Morning Sun

Eruption’s end brings relief to area

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MADRID » Authoritie­s on one of Spain’s Canary Islands declared a volcanic eruption that started in September officially finished Saturday following 10 days of no lava flows, seismic activity or significan­t sulfur dioxide emissions.

But the emergency in La Palma, the most northwest island in the Atlantic Ocean archipelag­o, is not over due to the widespread damage the eruption caused, the director of the Canaries’ volcanic emergency committee said in announcing the much-anticipate­d milestone.

“It’s not joy or satisfacti­on — how we can define what we feel? It’s an emotional relief. And hope,” Pevolca director Julio Pérez said. “Because now, we can apply ourselves and focus completely on the reconstruc­tion work.”

Fiery molten rock flowing down toward the sea destroyed around 3,000 buildings, entombed banana plantation­s and vineyards, ruined irrigation systems and cut off roads. But no injuries or deaths were directly linked to the eruption.

Pérez, who is also the region’s minister of public administra­tion, justice and security, said the archipelag­o’s government valued the loss of buildings and infrastruc­ture at more than 900 million euros ($1 billion).

Volcanolog­ists said they needed to certify that three key variables — gas, lava and tremors — had subsided in the Cumbre Vieja ridge for 10 days in order to declare the volcano’s apparent exhaustion.

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