Gwynt y Môr and Welsh Select Committee
As interested readers are no doubt aware the Gwynt y Môr wind farm development was approved some 18 months ago despite the opposition of local councillors and the concerns of the significant tourism sector centred on the town of Llandudno in this constituency.
The announcement of the success of the consortium led by RWE Npower Renewables in attracting the funding for the project, around £2.2billion, was made a few weeks ago and whilst this was in many ways a disappointment to local protesters and businesses which argued against the development. However, there was also a realistic view expressed by many that “we are where we are” and as such there was a clear need for the area to benefit financially from the development. This potential financial benefit would come in two ways;
1. The opportunities for local businesses to benefit from opportunities to win contracts with the developers.
2. The Community Benefits Package which had been discussed by the consortium with the local authority, Conwy County Borough Council.
I have contacted the Welsh Assembly Government Department of Economy and Transport in relation to the first opportunity in relation to the potential to use the Local Supplier Development Programme to support and guide businesses in relation to what they need to do to access the opportunities arising from the development. In the same way I have, in private meetings with the Secretary of State for Wales, asked her to make representations to the Consortium in relation to the accessibility of contract opportunities for local businesses. I hope to be involved in a ‘meet the buyer’ type event in the area in due course and will keep readers posted on any development.
However, my real concerns at this point relate to the Community Benefits Package. In the original discussions between Conwy Council and the consortium there were two separate strands for support discussed. These were;
1. Tourism support package for Llandudno (subsequently changed to Conwy Council Area) worth £230k per year
2. Community Benefits Package of £1m per annum for a period of 20/25 years
The concerns I have, which are shared by constituents, is that the Tourism Support Package is now been described by the Consortium as a package of support for Conwy and Denbighshire. It was disappointing, but perhaps understandable in many ways, that the initial tourism package which was proposed for Llandudno had been changed by Conwy Council to include the whole of the County. However, this package is now being described by the Consortium as a fund for the counties of Conwy and Denbighshire.
This is contrary to the spirit of the Memorandum of Understanding between the Consortium and Conwy Council which stated specifically that the Conwy Coast Tourism Programme (originally for Llandudno only) would be separate from any discussions with other authorities along the North Wales coast. The local population feel that the Consortium have made promises in order to attempt to win the support of Llandudno residents and businesses which are now been significantly changed since public support is not now needed. This change in the Llandudno Tourism package was made know to the Council on the 14th of April.
Secondly, in the same letter dated 14th April 2010 the Consortium informs Conwy Council that the Community Benefits Package will be significantly reduced from the promised £1m to £768k per year. This is justified on the basis of detailed site design work resulting in a project with a capacity of 750mw being reduced to 576mw.
At the Welsh Select Committee I asked the Secretary of State to meet with representatives of the consortium to discuss the unilateral changes to both the Tourism Support Package and the Community Benefits Package. Furthermore I also asked the Secretary of Sate whether she was of the view that there was a need for an agreed level of compensation for communities affected by large scale developments in order to ensure that a consortium such as the one led by RWE at Gwynt y Môr would not be in a position to make promises and then change them without consultation once planning permission had been secured. On this point I was advised to raise the matter with the Department of the Environment and Climate Change which I am now progressing.
ITV Wales and the Daily Post provided coverage for the fact that the issue was highlighted at the Welsh Select Committee – it might be possible to embarrass the consortium into honouring the original Memorandum of Understanding!
Guto