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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 18 December 2025

18 Dec 2025 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Fishing and Coastal Communities
Allan, Dr Alasdair SNP Na h-Eileanan an Iar Watch on SPTV

I am grateful for the opportunity to bring to the chamber an issue that matters to every fishing community in Scotland. It certainly matters to people in my island constituency, who have not been slow to raise it with me. I appreciate that the debate on my motion is the Parliament’s final item of business before the Christmas recess, so I am grateful to members who have stayed to take part in it. This is not the first time that the subject been raised in the Parliament but, as you will hear, there is good reason to raise it again.

In October this year, the United Kingdom Labour Government allocated its new United Kingdom-European Union fishing and coastal growth fund across the UK in a way that bears no relation whatsoever to the scale of Scotland’s fishing industry or, indeed, to the way in which such funds have been allocated in the past. Scotland consistently lands around 63 per cent of the UK’s total catch value, and more than 60 per cent of the UK’s seafood exports come from Scotland. However, the UK Labour Government has decided that, of the £360 million fund, only £28 million will make its way to Scotland’s coastal communities. The much smaller fishing industry in England is set to receive £300 million. Scotland has somewhere between half and two thirds of the UK’s fishing industry, but we will get less than an 8 per cent of the UK Government’s fund. That is because the funding has been divided up based on Scotland’s share of the UK’s human population—a fact that has nothing whatsoever to do with the scale of our fishing industry. Certainly, it has nothing to do with the proportions of landings, the value of exports or the total catch value for each country—nor does it have anything to do with precedent.

Prior to Brexit, the equivalent EU funding was split along the following lines: 46 per cent for Scotland, 36 per cent for England, 10 per cent for Northern Ireland and 8 per cent for Wales. That allocation recognised the significant economic contribution of Scotland’s fishing industry. I hope that colleagues across the chamber will recognise that the Labour UK Government’s decision to divide its new fishing fund using the Barnett formula is deeply flawed and does not provide our fishing communities across Scotland with the support that they need—indeed, the support that they were promised—after Scotland was taken out of the EU against our will.

The new UK fishing and coastal growth fund replaces the equivalent EU funding that was lost following Brexit. The Scottish Government requested £166 million of the £360 million fund and requested that it then be able to allocate its share to Scottish coastal communities, as fishing is a devolved issue.

I am afraid that the convoluted argument that Scottish Labour has offered to date on the issue—that the Scottish Government, in seeking to allocate our fair share of the funding in Scotland ourselves, is to blame for the situation where we receive only Barnett consequentials, rather than the equivalent proportion of the EU funding that we are no longer eligible for—does not hold water. The UK Government, by all accounts, refused to engage with devolved Governments on the issue in advance of, or indeed following, the allocation decision that was announced two months ago.

Labour Senedd members and MPs across the political spectrum at Westminster have criticised the UK Government’s allocation decision. Why are all Labour MSPs and indeed most Tory MSPs unwilling to do the same?

I had rather hoped that there would be no need to raise the issue again, given the pretty terrible reaction to the UK Government’s decision among Scottish fishing communities. However, the UK Government seems determined not to listen to reason on this occasion, despite many other notable policy U-turns in recent weeks.

In my constituency, Na h-Eileanan an Iar, fishing remains a vital part of our daily lives and local heritage, from Ness to Vatersay. In 2023, fishing in the Western Isles contributed more than £8 million in approximate gross value added to the Scottish economy. Its percentage share of the fishing sector’s economic contribution has grown by 8 per cent since 2016, despite the fact that the number of individuals who are employed in fishing in my constituency has dropped by 16 per cent in the past five years.

Fishing is a vital industry in the Western Isles and elsewhere, both economically and culturally, but it is one that requires sustained support given the challenges that the sector faces, for example as a result of Brexit’s implications for both exports and immigration and the consequent difficulty for some parts of the industry in recruiting crews. Increased administrative requirements, restrictions on labour mobility and the additional costs that are incurred in exporting to the EU have all had an impact.

