Scottish economy’s underlying strength invisible to our Nomedia

proxy.duckduckgo.com

(c) Scottish Construction Now

From Insider today:

‘Investment in Scotland’s commercial property sector is expected to top last year’s total of £2 billion, according to the latest data from estate agency Savills. It points to the latest data which shows that investment volumes of £1.74 billion have already been transacted and £265 million currently under offer as we approach the fourth quarter of the year. Volumes are 90 per cent ahead of the same point in 2017, suggesting that this will be one of the strongest recorded in terms of investment volumes.’

https://www.insider.co.uk/news/scottish-property-investment-2018-top-13299464

I’m not an economist, thank dog, but I understand that if businesses are investing more in property then there must be more business going on to fill those spaces and more folk employed there to produce the stuff that can be taxed and to pay tax themselves – seemples?

For more on the intrinsic and on the relative strength of the Scottish economy, see:

63% fall in large business insolvencies as Scottish economy reveals strength

See this Douglas? Business investment in Scotland up 250%!

Scottish Business Strength No.77: Small Scottish construction firms’ growth up 17%

Scottish small businesses still more confident than those in non-Scottish parts

Business activity soars to four-year high across manufacturing and service

Business confidence in Scotland soars by 24% while it sinks 29% in non-Scottish parts of UK

Scottish businesses more likely to be stable than those in rest of UK: News from a parallel universe unknown to our mainstream media

Scottish Government supports economy with new business rates unique in UK

Scottish business confidence higher than in any other region of UK

 

Both BBC Scotland and the ‘pro-Independence’ Sunday National use unpublished or unreliable evidence to accuse Scottish schools of ‘unlawful’ actions

autism

At 06:27 and five more times this morning, BBC Scotland News headlined:

Over a third of children with autism have been unlawfully excluded from school in the past two years’

There you have it – this morning’s daily dose of scaremongering to keep No voters in their pens. I’ve searched and searched but cannot find the report commissioned by three charities, on their sites, on the BBC website or anywhere at all. I’m itching to assess it! Dear readers, let me know if you can. It wouldn’t be the first time that one of you demonstrates superior information skills here.

Anyhow, see that ‘unlawfully’ there? That’s a serious accusation to be making especially when there’s no apparent source to check for it’s reliability and methods. Schools can, of course lawfully exclude pupils. Here’s the National Autistic Society’s own definition:

What is an exclusion?

The law states that a school or local authority can tell a pupil they can’t attend school if:

  • their parent is not following school rules, or is not allowing their child to follow them 
  • by staying in school the pupil would affect the school’s order and discipline, or the other pupils’ educational well-being.

This may be because:

  • of a pupil’s behaviour
  • an incident has taken place
  • a staff member who works with your child is unavailable
  • of health and safety reasons.

If you are told that your child can’t attend school, they have been excluded.

The school or local authority may use other terms, such as expulsion, cooling-off period or sending a pupil home. No matter what term is used, you should consider your child excluded from school.

All exclusions should be formally recorded and set procedures followed.

I really want to see what the unlawful exclusions were.

https://www.autism.org.uk/about/in-education/exclusion/scotland.aspx

Though unable to find the source for the BBC Scotland story, I did find this, strangely (?), in the Sunday National two days ago:

‘The Scottish school system is failing our autistic children’. Young people with autism are being failed by schools across Scotland because they are not putting in place the support to help pupils with additional needs meet their academic potential, it has been claimed.  Charities and legal experts said “urgent changes” were needed to give children with autism and other learning disabilities adequate support at school.

http://www.thenational.scot/news/16897038.the-scottish-school-system-is-failing-our-autistic-children/

There is only anecdotal evidence from one or two individuals here and absolutely no sign of the kind of empirical evidence you’d need to back up that headline. This kind of thing and the regular ‘critical’ commentaries by Fry, McKenna and Boyd, make me suspicious that the National may be a kind-of supporter of the campaign for Scottish independence but remains too-wedded to notions of journalistic independence to avoid harming it.

