Husker Doo wrote:All this nuclear talk is hogwash,what you are saying is that you would be happy with a plant near your home,and you would be happy with the spent waste being stored near your home and happy with the 60 years it takes to decommission just because you
don't want turbines, you've walked in to a dead end with your arguments.
Reducing your energy use by 10percent is great but it doesn't solve the problem in fact it`s lazy because you don't really do anything and it gives you a self righteous glow and it gives you time make up reasons against tidal,wave,hydro and whatever else might come along.
Come on be honest you don't want Scotland/Argyll to be successful in anything but tourism because that's what pays crap wages,entices lots of folk here and keeps up property prices.
Its a no brainer
Low on the pyramid Husker . . .
Reducing energy consumption by 10% nationwide with energy savings would have the same result as replacing 10% of our grid generating capacity with wind turbines. (And in real terms we can never do that anyway . . . )
It is throwing more money at developers to build wind turbines that is lazy and short on foresight. It diverts funds from other forms of renewable energy and leads us to believe that we can continue with our current (pun intended) profligate energy use profile indefinitely without making any real effort to develop new energy sources that provide the base load capacity the grid needs to continue to function.
Why you think covering Argyll in windfarms will make it 'successful' is difficult for me to fathom, so please enlghten us. None of the turbines are going to be made in Argyll, and I imagine the bulk of the installation crews will come from outwith Argyll. Windfarms create very few jobs, and it seems unlikely to me that this one will create any beyond the installation phase. The Skykon plant at Machrahanish rescued 100 jobs when it took over from Vestas (with Scottish government backing) - but now there is a big question mark over those 100 jobs again and no hope of the planned expansion taking place.
On the other hand a nationwide campaign to install better installation would be extremely cost-effective in terms of carbon emission reduction and result in many jobs for all areas including Argyll. Not as good for landowners, developers and energy companies - most of whom in all three categories come from outwith Argyll - but better for the rest of us.
You can sneer at tourism if you want, but Argyll needs it. I don't think the turbines at Clachan are going to help.