Giant Clyde Wind Farm Officially Opened by Scotland’s First Minister
At 350MW SSE’s Clyde is one of Europe’s largest onshore windfarms
SSE’s Clyde wind farm has today been officially opened by Scotland’s First Minister, Alex Salmond. Clyde is one of the largest single consented wind farms in Europe and represents SSE’s largest onshore wind project to date.
Clyde makes a significant contribution to SSE’s position as the largest generator of electricity from wind across the UK and Ireland, and supports SSE’s generation priority of becoming a greener and more flexible non-nuclear generator. SSE currently has over 3,000MW of renewable generation capacity in operation in the UK and Ireland, of which over 1,600MW is powered by wind.
The 152 turbines at Clyde wind farm are split into three sections with a total installed capacity of 350MW, capable of producing enough energy during a year to meet the needs of around 280,000 homes*. The project is situated between Biggar and Moffat occupying around 47 square kilometres.
Consent for Clyde wind farm was granted by Scottish Ministers in July 2008 with construction commencing in April 2009. At the peak of this construction around 400 people were employed on the site. Clyde’s location presented many engineering challenges, including the need to construct around 105km of roads to enable access to the furthest reaches of the site. Associated infrastructure also included two substations, one operations building and a new radar installation in Cumbernauld.
The £500m project has contributed approximately £100m of contract value with companies in Scotland, including Wind Towers in Machrihanish supplying the turbine towers, plus associated indirect value to the supply chain. Clyde continues to provide a range of employment opportunities with 19 full-time SSE staff and 39 Siemens staff based across the site with additional jobs created off-site to facilitate operations and maintenance.
Clyde has the largest wind farm Community Investment Fund in Scotland which is expected to be worth around £22million (£875,000 per year for the lifetime of the wind farm). This includes £700,000 per year in South Lanarkshire of which 70% goes to local community projects and 30% to a regional development fund for businesses and organisations. There are also local community funds in Dumfries and Galloway and The Scottish Borders worth £140,000 and £35,000 per year respectively. Well over £300,000 has already been awarded to a number of projects from these funds providing real benefit to the local community.

Industrial electricity turbines run on a small amount of wind and the rest is fossil fuel right?
Reports all over the world on wind turbine sickeness and yet some clown thinks its made up
How dare you! How dare anyone think that you can dictate on a group of people who were probably
didnt know what these ghastly things will be like to live with how they feel. I hope proof will come out
and these unfortunate people can at least claim off energy companies so they can move away and
rebuild their lives
I hate this invention and I hate the way it is forced on people especially country folk I hate the lies the
mafia like tatics The scurge and the scam of the century
See how you run your own business like i do with out lavish subsidies, not easy for an unsustainable idea is it
Local funds are bribes as you know as the people who get them eventually know they are hell on earth to live with
Bat munchers!