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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 27 January 2016

27 Jan 2016 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Fuel Poverty

To conclude, in my remarks I have set out what the Scottish Government has done, is doing and plans to do in the future to tackle fuel poverty. I believe that that demonstrates our firm commitment to improving energy efficiency and eradicating fuel poverty in Scotland.

I move amendment S4M-15432.3, to leave out from “is deeply concerned” to end and insert:

“recognises the Scottish Government’s commitment to eradicate fuel poverty as far as reasonably practicable through support and funding within the powers available to the Scottish Ministers, but notes that the Scottish Government has no control over the above-inflation price increases by energy companies that have pushed up fuel bills; notes the latest fuel poverty statistics published in the Scottish House Condition Survey, which show that the efforts of the Scottish Government have helped to contain fuel poverty levels in Scotland that would have been around 9.5%, instead of 35%, if fuel prices had only risen in line with inflation between 2002 and 2014; calls on energy companies to pass on wholesale cost savings to customers at the earliest opportunity and to the fullest extent possible for both gas and electricity customers; welcomes the Scottish Government’s continued investment in energy efficiency and fuel poverty and the contrast with the UK Government’s withdrawal of any taxpayer-funded support for fuel poverty in England since 2013; recognises that the Scottish Government has allocated over half a billion pounds since 2009 to fuel poverty and energy efficiency programmes, helping the most vulnerable people in society heat their homes affordably, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and supporting jobs; welcomes that the Scottish Government has maintained current budgets in 2016-17 by allocating more than £103 million to tackle fuel poverty and climate change next year in the face of ongoing spending pressures and UK Government cuts; welcomes that this funding will be used to help install energy efficiency measures in 14,000 homes, building on the more than 900,000 measures delivered since 2008 and that this record investment is reflected in the big improvements in the energy efficiency of Scotland’s housing, with the share of homes rated EPC band C and above having increased by 71% since 2010; further welcomes that the Scottish Government has designated energy efficiency as a National Infrastructure Priority, supported by a commitment to multiyear funding and new powers to design and implement Energy Company Obligations in Scotland, and is therefore providing a long-term commitment to tackling fuel poverty head on.”

16:09  
References in this contribution

Motions, questions or amendments mentioned by their reference code.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (John Scott) Con
The next item of business is a debate on motion S4M-15432, in the name of Jim Hume, on fuel poverty. I invite members who wish to speak in the debate to pres...
Jim Hume (South Scotland) (LD) LD
As we speak, there are approximately 1.8 million people in Scotland—that is 35 per cent of all Scottish households—who are in fuel poverty this winter. Of th...
Mike MacKenzie (Highlands and Islands) (SNP) SNP
Will the member give way?
Jim Hume LD
I hope that we will have some cross-party support from the member.
Mike MacKenzie SNP
I am glad that the member said that to a large extent the matter is beyond the Scottish Government’s control, given that the Government has no control over e...
Jim Hume LD
I disagree with the member, in that the Scottish Government is proposing a 13 per cent cut in its spending on fuel poverty. I will come on to that in due cou...
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP
I welcome the opportunity to take part in the debate. I agree with some of Jim Hume’s comments, including that Scotland is an energy-rich country and that th...
Jim Hume LD
The minister said that this Government is doing everything that it can. The cabinet secretary and another minister stated that £119 million was going into ta...
Margaret Burgess SNP
I will. As I have explained before, in the current year, we set aside and are spending £119 million on fuel poverty. The £119 million figure included £15 mil...
Gavin Brown (Lothian) (Con) Con
Since the draft budget was published in December, on how many occasions has the minister formally requested more money for fuel poverty from the Deputy First...
Margaret Burgess SNP
The overall budget of Scotland has been cut. We got the same allocation this year as we got last year. There are pressures on all the budgets. Interruption. ...
Margaret Burgess SNP
I will take no more interventions. When I came in here, I heard the Liberals shouting for more money for education. I now hear them shouting for more money ...
Claudia Beamish (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
Will the minister give way?
Margaret Burgess SNP
I cannot take an intervention; I am in my last minute. Work is under way to develop SEEP, and we continue to engage with stakeholders including the fuel pov...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
Please bring your remarks to a close.
Margaret Burgess SNP
To conclude, in my remarks I have set out what the Scottish Government has done, is doing and plans to do in the future to tackle fuel poverty. I believe tha...
Ken Macintosh (Eastwood) (Lab) Lab
Last year, the number of excess winter deaths in Scotland was the highest in more than a decade—a staggering 4,060. “Excess winter deaths” is an uncomfortabl...
Nigel Don (Angus North and Mearns) (SNP) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Ken Macintosh Lab
I will, for Mr Don.
Nigel Don SNP
I wonder what fraction of those whom Mr Macintosh has just mentioned, when they drew up that target, expected fuel prices to increase quite disproportionatel...
Ken Macintosh Lab
Either you sign up to the targets and claim credit, as you constantly do, for the work that you are doing, or not at all. I expected better from Mr Don than ...
Mike MacKenzie SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Ken Macintosh Lab
I will in a second. John Swinney’s budget decision not only came out the day after those terrible fuel poverty figures did, it came out a week after the Fir...
Mike MacKenzie SNP
I am grateful to Mr Macintosh for taking an intervention. The SNP Government has spent over £500 million on fuel poverty measures since 2009. I am very inter...
Ken Macintosh Lab
I thought that the amendment was feeble, but that intervention was even worse. As part of the Government that, along with the Liberal Democrats, set this tar...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
You must draw to a close, please.
Ken Macintosh Lab
It bears comparison with the SNP’s record. This is not just a social problem or about poverty—it is about the environment, too. I will end on this note. It ...
Gavin Brown (Lothian) (Con) Con
I congratulate the Liberal Democrats on bringing forward this extremely important debate on a subject that, I think, has become a bit of an Achilles’ heel fo...
Mike MacKenzie SNP
I have a great deal of respect for Mr Brown’s financial literacy. Can he lay out the Conservative’s plans for eradicating fuel poverty and tell me how much t...
Gavin Brown Con
Mr MacKenzie’s approach seems to be: if two bad interventions do not make the point, try three. I sat on a cross-party committee with some of Mr MacKenzie’s...