Hundreds object to plans for Speyside hydrogen plant 

The plans are being supported by a £3.1 million grant from the Scottish Government's hydrogen fund.

Hundreds object to plans for Speyside hydrogen plantLDRS

Proposals for a Speyside hydrogen plant have attracted over 160 objections, amid fears it will damage a “region of natural beauty.”

The plant will be based in Marypark, about six miles south of Aberlour, with road connections to the A95 for HGVs.

Developer Storegga, who have an office near Aberdeen, say the plant will create around 100 new jobs.

The plans are being supported by a £3.1 million grant from the Scottish Government’s hydrogen fund.

However, a growing number of the Speyside community hope to dam up the developer’s proposal.

They say the plant will push the natural limits of the Spey, lowering water levels and impacting fishing and tourism.

‘Leave our beautiful countryside alone’

Storegga anticipate the plant will be operational 24 hours a day and require 70 HGVs arriving and leaving the site with tankers of hydrogen each day.

Several of the 160 objectors repeatedly raised concerns about the HGV increase on the roads, calling the A95 from Marypark a “bottleneck” and “overloaded with traffic.”

Many have questioned the environmental impact of the proposal in a “region of natural beauty.”

One pleaded with the developer to “leave our beautiful countryside alone.”

Proposed junction of new hydrogen site.LDRS

Other objectors said the project could have a “knock-on effect” on the tourist trade, who come to fish and admire the views of the countryside.

Storegga said they have investigated over forty possible sites but found the Marypark location to be the most suitable.

A ‘thorny’ issue, but ‘vital’ say supporters

Letters backing the project have also been submitted, with five contributors supporting the project.

In their letters of support, they have called the green hydrogen “vital” for distilleries and the plant brings investment into the area.

One supporter said it was a “thorny issue” but the benefits outweighed the negatives.

“Morayshire needs investment, job creation and economic growth,” they added.

What is a hydrogen plant?

A hydrogen plant works by using renewable electricity to extract hydrogen from water, producing ‘clean’ hydrogen.

Storegga say this will aid in “enabling regional decarbonisation” and help the Speyside whisky industry to move away from using fossil fuels.

If approved, the plant will have a capacity of 70 megawatts and produce 25 tonnes of green hydrogen each day.

Storegga will get the vast majority of its water for the plant from a borehole connected to the Spey, with harvested rainwater added in.

The hydrogen plant hopes to become a regional ‘hydrogen hub’ ,adding to Scotland’s 13 other planned hubs across the country.

Consequences of plant could travel down the Spey

Once the project is operational, it will suck up 500,000 litres a day from the Spey.

An Olympic-size swimming pool typically holds five times that capacity at 2.5 million litres.

Innes Community Council member Jim Mackie has fished the Spey for over 65 years, and disputes Storegga’s claim there will be no impact on the river flow.

Mr Mackie said: “All the calculations on the river flow are averages, they are not looking at the critical times when it’s low water levels during the summer.

“[The borehole] will impact the water levels on the Spey.”

He stresses the added concerns of climate change, which increases water temperatures.

This in combination with falling Spey water levels could make it much harder for aquatic life in the Spey to thrive.

“There’s a lot more possible environmental impacts that the developers, SEPA and the council appear to be ignoring,” he added.

Storegga have also stated that an undisclosed amount of processed wastewater will be dumped back into the Spey.

Storegga’s research says this will amount to less than a 0.1% change in river water quality, and therefore is “not considered to be significant.”

Scottish Water says they have no objection to the plant.

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