The Scotsman

Campaigner­s pledge to fight new plan for golf course at wildlife site

● Plan for 18 holes at Coul Links near Embo returns after previous red flag

- BY GEORGE MAIR newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Conservati­on organisati­ons yesterday pledged to fight new plans for a championsh­ip golf course on an internatio­nally important wildlife site.

Permission for an 18- hole golf course at Coul Links, near Embo in East Sutherland, was refused by the Scottish Government in February this year.

A separate golf proposal has now been lodged with Highland Council for the site, which hosts a dune ecosystem of national and internatio­nal importance and is protected by multiple conservati­on designatio­ns.

Coul Links is also home to a wide range of plants, birds, insects and other animals, which are either unique to that part of Sutherland, rare or in severe decline elsewhere in the UK.

The new applicatio­n, made in the name of Embo Junior Football and Athletic Club c/o its chairman James Mcgillivra­y, is for “developmen­t of an 18 hole championsh­ip links golf course and practise area” covering around 805 acres.

While it acknowledg­es “the potential to affect nature conservati­on interests on the site both positively and negatively”, it states the site is in “increasing­ly unfavourab­le condition”.

It also highlights benefits to the local economy and “solid and substantia­l private investment waiting in the wings to support the establishm­ent of East Sutherland as a key internatio­nal centre for links golf in particular, and indeed Scottish tourism as a whole”.

Conservati­on organisati­ons, who previously fought a winning campaign to save the site, described the new plans as“ludicrous” after government reporters concluded that the harmful impacts of a golf course on the protected habitats and species “would outweigh the potential socioecono­mic benefits”.

Kate Bellew, senior conservati­on planner for RSPB Scotland, said: “This is an abso - lut el yludicrou side a to bring for ward another golf course proposal at the nationally and internatio­nally important wildlife site at Coul Links.

“We call on the local council to use their powers to refuse to consider any applicatio­n that comes forward.”

Bruce Wilson, Public Affairs Manager, Scottish Wildlife Trust( S WT ), called for the plans to be “refused at the earliest possible opportunit­y”.

He added: “It’s astonishin­g this applicatio­n has come back in largely the same form.”

Dr Tom Dargie of Not Coul, a local campaign group set up to protect the Links, said: “We led a very effective campaign over a three -year period and we will fight it again, as effectivel­y as before.”

“This is an absolutely ludicrous idea to bring forward another golf course proposal at an nationally and internatio­nally important wildlife site” KATE BELLEW RSPB SCOTLAND

 ??  ?? 0 Conservati­onists have already won a campaign to prevent developmen­t taking place at the Highland site which has multiple protection­s
0 Conservati­onists have already won a campaign to prevent developmen­t taking place at the Highland site which has multiple protection­s

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