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Climate activists occupy disputed German coal plant
by Staff Writers
Frankfurt Am Main (AFP) Feb 25, 2020

Climate activists occupied a highly controversial new coal power plant in Germany on Tuesday, police said, preventing a test run of generators campaigners say should never be brought online.

Police told AFP that 14 people had entered the grounds of the Datteln coal station in North Rhine-Westphalia state, and some had chained themselves to machinery.

The power station is controversial because it is slated to come online just after Berlin agreed a long-term plan to exit coal-fired power by 2038 as part of a drive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Activists argue the move to open a new plant flies in the face of Germany's ambitions to massively reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) output in the coming decades.

Eleven of them had climbed onto diggers or chained themselves to conveyor belts, the protesters said.

Supporters of the new power plant have argued that it will enable dirtier brown coal-fired stations to be shut down sooner.

But earlier this month, a study by Berlin economic think-tank DIW estimated that the new plant will generate 40 million tonnes of additional CO2 emissions.


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THE PITS
Protesters occupy disputed German coal mine
Frankfurt Am Main (AFP) Feb 2, 2020
Activists occupied Germany's newest power plant on Sunday to protest against a law passed last week to end coal electricity generation, but which environmental groups argue is insufficient. Police said more than 100 protesters entered the site of the Datteln 4 coal-fired power plant in western Germany. The organisers, a protest group called Ende Gelaende (Game Over), put the number at 150. The group said in a statement that their activists were "blocking crucial infrastructure". "Thei ... read more

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