Billionaire
property magnate attacks decision to build experimental offshore windfarm near
his golf course as 'purely political'
guardian.co.uk,
Severin Carrell, Tuesday 26 March 2013
The US businessman's Trump International golf course at Menie Estate also caused controversy, not least for building on an area of protected dunes. Photograph: Murdo Macleod |
Scottish
ministers have given the go-ahead to an experimental offshore windfarm site
near Aberdeen after ignoring Donald Trump's angry threats of legal action to
block the project.
Trump has repeatedly
attacked the European offshore wind deployment centre (EOWDC) proposal,
alleging the turbines will ruin the view from his £750m golf resort, which
overlooks the North Sea and sits several kilometres north of the site's
boundary.
The
billionaire property magnate again threatened to use his financial muscle to
oppose the 11-turbine project in the courts using "every legal means" to defeat it. Despite recently announcing plans to build a second 18-hole golf
course at his resort, he repeated his threat to put his entire project on hold
because the windfarm threatened the financial viability of his resort.
In a
statement, the developer attacked his former friend and ally Alex Salmond, the
first minister. "This was a purely political decision," Trump said.
"As
dictated by Alex Salmond, a man whose obsession with obsolete wind technology
will destroy the magnificence and beauty of Scotland. Likewise, tourism,
Scotland's biggest industry, will be ruined. We will spend whatever monies are
necessary to see to it that these huge and unsightly industrial wind turbines
are never constructed.
"All
over the world they are being abandoned, but in Scotland they are being built.
We will put our future plans in Aberdeen on hold, as will many others, until
this ridiculous proposal is defeated. Likewise, we will be bringing a lawsuit
within the allocated period of time to stop what will definitely be the
destruction of Aberdeen and Scotland itself."
Fergus
Ewing, the Scottish energy minister, said the £230m project would be capable of
generating up to 100MW of power, enough for nearly half of Aberdeen's homes.
But he
added that the project was chiefly designed to test and evaluate advanced new
offshore wind power designs, potentially helping to find new breakthrough
technologies. Scottish and UK ministers, who also support the project, believe
it could be crucial to helping the UK exploit the £100bn offshore wind
industry.
The 11
turbines, which have been reduced in number and location after objections from
fisheries and aviation interests, are expected to be of different heights and
designs. The project, owned by the Swedish power giant Vattenfall and a local
business and university consortium, still needs marine consents and planning
consent for an onshore sub-station.
Ewing said:
"Offshore renewables represent a huge opportunity for Scotland; an
opportunity to build up new industries and to deliver on our ambitious
renewable energy and carbon reduction targets.
"The
proposed European offshore wind deployment centre will give the industry the
ability to test and demonstrate new technologies in order to accelerate its
growth. [It] secures Aberdeen's place as the energy capital of Europe."
The scheme
has been made subject to a series of fresh conditions, to protect defence and
civil aviation radar systems, avoid a military firing range at Black Dog, on
environmental management and on protecting shipping and fishing in the area.
Trump's
opposition to the project led to open hostilities between him and Salmond, who
had originally been a prominent cheerleader for Trump's golf resort and hotel
development and played a crucial role in it securing planning approval.
Trump's
attacks on Salmond's vigorous support for wind power have put the two men in
direct conflict and also soured Trump's relationships with some of his most
influential supporters in Aberdeen.
Several
major figures and institutions who supported Trump's resort – the North Sea
engineering millionaire Sir Ian Wood, Robert Gordon University and
Aberdeenshire council – are also directly involved in the EOWDC project.
They
believe it could substantially support Aberdeen's attempts to benefit from the
billions of pounds being spent on renewable energy investment, particularly as
an alternative to North Sea oil and gas.
Iain Todd,
a spokesman for the project, made this clear, stating: "The Scottish
government's most welcome approval for the EOWDC is extremely positive news for
both Scotland and the UK's offshore wind industry as it helps position
Scotland, the UK and Europe at the global vanguard of the sector.
"The
decision also confirms Aberdeen city and shire's status as a world-class energy
hub, bringing with it significant economic benefits which will be pivotal to
ensuring the region's long-term prosperity."
Richard
Dixon, director of Friends of the Earth Scotland, said: "Offshore wind
will be a huge part of our energy future and this scheme is a big step forward.
"Well
done to the Scottish government for standing up to Donald Trump's threats and
bluster."
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