Custom Search

No renewables infrastructure for southern Scotland

Saturday 6th February 2010
Courtesy: Scotland's National Renewables Infrastructure Plan

Five out of eleven locations in the Highlands and Islands have been identified for their potential to be significant manufacturing sites serving Scotland's burgeoning offshore tide and wind energy industry, as have a swathe of central belt locations. But it highlights that the Scottish southern lands appear to be out in the cold from any renewables calculations.

Nigg, (Easter Ross); Arnish (Lewis); Machrihanish (Campbeltown); Ardersier (Inverness) and Kishorn (Wester Ross) have been picked out as priority sites. The six other locations are Leith, Dundee, Energy Park Fife at Methil, Aberdeen, Hunterston and Peterhead in the report Scotland's National Renewables Infrastructure Plan - published in response to the Scottish Government's Renewables Action Plan.

The  report also indicates that a number of locations in the region are prompting strong interest from tidal and wave developers, in addition to the strong lead established in Caithness and Orkney as a result of the Pentland Firth and Orkney Waters marine renewable leasing round.

The report has drawn on multi agency and industry input, and was prepared by Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE) and by Scottish Enterprise. If these locations can make a strong investment case over the next five years, these and other viable locations will be key to growing a globally competitive renewable energy sector in Scotland.

Calum Davidson, HIE's head of key sectors, (left) said: "This ...underlines the opportunities for the Highlands & Islands to significantly contribute to Scotland's intention to be at the forefront of this emerging industry. Committed government investment, the enthusiasm of developers and a supportive public sector in the Highlands and Islands has contributed enormously to the strong position we're in today."

Renewables manufacturing isunderway at Arnish, Nigg and Machrihanish, while Ardersier and Kishorn both have a history of involvement in energy industry manufacturing.

Davidson explained: "This report has been compiled at a strategic level, based on data regarding the infrastructural, and locational merits of specific sites, along with the availability of a skilled workforce. However, this is just the first stage, clearly development at any of these or other sites will depend on specific demand, the availability of funding, environmental issues and will of course require regulatory planning procedures to be undergone."

The report sets out the requirements and potential scale of the offshore wind, wave and tidal sectors; the infrastructure required; the consultations that have shaped the report; the criteria used to identify the priority sites and what the next stages will be.

"This is exactly the kind of co-operation between Government, development agencies and industry operators that is accelerating our chances of real gains from renewables," adds Ian Couper (right) of the North of Scotland Industries Group (NSIG) "We look forward to progressing the same positive relationship with all those stakeholders - local authorities, funders and public agencies who can support this momentum through the next stage of this plan."

Scotland, Computer News in Scotland, Technology News in Scotland, Computing in Scotland, Web news in Scotland computers, Internet, Communications, advances in communications, communications in Scotland, Energy, Scottish energy, Materials, Biomedicine, Biomedicine in Scotland, articles in Biomedicine, Scottish business, business news in Scotland.

Website : beachshore