
Amazon leaders call on Scotland not to use illegal logging for world's largest floating wind farm
Amazonian leaders have called on Scotland not to rely on illegal logging to build the turbines for the world's largest floating wind farm.
The Green Volt project, located 80km off the Northeast coast of Scotland, was approved last year.
The Autonomous Territorial Government of the Wampís Nation, in Peru, warned that the development off Peterhead could rely on illegally logged balsa wood from the Amazon rainforest.
Balsa wood is particularly light and strong, yet highly resistant, making it ideal for the manufacture of wind turbine propellers.
Wampís leaders Pamuk Teófilo Kukush Pati and Tsanim Evaristo Wajai Asamat said rising demand for the wood, which grows naturally in the Amazon, has resulted in disputes and threats of violence against indigenous people.
Mingyang is China's biggest offshore wind company, and environmental campaign group Friends of the Earth Scotland said it is the preferred manufacturer for Green Volt.
The indigenous leaders claim Mingyang and others have allegedly relied on illegal balsa supply chains linked to their territory for years.
Green Volt said that no turbine supplier has been confirmed for the project.
A spokesperson for the UK Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said the choice of suppliers is a commercial decision for the companies involved.
But added: 'We expect businesses to do everything in their power to remove unethical practices, such as illegal logging, from their supply chains.
'Earlier this month, we joined forces with industry and The Crown Estate to invest £1bn in offshore wind supply chains. This will secure Britain's renewal through manufacturing facilities and skilled well-paid jobs, delivering on our mission to make the UK a clean energy superpower.'
As part of their campaign, Mr Pati and Mr Asamat visited Holyrood and urged the Scottish Government to cut any links with illegal logging and introduce a corporate accountability law.
'We call on the Scottish Government not to invest in the big wind energy companies that are logging the Wampis territory,' Mr Pati, the Pamuk or elected president of the Wampís Nation said.
'The same goes for the oil and mining companies. Rather, they should invest in our own productive projects, which help to feed our people and protect our territory and forests.'
Tom Younger, from the Forest Peoples Programme advocacy group, said: 'The Scottish and UK governments must take tougher measures to ensure that the expansion of wind power does not come at the cost of the Wampis nation's lives, lands and livelihoods, and rather recognise and support their efforts to protect their territory.'
Green Volt secured approval from the UK Government in April 2024 under the Contracts for Difference scheme – the mechanism for supporting low-carbon electricity generation.
It is the first project in the Crown Estate Scotland's Innovation and Targeted Oil and Gas (INTOG) leasing round to be granted consent.
The world's current biggest floating wind farm, Hywind Tampen off of Norway, uses just 11 turbines.
'We are developing the largest commercial-scale, floating offshore windfarm in the world, working to hugely ambitious timelines to deliver the government's goal of 43-50 GW of offshore wind by 2030,' a Green Volt spokesperson said.
'Having secured a Contract for Difference from the government last year, we are identifying supply chain partners to help us build the wind farm. As yet, no turbine supplier has been confirmed for Green Volt.'
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'The Scottish Government is clear that the use of safe, sustainable materials in the offshore wind supply chain is critical, ensuring we protect the natural environment as we grow our economy and transition to a green and renewable energy system.'
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Scotsman
4 hours ago
- Scotsman
Silence of the Goats: Slaughtered animals reveal how SNP is creating £4.7bn black hole in public finances
Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... My MSP of the week, she might be surprised to learn, is Rachael Hamilton, the Tory who represents Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire, for an eloquent plea on behalf of goats, in a Holyrood committee. In a week when the SNP admitted it has dug a £4.7 billion black hole for itself – or rather, for all of us – it is a significant story not only for goat-lovers but as an illustration of how money is squandered without any understanding of what it is intended to achieve. I'll get back to the goats. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The bleak warning from Shona Robison, the hapless Finance Secretary, was slipped out in time for MSPs to go off on a two-month break. If I were taking a scythe to public expenditure, Holyrood and its countless apparatchiks would be a symbolically good place to start, before moving on to the quangos. A feral goat with a kid in the Tarras Valley near the town of Langholm | Katharine Hay Bad spending decisions For openers, Ms Robison promised cuts of £1bn a year to 'administration costs'. These are a symptom of the malaise as well as a cause but at least it seems to have dawned that spending money they don't have, then blaming 'Westminster' for not sending enough, has hit the buffers of credibility. The mission of the devolved government should be straightforward if the rules are observed – ie, you have a fixed budget, plus tax-raising powers, and your job is to spend it efficiently and effectively. The SNP have never respected these rules because they crave for entirely different ones. That conflict is incapable of resolution. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad By any reasonable standard, the Scottish Government is very well funded and receives far in excess – £22bn at the last count – of the revenues raised in Scotland. So get on with it. Instead, there has been no real fiscal discipline because the escape clause will always be to blame someone else. The £4.7bn black hole is made up of hundreds of spending decisions, few of them open to meaningful challenge at Holyrood, and many devolved to quangos which control massive budgets. There is no equivalent of the Public Accounts Committee at Westminster, which might penetrate the culture of waste and obfuscation. Ancient, wild herd But let me return to the goats of Newcastleton, whose plight is deserving of attention in its own right. 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Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad I can find no trace of that fundamental question having been debated at Holyrood before it became an assumed good that subsidising speculators in carbon credits should be the preferred approach on the road to net zero. Once that silo was created, it was there to stay. For the sake of completeness, I should acknowledge that Ms Hamilton moved an amendment to the Land Reform Bill calling for an 'ethical framework for natural capital investment... developed in consultation with individuals and communities that have a legitimate interest'. That sounds pretty reasonable but it was defeated by five votes (four SNP, one Green) to four. Greens Against Goats, apparently. Proper funding for high priorities The Scottish Government's approach to spending imposes no requirement to take an overview of priorities in order to review them. Just keep adding… more commitments, more quangos, more civil servants. It has taken nearly 20 years to embed these silos and they have no intention of being disturbed. Ms Robison certainly isn't going to do it. A day-one commitment by the SNP's opponents must be to a Comprehensive Spending Review, with no line of expenditure exempt. The highest priorities must be funded properly. However tenaciously guarded by vested interests, the spending silos, large and small, must be challenged. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad There has to be a real sense of change from a devolved government which respects the rules and has no agenda other than to deliver for Scotland. And if that involves not handing money to 'green' speculators to slaughter much-loved goats, I will make sure Ms Hamilton gets her share of the credit.


The Herald Scotland
5 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Swinney government accused of twisting EHRC advice
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Daily Mail
14 hours ago
- Daily Mail
At long last, the SNP is forced to accept the word 'woman' refers to biological sex
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