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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I beg the Parliament’s forgiveness, as this is going to be quite a long response. Edward Mountain’s amendment 1 relates to the aims and purpose of deer management. It seeks to redefine one of the aims from furthering “the conservation of deer native to Scotland” to further...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
My apologies. My amendment 20 seeks to address the issues that were raised by members and stakeholders during stage 2 proceedings. I thank Mark Ruskell, Rhoda Grant and Rachael Hamilton, all of whom I met earlier this month to discuss those concerns, and I am grateful for the...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I have already stated the position on authorisations for a shotgun, and that is the position that we are at. However, I said in my opening remarks that that is something that can potentially be looked at in guidance. I would also point out that there are exemptions in the 199...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will start with Tim Eagle’s amendments 215 to 217. I am not sure that I understand why Tim Eagle is seeking to amend the bill in that way. At various points in the stage 1 debate, Mr Eagle outlined that he thought that the powers that NatureScot had were broad and too vague....
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The more the merrier—absolutely. On Mark Ruskell’s amendment 246, I appreciate the member’s intention to create a national deer management plan. Although we share the ambition to address rising populations, the amendment as drafted would lock us into a rigid five-year progr...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
It is not uncommon for such obligations to be registered against land. The Forestry and Land Management (Scotland) Act 2018 enables ministers to register certain notices on the land register or on the register of sasines, and nature conservation orders can be registered in tha...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will speak to my amendments 54 to 58 before turning to Mr Mountain’s amendments in the group. My amendments seek to do two things. First, they seek to provide reassurance that I have listened to the concerns that have been raised at stage 2 about the potential safety risks ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 May 2025
Common Ground Forum on Deer
Absolutely—100 per cent. I endorse that approach, and the work that is going on in Argyll and Bute. People are starting to get involved in a number of different things, right across Scotland. My colleague Ariane Burgess mentioned the Good Food Nation (Scotland) Act 2022—I am ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
We already do that for nature damage, so we are adding restoration to that requirement. That can already be done. The amendment that Mr Mountain has lodged would put in statute that there has to be an economic impact assessment. That is my understanding of what his amendment w...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I have already stated that, through the bill, we are bringing forward a national deer management plan and introducing new powers to take action where deer are preventing nature restoration and enhancement. Outwith the legislation, we are working hard to trial incentive schemes...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I apologise in advance, because there are a considerable number of amendments to get through in this group, which may take more than a couple of minutes. On amendment 132, it is unfortunate that Edward Mountain has decided to bring this issue back again and to try disrupt pro...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
NatureScot has to report to ministers on any issues as well. If a particular issue is of concern, it can come back to ministers. On amendments 234 and 235, I am not sure why Tim Eagle wants to amend the bill in that way. At various points in the stage 1 debate, the member out...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendments 152 and 153 would remove the word “fit” from the bill’s amendment of section 17A of the 1996 act. Fitness is about more than technical skill; it ensures that individuals are personally reliable and legally compliant when carrying out an activity that involves lethal...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Chamber
27 May 2025
Common Ground Forum on Deer
I genuinely thank the members who have participated in today’s debate. If I have time, I will try to get through some of the points that they have raised. I especially thank Elena Whitham for securing this very useful debate. Before I get into the detail of the discussion, I ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I cannot remember where I had got to. There is nothing to prevent land managers who wish to observe a close season for deer on their land, for traditional reasons, from doing so. Skilled practitioners, using best practice—I have read all that. The Parliament voted on that mat...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I absolutely accept stakeholders’ concerns on the issue, but let us be absolutely clear: such an intervention will happen only after NatureScot has gone through a considerable period of asking for voluntary agreements to get to a collective agreement. The role of deer manageme...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
On amendments 219 and 329, making compliance with the deer code mandatory, even if only when that is reasonably practicable, could prevent NatureScot from exercising its professional judgment in complex or urgent situations such as disease outbreaks or severe weather impacts. ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
There will have to be a control scheme only if we cannot find a voluntary scheme that will reduce deer numbers. It goes back to the point that I made earlier: we have developed very good working relationships with deer managers across the country through the deer management gr...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
10 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will get straight into it. We have a lot to get through, so I will be as brief as I possibly can be. On amendments 321 and 252, I fundamentally disagree with the member’s intentions to prevent the repeal of the venison dealer licence in the bill. Time and again in Parliamen...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Chamber
11 Sep 2024
Portfolio Question Time · Deer Management Incentive Scheme Pilots (Rainforest Exclusion)
The purpose of the pilots is to explore incentives for deer management in different local circumstances. The pilots were designed around a number of criteria, including access to data on current cull levels and the potential barriers to increasing deer management. The focus of...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
