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Every contribution to the Official Report — chamber and committee — searchable in one place. Pulled from data.parliament.scot, indexed for full-text search, linked through to every MSP.

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2,354,908
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1999–2026
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Official Report

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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Chamber
29 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
::I want to take a moment to thank, from the bottom of our hearts, on behalf of Gillian Martin and Mairi Gougeon, our bill teams, our legislation teams, our policy development teams, our officials, our private office and the parliamentary staff. They have put in a hell of a lo...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
20 Jan 2026
Subordinate Legislation
Thank you very much, convener. I also thank the committee very much for inviting me to discuss the draft order.As the committee is aware, free bus travel has been a truly transformative policy, helping to reduce child poverty, grow the economy and tackle the climate emergency....
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
30 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Thank you, convener. I also welcome Tim Eagle to the committee. I look forward to working with him over the coming period. Thank you for inviting me to speak about the Free-Range Egg Marketing Standards (Amendment) (Scotland) Regulations 2024. The draft instrument will amend ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
If you put those things in primary legislation, they become primary legislation. We want them to be in the code of practice so that we have flexibility, because things might change, as we said earlier. Putting the conditions into the bill will mean that they are put into prim...
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 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 Chamber
13 Jan 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 1
I am pleased to open this debate on the Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill. I thank the Rural Affairs and Islands Committee for its detailed scrutiny of the bill and all those who have given evidence during stage 1. Most importantly, I thank the crofting communities for the...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
17 Feb 2026
Subordinate Legislation
Okay. As we have discussed, the free bus travel provided by the national concessionary travel scheme is invaluable to those who use it—it provides life-changing benefits for many people. As the committee is aware, the legislation being introduced today is designed to protect t...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
12 May 2022
Coronavirus (Recovery and Reform) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I absolutely accept that there is the possibility for that to happen if the Parliament can sit, but the member has no idea what the next pandemic or the next emergency is going to be. It is therefore required that we have legislation sitting ready to go. The real irony in the...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
22 May 2024
Petition
In the report that you are talking about it is stated: “Greyhounds are also subject to a number of other pieces of legislation, including: Welfare of Animals (Transport) (Scotland) Regulations 2006; Microchipping of Dogs (Scotland) Regulations, 2016; Animal Welfare (Licensing...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
25 Sep 2024
Subordinate Legislation
CAP rates are set in legislation. We are dealing with the legacy of the CAP, which is why the rates are in legislation.
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
09 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
We will come back with every single piece of legislation that we develop as we go along so that the committee can scrutinise it. I have made an open commitment that we will come back to talk to the committee and to stakeholders. The entire point of passing these regulations i...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
18 Sep 2024
Welfare of Dogs (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The Scottish Government is keen to develop the code of practice that is required by the bill, and the initial engagement with stakeholders has already begun. Amendment 14 will ensure that any consultation that takes place before the bill comes into force will count towards mee...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Good morning. Thank you for inviting me to discuss the regulations. As we know, franchising is an important tool for local transport authorities to improve services in their area. However, it is also a significant intervention in the local bus market. The franchising provision...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
I disagree with Graham Simpson’s point. If the regulations are not approved and we continue the process of creating or finalising legislation to allow franchising to go ahead, the panel will be set up, because it is in the 2019 primary legislation. The panel will be establishe...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
What part of the process does the member want to change? We either have a panel or we do not have a panel. If we do not, that would require changes to be made to primary legislation. Does he want us to go through the primary legislation process in order to remove the panel, wh...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
28 May 2025
Portfolio Question Time · Muirburn Licensing
NatureScot has been working closely with land managers since September 2023 to ensure that the legislation is workable in practice. It has produced the methodologies for identifying peatland and non-peatland areas. Those methodologies have been made available to land managers ...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
04 Jun 2025
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I do not think that we will be doing that in secondary legislation. The term “public interest” is widely used in legislation and, particularly in the context of the bill that we are looking at, the public interest might be one thing in a Highlands setting and completely differ...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
24 Sep 2025
Subordinate Legislation
Thank you, convener, and good morning. Thank you for inviting me to speak to the draft Free-Range Poultrymeat Marketing Standards (Amendment) (Scotland) Regulations 2025. This draft instrument amends European Commission regulation 543/2008, on the marketing standards for poul...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
From the crofters uprisings in the late 1880s to the Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886 and the 10 major acts of Parliament on crofting that have been delivered since then, with the last one being the Crofting (Amendment) (Scotland) Act 2013, we can see the evolution and th...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
28 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I take on board that Mr Ross was successful in having his amendment agreed to at stage 2, but there was still some confusion about what was being delivered. We could have tried to knock out the amendment completely and dismiss people’s views, but we did not do that. I said tha...
