismic event(s) off the Kona coast and ongoing local recovery reporting (tsunami advisories cleared, infrastructure/economic impacts) generating local/regional news interest.

Why is this signal trending?

Rapid publication of hazard-clearance (no tsunami) plus follow-up stories about water-system damage and business recovery created a concentrated local-information event.

Why does this signal matter?

Local communities, utilities, tourism operators and businesses need to respond to infrastructure damage and public-safety concerns; recovery and economic-impact reporting will drive search and local-service demand.

What content can creators make from this signal?

Local officials and utilities are treating the earthquake like a social-media moment instead of an infrastructure crisis — immediate, named reporting must connect the 'no tsunami' headline to concrete water-system and farm impacts. If reporters only parrot the all-clear, displaced businesses and coffee farmers lose claims windows and recovery leverage.

When is the best time to post about this signal?

00h 13m 39s remaining. Publish immediately if the angle is still relevant. Estimated valid until Jul 11, 2026 04:11 ET.

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