Thousands of Activists Stage Protests at Three German Coal Mines to Demand Bolder Climate Policies

On the heels of Friday’s global youth-led climate strike, thousands of activists staged demonstrations at three coal mines in Germany Saturday to protest the government’s plan to phase out coal by 2038, which activists say isn’t soon enough.

The German news agency dpa reported that “protesters ran into the Jänschwalde and Welzow-Süd open-cast mining sites in the eastern state of Brandenburg, as well as the United Schleenhain lignite mining area in neighboring Saxony.”

Ende Gelände (End of the Road), which helped organize the protests, said there were about 4,000 demonstrators total, while some reporting put the number closer to 2,000.

“We’re at a critical moment—the window of opportunity to stop the climate crisis is closing rapidly,” Ende Gelände spokesman Johnny Parks told German broadcaster DW.

The power plant at Jänschwalde has been deemed one of the top polluting facilities in Europe in terms of planet-warming emissions. Parks said that “we want to show with our protest today that this mine needs to be shut down permanently.”

According to DW:

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