The Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (Fish Farming) (Scotland) Amendment (No. 2) Order 2012
Citation, commencement and application1.
(1)
This Order may be cited as the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (Fish Farming) (Scotland) Amendment (No. 2) Order 2012 and comes into force on 1st December 2012.
(2)
This Order applies to development commenced on or after the date on which this Order comes into force.
Amendment of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (Scotland) Order 19922.
(1)
(2)
In Part 6A (fish farming) of Schedule 1 (classes of permitted development)—
(a)
in Class 21A—
(i)
“(a)
the surface area of the waters covered by the equipment comprising the fish farm is, or would as a result of the replacement or installation of finfish pens be, greater than 15,000 square metres;”; and
(ii)
“(aa)
in the event of the equipment falling into disrepair or becoming damaged, adrift, stranded, abandoned or sunk in such a manner as to cause an obstruction or danger to navigation, such works (including lighting, buoying, raising, repairing, moving or destroying the whole or any part of that equipment) as may be needed to remove the obstruction or danger to navigation must be carried out;”;
(b)
in Class 21B—
(i)
omit “and” following paragraph (2)(d)(ii); and
(ii)
“; and
(f)
in the event of the equipment falling into disrepair or becoming damaged, adrift, stranded, abandoned or sunk in such a manner as to cause an obstruction or danger to navigation, such works (including lighting, buoying, raising, repairing, moving or destroying the whole or any part of that equipment) as may be needed to remove the obstruction or danger to navigation must be carried out.”;
(c)
“(aa)
in the event of the equipment falling into disrepair or becoming damaged, adrift, stranded, abandoned or sunk in such a manner as to cause an obstruction or danger to navigation, such works (including lighting, buoying, raising, repairing, moving or destroying the whole or any part of that equipment) as may be needed to remove the obstruction or danger to navigation must be carried out;”;
(d)
“(bb)
in the event of the equipment falling into disrepair or becoming damaged, adrift, stranded, abandoned or sunk in such a manner as to cause an obstruction or danger to navigation, such works (including lighting, buoying, raising, repairing, moving or destroying the whole or any part of that equipment) as may be needed to remove the obstruction or danger to navigation must be carried out;”;
(e)
in Class 21E, in paragraph (3)—
(i)
renumber the third, fourth and fifth sub-paragraphs respectively as sub-paragraphs (c), (d) and (e);
(ii)
omit “and” following the fourth sub-paragraph; and
(iii)
“; and
(f)
in the event of the equipment falling into disrepair or becoming damaged, adrift, stranded, abandoned or sunk in such a manner as to cause an obstruction or danger to navigation, such works (including lighting, buoying, raising, repairing, moving or destroying the whole or any part of that equipment) as may be needed to remove the obstruction or danger to navigation must be carried out”; and
(f)
in the interpretation section of Part 6A, in paragraph (2) omit “or of equipment of a fish farm,” and “or equipment”.
St Andrew’s House,
Edinburgh
This Order amends the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (Scotland) Order 1992 (“the 1992 Order”). Schedule 1 to the 1992 Order specifies classes of development to which permitted development rights apply. Where such rights apply, an application for planning permission is not needed. This Order alters permitted development rights within Classes 21A to 21E of Schedule 1 to the 1992 Order. Article 2(2) amends these Classes to include an additional condition relating to the removal of obstructions or dangers to navigation. In addition article 2(2)(a)(i) alters the limitation in Class 21A so that development is not permitted by that Class if the surface area of the waters covered by equipment of the fish farm is, or would be, greater than 15,000 square metres.