Closed consultation

Electricity Infrastructure Consenting in Scotland

We are analysing your feedback

Visit this page again soon to download the outcome to this public feedback.

Summary

We're seeking views on proposals for reforming the consenting processes in Scotland under the Electricity Act 1989.

This consultation ran from
to

Consultation description

The UK government believes that Scotland’s growing renewable electricity sector requires a robust, timely and proportionate consenting process which meaningfully involves communities and relevant planning authorities in decision-making.

The Scottish Government grants consents to electricity infrastructure – both generating stations over 50MW (1 MW for generating stations 0-12 nautical miles from shore) and network projects - under the Electricity Act 1989. The UK and Scottish governments agree that modernising and removing inefficiencies within the Electricity Act 1989, is the best route to speeding up electricity infrastructure deployment, which is vital to achieving clean power for 2030 and beyond.

It is also agreed that requirements for applicants to involve communities and statutory consultees through pre-application and application processes should be strengthened, to build a fairer consenting system and develop better quality applications for consent.

This consultation sets out a package of proposals for reform which span the consenting journey. The purpose of the consultation is to test these proposals with a wide group of stakeholders ranging from communities hosting infrastructure to applicants for consent. This will help us understand the impacts proposals will have across stakeholder groups and be used to shape the development of policy proposals.

Alongside the consultation, we have published an options assessment which outlines the rationale for the reforms and identifies the costs and benefits.

Documents

Electricity Infrastructure Consenting in Scotland: options assessment

Request an accessible format.
If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email [email protected]. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

Updates to this page

Published 28 October 2024

Sign up for emails or print this page