British Columbia paused salmon farms. Why won’t Scotland?
MSPs must decide whether to expand salmon farming or pause growth to protect Scotland’s endangered wild salmon and marine ecosystems.
MSPs must decide whether to expand salmon farming or pause growth to protect Scotland’s endangered wild salmon and marine ecosystems, says Nick Underdown from Wildfish
The Future of Scotland's salmon industry in the @heraldscotland.bsky.social 7/7
www.heraldscotland.com/opinion/2585...
15.02.2026 23:28
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The Future of Scotland's salmon industry: Why we're looking at the sector now
The Herald launches a new series examining Scotland’s salmon industry, from expansion and exports to welfare, regulation and mortalities.
It's the UK's biggest export, but, with parliamentary scrutiny about to turn on it again, how is the salmon farming industry going on other measures?
Find links to the full @heraldscotland.bsky.social series, The Future of Scotland's salmon industry here 1/7
www.heraldscotland.com/news/2585247...
15.02.2026 22:58
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Could this idea solve the housing crisis and save nature?
A green entrepreneur has come up with a big idea, he calls “nature prosperity pump”, using woodland creation to drive a new wave of timber…
For day three of the @heraldscotland.bsky.social
New Highland Clearances Revisited series, I'm looking at where climate and net zero meets community and social issues...
For instance, could this idea solve the housing crisis 🏠 and save nature 🌿?
www.heraldscotland.com/news/2583712...
11.02.2026 08:17
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What a lovely post. Thanks, Kirsty. Made my day.
10.02.2026 20:18
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Will the north of Scotland's energy job boom ever happen?
Where are the clean energy jobs in the Highlands? The boom might not yet have happened, but there are signs of promise at the freeport - just no rush
Following in the footsteps of @heraldscotland.bsky.social's Caroline Wilson whose New Highland Clearances Revisited series has been a cracker this week.
Here's my first contribution: Will the north of Scotland's energy job boom ever happen? www.heraldscotland.com/opinion/2584...
10.02.2026 20:16
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How much renewables is too much? || Environment Correspondent @vickyallan.bsky.social
www.heraldscotland.com/opin...
21.01.2026 16:39
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Thanks to Spokes for sharing thoughts on the tram consultation.
If you're blocked by the paywall you might like to grab our great subscription deal, which ends on Monday
www.heraldscotland.com/subscribe/?u...
30.11.2025 12:02
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‘Toothless’ sewage enforcement sparks calls for national clean-water plan in Scotland
Experts warn Scotland’s sewage enforcement is “toothless”, urging a national plan to fix pollution, improve monitoring and protect communities.
Yesterday, @vickyallan.bsky.social wrote about the campaign to Clean Up Scotland's Sewage in @heraldscotland.bsky.social.
Get up to speed on how sewage pollution has become an issue, why communities are struggling with it & what must be done: www.heraldscotland.com/news/2563820...
24.11.2025 12:45
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Herald article headline & picture of bike & tram
Winds of change ♻️
Why cyclists fear dangers of new Edinburgh tram route
25th November
Start of article
When it comes to Edinburgh trams and cycling, I’m probably guilty myself of having focussed all too much on the matter of what the preferred route will mean for the leafy Roseburn Path.
It was one of the headline stories in our recent Future of Edinburgh Trams series – and, after cycling up and down its verdant avenue a few times, I wrote about what cyclists were saying about their much-loved route.
Some were vehemently against the plan. One described it as "the best commute you can imagine in a city". But Spokes, the Edinburgh cycling campaign, was broadly supportive of the compromise of a single track tram down the path, with cycle and walkway running alongside.
What was striking, though, was that, for Spokes, this wasn’t all about the Roseburn Path. They have a wider, more holistic view, and there were other issues that the cyclists involved in this campaign brought up - not least some of the dangers a new tram route might bring for cyclists.
Their response to the tram consultation reflects that wider view.
