For over a decade, policy-makers in the Western Isles have seen ‘renewable
energy’ as the key to achieving the Holy Grail of Hebridean aspiration.

That is, long-term economic abundance and cash flow, thereby lifting the
island population away from perceived poverty and inequalities vis-a-vis
the mainland. Onshore wind farms and an inter-connector (in island parlance
‘the interconnector’) are seen as the drivers towards that aspiration,
irrespective of all other considerations.

This, despite the view of Scottish Natural Heritage that the long-term
future of the islands lies in environmental tourism.

However those who have read the Grail legends will know that underlying the
achieving of the Quest is a fundamental question. ‘Whom does the Grail serve?’

Or, who will the wind farms ultimately benefit?

In this context, the current grotesque squabble between foreign
multi-nationals and established island interests on the one hand, and
individual crofters on the other, with both seeming to push local community
initiatives out of any involvement or benefits, is an irrelevance.

It does not deal at all with the true cost of turning parts of the Outer
Hebrides into an industrial landscape.

Readers of the Grail legends will be familiar with the concept of the
Wasteland, which could well be the fate of large areas of our island
landscapes, if the interconnector becomes a fact.

What will that landscape look like 30 years from now, when wind farm
technologies and economics have been overtaken by less intrusive, more
environmentally friendly methods, or the so-called ‘energy market’ has
moved on?

I’m aware there are re-instatement conditions in both extant and sought
planning consents.

But corporate companies, policies, identities, shift. Liquidation, usually
accompanied by mismanagement, is not an unknown route for avoiding
obligations, as we’ve seen recently with Carillion, where the UK taxpayer
will be picking up the pieces.

Pinning down who does what with what to who is difficult to follow, let
alone establish liability.

To take one example, AMEC, the original assailant of the Lewis Peatlands,
has in the last decade undergone at least three (or is it four) changes in
ownership/identity.

Will American, French, or other multi-nationals, pick up the tab?

In the case of EDF and the Stornoway Wind Farm, will the French taxpayer be
willing to spend cash on reinstating a bit of a remote island far away to
the north-west?

It is not far-fetched to see that future generations of islanders’
inheritance will be the ruins of an industrial landscape.

Rusting, crumbling turbines littering skylines as they gradually slide,
over decades, into bogs; overgrown borrow pits and quarries; and sites
dangerous to access.

To see what is possible, one only has to visit some of the UK mainland’s
once prosperous, now derelict, industrial landscapes.

Currently tourism benefits the islands by £65m every year.

Will passengers on cruise ships be willing to sit long hours in coaches
being taken past one wind farm after another, with the Callinish Stones a
mere historical, and in terms of comparative scale, minor appendage?

The life of the projected super wind farms is 25 years. £65m over that
period equates to £1.625bn. This puts the salivation over £10m across the
same period by interests in Tolsta in context.

As for the so-called jobs created. As has been pointed out before, the
skilled workforce in that context is already gainfully employed by the oil
industry, at rates way outside the range paid by wind farm employers.

Despite Brexit, or even perhaps because of it, we could well see those
so-called employment opportunities (mainly limited to the initial
construction period) filled by a non-Hebridean workforce.

Our landscape and its wildlife are unique and deserve the love of its people.

I read in the planning literature that cumulatively, the projected
super-windfarms, if built, over 25 years will kill 22 golden eagles, let
alone many creatures from smaller species.

These losses are described as ‘acceptable’ or ‘not significant’.

Going back to the question of ‘whom does the Grail serve?’ it is clearly
not the environment or the wildlife.

The time may come when the Lewis Peatlands may come to be described, more
accurately, as the Lewis Wastelands. – Yours, etc.,

Peter Lyons
Ecologisers (The Young People’s Anti-Litter Campaign)
Gress


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