The Block 9 plant burns hard coal and went online in 2015. It cost $1.2 billion to build and has a capacity of 2150 megawatts. It is owned and operated by three of Germany’s largest utility companies — RWE, EnBW, and MVV. The activists say it is responsible for 8% of all emissions in the state of Baden-Würtenburg.
Activists from an alliance calling itself End Of Terrain blockaded the front gate of the plant on Saturday morning with the intention of delaying new supplies of coal from reaching the plant. A police spokesman toldSüddeutche Zeitung, “Protesters are blocking the main access gate, and part of them are staying at the site of the power plant.” A plan to remove the protesters has not yet been agreed on by authorities.
The protesters say there are about 100 people on hand, with more on the way. The police put the number of protesters at between 40 and 50. Unlike in the United States, protesters in Germany are not subject to 40-year prison terms for daring to oppose the oligarchs. The Block 9 coal plant has enough coal on hand for about 10 hours of operation. After that it will be forced to shut down.
Generating stations typically have a 40-year service life, so Block 9 will continue to spew massive amounts of carbon into the atmosphere until 2055 if it is not closed ahead of schedule. The protesters are severely critical of what they see as government policies that talk of reducing emissions but follow that talk up with far too little action.
Things Are Not Good In Kentucky
Meanwhile in Kentucky, home to Mitch McConnell, who some consider the most despicable politician in the history of the United States, other protesters are blocking coal trains by standing on the tracks. They are not there because they are climate activists but because they are coal miners who woke up last Monday to find their most recent paychecks were no good after their employer, Blackjewel, unexpectedly filed for bankruptcy at the end of July.
McConnell was one of the loudest voices criticizing the Obama administration for its so-called “war on coal.” The putative president hopped on that bandwagon and promised miners, “The coal industry is back,” in 2018. Both men were lying through their teeth.
Blackjewel has made a business out of buying up bankrupt coal companies, so it could suck a little more life out of the labor of the miners. Now it too has fled the scene, protected by bankruptcy laws from paying those same miners for their efforts. The miners are none too pleased, as you might expect.
“We’re doing without money, food, and everything else before our kids are starting back to school. We can’t even get clothes or nothing else for them, so it was like a kick in the face,” miner Chris Rowe told CNN affiliate WYMT. “That’s basically what it was.”