by Iain Ramage

A major windfarm proposal for Sutherland will be decided by a public
inquiry, possibly later this year.

The 17-turbine plan for West Garty Estate near Helmsdale was referred to
the Scottish Government’s planning and environmental appeals department
after being rejected by Highland Council.

West Garty Renewables, a consortium of local landowners in partnership with
Aberdeenshire energy firm Muirden, proposes building the scheme on a
sporting estate that borders the A9, three miles west of Helmsdale and six
miles northeast of Brora.

Previous plans in the mid 1990s for three separate wind schemes in the area
were refused following a public inquiry.

According to the applicants, the West Garty development would be “set back
in the more elevated hills” of the estate.

They say the location would help ensure that minimal disturbance would be
required to the local road network.

The proposed turbine height of up to 361ft (110m) tall has been reduced
from an initial 394ft (120m).

Caithness-based wind industry watcher Brenda Herrick warned that the scale
of development would pose a “significant visual intrusion” on the landscape.

“The turbines would be seen from the A9 and, quite possibly from the
railway,” she said.

A spokesman for West Garty Renewables said: “The amended design places a
significant emphasis on reducing the visibility of the windfarm.

“The windfarm would subsequently be sensitive to views received along the
A9. In particular, views from the A9 would be extremely limited at
distances of less than 3km from the proposed development.”

Scottish Natural Heritage has objected to the planning application on the
grounds that it would have “significant adverse landscape and visual
impacts on a unique combination and experience of landscape character types
that make an important contribution to the distinctiveness and identity of
Scotland’s landscapes.”


SAS Volunteer

We publish content from 3rd party sources for educational purposes. We operate as a not-for-profit and do not make any revenue from the website. If you have content published on this site that you feel infringes your copyright please contact: webmaster@scotlandagainstspin.org to have the appropriate credit provided or the offending article removed.

0 Comments

Leave a Reply

Avatar placeholder

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *