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Benefits of wind energy are mapped out

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Published Date: 31 January 2009
A GOVERNMENT study says onshore wind energy could offer great economic and community benefits for the Western Isles – less than a year after ministers rejected plans for Europe's biggest wind farm in the islands.
The report predicts that green energy projects can be key drivers for the islands' economy without harming the environment.

The study was commissioned by the government after it refused consent for a 181-turbine project in Lewis last April.

Th
e results were welcomed yesterday by Western Isles Council, which has been promoting the islands as a green energy centre. It says Lewis could support bigger projects than those now planned by ministers because of its excellent natural resources.

The study says the best opportunities are south and west of Stornoway, with potential for a 150 megawatt (MW) wind farm in Lewis in addition to projects already planned.

Smaller, community-led wind development is more suitable in Harris, the Uists and Barra, it suggests, while there is marine potential of 105MW by 2015.

Inshore wave potential is around 30MW, with tidal potential of 75MW in the Sound of Harris, and much more in the offshore wave resource.

The report also suggests developing a local wind energy control centre and for developers to manufacture turbines at Arnish Point in Lewis to create jobs in the islands.

Jim Mather, the enterprise minister, said: "We want all areas of Scotland to be able to fully harness our vast potential for cheap, clean and green electricity.

"Maximising that potential brings economic and community benefits and the people of the Western Isles are no different in wanting to use their natural resources to build a sustainable economy."

Angus Campbell, the leader of Western Isles Council, said he was encouraged that the Scottish Government shared the authority's long-held view on renewable energy as an economic driver.

"It is good that the study is clear that 150MW of generation can happen in Lewis in harmony with environmental designations," he said.

"It is disappointing, however, that the report only identifies a potential of 150MW for Lewis, particularly given the excellent wind resources of the islands. That is a wasted resource at a time of economic challenge for the islands."

Mr Campbell also called for a speedy approval of a planned £120 million, 53-turbine project at Eishken in Lewis. "Any other decision would be a bitter blow," he said.

The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, one of the objectors to the 181-turbine project, also welcomed the report.

Stuart Housden, the society's Scotland director, said: "Individual proposals will still need to be carefully sited and designed to ensure they do not harm the environment or adversely affect European designated sites."

Last week it was announced the world's largest wave farm would be built off Lewis. The £30 million, 4MW Siadar Wave Energy Project will provide enough electricity to power about 1,800 homes.






The full article contains 488 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Unimpressed one,

31/01/2009 09:32:35
Here's the real 'benefits':

"LAVISH subsidies and high electricity prices have turned Britain’s onshore wind farms into an extraordinary moneyspinner, with a single turbine capable of generating £500,000 of pure profit per year.

According to new industry figures, a typical 2 megawatt (2MW) turbine can now generate power worth £200,000 on the wholesale markets - plus another £300,000 of subsidy from taxpayers.

Since such turbines cost around £2m to build and last for 20 or more years, it means they can pay for themselves in just 4-5 years and then produce nothing but profit.

The lucrative outlook has led to a surge in planning applications for new windfarms. There are already 165 wind farms operating 1,944 turbines in Britain but another 34 are under construction, a further 118 have planning consent and 220 are under consideration, according to new figures from the British Wind Energy Association.

If they are all built it would mean up to 4,000 more turbines being constructed across Britain - a prospect that is also generating a wave of protest.

Around 140 groups have been set up around the country to oppose wind farm projects, citing fears of noise and light flicker from the rotating blades and the impact the turbines will have on the landscape."
2

Jacqueline Hyde ,

On the shelf 31/01/2009 09:35:31
Surely Comhairle nan Eilean Siar has a primary responsibility to ensure that the economic benefits are retained within the islands. At the moment, all the indications are that the "cheap" electricity will simply be exported to the Central Lowlands and England while the profits go to London, Frankfurt and Madrid.

Any consent for wind, wave or tidal generation should include a provision to make a percentage of the power available to local business at exceptionally low cost. This would encourage companies to move their operations to the power source and create long-term, permanent employment.
3

Greenheatman,

TAIN 31/01/2009 10:53:59
#2 The electrical power from wind turbines is rarely if ever consumed. I doubt if one green electron has passed through anybody's consumer unit to date.

The accent is always on the generation side - for good reason. National Grid employees have been gagged by threat of losing their jobs - but they laugh amongst themselves at the dribs and drabs of uploaded electricity that comes on the grid - and is lost forever it not consumed in that nanosecond of generation.

Cheap green planet saving electricity is just another myth put about by the renewable energy industry.

So for a glipse of the future visit www.greenheating.com

4

nabodican,

Rural Scotland 31/01/2009 13:47:20
I really don't know whether to laugh or cry when I read drivel like this.
The fact of the matter is that the government were desperate to approve the huge windfarm, it was only European legislation that stopped them. It had nothing to with the fact that the vast majority of locals did not want it or that there were more than 10,000 objections to it.
As for Mather and Campbell - to call them "thick as mince" is an insult to mince.
Any sane person who is not in the pay of the wind industry knows that it is the most expensive electricity to the consumer going ie double the price of non rocs qualifying electricity.
We are enduring our coldest winter for many years, old people are dying because they can't afford to heat their homes and these imbeciles are still trying to inflict these windmills of mass destruction on us.
5

Greenheatman,

www.greenheating.com 31/01/2009 14:49:52
#4 said: "We are enduring our coldest winter for many years, old people are dying because they can't afford to heat their homes and these imbeciles are still trying to inflict these windmills of mass destruction on us."

...............an now we are going down the route of importing 'clean coal' from Poland until it runs out too.



 

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