Chattanooga Times Free Press

Icelanders plan for next volcanic eruption

- BY EGILL BJARNASON

VIK, Iceland — Sneeze next to the Katla volcano, goes the joke in this Icelandic village, and a seismologi­st in Reykjavik will analyze the disturbanc­e.

After a summer of increased seismic activity at Katla, Icelanders are obsessing over the smallest sign of an eruption at the country’s most closely watched volcano.

Katla last erupted in 1918. Never before in recorded history, dating back to the 12th century, have 99 years passed without an eruption from the volcano. Eight out of the last 10 eruptions at Katla have occurred between September and November, when glacial melting is believed to have created conditions for the magma to burst forth.

Vik, a coastal hamlet known for its black sand beach and red-roofed concrete church, is prepared for the worst. In the event of an eruption, a text message will be sent to every mobile phone connected to the regional network. All 543 residents will know what to do — inform their neighbors — and where to go: the church, which is sheltered by the mountain.

Air travelers and visitors to Iceland should also take note. The last major volcanic eruption in the north Atlantic nation created an ash cloud that stranded more than 10 million people in April 2010. And while civil defense officials are confident of procedures for notifying locals, they are still developing plans for alerting tourists who are flocking to Iceland’s waterfalls and geysers in record numbers.

“Tourists are the greatest challenge today,” said Vidir Reynisson, a Katla specialist at the Department of Civil Protection and Emergency Management. “They are in large numbers, spread out and less likely than locals to be aware of emergency actions.”

Of Iceland’s 30 active volcanoes, none is watched more closely than Katla. One of the nation’s largest and most feared, Katla lies under glacial ice hundreds of yards thick, meaning any eruption is likely to melt the ice and cause widespread flooding.

The volume of water that could stream toward the black volcanic beaches, one of Iceland’s most popular tourist attraction­s, is predicted by the emergency department to reach 300,000 cubic meters per second, greater than the Amazon river discharge. Ocean levels may rise sharply if flooding reaches the coast, so authoritie­s plan to evacuate the entire coast on the island’s southern tip.

Planning for such an event isn’t just an academic exercise.

Over the past 11 months, the Icelandic Met Office has twice raised its Katla alert level to yellow, signaling “elevated unrest.”

For four days this summer, Icelanders watched with concern as a series of strengthen­ing earthquake­s peaked at magnitude 3. Natural reservoirs of glacial melt under the ice cap burst and flooded the Mulakvisl River near Vik.

There are also risks from ash, lava and poisonous gases spewing out of the volcano.

On average, a major volcanic event occurs once every five years in Iceland. The Eyjafjalla­jokull eruption of 2010 stranded millions of tourists worldwide as it grounded more than 100,000 flights over seven days because of concerns its volcanic ash would damage aircraft engines.

Ironically, the publicity surroundin­g the Eyjafjalla­jokull eruption contribute­d to Iceland’s current tourist boom. A record 2.4 million people are expected to visit the country this year, up from 400,000 in 2006. About half of the tourists report visiting Vik, according to the Icelandic Tourist Board.

The country’s emergency text message system has tested well. For areas with weak phone signals, the plan is to search for travelers with drones. Reynisson’s team is also considerin­g asking visitors to sign up for an app that would make phones ring loudly and deliver messages in the appropriat­e language.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The church of Vik, Iceland, stands near the Volcano Katla.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The church of Vik, Iceland, stands near the Volcano Katla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States