The Herald

Anger at plans to build solar farm on historic battle site

Council agrees to controvers­ial proposal for 67-acre developmen­t

- ELLEN THOMAS NEWS REPORTER

AN HISTORIC battle site will be turned into a solar energy farm after council planners gave the go-ahead to the controvers­ial proposals.

The decision, which will see the facility built in the Kilsyth Hills, was made despite objections from the local community council, the local authority’s own archaeolog­ical service and its landscape wing.

Thesiteinc­ludesthela­ndwhere 4,500 men are thought to have lost their lives during the Battle of Kilsyth between a Covenanter army and royalists on August 15, 1645.

The new farm will feature 50,295 solar panels over more than 67 acres of farmland, surrounded by fences measuring more than 6ft high and CCTV posts.

Cumbernaul­d councillor and retired history teacher Tom Johnston was the only member of the committee to oppose the move.

He said: “The victor of Kilsyth, the Marquis of Montrose, was one of Scotland’s greatest generals.

“His tactics have been studied in military academies worldwide and some two dozen books have been written about him.

“It is my view that in one 30-minute planning hearing, the committee has trashed the battlefiel­d of Kilsyth and destroyed the rural and scenic value Kilsyth Hills.”

The SNP politician said that the wider process saw a number of objections submitted, including from within the council itself.

He said: “Kilsyth Community Council submitted an objection on the grounds of visual intrusion across the hills.

“The planning department itself objected, the council’s Archaeolog­ical service and North Lanarkshir­e Council Landscape all objected.

“The proposal is against the council’s local plan and even Cumbernaul­d Airport objected. of the

“And once the current rural character of the area is undermined by more solar farms, the council’s policy of keeping wind farms away from the southern Kilsyth Hills will be undermined.

“We have 150 miles of suitable south facing slopes in the Ochils, the Campsies and Kilpatrick Hills so why use these hills?”

However, Kilsyth councillor Heather McVey moved the motion tograntthe­plan,whichalsoh­ad the backing of Kilsyth’s other councillor­s, Jean Jones and Alan Stevenson.

Ms McVey said that the developmen­t would be of great benefit to the town, not least because the project will create six permanent jobs as well as 30 jobs at the constructi­on stage.

She said: “We have the opportunit­y to have the first non-subsidised panels connecting locally to the UK grid. It’s a new opportunit­y for green energy and we need to explore alternativ­es to our reliance on fossil fuels.”

She added: “I appreciate concerns about the location of the site, so we articulate­d the need for conditions for archaeolog­ical protection and visual screening.”

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