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Workers plugging energy wells as lava from Kilauea volcano flows nearby

Lava has destroyed a building near the plant in Hawaii.

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Fissures spew lava in the Leilani Estates subdivision near Pahoa, Hawaii (Jae C Hong/AP)

Authorities are racing to close off production wells at a geothermal plant threatened by a lava flow from Kilauea volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island.

Workers were capping the 11th and last well at the plant to prevent toxic gases from wafting out after lava entered, then stalled, on the property near one of the new volcanic vents.

“Right now, they’re in a safe state,” Mike Kaleikini, senior director of Hawaii affairs for the Puna Geothermal Venture plant, said of the wells.

There also were plans to install metal plugs in the wells as an additional stopgap measure.

The wells run as deep as 8,000ft underground at the plant, which covers around 40 acres of the 815-acre property.

The plant has capacity to produce 38 megawatts of electricity, providing roughly one-quarter of the Big Island’s daily energy demand.

A property is devastated by lava as fissures continue to spew lava (Jae C Hong/AP)
A property is devastated by lava as fissures continue to spew lava (Jae C Hong/AP)

The latest was a warehouse adjacent to the Puna plant, covered by lava on Monday night, Hawaii County spokeswoman Janet Snyder told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser.

The building was owned by the state of Hawaii, and was used in geothermal research projects in the early days of the site.

Puna Geothermal, owned by Nevada’s Ormat Technologies, was shut down shortly after Kilauea began spewing lava on May 3.

The plant harnesses heat and steam from the earth’s core to spin turbines to generate power.

A flammable gas called pentane is used as part of the process, though officials earlier this month removed 50,000 gallons of the gas from the plant to reduce the chance of explosions.

Native Hawaiians have long expressed frustration with the plant since it came online in 1989; they say it is built on sacred land.

Hawaii Volcano
Lava from Kilauea is causing explosions as it enters the ocean (Jae C Hong/AP)

Scientists, however, say the conditions on Kilauea make it a good site for harnessing the earth for renewable energy.

“There’s heat beneath the ground if you dig deep enough everywhere,” said Laura Wisland, a senior analyst at the Union of Concerned Scientists. But in some places in the US “it’s just hotter, and you can access the geothermal energy more easily.”

Geothermal energy is also considered a clean resource as it does not generate greenhouse gas emissions, said Bridget Ayling, the director of Nevada’s Great Basin Centre for Geothermal Energy.

Ormat said in a May 15 statement that there was a low risk of surface lava making its way to the facility.

The company also said there was no damage to the facilities above-ground and that it was continuing to assess the impact.

The plant is expected to begin operating “as soon as it is safe to do so,” according to the statement.

Puna Geothermal represents about 4.5% of Ormat’s worldwide generating capacity.

Mr Kaleikini said the gases that could potentially leak from the Puna plant are no different from those coming from active fissures.

The US Geological Survey said sulphur dioxide emissions from the volcano have more than doubled since the current eruption began.

Kilauea’s summit is now belching 15,000 tons of the gas each day up from 6,000 tons daily prior to the May 3 eruption.

The volcano’s Puu OO crater was releasing 200 to 300 tons a day but is no longer emitting sulphur dioxide.

Scientists say lava from Kilauea is causing explosions as it enters the ocean, which can look like fireworks.

When lava hits the sea and cools, it breaks apart and sends fragments flying into the air, which could land on boats in the water, said US Geological Survey scientist Wendy Stovall.

Kilauea sparked new safety warnings on Monday about toxic gas on the Big Island’s southern coastline after lava flowing into the ocean set off a chemical reaction.

Large steam plumes created lava haze, or “laze,” laced with hydrochloric acid and fine glass shards when it flowed into the sea.

It is just the latest hazard from a weeks-old eruption that has so far generated earthquakes and featured gushing molten rock, giant ash plumes and sulphur dioxide.

There has been continuous low-level ash emission from Kilauea’s summit with larger explosions every few hours, said US Geological Survey geophysicist Mike Poland.

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