Spokes member, Ian Maxwell explains this as informed by the campaign's "previous experience during the planning and construction of Edinburgh’s existing tram routes".
"In 2007," he says, "we invited a Dutch planner with extensive knowledge of tram design to visit Edinburgh and review the proposals for Princes Street and Leith Walk.
“In his report Hans van der Stok from Goudappel mobility consultants commented that: 'The introduction of a tram system is a chance to emphasise other means of urban transport than private cars.' This would of course always include safe travel by bike”
We know that one of the aims of the tram extension is to reduce car traffic and to head off potential traffic growth in development areas such as Granton and the Bioquarter, and, if that is the goal, Spokes suggests that Edinburgh needs to follow the Dutch lead.
“The project,” Maxwell says, “should also be accompanied by complementary measures to further e…
part 2
For Spokes, tram introduction should be about creating “an integrated sustainable transport place-making project”.
“It shouldn’t be a tram-only project into which cycling and walking have to be slotted in once all the tramline decisions are taken, as happened with tramline 1 and to a considerable (though lesser) extent in the Newhaven extension.”
READ MORE:
The future of Edinburgh trams
Is Edinburgh tram consultation a ‘false choice’? Here’s what the evidence says
I cycled the Roseburn Path - here’s why so many cyclists love and defend it
Most strikingly, the campaign note that the proposals could bring new dangers for cyclists, and advocates that it should avoid introducing “any major new risks to cyclists”.
Spokes, for instance, highlights the fact that “the kerb-adjacent tram stops proposed at North Bridge and Newington would be intolerably dangerous, forcing on-road cyclists to cross tram tracks at an extremely dangerous angle”.
Maxwell also points out that on the route through North and South Bridge, cyclists are “immediately adjacent to tramlines” and observes that this had been “a cause of ongoing crashes, injuries and compensation claims at Haymarket and Princes Street”.
He writes: “Given very limited space on the road and for pedestrians, Spokes has suggested a range of alternatives, including single-track tram southbound and Market Street/ Pleasance northbound - there are many similar examples in Nottingham, Dublin and Amsterdam. Another alternative is the Mobility Plan’s long-term ambition of a tramline in Morrison Street and the Meadows, an option also favoured by Edinburgh World Heritage.”
Spokes also suggests that the proposed North Bridge tram stop should be replaced by stops at Waverley Steps and at North Bridge arcade. “This would serve,” Maxwell says, “Princes Street, Waverley Station and the Old Town more effectively than tram users having to walk from a congested tramstop in the middle of North Bridge.”
“Further sout…
end of article..
Other issues they raise include how, staff and patients at the Royal Infirmary will reach the tram stop.
And what of the Roseburn Path? Spokes has pointed out “plusses and minuses to both the Roseburn and the Orchard Brae route options”.
“On Roseburn," the campaign says, "the now planned single track running, with battery powered trams, certainly lessens the negatives there, but ecology and ambience suffer a loss even with mitigation measures.
"However, since it was Spokes who, years ago, argued to install tarmacked paths on disused railways which were entirely occupied by nature, including draining wetland cuttings, perhaps we cannot complain too much! The Orchard Brae option introduces new onroad tramline dangers, but of course leaves Roseburn untouched.”
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Finally, if Roseburn is the Council’s chosen option, Spokes urges that the plans include a cycle and pedestrian bridge over the tram and mainline railway, linking Roseburn path to the "fantastic new path to the canal", avoiding the long ramps down to road level and up again. "This bridge," Maxwell says, "is already an aspiration in the Council’s Mobility Plan and would be a truly transformative improvement in the city’s offroad network."
Roseburn has, of course, its other issues. It’s a wildlife corridor, home to badgers, foxes, rabbits, bats, and arguments about what happens there are much about green space and biodiversity as they are about bikes.
I am a fairly nervous cyclist. The virtue, for me, of the Roseburn Path, when I have used it, is partly that it feels safe, and away from the traffic - away from worrying about cars, buses or getting caught in tramlines.
