“A paradigm shift from reactive disaster response to proactive citizen warning — every phone becomes a lifeline.” — Launch of India’s Cell Broadcast System, 2 May 2026
On 2 May 2026, Union Minister for Communications Jyotiraditya Scindia officially launched India’s indigenous Cell Broadcast System (CBS) in New Delhi. Developed by the Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DOT) under the Department of Telecommunications (DoT), and built in collaboration with the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), the system delivers emergency alerts simultaneously to all mobile devices in a targeted geographical area — bypassing network congestion entirely.
A nationwide test was conducted on the same day, sending emergency alert pop-ups with a distinctive siren tone to mobile phones across all 36 states and Union Territories. The launch also saw the release of updated Disaster Management Guidelines, a new Handbook on Disaster Management, and the presentation of the Subhash Chandra Bose Aapda Prabandhan Puraskar for outstanding contributions to disaster management.
📜 Background: From SACHET to Cell Broadcast
India’s emergency alert architecture has a layered history. The NDMA operationalised the SACHET (Integrated Alert System) platform — developed by C-DOT — as the country’s primary disaster communication backbone. SACHET is built on the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP), the international standard for emergency alerting recommended by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). It is operational across all 36 states and UTs, and has delivered over 134 billion SMS alerts in more than 19 Indian languages — covering cyclones (Asani, Yaas, Nivar, Amphan), floods in Assam and Gujarat, lightning alerts in Bihar, and heat wave warnings.
However, SMS-based alerts have a fundamental flaw: during mass emergencies, mobile networks are flooded with calls and messages, causing SMS queuing and delays precisely when speed is most critical. For events measured in seconds — earthquakes, tsunamis, flash floods, industrial gas leaks — SMS cannot be relied upon. The CBS was introduced as an upgrade layer on SACHET, adding Cell Broadcast technology to the existing CAP platform to create a faster, network-independent emergency alert architecture.
Think of the difference between a WhatsApp message and a radio broadcast. A WhatsApp message goes to one person at a time and can get delayed when the server is busy. A radio broadcast goes to every radio within range simultaneously — no queuing, no congestion. CBS works like the radio model: every phone in the danger zone gets the alert at the same moment, whether or not the network is jammed.
✨ How the Cell Broadcast System Works
CBS operates on a fundamentally different architecture from SMS. A standard SMS is a one-to-one communication — sent to a specific number, subject to network traffic. Cell Broadcast is a one-to-many service: messages are transmitted from a central platform directly to Base Transceiver Stations (BTS) — the cell towers in the affected area — which then broadcast to every mobile handset within their signal radius simultaneously.
The process has three key stages:
- An authorised agency (NDMA, state disaster management authority) issues an alert through the CAP-based SACHET platform.
- The platform formats the alert and pushes it to the relevant BTS network nodes covering the targeted geographical area.
- Every mobile phone connected to those towers — regardless of the sender having the recipient’s number, internet access, or SIM registration — receives the alert instantly as a high-priority pop-up with a loud siren.
The only requirement: the phone must be switched on and within the coverage area of the targeted towers.
| Feature | SMS Alert (Old) | Cell Broadcast System (CBS) |
|---|---|---|
| Communication type | One-to-one | One-to-many (broadcast) |
| Requires phone number | Yes | No |
| Affected by congestion | Yes — queuing delays | No — dedicated channel |
| Requires internet/data | No (but SIM needed) | No |
| Delivery speed | Delayed during emergencies | Seconds |
| Geo-targeting precision | Limited | BTS-level (neighbourhood to national) |
CBS Key Principle: BTS (Base Transceiver Station = cell tower) broadcasts to all phones in range simultaneously. No number needed. No internet needed. No queuing. Works on 2G–5G. Arrives as a full-screen pop-up with siren — even in silent mode.
📌 Key Technical Features of India’s CBS
- Precise Geo-Targeting: Alerts can be targeted at a single BTS (neighbourhood), a cluster of towers (district/tehsil), or scaled to cover entire states or the full nation. Prevents unnecessary alarm in unaffected areas.
- Network Independence — No Queuing: CBS operates on a dedicated broadcast channel separate from voice and data channels — unaffected by peak congestion. Messages reach all devices within seconds.
- Multilingual Support: Delivered in English, Hindi, and regional languages — 19+ Indian languages supported on SACHET.
- Priority Pop-Up with Siren: Overrides all apps as a full-screen pop-up with a siren that cannot be suppressed — activates even in silent or do-not-disturb mode.
- Read-Aloud Capability: On supported handsets, the system reads the alert aloud — providing accessibility for visually impaired users.
- 2G–5G Compatibility: Works across all network generations, ensuring rural and remote India is covered even with older infrastructure.
- Indigenously Developed: Built entirely by C-DOT; already demonstrated internationally in Mauritius, Cambodia, El Salvador, and Sri Lanka.