Seafood industry representatives estimate that Brexit has led to a 30 per cent increase in the cost of transporting products and a 50 per cent increase in the cost of packaging, with export health certificates estimated to have cost UK food businesses some £60 million in 2021 alone. At the same time, 20 to 25 per cent of seafood industry vacancies remain unfilled, and the end to EU freedom of movement provisions has been a significant contributor to that.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The final item of business is a members’ business debate on motion S6M-19427, in the name of Alasdair Allan, on fairer funding allocation for Scotland’s fish...
Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP) SNP
I am grateful for the opportunity to bring to the chamber an issue that matters to every fishing community in Scotland. It certainly matters to people in my ...
Stephen Kerr (Central Scotland) (Con) Con
I note that Dr Allan referenced a lack of vocalised response to the apportionment of the support funds that he has identified. I want to make it absolutely c...
Alasdair Allan SNP
I am happy for Andrew Bowie’s words to be on the record and to accept what Stephen Kerr says about his stance and his party’s stance on the issue. In conclu...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
We move to the open debate. I call Tim Eagle.
Stephen Kerr Con
Hear, hear. 14:19
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I thank my colleague Stephen Kerr. This is the season of good will, so I want to end on a happy note, although, sadly, I have one negative point that I will...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP
Does the member accept that there are unprecedented pressures on the processing sector right now and that the decision has been taken in order to protect the...
Tim Eagle Con
I accept that the processors have made some comments on the issue, but I have had other stakeholders on the phone today, who have told me, “I can’t believe t...
Kenneth Gibson (Cunninghame North) (SNP) SNP
I congratulate my colleague Alasdair Allan on securing this debate and standing up for his constituents. Six months ago, Scotland’s fishing industry found i...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I advise Mr Gibson and other members that we have members online who are participating in the debate. I call one of them now—Karen Adam. 14:27
Karen Adam (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP) SNP
I am grateful to Alasdair Allan and congratulate him on bringing the debate to the chamber. The unfairness that his motion describes is felt from the Western...
Rhoda Grant (Highlands and Islands) (Lab) Lab
The SNP continues to complain about the fishing and coastal growth fund allocation, but it was devolved at the SNP’s request. It knew that devolved funding c...
Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP) SNP
I support Dr Allan’s motion. I want to highlight the impact that the UK Government’s choice of allocation for the UK EU coastal growth fund has had on our sm...
Alasdair Allan SNP
Does the member agree that some of what we have heard from members in previous speeches has been truly extraordinary in its attempts to blame Scotland for ha...
Emma Harper SNP
Absolutely. The twisting of the information is just a distraction from what is happening: the money is going predominantly to English fishermen when most of ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I call Jim Fairlie to respond to the debate. 14:37
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP
I thank Alasdair Allan very much for lodging the motion for debate, and I thank members for giving their views on this important issue. I am heartened by the...
Stephen Kerr Con
I think, however, that the minister ought to address the issues that Rhoda Grant raised. Can he confirm that, when the Scottish Government asked for the fund...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I can give you the time back, minister.
Jim Fairlie SNP
Patience, Mr Kerr. Tim Eagle said that we were “better off under the Tories”. Well, I can hardly say that that was the case, given the fact that the Tory Go...
Martin Whitfield (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
Will the minster give way?
Jim Fairlie SNP
I will take the member’s point in a second. I tried to talk to Dame Angela Eagle about this very point in an interministerial group meeting, but it was utte...
Martin Whitfield Lab
I am grateful to the minister for taking this intervention and for his kind compliments on my attending the debate—which is interesting in itself. Is what Rh...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
Always speak through the chair.
Jim Fairlie SNP
I say to Mr Whitfield what I said to Mr Kerr: patience. The decision is insulting to our vital fishing industry and coastal communities, and it demonstrates...
Stephen Kerr Con
Will the minister give way again?
Jim Fairlie SNP
Not at this time. On our engagement with the UK Government ahead of its announcement about the fund, we were clear that we expected the funding approach to ...
Stephen Kerr Con
Will the minister give way?
Jim Fairlie SNP
No, I will not. Make no mistake: the decision was made in London, and it treats Scotland as an afterthought. Since the UK Government made its announcement...