Stuart McMillan, MSP for Greenock, is due to launch the second tranche of
shares in the Small Wind Co-op tomorrow in Glasgow’s Quaker Meeting House
after the first phase raised more than £1 million to fund the installation
of farm-scale wind turbines at Wemyss Bay, Inverclyde.

As well as offering a stable return for members, supported by the
government-guaranteed Feed-in Tariff, the 2 x 100kW project will generate a
community fund of £3,000 a year (index-linked) for 20 years.

For this second tranche, which aims to raise £500,000, people who live
within postcodes which are within 20 miles of the projects have the
opportunity to invest in £100,000 of shares set aside for local investment
for the first two weeks of the offer period – until 1 November.

The minimum investment is just £100 and projected average annual returns
are 6.5% over 20 years.

McMillan said: “Well done to everyone involved with the Small Wind Co-op.
£1 million is a fantastic achievement and I’m delighted that work can now
go ahead on the Kellybank turbines, supporting initiatives that improve
employment prospects and grow a further sense of community in Inverclyde.”

Jon Halle, Director, Small Wind Co-op, said: “More than 300 people joined
us to help raise over £1 million this summer, which means the groundwork is
now getting underway at Kellybank and we’re now building on that momentum
with our second offer.”


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Your email address will not be published.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 *