There is some disagreement on the estimates. We have an estimate of between 750,000 and 1 million deer, which the deer working group compiled using a range of methods. That estimate includes data on the distribution of Scotland’s four species, but I absolutely accept that some...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
We want there to be a baseline of competence across everyone who goes out to shoot deer. That is not just about deer welfare; it about public concern and public safety, especially with increasing numbers of deer and more venison entering the food chain. If we can ensure that e...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
We already do that for deer damage. We already have that ability in place. We are looking to create more biodiversity. I absolutely get the nervousness among deer managers as to what “restoration” means. It is not something that can be plucked out of the air; someone cannot...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
With regard to amendment 97, it is absolutely critical that we look at deer management as a whole, as Rachael Hamilton said. We are creating plans, and that is why, in collaboration with Rachael Hamilton, Rhoda Grant and Mark Ruskell, who raised the issue at stage 2, we have i...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
10 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
At stage 1, a range of views were expressed by stakeholders, members and the committee, especially about the long-term impact and effectiveness of the proposed changes to deer management. I acknowledge the concerns that were raised and reassure people that the Scottish Governm...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Deer Management
Good, sustainable deer management is integral to our effectiveness in addressing biodiversity loss and protecting and restoring the natural environment. That is why we brought forward reforms to the deer legislation through the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill and will deve...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I do not see that being a concern. There is definitely a difference between what lowland deer management will do and what upland and hill deer management will do, because there are deer management groups in those areas. Is the concern that deer management groups are being targ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
There is already provision for the tenants that you are talking about to control deer and stop them marauding, and so on. Section 26 of the 1996 act gives occupiers the right to take deer when they might not otherwise have the right to do so, including in “enclosed woodland” a...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
NatureScot’s inclusion was part of the deer working group’s advice—that is who recommended it. I disagree that there would be a conflict of interest. This line of questioning makes it feel as though the purpose of the bill is to come in with a big stick—it is not; it is about ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
30 Oct 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I take the point on board. We have listened carefully to what members and stakeholders have said. The cabinet secretary has already agreed to meet members about those issues. I hope that that gives Ms Boyack confidence that we are trying to engage with members. As I said, ther...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
05 Nov 2025
Portfolio Question Time · Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill
We are not ignoring concerns at all. I stated in my first answer that we are actively engaging with deer managers right across the country—lowland and upland. On the ability to shoot deer effectively, I do not think that it is too much to ask to ensure that deer stalkers and ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I like your analogy, Mr Mountain, but I disagree with you. I think that NatureScot has the functions and the capability to do its job properly; however, that must be in conjunction with deer stalkers and managers on the ground. That is why I actively encourage NatureScot to ha...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I am glad that you mentioned the collaborative approach that is currently being taken. I have had extensive engagement with land managers since I was given the responsibility of taking this part of the bill through, and not one deer manager or land manager that I have had a co...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Cull returns are currently happening all over the country. Yes, the app is a pilot at the moment, but it is definitely something that we can develop. On amendment 333, in the name of Tim Eagle, I appreciate the member’s efforts to seek to incentivise sustainable deer manageme...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I shall refer back to those comments if I refuse to take interventions in the future, convener. On amendment 310, in the name of Tim Eagle, I absolutely agree on the importance of clear guidance being provided before new duties take effect, but I ask him not to move the amend...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Deer Management
I disagree with that point. We need a range of options across the sector. It is not just roe deer or deer in lowland Scotland that we are talking about—it is deer across all areas. Deer will be overgrazing in some areas and undergrazing in others.I get the point that the situa...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Chamber
29 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
::First, Tim Eagle talks about the fact that rural deer managers have managed deer effectively over a number of years, yet we have a crisis with the number of deer and the damage to the environment. Everyone in the debate has agreed that we need to bring down deer numbers.Seco...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am not quite sure that I accept the way in which Mr Ruskell has put that. I am genuinely grateful to him for the meetings that we have had to discuss his proposals, but our national deer management plan will build on the direction of travel that we have already set out and o...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I hope that the member understands that we are making sure that we have a balance. The member will agree that we cannot do deer management without deer managers on the ground who know that they are doing. The proposals that I am putting forward in my amendment will ensure that...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I would not say that the system has not worked at the moment—it is just that deer numbers are where they are, and we are now going to take action to try to get those numbers down. There is a huge amount of good will in the sector. I have had a number of meetings with land man...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
