no one knows isjust villages at risk as it flows. what no one knows is just how long this is going to go on, how much more lava will be produced and how much more ash will fall. this is the sort of stuff that covers absolutely everything here now. people are having to brush it every day from their roofs, pathways, cars, it covers everything, a thick layer of that and you can taste it in the air at times depending on what way the wind is blowing. the other big risk here is gas and there is gas being emitted therefrom the volcano crater, but also at the point where the lava hits the sea and depending on the wind direction, different communities are under threat at different times and police are driving around certain villages telling people to stay inside and keep their doors and windows closed. there are bigger questions, even when there active phase ends, about what people do to live around this larva, it has eaten through roads, cut through communications and power lines, it is making
sort of stuff that covers absolutely everything here now, people are having to brush it every day from their roofs, pathways, cars, it covers everything, a thick layer of that and you can taste it in the air at times depending on which way the wind is blowing. the other big risk is gas and gas is being emitted therefrom the volcano crater but also at the point where the lava hits the sea and depending on the wind direction, different communities are under threat at different times and the police are driving around certain villages telling people to stay in and keep their doors and windows closed. there are bigger questions, even when this active phase of the disruption ends, what people do to live around this lava, it has eaten through roads, cut through communications and power lines and it is making daily life really difficult, but also putting at risk longer term livelihoods here. what about the banana farmers and fishermen and the tourist industry?
sort of stuff that covers absolutely everything here now, people are having to brush it every day from their roofs, pathways, cars, it covers everything, a thick layer of that and you can taste it in the air at times depending on which way the wind is blowing. the other big risk is gas and gas is being emitted therefrom the volcano crater but also at the point where the lava hits the sea and depending on the wind direction, different communities are under threat at different times and the police are driving around certain villages telling people to stay in and keep their doors and windows closed. there are bigger questions, even when this active phase of the disruption ends, what people do to live around this lava, it has eaten through roads, cut through communications and power lines and it is making daily life really difficult, but also putting at risk longer term livelihoods here. what about the banana farmers and fishermen and the tourist industry?