Austin American-Statesman

Philippine volcano may be close to big eruption

34,000 people have been transferre­d to evacuation centers.

- By Kristine Phillips Washington Post

Thousands of Filipino families have been evacuated in the Philippine province of Albay as the country’s most active volcano inches toward a possibly major eruption.

A thick gray cloud of ash billowed high above the summit of Mount Mayon on Monday, when officials raised the alert level to 4, an indication that a hazardous eruption is imminent. The Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology said the volcano has been “exhibiting increased seismic unrest, lava fountainin­g and summit explosions.” The agency also has extended what it calls the “danger zone” to an 8-kilometer radius (nearly 5 miles) from the volcano’s vent.

Footage captured by the agency showed bright orange lava fountains shooting out of the volcano’s summit Sunday night.

Renato Solidum, the agency’s director, described two possible scenarios during a news conference Monday. Mayon will either continue to ooze out lava with small eruptions in between, like what happened in 2006 and 2009. Or we’re seeing the early stages of a major, and far more catastroph­ic, blast or pyroclasti­c flow, a deadly combinatio­n of lava, pumice, ash and volcanic gas barreling down a volcanic slope and into residentia­l areas.

Compoundin­g the threat is what’s called lahar, a potentiall­y deadly mudflow of volcanic material that can happen even without a major explosion. Solidum said heavy rain could drive mud flow in the region and cause landslides near already swollen bodies of water.

Romina Marasigan, spokeswoma­n for the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, told reporters last week that nearly 8,300 families — or more than 34,000 people — in the Albay province have been moved to 30 evacuation centers. These include families in areas far from the danger zone but who could be affected by mud flow. Marasigan said it could be weeks before families can return to their homes.

Officials have allotted about $100,000 worth of assistance, some in the form of food items, for evacuees, Marasigan said.

Classes in several cities and municipali­ties and flights to and from some areas of the province have also been suspended, Albay Gov. Al Francis Bichara announced Monday on Facebook. Bichara also urged people to stay indoors and wear face masks.

Mayon first showed signs of unrest Jan. 13, when the volcano produced a grayish ash plume, about a mile and a half high, that drifted southwest and sent ashes down on nearby areas. The Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology raised its alert level to 2 the following day and then to 3 hours later.

Mayon, which draws tourists because of its symmetrica­l cone shape, rises more than 8,000 feet above the Albay Gulf. It has erupted 47 times since 1616. The deadliest, in 1814, killed more than 1,200 people and buried a village.

 ?? EARL RECAMUNDA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A thick gray cloud of ash billows high above the summit of Mount Mayon in the Philippine province of Albay on Monday. Authoritie­s raised the alert level to 4, an indication that a hazardous eruption is imminent.
EARL RECAMUNDA / ASSOCIATED PRESS A thick gray cloud of ash billows high above the summit of Mount Mayon in the Philippine province of Albay on Monday. Authoritie­s raised the alert level to 4, an indication that a hazardous eruption is imminent.

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