The Borneo Post (Sabah)

With final goodbye, Germany to shutter last black coal mine

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BERLIN: Germany will close its last black coal mine, a milestone marking the end of a 200-yearold industry that once fuelled the country’s economic growth but lost the battle against cheaper foreign competitor­s.

The remaining 1,500 workers of the Prosper-Haniel mine in Bottrop will make their final descent into the pit’s belly, greeting each other one more time with the traditiona­l ‘Glueck auf, Kumpel’, or ‘Good luck, buddy’.

The miners will end their shift by bringing up the last chunk of ‘black gold’ and handing it to President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, in a ceremony also to be attended by European Commission chief JeanClaude Juncker.

A mining choir will sing the miners’ anthem ‘Steigerlie­d’ and local churches will hold special services in what promises to be a poignant farewell to a historic era in western Germany’s industrial Ruhr heartland.

The 150-year-old deep-shaft colliery, whose galleries were dug by six generation­s of miners, will then be sealed up for good.

“There’s a deep sadness now that it’s all going to be over soon,” miner Thomas Echtermeye­r, 47, told the Bild newspaper.

Although the closure comes amid a growing environmen­tal outcry against coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, it wasn’t pollution concerns but cheaper imports from abroad that sounded the mine’s death knell.

With its own vernacular, songs, football clubs and masses dedicated to the miners’ patron saint Barbara, mining is woven deeply into the fabric of daily life in the Ruhr region.

Bundesliga clubs in the area, who owe their origins to local mining communitie­s, are marking Prosper-Haniel’s closure with tributes to their shared heritage.

Schalke invited 2,000 miners to their game against Leverkusen. And on Saturday, Borussia Dortmund players will wear the message ‘Danke, Kumpel’ on their chests, which means both ‘thanks, buddy’ and ‘thanks, miner’.

In a reminder of the dangers of the job, a 29-year-old man died in another recently shuttered mine in the same state of North RhineWestp­halia, where dismantlin­g work is ongoing.

The industrial mechanic died from injuries suffered after getting trapped by a heavy door.

Dating back to the 19th century, the coal mines, plants and steel mills that once dotted the Ruhr basin were long the beating heart of Germany’s industrial prowess, powering its economic ‘miracle’ after World War II.

At its peak, the mining industry employed some 600,000 people. But Germany’s dominance in the black-coal market started to wane in the 1960s as foreign rivals made it cheaper to import the raw material.

Today, most of the black coal, also known as hard coal, used in Germany’s coal-fired power plants comes from Russia, the United States, Australia and Colombia.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government decided in 2007 to phase out state aid and shutter the last black coal mines by 2018 – giving the workers of ProsperHan­iel 11 years’ notice.

The long preparatio­n has been credited with avoiding large-scale upheaval or angry protests, with many opting for early retirement schemes.

“We made sure nobody was left high and dry,” Michael Vassiliadi­s, head of the IG BCE mining union, told the DPA news agency. — AFP

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