This report is being provided to the Fire and Emergency Services Authority (FESA) as part of the Collaborative Research Agreement with Geoscience Australia. FESA recognises the potential vulnerability of the Western Australia coastline to tsunamigenic earthquakes originating from the Sunda Arc subduction zone. There is historic evidence of such events and FESA has sought to assess the relative risk of its urban and regional communities to the tsunami threat and develop detailed response plans. This report is the first in a series of studies to assess the relative risk to the tsunami threat. The methods, assumptions and results of a single tsunami source scenario is described for the Onslow area in the North West shelf region. The return period of this particular scenario is unknown, however it can be be classed as a plausible event. Future studies will present a series of scenarios for a range of return events to assist FESA in developing appropriate plans for a range of event impacts. The software tool, ANUGA, has been used to develop the inundation extent and associated water height at various points in space and time. ANUGA has been developed by GA and the Australian National University (ANU) to solve the nonlinear shallow water wave equation using the finite volume technique (described in [1]). An advantage of this technique is that the cell resolution can be changed according to areas of interest and that wetting and drying is treated robustly as part of the numerical scheme. ANUGA is continually being developed and validated. As such, the current results represent ongoing work and may change in the future. The following set of information is required input to undertake the tsunami impact modelling and will be discussed in following sections. \begin{itemize} \item onshore and offshore data \item initial condition \item boundary condition \end{itemize} The inundation results for the Onslow area is described in section \ref{sec:results}.