How Trump Wrecked Scotland Sand Dune System to Build Golf Course

  • Before-and-after photos show the environmental damage caused by Donald Trump’s Scottish golf course.
  • Trump opened the course on a sand dune system in 2012 despite fierce local opposition.
  • The course is the subject of a legal action intended to find out whether Trump obtained the money to build it from Russia.

In 2006, the New York real-estate magnate Donald Trump purchased a stretch of coastal land in Aberdeenshire, northeast Scotland, for the purpose of building “the world’s best golf course.”

There was noisy local opposition to the plan, but Trump had a relationship with Scotland’s then-first minister, Alex Salmond. In 2008, the Scottish government stepped in to approve his plan, touting the economic benefits the resort would bring to the country.

Despite warnings in 2008 that the construction of an 18-hole course would destroy the sand dunes around it, Trump had pressed ahead, saying: “We will stabilize the dunes. They will be there forever. This will be environmentally better after it [the course] is built than it is before.”

But as conservationists predicted, the part of the highly sensitive ecosystem on which Trump International Golf Links was built was largely ruined. Officials announced in December 2020 that the coastal sand dunes Trump’s the resort would lose their status as a protected environmental site because they had been partially destroyed.

Insider has obtained before-and-after photos from the satellite technology firm Maxar, which show the dramatic destruction of the prized Foveran Links sand dunes between March 2010 and April 2021.

The course has stayed in the headlines thanks to a legal action working its way through the Scottish courts intended to discover why Trump has tolerated the loss of $315 million from his golf businesses. The construction money was sourced through loans that were not hedged, leading to further losses. Trump’s son, Eric Trump, once said that they obtained the money they needed for golf course development from Russia. (He has also since denied he said that.)

The environmental campaign group Avaaz has sued in the Scottish courts in an attempt to force the government to issue an “unexplained wealth order” that would demand details of Trump’s golf financing.

March 2010

Satellite images taken in March 2010 of Foveran Links show the dunes in their full unspoiled form:

Overview of the area where Donald Trump's Aberdeenshire golf course would be built, taken in March 2010.

Overview of the area where Donald Trump’s Aberdeenshire golf course would be built, taken in March 2010.

Satellite image © 2021 Maxar Technologies.


The site contained areas of mobile sand and dunes that were semi-fixed in position, as well as marshes, dune grassland, and low-lying areas called dune slacks, according to a government document designating Foveran Links as a site of special scientific interest.

A closer image of the dunes shows some of these features in more detail:

A closer view of the area containing the sand dunes at Foveran Links where Donald Trump's Aberdeenshire golf course would be built.

A closer view of the area containing the sand dunes at Foveran Links where Donald Trump’s Aberdeenshire golf course would be built.

Satellite image © 2021 Maxar Technologies.


NatureScot, Scotland’s conservation agency, said that Foveran Links was “a very high-quality example of a sand dune system characteristic of north east Scotland, and was of exceptional importance for the wide variety of coastal landforms and processes.”

April 2021

Images taken of the course in April 2021 show how many of the sand dune features at the southern third of Foveran Links, where Trump’s golf course was built, had been partially destroyed.

Here is a general overview of the area:

An overview of the area containing Donald Trump's Aberdeenshire golf course, taken in April 2021.

An overview of the area containing Donald Trump’s Aberdeenshire golf course and the destroyed sand dune ecosystem, taken in April 2021.

Satellite image © 2021 Maxar Technologies


These side-by-side photos show a zoomed-in view of the 18-hole links course (right), along with what it looked like before the course was constructed (left):

Before-and-after photos of the coastal stretch of land where Donald Trump built his Aberdeenshire golf course.

Before-and-after photos of the coastal stretch of land where Donald Trump built his Aberdeenshire golf course.

Satellite image © 2021 Maxar Technologies.


‘They’ve just killed it as a natural environment’

Bob Ward, policy and communications director at LSE’s Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, explained to Insider earlier this year how building on top of the dunes had resulted in their destruction.

“Sand dunes are a dynamic system, they’re wind-driven, so they go backward and forwards,” he said.

“Building a golf course on top means you can’t have the dunes moving around, so they have to stabilize them. So they’ve essentially planted vegetation on top of them and put physical constraints on them so the dunes can’t move and it’s not a dynamic system anymore.”

“The argument the Trump International Golf Links used was that they’d protected them by stabilizing them. But essentially what they’ve done is they’ve just killed it as a natural environment.”

The Trump Organization did not respond to Insider’s request for comment.

The mystery of Trump’s all-cash purchases in Scotland

Trump International Golf Links was opened in 2012 but has been the center of a mystery ever since: How did Trump suddenly come up with hundreds of millions in cash to finance the purchase of the course, as well as a second one he bought in 2012?

He is reported to have spent hundreds of millions of dollars in cash buying and developing the resorts, neither of which have ever turned a profit.

James Dodson, a golf correspondent, has said that Eric Trump, Donald Trump’s son and a director at both the Scottish resorts, told him in 2014 that the Trump Organization had “all the funding we need out of Russia.” Eric Trump has strenuously denied making the claim. 

Campaign group Avaaz, which has raised concerns about the second course purchased in 2012, is challenging the Scottish government in court over its decision not to investigate the transactions. 

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