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AEROSPACE
Chile ash cloud disrupts flights on two continents
by Staff Writers
Buenos Aires (AFP) June 13, 2011

More flight delays in Australia as ash plays havoc
Sydney (AFP) June 14, 2011 - Thousands of airline passengers faced a third day of delays in Australia on Tuesday as the ash cloud from Chile's volcanic eruptions continued to cause havoc.

Qantas and Jetstar have lifted a ban on flights to and from Melbourne but services by the two airlines in and out of the southern island of Tasmania and New Zealand remain grounded.

Flights to Adelaide by Qantas, Jetstar and Tiger were also grounded Tuesday with a review on the situation later expected in the day.

"Qantas will continue to monitor the movement of the ash cloud and assess its impact on flight operations as the situation develops," the airline said in a statement.

"The Qantas Group's approach to flying is based on the highest standards of safety and risk assessment. Safety is always put before schedule."

While Qantas continues to take a conservative approach, Virgin has resumed normal flights to Melbourne, Tasmania and New Zealand with its planes flying around or under the ash plume.

They are also flying in and out of Adelaide, as are international services by Singapore Airlines and Malaysia Airlines.

"Additional flights will be implemented between Sydney and Melbourne and Melbourne and Hobart to carry impacted guests,' Virgin said.

Air New Zealand's domestic and trans-Tasman flights continue to operate to schedule.

"By adjusting cruising altitudes of our aircraft we are able to continue to safely deliver customers to their destinations," Air New Zealand said.

Strong winds have carried the ash more than half way around the world, over the southern Atlantic and southern Indian Oceans to Australia and as far as New Zealand since Chile's Puyehue volcano erupted over a week ago.

Andrew Tupper, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology's Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre head, warned the crisis was not yet over.

"I think it's fair to say there will be more disruption, so that's the bit of bad news," he told ABC radio, adding that while the ash was heading back to South America, it could return to Australia.

"It has been known to do a double lap in the past," he said.

The flight disruptions have affected an estimated 60,000 travellers.

A volcanic ash cloud in Chile delayed flights across South America and Australia on Monday, stranding thousands of travelers and forcing UN chief Ban Ki-moon onto an overnight bus.

The eruption of the Puyehue volcano, high in the Andes, entered a second week, spewing ash that has disrupted air travel on a scale unseen since the volcanic cloud over Iceland paralyzed Europe in 2010.

Buenos Aires airports suspended domestic and international flights on Sunday night for the third time in a week, prompting a crisis meeting Monday to assess the situation, the Argentine Civil Aviation Administration said.

"Meteorological conditions have worsened again, with forecasts that the cloud of volcanic ash will remain suspended in the area over the Ezeiza airport and the Jorge Newbery Metropolitan Airpark," the agency said.

At the Ezeiza international airport, an Ecuadoran tourist anxiously awaited a break in the dusk cloud to fly home for medical treatment.

"We're biting our nails, we're so anxious," she said.

Daniel Alegrin was stranded at the airport after flights to Alicante, Spain were delayed for a week.

"We come from Rosario (Argentina) and the (airline) refused to assume responsibility for our return home on grounds that it was a natural disaster," he said.

The UN secretary-general became the most high-profile person to be stranded after he was forced to rough it on an overnight bus to meet Argentinian leaders on Monday. Worse still -- it was his birthday.

All ended well as Ban, who marked his 67th birthday on Monday, made it to the capital in time to meet Argentinian leaders and win their support for a second term as secretary-general.

"We are very happy to welcome him and to say to him that we support with joy his re-election," said Argentine President Cristina Kirchner.

Montevideo's Carrasco international airport in neighboring Uruguay also suspended operations, with more than 70 flights cancelled, officials said, and Brazil has halted all flights to Uruguay and Argentina.

The Chilean Meteorological Service, said prevailing winds would continue to blow the ash into Argentina through Wednesday.

Chilean seismologist Enrique Valdivieso said the eruption could run its course within a week, but it was hard to know based on precedent. An eruption in 1960 lasted two weeks, but an earlier one in 1921 lasted two months.

The June 4 eruption has been hardest for tourist areas near the volcano like the alpine resort of Bariloche, whose airport has been closed for a week, and Villa Angostura, which is 30 kilometers (18 miles) away.

Strong winds have carried the ash cloud half way around the world, snarling travel as far away as Australia.

The Australian carrier Qantas said all flights in and out of the southern island of Tasmania and to New Zealand remained grounded Monday, but it lifted a ban on flights to and from the southern Australian city of Melbourne.

Hours after the airline began working through the backlog of thousands of passengers stranded in Melbourne, it cancelled several flights into Adelaide after the plume moved into South Australian airspace.

Qantas said three international services to Buenos Aires and Los Angeles were also halted.

More than 110 Qantas flights were cancelled on Sunday and Monday, delaying at least 20,000 travellers while as many as 25,000 more passengers have been disrupted by Qantas's offshoot Jetstar suspending some flights.

The eruption in 2010 of an Icelandic volcano, Eyjafjoell, caused the biggest aerial shutdown in Europe since World War II, affecting more than 100,000 flights and eight million passengers.

Puyehue's eruption sent columns of debris 10,000 meters (six miles) high, blanketing the picturesque mountains and lakes along the Chile-Argentina border in a snowy white ash and prompting the evacuation of 3,500 people.

Its last major eruption was in 1960, following a 9.5 magnitude earthquake -- the largest on record.

burs-jk/ag




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Eritrea eruption disrupts air traffic, Clinton visit
Addis Ababa (AFP) June 13, 2011 - A long-dormant volcano has erupted in Eritrea sending clouds of ash over parts of east Africa, disrupting air traffic and forcing US chief diplomat Hillary Clinton to cut short a trip to Africa.

The eruption of the Dubbi volcano sent a plume of ash up to 15 kilometres into the air, the Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre said, disrupting air traffic in Eritrea and neighbouring Ethiopia, and threatening further disruptions in the region.

German airline Lufthansa said it had cancelled two flights to the region and a senior US official said Clinton was leaving the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa for fears of being stuck there by the ash cloud.

The official said Clinton and her delegation were leaving "because the ash cloud is moving towards Addis and it could cover the city... for an indeterminate length (of time)."

An AFP reporter confirmed her plane had departed at about 10:00 pm local time (1900 GMT).

Clinton was supposed to have stayed in Ethiopia until Tuesday afternoon as part of a tour of African nations.

The eruption, which began at 2100 GMT on Sunday and was continuing late Monday, was "significant" according to Jean Nicolau of French weather service Meteo-France, which houses the VAAC's operations for southern Europe and Africa.

"Based on satellite images we are seeing, the volcanic ash is reaching altitudes of 13 to 15 kilometres" (42,650 to 49,200 feet), he said, adding: "We are not in a critical situation like with the Icelandic volcano Grimsvotn, which concerned a very busy air traffic zone, because the traffic is much less important" in east Africa.

The eruption was the volcano's first since 1861.

According to preliminary Meteo-France simulations, the lower-density ash clouds were heading west/northwest toward Sudan, while the higher-density clouds were heading west/southwest.

"If the cloud reaches Egypt, Israel or the Arab peninsula, the impact on air traffic will be more significant, but it is too early to know," Nicolau said.

In Berlin, Lufthansa spokesman Marco Dall'Asta said the company's Frankfurt- Addis Ababa flight had been cancelled and that its flight from Frankfurt to the Eritrean capital Asmara via Jeddah had been stopped in Jeddah.

"Nothing has yet been decided for tomorrow (Tuesday)," he said.





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