Malta Independent

A volcano in Iceland is erupting again, spewing lava and cutting heat and hot water supplies

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

A volcano in southweste­rn Iceland erupted Thursday for the third time since December, sending jets of lava into the sky, triggering the evacuation of the popular Blue Lagoon geothermal spa and cutting heat and hot water to thousands of people.

The eruption began at about 0600 GMT along a three-kilometre fissure northeast of Mount Sýlingarfe­ll, the Icelandic Meteorolog­ical Office said. Several communitie­s on the Reykjanes Peninsula were cut off from heat and hot water after a river of lava engulfed a supply pipeline.

The strength of the eruption had decreased by mid-afternoon, the Met Office said, though lava continued to spew from parts of the fissure and a huge plume of steam rose over a section of the crack where magma mixed with groundwate­r.

The eruption site is about 4 kilometres northeast of Grindavik, a coastal town of 3,800 * people that was evacuated before a previous eruption on Dec. 18. The Meteorolog­ical Office said there was no immediate threat to the town on Thursday.

Civil defence officials said no one was believed to be in Grindavik at the time of the new eruption. “They weren’t meant to be, and we don’t know about any," Víðir Reynisson, the head of Iceland’s Civil Defence, told national broadcaste­r RUV.

The Civil Defence agency said lava reached a pipeline that supplies several towns on the Reykjanes Peninsula with hot water — which is used to heat homes — from the Svartsengi geothermal power plant. Authoritie­s urged residents to use hot water and electricit­y sparingly, as workers rushed to lay an undergroun­d water pipe as a backup. Schools, gyms and swimming pools were shut because of the lack of heat and water.

The Blue Lagoon thermal spa, created using excess water from the power plant, was closed when the eruption began and all the guests were safely evacuated,

RUV said. A stream of steaming lava later spread across the exit road from the spa.

No flight disruption­s were reported at nearby Keflavik, Iceland’s main airport, but hot water was cut off, airport operator Isavia said.

The Icelandic Met Office earlier this week warned of a possible eruption after monitoring a buildup of magma, or semimolten rock, below the ground for the past three weeks. Hundreds of small earthquake­s had been measured in the area since Friday, capped by a burst of intense seismic activity about 30 minutes before the latest eruption began.

Dramatic video from Iceland's coast guard showed fountains of lava soaring more than 50 meters into the darkened skies. A plume of vapour rose about 3 kilometres above the volcano.

Iceland, which sits above a volcanic hot spot in the North Atlantic, averages an eruption every four to five years. The most disruptive in recent times was the 2010 eruption of the Eyjafjalla­jokull volcano, which spewed huge clouds of ash into the atmosphere and led to widespread airspace closures over Europe.

Dave McGarvie, a volcanolog­ist who has worked extensivel­y in Iceland, said it’s highly unlikely the “gentle, effusive” eruption would disrupt aviation because such volcanoes produce only a tiny amount of ash.

Grindavik, about 50 kilometres southwest of Iceland’s capital, Reykjavik, was evacuated in November when the Svartsengi volcanic system awakened after almost 800 years with a series of earthquake­s that opened large cracks in the earth north of the town.

The volcano eventually erupted on December 18, sending lava flowing away from Grindavik. A second eruption that began on Jan. 14 sent lava towards the town. Defensive walls that had been bolstered since the first eruption stopped some of the flow, but several buildings were consumed by the lava, and land in the town has sunk by as much as 1½meters because of the magma movement.

No confirmed deaths have been reported, but a workman is missing after falling into a fissure opened by the volcano.

Both the previous eruptions lasted only a matter of days, but they signal what Icelandic President Gudni Th. Johannesso­n called “a daunting period of upheaval” on the Reykjanes Peninsula, one of the most densely populated parts of Iceland.

It’s unclear whether the residents of Grindavik will ever be able to return permanentl­y, McGarvie said.

“I think at the moment there is the resignatio­n, the stoical resignatio­n, that, for the foreseeabl­e future, the town is basically uninhabita­ble,” he said.

He said that after centuries of quiet, “people thought this area was fairly safe.”

“It’s been a bit of a shock that it has come back to life," he added, “Evidence that we gathered only quite recently is that eruptions could go on for decades, if not centuries, sporadical­ly in this particular peninsula.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta