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Mount Etna ‘red alert’ triggered after eruptions recorded sparking travel chaos

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The alert level was raised on the Mediterranean island of Sicily after activity at the 10,905ft volcano increased significantly over the last 24 hours causing disruption to thousands of travellers

The two volcanoes, Mount Etna and Stromboli, have caused the temporary shut down of flights to Catania, Italy(Etna Walk/AFP via Getty Images)

Eruptions at the Mount Etna and Stromboli volcanoes in Italy have triggered a “red alert” sparking travel chaos for thousands of tourists.

The alert level was raised on the Mediterranean island of Sicily after activity at the 10,905ft volcano increased significantly over the last 24 hours.




Catania airport, Sicily’s main international airport, sits near Mount Etna, and the increased alert level has seen dozens of flights grounded with an estimated 15,000 passengers affected by the disruption.

Budget airline Ryanair cancelled 42 internal flights in Italy, serving Rome, Venice, Pisa and Bergamo while rival easyJet cut flights to London, Milan and Naples.

Are you affected by the alert? Contact us at webnews@trinitymirror.com

Mount Etna is Europe’s tallest active volcano(Emilio Messina / SWNS)

Other flights have seen diversions as far afield as the Sicilian city of Palermo, a four-hour drive from Catania. While the airport remains open, travellers have been warned to expect disruptions to flights for the rest of the day.

The body that monitors Mount Etna, the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), said its new red warning meant the situation could deteriorate. It said a ‘gradual increase’ in Strombolian activity in the Voragine crater had been recorded on Wednesday evening.

“The average amplitude of the volcanic tremor, after a gradual increase observed starting from 8pm yesterday, has reached the high level, with an increasing trend,” the INGV added.

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