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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Sarah Ward & Jordan Shepherd

Scots community are saving thousands after buying disused petrol station

A village bought up a disused petrol station and carried out a £320,000 renovation to prevent fuel poverty - and is now saving families £1,000 a year. Newcastleton, Scottish Borders, the closest village to the English border, was deprived of a fuel station for a decade, forcing residents, most of whom are self-employed or work in agriculture, to make long journeys to fill up.

Trade suffered in the village, which had at one point had two fuel stations, until in 2015 talks began about reopening one. The fuel station is now processing 21,000 litres per week, and between 400,000 and 500,000 litres per year.

A windfall of £320,000 in funding including from the National Lottery paid for the fuel station renovations - including a new forecourt and fuel tanks. Community council chairman Greg Cuthbert, 58, said many families have three or four cars.

He said the elderly population depended on their cars as only around four buses a day pass through the village. All the money is reinvested in the village, and Gulf rents the fuel station on the condition it is properly staffed and kept clean.

Dad-of-two Greg said: "People usually have three or four cars per family, it's mental. "It has been a huge saving, around £900 to £1,000 a year.

Community council chairman Greg Cuthbert at Newcastleton Community Fuel Pump (SWNS)

"There's so much more expense to being in a rural area. We live in a beautiful place, the kids can go out and play and you can leave doors unlocked.

"It's like the 1950s. Crime here is a rarity. Everybody got used to getting fuel in Carlyle or Hawick.

"With an elderly population, you would probably get someone taking the car there for them and bringing it back for them. They mostly use their cars in the local area.

"We are an agricultural area, people who live in a farming community were having to go into town to fill up jerry cans for quad bikes." Greg said they couldn't disclose how much they had bought the disused petrol station for as it was a private sale.

Grandad-of-four Greg, who worked as a mobile hairdresser, said: "It has been fantastic. The community has been here 250 years.

"It is definitely the way to go. We have got a good relationship with the fuel supplier.

"We rent them the fuel station and they manage it. It's the first time it's ever been done.

"Gulf run it and we don't have a great deal of risk." The last petrol station closed around 15 years ago and badly impacted the local economy.

There are now two unleaded petrol pumps, two diesel pumps, an electric vehicle point, and air and windscreen wash.
Greg added: "We didn't sell fuel for ten years. There was a decline in shopping in the village because people would go to Carlyle to shop and fill up.

"A lot of footfall has come back, you can see businesses thriving. It's been great for the village. It's been a godsend."

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