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£14m boost for Caithness tidal energy skills centre

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Published Date: 19 June 2009
A CAITHNESS college yesterday received a £14 million funding boost as part of the Scottish Government's drive to transform the Pentland Firth into the "Saudi Arabia" of tidal energy production.
The massive investment at the North Highland College UHI in Thurso, announced by Highland and islands Enterprise, will be used to develop a new Centre for Engineering Skills and a Centre for Energy and the Environment at the campus.

The European R
egional Development Fund, the Scottish Funding Council, Highlands and Islands Enterprise, Highland Council and the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority have all contributed towards the £14 million funding package.

First Minister Alex Salmond welcomed the investment. He said: "The Pentland Firth, Scotland's Saudi Arabia of tidal power, has been opened up for development in clean, green energy.

"The interest, the capacity and the opportunity in these waters is vast. Already, the Crown Estate has been approached by 42 developers to put wave and tidal test devices into the Pentland Firth.

"This project will significantly strengthen Scotland's well-established reputation as the European leader in clean, green energy."

A spokesman for HIE said the Centre for Energy and the Environment would be built at the campus of the North Highland College UHI to be used as a teaching facility offering postgraduate qualifications, such as MSc in environmental management and renewable energy.





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  • Last Updated: 18 June 2009 10:49 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Unimpressed one,

19/06/2009 08:32:17
£14 million of public money down the drain. Of course there'll be no shortage of takers of this cash but once it runs out there will be sod all to show for it. The idiots would be better off distributing the cash to a handful of entrepreneurs as seed money and let them come up with real wealth-creating ideas and the jobs that would surely follow.
2

Keegan,

Newcastle 19/06/2009 09:45:22
Agree with above comment. There are entrepeneurs out there who could do with £500,000, let alone 14 million. The UK Government(s) are failing these kinds of developments with application schemes that are convered in red tape. They are giving money to people who only have a half a clue. This industry has been studied for a long time and there must be at least fourteen companies who are struggling to find investment because of the high risk nature of the industry. Educating people about that fact isn't going to help the industry progress, and these companies are going to lose their patents and we'll miss the boat. argh!
3

Baba Yaga,

15/07/2009 16:31:24
More money down the drain all right. Money that could be put to better use.

 

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