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MINING

How Germany will shut down its last black coal mine

After more than 150 years, Germany's last black coal mine will close in the Ruhr region, posing a gigantic geological and environmental challenge to the former industrial heartland.

How Germany will shut down its last black coal mine
The entrance to the Prosper-Haniel site, and its tower, on December 11th. Photo: DPA

How to close a mine

The Prosper-Haniel mine's galleries were painstakingly excavated over decades by workers with pickaxes and later pneumatic drills.

Now they have been sealed off by enormous stretches of concrete.

Mining company RAG, in charge of clean-up at the site, has nearly finished removing tonnes of steel, equipment and cables from the tunnels.

SEE ALSO: End of an era as Germany's last black coal mine closes

The final concrete blocks remain to be placed for Prosper-Haniel to fall silent once and for all.

Within around 10 years, the galleries more than 600 metres below the earth will fill up at least partially with groundwater.

RAG will drain and pump this water as part of its “eternal task” as the owner.

“If this system of 'eternal tasks' did not exist, 80 to 100 years from now the water would rise and two-thirds of the Ruhr region would be flooded,” the professor and hydraulic engineer in charge of the project, Andre Niemann, told AFP.

Environmental risks

The water found in mines is particularly acidic after trickling through a kilometre of underground sediment, and contains more salt than seawater.

If it reaches the water table just below the surface, it could contaminate drinking water resources in the region.

Hence the requirement for RAG to constantly pump it away – as well as 
treating it before it can be diverted into a river like the Rhine.

Meanwhile, the tunnel floors in the mine contain so-called polychlorinated 
biphenyls (PCBs), chemicals used for mining production.

“There is a study to determine the concentration (of PCBs) and how dangerous it is,” Niemann said.

“A plant for treating it has already been set up,” he added.

A new chapter? 

“As long as the water is regularly pumped out, there's no risk of subsidence or flooding” in areas above the pit, Niemann said.

And so-called “firedamp” methane explosions are unlikely as long as the galleries are sealed away from the open air.

“The gigantic concrete blocks we poured to close the tunnels are designed 
for this, so even if there is an explosion they won't budge,” the engineer said.

Some coal still squirreled away will be burned to heat the homes of people  in the region, while the naturally warm mine water will flow through the underfloor heating of houses in the area.

Part of the Prosper-Haniel site will be covered with grass and plants, turning it into a park alongside tourist landmarks and museums aimed at keeping the memory of mining culture alive.

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COPENHAGEN

Copenhagen to get warning system for air pollution

Residents in Copenhagen system will be warned when air pollution hits high levels in the capital, the city government has decided.

Copenhagen to get warning system for air pollution

The quality of Copenhagen’s air is slowly improving, but city politicians have nevertheless decided to implement a warning system that will tell the capital’s residents when the air quality takes a dip, broadcaster DR reports.

The idea behind the decision, taken by the Copenhagen Municipality city council, is to warn people with respiratory conditions and in other risk groups when the air is so polluted that it presents a risk to their health.

“Every tenth death in Copenhagen can be linked to air pollution. We have to protect Copenhageners against this,” head of the city government’s health committee, Sisse Marie Welling of the Socialist People’s Party (SF), told DR.

READ ALSO: Pollution linked to ‘one in eight’ deaths in EU countries

The details of how the warning system will work are yet to be finalised, but will likely to be based on telephones.

Asthmatic Copenhagen resident Katrine Østerby welcomed the move but also told DR that she hoped politicians would do more about the causes of air pollution.

“I am a young student who is in good physical condition and does a lot of the right things, so I feel there should also be space for me in Copenhagen – and that it’s air pollution that we should get under control, not me that should move out of the way,” she said.

The system will be implemented by late 2024, according to the plan.

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