Government, Health, Scotland, Society

A backlog of £860m exists for maintenance work to NHS buildings in Scotland…

NHS BUILDINGS IN SCOTLAND

A report has revealed that maintenance work costing almost £860 million needs to be carried out on NHS buildings in Scotland.

While the backlog of work for the NHS estate has fallen from more than £1 billion in 2011, the figures available for 2013 show ten hospitals in Scotland require £360 million of work to be carried out.

Aberdeen Royal Infirmary has the largest backlog, with maintenance work required amounting to £60.27 million.

The latest report, examining the condition of the NHS estate, calls for investment to be prioritised at Aberdeen Royal, Ninewells Hospital in Dundee, Edinburgh’s Western General, Dumfries and Galloway Royal Infirmary, Monklands Hospital, Crosshouse Hospital in Kilmarnock, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, the Royal Edinburgh Hospital, the Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife, and Glasgow’s Southern General.

The report found that despite ‘substantial capital investment over recent years’, 28 per cent of Scotland’s NHS buildings are more than 50 years old, with a further 26 per cent more than 30 years old.

While 68 per cent of the NHS estate was classed as being ‘functionally suitable’ for its current use, the report said that 26 per cent of buildings needed investment to improve their suitability, while 6 per cent required either major investment or to be replaced to make them fit for purpose.

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Britain, Economic, Energy, Environment, Government, Politics, Scotland

The development of hydro-electric power in the Scottish Highlands was a revolution…

A SECOND REVOLUTION?

Intro: An investment appraisal and feasibility study is currently underway between the Scottish Government and Scottish Power for a new development of hydro-electric storage at Cruachan, beside Loch Awe

The development of hydro-electric power in the Scottish Highlands was seen as a revolution. It provided for a big leap in living standards, not just because residents in northern Scotland could have a reliable and dependable supply of electricity to light and heat their homes, but also because it became an engine of growth for industry and commerce.

The First Minister in Scotland, Alex Salmond, has announced a second expansion of hydro power. In conjunction with a feasibility study being carried out by Scottish Power, a major utility company, the aims are to more than double the current generation of electricity. Some suggest this could amount to a second revolution.

The technical feasibility is investigating the costs involved in doubling the generating capacity of Scottish Power’s Cruachan pumped storage plant located beside Loch Awe.

In principle, an expansion of pumped storage would be hugely beneficial, because it is regarded as the only reliable means of storing wind energy – which gets generated at times when there is no demand for it. Increasing the storage capacity would help to make wind a far more reliable source of energy supply, and also by reducing carbon emissions.

However, we should not dismiss the fact that this is a feasibility study that will take up to two years to complete. The associated costs and employment creation potential of the project are, at this early stage, a rough guesstimate. It may turn out that the Cruachan expansion plans, like Scottish Power’s schemes for carbon capture and storage at Longannet, and its proposals for the Argyll Array offshore wind farm, are too technically difficult or too costly for it to go ahead.

For it to work (effectively) as a 1,000 megawatt storage battery for wind power, there is the additional problem that the reservoir halfway up Ben Cruachan will have to be increased in size quite dramatically. The obstacles in overcoming resistance from environmental campaigners should not be overlooked, either.

The Scottish Government appears to regard the project as one that is more likely than not to come to fruition. But, notwithstanding whether the project ever goes ahead or not, this will become an investment decision that will serve a valuable political purpose. That decision is to be made after the referendum for Scottish independence in September.

In this context, energy is a problematic issue for Mr Salmond. Expansion of Scottish renewables – which, undoubtedly, the Scottish Government will see as a major source for employment as well as cutting the country’s carbon footprint – is largely dependent on a subsidy which is mostly financed by energy consumers in England and Wales.

Implicit in the First Minister’s arguments is that, such will be England’s needs, the people and businesses south of the Border will be willing to continue paying their ‘foreign’ neighbour the subsidy in maintaining continuity of supply. That’s a difficult assumption to make and certainly holds no guarantee.

History may be tempted to record that if the hydro revolution being envisaged fails to materialise, Mr Salmond has cleverly waved a diversionary red flag for political purposes. We can only hope, though, that the project investment at Cruachan gets the green light.

Under an independent Scotland, energy policy would be under the direct control of the Scottish Government.

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Asia, China, Foreign Affairs, Taiwan

The meeting between China and Taiwan has symbolic meaning…

ASIA

Intro: Despite more than six decades of bitter hostilities, China and Taiwan came together recently in a diplomatic meeting in Nanjing. Its significance was hugely important

Following months of dogma and revival of old tensions in East Asia, an unexpected break in relations has occurred as representatives of China and Taiwan sat down together in Nanjing last week in an attempt to improve bilateral relations.

Little of substance was expected from the talks, but in retrospect that hardly mattered. More important was the symbolism.

Ever since Mao’s Red Army chased the nationalist Kuomintang into the sea in 1949, the two Chinas have been locked in antagonism. For the better part of six decades, two distinctly unique populations with the most ancient and intimate links have been embroiled in bitter hostility. On a couple of occasions now these hostilities have threatened to spill over into outright war.

Taiwan’s President, Ma Ying-jeou, was elected in 2008, but his political dream to bring Taiwan closer to the mainland has been embraced by Xi Jinping, the mainland’s President. Whilst the two sides met in Nanjing, the capital under Chiang Kai-shek, the significance is that all flags, maps or other visual reminders of Beijing’s longstanding claim to rule all China, including Taiwan, had been removed prior to the meeting. More significant – highly significant from Taiwan’s point of view – was the fact that both sides addressed each other by their official titles. With China never likely to relinquish or ever intending to modify its claim to the island, here is an instance where goodwill can still flourish even after decades of stalemate and diplomatic limbo.

In the wider context of the region, this meeting mattered. The ongoing disputes surrounding China’s claims to sovereignty over much of the East and South China Seas have caused tensions to rise to dangerous and unprecedented levels. The recent flashpoints over the group of uninhabited rocks – known to the Japanese as Senkaku, and to the Chinese as Diaoyu – have been under Japanese influence since the end of the 19th century. Now, though, they are being claimed and fiercely contested by China with increasing vehemence. Similar disagreements have set Vietnam and the Philippines at odds, too, against their giant and emerging superpower neighbour.

None of the disputes are anywhere near close to being resolved. But a chink of light through the quiet and mannerly discussions between old adversaries has raised hope that diplomacy may yet prevail.

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