By Leeza Clark
The Scottish Government has been accused of ignoring its own experts in
determining the development of large-scale windfarms.
Rural and conservation bodies have come together to ask the Government to
listen to its own advisors.
The Association for the Protection of Rural Scotland, the Mountaineering
Council of Scotland, the Munro Society, the National Trust for Scotland,
Ramblers Scotland and the Scottish Wild Land Group said that instead of
forcing objectors to embark on costly challenges through the courts, the
Government should first ensure such planning developments have been exposed
to the “proper and democratic scrutiny” their scale and potential impact
warrants.
The organisations have written an open letter highlighting concerns over
the Government’s approach to assessing planning applications for major
windfarms.
They focus on two developments where the Scottish Government has been
perceived to disregard submissions made by Scottish Natural Heritage.
These are the marine windfarm projects in the Forth and Tay and the
Stronelairg windfarm in the highlands.
They say in the letter: “In both cases the Scottish Government chose to
ignore the views of its own expert advisors from Scottish Natural Heritage.
“Their advice made it absolutely clear that the impact from these turbines
will be very significant, and that the locations were problematic as a result.”
Terry Levinthal, director of conservation and projects with the National
Trust for Scotland, said: “We count on the Scottish Government to have in
place a fair and transparent process that ensures proposed developments are
properly scrutinised and that important ecological factors are considered
fully.”
Scottish Wild Land Group coordinator John Milne added: “Scottish Government
decision-making too often ignores expert opinion and prioritises claimed
economic gain over the need to protect nature and our environment.”
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