During the construction of the wind farm in 2011 and 2012, around £3million was spent on local contractors who built the infrastructure and manufactured the turbine towers. The local economy also received a short term boost during 2012, with the demand for accommodation, provisions and other local services required by the construction teams. These are significant amounts in a fragile rural economy like Argyll.
The wind farm now provides secure, well paid employment for the three local men in the Vestas Service Team, and Ormsary Farmers has created a further full time service job. These wages are retained in Argyll.
As part of the planning consent ADWF entered into a long term Landscape and Habitat Enhancement Plan (LHEP). The plan’s objective is to improve the local landscape and environment for wildlife. The aims have been agreed with the host estates and Scottish Natural Heritage, and plan delivery is funded by ADWF. These projects include the replacement of commercial conifer plantation with native woodland around the shores of Loch Caolisport that lie within the South Knapdale National Scenic Area, the eradication of Rhododendron Ponticum (a highly invasive weed) and encouragement of water voles in the Stronachullin Burn area, the restoration of the upland peat bogs around the turbines, the restoration and maintenance of the traditional roadside dykes within the National Scenic Area, and the encouragement of endangered Black Grouse through specific land management. These projects together with the re-routing and substantial undergrounding of the SSE 33kV line between Inverneill and Lochgilphead, funded by Allt Dearg, go some way to mitigate the environmental impact of the Allt Dearg construction works. Once operational Sròndoire Wind Farmers will add additional funding to implement the LHEP.
ADWF and Sròndoire Wind Farmers now provide over £65,000 every year to the Educational Trust, which provides financial support to local young people in Further Education living away from home, Argyllshire students who might otherwise be unable to afford the opportunities of education.
Due to the substantial local ownership held by the Ormsary and Stronachullin Estates, and the Ardrishaig Community Trust, the majority (around 85%) of the “profit” derived from the generation and sale of clean, renewable energy, is retained locally. Depending on wind and power production, the Ardrishaig Trust hopes to distribute around £100,000 per annum to local projects designed to improve the lives of Ardrishaig residents. By the nature of this support, the benefits tend to spill over into the wider neighbouring communities.
Ormsary Estate is a significant local employer and user of services. The Estate is dependent of what it can produce and sell, to provide the income that funds and supports the jobs and homes at Ormsary, and underpins the social viability of what is otherwise a very fragile rural community.
The less tangible benefits of Allt Dearg include the new road access used by walkers and bicyclists, and the opportunity to visit and explore the wind farm provided to local schools and community groups.
We believe Allt Dearg and now Sròndoire offer an alternative development model, where utility scale, commercially funded developments owned and operated locally can deliver far more social and economic benefit to Argyll than the alternate models, whilst still generating very significant amounts of wind energy.
The figures released by Argyll & Bute Council in 2023 listing the Community Benefit payments made by Argyll’s fifteen operational wind farms. Together these wind farms have around 328 MW of installed capacity and now pay out over £ 1.5 million in “Community Benefits” every year. 47% of these annual payments (£713,794) are made by the locally owned Allt Dearg and Sròndoire Community Wind Farms, which represent less than 5% of the installed capacity. Since December 2012 ownership in Allt Dearg has generated nearly £1.7 million for the Ardrishaig Community Trust and over £400,000 for our Educational Trust, in turn Sròndoire which started in 2015 has delivered over £ ½ million for Tarbet, Skipness, Tighnabruich and the Educational Trust. This is around £2.7million in direct community benefits over the last ten years, and many times this amount in the ongoing local expenditure by the landowning partners and the wind farms themselves.
Allt Dearg and Sròndoire Community Wind Farmswhilst provide seventeen times Argyll’s average level of direct community benefit payments, when the indirect financial benefits of local estate ownership and the resulting expenditure funded by wind farm profit is taken into account, the financial benefit to the wider local community is many times greater than the £5000 / MWh utility benchmark.