Protest at open-pit coal mine near Bonn ahead of UN climate talks

Published November 6, 2017
POLICEMEN are seen behind a bucket-wheel excavator as they secure the area around a lignite open-pit mine.—AFP
POLICEMEN are seen behind a bucket-wheel excavator as they secure the area around a lignite open-pit mine.—AFP

HAMBACH MINE: Environmental activists wearing hazard suits marched ontoone of the world’s largest open-pit coal mines, near Bonn, on Sunday, the eve of 196-nation UN climate talks in the west German city.

Some two hundred protesters crossed a denuded no-man’s land and lined up like guards at the edge of the 40-square kilometre Hambach opencast coal mine, the biggest manmade hole in Europe.

Operated by German electricity producer RWE Power AG, the Hambach operation mines lgnite, a brownish, low-grade coal.

Its high carbon content makes it one of the most polluting of fossil fuels.

As dozens of police encircled a 30-storey high bucket-wheel excavator, the protesters unfurled banners reading, “Welcome to COP23”, “Burn borders, not coal” and “Climate Justice”. COP23 refers to the 23rd “Conference of the Parties,” the formal name for the annual UN climate summit.

“On the international stage, politicians and corporations present themselves as climate saviours, while a few miles away the climate is literally being burned,” said Janna Aljets, spokesperson for climate justice group Ende Gelande.

So far, RWE have broken ground on about half of the area designated for mining, and dug to a depth of more than 300 metres below sea level. The company extracts 40 million tonnes of lignite every year, according to its website.

The site holds reserves estimated at 2.5 billion tonnes.

Coal is responsible for 45 per cent of global CO2 emissions from the energy sector, as well as other greenhouse gas pollutants and small particles hazardous to health, according to the International Energy Agency.

The world is today burning more coal than it ever has, with global demand increasing an average of four per cent between 2000 and 2013.

Published in Dawn, November 6th, 2017

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