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Scotland’s wild places are full of energy

There are the thousands of people who live in rural communities in harmony with the land. There are the countless ramblers, climbers, cyclists, runners that enjoy respite and adventure in our precious wild places.

And, of course, there are the hundreds of wind turbines, pylons, and associated infrastructure that are producing so much energy that Scotland is now exporting electricity. 

These windfarms are contributing to the nation’s net zero objectives. But at what cost? Wild places, rural communities and those who visit for pleasure are paying the price, while massive energy companies line their pockets.

It’s time to have an honest conversation about what is happening to the country’s wildest landscapes.

The John Muir Trust believes there is a way forward that allows us to power the future and protect the wild.

Join the nationwide campaign to Protect the Wild

Crosbie Windfarm (near Largs) goes to Public Inquiry

Inquiry to investigate proposed wind farm near Largs | Ayrshire Today

The inquiry, led by Alasdair Edwards, was triggered after North Ayrshire Council, as the planning authority, lodged an objection to the Crosbie Wind Farm project on Kaim Hill in Fairlie.

The proposed development by Galileo involves the construction and operation of 14 turbines, each with a tip height of up to 200 metres, and associated infrastructure.

The wind farm is expected to have a generation capacity exceeding 80 megawatts, alongside a battery energy storage facility with a capacity exceeding 50 megawatts.

The project site is located approximately 3.5 km southeast of Largs.

In addition to North Ayrshire Council, various community councils and interest groups have opposed the proposal, citing a range of concerns.

Fairlie Community Council has raised issues related to impacts on residents and wildlife, potential noise pollution, and the destruction of scenic and leisure areas. They have also flagged concerns about the impact on local amenities, peatland, watercourses, light pollution, shadow flicker issues, and air traffic safety.

West Kilbride Community Council has also objected, expressing concerns about the impact on the country park, visual disruption to the skyline, noise, access, ground conditions, public access, and peat.

Friends of Clyde Muirshiel Regional Park have also raised objections, including concerns about overdevelopment, industrialisation, turbine scale, recreational loss, visual impact, tourism impact, traffic disruption, and ecological damage.

Glasgow Airport objects to Giant’s Burn Windfarm proposal

‘Located approximately 36km from the Aerodrome Reference Point, turbines of up to 200m high in this location are predicted to be visible to Glasgow radar and will therefore generate unwanted
returns (clutter) on air traffic control display screens.’ They are in discussions with Statkraft re mitigations as is standard….

Kilmun Community Council’s objection to the Energy Consents Unit (ECU)

As shared on Kilmun Community Council’s website (Kilmun Community Council | Giants Burn Windfarm) this evening, we must acknowledge AND applaud this very robust objection as submitted to the Energy Consents Unit (ECU) on behalf of those who live within Kilmun Community Council area. Well done to all concerned.

Holy Loch Nature Reserve: the serious risks posed by the Giant’s Burn Windfarm proposal (as published in Dunoon Observer today)

Sir, in 2009 a Scottish Government Reporter turned down a windfarm development in Cowal’s hills. His reasons included:

1 – “Because of its conspicuous position on the spine of a peninsula the wind farm would have unacceptable adverse impacts on visual amenity for places on coasts of the Firth of Clyde, most markedly on Bute and on the eastern side between Gourock and Largs, . . and on important tourist routes on the coasts and on the waters of the firth”.

2 – The wind farm “would also have an unacceptably high risk of causing significant deterrence to tourism, which is of exceptional economic importance to Cowal and the Firth of Clyde islands, contrary to the criterion of ‘no significant adverse effect on local communities’.”

What has changed since that time? Now tourism is even more important, but the biggest change is that the proposal in 2009 was for 70-metre turbines. Statkraft are proposing 200-metre turbines for the Giant’s Burn Development. These would be visible all over the Clyde Estuary with flashing red aircraft lights and continual background noise.

