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Germany relocating towns to dig up more coal

17 Feb 2014

Most of us think of Germany as one of the most energy-progressive countries in the world. But in recent years, it's also increased its dependence on a form of energy that's anything but clean: coal. And it's demolishing or relocating entire towns to get at it.

While Germany has some of the largest brown coal deposits on Earth, a valuable chunk of it resides underneath towns that date back to the Middle Ages. Most of these are located in the old East Germany, and in the 1930s and 40s, dozens of them were destroyed to make way for mining. The practice ended when Germany established its clear energy initiatives. But now, dirty brown coal reemerging as a cheaper option than clean energy. And the cities are in the way again.

There's the small town of Atterwasch, which National Geographic reports is now on the doomed list thanks to the rich supply of brown coal that sits beneath it. Or Proschim, a 700-year-old village that's on the chopping block as well. Or Magdeborn, whose church now sits in the middle of a lake created by an open-pit mine:

The same story goes for towns in Poland and Czech Republic, too. At the Czech pit mine of Horni Jiretin, pits mines have almost consumed a Baroque castle where Beethoven premiered the symphony Eroica:

How is this brown coal actually mined? It's pretty simple—a giant bucket digger, is used to cut wide swatches of dirt away from the coal deposits underneath:

Then it's just a matter of getting the stuff—millions of tons of it—onto conveyor belts for processing. The complex part is the sheer scale of the operations, which involves some of the largest bucket diggers in existence. In some ways, it's ironic. Germany, and Europe, in its race to decrease its dependence on dirty forms of energy, has opened up a market gap that's being filled by one of the dirtiest of all. And centuries of history wind up as collateral damage. [National Geographic]

Source: GIZMODO