If NatureScot were to de-escalate a control scheme and the new owner said that they would carry that out and then did not comply, NatureScot would be back to square 1. It would land back on the minister’s desk to be signed off, and so on. If the order stays with the land, the ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
All that people will have to do is report it. It is not the case that someone will have committed an offence for shooting a stray deer. If someone shoots a deer and it turns out to be a farmed deer, all they will have to do is report it within five days—that is all that is req...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
There is a NatureScot app right now. When deer managers shoot a deer, they record it in the NatureScot app, which gives the location of where that deer was taken out.
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
There is a solution to be found here, and, if we work together ahead of stage 3, we can find that solution. I take on board that there are potential safety issues with having two different sets of people going out with guns on a hill, unless there is some co-ordination. Looki...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I just want to make the point to Mr Mountain that I held a licence for a heavy rifle for a number of years, but not one bullet ever went through that rifle to shoot a deer. I had not had any training, and yet I had a licence to go out and shoot deer because I held a firearms l...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
10 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I absolutely concur. As we start to develop the deer action plan, venison will be very much part of the process. I have said a number of times in this committee and in engagements with other stakeholders that we should stop talking about culling deer and start talking about ha...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Deer Management
The improved deer management legislative framework and strengthened regulatory powers that were introduced through the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill will deliver opportunities for rural communities and create significant demand for skilled workers who are able to carry o...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
27 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The bill will bring into effect the deer working group recommendation that requires us to produce a deer management plan. We are working to gather better data on deer, and I expect that any plan to tackle the data gaps will come out of that. I ask members to accept the amendme...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
27 Apr 2022
Petition
I could talk to you all day, Patrick. Just quickly, there are tensions between landowners and tenant sheep farmers on the issue of grazing deer, and an agreement that landowners have to control deer at a certain level. As part of their responsibilities, what do landowners have...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
11 Sep 2024
Portfolio Question Time · Deer Management Incentive Scheme Pilots (Rainforest Exclusion)
We will not expand the current pilot scheme, but it is part of a package of looking at how we will manage deer across the whole country. Rainforests are crucial to what we will look at as we go forward. Although the deer management incentive scheme pilots are looking at a spe...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
When you say the deer groups, are you talking about the deer management groups?
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
NatureScot is a public body. It therefore has a duty, and it must act reasonably and with impartiality when carrying out all its duties. Furthermore, deer panels have to be approved by the Scottish ministers. If the panels must be approved by a Scottish minister, if NatureScot...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
18 Jun 2025
Portfolio Question Time · Venison in Catering (Support for Public Bodies)
I do not accept the premise of that question. We are going through vital deer management processes to allow us to restore nature and reduce damage to habitats. As I said, deer are not a problem species; they are part of our natural heritage. We should be able to put venison in...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
It goes back to the point that Mr Mountain just made. He quite clearly indicated that he did not think that NatureScot had the ability to walk the miles that a deer stalker might have walked. I disagree. There will be expertise in NatureScot; it is a very good organisation wit...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I appreciate that the member already knows this, because of our previous engagement on the matter, but I want to put this point on the record. NatureScot has the ability to set a three-month timescale, on the basis that some land managers will simply not engage and will have ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
That is exactly what Ross Ewing did in the press release that he put out. I find it astounding that you are prepared to go down that road. First, you know as well as I do that you can go out with 10 bikes and 50 dogs but you will not round up deer and manage them in the same ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I am not sure that the systems are not working. There are good examples of the systems working right across the country. The deer management groups work regularly to manage their deer effectively. That work is already being done.
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I would much rather that we did not pay people to shoot deer that had no value—I would rather create a market for a product that we were proud of. It would be of much more value to the country if we were able to say, “Venison is a brilliant product. Come to Scotland and eat it...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
On capacity, I have been assured that there is more than enough capacity to process the number of deer, even if we got to the target of taking an extra 50,000 head of deer a year. However, I absolutely agree that, at the moment, we do not have a viable marketplace for that ven...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
03 Dec 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
We have not done the consultation because it came out of the deer working group that I commissioned to look at all the deer management options.
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 27 January 2026 [Draft]

