Ende Gelände 2016
This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (June 2019) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Ende Gelände 2016 was a large civil disobedience protest movement in Germany to limit global warming through fossil fuel phase-out.
3500–4000 environmental activists from twelve countries blocked the Welzow-Süd open-pit coal mine and the coal-fired Schwarze Pumpe power station, then owned by Vattenfall (Spremberg), from 13 to 15 May 2016.[1]
Context[]
On 15 August 2015, in the first year of Ende Gelände, 1500 activists blocked the Garzweiler surface mine owned by RWE (Ende Gelände 2015).[2][3]
Ende Gelände formed in 2015 as a coalition of German environmental groups and "people from the anti-nuclear and anti-coal movements".[4]
The activists of the first Ende Gelände 2015 were hosted by the climate camp "Rheinlandcamp". In 2016 the "Lausitzcamp" hosted the 3500 to 4000 activists and provided infrastructure and support.[5]
In German, Ende Gelände idiomatically means "Here and no further".[6] Ende Gelände 2016 was part of an international wave of actions called "Break Free from Fossil Fuels".[7][8]
It was followed by Ende Gelände 2017: in the Rhineland open-pit mines on 24 to 29 August 2017 as well as 3 to 5 November 2017 on (for the 2017 United Nations Climate Change Conference).
Description[]
During the 48 hours of mass action, the coal-fired Schwarze Pumpe power station (described as "Europe's tenth largest emitter of CO2") was cut to 20 percent of its power for two days.[1]
The nearly shutting down of the power plant over the weekend of Ende Gelände was seen by activists as a great success.[6] Vattenfall Europe´s chairman of the board said: "It is an absolute new quality, that a power plant shall be forced to cease its work by violent pressure, which has direct consequences for the German electricity grid. This does not any more only affect Lusatia."[9]
The short term goal of Ende Gelände was to stop the process of Vattenfall selling the mining area. The selling of Lusatia´s coal mining industry was described by Ende Gelände as the biggest single investment in coal power in Europe. Ende Gelände intended to stop the selling process.[10] Instead, Vattenfall should have, according to Ende Gelände, financed a social coal phase out and cover ecological follow up expenditures.[11]
The mining region was eventually, after renewed debates in the Swedish Parliament as a direct response to Ende Gelände,[12] sold to EPH in October 2016. Vattenfall initially expected to sell for 2 to 3 billion Euro, but finally had to pay EPH 1,7 billion for EPH taking over all (especially ecological) liabilities in the region.[13] Ende Gelände had the motto in 2016 "we are the investment risk".[14]
Organisers describes Ende Gelände 2016 as "the largest ever global civil disobedience against fossil fuels".[6]
Gallery[]
Poster
Gathering
Activists in the open-pit coal mine
Blocking a conveyor belt
Near the power plant
Blocking railway lines leading to the coal mine
The power plant was cut to 20% of its power for two days, preventing 16 kton CO2 emissions
See also[]
- Climate disobedience
- Climate justice
- Energy transition (in Germany)
- Ende Gelände
- Ende Gelände 2015
- Ende Gelände 2017
- Extinction Rebellion
- Fossil fuel divestment
References[]
- ^ a b Mass action blocking German lignite mining finishes after 48 hours, press release of Ende Gelände, 15 May 2016 (page visited on 28 September 2016).
- ^ John Jordan, "The day we stopped Europe's biggest polluter in its tracks", The Guardian, Thursday 27 August 2015 (page visited in 28 September 2016).
- ^ Ende Gelände 2015, 350.org (page visited in 28 September 2016).
- ^ "about us – Ende Gelände". www.ende-gelaende.org. Retrieved 2016-05-19.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-09-10. Retrieved 2016-11-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Press Release Lausitzcamp, May 18, 2016
- ^ a b c Oliver Milman, "'Break Free' fossil fuel protests deemed 'largest ever' global disobedience", The Guardian, Monday 16 May 2016 (page visited in 28 September 2016).
- ^ Break Free from Fossil Fuels (page visited in 28 September 2016).
- ^ (in French) Mathilde Gracia, "Mobilisation internationale contre les énergies fossiles", Le monde, 13 May 2016 (page visited in 28 September 2016).
- ^ Schwarze Pumpe weiterhin blockiert Archived 20 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine. MDR.de, 15. Mai 2014.
- ^ https://www.ende-gelaende.org/de/aktion/aufruf/ Ende Gelände 2016 Aufruf
- ^ "Ende Gelände ... und wie weiter? - Interventionistische Linke". interventionistische-linke.org. Retrieved 2017-01-18.
- ^ Riksdagsförvaltningen. "Start". riksdagen.se. Retrieved 2017-01-18.
- ^ https://www.ende-gelaende.org/de/press-release/vatteinfail-offener-brief-vom-23-06-2016/ Press Release from Ende Gelände, German language, 23.6.2016
- ^ https://www.ende-gelaende.org/en/action/call-out/ Call for Action 2016, English
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ende Gelände 2016. |
- 2016 in Germany
- 2016 in the environment
- 2016 protests
- Climate change in Germany
- Climate change policy
- Coal mining
- Coal in Germany
- Demonstrations
- Direct action
- Environmental protests in Germany
- Lusatia
- Mining in Germany
- Occupations (protest)
- Spremberg
- Vattenfall
- Surface mining