The UK’s historic departure from coal signals the end of its 150-year reliance on the fossil fuel that powered the industrial revolution, as the Ratcliffe-on-Soar Plant shuts its doors. The closure serves as a crucial inflection point in the global push to reduce carbon emissions. Coal, responsible for 40 percent of global carbon emissions, has long been the backbone of Britain's industrial expansion, making it a difficult transition, marked by contentious debates over the social costs and differences over new coal mines, such as the proposed project in White Haven, Cumbria.