The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Isles ideal for hydrogen

- By Brian Wilson ■ Brian Wilson is a former UK energy minister

Plans to reinforce the power line between Fort Augustus and the Western Isles, via Skye, reminded me of the controvers­y that arose when the link was created in the 1980s.

Until then, electricit­y supply in the islands depended on two diesel- fuelled power stations at Stornoway and Loch Carnan in South Uist. With industrial activity, particular­ly at the Arnish fabricatio­n yard, expected to increase, the need arose for a more robust power supply.

The original Hydro Board proposal was to run the line through Glenshiel, close to the scenic main road leading to Skye. Some of the land was owned by the National Trust for Scotland. Put these two factors together and it was scarcely surprising that a great furore arose and the plan was eventually amended.

Ins t e a d of going through Glenshiel, the route runs further south via Glen Quoich, which is largely out of sight and out of mind – though this was not the view of those who objected to a pristine environmen­t being defiled by an overhead power line.

However, the scheme got the go-ahead after a public inquiry and for three decades has been the main source of power for Skye and the Outer Isles. Two subsea cables run from Ardmore on the Waternish peninsula across to Harris and South Uist respective­ly.

When indignatio­n over Glenshiel was at its height, I advanced an alternativ­e idea which, in retrospect, I’ve always thought was one of my better ones. Instead of linking the Western Isles to the National Grid, could the islands have become the national test-bed for renewable energy?

The diesel- powered stations were going to continue as back-up anyway. Indeed, they fulfil that role to this day.

But this was the 1980s. The Hydro Board was heavily into big engineerin­g solutions. So my helpful suggestion did not get much traction. Glen Quoich emerged as the alternativ­e option. Glenshiel was spared and almost everyone was happy.

The downside was that there was no imperative to drive forward renewables in the Western Isles and that enigma has persisted through the decades. While “the best renewable resources in Europe” are much spoken of, very little has actually happened.

The subsea cables have brought in power to keep the Hebridean lights on, but lack the capacity to

export power generated within the islands. The upgrade proposals from SSE/SHETL will not change that. Power generated from within the Western Isles will remain stranded, unless…

The big “unless” involves the long- awaited interconne­c tor between Lewis and the mainland which is required to support wind farm developmen­ts on the island. There is now a consented capacity of 400 megawatts but nowhere to send it. As long as that is the case, nothing will be built.

There are no early prospects for resolution. While the smaller schemes on Lewis secured offers of contract for difference support in the last round, the big one did not. Without it, the megawatts do not add up to justify an interconne­ctor in the eyes of Ofgem.

Perhaps it is again time to look for Plan B. Is there another route by which wind-generated power could be transporte­d and sold? Could hydrogen be the magic word?

The Western Isles Council is developing a hydrogen plan within the islands’ own energy requiremen­ts. Perhaps it would also be worth looking further afield, to the Heligoland islands, 45 miles off the German coast for a different perspectiv­e. They have a population of just 1,200 but are not short of big ideas.

Their ambition is to become the centre of an offshore wind-tohydrogen hub on a multi-gigawatt scale, feeding off offshore wind developmen­ts along the German coast. The mayor, who is leading the project, predicts: “In less than 10 years, green hydrogen from

the North Sea will be normal and an integral part of the national hydrogen strategy.”

A “national hydrogen strategy”? It might be useful to have one of these. Or how about the European Commission’s hydrogen strategy which aims to create a market by 2050 that will support up to a million jobs and “help to reach greenhouse gas reduction targets in sectors that are otherwise hard to decarbonis­e”?

Portugal and the Netherland­s recently produced their own strategies while Saudi Arabia has announced the “world’s largest green hydrogen plant” to fuel global bus and truck fleets.

Just as in the 1980s, the Western Isles would be the ideal location to be at the centre of such a strategy.

Not only are there existing onshore consented wind projects but also sites west of the Hebrides earmarked for floating wind. Or will, once again, Scottish green energy potential float off into the welcoming arms of Denmark, Spain and Germany? (It should not escape notice that the 103 turbines for SSE’s Shetland bonanza will be built in Denmark).

Nobody questions the need for the Fort Augustus- Ardmore link to the Western Isles to be strengthen­ed but it should be more than a passing thought that, on its own, it will do nothing to resolve the dichotomy between potential and reality for the islands as a source of green power. Maybe it’s time to look to Heligoland.

 ??  ?? Nobody questions the need for the Fort Augustus-Ardmore link to the Western Isles to be strengthen­ed but it should be part of a much wider strategy
Nobody questions the need for the Fort Augustus-Ardmore link to the Western Isles to be strengthen­ed but it should be part of a much wider strategy
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