On Friday, Germany closed its last black coal mine with an emotional tribute to the 2 century old industry.
The black coal industry had once fueled the country’s economic development but was out run by cheaper imported fuels.
After the remaining 1,500 workers of the Prosper-Haniel mine in Bottrop clocked off from their final shift, a group of seven workers exited the mine’s elevator carrying the symbolic last chunk of “black gold”.
Veteran pitman Juergen Jakubeit, wearing worn-off overalls and a black-sooted hard hat, then handed the block of coal to German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who accepted it with the traditional miners’ greeting of “Glueck auf” or “Good luck”.
“A difficult day isn’t it?” said Steinmeier. “A very difficult day,” replied Jakubeit.
In a ceremony carried live on television and attended by 500 people, including European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker, Mr Stein¬meier said the closure of the deep-shaft colliery marked “the end of an era” in western Germany’s industrial Ruhr heartland.
“This is more than a piece of coal, this is history. This is a day of mourning for you but I assure you this day has moved many people across Germany,” he said.
A mining choir then sang the miners’ anthem “Steigerlied” while across the region churches marked the occasion with special services.
Although the closure comes amid a growing environmental outcry against coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, it wasn’t pollution concerns but cheaper imports from abroad that sounded the mine’s death knell.
With its own vernacular, songs, football clubs and masses dedicated to the miners’ patron saint St. Barbara, mining is woven deeply into the fabric of daily life in the Ruhr region. On Saturday, players from the Bundesliga club Borussia Dortmund will pay homage by wearing the message “Danke, Kumpel” on their shirts, which means both “thanks, buddy” and “thanks, miner”.
Dating back to the 19th century, the mines, plants and steel mills that once dotted the Ruhr basin were long the beating heart of Germany’s industrial prowess, powering its “economic miracle” after World War II. At its peak, the mining industry employed 600,000 people. But Germany’s dominance in the black-coal market started to wane in the 1960s as foreign rivals made it cheaper to import the raw material.
Today most of the black coal, also known as hard coal, used in Germany’s coal-fired power plants comes from Russia, the United States, Australia and Colombia.