The opt-in new partnership seeks to increase contributions to £7500 per MW on top of the £5000 per MW already in place.
The opt-in new partnership seeks to increase contributions to £7500 per MW on top of the £5000 per MW already in place.
But can the polls be trusted when all the Highland constituencies are brand new after boundary changes?
Thousands of jobs at the Green Freeport in the next decade is fuelling the need for new homes but funding construction is the issue.
All the Holyrood parties SNP, Labour, Conservative, Liberal Democrats and Alba were involved – except the Greens are against the project.
Laura Hansler says ‘it is only a matter of time before we are faced with catastrophic consequences’.
SNP, Labour and Tories lay out plans that would impact north in their mission to win votes.
Voters were allowed just 43 days to decide who is best suited to form the next UK government amid all the problems facing the country.
Highland Council’s multibillion-pound vision would see investment in roads, schools, housing and renewables.
The local authority issues a paper looking at how renewable companies could help deliver the new homes.
The new school is set to be opened just after the 2026 summer holidays while the old school will be demolished.
The bold move would see empty homes repurposed and put back on the market alongside if people commit to living locally.
New figures from Transport Scotland show single carriageways on the road are twice as deadly as dualled sections.
There were 199 injuries and 15 deaths on single carriageways while on dual carriageways that fell to 114 injuries and seven deaths.
The Chamber wants the next occupant of No 10 ‘to fully embrace the Highlands’ position at the centre’ of the just transition.
From surprising his own MPs with a snap election to ditching candidates and the resignation of Douglas Ross – can anything go right for Rishi Sunak?
They are currently predicting wins for Liberal Democrats and the SNP
The organisation ‘BID are collecting information on gull disturbance incidents in the city centre during the summer of 2024’.
Just 175 eggs were removed in Inverness city centre compared to 1950 last year after New NatureScot guidance led to delays.
Freeport chief executive Calum MacPherson says the ‘the public and private sectors coming together for the long-term benefit of the Highlands’.