Plans for onshore windfarm in Western Isles fails to get approval under EC law on protected habitat
A proposal for one of Britain鈥檚 biggest onshore wind farms has been scrapped to protect rare birds.
Lewis Windpower, the consortium of Amec and British Energy behind the plan, issued a statement saying it was 鈥渂itterly disappointed by the Scottish government鈥檚 decision鈥.
It claimed the project could have been built without violating EC law and identified benefits including 650MW of renewable energy and the creation of 400 local jobs and 680 jobs across Scotland during the construction process.
Scottish energy minister Jim Mather said: 鈥淓uropean legislation requires a specific procedure to be followed when proposals which could potentially affect Special Protection Areas come forward. I considered all the relevant issues and decided it would not be possible to approve the application.鈥
However, Mather added: 鈥淭his decision does not mean that there can not be onshore wind farms in the Western Isles.鈥 He added that thirteen projects had already been approved across the country and that the Scottish government was well on its way for meeting its target to generate 50 per cent of Scotland鈥檚 electricity from renewable sources by 2020.
Lewis Wind Power said it would consider the government鈥檚 response before deciding on it s next move.
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