 

 

As Scottish oil heads for $100pb will the UK Treasury tax this massive revenue?

bllomberg expressoil

Since first thing yesterday morning, the online news agencies have been buzzing with the news that crude oil prices are now confidently expected to hit $100 per barrel in 2019. Bloomberg and Reuters reported around 06:00 with newspapers such as the Express reporting by midday. None of the reports had anything to say about Scotland and our Scottish Nomedia are presumably working on turning it into very bad news with interviews involving angry drivers.

The idea that oil might hit $100pb was mentioned here in July 2017 with four more predictions ending in June 2018:

Will Scotland’s oil hit $100 (or more?) a barrel again after 2020?

With production costs falling to $12pb, the revenue available to be taxed will amount to billions, maybe a trillion. See this for more detail:

A fifth prediction of oil rising to $100 per barrel for Scottish oil, suggests pre-tax revenue of around $1 trillion!

However, we already suspect the Treasury will forgo this income with tax breaks for the corporations in a desperate attempt to keep the myth of Scotland’s deficit going. See:

London is giving away Scotland’s oil revenues

Tom Mitro, who managed Chevron’s taxation and financial planning in the North Sea in the 1990s, said [a new tax] scheme could deprive the Treasury of more than £3bn in tax over the next decade.

“Overall impact on the Exchequer of [the transferable tax history scheme] could range from virtually zero to roughly [a] £3bn [plus] reduction in tax receipts over the next 10 years depending on oil prices and [the] number of asset sales and decommissioning [of North Sea platforms and pipelines],” he said in a research paper prepared for Global Witness, the non-governmental organisation.

But why does the Treasury care? If it assists the spin that Scotland cannot survive on its own, I suspect that’s considered a price worth paying. And I would not be at all surprised if that is part of the political motivation for this.’

http://www.taxresearch.org.uk/Blog/2018/09/03/london-is-giving-away-scotlands-oil-revenues/

and:

‘Huge swing in North Sea oil revenues’ suggests tax fiddle

 

‘Scotland outperforming rest of UK in slashing carbon emissions, say government climate advisers’ or is it, little people of Scotland?

9a4fe597-fb31-48fe-aa1c-0257ee6ea346

The Independent headline needs no modification. Have a look at the others for a different view of the same stuff. In the Indy report:

 “Scotland continues to lead the UK in reducing its emissions and has ambitious targets which aim to go further,” said Lord Deben, chair of the committee. “Decarbonisation of Scotland’s electricity sector, and reductions in emissions from waste, have seen Scotland outperform the UK overall as emissions continue to fall year-on-year to nearly half of 1990 levels.”

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/scotland-climate-change-greenhouse-gas-emissions-renewable-energy-electric-vehicles-a8551541.html

Here’s how to twist things to weaken Project Scotland:

bb7304a0-6021-4407-aee6-cbc418fa4413

 

Finally, from BBC TV News (is on website), the Scotsman, the Herald:

Hmmm..think we’ll say we didn’t see it?

A trillion cubic feet of gas found in Glendronach!

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(c) http://drinkingtraveller.com

What under the floor of the Gents in the Glendronach Arms in Tillysumthin?

OR

Ah if that was a whisky I’d be having it. A double Glendrrronachhh barr-steeewaarrd!

Apologies new readers for the above daftness. Too much caffeine this morning?

What, it is a whisky? Right, I’m off to..

grnob.12yov4

In Insider today:

A major new gas discovery has been made off the coast of Shetland in a significant boost for the North Sea sector. French energy Total said the discovery had been made on the Glendronach prospect and that it could be commercialised quickly and at low cost by linking it to existing infrastructure on nearby developments. Preliminary well tests have identified recoverable resources estimated at about one trillion cubic feet,

https://www.insider.co.uk/news/major-gas-discovery-announced-north-13297773

Earlier reports of gas-liking here:

‘Scottish oil and gas sales saw an 18.2% increase to £20billion in the last financial year.’ but we get diddley!

