The Tory MEP Struan Stevenson has calculated that the Duke of
Roxburghe could net 1.5 million a year, the Earl of Moray 2m and the
Earl of Glasgow more than 300,000 from wind farms on their land.
Mr
Stevenson – of course – thinks the solution is to dump wind farms and
the Scottish Tories back a one-year moratorium on new wind farms and a
halving of wind subsidies.
And yet the Conservative environment
spokesman, Jamie McGrigor, and Tory MSPs Alex Fergusson and John Scott
are all set to benefit financially from wind turbine development. Double
standards apart though – why is this a problem?
First, unlike
Saudi Arabia, Scotland is a democracy where one would expect wealth –
including the wealth that arises from natural assets – to be shared.
Second,
fuel poverty causes hyperthermia and chronic ill health – so a cash
share in the country’s wind earnings would be a quick way to cut bills
and save lives.
Thirdly, high energy costs deter industry by turning energy-rich Scotland into an energy-expensive location for new business.
Finally,
it could be otherwise, as the intriguing tale in yesterday’s Scotland
on Sunday of the “wind crofter” demonstrated. Under the Energise
Scotland scheme, smallholders, crofters and communities host small
turbines and get free electricity while developers pay for the kit and
sell excess energy to the grid.
There may be better schemes
around – but “wind crofting” demonstrates the empowering potential of
wind income split more evenly. A small turbine can reduce individual
energy bills to zero and still make a profit for investors – as long as
that individual owns land.
And there of course is the rub.
Scotland may be a northern energy emirate, but ordinary Scots pay the
highest electricity bills in Europe because 60 per cent of “our” land is
owned by just 1,000 people – and the disappointing interim report by
the Land Reform Review Group suggests this shameful picture is not about
to change.
Now, admittedly land ownership and the possibility of
free or discounted electricity have not featured strongly in the wind
farm debate so far. Battle lines have been drawn instead over
appearance, intermittency and cost – and though a vocal minority won a
ban on new wind farms in “scenic areas”, they’ve failed to dent the
consistent majority for wind energy in regular opinion polls.
Dig
deeper in the data however and its clear wind energy is more popular in
cities than country areas. Is that because of visual interference or
financial unfairness? We’ll probably never know.
So what’s to be
done? Struan Stevenson’s solution is to ditch “expensive and unreliable”
wind energy. Yet if anything is “expensive and unreliable” it’s gas.
Britain was just six hours from running out in March when energy
regulator Ofgem reported, “higher gas prices have been the main driver
of increasing energy bills over the last eight years”.
The
Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) says “fossil fuel price
volatility is a bigger driver of energy price variation than the impact
of climate change policies,” and DECC figures show the Renewables
Obligation was 1.1 billion compared to nuclear decommissioning costs of
2bn in 2009-10. Finally Bloomberg New Energy Finance has predicted
onshore wind will be cost competitive with gas and coal generation by
2016.
Sticking with wind in a varied energy mix is worthwhile.
Letting lairds trouser millions in wind cash is not. Neither is missing
the opportunity to completely recast the energy debate in Scotland for
the advent of renewables and the prospect of independence.
Currently
Scotland’s economic model for renewables is oil. Big companies make big
profits, the government gets tax revenues, the sector and the North
East get jobs and everyone’s happy(ish) – though of course Alex Salmond
would rather hold on to the oil revenues. So far, so centralised.
Indeed, as Bill Jamieson pointed out in yesterday’s Scotland on Sunday,
so dangerously centralised.
What cash benefit reaches the average
inhabitant of this oil-rich nation? Next to none. And Chancellors are
quite happy to keep it that way – on both sides of the border.
Somehow the public hoped and presumed the renewable energy bonanza would be different.
The
industry does offer community benefit – a sum per megawatt of wind
generated locally. But some communities have not spent their wind cash
and few have performed land buyouts to become joint wind developers –
even though Duke-sized hand-outs await. What are communities waiting
for?
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