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Calls to stop installation of more wind turbines at Loch Ness 

Credit:  By David McPhee | 13/05/2021 | www.energyvoice.com ~~

Calls have been made to curb wind farm construction around Loch Ness as more than 700 turbines may soon surround the popular tourist attraction.

A number of Highland leaders and anti-wind farm campaigners have urged the Scottish Government to “halt the devastation” to nature and local wildlife through a growing number of wind projects around the Great Glen area.

In the hillside around the 22-mile loch, 363 operational onshore wind turbines have been built – with a further 20 under construction and 29 developments awaiting approval.

Another 198 wind developments are currently in pre-application or scoping with 109 awaiting applications or a final decision on whether they can apply to build.

Beauly-based anti-wind farm campaigner Lyndsey Ward said the rampant construction of onshore wind farms was “systematically industrialising hundreds of thousands of acres of Scotland’s beautiful landscape”.

She added: “We simply do not need any more turbines, we can’t afford them – emotionally or economically.

“Rural communities should be left in peace after more than a decade of being targeted.

“I would ask people to look at this map and understand these are primarily wealthy companies from overseas harvesting our heritage with thousands of tonnes of concrete poured into our hillsides.”

Highland council leader Margaret Davidson said wind farm applications required “constant revision” due to the “huge pressure for development” in the region.

But she added that most turbines are “not visible from Loch Ness” and that the council has been “careful to mitigate the cumulative visual impact on visitors and local people”.

However, Ms Davidson also claimed Highland communities are seeing “nowhere near enough” financial benefit from the large number of wind farms in the region.

She said: “We want to see far more wealth from these projects kept in the Highlands.

We need to raise our expectations on this and the Scottish Government need to get behind us.

“Promises have been made by these companies and yet the money seems to be evaporating away from the Highlands.”

Highland MSP Edward Mountain said any plans for new wind farms in the Highlands “should only proceed with the backing of the local communities that are impacted by the developments”, adding: “In recent years we have seen Scottish ministers overturn local decisions too often.

“I firmly believe that planning decisions are best dealt with at a local level and that this achieves the most democratic outcome for local communities.”

A spokesman for the Scottish Government said it was “committed to providing clean, green energy” and that it considers “any impacts on local communities” before a consent is made.

“Onshore wind is firmly established as being one of the most cost-effective forms of large-scale electricity generation and is vital to Scotland’s future energy mix as we transition to a net-zero economy.

“Provisional figures indicate that renewables provided the equivalent of 97% of Scotland’s gross electricity consumption in 2020, with onshore wind alone meeting the equivalent of 60% of that consumption,” he said.

Source:  By David McPhee | 13/05/2021 | www.energyvoice.com

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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