27 Jan 2026 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Fairlie, Jim SNP Perthshire South and Kinross-shire Watch on SPTV

I beg the Parliament’s forgiveness, as this is going to be quite a long response.

Edward Mountain’s amendment 1 relates to the aims and purpose of deer management. It seeks to redefine one of the aims from furthering

“the conservation of deer native to Scotland”

to furthering the conservation of

“fallow, red and roe deer”.

The deer working group report set out that four species of wild deer occur in Scotland—the two species of native wild deer, which are red and roe, and the two non-native species, which are fallow and sika. While we recognise that fallow deer are now naturalised in Scotland, they are not a species that is native to Scotland. The amendment is unnecessary and confusing because it would include fallow deer in the list of deer that are native to Scotland. I therefore ask Edward Mountain not to press his amendment. If he presses it, I ask members to oppose it.

I support the aim that Mr Mountain looks to achieve with amendment 2, but I cannot support it, as I set out at stage 2. We have many excellent deer managers up and down Scotland and I want to ensure that they know, as I do, that we will always need skilled people on the ground to manage our deer population. Amendment 2 would require NatureScot to consider the protection and promotion of deer management employment in carrying out any of its deer functions. That is impractical. For that reason and for the reasons that were set out at stage 2, the amendment is unnecessary and I ask members not to support it.

Edward Mountain’s amendment 3 seeks to amend the aims and purposes of the 1996 act to make it explicit that NatureScot must ensure that deer are controlled humanely as well as effectively when it exercises its functions under that act. Consideration of deer welfare is already embedded in the existing best practice guidance in Scotland and in NatureScot’s code of practice. Amendment 3 therefore reinforces our existing policy, and it is for that reason that I will support it.

Although Edward Mountain’s amendment 4 is well intentioned, as it seeks

“to prevent conflict between the public and”

those who are undertaking deer management, it would introduce significant challenges that would risk undermining effective management. In practice, it would create complex engagement requirements that could delay decision making, particularly where the public disagreed with or had concerns about proposed deer management. We all know that deer management can be an emotive subject, and there are many views on the best way to manage deer in different areas.

I also do not think that Edward Mountain has considered the potential implications in peri-urban areas, where some members of the public who rarely see deer may not understand the impact that they have on the environment if their population is left unchecked, and they may not actually care. For those reasons, I ask him not to move amendment 4. If he moves it, I ask members not to support it.

Edward Mountain’s amendments 5, 6 and 7 relate to the composition of deer management panels. An amendment that will be made by the bill will allow NatureScot to sit on a panel as a member. Mr Mountain’s amendment 5 would make it a requirement that it did so, and his amendment 6 would make it an obligation that the NatureScot member of the panel was always in attendance at any meeting of the panel. We can foresee that there may be circumstances in which it would be beneficial for a relevant expert from NatureScot to sit on a panel, but it is not our intention that such an expert will sit on every panel. That decision reflects the discussions that we had with stakeholders during the drafting of the bill.

Amendment 7 is not necessary, as not all panels will relate to the management of deer in local areas. For example, a previous panel related to the transfer of deer functions from the Red Deer Commission to NatureScot. Our intention with the changes to be made to the 1996 act has always been to retain flexibility on the make-up of the panels, but amendments 5, 6 and 7 would undermine that. For those reasons, I urge members not to vote for them.

