Leader: Wind changes direction in turbines debate

WEHN Alex Salmond first declared his intention to make Scotland the “Saudi Arabia of renewables”, a phrase which, for reasons best known to the First Minister, he has not repeated recently, there was a mixed reaction, to put it mildly.

Environmentalists of one kind – those who believe we should not be powering Scotland using nuclear fission or burning coal and gas, but get our energy from the wind and the tides – rejoiced. At last, the dream of so-called “green energy” was to become a reality.

Environmentalists of another kind – those who believe in preserving Scotland’s magnificent wilderness – were less than overjoyed. While they accepted the case for renewable energy, many felt that the Caledonian countryside was about to be overrun by what might be described as a monstrous regiment of wind turbines.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Their initial fears appeared to be justified as wind farm after wind farm was approved, often with the Scottish Government overruling the planning concerns of local communities or councils. Some of the wind farms were in areas of considerable natural beauty.

However, thanks to some astute lobbying by mountaineer, hillwalker and SNP member Cameron McNeish, among others, it appears that Mr Salmond and his administration have had second thoughts about their determined environmentalism and are set to protect large swathes of wilderness from having unsightly wind farms built on them.

New proposals are set to be produced by the Holyrood administration aimed at ending what Mr McNeish rightly calls the “mad speculation” by energy firms desperate to erect turbines in some of the most remote and beautiful landscapes.

This new guidance will include maps, drawn up by Scottish Natural Heritage, which will designate around 28 per cent of the country’s landscape as wild land, largely in the north and west Highlands, making it more difficult to secure permission for wind farms.

Whether this is indeed a U-turn by Mr Salmond and the Scottish Government or perhaps simply what ministers might describe as a further refinement of their policy, let’s hope it lives up to its billing and gives adequate protection.

There are very few who doubt the need for renewables to make a significant contribution to Scotland’s energy generation in the decades ahead, though the sensible approach is for a mix that should include nuclear, “clean coal” and gas.

However, to allow potentially for fields of turbines to be erected across some of the country’s most beautiful landscapes is wrong, both in terms of degrading a precious environment in the name of environmentalism, and the potential effect on tourism which, we should not forget, is one of our biggest industries.

An author to the end

In A short pithy sentence, novelist Iain Banks yesterday began to tell the world he had cancer with these words:

“I am officially Very Poorly.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Typical of the man who has become one of Scotland’s most highly acclaimed literary figures, the sentence hooked the reader in a manner reminiscent of the opening to his novel The Crow Road, which famously starts: “It was the day my grandmother exploded.”

Once an author, always an author. Even, it seems, when you have to reveal to your many devotees that you have been diagnosed with inoperable cancer of the gall bladder and are expected to live a matter of months.

What followed his literary hook line was a matter-of-fact description of his condition, including the hope that his publishers will get what will be his last novel, The Quarry, out on the bookshelves before he dies.

There was also the touching revelation that his partner had done him the honour of “becoming my widow”, and the note that what he calls “ghoulish humour” is helping them cope.

It is a great tragedy that Banks will no longer be producing the complex, intellectually challenging science-fiction under his Iain M Banks name, and the often dark fiction which he wrote as plain Iain Banks.

We should reflect on the dignified way he broke this sad news to the public: devoid of self-pity and with, one imagines, a wry smile over the circumstances.

It was done with courage and fortitude and we hope he can take a degree of comfort from the glowing tributes from across the globe paid to him yesterday. They prove Banks is, officially, one of Scotland’s Literary Greats. But we knew that.