Still Burning is a network working against the global hard coal infrastructure.

9.3 Hydrogen is hypocrisy

9.3 Hydrogen is hypocrisy

Steel-making is a climate catastrophe in itself: in the process, hard coal is burned and CO2 emitted. In fact, it is one of the most carbon-intensive industries in the world. In addition, most steel is produced for emission-heavy products like cars or the Nord Stream...
9.4 Conversion from coal to gas and biomass

9.4 Conversion from coal to gas and biomass

That the coal phase-out is under way in much of Europe – albeit far too slow – should be unequivocally good news for the climate. Sadly, this is not always the case: a growing number of coal plants, rather than being shut down, are being converted to, or replaced...
9.5 Renewable energy: a true alternative?

9.5 Renewable energy: a true alternative?

In our struggles against the coal industry it is easy to cling onto the promises of renewable energy as an easy alternative. Solar, wind, and thermal as ‘clean’ alternatives to dirty coal – these promises are propagated all around us: by NGOs, governments, business...
9.6 Still not loving nuclear

9.6 Still not loving nuclear

More recently, the nuclear and there is currently no feasible solution for industry has been working hard to sell us nuclear power plants as a green method of energy production and the solution to the climate crisis. Their main argument: nuclear power plants do not...
10.1 Direct action gets the goods

10.1 Direct action gets the goods

When was the last time you felt you made a difference at the ballot box? Or by writing a letter to your elected representative? In 2003, two million people marched in London against the UK’s involvement in a war in Iraq, and still the government did not listen. Over...