17:00  

Amendment 78 attempts to reinstate the close season for male deer. I have lost count of the number of times that Mr Mountain has attempted to overturn the decision of the Parliament on close seasons of deer. His attempt at stage 2 was debated and opposed at that time. I therefore recommend that members oppose it again.

I turn to Edward Mountain’s amendment 8 and Tim Eagle’s amendment 79. I cannot support Mr Mountain’s amendment, as I think that there is a benefit in requiring NatureScot to set out in the code of practice details of how and where it intends to intervene in deer management. However, I have listened to the concerns that have been raised by stakeholders and the committee during proceedings at stages 1 and 2. Although the use of “will” instead of “may” was intended to provide some security to stakeholders, it has raised concerns about lack of flexibility, so I am content to support the change proposed by Mr Eagle. I ask Mr Mountain not to move his amendment 8 and instead to support his colleague’s amendment 79, and I ask members to support amendment 79.

I cannot support Mr Mountain’s amendments 9 and 80. At present, NatureScot must review compliance with the code of practice every three years. The deer working group was clear that that requirement was too burdensome, so we consulted on proposals to amend the review period and brought forward changes that will require NatureScot to review compliance in three circumstances: first, when requested to do so by ministers; secondly, if substantive changes have been made to the code; and thirdly, at a bare minimum, no later than 10 years after the code was laid before the Parliament. NatureScot will also be able to carry out a review at any other point if it feels that that is appropriate. I set out very clearly at stage 2, but will do so again now, that it is my expectation that 10 years will not become the norm for compliance reviews. For those reasons, I ask Mr Mountain not to move amendments 9 and 80. If he does, I ask members to vote against them.

I am pleased to support Edward Mountain’s amendments 10 and 11. I would expect NatureScot to undertake such consultation work as part of a review of compliance, but I am happy to support such a requirement in legislation. I hope that that gives some reassurance to those in the land management sector that a key priority for the Government is to ensure that the changes that the bill makes are workable for them. I therefore ask members to support amendments 10 and 11.

Given what I have just said about Edward Mountain’s amendments 8, 9 and 80 and Tim Eagle’s amendment 79, I hope that Mr Mountain will understand why I cannot support amendment 12. It would undo all the changes that we have made to secure flexibility on the code of practice and review of compliance with it. The changes that we are asking for are sensible and are being made in good faith. I therefore ask Mr Mountain not to move amendment 12. If he moves it, I ask the chamber to oppose it.

On amendment 81, I admit that I was a bit surprised at Mr Mountain’s lodging an amendment that would require NatureScot to consider whether speed limits were a better alternative to requiring deer management to reduce public safety risks. I seem to recall fairly strong opposition from the Conservative Party to a previous proposal on speed limits.

The protection of public safety is a circumstance in which I do not want to put up barriers to the ability of NatureScot to take action to control deer. Amendment 81 would require NatureScot to be satisfied that no alternative measure would be effective. However, I do not think that that would be reasonable or practical, given that the primary concern must be to ensure public safety. I therefore cannot support amendment 81.

I turn to amendment 82, in the name of Tim Eagle. As I set out at stage 2 in relation to an amendment that sought to achieve the same thing, although it appears to be technical, changing “in relation to” to “on” would narrow the scope of intervention powers. The current wording allows NatureScot to act where deer activity or management decisions are causing or are likely to cause damage to an area of land, even indirectly. Limiting that to damage “on” the land could create unintended consequences, making it harder to address cumulative or cross-boundary impacts.

Deer do not respect property boundaries, and our legislation should reflect that reality. For example, deer could be on a particular area of land but wander on to roads, causing road traffic accidents. That would be a public safety issue that would not be “on” that particular area of land, but rather “in relation to” it. For those reasons, I believe that the existing wording provides the flexibility that is needed to protect the public interest and the environment, and I encourage members to oppose amendment 82.

In regard to amendment 83, in the name of Edward Mountain, a similar amendment was lodged at stage 2 but was not agreed to. As I set out at stage 2 in relation to that amendment, amendment 83 would risk weakening the effectiveness of the bill’s restoration objectives. For that reason, I urge members to reject amendment 83.