But Roseburn is just one path, down a route I take infrequently, and, in reality, what would actually make me into a more regular cyclist is the feeling that all routes are safe, whatever part of town.
Nothing comes without d…
#EdinburghTram
@vickyallan.bsky.social @heraldscotland.bsky.social
interviews us
-> www.heraldscotland.com/opinion/2564...
@edi.bike @stephenjenkinson.bsky.social @chasbooth.bsky.social @davidfkey.bsky.social @sannedd.bsky.social @edinburghtrams.bsky.social @edinpl.bsky.social @edfoc.bsky.social
26.11.2025 17:52
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Final day of City of Edinburgh tram consultation. Wondering what the Roseburn Path route will mean for bikes? Here's what cyclists are saying... 🚴
17.11.2025 14:51
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☝️ TRAM
"fantastically comprehensive" Spokes response says @edi.bike
@spurtle.bsky.social @turvill.bsky.social @alastairdalton.bsky.social @threadinburgh.scot @lauralaker.bsky.social @smcarthurreports.bsky.social @holyroodmag.bsky.social @severincarrell.bsky.social @vickyallan.bsky.social
17.11.2025 09:33
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The Future of Edinburgh's Trams: Cost, impact, and what the next stop is
A decade on from a troubled launch, Edinburgh's trams have become a success, carrying a record number of passengers. Now, a proposed £2 billion…
Deadline for the City of Edinburgh consultation on the new tram build is midnight today. If you want a quick catch up on all the issues (plus a few long reads) - here's the @heraldscotland.bsky.social full series The Future of Edinburgh Trams from last week.
www.heraldscotland.com/business_hq/...
17.11.2025 12:45
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Should the war on cars extend to EVs?
Carspreading is increasingly being identified as a problem as SUVs grow bigger. But it's not only petrol and diesel, we need to worry about - it's…
Should the war on cars extend to SUV EVs?
As part of an @heraldscotland.bsky.social
Scotland's Energy Future series I've looked at the impact of carspreading, and ever larger SUVs on net zero and a just transition.
www.heraldscotland.com/news/2556826...
25.10.2025 07:18
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Heat pumps. How do we avoid clean heat becoming 'two-tier' and making people poorer?
The Herald examines the human cost of Scotland’s troubled heat pump rollout — and the risk of leaving households behind in the race to net zero.
Jobs, bills, heat pumps, fuel poverty. Scotland's stalling heat transition risks leaving people out in the cold, and industry uncertain. Where we are at - and the big ideas. 🔥
Part of an @heraldscotland.bsky.social series, Scotland's Energy Future
www.heraldscotland.com/news/2556624...
25.10.2025 07:01
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Do the jobs figures add up? What are the opportunities and the questions? What’s the plan for workers rights?
www.heraldscotland.com/opin...
@vickyallan.bsky.social
22.10.2025 16:00
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Could Galloway Dark Sky park lose its status because of windfarms lights? How do we fight climate change and make sure we hold onto other disappearing aspects of the natural world?
Fascinating chat with concerned Dark Sky Ranger, Matthew MvFadzean
29.08.2025 12:36
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'We’ve got encroaching forestry. It's swamping the town, economically, physically'
The land around Langholm is changing, driven by nature restoration ambitions, carbon and timber market. But it's a forestry scheme that has upset…
Cumulative forestry projects 'swamping' Langholm, say locals. The town is surrounded by land management changes. But the one upsetting some locals most is a conifer proposal for Warblaw. 🌲
My latest piece for @heraldscotland.bsky.social D&G series
www.heraldscotland.com/news/2541415...
26.08.2025 06:43
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Dumfries & Galloway has the second highest percentage of old people. But many young people choose to stay in the region - and love it
www.heraldscotland.com/news...
@vickyallan.bsky.social
25.08.2025 15:35
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