Scottish manufacturing, excluding oil and gas, grows by 8.7% as it falls dramatically elsewhere in UK

Scotland’s oil and gas expertise will aid and earn abroad

Culzean field expected to produce enough gas to meet 5% of total UK demand or more than 50% of Scottish demand.

With only 8% of the population, Scotland’s maritime sector accounts for 25% of the UK maritime sector’s (GVA) contribution to the economy and is 17.5% more productive than the UK marine oil and gas sector. Once more, too wee, too poor?

An Edinburgh University Professor says North Sea oil and gas has only ten years left while the Wall Street Journal describes it as an ‘oil hot spot’ and Oil and Gas UK doesn’t recognise his figures. Who’s right?

Scottish oil and gas production sales value rises 15.2% in one year

More Scottish gas comes online as Brexit threatens UK supplies

Scottish Government invests additional £2.2m in oil and gas research and development

Scotland’s oil and gas extraction expertise continues to earn millions

 

BBC Scotland once more hide SNP Government’s policy success to create scare on obesity in women

‘Experts predict Scottish women less likely to be obese than those in England and Wales’

‘BBC Scotland try to scare Scottish women with fears of obesity’

obesitygraph

Combined male/female figures

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/morbid-obesity-double-britain-poverty-education-employment-study-a8369731.html

At 06:26am and repeated six times throughout the morning:

‘Cancer specialists say obesity is set to overtake smoking as the biggest cause of preventable cases of the disease in Scottish women. Cancer UK’s report focuses on data from across the UK, but prevention experts say the results are expected to be the same in Scotland. It’s urging the Scottish Government to press ahead with plans to restrict supermarket special offers on junk food.’

This report is missing crucial information, from May this year, on scientifically produced estimates contradicting the mere ‘expectations’ of anonymous ‘prevention experts’ and illustrated in the graph above.

Based on research led by Laura Webber of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, reported in the Independent on 26th May 2018:

‘Under current trends it is predicted that 11 per cent of the population in Wales will be morbidly obese in 2035, roughly 340,000 adults, while Scotland is likely to plateau at about 5 per cent and England will rise to about 8 per cent.’

The researchers offer a surprisingly clear, confident and simple explanation for the significantly slower growth in Scotland – Scottish Government policy initiatives and resource allocation:

‘The government put a massive push on developing a route map for how we can actually combat this. They put together resources from the NHS that were proving to be effective. They did put a lot of work into it.’

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/morbid-obesity-double-britain-poverty-education-employment-study-a8369731.html

I appreciate that the trend graph relates to combined male and female obesity, but the table below shows that for other than two groups, the prevalence of obesity in Scottish women is expected to be significantly lower than that in England or Wales and notably much lower for the 15-24-year-olds most likely to have experienced, in schools and colleges, the ‘Scottish Government policy initiatives and resource allocation.’

obesitytable

Table: Predicted % prevalence of obesity

https://www.eveningexpress.co.uk/news/five-million-british-people-will-be-morbidly-obese-by-2035-study-shows-2/

This is classic propaganda and bias by omission. It’s quiet and slips smoothly into the subconscious mind like a hypodermic needle. BBC Scotland know of the research by Laura Webber of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine because they reported on it, at the time, but only partially so as to obscure the Scottish Government’s role. I complained but got nowhere.

Now they rely on unattributed sources to subtly remind Scots women:

‘You’re no different from the rest of the UK’

‘You’ll suffer like the rest of the UK’

‘Your government is absent here.’

‘Feel negative, stay still, no, no……’

Correct headline?

‘Experts predict Scottish women less likely to be obese than those in England and Wales’

 

 

A contrarian looks at the BBC and new media

 

shaken not stirred miss moneypenny.

