Inquiry and March

Kim and Mary leading the march

Kim and Mary leading the march

Graham Lang, Mark Gibson and Susan Crosthwaite with Donald Trump

To hear the inquiry

Lindsey Ward gave Alex Salmond a run for his money on Call Kay last Monday morning

You can read all about it here

VALE campaigners joined Donald Trump’s parliament protest against windfarms last Wednesday – claiming they are destroying Scotland’s “wonderful and spectacular” landscape.

Members from area action group Stop Loch Lomond Turbines linked up with protesters from Communities Against Turbines Scotland to lobby the Scottish Government over its renewables policy.

The protesters marched on Holyrood armed with banners and placards in a move coinciding with an inquiry where MSPs probed the administration’s energy targets.

The SNP administration wants green energy projects such as wind power to produce 100 per cent of Scotland’s requirement by 2020.

However, critics are worried this will produce a rash of windfarms.

American business tycoon Donald Trump thrilled protesters when he spoke with them after appearing at the inquiry to tell politicians wind farms are “so unattractive, so noisy, so ugly and so dangerous”.

Sally Page, of Stop Loch Lomond Wind Turbines told the Reporter: “I felt the march was very moving.

“People have very strong feelings about it and I think most people are saying about 250 people were there.

“I would say they were all different types of people and a range of different ages.

“There were a lot of police around because of Donald Trump’s presence at the inquiry and it was much larger and much bigger than the last march I took part in.

 

 

JOIN THE REBELLION AND SAVE SCOTLAND

To view the CATS and Trump submissions to the Scottish Inquiry into Renewable energy:

Protest March

 

 

 

We need your support to make the Government  take notice  and have a moratorium on any future developments of wind turbines until they can prove that  the construction of wind farms are safe, reliable, cost effective, save CO2 and will not destroy rural life and tourism jobs.

An inquiry is being held into the Scottish Government’s Renewables Target, where Donald Trump and CATS (Communities Against Turbines Scotland) will be giving evidence.

Anyone arriving in Edinburgh for 9.30am can meet at Holyrood prior to the march  to support CATS  as the  the media will be present to witness Donald Trump’s arrival at Holyrood for the Renewables Inquiry.

A march will then begin from the pedestrianised area of High St, between City Chamber and Cockburn Street, just downhill from St Giles Cathedral.

We will assemble  at 10.30am.

The march will begin at 11am and aims to arrive at the Parliament about 11.30am, in time for CATS and Donald Trump leaving the inquiry. There will be plenty of press attention.

This should not be read as support for Donald Trump but as an opportunity to capitalise on the publicity generated on the day to highlight the negative impacts wind turbines are having on the landscape, natural heritage, residential amenities and on the pockets of the people of Scotland.

Visit Scotland Expo is also taking place at Ingliston where they show case the Scottish tourism product to the world.

Will there be any turbines on display?

Do windfarms and turbines enhance the visitor experience?

You may wish to protest at the Expo from 9am to 4pm when tourism buyers from all over the world will be attending this event.overseas

Windfarms Threaten Heritage



Blowing in the Wind and a Call to join us in our crusade to save the Scottish landscapes and seascapes

Download theFlier final version CATS flier
If you are a member we will send you a consignment. Please send to MPs MSPs councillors

A rally is being organised to coincide with CATS and Donald Trump giving evidence at Holyrood’s economy, energy and tourism committee on 25 April as part of its inquiry into whether the Scottish Government’s renewable energy targets are achievable.
Details to follow!

The Scottish people need to let this Scottish Government know that this inquiry need to be accountable and questions why only one engineer has been asked to testify on what is an engineering question?

Blowing in the wind
By Paris Gourtsoyannis
Published March 26, 2012

The woman who counts Donald Trump as an ally in the fight against wind turbines

Mark your calendars – the stage is being set for one of the most compelling pieces of political theatre that the Scottish Parliament is ever likely to play host to. On 25 April, the American property tycoon and TV impresario Donald Trump will descend on a Holyrood committee room to give the Government both barrels over plans to construct an 11 turbine offshore wind farm facing the £750m luxury golf estate that Trump is building – and has now put on hold – on the Menie Estate in Aberdeenshire. The only thing that can be guaranteed is a full house; Trump never gives anything less than a bravura performance.
Those watching the spectacle would do well not to focus solely on the top billing, however. No one will recognise the woman appearing alongside Trump, but the presence of Susan Crosthwaite on the panel facing the Economy, Energy and Tourism Committee should send a signal that the latest round of transatlantic acrimony could have an impact far beyond a dispute over a spoiled view from the golf course at Menie.

