The Fire and Emergency Services Authority (FESA) of Western Australia and associated volunteers respond to a wide range of emergencies as well as undertaking search and rescue operations on land and water\footnote{http://www.fesa.wa.gov.au/internet/}. FESA helps the West Australian community prepare, prevent (where possible) and respond safely to disasters. FESA also aims to reduce injury, loss of life and destruction of property in Western Australian communities through proactive measures. These measures involve understanding the relative risk of the disaster so that resources can be directed to appropriate areas and corresponding evacuation plans put in place. The key role of the Risk Research Group at Geoscience Australian is to develop knowledge on the risk from natural and human-caused hazards for input to policy and operational decision making on the mitigation of risk to Australian communities. The Group achieves this through the development of computational methods, models and decision support tools that assess the hazard, vulnerability and risk posed by hazard events. To develop an understanding of the tsunami risk, GA has developed decision support tools, consisting of inundation maps overlaid on aerial photography of the region detailing critical infrastructure as well as damage modelling estimates. This report is the first in a series of tsunami assessments of the North West Shelf. The scenario used for this study has an unknown return period, but is considered a plausible event (see Section \ref{sec:tsunamiscenario}). Subsequent assessments will use refined hazard models with associate return periods. A suite of assessments will be made for Onslow and other localities, as advised by FESA. Onslow has a population of around 800 and is part of the Shire of Ashburton in the Pilbara region of Western Autralia\footnote{http://www.pdc.wa.gov.au/region/political.htm}. Onslow supports a variety of industries, including oil, gas, mining, cattle, fishing and tourism. The modelling technique to simulate the impact ashore is discussed in Section \ref{sec:methodology} and data inputs discussed in Section \ref{sec:data}. The inundation results are presented and discussed in Section \ref{sec:results} and the impact modelling results outlined in Section \ref{sec:impact}. A summary of the results detailing issues regarding underlying data and further model development, are discussed in Section \ref{sec:summary}.