(c) stevensonfinancialmarketing.wordpress.com

From irregular contributor, Contrary:

Righty-o, so if the BBC don’t do this sort of misreporting consciously, then who is? Do politicians consciously do it and the Nomedia consciously only pursue the ‘uncontroversial’ view, the accepted doctrine. They never self-analyse, and we just have to put up with the bile they regurgitate in our direction, because they’ve squeezed anyone with a modicum of competence out of the business? Yes, I know I’m still banging on about how can they not know, consciously, what they are doing. I might not give it up until you get a professor of psychology to write an article and tell me how it is.

Aaaaanyway, ***Brain-Spew Warning***.

So, some things John has written has got me thinking about words such as ‘controversial’ and how surprised I am to see anything nice said about Wings, and how we all tend to still be caught in the Nomedia trap of thinking what they want us to think, alongside some Twitter stuff being said, I went along to Wings and made this comment, but being a big fearty put it at the end of a post, in case they thought I was criticising, so it may not be seen:

Comment on wings (yesterday’s cartoon article):
“O/T but inspired by wings Twitter feed on the subject of the defamation case against Kezia being reported in the papers and her tragic loss of Labour funding. Labour appear to be taking sides on something that wouldn’t have needed funding if she’d just written an apology – but I guess ‘principles’ abound.

The strange thing is, they are reporting that only Wings followers – the extremist elements (yeah yeah) – funded Rev Stu – well, I put in my tuppence worth on principle – on the principle that politicians appear to think they can get away with telling unrelenting lies (believing the rules of parliaments where you can’t use the word ‘lie’ apply in the real world?) with no come-back, and that applying the same rules that seem to be acceptable – even required – in the political word (slagging off your opponents) are acceptable in the real world to be used against private citizens. Well, no, you cannot just say anything you want publicly against private citizens, and certainly not something that causes harm and is only an opinion (not real). They are in an alternate universe bubble, and they need to get real. I’m hoping that Rev Stu ‘s bravery on taking on this case will help them along that path.

I am, of course, an extremist fan of John (prof, leading academic). And he, bizarrely, has been saying nice things about Wings and its author. This: “outspoken, spirited, lively and sweet-toothed, pro-independence blogger, the Reverend Stuart Campbell ” sent me into shock, how often do you hear pleasantries (can’t remember which article this was in, it was recent, you’ll have to search to find it) said about Rev Stu? Refreshing, and uplifting to hear, and no ‘but’ at the end of it.

Then John has just awarded wings a professorship:
“Wings has actually researched the story properly. I award him a full-visiting-honorary professorship in ‘21st Century Investigative Journalism’ at the Chomsky University of Propaganda Studies in Ayr.”
https://thoughtcontrolscotland.com/2018/09/23/with-the-help-of-a-familiar-associate-professor-good-morning-scotland-maligns-the-most-reliable-trains-in-the-uk/

Anyway, got me thinking; the negative spin from unionists decrying this [Wings] site and Rev Stu himself as some kind of objectionable extremist trough, does need to be countered – This [Wings] blog is an extremely useful resource, well written, and articles well researched (mostly 😉 ) – no one is going to agree with every single opinion of another person so that is irrelevant – and no one should be concerned about accessing it. I believed the Nomedia (see John’s blog) hype re this [Wings] blog before 2014, and I’m sure others still do. The perpetuating myth that somehow Rev Stu is brainwashing thousands might put people off reading this [Wings] blog, and then allowing their brain to start functioning again.

So words we use do matter, and ‘spirited’ and ‘outspoken’ are good words. I’m not really aiming this at the commenters here, but maybe more to SNP politicians and other independence supporting institutions – I have been gratified to see some articles [on Wings]here by SNP (members) and Alex Salmond support for the YouTube incident – but we, all of us, need to stop buying into the Nomedia brainwash-idea that this blog and its author are somehow ‘controversial’ – it isn’t true (unless you subscribe to the opinion that Scottish independence is a controversial idea,,, hmm). It is a platform, and one that could be used to benefit the SNP, they should use it instead of believing they’ll get a break from any of the mainstream ones one day. Why should the Herald (for example) be any less controversial – just because they have been spewing out the same opinion for more years? Just because,,,? Is it okay to twist a story and lie about it, to miss context, just to fit in with your own opinion, affecting millions of lives (‘controversial P1 assessments’ – when did that become controversial? When the BBC told us it was?) – that is what should be controversial. All authors should be declaring which stance they are writing from. Why are there not more quotes from [the Wings] blog on the BBC? What makes a labour politician’s tweet of more value? Etc. If the BBC version of balance was applied (‘here are two extremist views’) surely we should be hearing about wings all the time?