Don’t confuse SACHET and CBS: SACHET is India’s existing CAP-based integrated alert platform — it handles multiple channels including SMS, radio, TV, sirens. CBS (Cell Broadcast System) is the newer upgrade layer integrated into SACHET — it adds the broadcast-to-BTS capability. CBS did not replace SACHET; it strengthened it. Also: CAP = Common Alerting Protocol (an international standard by OASIS/ITU) — not to be confused with a specific Indian system.
🌍 Proven Deployments and Live Use Cases
The CBS was not launched without prior operational testing. Pan-India trials were conducted across all states and UTs before the formal launch. Real disaster deployments include:
- Andhra Pradesh and Odisha: Cyclone and flood alerts issued through CBS.
- Uttarakhand: Flash flood warnings delivered to residents in vulnerable terrain.
- Char Dham Yatra: Used for crowd management and real-time safety advisories to thousands of pilgrims in geographically challenging mountain terrain — a unique use case beyond conventional disaster scenarios.
CBS testing (beginning ~29 April 2026) sent sample alerts to mobile phones in all state capitals including Delhi-NCR. Citizens confirmed receiving loud, unmissable pop-up notifications on both Android and iOS devices across all major telecom operators.
C-DOT has also demonstrated the system internationally in Mauritius, Cambodia, El Salvador, and Sri Lanka — positioning India as an exporter of sovereign digital public infrastructure in disaster management.
The CBS was used during Char Dham Yatra — a religious pilgrimage, not a natural disaster. This reveals that “emergency broadcast” infrastructure can serve crowd safety, public health, and civil order purposes beyond traditional disaster scenarios. Should the system be used proactively for non-disaster events, or does that risk desensitising citizens to alerts?
⚖️ C-DOT: India’s Telecom R&D Backbone
The Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DOT) is the premier Research and Development organisation of the Department of Telecommunications (DoT), established in 1984. Its mandate is to develop indigenous telecom technologies for India. The CBS, built on the CAP standard recommended by the ITU, reflects C-DOT’s capacity to design globally interoperable, domestically produced systems.
The Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) is the international standard format for emergency alerting, developed by OASIS (Organisation for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards) and adopted by the ITU. CAP-based systems allow a single alert message to be automatically disseminated across multiple channels — SMS, Cell Broadcast, radio, television, sirens, social media, and web portals — from a single input. India’s SACHET platform, built on CAP, covers all these modalities simultaneously.
🌐 Global Context: How India’s CBS Compares
Cell Broadcast-based emergency alerts are well-established in advanced economies. Key comparisons:
- USA — Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA): Launched 2012. Delivers Presidential alerts, Imminent Threat alerts, and AMBER alerts via cell broadcast. Reaches over 90% of Americans on compatible devices.
- Japan — J-Alert: Operational since 2007. Uses CB for earthquake early warning (EEW) — delivering alerts within seconds of seismic detection. Widely credited with saving lives during major earthquakes.
- South Korea: Uses CBS for severe weather, earthquakes, air quality, and military emergencies. Gained global attention during North Korea missile-launch alerts.
- European Union — EU-Alert: CB framework used across Netherlands, Germany, France, Greece, Italy. Netherlands was among the earliest EU adopters.
India’s CBS is distinct in being entirely indigenously developed, integrated into an existing national CAP platform (SACHET), and designed to serve 1.4 billion people across extreme linguistic diversity (19+ languages), terrain complexity, and network heterogeneity (2G–5G). No comparable system at this scale has been built from scratch by a developing nation’s own R&D institution.
📖 Alignment with Global Frameworks
India’s CBS launch aligns with two key international frameworks:
- UN “Early Warnings for All” (EW4All): Launched at COP27 (November 2022) and co-led by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR). Goal: every person on Earth covered by an early warning system by 2027. As of 2022, only about half of all countries had multi-hazard early warning systems.
- Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030: The global blueprint for DRR, adopted at the Third UN World Conference in Sendai, Japan, in March 2015. Priority 4 — “Enhancing Disaster Preparedness for Effective Response” — explicitly calls for strengthening multi-hazard early warning systems. India’s PM 10-point agenda on DRR (2016) also emphasised technology-driven early warning as a core pillar.
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CBS was launched by Union Minister for Communications Jyotiraditya Scindia on 2 May 2026 in New Delhi. It was developed by C-DOT under DoT in collaboration with NDMA and MHA.
Cell Broadcast transmits alerts via Base Transceiver Stations (BTS) to all phones in range simultaneously — a one-to-many broadcast. No phone number, SIM registration, or internet needed. It operates on a dedicated channel unaffected by network congestion, unlike SMS.
SACHET is India’s existing CAP-based Integrated Alert System — the national disaster communication backbone delivering alerts via SMS, radio, TV, and sirens in 19+ languages. CBS is the upgrade layer integrated into SACHET, adding Cell Broadcast (BTS-based) capability.
EW4All was launched at COP27 in November 2022, co-led by WMO and UNDRR. Its goal: every person on Earth covered by an early warning system by 2027. As of 2022, only ~50% of countries had multi-hazard early warning systems.
C-DOT demonstrated India’s CBS technology internationally in Mauritius, Cambodia, El Salvador, and Sri Lanka — positioning India as an exporter of sovereign digital public infrastructure in the disaster management domain.