Scottish gold mine in doubt
Plans to mine more than £110m worth of gold in the Scottish Highlands have hit a serious setback after planners at Loch Lomond national park today said the application should be refused.
With gold prices soaring, the mining company Scotgold wants to dig out 700kg of gold and 17 tonnes of silver a year over the next decade from an unworked mine called Cononish, which sits near Tyndrum, just inside the north-eastern boundary of the national park.
The proposal has been enthusiastically supported by local councillors and appeared to have been positively received by the national park. But following objections from conservationists and countryside groups, Gordon Watson, the park's director of planning, has recommended the proposal be rejected.
More: Scottish gold mine in doubt | Environment | guardian.co.uk
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Nae luck!
Plans to mine more than £110m worth of gold in the Scottish Highlands have hit a serious setback after planners at Loch Lomond national park today said the application should be refused.
With gold prices soaring, the mining company Scotgold wants to dig out 700kg of gold and 17 tonnes of silver a year over the next decade from an unworked mine called Cononish, which sits near Tyndrum, just inside the north-eastern boundary of the national park.
The proposal has been enthusiastically supported by local councillors and appeared to have been positively received by the national park. But following objections from conservationists and countryside groups, Gordon Watson, the park's director of planning, has recommended the proposal be rejected.
More: Scottish gold mine in doubt | Environment | guardian.co.uk
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Nae luck!
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