“This eruption is impacting a part of the island, but La Palma is still a safe place and can offer a lot to those who visit,” said Mariano Hernández, the island’s leading authority. The Canary Islands’ tourism industry was already hard hit by the pandemic, and officials were urging tourists not to keep staying away. That would generate explosions, gas emissions and large waves, committee spokeswoman José María Blanco said, but should not represent a danger to those outside the no-go zone. The scientific committee advising the government said that if the delta continues to grow outwards into the sea, parts of it could break off. Government experts estimated that the largest of the lava flows measures nearly a mile at its widest point, while the delta of new land being formed where lava is flowing into the Atlantic has reached a surface of 84 acres. Some 6,000 residents were promptly evacuated after the initial eruption. The new rivers of lava have not forced the evacuation of any more residents since they are all so staying within the exclusion zone that authorities have created. La Palma is part of Spain’s Canary Islands, an Atlantic Ocean archipelago off northwest Africa whose economy depends on the cultivation of the Canary plantain and tourism. “We cannot say that we expect the eruption that began 21 days ago to end anytime soon,” said Julio Pérez, the regional minister for security on the Canary Islands.
The fast-flowing stream carried away huge chunks of lava that had already hardened.
The collapse Saturday of part of the volcanic cone sent a flood of bright red lava pouring down from the Cumbre Vieja ridge that initially cracked open on Sept.