Press release: Scottish Borders ban sky lanterns & helium balloons
The latest Scottish local authority has voted to ban the release of sky lanterns and helium balloons on public land. Scottish Borders Council voted unanimously today at a meeting of the full council (Thursday 14 December 2023) to impose “a complete ban on the release of Sky Lanterns and Helium Balloons from any and all of the land it owns”.
Most Scottish local authorities have a similar ban in place and Borders Council is the latest to recognise the risk to animal life as well as the natural environment.
Sky lanterns are constructed using a bamboo frame with a naked flame which takes the lantern into the air.
The primary risk to animal life is through ingestion. Both sky lanterns and helium balloons can asphyxiate and ultimately kill any animal that tries to eat one. An additional risk posed by ingestion is skin or organ perforation due to the sharpness of a damaged frame.
There is no means of controlling a released sky lantern or helium balloon. The distance they travel can be miles dependent on the sky lantern’s fuel and the strength and direction of the wind.
The frame of a sky lantern poses the risk of entanglement and can be as deadly as a snare to any animal trapped in one.
Sky lanterns also pose a significant fire risk. With no control over where they land if still lit they are particularly dangerous during the drier summer months. A massive fire destroyed a recycling plant in the Midlands and is thought to have been caused by sky lanterns.
Speaking shortly after the vote Animal Concern spokesperson Graeme Corbett said:
“We are delighted Scottish Borders Council has taken this important step. Sky lanterns and helium balloons pose an appalling risk to animal life whether farmed, domestic or wild as well as to our built and natural environment.”
“We’ve seen the damage they can do elsewhere in the UK and around the world. This important step forward helps minimise the risk of that here in Scotland.”
“It isn’t only local authorities who have recognised the dangers of sky lanterns and helium balloons. Organisations as diverse as animal welfare charities like Animal Concern, the National Farmers Union, the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service, Keep Scotland Beautiful, and Glastonbury music festival all say they carry more risks than they’re worth.”
“With another local authority using what powers it has to prohibit these fire hazards, inevitably attention will shift to the Scottish and UK Governments to follow the leadership local government has shown, and restrict if not prohibit the release of sky lanterns and helium balloons across Scotland. We call on them to act swiftly. Successive local authorities have taken things as far as they can, it is now up to central government to pick up where they’ve left off”.
Notes:
Animal Concern is a charity registered in Scotland (SC050422) which dates back to 1876 as the Scottish Anti-Vivisection Society and has campaigned on blood sports, seal shooting and the fur trade. More recently, in addition to sky lanterns and helium balloons, Animal Concern has campaigned on fireworks, rodenticides, salmon farming and phasing out greyhound racing in Scotland.
Click here for a link to the agenda for Scottish Borders Council (see item 13).
For more information please contact Graeme Corbett on 07840 377532.
Ends.