In recent days many evacuees have come home, as the island scrambles to find a use for the spewed matter

For three months they were subject to whims of a roaring volcano. Now residents on the small Spanish island of La Palma are wrestling with another dilemma: what do with the millions of cubic metres of lava and ash it left behind.

The volcano rumbled for 85 days, ejecting ash and rivers of lava that swallowed more than 1,000 homes, cut off highways and suffocated the lush banana plantations that drive the island’s economy.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

EU announces plans to protect journalists from vexatious lawsuits

Anti-Slapp directive would also enable EU states to refuse to recognise judgments…

Argentina beat France on penalties to win World Cup after stunning final

Argentina have won the World Cup for a third time, beating France…

Priti Patel faces increasing pressure over deletion of police records

Keir Starmer calls on home secretary to take responsibility for ‘fiasco’ as…