THERE’S SOMETHING eerily beautiful about a coal mine in the evening. The vast expanse, the giant machinery, the haze of smoke and dust that floats above a golden, man-made desert. Beneath the surface, though, something dark is stirring.
It’s the evening before Ende Gelände, Europe’s biggest climate action for a generation. Just under 150 kilometres south of Berlin, the German village of Proschim is a hive of activity. Activists from all across Europe are descending on this sleepy hamlet with a singular goal: to shut down a coal mine that, as one of the continent’s greatest polluters, spits out an average of three million tons of CO2 per year.
“I just think about the future, when I’m sat down one day with my children,” says Bethan Lloyd, a 29-yearold musician…