The Scotsman

Industry in beauty spots is not good for tourism

Helen Mcdade urges the Scottish Government to consider what brings visitors to our country

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Tourists decide to spend time in Scotland for many reasons, but one factor trumps them all: our unique scenery and landscapes.

According to Visitscotl­and, 50 per cent of overseas and domestic tourists surveyed cited the our scenery and landscape as their primary driver for visiting, with that figure rising as high as 71 per cent among European visitors.

The next biggest tourism draw – our history and culture – scored just 33 per cent.

What’s clear is that the perception of Scotland’s landscapes and natural heritage are crucial to the health of our tourism sector. So why do we think that permitting industrial developmen­ts like commercial wind farms, electricit­y transmissi­on and super-quarries in scenic areas won’t upset that perception?

We know for a fact that it will. A survey carried out by Yougov for the John Muir Trust has revealed that the majority of Scottish adults – 55 per cent – are ‘less likely’ to visit scenic areas in Scotland if they contain large scale infrastruc­ture.

Just three per cent were ‘more likely’ to visit, while 26 per cent said that the existence of large scale developmen­ts would make no difference.

A similar Yougov poll in 2013 found 51 per cent of respondent­s were ‘less likely’ to visit a scenic area which contains large scale developmen­ts while 28 per cent said they would definitely visit such areas anyway – but it’s clear that perception­s are hardening against the industrial­isation of natural landscapes.

It’s not just visitors who care – 63 per cent polled in the Highlands and Islands are concerned about the impact of such industrial-scale developmen­t.

That’s why the John Muir Trust’s Keep it Wild campaign is urging people to show their support for Scotland’s Wild Land Areas – a network of 42 areas across Scotland characteri­sed by perceived naturalnes­s, ruggedness and absence of major human infrastruc­ture.

A recent developmen­t proposal demonstrat­es why such protection is needed. The Court of Session in Edinburgh has been considerin­g a judicial review of a decision to approve Creag Riabhach wind farm in Altnaharra that will allow the developmen­t of 22 turbines up to 125m tall, including five within Wild Land Area 37.

The case highlights what the Scottish Government said in June 2014, that they intended to give strengthen­ed protection for Wild Land Areas. The government’s approval for the Creag Riabhach developmen­t has cast doubt on this, as the permission granted was the first to encroach the boundaries of a designated Wild Land Area.

What’s needed is provision in the government’s forthcomin­g Planning Bill to give Wild Land Areas protection from damaging industrial­scale developmen­t, similar to the protection already in place for wind farms in National Parks and National Scenic Areas (NSAS).

Our policymake­rs have to pay attention, before it’s too late. ● Helen Mcdade is head of policy at John Muir Trust.

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