So if you are ever describing this [wings] blog, or Rev Stu, and find yourself needing to use the word ‘but’, try again. There are no buts. Re-word it. Positively. The message can be the same, just framed differently. In this way it is this [Wings] blog (and others that are doing proper investigative journalism) that becomes mainstream. Small steps.” (By me, 2018)

My first drafts are never very smooth eh, hopefully you catch the drift. Hmm, or even read it and have an opinion? Or have more ideas? It is important we show that independence supporting is just as, or more, normal and uncontroversial, of legitimate value, as other constitutional views. My opinion is that supporting independence is the most normal, most self-esteem boosting, view to have. I say it is the Nomedia that are controversial. And divisive.

And why shouldn’t our SNP representatives be separating out their governmental duties from their independence seeking duties? If they made that a clearer division, I think it would be easier to understand that attacking ScotGov on social policies is not actually an attack independence, those parties claiming the policies are wrong just because they disagree with SNP constitutional ideology will be shown in a (very slightly) harsher light. If MPs and MSPs are allowed to write articles in Nomedia papers, why aren’t they doing so on Wings, or here (strict tests first on John’s blog though)? It gives the blogs wider credibility, and actually allows us to read about their opinions and thoughts, and they might actually get some positive feedback. Arguments of ‘caught in a bubble’ and ‘wider audience’ don’t wash – we all choose our own bubbles accordingly (and why should it be hate-filled Nomedia?), and there will be a wider audience once the politicians have accepted that their ideas and these blogs are not the controversial ones. So the BBC criticises that an MSP has written articles on a pro-independence blog? (Chances are they won’t) – Advertising, new readers, quotes. MSP says that there is nothing controversial – leads to ball in their court to prove controversy ,,, nothing new.

This comment caught my attention while browsing wings:

Dr Jim at 12.07 (partial)
“…

Remember folks every country in the world has around 10% of it’s population who are complete and total idiots which means that England has 5.5 million of them that’s more than the entire population of Scotland and they get to outvote Scotland as often as they want because our 10% of idiots don’t even make a dent let alone every single voter in Scotland

Nicola Sturgeon is 100% right the only way to upset England plans is to vote SNP because if you don’t then England immediatly states that you agree with every single thing they decide to do, so there’s no point complaining to them after they do it

That’s why Scotland must be Independent so that no matter who you vote for, your voice and vote to run your country is a real and meaningful vote and not a vote lost in a pointless political England system where the system is designed for Scotland always to lose by weight of numbers”

From:

https://wingsoverscotland.com/lord-of-the-fruit-flies/
(Not a very thorough article, despite my earlier glowing report, but sometimes it’s good to get in a short snappy piece and run with it)

Not sure where the figure of ‘10% of the population are … idiots’ come from (totally made up I suspect, but it’s a nice round number), but that first paragraph there puts things in perspective on how much of a voice Scotland has, on any normal day (without Labour trying to actually deny Scotland any democratic say), within the UK.

***Brain Spew (maybe) Over***

P.s. I want a prize for using the word Nomedia elsewhere.

Editor: I’ve awarded the prize.

Scotland has 10% of the population but 17% of the health visitors and fewer post-natal deaths after SNP government increases staffing by 25%

c91d079c-4074-4578-896d-5c5c79e81d7b

I’m using the unconventional term ‘SNP Government’ here, in the context of good news, to compensate for the tendency in our Nomedia to use it for bad news.