Crosthwaite’s life is tourism. Alongside her husband Robin, she has owned and run the fivestar Cosses Country House at Ballantrae in rural Ayrshire since 1990. She sits on the Ayrshire Chamber of Commerce’s tourism and business forums, and is a member of the Ayrshire Food Network. When Crosthwaite became convinced that VisitScotland wasn’t being active enough in promoting her region’s tourism industry, she set up the Southern Scotland Marketing Initiative to help fill the gap. She was, until last December, a vice chairman of Wolsey Lodges, the luxury franchise that Cosses Country House is a part of, but had to step down from that role when her latest passion started to take up a significant part of her time.
That new commitment is the reason why Crosthwaite will be sitting alongside Trump at the Scottish Parliament: she is chairman of Communities Against Turbines Scotland (CATS), the group adopted by Trump as the local vehicle for his campaign against wind farms in Scotland. Some reports claim the tycoon is prepared to put a £10m war chest behind the fight; whatever the sums involved, much of the money would be spent by CATS, making it Scotland’s first and best-financed nationwide anti-turbine campaign group.
Crosthwaite outlines how CATS plans to make life uncomfortable for politicians, planners and wind power developers, in a national campaign that could see an unprecedented single-issue intervention in Scotland’s local elections. CATS aims to identify councillors in areas where its member organisations are active that have supported wind turbine development, and target them with “a massive advertising campaign”.
The financing would come from overseas: “This is one of the areas that Donald Trump will help us by doing some advertising,” Crosthwaite says.
Another area that CATS is discussing with the Trump organisation is the idea of a ‘flying squad’ of planning experts that the group could dispatch across Scotland to wherever a new wind farm application was made, providing local opponents with the resources they would need to block developments. “We would have a group of retired planners or people who’ve worked for Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) who would go out and help groups and individuals who are objecting, because the only way we will do anything is by working with the system that we’ve got,” Crosthwaite says. “We have to work with the current planning system.
“At the moment, it’s very heavily on the side of the developers and the Government, and it’s very hard for groups to get the relevant information they need, particularly on Section 36 applications, and it costs them a lot of time and a lot of money that they don’t have, so the balance isn’t fair. What we would like to do is help ‘upgrade’ the objections, because if the planners get the right kind of objections, with the right references from SNH and Historic Scotland, this is somewhere where we can really help make a difference. The Scottish Government can’t go on just rubber stamping [applications] and going against democracy.” While no final agreement has been reached and no money has yet changed hands, if Trump puts forward the resources to back CATS’ plans, Crosthwaite will have Conservative MEP Struan Stevenson to thank for his intervention.
“Donald Trump came to us as a result of Struan Stevenson doing an article in the Sunday Post,” she says. “Trump asked how he could get involved, and Stevenson suggested that he got in touch with CATS because of the very large network of groups that we liaise with.
“At the moment, [Trump] has very much raised CATS’ profile through the media, which is good, and we’ve provided him with access to relevant information and contacts. We’re in discussion about ways to move forward,” Crosthwaite adds. When asked if she expects Trump to make good on his pledge of funding, Crosthwaite says: “I think there’s hope for the future. On the single issue of wind turbines and their impact on the tourism economy, we are working quite closely with the Trump organisation, and they are going to support us in certain things.” The group’s ambitions belies its infancy.
Formed on the back of a public meeting in Ballantrae in August 2011 that drew 100 local people, as Stevenson and Labour MSP Graeme Pearson, CATS instigated the first Scottish National Wind Farm Conference, bringing together almost 300 groups from across the country that had previously focused on opposing local turbine planning applications. The new group’s national character is reflected in the membership of its committee: representatives of the East Fife Turbine Awareness Group and No- Tiree Array sit alongside Crosthwaite in deciding Scotland-wide strategy.
“We have hundreds of groups and people on our database that we contact on a daily basis.
We act as a voice for most, if not all of the action groups throughout Scotland, and we’re in communication with many of the groups south of the border as well, and we are aspiring to have a UK conference,” says Crosthwaite. “It’s very much a cross-party initiative; it’s an issue that will only be solved if members from all the parties come together and lobby their colleagues to do something about it.” As dramatic as CATS’ rise has been, Crosthwaite’s journey from concerned citizen to activist campaigner has been equally swift, with a local newspaper article in January 2011 convincing her that she had to take action. “I’d always been aware that turbines and tourism didn’t go together, but I didn’t understand the volume of turbines until the Carrick Gazette printed a map of the turbines that were operational, consented, in planning and in scoping for the area. It was at that point that I realised something had to be done.” Crosthwaite insists that her concerns over the impact on the local area are more than just aesthetic – the development of turbines poses an existential threat to her business. “I bring high spending visitors into Scotland,” she says, highlighting the importance of businesses like hers to the local economy, but also the fragility of the market: her guests have the resources to be selective, and to take their custom elsewhere if they so choose.
“I think it presents a real threat to tourism businesses. The problem is that this goes back for years and years, to when the Scottish Parliament was set up and it was decided to have a Minister for Tourism and Energy as being the same person,” Crosthwaite says. The arrangement makes for an impossible balancing act between competing interests. She cites the Scottish Government report, The Economic Impacts of Wind Farms on Scottish Tourism, carried out for the Tourism Policy Unit by academics at Glasgow Caledonian University’s business school and a Glasgow-based consulting firm, Cogent Strategies International, as an example. “Even the research done in 2005, that was published in 2008, that is frequently referred to on the impact of wind farms on tourism, that was done when there were only a few wind farms, and I think the choice of who they used to do the research affected the questions that were asked and affected the outcome. If you did that research today, you would get a very, very different outcome.” Crosthwaite claims the dividing lines in the wind turbine debate are shifting. The conflict has taken on a ‘green on green’ character, with local people who are often highly sensitive to environmental concerns – her own business holds a silver award from the VisitScotland Green Tourism Business Scheme – pitted against other environmentalists with a different set of priorities. Crosthwaite also says the issue can’t be considered solely a rural matter any longer. “I think that’s changing. If you look at the letters that are in The Scotsman and The Herald, they’re against wind farms and they’re coming from people who live in cities.
I think there are a lot of people who do not understand the issue at all; they don’t understand how the [electricity] grid works, they believe Alex Salmond when he says the wind is free.”