When a Cabinet Secretary suggests that opposition to large scale wind development is being driven by “false narratives of the far right”, that is not a throwaway remark. It is a calculated political statement.
It deserves to be examined properly.
We remain party neutral. We do not campaign for or against any political party. Our work has always focused on planning law, evidence and procedural integrity. However, over the last year it has become increasingly difficult to maintain that neutrality in relation to the SNP, as the Government has accelerated energy consenting at pace while repeatedly minimising, reframing or dismissing legitimate community concerns.
There comes a point where silence becomes complicity.
And the suggestion that thousands of Scottish residents are somehow being manipulated by fringe ideology crosses that line.
This Is Not an Ideological Uprising. It Is Administrative Fatigue.
Communities are not objecting because of conspiracy theories. They are objecting because they are being asked to absorb unprecedented density of infrastructure.
In multiple regions, residents are facing:
Stacked wind farm applications
Extensions before existing schemes are fully operational
Battery energy storage co-located with generation
Major grid reinforcement corridors
Substations and industrial scale compounds
Consultation periods overlap. Environmental statements run to thousands of pages. Visual impact zones expand. Turbine heights increase. Night time aviation lighting becomes permanent.
This is not abstract policy. It is lived environmental transformation.
When Ministers reduce that reality to “false narratives”, it signals either a profound misunderstanding or a deliberate attempt to delegitimise participation.
The SNP’s PR Line Collapses Under Scrutiny
The SNP’s messaging frames opposition as either climate denial or political sabotage. That framing is convenient. It simplifies a complex structural issue into a moral binary.
But it collapses when tested against evidence.
The majority of objections submitted reference:
Cumulative landscape impact
Peatland carbon integrity
Hydrological risk
Noise modelling limitations
Wild land designation pressure
Grid constraint and sequencing
Transport and construction impact
Procedural fairness under Section 36 and 37
These are textbook planning considerations.
They are drawn directly from statutory policy.
They are not culture war slogans.
If Ministers wish to rebut them, they must do so on technical grounds. Labelling them as ideological does not make them disappear.
The Grid Reality the PR Material Avoids
Scotland has experienced sustained transmission constraint and curtailment. Renewable generation has been switched off due to insufficient transmission capacity to export power south.
That is not anti net zero rhetoric. It is grid engineering reality.
Yet consent continues to be granted to new generation in advance of fully deliverable, time certain reinforcement.
Communities are therefore entitled to ask:
Why is additional industrialisation being approved before transmission bottlenecks are resolved?
Why is sequencing not aligned with infrastructure capacity?
Why are landscapes being transformed ahead of confirmed grid readiness?
These are rational planning questions.
They are not far right talking points.
Grid Reinforcement Must Be Engineered, Not Bulldozed
Where reinforcement is proposed, it must be done properly.
It must not be rushed through using the cheapest pylon corridor options under the banner of urgency. It must not cut through sensitive landscapes simply because overhead lines are less expensive than undergrounding.
Cost cutting infrastructure driven by political timelines erodes public trust.
If reinforcement is required for decarbonisation, then it must meet a standard of environmental sensitivity consistent with national policy. Proper routing, meaningful undergrounding assessment, full cumulative evaluation and genuine consultation are not optional extras.
Communities are not anti grid. They are anti reckless delivery.
There is a difference.
The ECU and the Question of Participation
The removal of email as a submission route to the Energy Consents Unit has compounded concern.
Email was simple. Accessible. Auditable.
Its removal coincided with rising objection volumes.
No publicly evidenced Equality Impact Assessment has been demonstrated. Portal constraints remain. Character limits and structured input formats make detailed submissions more cumbersome.
When participation increases and submission routes narrow, suspicion is inevitable.
If Government wishes to rebut the perception of silencing, it must provide transparent evidence. Not rhetoric.
The Political Calculation
With an election approaching, framing opposition as extremist simplifies messaging.
But rural communities are not extremists.
Many support renewable energy in principle. Many voted SNP. Many remain environmentally conscious.
Their objection is to density, sequencing and procedural opacity.
By attempting to paint dissent as ideological manipulation, the Minister risks alienating precisely the voters whose landscapes are bearing the brunt of accelerated consenting.