In the Guardian today:

‘Health visitors struggling with ‘dangerously high’ caseloads’

In the same article:

‘The number of health visitors [England] rose from 7,849 in September 2010 to 10,236 in September 2015 because the coalition government made recruitment a priority. But that fell to 8,497 in September last year and again to 8,016 in May this year, as councils cut spending on public health after their grants for that purpose from central government were reduced.’

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/sep/23/health-visitors-struggle-with-dangerously-high-caseloads

In Scotland, the SNP Government has increased the number of health visitors from 1 155 in March 2015 to 1 448 in December 2017 (17% of the NHS England figure). That’s an increase of more than 25%.

http://www.isdscotland.org/Health-Topics/Workforce/Publications/2018-03-06/2018-03-06-Workforce-Report.pdf

Perhaps related to this, in the Nordic countries – Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Iceland – the rate of stillbirths and deaths of babies within 28 days is 4.3 per 1 000 live births. This is the lowest in the world. In the USA, it’s about 10. The Scottish figure has now fallen to just 4.72 with the rate for the UK at 5.61.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-40366637

What with the crisis so helpfully pointed out by the Unionist branch offices, it’s been a struggle to find any but here are a few recent good news stories about NHS Scotland:

NHS Scotland survives summer heatwave despite SNP failure to control London Met Office

NHS Scotland chronic pain waiting times hold steady despite 3.26% increase in demand and while NHS England figures mysteriously disappear

SNP blamed for standing by as NHS England vacancies run at more than three times those in NHS Scotland

SNP Government acts early to prevent NHS winter crisis in 2018/19

NHS Scotland Psychological Therapies waiting times almost maintained despite major increase in demand

Six consecutive years of NHS Scotland staffing growth

Looking south only, NHS England is ‘left behind Germany, France, Spain, Italy and Japan’ but Scotland is both ‘just behind’ and well ahead of them!

91% satisfaction with NHS Scotland staff! Patients even more satisfied than before

NHS Scotland maintains waiting times for Outpatients despite soaring pressures and unlike the crisis in non-Scottish parts

NHS Scotland sees more patients within 18 weeks as demand soars

Major achievement by NHS Scotland as operations cancelled due to capacity or non-clinical reasons fall dramatically by 31%

Is BBC Scotland exploiting patients with mental health problems to construct an ill-founded attack on NHS Tayside?

At 78% level of satisfaction with NHS Scotland is impressive 36% higher than for the NHS across UK

NHS Scotland misrepresented!

Anger over Scotsman’s call for Miles Briggs to be listened to…at all as NHS taxi costs fall 14% in one year

NHS Scotland first to be 100% Baby Friendly

Updated: The Scotsman colludes with Labour and Tories to fake another crisis in NHS Scotland

NHS England sees 35% increase in patients waiting more than 18 weeks while NHS Scotland reports a fall of 0.2% despite a 14.6% increase in demand

Scotsman, Herald and Tories collude in another laughable attempt to unseat Scottish Health Secretary using NHS Scotland’s success stories

NHS Lothian ‘bed-blocking’ remains much lower than average in NHS England

Scotsman under fire over dishonest reporting of four-doctor protest, against NHS England, but at Holyrood (?), in latest round weaponizing NHS in proxy war against SNP

NHS Scotland A&E performance is more than 10% better than NHS England though BBC Salford mislead viewers by using wrong figure

NHS Scotland: 27% increase in kidney transplants including 10% increase from living donors as ‘UK’ level falls to eight-year low

Bed-blocking in NHS Scotland falls by nearly 10% in one year as the rate in NHS England surges to nearly 500% higher, per capita, than that in NHS Scotland!

National auditors find two very different NHS systems in the UK. Someone tell Theresa today.

 

 

 

With the help of a familiar ‘associate professor’, Good Morning Scotland maligns the ‘most reliable’ trains in the UK

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‘Keep up the good work chaps chapesses!’

