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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 24 January 2024

24 Jan 2024 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Green Economy
Lumsden, Douglas Con North East Scotland Watch on SPTV

I hear “nonsense” from the cabinet secretary, but today’s issue of The Press and Journal reported that “Big names” are due to join the

“North Sea exodus this year”,

with Apache, ExxonMobil and Dana Petroleum tipped as exit candidates. That is bad news for not just the north-east economy but the Scottish economy. This Government is making those companies feel as welcome as a hole in a lifeboat.

That is demonstrated by the letter from the chief executive of Ithaca to the First Minister, in which he spoke about the £8 billion investment in Rosebank and the contribution to the “whole Scottish economy”, as well as his disappointment that no Scottish minister welcomed the jobs that would be supported. He went on to say:

“Without support for oil and gas, our human capital and supply chain will be lost to the booming energy sector opportunities overseas thereby slowing down the energy transition”,

which is a point that Fergus Ewing has made.

So much for the new deal for business—and it is telling that no one from the energy industry was invited on to the group. The SNP is turning its back on the north-east again and again and showing that it simply cannot be trusted.

We also know how important nuclear power is to the green agenda, by creating energy in a clean and sustainable way. Nuclear energy currently provides around 15 per cent of the UK’s energy needs, but that proportion has fallen since the 1990s, when it was closer to 25 per cent. We must be much more open to discussing with the industry the place of nuclear alongside renewable energy to meet our energy needs. We are all agreed that we need to be less reliant on oil and gas, but the Scottish Government has ruled out a key source of energy that could contribute to that picture. We believe that that is a short-sighted decision that will adversely affect the ability of Scotland to take its place as a leader within the UK in clean and low carbon energy production. Renewables are great, but they are not enough to meet our changing energy needs.

Of course, when we look at green economic growth, we must also consider many of the fantastic smaller-scale businesses that have grown up in the sector. Green growth is now a key driver in our economy, and we should do more to support it.

In particular, I will mention the social enterprises that currently work throughout Scotland, contributing to our economy and providing employment and community services, as well as contributing to the green agenda. Such businesses have grown up while we have known about the need for us to be more environmentally aware, and they provide valuable services, including upcycling projects, services that collect garden waste and deal with compost, and those that provide wood and timber. We are also seeing more and more community energy production through smaller-scale wind power and hydropower schemes. I am sure that the cabinet secretary will join me in paying tribute to those businesses across Scotland and will recognise that we can do much more to support them.

We welcome the Scottish Government’s commitment to publish papers such as the green industrial strategy. Although I am sure that we will not agree with everything that the Government says, I welcome the debate and the focus on such important issues relating to our economy. We want more to be done—more investment and more understanding of how businesses that currently work in the energy sector want to adapt and change. We should not demonise particular sectors. Instead, we should work with them to move towards a greener future.

We want the Scottish Government to adopt green hydrogen as a fuel source, to be an early adopter of the technology and to move quickly to secure investment in that area, which is why it was disappointing to hear the cabinet secretary confirm at the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee’s meeting yesterday that the remaining 90 per cent of the promised green hydrogen fund will not be available in the coming financial year. We want there to be investment in the expanding offshore wind sector and in the onshore wind sector, in partnership with local communities. We also want there to be support for our oil and gas sector, which is a key ally as we move towards greener energy provision in Scotland.

There are so many aspects to our green economy and to green economic growth that it is difficult to cover them all in the time that I have. We must go further and do more. The Green-SNP coalition Government is failing to deliver on its priorities and targets. It has cut vital budgets and is spending money on vanity projects instead of focusing on what really matters. It is isolating key partners, such as the oil and gas sector and house builders, while shutting others out completely, such as those involved in nuclear and green hydrogen. When it comes to green energy, Scotland has so much potential, but, with the SNP and the Greens in Government, that potential could well be squandered.

I move amendment S6M-11945.2, to leave out from “is deeply” to end and insert:

“notes that the recent Scottish Budget for 2024-25 is anti-growth and will damage Scotland’s ability to create a thriving green economy by stymying investment, cutting enterprise funding, and by placing a higher tax burden on Scotland compared to the rest of the UK; further notes that the education system is not aligned with the opportunities that the green economy offers; believes that the Scottish Government’s opposition to new oil and gas exploration licences will damage the economy of the north east, and that the Scottish National Party administration’s inability to deliver economic growth has hindered the development of green jobs and a just transition, and calls on the Scottish Government to back the 93,000 oil and gas sector jobs and ensure that they are not abandoned, to end its opposition to nuclear and to ensure that the financial costs of the transition to net zero do not disproportionately fall upon individuals, families and communities.”

