Net Zero Ambitions Boosted
Global tidal pioneer Nova Innovation welcomes the news that the island of Yell in Shetland and Islay (alongside Hoy, Great Cumbrae, Raasay and Barra) have been selected as two of six islands included in the Scottish Government’s Carbon Neutral Islands (CNI) project.
The announcement made today by Mairi Gougeon, Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs and Islands, will set Yell and Islay as two of Scotland's “net zero lighthouse communities” boosting awareness, knowledge and investment strategies to further assist them becoming net zero by 2040.
Yell has superb tidal resource around both sides of the island precisely where Nova Innovation’s existing projects are located, but, these leases only scratch the surface in terms of potential. The Carbon Neutral Island Project could be revolutionary in helping Yell realise its renewable resource potential.
Nova has well-established links with Yell having installed the world’s first offshore tidal array in Bluemull Sound in 2016 powering local homes and businesses ever since. In Yell Sound, they were awarded an Options Agreement by Crown Estate Scotland to develop a 15MW tidal array, their largest tidal array to date, which will meet over a third of household electricity demand in Shetland.
In Islay, Nova Innovation's detailed developments are well underway for the revolutionary 3MW Òran na Mara project to produce scotch whisky distilled by tidal power. Islay and Jura are currently home to 10 of Scotland’s finest whisky distilleries and, as Scotland transitions toward its commitment to net zero emissions by 2045, the whisky industry is adapting, with many distilleries looking at developing alternative zero carbon solutions.