By Tim Pauling
A row broke out last night after a survey showed that the majority of
people living in the north and north-east support wind power.
The industry claimed the results shot down the “vocal minority” of
objectors who claim that most Scots are opposed to giant turbines dotting
the countryside.
But anti-wind campaigners said the findings had to be “taken with a bucket
of salt” as they did not separate out those who are “adversely affected”,
mainly people who living in rural areas and communities targeted by wind
developers.
An online survey carried out by YouGov found that seven in 10 (71%) of
Scottish adults supported the continued development of wind power as part
of the energy mix, up seven points on 2013.
Support in north-east Scotland stood at 73%, the same at two years ago. In
the Highlands and Islands 66% voiced their approval, up eight points on 2013.
The poll of 1,008 people over two days in February was carried out for the
green industry body, Scottish Renewables.
Joss Blamire, senior policy manager at Scottish Renewables, said: “These
poll results highlight once again that not only do the vast majority of
Scots support wind power, but the number who do is actually increasing.
“In the Highlands and Islands the number of people backing the wind energy
sector has risen by eight percentage points to 66% since 2013, while in the
north-east it has remained static at 73% – two points higher than the
national average.
“The capacity of Scotland’s onshore wind sector has actually risen by a
fifth in the same period, and these figures demonstrate that while a vocal
minority of objectors claim Scots don’t like wind power, it seems the
opposite is actually true.”
Highland anti-windfarm campaigner Lyndsey Ward, of Kiltarlity, accused
Scottish Renewables of “desperately trying to prop up an increasingly
unpopular industry against a tsunami of negative press from engineers,
economists and health experts”.
“These results should be taken with a giant bucket of salt,” she said.
“The opinions who really matter on this are from the rural people who are
adversely affected. They are the people who’s lives are threatened and have
taken the time to research the efficiency and economic viability of wind.”
Linda Holt, of Scotland Against Spin, said: “How does Scottish Renewables
explain the fact that almost no turbine or wind farm application in
Scotland commands majority support in the local communities which are
supposed to benefit from it?”
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