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
I start with Willie Rennie’s amendments 164 and 165, which would allow falconers to hunt mountain hare but only under licence granted by NatureScot and outside the breeding season. That issue has been subject to extensive scrutiny over a number of years, including detailed con...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
04 Feb 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 2
I am very happy to support Alasdair Allan’s amendments 1 and 24. Enforcing compliance with statutory duties is one of the commission’s most important functions, and it is right that that is stated explicitly in the legislation. It is also much more appropriate and practical fo...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
21 Jan 2026
Subordinate Legislation
I am pleased to appear before the committee to discuss the Animal Health (Fixed Penalty Notices) (Scotland) Regulations 2026. These regulations introduce a new enforcement tool for the relevant enforcement bodies to address specific breaches of animal and bee health legislatio...
Jim Fairlie (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP) SNP Chamber
20 Jan 2022
Coronavirus (Discretionary Compensation for Self-isolation) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Others who have spoken before me, particularly my fellow members of the COVID-19 Recovery Committee, have dealt with the intentions and implications of the bill in a more specific and detailed manner. I hope to avoid going over the same ground in my speech this afternoon. In ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
22 Mar 2022
Good Food Nation (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Absolutely—I called for that when I was outside Parliament and I completely agree. The situation did not add up, and someone had to take the initiative to change the attitude that we had and to address the obesity challenges. Hungry for success—a national nutritional standard...
Jim Fairlie (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP) SNP Chamber
29 Jun 2022
Northern Ireland Protocol Bill
When is an international treaty not an international treaty? Ordinarily, there should be a punchline inserted at this point, but unfortunately the joke is on us in so many ways that it is embarrassing and dangerous. I attended the Quality Meat Scotland breakfast meeting last...
Jim Fairlie (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP) SNP Chamber
23 Jan 2024
Point of Order
On a point of order, Presiding Officer. Standing order rule 12.3, on committee meetings, says: “A committee shall meet to consider such business on such days and at such times as it may from time to time decide, subject to any timetable specified in the business programme.” ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
21 Feb 2024
Wildlife Management and Muirburn (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
We are keeping the definition under review anyway, but I fully understand that it is a difficult issue in terms of getting everybody on board. Through the bill, we are trying to find the balance. I will meet you before stage 3 and we can discuss the issue. However, right now, ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
05 Mar 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Good morning, convener, and thank you very much for having me along. I am very pleased to take on my new portfolio as Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity, which includes bus and concessionary travel, and I thank the committee for inviting me to discuss the draft order. ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
05 Mar 2024
Subordinate Legislation
If we meet the limits on the capped amount, and if monitoring in-year suggests that the claims are likely to exceed the cap, claims for the latter part of the year are paid at a lower rate than is set out in the legislation, so as to keep the total payments under the scheme wi...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
