The Daily Courier

Germany’s last coal mine closes

- By The Associated Press

BERLIN — Straining to hold back tears, their once-white helmets and overalls smeared with dust, seven miners in Germany stepped out of a metal cage Friday bearing the last piece of black coal hauled up from 1,000 metres (3,280 feet) below.

The ceremony marked the end of an industry that laid the foundation­s for Germany’s industrial revolution and its post-war economic recovery.

The men at the Prosper-Haniel mine symbolical­ly handed the football-sized lump of coal to German President FrankWalte­r Steinmeier with the words “Glueck Auf.” The ancient miners’ greeting roughly translates as “good luck,” reflecting the uncertaint­y of a life spent prospectin­g deep undergroun­d.

“A piece of German history is coming to an end here,” Steinmeier told the miners. “Without it, our entire country and its developmen­t over the past 200 years would have been unthinkabl­e.”

The Prosper-Haniel mine in the western city of Bottrop and another colliery in Ibbenbuere­n, 100 kilometres (62 miles) to the north, were the last remnants of an industry that once dominated the region, employing half a million people at its peak in the 1950s. Together, they helped feed the Ruhr valley’s hungry steel mills until imports of cheaper, foreign coal made Germany’s “black gold” lose its sheen.

For decades, the mines survived only thanks to generous subsidies. But in 2007, a political decision was made to phase them out, with a promise of early retirement or retraining for their remaining workers.

According to government figures, Germany’s coal mining industry received more than 40 billion euros ($46 billion) in federal funds since 1998 and is slated to get another 2.7 billion euros through 2022. Some of the money is needed to deal with mine maintenanc­e and environmen­tal cleanup efforts that include preventing parts of the Ruhr region from slowly sinking as myriad tunnels give way over time.

Further vast sums have been spent supporting economic redevelopm­ent in the region, which has seen a growth in universiti­es, research facilities and IT startups in recent years.

Steinmeier urged the miners and their loved ones to look to the future, but also to take pride in a culture of hospitalit­y and openness. The Ruhr region became a melting pot with the arrival since the 19th century of successive waves of immigrants, from Poland, Italy and Turkey, in search of well-paid work down the mines.

The end of deep-shaft mining is seen as a test for the planned closure of open-cast lignite, or brown coal, mines that still operate in Germany.

Germany still generates almost twofifths of its electricit­y from burning coal, a situation that scientists say can’t continue if Germany wants to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions. Lignite is considered even dirtier than black coal but remains relatively cheap to extract.

Toward the end of Friday’s ceremony, miners paid their respects to colleagues who lost their lives undergroun­d. The dangers were highlighte­d Monday, when a 29-year-old worker was crushed to death by a metal door in the Ibbenbuere­n shaft.

And overnight Friday, news emerged of the deaths of 13 miners in the Czech Republic.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, right, receives a symbolic last lump of coal during a closing ceremony of the IProsper-Haniel mine in Bottrop, Germany on Friday.
The Associated Press German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, right, receives a symbolic last lump of coal during a closing ceremony of the IProsper-Haniel mine in Bottrop, Germany on Friday.

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