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Raumfahrt - Billionaire fails in bid to block Sutherland spaceport

22.08.2021

Wildland Limited "surprised and disappointed" by the Court’s judgement

spaceport-alt

The planned space hub on the Melness Crofters Estate

A billionaire retail tycoon and Scotland's largest landowner has lost a legal challenge to overturn planning permission for a spaceport in Sutherland.

Anders Povlsen's company Wildland Ltd launched a judicial review against Space Hub Sutherland, which was granted permission last August to build a site from which to launch small satellites into orbit.

 

Mr Povlsen, who owns more land in the UK than the Queen and the Church of Scotland combined, is the majority shareholder in the online fashion giant Asos.

The Danish tycoon and his wife Anne, worth an estimated £6 billion, own tens of thousands of acres of land in Sutherland and across the Highlands.

 

They had argued that Highland Council's decision to green-light planning for the project had failed to consider effects on the local wildlife and environment.

Another of the couple's firms has invested £1.5 million into plans for a space centre on a former RAF site in Unst in the Shetland isles.

But in a Court of Session judgment published on Friday, Lord Doherty rejected the legal challenge brought by Wildland Ltd against Highland Council, saying he was "not persuaded" the local authority had breached any law.

Lord Doherty considered that "none of the grounds of challenge is well-founded".

Wildland Ltd chief executive Tim Kirkwood said the company was "surprised and disappointed".

The firm remains convinced "the proposed space port will be completely inappropriate for such an environmentally vulnerable area and the protected habitats it sustains", he added.

Dorothy Pritchard of chair of Melness Crofters Estate has hailed the move as a means to combat dwindling populations in the Far North, she said: "We've an elderly population here with very little opportunities for young people here apart from service industries and tourism"

"We were apprehensive initially, we didn't just go 'oh yes that's great!' there was a lot of soul-searching and researching. We looked into it and listened to people, and we decided we wanted it, but it wasn't the case that we just wanted it at any cost"

Chris Larmour, chief executive of Forres-based Orbex, a Scottish rocket company, also welcomed the news.

The firm hopes to launch its satellites from the site on the A'Mhoine Peninsula, which is an area of peatland near Tongue on the north coast.

"Sutherland is still the only UK spaceport with planning permission and now, with this ruling, the countdown to space launch from the UK can begin," he said.

"We're especially pleased for the crofters of the Melness Crofters Estate, who will be able to protect and develop their community with modern jobs."

Wildland Ltd is wholly controlled by Mr and Mrs Povlsen and owns 221,000 acres across Scotland.

Its sister company Wild Ventures Ltd invested nearly £1.5 million into the Shetland Space Centre on Unst last year.

Quelle: YOUR MFR
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Judge rules Sutherland spaceport project can go ahead

SPACE Hub Sutherland, the world’s first carbon-neutral spaceport on A’ Mhoine peninsula, has been given the go-ahead by Lord Doherty after he ruled in a judicial review instigated by Danish ASOS billionaire Anders Povlsen.

It is now hoped the inaugural space flight from land on the Melness Crofters’ Estate could happen late next year.

In a 30-page decision, in which he said “none of the grounds of challenge is well founded”, the judge rejected every one brought by Wildland to block the development.

Chris Larmour, CEO of Orbex, the Scottish rocket company that will be launching from the site, said: “This is extremely positive news for a wide variety of communities and businesses and paves the way for the Pathfinder launch of small satellites from Sutherland Spaceport.

“We're especially pleased for the crofters of the Melness Crofters Estate, who will be able to protect and develop their community with modern jobs.

“Sutherland is still the only UK spaceport with planning permission and now, with this ruling, the countdown to space launch from the UK can begin.” 

Melness Crofters’ Estate (MCE), is a voluntary committee of local crofters who own their own land and support the proposed £17.5 million development.

With a declining population and the decommissioning of the nearby former nuclear power site at Dounreay, it sees the spaceport project as an opportunity to secure the long term future of the community.

MCE is now awaiting the results of a Land Court hearing which, if positive, will see construction work will begin.

Chair of MCE, Dorothy Pritchard said: “This is a game-changing moment for the local community here in Sutherland.

“We have worked tirelessly with all the stakeholders involved over the last four years to consider every stage of this development.

“Our priority has always been to ensure the close-knit crofting community, its stunning landscape, and native wildlife are protected under a proposal that would make this the world’s first working croft land and carbon-neutral space hub.

“This decision unlocks investment in a project that will undoubtedly secure a long-term future for our community, creating new job opportunities for the younger generation while also attracting new people and investment to the area.”

Quelle: THE NATIONAL

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