The Herald on Sunday

Blow for protesters Fury as work begins on controvers­ial turbine windfarm

Bulldozers finally move in at Shetland beauty spot to start work on new £580 million Viking Energy project following years of petitions, court fights and appeals

- By Victoria Brenan

RENOWNED for its stunning scenery, pure air and sense of peace, a new Viking battle is disturbing island life on Shetland more than 1,000 years after the first.

Last month, after a protracted process involving petitions, court fights and appeals, the bulldozers finally moved in to start work on a £580 million, 103-turbine windfarm which was granted planning consent eight years ago.

The plans were first raised in 2005 when they were presented to the islanders as a community-owned enterprise with the potential to earn them £37m a year.

However, the involvemen­t of Shetland Islands Council (SIC) as developers attracted accusation­s of conflicts of interest, which led to the council transferri­ng its share – 50% of ownership – to Shetland Charitable Trust, which invested about £10m in the project.

It later announced it would not be contributi­ng further, and the project is now solely funded by Scottish and Southern Energy (SSE).

From the outset, the Viking Energy windfarm – the largest in the UK in terms of output, capable of powering 500,000 homes annually – has been a controvers­ial prospect for many islanders.

When the plans gained consent in April 2012, the developers quickly faced a court challenge over their wildlife impact assessment­s.

In 2013, an Edinburgh judge ruled that they did not follow EU law on bird protection. Appeals took this to the UK’s highest court, where judges then ruled in favour of SSE in 2015.

The plaintiffs, community group Sustainabl­e Shetland, were not pleased and raised £200,000 to contest the plans. They remain a vocal opponent of the windfarm and maintain there should have been a public inquiry before it was approved.

Chairman Frank Hay said consultati­ons throughout the planning process had been lacking and that alternativ­e proposals for a gas-powered station in Lerwick had never been properly considered.

“This was going to happen, no matter what,” he said. “A lot of our efforts were wasted. This is about pursuing a carbon zero agenda, regardless of value for money for energy customers.”

He said the land the windfarm will be cited on is “predominan­tly peat”.

Indeed, the developers reduced the number of turbines – originally proposed to be 150 – partly due to the planned location across the peat bogs. Peat bogs store significan­t amounts of carbon emissions, even more intensely than forests.

“They are digging through vast quantities of peat, some places three of four feet deep,” he said. “They are carbon stores and here we have Viking just digging them up.”

Last month, 20 people from across the isles signed a petition expressing concern that Shetland Islands Council’s recognitio­n of a global climate emergency had not taken into account current evidence on the carbon value of peatland.

Petitioner­s said that since the original approval was given to the Viking windfarm from the Scottish Government in 2012, “much of the science has fundamenta­lly changed and we now indisputab­ly recognise peatland as a store of carbon equal to or greater than that of rainforest”.

Hay said the 129sqkm windfarm had divided the community. “I think it’s got worse since the diggers moved in,” he added. “It is really the economy versus the environmen­t.

“Things are getting quite heated. Former friends no longer speak to each other, families are split. It’s almost a taboo topic.”

Lorna Moncrieff, 65, is the fourth generation of her family to live in Shetland, in Aith.

She said: “We are just concerned about wildlife and the areas being desecrated.

“I am all for green energy but you can’t call it green when you are digging up half the island, it’s ridiculous.

“They keep saying now we should be preserving peat and then they dig it up to build a windfarm. I think it’s madness.”

She said landowners were being paid compensati­on for having turbines and added: “The only green part about this is the money.”

“We wouldn’t have minded a few windmills to power Shetland but this isn’t to power Shetland, it’s to power the whole of the UK. Nobody has listened to us from the start.”

Central mainland councillor Moraig Lyall added: “I believe that it will turn the heartland of our islands into an industrial zone dominated both in sight and sound by a forest of mechanical giants.”

Lyall added: “I feel sad that so many seem to think that ruining the landscape is our only option to maintain economic prosperity. This decision is not being taken by SSE to benefit the people of Shetland but to satisfy the thirst for ‘green’ energy on the mainland and to swell their profits.”

Protesters held a picnic in Upper Kergord in July to show their concerns over the windfarm.

More than 50 people held a picnic next to the site of an access road, which is being built for a large substation linked to the developmen­t.

Placards on show included “Where was our voice”, “Nature not money” and “Wir hills are wir lungs”.

Tour guide Laurie Goodlad said: “We are really not happy with what’s going on here.

“We just want to have a picnic in an area of outstandin­g beauty.”

The scale of the project and lack of community benefit were some of the concerns raised by the protesters.

One picnicker said the “the damage is done”, adding that the windfarm was “simply too big”.

SSE says the windfarm – due to be operationa­l by 2024 – will bring investment to Shetland and help resolve

I am all for green energy but you can’t call it green when you are digging up half the island. They keep saying we should be preserving peat. I think it’s madness

energy supply issues on the island. It will also benefit the island in terms of community payouts for local projects, around £2m a year, and support 400 jobs during the constructi­on phase and 35 jobs during its 25 years in operation.

A spokesman for SSE Renewables said much of the windfarm site was on “heavily eroded and degraded peat” and “is therefore a net emitter of that stored carbon”.

“Viking’s Habitat Management Plan (HMP) has been approved by Sepa, SNH and Shetland Islands Council,” he said. “An independen­t expert advisory group, Shetland Windfarm Environmen­tal Advisory Group (SWEAG), will oversee the comprehens­ive programme of conservati­on measures, which include extensive peat restoratio­n over 260 hectares of significan­tly damaged and eroded habitat.

“SSE Renewables is a responsibl­e developer and will ensure that people and contractor­s operating the Viking constructi­on site do so to the highest health and safety and environmen­tal standards, with strict adherence to consent conditions.”

The project failed to secure Government subsidy last year, but SSE pledged £7 billion of private capital in low-carbon investment­s in the UK and Ireland over the next five years as it targets a “green recovery” from the pandemic.

Main image, the scenic majesty of the Shetlands site. Left, Paul Wheelhouse, Minister for Energy, Connectivi­ty and the Islands described the Shetland windfarm as a “great symbol” for the green recovery post-Covid

A community investment review, carried out by SSE Renewables, earlier this week showed that more than £3m has been allocated to areas across the north and northeast of Scotland to fight Covid 19 – with nearly £1.5m going towards community groups helping in the front line response.

Around £6.1m was allocated to 443 projects across the UK. Funding was also granted to groups including the Royal Burgh of Wick Community Council towards materials for a 3D printer to make masks and visors.

Managing director of SSE Renewables, Jim Smith, said: “Viking windfarm will help kickstart the green economic recovery, bringing much-needed low-carbon investment to Shetland.

“In doing so, it will trigger the building of the associated transmissi­on connection to the islands, which will itself help resolve longstandi­ng security of supply issues on the island.”

The Scottish Energy Minister Paul Wheelhouse described the Shetland windfarm as a “great symbol” for the green recovery that the Scottish Government is determined to “foster and encourage”.

Wheelhouse added: “I am determined that this excellent outcome should be a starting point for similar investment­s and connection­s to unlock equivalent potential and benefits on the Western Isles and in Orkney.”

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 ??  ?? Councillor Moraig Lyall said she believed ‘the heartland of our islands into an industrial zone’
Councillor Moraig Lyall said she believed ‘the heartland of our islands into an industrial zone’

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