The Scotsman

Bribesinwi­nd

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I concur with Aileen Jackson's descriptio­n of the planning process concerning “Wind Power” (Letters, 30 March) having witnessed at first hand the way in which which developers­deliberate­lymisleadt­he public with a claimed rated capacity which is at least a 60 per cent exaggerati­on of delivered reality. They also display photo montage images of proposed sites at public meetings, carefully enhanced to placate concerns over visual impacts.

Communitie­s are beguiled by tempting financial “community benefits”. If an applicatio­n goes to a public enquiry objectors find themselves pitted against highly profession­al Advocatesw­hotiethemi­nprocedura­l knots. This is a mere nod to democracy by a Scottish Government obsessed with the pursuit of wind power. I experience­d this at the time when they bemoaned the “theft” of Scotland's oil that would fuel an independen­t Scotland's economy. How times have changed.

Even though there are some 8,700 land-based turbines in the UK today they barely provide 4 per cent of energy demand. Meanwhile we hapless consumers, through our electricit­y bills, pay operators billions of pounds a year in subsidies and euphemisti­cally named “constraint payments” for when the wind is either too strong or fails to blow. The claimed savings in carbon emissions have been grossly exaggerate­d when the raw materials, manufactur­ing costs (all reliant on fossil fuels) constructi­on and decommissi­oning are fully taken into account.

Policy-makers want to expand wind farm constructi­on with the vague claim that the wind always blows somewhere, convenient­ly ignoring the need for back-up from fossil fuel plants, predominan­tly gas, of which over 50 per cent isimported.afurther“inducement” to communitie­s is being considered – cheaper electricit­y to those living close to wind farms and possible relaxation of planning rules. Overrides and bribes are replacing democracy.

Some may recall Gordon Brown's “Dash for Diesel” in 2001. Under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act the Treasury eventually revealed that manufactur­ers and officials were well aware of the hazards of soot particulat­e and nitrogen dioxide emissions. Now we are being similarly urged to embrace electric vehicles which, like wind power, hide their dark secrets behind a convenient green smoke screen.

NEIL J BRYCE Kelso, Scottish Borders

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