Local communities are to get new opportunities to benefit from
renewable energy developments under a pilot scheme announced by
the Scottish Government.
Community groups, from South Lanarkshire to the Highlands, will
be given the chance to lease one of 10 publicly-owned Forestry
Land and Scotland (FLS) sites with windfarms as they approach
repowering.
The pilot, which makes changes to the Community Asset Transfer
Scheme (CATS), will provide a protected window for local groups
to make an asset transfer request to lease FLS sites to extend
the operational life of the windfarms.
The new approach, developed with FLS, will help strengthen the
community asset transfer process which enables communities to
request to buy or lease publicly owned land they feel they could
make better use of.
Other changes to CATS will see community groups given:
- advance notification of upcoming lease opportunities, so they
have time to prepare asset transfer requests before sites go to
market
- dedicated guidance for repowering projects, including support
on financing projects, evaluation and governance
- targeted support through the Community and Renewable Energy
Scheme (CARES), including help to develop proposals
Energy Secretary said:
“Ownership and control of land is a powerful tool for communities
to drive change and can help to develop local economies,
provide activities and services, and boost community identity.
“These new measures will make it easier for groups across
Scotland to reap the rewards from renewable energy projects on
Forestry Land Scotland sites with the potential to deliver real
benefits to a local area.
“It is yet another way that we are ensuring
that communities can benefit from Scotland's transition to
renewable energy and that we are helping provide a just
transition to net zero for people across the country.”
Community Energy Scotland CEO Zoe Holliday said:
"We have seen time and time again the transformation impact of
land ownership and ownership of energy assets on communities
across Scotland.
"Right now, repowering of private developments represents one of
the biggest opportunities to upscale the community energy sector
at pace and meet the Scottish Government's community energy
targets; community energy groups are increasingly ambitious but
gaining grid access continues to be a challenge, which is why
taking on existing sites has so much potential.
"Today's announcement is a promising first step by the Scottish
Government in starting to open up the public estate for large
community energy projects and we look forward to working with
them to continue to unlock opportunities for the community energy
sector going forward."
Background
Updates to the Community Asset Transfer Scheme will be
implemented by the end of the year, following further engagement
with stakeholders, including Community Energy Scotland, community
groups and developers.
These measures will apply to projects with a maximum generation
capacity of 50MW, reflecting the current scale of community
energy initiatives.
The ten sites approaching the need for repowering are:
|
Scheme Name
|
Indicative Repowering year
|
LA
|
|
Black Law
|
2032
|
South Lanarkshire
|
|
An Suidhe
|
2033
|
Argyll & Bute
|
|
Camster
|
2035
|
Highland
|
|
Myres Hill
|
2036
|
East Renfrewshire
|
|
Stroupster
|
2038
|
Highland
|
|
Burn of Whilk
|
2038
|
Highland
|
|
Clashindarroch
|
2041
|
Aberdeenshire
|
|
A' Chruach
|
2043
|
Argyll & Bute
|
|
Beinn An Tuirc 3
|
2047
|
Argyll & Bute
|
|
West Benhar
|
2048
|
North Lanarkshire
|
The largest community energy project currently in Scotland's
pipeline is 43MW.
Find out more at Forestry and Land Scotland ·
Local Energy Scotland and Community access to wind farm
repowering | Forestry and Land Scotland.