Tag: renewables

October 18, 2018 Nick Kempe No comments exist

Recent news stories (above and here) about community financing of renewables and the benefits which may be derived from them should not be allowed to conceal what is going on across Scotland and in our National Parks.  The primary driving force behind the development of renewables is profit for the few and within the overall…

October 6, 2018 John Digney 2 comments

I have followed some of the Parkswatch blogs about the awful hydro tracks around Glen Falloch (see here) and seen them for myself from the hills. In July 2017 we were staying in Lochcarron and I was horrified to see a hydro scheme at Coulags at the start of the walk up Maol Chean-dearg.  This…

September 20, 2018 Nick Kempe 3 comments

Last week Community Land Scotland, who have the ear of the Scottish Government, was reported in the Herald as claiming “Rural communities are being “airbrushed” out of Scotland’s rugged landscapes by policymakers who care more about maintaining an artificial wilderness”   (see here). One of CLS’s central arguments is that protection of wild land is preventing…

August 23, 2018 Ron Greer 19 comments

Hydroelectric power generation  features prominently in the firmament of  the renewable energy icons of the ‘green movement’ and indeed among its most avid supporters, there is almost a zealous fervency about it, bordering on religiosity about its promulgation, indeed one tantamount to a holy dictum of hydro. There is no doubt, in a  political environment…

August 22, 2018 Nick Kempe 5 comments

Following my piece, illustrated with David Lintern’s fine photos,on the would be desecration of Glen Etive by 7 hydro schemes (see here) Tim Parkin, who runs a landscape photography magazine (http://www.timparkin.net), offered  to get more photos for use on Parkswatch to help show what is at stake.  One of the things I should have said…

August 9, 2018 Nick Kempe 10 comments

The Glen Etive hydro proposals After the developments at the head of Glen Coe (see here), just when one thought it couldn’t get any worse, seven planning applications have been submitted for hydro schemes in Glen Etive on land owned by the Dalness Estate. Each scheme has been submitted as an individual application with its…

August 8, 2018 Nick Kempe 2 comments

Last week the Herald reported figures from Trip Advisor showing that a trip through Glen Coe and other unnamed parts of the Highlands was rated as THE top visitor attraction in Scotland.  The central importance of landscape and cultural history to tourism, not to mention our own physical and mental well-being, is well researched.  Despite…

August 2, 2018 Nick Kempe 1 comment

  After my recent posts on the lack of agricultural (see here) and (see here)   hydro tracks in the Pyrenees National Park and surrounding protected areas and how we could learn from this in Scotland, I thought it worth reminding readers what best practice in the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park  currently looks like.     The…

July 29, 2018 Nick Kempe 1 comment

While the central Pyrenees has many beautiful natural mountain lakes,  there has been significant hydro development for over 100 years and many lakes have been created or extended by dams.   We came across  hydro schemes on many days of our two week walk, even in remote places. In an interesting article (see here –…

May 21, 2018 Nick Kempe 2 comments

On Sunday 13th I noticed a crashed or abandoned car just south of Inverarnan close to the location of another abandoned blue car which had featured in two of the earliest posts on parkswatch in 2016  (see here).   These explored how the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority’s approach to abandoned cars  fitted…

March 26, 2018 Nick Kempe 5 comments

The Allt Essan and Auchessan hydro schemes lie on the north side of Glen Dochart south of the Munros Meall Glas and Sgiath Chuil.  Both were approved by the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority in December 2014 but the Auchessan design was subseqently amended in 2015 (see here and here).  While both schemes were…

February 28, 2018 Nick Kempe 1 comment

Yesterday, on way up to the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority meeting on the Cononish goldmine, I stopped off to take another look at the Derrydarroch hydro scheme in Glen Falloch – I had not been to the powerhouse area for over a year.    I don’t recall seeing the top sign on the…

January 21, 2018 Nick Kempe No comments exist

Returning from a great day on the hill yesterday, I stopped at Inverarnan at the head of Loch Lomond to have a look at the Eagle Falls.  I wanted to check how much ice had formed.   While on past experience the temperatures we have had over the last ten days would not have been cold…

December 1, 2017 Nick Kempe 1 comment

After my visit a few weeks ago to Glen Bruar and my post on the restoration work on the pipeline (see here), the Cairngorms National Park Authority indicated they had some further documentation about the restoration works and would place these on the planning portal.  They did so a couple of weeks ago (see here)….

November 6, 2017 Nick Kempe 1 comment

Following my two posts last December about the destruction caused by the hydro scheme in Glen Bruar (see here) and (here), I took a jog up the glen on Saturday.  I was prompted to do so after planning staff at the Cairngorms National Park Authority were kind enough to inform me – unprompted – that significant…

October 26, 2017 Nick Kempe 1 comment

Gleann Casaig runs from the east shore of the Glen Finglas Reservoir, north of Brig O’Turk, up to the ridge between Ben Ledi and Ben Vane in the Trossachs.  The glen forms part of the Woodland Trust’s Glen Finglas estate and part of the Great Trossachs Forest project which in 2015 was designated as Scotland’s…

October 21, 2017 Nick Kempe 2 comments

Last Saturday, sitting in a hut in the Snowdonia National Park, I came across a Guardian travel supplement “Adventures in Wild Britain” which featured ten places to experience Britain’s most stunning wildlife.  One of the places was Glen Falloch at the head of Loch Lomond (see here).   Regular readers and anyone who hillwalks there,…