The Annual Report for Historic Environment Scotland (HES) offers updates as well as outlining HES’s commitments across a number of key agendas.
… For every £1 invested in 2022-23, projects….attracted a further £2.59 in additional investment…
HES writes:
As Scotland’s lead body for the historic environment, the report outlines HES’s commitments across a number of key agendas, including green recovery, tourism, outreach and learning, the circular economy, its role as a statutory consultee in the planning process and wider contribution to Scotland.
Key statistics include:
- Welcomed 3.3 million visitors to staffed sites
- 184,000 Historic Scotland members
- Invested £12.5 million through grants programme
- Dealt with 96% of regulatory activities within stated timescales
- Continued to reduce carbon emissions, emitting 20% less carbon than 2019-20
- Generated £640 million for the Scottish economy from heritage tourism
- Digitised and made available more than 132,000 images and files
During this period, the organisation has also launched new grant schemes to provide increased access to funding, as well as new partnerships. As part of supporting the contribution of the wider historic environment, grants schemes run by HES have helped to continue to fund the regeneration of local communities and to encourage repair and reuse in their local environment. For every £1 invested in 2022-23, projects funded by HES attracted a further £2.59 in additional investment.
HES is also continuing to invest in net-zero technologies and emission-reducing measures, including the planning of a unique facility to house the substantial HES archive. Archive House, which is expected to be in use from 2026, is the first public building to be designed under the NZPBS (Net Zero Public Building Standard), which considers not only the carbon emissions while in use, but also the emissions associated with the building materials and maintenance.
HES’s commercial income, which was greatly reduced during COVID, continued to experience further recovery, and helped to provide a wider contribution to Scotland’s economy in a sector worth over £640 million per annum to Scotland’s economy. HES is also on track with the rest of its scheduled high level masonry inspections, which is looking at the impact of climate change on sites at a high level, in combination with other factors. Re-openings and increased access took place following inspections, with over 88% of the estate accessible over the 2023 summer months.
The financial year, 2022-23 also saw the publication of the organisation’s new corporate plan, building on the parameters set out in HES’s first corporate plan, ‘Heritage for All’. Alongside the corporate plan, HES has published a number of other core corporate commitments, including the HES Responsible Tourism Framework, its five-year research strategy (2023-28) and its Green Recovery Statement for the Historic Environment.