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Coal-pit partying: Festivals in the iron city – Berlin, Germany

Photo: Dancing the night away: There are few places in the world where you can party next to huge steel excavators on top of an old coal-pit. But for the past decade or so in the iron city of Ferropolis, near Dessau in eastern Germany, festival-goers have been doing just that. The pit opens to dancers for Germany’s largest hip hop festival Splash! and the electronic and indie festial Melt!

Berlin wants to become a carbon neutral city by the year of 2050. While many people point to the car industry to reach these goals, Berlin’s club scene could actually help pave the way.

Clubs emit quite a lot of CO2 into the atmosphere. According to the German NGO Friends of the Earth Germany, one club emits around 30 tons per year. Not only that, but a club also uses as much electricity over the course of a single weekend as one household uses over an entire year.

And then there’s an even bigger picture. Georg Kössler, Green Party representative for climate protection and club culture, says it’s important that Berlin clubs go green, not just to do their bit to save the environment, but to motivate regular citizens to do the same.

“I think Berlin clubs are trendsetters, not just in terms of music, but also in terms of lifestyle. And when people see, oh, they don’t use plastic straws any more, maybe they’ll start doing the same at home,” he told DW.

“That’s why we as politicians focus on clubs now because they have such an impact. Thousands of people in Berlin go to clubs, thousands of people are coming to Berlin for the clubs, so we can really reach a lot of people by working with the clubs and making the clubs greener.”

Berlin Senate helps clubs go green

A new climate project by the German NGO Friends of the Earth Germany and the association clubliebe e.V. has now been designed to help Berlin clubs reach that goal.

Financed by the Berlin Senate, the project sends experts to clubs to advise them on how they can become more eco-friendly, for instance by switching to green energy, installing energy efficient cooling and heating systems, using LED lights instead of regular ones, reducing their water consumption, and managing their trash better.

When Marcel Weber, CEO of SchwuZ, a famous gay club in Berlin, heard about the new project he was intrigued.

“The question of how to be sustainable as a club has been on our minds for a while. We already switched to LED technology but we believe we can do more,” he told DW.

“If you look at how much waste we produce as a club, it becomes clear that sustainability is an important issue.”

He’s now working together with clubliebe e.V and Friends of the Earth Germany to make SchwuZ more environmentally friendly. They’ve scheduled two days to inspect the entire club, from sound cables to refrigerators and cooling units, to find ways to decrease the club’s carbon footprint.

“What would be super cool is if we find a way to digitally control our cooling units so that our fridges don’t have to run 24/7,” Weber said.

He’s also looking at ordering more products that aren’t wrapped in plastic.

Generating electricity through dancing

Another idea that has been floating around is building dancefloors that produce electricity. Dutch designer Daan Roosegaarde invented the so-called sustainable dancefloor, which uses floor tiles that harvest the energy of the dancers and then turn it into electricity. The invention is already in use in a club in Rotterdam.

“We want to bring that spirit and these good examples to Germany,” Konstanze Meyer from clubliebe e.V. and Friends of the Earth Germany, told DW.

The problem, according to Meyer, is that technology like that is really expensive and most Berlin clubs only have short rental agreements, so big investments like that might not be worth it.

“They have really short perspectives and often that keeps them from making bigger investments in energy efficient technology,” she told DW.

But politicians like Kössler want to change that.

“We have made a multi-million dollar fund available for climate protection within the city and there’s still a lot of money left, so whoever has a good idea has to come forward,” he said.

“We even have a message for clubs: If you have an innovative project to save energy or to make your club green, you can apply for funds.”

Ferropolis festival site is paving the way

Beyond Berlin, a festival site in the German state of Saxony-Anhalt has already found a way to be more sustainable.

Thies Schröder, CEO of the iron city of Ferropolis, has devised a concept to make the festivals at the former coal-pit as environmentally friendly as possible. Seventy percent of the energy currently used at the festivals comes directly from solar. And considering how much electricity a festival with elaborate sound and light systems gobbles up, that’s a pretty impressive number.

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Read the full story here:
https://www.dw.com/en/making-berlin-clubbing-greener/a-47412968
[Thank you to Alex Teitz, http://www.femmusic.com, for contributing this article.]

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