Local News

Piparo mud volcano shows heightened activity

24 December 2025
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.

Fear is sweep­ing through the vil­lage of Pi­paro this morn­ing as the mud vol­cano shows height­ened ac­tiv­i­ty, with loud rum­bling and mud and gas­es spew­ing in­to the air.

Res­i­dents said some homes are crack­ing, and a por­tion of the road is al­ready im­pass­able.

Fi­del Solomon, who lives very close to the site, said the sit­u­a­tion is wors­en­ing by the hour. He said it is worse than the ma­jor erup­tion a few years ago when his home was split. He has al­ready be­gun pack­ing his be­long­ings, brac­ing for the pos­si­bil­i­ty of evac­u­a­tion.

“It’s like twice as much as last time. The con­crete burst open, the tiles start to crack, the gal­va­nize start to raise up, the ground start to open up the road start to crack up. Right now, the road im­pas­si­ble on one side. Right now, I try­ing to move out my things be­cause our house get­ting the worst dam­age…It run through our house. Ba­si­cal­ly, every­thing col­laps­ing now. T&TEC line burst,” he said.

Solomon said an hour and a half lat­er they were still wait­ing for an emer­gency ser­vice to re­spond.

Coun­cil­lor for Pi­paro, San Pe­dro and Tabaquite, Hen­ry Awong, said a team from the Dis­as­ter Man­age­ment Unit of the Cou­va, Tabaquite and Tal­paro Re­gion­al Cor­po­ra­tion was on its way to the site.

Based on what he has heard from res­i­dents, Awong said the sit­u­a­tion ap­pears se­ri­ous and he would be vis­it­ing the area some­time to­day. He said peo­ple are scared not on­ly for their prop­er­ty but for their lives.

How­ev­er, Awong said there have been mul­ti­ple in­ci­dents over the years and each time there is pan­ic and con­cern, but then life re­turns to nor­mal. He said au­thor­i­ties should en­sure res­i­dents are re­lo­cat­ed per­ma­nent­ly.

“Every time this thing acts up is then every­body gets busy etc. Peo­ple now start to talk about peo­ple need to re­lo­cate and that is hap­pen­ing for years.”

He said some res­i­dents were pre­vi­ous­ly against re­lo­ca­tion.

“When it is act­ing up, they ready to go, af­ter that they don’t want to go and then the agency with re­spon­si­bil­i­ty would ease off as well. I think it is time we have some kind of com­pul­so­ry eval­u­a­tion in terms of mov­ing those peo­ple that are on the hot­line,” he said.

The Pi­paro mud vol­cano has a vi­o­lent his­to­ry. On Feb­ru­ary 22, 1997, it erupt­ed, spew­ing mud and de­bris 200 feet in­to the air and cov­er­ing an area of 2.5 square kilo­me­tres. More than 300 peo­ple were evac­u­at­ed, 31 fam­i­lies were dis­placed, ex­ten­sive dam­age was done to prop­er­ties and ve­hi­cles, and pets and live­stock were killed.