The Scotsman

SSE must be held to account for its actions

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Scottish and Southern Energy’s disposal of its retail customers to an outfit called Ovo has produced predictabl­e results.

“Integratio­n” means 2,600 jobs lost, 1,000 of them in Scotland. SSE call centres in Glasgow and Selkirk will close.

Most customers are in England but a loyal base was in the Highlands where SSE traded on the reputation of the old Hydro Board and the people who work for it.

That was the least of SSE’S considerat­ions when retailing was no longer profitable enough. Instead, it would concentrat­e on offshore windfarms. And how has it repaid Scotland in that respect?

Once again, it seems SSE will send abroad major contracts for the Seagreen project off the Angus coast with a few crumbs for Fife. Former workers at the Arnish yard in Lewis fear it will get nothing.

It is time Scotland’s politician­s took the gloves off and reminded SSE that the position of power they hold is not untouchabl­e. At the time of

electricit­y privatisat­ion, both Scottish companies retained vertical integratio­n – generation, distributi­on and retail – because of the esteem they enjoyed among Scottish consumers. With the emergence of renewable energy, this meant that one tentacle or

another of SSE is involved in determinin­g the fate of every project in the north of Scotland. That is an accident of history and has long been unhealthy.

Having got rid of retail, SSE are no longer vertically integrated. They have sold off

1,000 Scottish jobs via Ovo and done nothing to build Scottish manufactur­ing capacity in renewables.

It is time the pieces of that jigsaw were put together and the overall picture considered on its current merits – not the image of 30 years ago.

 ??  ?? A different time: the former Hydro Board’s Tummel-garry hydro-electric scheme, pictured in 1950
A different time: the former Hydro Board’s Tummel-garry hydro-electric scheme, pictured in 1950

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