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Hayli Gubbi volcano

Why is it in News?

  • Hayli Gubbi volcano in Ethiopias Afar region erupted after ~10,000 years of dormancy, sending massive ash plumes up to 14 km into the atmosphere.
  • Ash travelled across Red Sea → Yemen → Oman → India, entering through Rajasthan and drifiting toward Delhi, UP, Bihar, Northeast.
  • DGCA issued urgent advisories directing all Indian airlines to avoid ash-affected flight routes and altitudes.
  • Multiple flight diversions and cancellations (e.g., Indigo Kannur–Abu Dhabi flight diverted to Ahmedabad).
  • Raises major concerns about aviation safety, atmospheric circulation patterns, and volcanic hazards in South Asia.

Relevance

GS3 – Disaster Management

  • Aviation hazard management; ICAO compliance.
  • Early warning & ash cloud monitoring systems.

GS1 – Geography

  • East African Rift dynamics; Afar triple junction.
  • Atmospheric transport of aerosols affecting distant regions.

Where is the Hayli Gubbi Volcano?

  • Located in Afar Depression, northern Ethiopia.
  • Part of the East African Rift System (EARS), one of the world’s most active tectonic zones.
  • rift volcano associated with continental plate divergence (African Plate splitting into Nubia and Somalia plates).
  • Dormant for ~10,000 years → now active.

Type of Volcano & Eruption Characteristics

  • Rift-zone basaltic volcano (common to Afar).
  • Eruption produced:
    • High-altitude ash plume (up to 14 km) reaching the tropopause.
    • Volcanic ash and fine pyroclasts carried by upper-level winds.
  • No major lava flow reported; eruption dominated by explosive ash generation.

Path of Ash Transport (Atmospheric Science)

  • Strong westerlies and subtropical jet stream transported ash eastwards.
  • Sequence: Ethiopia → Red Sea → Yemen → Oman → Arabian Sea → India.
  • Entered India via western Rajasthan, then moving northeast.
  • Expected spread: Delhi (near midnight), UP, Bihar, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh.

Why Volcanic Ash is Dangerous for Aviation ?

  • Extremely abrasive fine particles of glassy volcanic silica.
  • At engine temperatures, ash melts → forms glass-like coating → sticks to turbine blades → engine stall/failure.
  • Can cause:
    • Compressor surges / flameouts
    • Erosion of fan blades
    • Pitot tube blockage → instrument failure
    • Windshield abrasion → visibility loss
    • Damage to avionics & filters
  • Worst-case: multi-engine failure (e.g., 1982 BA Flight 9, 1989 KLM Alaska incident).

DGCA Advisory — Key Directives

  • Avoid flights through ash-contaminated airspace/altitudes.
  • Mandatory reporting of:
    • Engine performance changes
    • Smoke/odour in cabin
  • Airports:
    • Inspect runways for ash deposits
    • Restrict/suspend operations if contamination detected
  • India’s first large-scale volcanic ash intrusion in years → precautionary measures intensified.

Impact on India

  • Flight disruptions: diversions, cancellations, re-routing.
  • Visibility reduction possible in some sectors.
  • Surface-level impact limited, as ash concentrations dilute with distance.
  • Health impact low but sensitive groups may feel irritation if ash reaches ground level.
  • Meteorology impact:
    • Potential scattering of sunlight, minor cooling effect locally
    • Monitoring by IMD, satellite agencies

Geological Significance

  • Shows the tectonic dynamism of the Afar Triple Junction where Africa is splitting.
  • Could indicate increased rifting activity in East Africa.
  • Afar Depression is one of the only places where mid-ocean ridge volcanism occurs on land.

Why Volcano Ash Can Travel to India ?

  • High-altitude eruption reaching jet stream level (approx. 12–16 km).
  • Jet streams can carry ash thousands of kilometres rapidly.
  • Dry conditions over the Arabian region prevent washout, allowing long-distance travel.

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