CONTROL over the revenue and management of Crown Estate resources in Scotland has been transferred to the Scottish Government.
The transfer, which formally took place yesterday, is part of the changes contained in the 2016 Scotland Act.
It means ministers at Holyrood now have control over thousands of hectares of rural land, around half of Scotland's foreshore and leasing the seabed for rights to renewable energy.
The assets were worth a total of £271.8 million in 2015/16 and generated a gross annual revenue of £14m.
The Scottish Government said the transfer will give communities a stronger voice over how those assets are managed.
Land reform secretary Roseanna Cunningham described it as a "historic day".
She added: "The management and resources of the Crown Estate now rest with the people of Scotland and we have a genuine, once in a lifetime opportunity, to use them to change the fabric of Scottish society, placing the needs of local and coastal communities at the centre of our long-term planning for these considerable assets.
"From today, decisions about both the day-to-day management and the future of the estate will be taken in Scotland."
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