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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 10 December 2025

10 Dec 2025 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Road Network (Connectivity and Economic Growth)

The Scottish Government’s 2015 infrastructure investment plan has been laid bare not just in the debate but numerous times in the chamber. The investment plan promised, among other things, two new major ferries, which would be operational by 2017 at a price of £90 million for both. It promised to invest in our harbours, yet Ardrossan harbour is still in limbo, and all the businesses around it are still waiting for compensation for the endless disruption. There is also the famous promise—the Conservatives are right to bring it to the fore today—that was a

“commitment to ... dual the A9 between Perth and Inverness by 2025”.

What has happened since 2015? The sad reality is that 48 people have died on that single road alone. The worst year on record was 2022, when 13 people lost their lives. I say gently to the Government that, no matter what the logistical or financial barriers are to finishing that road, surely there is a moral imperative, if nothing else, to get it done.

The road should have been dualled before now. If that can be done before 2035, that is even better. However, the problem that remains is: how many more people will die while we wait for the road to be completed?

The issue is not just with the A9. Let us look at the A96. Moray Council and the local chamber of commerce recently said that major developments such as ScotWind and the Inverness and Cromarty Firth green port are being held back by a failure to complete the dualling of that road.

Similarly, as others have mentioned, completing the dualling of the A77 and the A75 would massively improve not just the local economy but links between Scotland and Northern Ireland. That would keep heavy trucks off single-lane roads, improve road safety and, as Finlay Carson said, reduce carbon output in that part of the world.

Presiding Officer, do not get me started on the M8, where I seem to spend most of my free time these days. It is Scotland’s busiest road, with 150,000 people using it every day. It connects our largest city with our capital city. However, the road is now the contraflow capital of Scotland. Glasgow airport is left connected to Glasgow city solely by a road that resembles a car park at most times of the day.

What does that result in? CBI Scotland was quite clear with us. It said:

“Scotland’s motorways are the beating heart of our economy ... But motorway construction has slowed in recent years in a way that just doesn’t fit with our ambition for long-term, sustainable economic growth.”

I am sorry, but I have to disagree with Mr Johnson on EV cars. We all know that they are the future—they have a lower carbon footprint, they represent a step towards net zero and they will mean cleaner air for our children and less reliance on fossil fuels. However, the new policy to tax people who have bought an EV is utterly insane. It will hit rural economies harder than those anywhere else and will surely drive down uptake, not improve it.

I understand the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s conundrum in replacing fuel duty with some other source of income, but the proposed policy solution smells like a policy that has been drummed up in Whitehall by somebody who gets on the tube every day to work, not by somebody who has to make a 200-mile journey to the nearest maternity hospital. That is the reality of what happens when such policies are not thoroughly thought through. Do not forget that our EV industry is up against it. It is up against China and others, so why are we handing advantage to them on a plate?

Here is what we could be doing. We could be building better EV infrastructure. Why not offer sensible subsidies to move from gas to electric? Why not even cap the cost of charging EVs? It is not the consumers who need to change their behaviour—I am afraid that, in this case, it is Government ministers.

I will support the essence of the Conservative motion, because the EV tax is a step backwards, it is punitive and it is short-sighted. We need to dual the A9 and get on with it, and we need to unlock our regional and rural economies by building up and building better. I believe that no one and nowhere should be left behind. Both of Scotland’s Governments share responsibility for keeping our country moving.

16:23  

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-20057, in the name of Sue Webber, on connecting Scotland. I invite members who wish to participate to pre...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con
Interruption. Sorry—I am phoning someone by mistake. Scotland’s road network is the backbone of our connectivity and economic growth. Communities across Sco...
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab) Lab
I hear what the member is saying, and I totally accept the need for urgency, but it is not about passing laws; it is about planning and implementation. What ...
Sue Webber Con
No one objects to the plans for the A9. Everyone is desperate for that road to be dualled—yet here we are. Improved connectivity is not only about tarmac an...
The Cabinet Secretary for Transport (Fiona Hyslop) SNP
Will the member give way?
Sue Webber Con
If Ms Hyslop does not mind, I have quite a bit to say. If I have time, I will bring her in. Motorists cannot be expected to make the shift to EVs without h...
The Cabinet Secretary for Transport (Fiona Hyslop) SNP
This Government has made significant investment to improve Scotland’s trunk road network and has a strong record of delivering road infrastructure projects. ...
Finlay Carson (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con) Con
Will the cabinet secretary give way?
Fiona Hyslop SNP
No. Other recently completed projects include the Haudagain improvement in Aberdeen, the A737 Dalry bypass and the first two sections of the A9 dualling pro...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
Will the cabinet secretary give way?
Fiona Hyslop SNP
I have only five minutes, and I have a lot of ground to cover, because we are doing so much. Since announcing in December 2023 our delivery plan to dual the...
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab) Lab
It gives me great pleasure to open for Labour in the debate, given that I have acquired transport as part of my economy, business and fair work brief. I thin...
Douglas Ross (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
Will the member give way?
Daniel Johnson Lab
I am happy to give way, but it will have to be brief.
Douglas Ross Con
Daniel Johnson mentioned rest stops. There is a rest stop on the A9 that provides a useful food van, but Transport Scotland will not allow a sign to be put u...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I can give you the time back, Mr Johnson.
Daniel Johnson Lab
On the face of it, the member’s suggestion sounds eminently sensible. It is about getting into the small details, which can make a big difference. If we want...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con
Will the member give way?
Daniel Johnson Lab
It will have to be very brief. Interruption. Actually, I do not really have time. I come on to EV—
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con
Will the member give way?
Daniel Johnson Lab
I am afraid that I cannot. I say politely to members of both parties that oppose the EV tax that, while the objections are understandable, we have taxation ...
Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green) Green
Speaking as a motorist, I welcome sensible investment in our roads, but building roads is not the only way to generate economic growth, and roads are not eve...
Finlay Carson Con
Will the member take an intervention?
Mark Ruskell Green
Unfortunately, I do not think that I have time to take interventions. Of course, buses use the roads too, but the unprecedented growth in traffic and conges...
Finlay Carson Con
Will the member take an intervention on that point?
Mark Ruskell Green
Do I have time, Presiding Officer?
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I can give you some time back.
Finlay Carson Con
Briefly, the economic impact assessment for the A75 noted that full dualling would generate £5 billion-worth of benefits, including £700 million from reduced...
Mark Ruskell Green
Every project needs to be considered on its own merits. If the member were to look at the A9, he would see that its cost benefit ratio did not stack up initi...
Jamie Greene (West Scotland) (LD) LD
The Scottish Government’s 2015 infrastructure investment plan has been laid bare not just in the debate but numerous times in the chamber. The investment pla...