The Scotsman

Solar power pioneer to sink £4m fortune into rewilding Scotland

- By ALISON CAMPSIE newsdeskts@scotsman.com

A former scientific director at Greenpeace is to sink around £4 million into rewilding and climate change projects in Scotland after selling his global solar energy business.

Jeremy Leg get th ass old Solar century to the Nor weg ian state renewable s firm St at kraft and will invest around 50 percent of his share value into projects that drive down carbon emissions, increase biodiversi­ty and create jobs and opportunit­ies in Scotland’s rural communitie­s.

Mr Leggett said he hoped the investment would ultimate - ly tee up “tens of millions of pounds” for such projects in

Scotland with talks ongoing with a number of ‘compadres’ who share his vision for a new era in land management and “natural-based solutions” to fight climate change.

Mr Leggett said :“I believe that Scotland has a great chance to bean en during leader in fighting climate chaos while fashioning a better economy, including building back better after the Covid crisis.”

Earlier this year, Mr Leggett purchased the 500- hectare Bun lo it Estate at Loch Ness and is set to reverse generation­s of land management practices by restoring peatlands and returning large areas of commercial forestry to mixed woodlands in a bid to lock up carbon while supporting new job opportunit­ies on the land.

A‘ world class open labora tory” will also be created with discussion­s ongoing with Edinburgh University to develop new qualificat­ions in climate change science.

Following the company sale, he will invest further into his ‘Bunloit Wildland’ project and Inverness timber-building manufactur­er Makar, which will use Douglas Fir from the the estate for affordable carb on-neutral homes, with a number to be built on his land for local people.

A fund will also be set up to develop “other Bunloit-type projects, both in the Highlands and elsewhere,” Mr Leggett added. He said: “We now know we can’t win on climate without removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere on an enormous scale.

"Bunloit-type projects hold the potential to do that, by measurably increasing the extent to which the gas is sequestere­d in wood lands, peatlands, pastures, soils and also to some extent in wooden buildings powered by renewable energy on a micro scale.

“We are only going to maintain social coherence if we can provide good jobs for people, plus affordable housing and functional self-helping communitie­s on all scales, at the same time we fight the c limate- and biodiversi­ty crises.”

One idea being pursued at

Bun lo it is the creation of a small school for master furniture building with an intake of about 20 students a year, most of which will be reserved for local people. Bun lo it wood would be the material of choice.

"People will have jobs other than in tourism, vital as that is. They will increasing­ly be able to work exactly where they live, and in ways that improve the health of both ecosystems and economies,” Mr Leggett added.

He said he hoped his Bunloit vision would inspire others, including those “who use estates in much less nature - friendly ways".

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