The rhetoric may energise party lines.
It does nothing to address structural pressure.
Cumulative Saturation Is the Issue the SNP Refuses to Confront
If this debate were genuinely about misinformation, the Government would be publishing rebuttal evidence, not political character assessments.
The real issue is cumulative saturation.
In several parts of Scotland, wind developments are no longer singular proposals assessed in isolation. They are clusters. One ridge consented. The adjacent ridge proposed. Extensions layered onto existing schemes. Battery storage added. Grid corridors overlaid. Substations embedded.
Each Environmental Impact Assessment assesses its own boundary. Each developer frames impact within a defined zone. Yet communities experience the combined effect.
Successive decision notices frequently conclude that cumulative impact is “acceptable” when viewed within policy support for renewable generation.
That is precisely the tension.
Policy support does not eliminate spatial capacity limits. Landscapes have thresholds. Communities have thresholds. Infrastructure density has thresholds.
When Ministers dismiss opposition rather than acknowledging cumulative fatigue, it suggests that those thresholds are not being meaningfully recognised.
Calling this “far right narrative” does not address saturation.
It avoids it.
Centralisation Has Amplified the Democratic Deficit
Under Section 36 and 37 regimes, ultimate authority rests with Scottish Ministers. Local authority objections can be overridden. Reporter recommendations can be departed from.
This is lawful. But it increases the burden of procedural integrity.
If decisions appear predetermined in favour of approval because national targets dominate localised harm, communities perceive the planning balance as weighted before evidence is considered.
When that perception grows, participation intensifies.
That is not ideological radicalisation. It is a rational response to centralised authority.
The appropriate ministerial response would be reassurance through transparency and improved process. Instead, the response has been rhetorical dismissal.
The PR Narrative Ignores Its Own Contradictions
The SNP’s public messaging positions Scotland as a global climate leader. That ambition is not inherently problematic.
What is problematic is advancing that narrative while failing to acknowledge system strain.
Transmission constraint persists. Curtailment remains significant. Infrastructure sequencing is misaligned. Cumulative development in specific regions is accelerating.
Communities are told that opposition is harmful to climate goals. Yet those same communities witness electricity being constrained off the grid because the network cannot export it efficiently.
They are entitled to ask whether consenting more generation before resolving transmission bottlenecks is strategic planning or headline chasing.
That question is technical. Not ideological.
The Removal of Email and the Optics of Control
The timing of procedural tightening at the Energy Consents Unit cannot be ignored.
Email submissions allowed residents to prepare detailed, evidence based representations without navigating portal limitations. It provided a straightforward audit trail.
Its removal has coincided with record levels of structured objections.
Even if administrative explanations exist, perception matters. In democratic systems, accessibility should expand as participation expands, not contract.
If no Equality Impact Assessment was undertaken, that raises further concern about compliance with duties of due regard.
When Government narrows channels while labelling dissent as extremist, the combination is corrosive.
Trust diminishes.
The Electoral Risk of Misreading Rural Scotland
Rural communities are not a caricature. They are not politically uniform. Many are environmentally conscious. Many support renewable energy targets. Many have historically supported the SNP.
Their objection is not to climate ambition. It is to intensity without proportionality. Infrastructure without sensitivity. Acceleration without sequencing.
By conflating objection with ideological manipulation, the Minister risks alienating voters who do not recognise themselves in that portrayal.
Political messaging designed for central belt headlines does not always translate well to landscapes carrying turbine density.
The Core Reality
This is not a culture war.
It is a structural governance issue.
Communities feel overwhelmed by development volume. They see grid reinforcement proposed at pace, sometimes through visually intrusive and cost driven pylon corridors. They observe submission routes tightening. They hear their concerns reframed as narrative warfare.
When Government responds to evidence based objection with rhetorical categorisation, it confirms the very perception it seeks to deny.
If anything, the Minister’s remarks demonstrate how insulated central policy can become from regional experience.
The public are not being weaponised.
They are responding to tangible, cumulative change in their own landscapes.
And attempts to discredit that response will not reduce it.
They will strengthen it.
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