Eruption puts fishing village at risk again
A volcano erupted in southwest Iceland on Sunday, posing an immediate threat to a nearby small fishing town though it had been evacuated earlier and no people were in danger, authorities said.
Early-morning video footage from the site showed fountains of molten rock spewing from fissures in the ground, the bright orange lava flow glowing against the dark sky.
“No lives are in danger, although infrastructure may be under threat,” President Gudni Johannesson said on social media site X, adding there had been no interruptions to flights.
The eruption began early on Sunday north of the town of Grindavik, which the previous day had been evacuated for the second time in a month over fears that an outbreak was imminent amid a swarm of seismic activity, authorities said.
Authorities have been building barriers of earth and rock in recent weeks to try to prevent lava from reaching Grindavik, about 40km southwest of the capital, Reykjavik, but the latest eruption appeared to have penetrated the town’s defences.
“According to the first images from the Coast Guard’s surveillance flight, a crack has opened on both sides of the defences that have begun to be built north of Grindavik,” said the Icelandic Meteorological Office.
Lava was flowing towards the town and had come within about 450m, the office said.
Based on flow models, it could take the lava a few hours to reach Grindavik if it continues to flow towards the town, a spokesperson for the meteorological office told public broadcaster RUV.
This was the second volcanic eruption on the Reykjanes peninsula in southwest Iceland in less than a month and the fifth outbreak since 2021.
An eruption started in the Svartsengi volcanic system on December 18 after the complete evacuation of Grindavik’s 4,000 residents and the closing of the Blue Lagoon geothermal spa, a popular tourist spot.
HOTSPOT
More than 100 Grindavik residents had returned in recent weeks, before Saturday’s renewed evacuation order, according to local authorities.
Lying between the Eurasian and North American tectonic plates, two of the largest on the planet, Iceland is a seismic and volcanic hotspot as the plates move in opposite directions.
In 2010, ash clouds from eruptions at the Eyjafjallajokull volcano in the south of Iceland spread over large parts of Europe, grounding 100,000 flights and forcing hundreds of Icelanders to evacuate their homes. Unlike Eyjafjallajokull, the Reykjanes volcano systems are not trapped under glaciers and are not expected to cause similar ash clouds.