05 Mar 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Is what not written down in legislation?
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
05 Mar 2024
Subordinate Legislation
I think that I have already explained that. Let me see whether I can find this in writing so that it makes sense to you. If monitoring in-year suggests that the claims are likely to exceed the cap, claims for the latter part of the year are paid at a lower rate than that set o...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
21 Mar 2024
Wildlife Management and Muirburn (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
As I close the debate, I again thank the Rural Affairs and Islands Committee and the Parliament, especially the committee clerks and the members who have spoken today, as well as all the organisations that have contributed to the debate. At the inception of the Scottish Parli...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
16 Apr 2024
Automated Vehicles Bill
The Scottish Government does not have a date from the UK Government, so we are still waiting for that meeting to be arranged. I will return to the point that I was making. That may include devolved legislation in the criminal sphere in relation to driving offences, as well a...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
16 Apr 2024
Automated Vehicles Bill
As we draw today’s deliberations to a close, I thank members from across the chamber for their contributions to the debate. I reiterate that UK ministers have requested a meeting with the Cabinet Secretary for Transport in an effort to come to an agreement on clause 50 that re...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
21 Feb 2024
Wildlife Management and Muirburn (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will make a couple of points. We will be debating the muirburn code. As Mr Mountain says, not everyone carries out muirburn properly, in the way that the code dictates. I am disappointed that Mr Mountain has lodged amendments that would remove the whole of part 2 of the b...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
21 Feb 2024
Wildlife Management and Muirburn (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Please bear with me while I find where I am in my notes. The provision that I mentioned is narrower because those are the only ways in which we can foresee muirburn being required. Given the way in which amendments 25 and 26 are worded, they would also allow a muirburn licenc...
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
04 Sep 2024
Off-road Vehicles
I am merely giving an outline of all the things that the Scottish Government is doing and how seriously we take the issue. Previously, Transport Scotland has funded a police-led initiative for young people to produce and circulate a short film to discourage their peers from t...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
18 Sep 2024
Welfare of Dogs (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I have absolutely no idea. Think of Covid. Who knows what might happen? There could be any number of reasons why a code could not be concluded within the 12-month period. The proposal allows us flexibility if something does happen. We fully expect to have it done well within t...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
18 Sep 2024
Welfare of Dogs (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The amendments in the group seek to leave out sections 8 to 11 of the bill, which contain the powers to make regulations about the registration of litters, and consequentially to remove references to part 2 from the bill and its long title. The Scottish Government is pleased ...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
25 Sep 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Thank you for making time to consider this draft SSI. As the committee will note, this is a very brief SSI, which makes changes to two dates that relate to plant health import inspection fees. It extends until 1 July 2025 the end date for easements regarding the introduction ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
25 Sep 2024
Subordinate Legislation
You are right. All that I can do is give you the assurance that we are working incredibly hard right now to bring forward the legislation that will allow us to continue to support agriculture in the way that we want to support it. If the 2030 date is the problem, I can take th...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
25 Sep 2024
Subordinate Legislation
No, it would not, because, if the position that we took was that rebasing was desired, that could be brought in at a later date, but before 2030, in other legislation that might come forward. 13:00
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
09 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
I will try to be as plain as possible. There is absolutely no desire to hoodwink, play the industry off against itself or create any division; we simply need to get the regulations in place. You have mentioned LFASS again in the context of these regulations, but that is only ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
I was not even sitting in the Parliament in 2019, so I cannot answer for the decision-making process at the time, but I trust the parliamentary procedure, and I trust that the people who look at regulations or acts as they are going forward do their due diligence. Therefore, w...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Because it is set in primary legislation. It is part of the 2019 act, so we would have to go back to the beginning and start again.
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
We will have a memorandum of understanding, and the guidance is under development. I suspect that somebody will ask whether franchising could go ahead whether or not the regulations are annulled. It could, and the traffic commissioner would still establish a panel but, without...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Yes—that is in primary legislation.
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
I am comfortable that it would be the traffic commissioner for Scotland, on the basis that we will be allowed to create a memorandum of understanding and guidance. I remember the second part of your question now. The Secretary of State for Transport appoints the traffic commi...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
You talk about correction, but what does that mean? It means that we would go back to the primary legislation, and I can only see that creating a much longer delay, going into the next session of Parliament.
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Okay. It is quite clear where we are in the committee. I will make one or two observations. