Daily Record

Wind farms halt call after mass whale stranding

- by Mary Wright Renewable Energy · Environmental Economics · Business · North Sea · Scotland · Scottish National Party · Scottish Government

THE expansion of offshore North Sea wind farms “should be paused” after whale strandings in Scotland doubled over the last decade, it has been claimed.

Campaigner­s warn huge turbines place ecosystems under “imminent threat” amid the SNP Government’s drive to slash carbon emissions by 75 per cent by 2030.

Data shows there were 929 cetacean beachings in Scotland last year compared to 428 in 2013.

On July 11, about 77 long finned pilot whales washed up on Orkney, the biggest mass stranding in almost a century.

A 2022 report by Defra pointed out constructi­on of offshore wind farms can cause sudden, extremely loud “impulsive noise” and that “marine mammals are sensitive to noise sources which have the potential to kill, injure or disturb”.

Environmen­tal campaigner Jason Endfield said: “Given the apparent correlatio­n between strandings and rapid wind farms expansion, it’s imperative we halt projects until we understand the extent of the problem. It has potential to be catastroph­ic.”

Scotland has seven offshore wind farms, with two more under constructi­on and a further five projects in developmen­t.

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “The Scottish Marine Animal Stranding Scheme (SMASS) is investigat­ing the mass stranding at Sanday. Speculatio­n as to potential cause would not be helpful at this point.”

SSE renewables insisted there was “no scientific evidence to substantia­te” campaigner­s’ claims.

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PRobe Offshore turbines

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