Outdoors News
You are looking at: Home : Outdoors News

Power Line Decision Condemned

Scottish Government electricity transmission project slated by outdoor bodies.


Posted: 6 January 2010
by Jon

The decision to approve the building of the Beauly-Denny electricity transmission line by the Scottish Governernment has provoked widespread codemnation from outdoors and environmental bodies.

pylons
Spot the pylons - HilQ, OM Gallery

The 220 km overhead pylon line will run from Beauly to the west of Inverness down to Denny, which is near Falkirk and connect renewable power projects to the national grid. Some of the 600 pylons needed will be more than 200 feet high and the route of the line crosses the central Highlands and part of the Cairngorm National Park.

There were almost 18,000 objections to the scheme with bodies like the John Muir Trust advocating underground or subsea cables as a less damaging alternative.

"Marching a 220km mega pylon line though some of our most world-renown landscapes may be the most lucrative option for the energy industry but it is the wrong choice for Scotland,” commented Helen McDade, Head of Policy for the John Muir Trust.

“It is particularly galling that this white elephant is being given the go-ahead in a week when the UK government will announce another generation of offshore wind farms."

The Mountaineering Council of Scotland is similarly dismayed. MCofS President, Chris Townsend said: “We express great disappointment at the decision: the pylon line will damage the precious and irreplaceable Scottish mountain landscape.”

MCofS Chief Officer, David Gibson, added “Future generations will judge whether this is the correct decision, made against a background of nearly 18,000 objections, the damage to the landscape, and the lack of examination of alternative options.”

Ramblers Scotland has also spoken out against the project calling it 'deeply flawed ... with no effective scrutiny of suitable alternatives, including a potential east coast powerline upgrade and subsea options'.

The body calls for a legal challenge to the decision along with its promotion as a live issue at the next Parliamentary election.

Basic overview at news.bbc.co.uk. Comment from JMT at www.jmt.org. Mountaineering Council of Scotland observations at www.mcofs.org.uk. Ramblers Scotland comment at www.ramblers.org.uk.


Previous article
New Fell Top Man's Safety Tips
Next article
Adidas Backs Spectacular Lakes Race


TwitterStumbleUponFacebookDiggRedditGoogle

Related Content

Related Products


Discuss this story

Although it was expected, i was sickened when it was announced. It seems that little thought was given to the other options, such as a sub-sea line. This is a victory for greed and politicians agendas. I can't believe that folk like the Green Party, and Friends of the Earth supported this vandalism.
 I'm convinced this is the thin end of the wedge, and a major threat to the few unspoilt places we have left.

When this monstrosity is built, it will open the floodgates. Every hill will have an application to build a powerstation on it, wired into this new line.
Windpower is of limited use, and if grants weren't available, it would be interesting to see how many would get built.

I was watching BBC News 24 yesterday, and during this cold spell, only 1% of power available in the country was wind powered. Although more power is needed right now, there has been little wind to power the wind powerstations!


Posted: 06/01/2010 at 18:19

Look on the bright side Mike - there will be access roads to the turbines on Cairn Toul, Ben Avon and Beinn a Bhuird - you'll be able to cycle in

Posted: 06/01/2010 at 18:34

I'm glad you've taken all those good photos, Kinley. They will be a reminder of how the hills used to look.

Posted: 06/01/2010 at 18:39

See more comments...
Talkback: Power Line Decision Condemned

First Name:
Last Name:
Nickname:
Email:
Security Image:
Enter the code shown:

I agree to the site's Terms and Conditions & Code of Conduct:


Latest posts