Amendments 84 to 87, in the name of Tim Eagle, all seek to limit the scope and effectiveness of NatureScot’s intervention powers. Amendment 84 would change the wording relating to environmental improvements in an attempt to narrow the scope of the nature restoration ground for intervention and, in doing so, would potentially exclude certain projects.

Amendments 85 and 86 would unnecessarily narrow how we consider deer management. Deer impacts do not sit in isolation but directly affect biodiversity, woodland recovery, climate objectives and sustainable land use. By limiting the relevant targets to ones that are set out in deer-specific legislation only, amendment 85 would risk creating policy silos and undermining our ability to manage deer in a way that supports wider national environmental goals. Managing deer impacts is central to delivering those wider environmental, biodiversity and land-use objectives, and those priorities are often set out in strategies that are led by environmental and natural heritage bodies. Amendment 86 would exclude those plans and would risk the siloing of deer management.

Amendment 87 would simply reinstate the status quo that the bill seeks to reform in line with the deer working group’s recommendations and would undermine efforts to strengthen the use of timely and effective action in the wider public interest. There is already a general requirement for NatureScot to have “regard to the code” in exercising its functions under the Deer (Scotland) Act 1996. The changes in amendment 87 might seem technical, but they would reduce flexibility, weaken accountability and, ultimately, make it harder to deliver effective, joined-up land management across Scotland. The original wording is clear and comprehensive. For those reasons, I urge members to reject amendments 84 to 87.

The issue that is addressed in amendment 88, in the name of Edward Mountain, was also fully debated at stage 2. The bill’s provision of a minimum three-month time frame is just that—a minimum. The change made by the bill simply gives NatureScot greater flexibility to act sooner where responsibilities have not been met, as I said in my earlier intervention. For that reason, I do not support the amendment, as it would reduce that important flexibility. I urge members to reject amendment 88.

Taken together, amendments 13 to 15, in Edward Mountain’s name, would complicate the process for putting in place effective and, in many areas, much-needed deer management plans.

Amendment 13 would require NatureScot to consult holders of shooting or sporting rights even when they have no direct responsibility for land management, which would add unnecessary delay. Amendment 14 would remove the clear definition of “relevant owners and occupiers”, creating uncertainty and increasing the risk of dispute. Amendment 15 would go further, by removing NatureScot’s discretion to determine who has “sufficient interest ... or control”, replacing professional judgment with a rigid test that would invite challenge.

Collectively, the three amendments would increase bureaucracy, reduce flexibility and make timely intervention in the public interest harder to achieve. I ask members to reject amendments 13 to 15.

Amendments 89 and 90, in the name of Tim Eagle, would do the same to control agreements and schemes as amendment 87 would to deer management plans. Amendments 89 and 90 would simply reinstate the status quo that the bill seeks to reform in line with the deer working group’s recommendations, undermining efforts to strengthen timely and effective action in the wider public interest.

I discussed the issue in a meeting with Tim Eagle recently. There is already a general requirement for NatureScot to have “regard to the code” in exercising its functions under the 1996 act. For the same reason that I gave in opposing amendment 87, I ask Mr Eagle not to move amendments 89 and 90, and if he does, I ask members to oppose them.

Amendment 49, in the name of Rhoda Grant, will refine a stage 2 amendment. It will require NatureScot to publish the outcomes of reviews of control agreements, which will help to maintain public confidence and make clear whether agreed measures are being delivered. It will also encourage compliance and support learning by making evidence about what works publicly available. That is a proportionate step that will align deer management with wider principles of openness in environmental governance. For those reasons, I urge members to support amendment 49. I thank Ms Grant for her willingness to work with me to improve amendments 49 and 50, following the stage 2 proceedings.

Amendment 50, which sets out the process by which someone can request an intervention from NatureScot in response to damage being caused by deer, would provide clarity and assurance for those suffering from damage by deer that they do not have the right or responsibility to manage on how to access support from NatureScot.

In later groups, we will come to amendments that relate to the statutory rights of occupiers. However, I have taken on board the concerns raised by stakeholders about friction between landowners, sporting tenants and occupiers, especially when there are long-standing deer management issues or differing priorities. Amendment 50 can go a long way towards addressing some of those concerns, so I ask members to support it.