If this was not bad enough, the proposed site is on an undisturbed peatland. The developer has stated that the foundation for each turbine would consist of a minimum of 1000 cubic metres. This peat would be stored but would then dry out thus contributing to the Carbon Dioxide in the atmosphere. The hardcore roads, even if floated, will act as drainage channels with an initial expulsion of water during construction and then continuously run-off during the life of the project. This will result in the lowering of the water table and increased flooding, particularly in Sandbank and Dunoon. There will be erosion of peat into the Holy Loch with the pollution adversely affecting the biota. The developer has proposed sediment traps, but these are rarely maintained and regularly overflow bringing sediment and debris into the loch.

The risk to the very rare, naturally recovering seagrass meadow on the bottom of the Holy Loch is a critical concern. This fragile ecosystem, a key indicator of the loch’s improved health, is extremely vulnerable to the fine sediment that would be released from the peatland. This is particularly worrying as the loch’s ecosystems are only just recovering from the major pollution caused by the American base, local industry, and agriculture. Peat runoff would cloud the water, reducing the sunlight essential for photosynthesis and effectively smothering the seagrass plants, thereby reversing years of recovery.

Furthermore, the highly biodiverse saltmarsh communities, comprising at least 2000 species, on the Holy Loch Local Nature Reserve and adjacent Scottish nature conservation site, are also in grave danger. Many species new to science have recently been identified living on the marsh. This ecosystem, which acts as a vital buffer between the land and the sea, depends on a specific balance of salinity and nutrients. The continuous flow of peat-laden water during tidal inundations would alter the chemistry of the marsh, polluting habitats and threatening the unique invertebrate community that thrives there, thereby disrupting the local food web. 

It is deeply concerning that Statkraft has not, at any stage, contacted the nature reserve for specific biodiversity data from its extensive research programme. As a result, by definition, Statkraft cannot have adequately assessed the impact on this protected site with its many species yet to be formally described and named. Local extinction of species before they’ve even been described by science could easily result from peat pollution events.

Finally, the entire plankton cycle, the foundation of the loch’s marine ecosystem, would be destabilised. The influx of dissolved organic carbon and nutrients from the peat would trigger harmful algal blooms, which deplete oxygen and produce toxins. Simultaneously, the increased turbidity from the sediment would reduce the light available for phytoplankton, the microscopic plants at the base of the food chain. This twin assault would have a catastrophic impact on fish, birds, and other marine life that depend on a healthy plankton population.

In conclusion, the Scottish Government is spending millions to restore peatland and sea grass in the lochs. This project would have the opposite effect with peat desiccation releasing Carbon Dioxide into the atmosphere and the resultant pollution in the loch damaging the self-regeneration of sea grass, and disturbing its delicate chemical balance which is the basis of the Holy Loch’s exceptionally biodiverse, stable and unique ecosystem.

As John Swinney said, “the appropriate windfarm in the appropriate site,” THIS IS NOT THE APPROPRIATE SITE.

Gordon Holm BSc FGS and Dr. Neil Hammatt PhD

Navigating the Energy Consents Unit website

It is not necessary to register with the Energy Consents Unit in order to submit an application – but you can do so if you wish and submit directly on the website.

If you find it easier, you can simply write or type your objection and email it to representations@gov.scot

If you prefer, you can simply post it to Energy Consents Unit, 5 Atlantic Quay 150 Broomielaw Glasgow G2 8LU

Take your time and read through the parts of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) that you feel you will wish to comment on. You will find this on the Energy Consents Unit website Scottish Government – Energy Consents Unit

Go to the ‘Search’ tab, then ‘simple search; and then type in Giant’s Burn

This should take to you to the application. If not, search for the application using the reference number: ECU00005007

You can then search through the application documents…….you may wish to download or print some of them given how long they are (there are printed copies in the Dunoon Library and the Rothesay Library).

Preserving the beauty of our natural heritage