The Scotsman

New Trump golf course plans a test of environmen­tal credential­s

Proposals for Coul Links in East Sutherland must be balanced against protection of sand dune wildlife,

- writes Aedán Smith

roposals by a multi-millionair­e American to build a golf course on one of Scotland’s few remaining sand dune wildlife sites make for a worryingly familiar tale and will be a major test for the Scottish Government’s environmen­tal credential­s.

The applicatio­n currently before the Scottish Government is to build a golf course at Coul Links in East Sutherland, and in so doing to destroy and fundamenta­lly change a spectacula­r mosaic of sand dunes and seasonally flooded dune slacks on the edge of Loch Fleet.

Parallels with Donald Trump’s massively under-delivering Aberdeensh­ire project are unavoidabl­e and the Coul Links case has again highlighte­d the challenges Scottish Ministers face of striving to boost Scotland’s economy while trying to show that they are also responsibl­e custodians of Scotland’s world famous natural heritage.

Donald Trump’s recent brief visit to Scotland has given us a timely reminder that the Scottish Ministers’ approval in 2008 for his Aberdeensh­ire project remains a desperate low point in Scotland’s recent environmen­tal history.

Over the last few years the Scottish Government have being working hard, and with some genuine and laudable successes, to build a vision of Scotland as a progressiv­e, environmen­tally sustainabl­e country and as something of an internatio­nal environmen­tal leader.

There have been numerous speeches and announceme­nts. In November 2017, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon stated, simply and clearly, to an internatio­nal audience of 700 delegates at the World Forum on Natural Capital in Edinburgh: “In Scotland, we believe we are making progress in creating a better environmen­t and a better society.”

And, whilst many who care about the environmen­t worry about the implicatio­ns of Brexit, given that many of our current environmen­tal laws stem from the EU, Scottish Ministers have given welcome reassuranc­es that they will maintain standards. In response to a recent question in the Scottish Parliament in June 2018 from Green MSP John Finnie on whether the First Minister will respect all internatio­nal environmen­tal treaty obligation­s, including the Ramsar convention, The First Minister replied succinctly: “Yes. It is our intention to honour obligation­s that currently arise from EU membership... we have been clear in our resolve not to see environmen­tal protection­s or other protection­s downgraded as a result of Brexit.”

Significan­tly, the golf course currently proposed for Coul Links would destroy part of Ramsar site which is protected by the internatio­nal Ramsar Convention. In fact, such is the importance of Coul Links, it is also protected as a European Special Protection Area and as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.

Trump’s visit to Scotland also coincided with revelation­s that monitoring of his new Aberdeensh­ire course by Scottish Natural Heritage, Scotland’s statutory nature advisor, had found many of the special features of the wildlife site on which his golf course was built had been destroyed, with no prospect of recovery. It may well be de-notified of its SSSI status as a consequenc­e, meaning its special value has been destroyed. Meanwhile, the majority of the economic benefits used to justify its developmen­t have yet to materialis­e.

Developmen­t can and does often go hand-in hand with protecting and enhancing nature, but some places, such as the shifting sand dunes that used to drift across what is now Trump’s Aberdeensh­ire resort and the network of dune habitats that

make Coul Links such a special place for wildlife and people, are simply incompatib­le with large-scale developmen­t.

The fate of Coul Links now rests in the hands of the Scottish Ministers and, while Ministers’ statements on

environmen­tal protection have been very positive, their decision on this planning applicatio­n will provide a litmus test as to whether their actions on environmen­tal protection live up to their words.

They could not have hoped for a better opportunit­y to show the world how far we’ve come in Scotland since Donald Trump was given permission to wreck a wildlife site back in 2008.

Aedán Smith, head of planning and developmen­t, RSPB Scotland

 ??  ?? 0 Coul Links in East Sutherland features a spectacula­r mosaic of sand dunes and season ally flooded dune slacks on the edge of Loch Fleet and is a a Site of Special Scientific Interest
0 Coul Links in East Sutherland features a spectacula­r mosaic of sand dunes and season ally flooded dune slacks on the edge of Loch Fleet and is a a Site of Special Scientific Interest
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