I turn to amendments 51, 52 and 53, in the name of Beatrice Wishart. I thank Ms Wishart for not pressing her amendment at stage 2 and instead returning with slightly updated amendments, which I will gladly support.

The amendments will require NatureScot to notify not only the owner or occupier of land on which a control scheme applies, but others who are likely to be significantly affected by the scheme. The amendments would also mean that those who are likely to be significantly affected have the right to object to a scheme. I have listened to concerns that were raised about the potential impact of a control scheme on local communities and local economies and how balance will be achieved when these powers are used. That touches on some of the issues that were raised by Mr Mountain and Mr Eagle earlier.

I think that the amendments would be effective in ensuring that local communities are notified and are able to feed back on compulsory deer management. The amendments would not give those wider groups of people the right to appeal to the Scottish Land Court, given that a scheme needs to be confirmed by Scottish ministers where it comes into effect, which will require any objections to be considered. It is considered only appropriate to give the right of appeal to the owners or occupiers on whom a control scheme, or a variation of a control scheme, is imposed. Such a right of appeal is no different from the existing appeal rights under the 1996 act, and it is a recognition of the seriousness of that undertaking. I therefore ask members to support amendments 51 to 53.

Amendments 91 and 92, in the name of Edward Mountain, are the same as amendments that were originally lodged by Ms Wishart at stage 2 and debated then. As I set out at stage 2—I believe that this is why the amendments were not pressed by Ms Wishart—in practice, the amendments would not have a meaningful impact on those required to be consulted by NatureScot. For that reason, I urge members to oppose amendments 91 and 92.

I turn to amendment 93, in the name of Mark Ruskell. I appreciate Mr Ruskell’s intention, but I cannot support the amendment. I have said this before and I will say it again: it is vital that we balance the need to reduce deer populations with the needs of our rural communities; we have to get that balance right. I have been clear throughout the process that we have to find ways of working effectively and collaboratively to meet our deer management aims. That means bringing the sector with us. Unfortunately, I do not think that amendment 93 would achieve that.

Furthermore, the amendment would include a significant amount of land and well over 1,000 holdings. The resources that would be required by NatureScot to enter into control agreements in all those places would mean that it would have to down tools on almost all of its other deer management work and swathes of its wildlife management work. I do not think that that is what Mr Ruskell is aiming for here, but I cannot support the amendment.

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Alison Johnstone) NPA
The next item of business is stage 3 proceedings on the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill. In dealing with the amendments, members should have the bill as ...
The Presiding Officer NPA
Group 1 is on targets for improving biodiversity. Amendment 22, in the name of Beatrice Wishart, is grouped with amendments 23, 63, 46, 47, 24, 64 to 67, 25 ...
Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
Amendment 22 would place an obligation on our public bodies and officeholders to take the biodiversity targets into account when they are fulfilling their pu...
The Presiding Officer NPA
I call Lorna Slater to speak to amendment 23 and other amendments in the group.
Lorna Slater (Lothian) (Green) Green
Amendment 23 reflects the fact that Scotland has already signed up to a number of international commitments that aim to tackle the biodiversity crisis, inclu...
The Presiding Officer NPA
I call Tim Eagle to speak to amendment 63 and other amendments in the group.
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
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Mercedes Villalba (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab
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John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind
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Tim Eagle Con
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John Mason Ind
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Douglas Lumsden (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
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Sarah Boyack (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
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Ariane Burgess (Highlands and Islands) (Green) Green
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Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green) Green
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Edward Mountain (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
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Rhoda Grant (Highlands and Islands) (Lab) Lab
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Christine Grahame (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP) SNP
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The Cabinet Secretary for Climate Action and Energy (Gillian Martin) SNP
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John Mason Ind
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Gillian Martin SNP
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Edward Mountain Con
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Gillian Martin SNP
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Edward Mountain Con
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Gillian Martin SNP
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Mercedes Villalba Lab
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Gillian Martin SNP
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Mercedes Villalba Lab
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Gillian Martin SNP
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Douglas Ross (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
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