If rivers rising and cattle farms being flooded is not enough to cause evacuations and misery to residents in the surrounding region to the recently erupting volcano Eyjafjallajokull in Iceland, it has also affected the air space with ash and the environment of Northern Europe as far away as Scotland and beyond. In a conversation with Dr. Pall Einarsson, a Geophysicist at the University of Iceland in Reykjavik and one of the top experts monitoring the volcano from the comfort of his own office, sitting in front of his computer monitors about 120 km or 75 miles from the volcanic eruption, it is becoming apparent that the worse could still come, The neighboring dormant but bigger volcano Katla which is only a few 20 odd kilometers (9 miles) away could erupt from the rumblings in the belly of the mother earth due to the dykes separating the two breaking open. Furthermore the scenario seems quite likely considering 2010 is the year when Katla was predicted to erupt. If this truly happens then the catastrophy is quite difficult to assess. The transatlantic corridors from all of western Europe to and from North America will be seriously damaged by the volcanic ash and new corridors and flight detours will have to be evaluated. The volcanic eruption will also cause serious climate change in a wide region of the earth and damage health, farm animals and property. This threat of a major natural disaster could have serious consequences to the environment , air traffic and travel