The church in the western German town of Immerath was one of the last major structures to remain standing. Residents have been resettled and the town will be devoured by a massive open-pit coal mine.
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Garzweiler open pit mine
The quest by energy companies for extractable lignite coal has driven some residents of the lower Rhine plain from their homes. Despite a recent Supreme Court ruling, many view the development as "too little, too late."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Supreme Court strengthens rights - and sanctions further digs
For years, the lignite mine of Garzweiler has been a case for the courts. Now Germany's Supreme Court in Karlsruhe has decided: The constitutional rights of one of the plaintiffs had indeed been breached. In future, citizens must be able to file complaints against expropriations and resettlements at an earlier stage. At the same time, the court gave the general go-ahead for further mining.
Image: DW/S. Dege
Gluttonous giants
Lignite, or brown, coal, which on the plains of the Rhine river can be found on or just below the earth's surface, is removed by giant excavators. The black chunks, are then transported on long conveyor belts to be put in storage. The blocks of coal will later be burned in power plants and converted into electricity.
Image: Reuters
Machines replace muscle
"Elbow grease" no longer suffices to extract the enormous quantities of coal from the open pit mines. Instead, machines carry out the work - with the help of just a handful of workers. As parked cars in the background illustrate, the gargantuan excavators are so huge they stretch the imagination.
Image: pommes.fritz123/flickr cc-by-sa 2.0
Climate killer
The Garzweiler mine covers an area of 114 square kilometers (44 square miles). Sitting alongside it is the Frimmersdorf power plant, one of Europe's ten worst "climate killers." Lignite coal releases more carbon dioxide than any other energy source, but much of Germany is dependent on it.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Fruitless protests
Open pit mines are increasingly devouring land once populated by people. That has created a backlash, like here, in this temporary camp set up by the German chapter of Friends of the Earth (BUND). Yet, as passionate as their protests were, they came to nothing. When the excavators arrive, people have to go.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
New rumors
Lately, there have been rumors that German energy giant RWE plans to pull out early from the Garzweiler II mine - by 2017 or 2018 rather than 2045. Those affected remain skeptical. They doubt that the publicly-traded energy concern would willingly give up the lucrative brown coal business. Years of fruitless demonstrations have contributed to the sense of resignation.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Ghost towns
An abandoned village dies slowly. One house after the other is first discarded, sitting empty before finally coming apart, like here, in the rural district of Borschemich in the city of Erkelenz. The psychological pressure on the last remaining inhabitants simply becomes too much to bear. Though locals were resettled, no house can replace a home.
Image: DW/K. Jäger
Children don't play here
The sign is deceptive: There's no sign of a "Baustelle," or construction site, in the area. Instead, the town will be scraped clean. The sound of children playing doesn't exist here anymore. The village of Pesch, also near Erkelenz, is gone.
Image: DW/K. Jäger
A depressing outlook
Only those with nerves of steel should consider visiting these towns. Calling them "ghost towns" is something of a euphemism. In reality, they're sad and depressing. This house belongs to Spenrath village, which stood in the way of the Garzweiler II excavators. The latest court ruling gives the go-ahead for its exploitation until 2045.
Image: dapd
Picturesque gloom
For a moment, nature holds the energy concern at bay. Not for long, though, with excavators soon to arrive. In this final stage of "resettling," the remaining buildings creates a picturesque scene for photographers - or for those on the lookout for morbid place settings.
Image: XsomniumX / flickr cc-by.nc-sa 2.0
Greener pastures?
The village of Immerath had been around since the 12th century. But its 826th birthday was also its last. The mining forced Immerath's 400 inhabitants to pack up and relocate to "greener pastures" at "New Immerath" pictured here.
Image: DW/K. Jäger
Tortured landscape
The rush for coal doesn't just drive people away - it also drives away other life forms, like here, at the Hambach mine. Little grows in the lifeless wasteland. One of the largest forested areas in Germany's largest state, North Rhine-Westphalia, once stood here. The moonscape will be made liveable again, but it will take decades before a new recreational lake is created.
Image: DW/T. Thor
Energy giant
As Germany's "energy turnaround" takes hold - a plan that will shutter the country's nuclear reactors by 2022 and source 80 percent of its energy from renewables by 2050 - conventional power plants will continue. But lignite coal plays no part in the turnaround. Wind energy, however, like that generated at the Jüchen wind farm near Garzweiler is a clean alternative.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Looking ahead
Whether or not lignite coal's days are numbered here along the Rhine, nature and local residents will feel its effects for a long time to come. Protests continue, both against the RWE energy company and its mining subsidiary, Rheinbraun. For the people of Keyenberg the protests are close to home: The threat of resettlement hangs over them.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
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Bulldozers and excavators turned the bell towers of a late 19th century church in western Germany into a pile of rubble on Tuesday to make way for a massive open-pit coal mine.
The St. Lambertus Catholic church in Immerath, west of Cologne, was one of the last major structures to remain standing in the hollowed out ghost town.
The last church service at what locals call the "Immerath Cathedral" was held in 2013.
Immerath's 1,200 residents were resettled in 2006 to make way for the massive Garzweiler II open-pit coal mine, which is expected devour the erstwhile town and surrounding countryside by the end of 2018.
The energy conglomerate RWE said it would take another two weeks to remove the church rubble.
The church was finished in 1891 after nearly three years of construction. Destroying it took only two days.
Coal mining a burning issue
Open-pit coal mines have become a major political issue in Germany, which still relies on coal for about 40 percent of its energy needs despite pledges to move to cleaner energy sources to meet climate change commitments. Some 25 percent of energy needs are met by power plants fired by high-polluting lignite (brown coal).
Environmental groups regularly protest in and around the coal mines.
Several hundred people witnessed the destruction of the church.
Police said charges were filed against 14 protesters, including several who chained themselves to a bulldozer and climbed the church to unfurl banners.