15:17  
References in this contribution

Motions, questions or amendments mentioned by their reference code.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-11945, in the name of Neil Gray, on investing in Scotland’s green economy. I invite members who wish to s...
The Cabinet Secretary for Wellbeing Economy, Fair Work and Energy (Neil Gray) SNP
The transition to net zero will transform the global economy. For us, in Scotland, it presents enormous economic opportunities together with benefits for our...
Fergus Ewing (Inverness and Nairn) (SNP) SNP
I agree with all that the cabinet secretary has said. Does he agree that, in order to maximise the efficacy of the opportunities in the green economy, we mus...
Neil Gray SNP
I agree with much of that. The traditional oil and gas energy companies will be putting private investment, which we need, into the renewables sector. I abso...
Douglas Lumsden (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
Will the cabinet secretary give way?
Neil Gray SNP
I am mindful of the time, but I will take one further intervention.
Douglas Lumsden Con
Does the cabinet secretary agree that cutting the just transition fund by 75 per cent is detrimental to reaching net zero?
Neil Gray SNP
The investments and the choices that we have had to make in the budget are a direct consequence of the choices and underinvestment that have come from UK Gov...
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Neil Gray SNP
I will come back to Mr Whittle later if time allows. That strategic public investment in offshore wind will catalyse private investment in the infrastructur...
Michelle Thomson (Falkirk East) (SNP) SNP
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention on that point?
Neil Gray SNP
I will come back to the member later if time allows. We need urgent action from the UK Government to buy in to meeting our net zero targets and securing the...
Douglas Lumsden (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
This is an important debate to shine a light on our move towards a more green economy and on how the Scottish Government should be doing more to support the ...
The Minister for Zero Carbon Buildings, Active Travel and Tenants’ Rights (Patrick Harvie) Green
Douglas Lumsden knows—or at least he should do—that Greens, like the whole Scottish Government, are extremely enthusiastic about the potential for green hydr...
Douglas Lumsden Con
I will come back later in my speech to the commitment on hydrogen and to how much the Scottish Government is cutting that. Regarding nuclear, the costs have...
Jim Fairlie (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP) SNP
Will Douglas Lumsden take an intervention?
Douglas Lumsden Con
I will make some progress first. Cuts are being made to vital industries that are leading in the areas of green economic growth, and the budget also makes S...
Neil Gray SNP
Will Douglas Lumsden give way?
Douglas Lumsden Con
I will continue a little further. Those cuts will affect our ability to grow the economy and make the transition to a greener future more difficult because,...
Michelle Thomson SNP
Will Douglas Lumsden take an intervention?
Douglas Lumsden Con
I will give way to Michelle Thomson.
Michelle Thomson SNP
I remind Douglas Lumsden that, with regard to capital expenditure, the Scottish Fiscal Commission projects a 20 per cent cut from the UK Government to the Sc...
Douglas Lumsden Con
Let us look at the budget that Michelle Thomson is asking me about. If we look at the Scottish Parliament information centre report, which is available for ...
Neil Gray SNP
Absolute nonsense.
Douglas Lumsden Con
I hear “nonsense” from the cabinet secretary, but today’s issue of The Press and Journal reported that “Big names” are due to join the “North Sea exodus thi...
Sarah Boyack (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
I wanted to be constructive when crafting my amendment, but then I saw a news article this morning that summarised the attacks on Labour that the cabinet sec...
Neil Gray SNP
Sarah Boyack says, quite rightly, that we need clarity and confidence. I was heavily critical of the current UK Government in its flip-flopping and reneging ...
Sarah Boyack Lab
I felt that it might not be appropriate to ask members to vote Labour, so I thought that it would be better to ask them to note our policy, then I would go t...
Neil Gray SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Sarah Boyack Lab
No, I will not. There has been a 48.5 per cent cut to the climate change budget; a 75 per cent cut to the just transition fund; a nearly 40 per cent cut to ...