Phivolcs raises Mayon Volcano's alert level further as the collapse of the lava dome at the volcano's summit generates pyroclastic density currents on Tuesday, Phivolcs raises Mayon Volcano's alert level further as the collapse of the lava dome at the volcano's summit generates pyroclastic density currents on Tuesday,

Mayon Volcano now under Alert Level 3 amid magmatic eruption

2026/01/06 14:20

MANILA, Philippines – Albay province’s Mayon Volcano was raised to Alert Level 3 on Tuesday, January 6, less than a week after being placed under Alert Level 2 on New Year’s Day.

The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) said “very slow extrusion of shallow degassed magma is ongoing and is incrementally increasing in rate,” or an “effusive magmatic eruption is taking place.”

An effusive magmatic eruption is “dominated by the outpouring of lava onto the ground,” according to the United States Geological Survey, in contrast to an explosive eruption where there is “violent fragmentation of magma.”

Phivolcs said the collapse of the lava dome at Mayon’s summit generated pyroclastic density currents (PDCs) along the Bonga Gully on the southeast side of the volcano at 12:26 pm on Tuesday, traveling down within 2 kilometers of the summit crater.

PDCs are made up of fragmented volcanic particles, gases, and ash that travel down volcanic slopes at high speeds.

“Mayon is exhibiting magmatic eruption of a summit lava dome, with increased chances of lava flows and hazardous PDCs or uson affecting the upper to middle slopes of the volcano, and of potential explosive activity within days or weeks,” Phivolcs further explained in its bulletin, issued at 1:20 pm on Tuesday.

That also means there is now an “increased tendency towards a hazardous eruption.”

Phivolcs recommended evacuation within the 6-kilometer-radius permanent danger zone surrounding Mayon, citing “the danger of PDCs, lava flows, rockfalls, and other volcanic hazards.” Ashfall and lahar flows may also occur.

Rockfalls in particular have spiked further in the early days of 2026, with a total of 364 rockfall incidents recorded since New Year’s Day, compared to 599 from November to December 2025.

“The volume of discrete rockfall, with observed incandescence at nighttime, increased yesterday (Monday, January 5), signaling an increase in the rate of dome growth and the onset of extrusion of new lava at the crater,” added Phivolcs.

Mayon’s eastern and southeastern slopes have also been inflated or swollen since June 2024.

The last time the volcano was placed under Alert Level 3 was in June 2023. It was subsequently downgraded to Alert Level 2 in December 2023, then Alert Level 1 in March 2024, followed by the New Year’s Day 2026 declaration of Alert Level 2.

The alert levels are from 1 to 5, with 5 indicating that a hazardous eruption is already in progress. – Rappler.com

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