Just found a newspaper cutting, 2 page spread, that I held onto with regards to Offshore windfarms - The Scotsman Thursday 20 May 2010, did anyone read it? Makes interesting reading, to quote
'a spokewoman for the Crown Estate, which controls the seabed, welcomed the conclusion that there were no signicficant environmental barriers to offshore wind developement in the ten sites around the coast'
According to the article '25 new sites have been earmarked by the Scottish Government for the development of offshore wind farms, Stretching all around the coast of Scotland the sites would cover up to 12,000 square miles of sea. They have been identified as possible sites where huge wind farms can be built after 2020.
The Environment Secretary Richard Lockhead who launched a 12 week consultation into a report at the All Energy Conference in Aberdeen on 19 May 2010 said 'it marked a major step in commitment to make Scotland a powerhouse of renewable energy in Europe.'
A map indicates that 10 short term optional sites stretching from the coast line of Dumfries and Galloway Solway Firth, Machrihanish, West coast of Islay, South tip of Tiree, East of the Dornoch Firth and the Firth of Fourth.
The other 15 sites earmarked as Medium Term options stretch right round the entire coastline from the Solway Firth, 2 large areas marked on the map off Kintyre one off the south tip of Arran and the other indicates an area at the South tip of Kintyre, North West coast of Islay, Tiree, The outer Hebrides, The North coast of Scotland and it looks as if Orkney and Shetland are completely surrounded by turbines.
The articles was written by
jfyall@scotsman.com if anyone is interested in contacting him/her, he/she seems to know what they are taking about and quotes statistics for a 'Green future'. I have to say in the 'comment page' he/she writes 'To get Scotland to what would, of course, be a position which would be beneficial, we would have to litter the seas with turbines,wave machines and tidal generators and spend billions of pounds every year.'
I hope someone from the Machrihanish committe will read this because it looks as if Kintyre and other area of Scotland will have a massive fight on their hands to prevent our waters being polluted by huge visual intrusions. The Scottish Government has pleged to generate 20 per cent of all energy and 50 per cent of electricity from renewable resources by 2020. The Government do not quote any groups who would object to this [it looks as if it's already written in stone] but a spokespersons from the Scottish Fishermans Federation said. ' it is imperative that a primary food producing industry, harvesting a sustainable renewable resource will not be forgotten as the new industires develop.'