"When Tsunami came in the month of December 2004, you can say that we were literally taken by surprise. And the country virtually had no system to be able to (predict)," Dr Vardhan said during a visit to the Indian Association For the Cultivation of Science.
"Now within the last ten years, what we have in the country in 2015 is actually world-class, number one," Vardhan said, adding that India also helps other countries with early signals and warnings.
When asked about the Nepal quake which has claimed thousands of lives, he said earthquakes cannot not only be scientifically predicted in India but all over the world.
