SITE OCCUPATIONS HAVE BEEN A SIGNIFICANT TACTIC IN SLOWING OR STOPPING NEW COAL
MINES AND POWER STATIONS
~ From Coal Action Network ~
Smoke filled the sky across the industrial parts of the UK, as coal powered the
industrial revolution. First coal brought prosperity and progress, but over
decades the smoke stacks have been identified as a major cause of the climate
crisis.
Over the last 20 years the UK has changed dramatically, with the closure of
Ratcliffe on Soar power station at the end of September 2024 marking the
beginning of a coal free era. As recently as 2012, coal provided 40% of the UK’s
electricity, with around 40 coal mines extracting 17.1 million tonnes of coal,
with an additional 45 million tonnes of coal imported from Russia, Colombia and
the USA.
Ratcliffe on Soar, near Nottingham opened in 1967, with a capacity of 2,000
megawatts, enough to power 2 million homes. Since the early 2000s people across
the UK have campaigned against coal power stations, coal mines and other coal
infrastructure. Coal is the greatest historical cause of climate change and
still a major global contributor of green house gas emissions.
In 2015, the UK was the first country to announce it would phase-out coal by
2025. While lauded as a big climate victory the Government’s intention was also
to ensure coal didn’t exit the UK’s grid any earlier than 2025. At the time coal
still contributed 9% of the UK’s electricity supply.
Ratcliffe power station has seen its fair share of protests demanding closure.
One example of direct action took place on the site in 2007, when Spring into
Action, saw 11 people locked on to the dumper trucks and the conveyor belts,
feeding coal to the power station. This caused major disruption to the plant
operation, before they were removed. Back then Ratcliffe was the UK’s 3rd
largest source of carbon dioxide emissions in the UK.
One of the group occupying the site said “the threat of climate change is so
huge and the government so complacent that the people themselves are now acting
in proportionate response to this and targeting the root causes of climate
change”.
In a far cry from recent sentencing, in 2009, when 114 people were pre-emptively
arrested from a meeting place in Nottingham, they were found to have been
intending to occupy Ratcliffe for as long as possible. When activists were
sentenced, one judge declared they acted with “the highest possible motives”.
They accepted that they were intending to close the power station, but said that
the urgency of climate change meant they had to take this action.
Undercover police officer Mark Kennedy, was involved in organising actions
against Ratcliffe power station and as such some of the convictions were later
overturned.
Three years ago, prior to the Glasgow COP climate summit, the phase-out date was
brought forward to 2024. The UK wanted to be seen as a climate leader in
phasing-out coal and setting up the Powering Past Coal Alliance with Canada in
2015, but others got there first.
Although the UK was first to announce the end of its coal power sector, Belgium
was the first European nation to stop burning coal, ending its use in 2016.
Sweden stopped using coal in 2019, bringing forward the planned date by 2 years.
Austria stopped using coal in 2020. Neither the Belgium nor Austrian phase-outs
were considered to be government driven. Portugal brought forward its phase-out
date twice from a starting point of 2030 to 2021.
The UK Government extended the life of coal power stations after Russia invaded
Ukraine. Drax, West Burton and part of Ratcliffe coal power stations were kept
from retiring in 2022, in a fear that Russian warmongering would endanger
electricity supply. The UK stopped Russian coal imports in response to the war.
In 2017, the UK had sourced 49% of its imported coal from Russia, where coal
mining contributed to cultural genocide and laid waste to large areas of the
country, decimating rivers, forests and agricultural areas.
Imported coal comes with a high toll for the local populations and campaigners
in the UK have been pushing for an end to imports of coal from Russia as well as
Colombia, while calling for the end of its mining and use in the UK. Over the
years London Mining Network has brought visitors to the UK from international
coal affected regions, particularly in Latin America. Meeting these campaigners
has been profoundly moving experiences for people living close to proposed coal
mines in the UK, as the similarities in their struggles are numerous, and it
shows that the campaigns are thinking globally by acting locally and pushing for
the end of coal power.
The movement against coal power in the UK has been wide, with people standing up
and saying no to opencast coal mines near their homes and joining together to
stop 45 planned new opencast coal mines from operating. Significant battles were
fought at Lodge House in Derbyshire, in the Pont Valley in Durham and
Ffos-y-fran the UK’s largest opencast mine, which was allowed by the Welsh
Government to mine coal for an unbelievable 15 months after planning permission
ended.
Coal Action Network has worked with communities resisting opencast and later
deep coal mining across the UK. From its inception in 2008, it has supported
more than 25 communities to stop coal mines and extension from destroying local
wildlife, filling local people’s lungs with dust and the industrialisation of
the countryside.
Site occupations have been a significant tactic in slowing or stopping coal
mines from starting. Coal Action Scotland occupied several sites including
Mainshill and later Glentaggart East, both in South Lanarkshire for action camps
that disrupted operations on existing opencast sites. Scotland’s last coal power
station, Longannet closed in March 2016, and the Scottish Government banned coal
mining in 2022, in a protest against the proposed West Cumbria coal mine.
In 2018 the last two opencast coal mines started, both in County Durham,
opposition to the one in the Pont Valley a protest camp was set up and featured
in the urgent film documentary Finite: the climate of change. This campaign, and
others in the North East had brought the local opposition to coal extraction to
a head and in 2020 the proposed mines at Druridge Bay, and Dewley Hill were
rejected, along with an extension to the Pont Valley opencast. Support for coal
had turned a corner.
With the coal-phase out announcement and pressure on opencast coal mines coal
companies started saying that their coal was destined for use in the steel
industry. The second and third biggest single site emitters of carbon in the UK
were Port Talbot steelworks and the steelworks at Scunthorpe. Drax power station
has the dubious honour of being the biggest carbon emitter, which although it no
longer burning coal, it does burning trees from old growth forests.
In September 2024 the planning permission for the proposed West Cumbria coal
mine was revoked and then the license from the Coal Authority was rejected.
Communities in Cumbria and beyond fought long and hard to bring about these
results which were cemented in court by South Lakes Action on Climate Change and
Friends of the Earth.
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