The Standard (St. Catharines)

Documents: Trump golf course damaged Scottish sand dunes

- DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — U.S. President Donald Trump’s family business partly destroyed legally protected sand dunes in Scotland when it built a golf course north of Aberdeen, according to government reports released in response to a freedom of informatio­n request.

Scottish Natural Heritage, which monitors the country’s sensitive and scientific­ally important sites, said that constructi­on of Trump Internatio­nal Golf Links Scotland “led to the direct loss” of up to 68 hectares of the 205-hectare Foveran Links site.

The damaged and destroyed drifts, one of the best examples of moving sand dunes in the United Kingdom, developed over 4,000 years, according to the agency.

“The constructi­on has removed the vast majority of the geomorphol­ogical interest within the vicinity of the golf course,” Scottish Natural Heritage said in the documents.

The documents were released following a public records request made by Bob Ward, policy director of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environmen­t at the London School of Economics. Britain’s Observer newspaper first reported the studies.

Trump Internatio­nal executive vice-president Sarah Malone said the company owned less than five per cent of the site of special scientific interest, or SSSI, most of which remains untouched.

“As for the small portion that we do own, no other SSSI site in the land has seen more environmen­tal care or investment,” Malone said in a statement. “The site was ignored until Trump took ownership, and is now celebrated and enjoyed by many.”

As for the land developed for the golf course, “it has changed in parts because we have sown grass, but our environmen­tal consultant­s and (Scottish Natural Heritage) can confirm that many of the special attributes of the land remains and the wildlife is flourishin­g.”

The golf course was completed in 2012 and is part of what the Trump Organizati­on envisions as a larger project that could include two golf courses, a 450room hotel and as many as 1,500 homes.

Scottish authoritie­s approved the outlines of the project in 2008, though each phase will require additional review. The company last week unveiled plans to invest 150 million pounds ($255 million Cdn) in the second phase of developmen­t.

During the original approval process, Trump promised to minimize any environmen­tal damage, saying he was “fully committed to mitigating the effects of the course on the environmen­t.”

Ward said the Scottish government should consider Trump’s failure to live up to the commitment when it reviews future building plans for the site.

“I think the problem here is the disregard they’ve shown and the way in which they made promises which he has not kept,” Ward said. “I think personally that the Scottish government here has not been as strong as it should have been in holding Mr. Trump to account, and I hope that they will now see the need to do that.”

Critics in Scotland previously accused the Trump Organizati­on of failing to deliver the jobs and investment it promised when the project first came up for review.

The Trump Organizati­on says it has already invested 100 million pounds ($170 million Cdn) in what is expected to be a “multiphase­d developmen­t” costing 750 million pounds ($1.2 billion Cdn).

The proposed second phase will support nearly 2,000 jobs during constructi­on and some 300 permanent jobs after it is completed, the company said last week.

Foveran Links is one of the “least disturbed and most dynamic” dune systems in Britain, which makes it important for studying the natural features of the coastline, according to Scottish Natural Heritage.

 ?? MATTHEW LLOYD BLOOMBERG ?? Donald Trump drives a golf cart at Trump Internatio­nal Golf Links north of Aberdeen, Scotland, in 2016. A Scottish Natural Heritage report says constructi­on of the course damaged legally protected sand dunes.
MATTHEW LLOYD BLOOMBERG Donald Trump drives a golf cart at Trump Internatio­nal Golf Links north of Aberdeen, Scotland, in 2016. A Scottish Natural Heritage report says constructi­on of the course damaged legally protected sand dunes.

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