In doomed coal village, Germany’s Greens go to
war among themselves
Chaotic scenes in Lützerath as thousands of protesters
confront armored police with truncheons and pepper spray.
BY KARL
MATHIESEN AND GABRIEL RINALDI
JANUARY 15,
2023 11:35 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/lutzerath-germany-coal-climate-change-greens-war-among-themselves/
LÜTZERATH,
Germany — The political party responsible for the pepper spray, the bulldozers
and a coal deal with one of Germany’s biggest energy companies was the Greens.
And every protester here on Saturday knew it.
It was a
chastening day for a party that entered coalition government in Berlin just
over a year ago riding on a wave of environmental optimism. From across the
country a broad slice of the Greens’ base turned out in wind, rain and mud in
support of a small cluster of abandoned farms and houses called Lützerath. The
hamlet in North Rhine-Westphalia is to be wiped from the map to make way for an
extension of the Garzweiler opencast coal pit, a move the Greens have supported
as part of a compromise deal.
“I voted
the Greens and I will never, ever do [so again],” said David Dresen, from the
neighboring village of Kuckum. “We have to stop this mine because it's
destroying my life. Since 30 years, it's been destroying all my family’s lives.
It's destroying our fields, our rivers; it's destroying our groundwater.”
On Saturday
morning, police were evicting the final handful of climate activists who had
squatted in the village for more than two years. The last protesters slipped
between treehouses, using elaborate rope systems to delay their capture. Two
activists, calling themselves Pinky and the Brain, were broadcasting on YouTube
from a tunnel somewhere under the village.
But there
was a sense of inevitability about the scene. Diggers were already tearing down
the farmhouses just a stone’s throw away and a massive police operation was
under way to ensure no more protesters could enter the village and impede the
work.
It’s become
increasingly uncomfortable for the Greens that this is all in service of a deal
they made.
Last year,
Mona Neubaur, Green vice premier of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW),
and Robert Habeck, Germany’s economy and climate minister, reached an agreement
with RWE, the company that owns the Garzweiler mine. The deal brought forward
the phase-out of coal in the region by eight years to 2030. In return, the
company agreed to save five villages slated for demolition, but Lützerath would
be razed as the last part of RWE's expansion plans in the region. The coal at
Garzweiler is brown coal, a particularly dirty source of the greenhouse gases
that are heating up the planet.
'Backroom
coal deal'
“It’s a gut
punch that Green ministers now try to sell this backroom coal deal as a
success. We won’t accept that,” said Olaf Bandt, the chair of the German
Federation for the Environment and Nature Conservation, an NGO.
Addressing
a large rally in the fields outside the Lützerath on Saturday afternoon, Swedish
activist Greta Thunberg called the government’s deal with RWE “shameful."
"How
is this possible? In the year 2023?” Thunberg asked the protesters.
The crowd —
which police said totaled up to 15,000 people; Thunberg said 35,000 — was
clearly not buying into the pragmatism Greens like Habeck say they need to
demonstrate to govern. Each time one of the speakers slammed the party, it got
a huge cheer.
After
Thunberg had spoken, thousands of the protesters marched to the outskirts of
Lützerath to try to retake it. But they were confronted by a line of hundreds
of armored police wielding truncheons and pepper spray. There were violent
clashes. Several times protesters charged the police line and broke through,
although never making it past a high double fence that had been erected around
the village. Several protesters were hurt and were treated by ambulance staff.
One was bleeding from a head wound as colleagues led him away.
It was a
chaotic scene and one with no clear aim. The village was already disappearing
into the jaws of RWE’s machinery.
But it
served to deepen the angst of the Greens. Lützerath has driven a wedge between
Habeck's “realo” group of pragmatists who currently hold the party’s most
senior positions and the party’s more activist and youth wings.
In
Düsseldorf, activists of the "Lützerath unräumbar" alliance occupied
the headquarters of the NRW Greens on Thursday. Habeck’s constituency office in
Flensburg also was occupied by the local group of the "Ende Gelände"
alliance and autonomous activists, according to statement. In Leipzig and
Aachen, the windows of Green Party offices were smashed.
'Painful
compromise'
Recent days
have seen senior Greens politicians scrambling to try to explain their position
or to deflect blame onto RWE or onto the party's partners in the coalition
government.
Habeck
argues that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has forced Germany to reboot coal
plants and that the coal must come from somewhere. It’s a “painful compromise
that has truly been difficult for me in the past year. But it had to be that
way to ensure energy security in Germany," he said in a video shared on
social media.
Their
position on coal is just one of the sacred cows the Greens have had to
sacrifice as they try to steer Europe's biggest economy through the energy
crisis. Habeck has commissioned a handful of new terminals to import liquefied
natural gas and has extended the lives of Germany’s nuclear power facilities.
The latter extension, despite being just a few months long, has led to much
soul-searching within the party.
Economy
Ministry officials point out that RWE won an extensive legal battle to secure
its right to destroy Lützerath. That means the only option to save the village
would have been an expensive compensation payment to the company.
They also
note that European regulation caps the overall emissions from coal, so the mine
expansion won’t lead to increased total emissions as some activists have
claimed. That position was backed up by one of Germany’s leading climate
economists, Ottmar Edenhofer, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate
Impact Research: “The bottom line is that no additional climate-damaging gases
are released into the atmosphere. Even if Lützerath is dredged, coal has no
future."
Despite the
anger on display on Saturday, there’s little indication that voters more
broadly are turning against the Greens. Their poll numbers are steady and
higher than at the last election.
Germans are
also divided on the fate of the village of Lützerath. In a representative
survey commissioned by the Berliner Morgenpost newspaper, a total of 39 percent
favored the compromise with RWE, while 39 percent said the agreement was wrong.
In Habeck’s
view, the village is the “wrong symbol.”
But for
Luisa Neubauer, a Greens member who is a leading figure in Thunberg’s Fridays
For Future climate movement, the message for her party was clear: many of their
voters have had quite enough of compromise. She questioned how the Greens'
"realpolitik" could survive if it meant deploying police against
environmentalists to defend a coal company.
On Saturday
evening, some protesters were still holding a vigil around the doomed village.
“They voted for the very party they are up against,” Neubauer said.
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