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DESPITE the steady feed of media images, it may be hard for some of us, well entrenched in routine away from Batangas province, to fully appreciate the magnitude of the crisis.

But this was what the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology reported yesterday: “The intense seismic activity coupled with fissuring on the caldera region likely signifies continuous magma intrusion beneath the Taal edifice, which may lead to further eruptive activity.”

There are indication­s that the volcano is far from over with its violent eruptions. The Phivolcs pegged the warning at Alert Level 4, which means more eruptions are coming within hours to days. That the Taal volcano is right in the middle of a body of water makes it more dangerous, its explosions more violent, says experts. The interactio­n of magma and water makes any eruption far more dangerous.

The Philippine Seismic Network, reports say, recorded 49 volcanic earthquake­s yesterday, seven felt with intensitie­s ranging from Intensity II to IV in Tagaytay City.

Phivolcs characteri­zes Taal’s eruption as continuous­ly “magmatic and hydrovolca­nic,” its “lava fountains generated 800meter tall dark gray steamladen plumes that drifted to the general southwest.”

With damp ash settling heavily on houses and agricultur­al lands, its toll on the economy is largely devastatin­g. Initial reports from the Department of Agricultur­e pegged the damage to agricultur­e at P74.55 million; with coffee bearing the brunt, accounting for 99 percent of the total damage.

Talk about health. It should be noted that volcanic ash falls are not your ordinary ash from burnt materials. They contain microscopi­c shards of glass, its dimensions smaller than a strand of hair, which means they could easily be in the air you breathe in. The series of Taal eruptions can potentiall­y create ash plumes traveling around a hundred kilometers. Within that perimeter around the volcano are close to 25 million residents, reports say.

Each volcanic eruption is a theme by itself, says experts, and therefore disaster managers may not have a fixed model from preceding events. While we may have the lessons from Mt. Pinatubo, Taal certainly poses unique challenges.

While we pray and hope that the extent of damage won’t proceed to unimaginab­le proportion­s, we also expect for the worst, especially that scientists have pointed out more red si gn s.

What we, who are out of harm’s way, can do is pray and start practical efforts to help our brothers and sisters in affected areas. - Sunnex

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