The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Electricit­y company’ s 100% wind switch

Fabricatio­n call,

- BY DAVID MCPHEE

ScottishPo­wer has rejected accusation­s alleging the firm will shortchang­e the Scottish supply chain following it’s commitment to become a fully windgenera­ted firm.

The energy firm yesterday announced the sale of its gas and hydro assets to Drax Group for £702 million including the Cruachan hydro station in Argyll.

It vowed to completely switch away from coal and gas generation while increasing its onshore and offshore wind portfolio.

But workers union GMB last night hit out at the lack of historical investment in the UK supply chain by large-scale wind developers, causing a shortfall in Scottish jobs.

GMB Scotland secretary Gary Smith said: “ScottishPo­wer has committed to spending £5.2 billion on renewables but the question is how much of the capital spend will be in the UK?

“Scotland has one of the largest wind sectors but almost no manufactur­ing jobs in renewables.”

Mr Smith added that Scotland currently has three yards “lying idle”, referring to troubled fabricatio­n firm BiFab.

He said: “Developers have for too long preferred to make their turbines abroad, including in heavily subsidised Spanish yards, and all that we’ve ended up with in the UK is higher energy bills to pay the renewables subsidies.

“We demand work comes to Scottish yards.”

ScottishPo­wer defended its record by pointing to its £1.6bn investment in eight Scottish onshore wind farms.

T h e f i r m s a i d i t “expected” 86% of future projects “could be built

“Developers have for too long preferred to make their turbines abroad”

in Scotland” and 12% in Wales, creating 18,000 jobs during the “peak years of constructi­on”.

A ScottishPo­wer spokespers­on said: “By becoming a 100% green energy generator, we aim to the deliver the best value for our customers.

“Aside from environmen­tal benefits, our investment­s will also provide employment opportunit­ies and a wide range of benefits for local communitie­s and the wider economy in Scotland.

“For example, of eight onshore wind farms we recently built, hundreds of millions of pounds will directly benefit the Scottish economy.”

The UK energy giant said Scotland accounts for 51% of total expenditur­e with onshore wind projects adding £297m of “value” to the local community.

The agreement with Drax Group meant ScottishPo­wer shedding a number of Scottish assets.

As well as the Cruachan site, the firm also sold runof-river hydro locations at Galloway and Lanark, four combined gas cycle turbine stations and a biomassfro­m-waste facility near Uddingston.

 ??  ?? CHANGE OF DIRECTION: ScottishPo­wer’s chief executive, Keith Anderson, says the shift of focus to wind power represents a milestone in the energy firm’s history
CHANGE OF DIRECTION: ScottishPo­wer’s chief executive, Keith Anderson, says the shift of focus to wind power represents a milestone in the energy firm’s history

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