Dual Volcanic Eruptions Hit Indonesia: Mount Semeru and Mount Ibu on High Alert
LUMAJANG, Indonesia – Indonesia’s precarious position along the volatile "Ring of Fire" was starkly highlighted Thursday night, December 18, 2025, as two major volcanoes, Mount Semeru in East Java and Mount Ibu in North Maluku, erupted within hours of each other. The simultaneous geological convulsions have triggered high-level alerts, forcing thousands of residents into hyper-vigilance and complicating regional air travel prospects due to ash in the atmosphere.
Mount Semeru, the tallest and most active volcano on the densely populated island of Java, roared to life again at 9:18 PM WIB, following earlier activity that morning. The Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation (PVMBG) reported intense seismic signals, recording 37 separate eruption earthquakes in just a single six-hour window today. While thick cloud cover obscured visual confirmation of the ash plume's exact height, seismographs registered significant tremors with a maximum amplitude of 22 millimeters. Authorities are strictly maintaining a Level III (Alert) status, enforcing a critical 13-kilometer exclusion zone in the southeast sector due to the deadly, fast-moving threat of pyroclastic flows (avalanches of hot gas and debris).
Almost simultaneously across the Indonesian archipelago, Mount Ibu in North Maluku erupted at 11:04 PM WIT. The volcano ejected a thick, gray ash column that reached 500 meters above its peak. The intense eruption event lasted approximately 53 seconds and was preceded by significant unrest, including over 100 explosive earthquakes recorded throughout the day. Residents have been sternly warned to stay at least 2 kilometers away from the active crater to avoid falling ash and debris.
The geological unrest isn't confined to Indonesia. The USGS has issued a "Watch" for Hawaii’s Kīlauea. Though its summit eruption is currently paused, rapid ground inflation and distinct "gas pistoning" tremors indicate a major new lava fountaining episode is imminent, likely beginning between December 22 and 27. This global uptick follows the recent subsidence of the historic Hayli Gubbi eruption in Ethiopia.