On GMS, at 7.40am yesterday, associate professor, Dr Eamonn O’Neill, Napier University, reviewed the papers with all the critical analysis of…..eh….someone who is not an associate professor and who likes them and all his old pals a lot? He delights in a Herald (his old employer) piece on Scotrail beginning with:

‘Services in Scotrail are the worst since records began’

You can guess what follows. Less predictably, he sniggers strangely between dramatic catastrophic quotes.  He’s guffawing now. Why is he so delighted by this? Is he hoping that a posse of maddened-by-delay commuters will verbally attack Humza Yousef, thinking he’s still responsible and that Scottish Labour can then exploit the situation? They’d fuck it up of course.  Why does he think his suggestion of ‘a train of woe’ is clever and worth repeating? He finishes this piece, astonishingly, given his status, with:

‘And I know this because you see it in tweets all the time. People really do suffer because of the trouble with trains. Those figures this morning will really bear out people’s beliefs that things are not quite getting better.’

WTF!? An ‘associate professor’, working in a university, seems to think he can ‘know things’ because he ‘sees it in tweets all the time’ and that it will ‘bear out people’s beliefs.’ You need empirical evidence to say anything at all about anything like that and even then, it has to remain conditional on new evidence supporting or questioning it. He must know this to work in a university even if he didn’t have a doctorate or wasn’t an associate professor, both of which require or used to, considerable knowledge of research methods.

Eamonn is a former ‘international award-winning investigative journalist’ with Esquire, the Herald and the Scotsman. I guess that’s the kind of radical outsider academic that Good Morning Scotland needs to keep it on its toes.

Getting back on track (clever? Ho ho) with my train of thought (stop it my ribs hurt) to signal (STOP!) the fault in his line of thought (Aeeeee!!!!), as an investigative journalist even, never mind the academic bit for now, should he have questioned the Herald report in any way? It would only have taken a few minutes to find that Wings over Scotland had already demolished the story.  He’ll be fond of the Rev Stu and bloggers genrally, I feel sure. Anyhow, here it is:

abdee3a5-6677-47d0-99c9-fb5230e6c0fd

https://twitter.com/WingsScotland/status/1043468221796507648

Wings has actually researched the story properly. I award him a full-visiting-honorary professorship in ‘21st Century Investigative Journalism’ at the Chomsky University of Propaganda Studies in Ayr.

I was on GMS one morning in 2014. I was only a ‘Reader’ or ‘Associate Professor’ then. The next day, in the morning I got an invite to appear on Newsnight Scotland. At around 3 in the afternoon they withdrew the request. Now I’m retired and past it, I don’t suppose I’ll ever get to meet Gordon Brewer….sigh.

 

Once more Scotland has the wind in its favour

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Image: Vattenfall (Creative Commons)

In Energy Voice yesterday:

‘A new mammoth offshore wind project has applied for Marine Scotland consent off the north-east coast of Scotland. A joint partnership between SSE and Fluor, Seagreen Wind Energy will develop two large scale offshore projects named Seagreen Alpha Offshore Wind Farm (OWF) and Seagreen Bravo OWF. The combined 120 turbine development will look to generate a capacity of over 1 gigawatt (GW), making it the largest energy generating windfarm in Scotland to date.’

https://www.energyvoice.com/otherenergy/182146/mammoth-wind-project-planned-off-scotlands-east-coast/

As always, this comes in the wake (I checked. It applies to air flow too) of many other reports on Scotland’s booming wind-power sector:

Sorted! Enough wind power for 87% of Scottish homes in August

First subsidy-free onshore wind farm for Scotland?

Scotland’s world-first offshore wind farm electricity to cost less than half that of Hinkley Point C nuclear and has ability to withstand hurricanes.

Nearly 100 Scottish contracts awarded by Swedish wind-farm owners

Scotland’s offshore wind electricity generation capacity could be five times greater by 2030

Another 1 GWh wind farm taking our current supply up enough for 3 200 000 homes to be built in forest near Dumfries. 100% renewable energy by 2030? More like 1 000%.