Lava flow stalls, sparing Hawaii
geothermal plant from more damage
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[May 29, 2018]
By Jolyn Rosa
HONOLULU (Reuters) - A lava flow from
Hawaii's erupting Kilauea volcano that damaged a geothermal power
station has stalled, as have lava fountains gushing 100 feet (30 meters)
into the air, offering momentary relief to an area under siege for 25
days, officials said on Monday.
Even so, new blasts from the crater sent ash plumes billowing as high as
13,000 feet (4,000 meters) into the sky, and a new fissure was pumping
out lava at a rate of three feet (1 meter) per second, geologists said.
The new fissure sent more lava into the to evacuated Leilani Estates
district in the eastern corner of Hawaii's Big Island.
Because the lava was spread out over a wide area, the frontier of the
flow was only moving at about three feet per second, Carolyn Parcheta, a
geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, said in a video message
posted online.
Lava engulfed the heads of two wells that tap into steam and gas deep in
the Earth's core at the 38-megawatt Puna Geothermal Venture on Saturday.
Its operator, Israeli-controlled Ormat Technologies Inc, said it had not
been able to assess the damage.
Residents fear the wells may be explosive. Officials have said the power
plant is safe but lava has never engulfed a geothermal plant anywhere in
the world, leaving a measure of uncertainty.
The lava flow at PGV stalled on Monday, Hawaii County spokeswoman Janet
Snyder said.
Ormat said the plant represented about 4.5 percent of its total
generating capacity and that major damage or a shutdown could have an
"adverse impact" on the company's business.
Authorities have shut down the plant, removed 60,000 gallons (230,000
liters) of flammable liquid, and deactivated the wells.
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Lava flows are seen entering the sea along the coastline during
ongoing eruptions of the Kilauea Volcano May 23, 2018. USGS/J.
Ozbolt, Hilo Civil Air Patrol/Handout via REUTERS
At least 82 homes have been destroyed in the southeast corner of Big
Island and about 2,000 people have been ordered evacuated since
Kilauea began erupting on May 3.
About 2,200 acres (890 hectares) have been scorched and the
eruptions are expected to cut tourism revenues.
The sole reported serious injury from the eruption so far came when
a man was hit by flying lava.
An eruption from the summit's Halemaumau crater on Monday sent ash
almost 15,000 feet (4,600 m) into the air, a National Weather
Service meteorologist said. Hawaii County officials later cut the
estimated height to 13,000 feet.
Magma has drained from Kilauea's summit lava lake and flowed around
25 miles (40 km) east underground, bursting out of about two dozen
giant cracks or fissures.
(Reporting by Joyln Rosa in Honolulu; Additional reporting by Ian
Simpson; Editing by Daniel Trotta and Tom Brown)
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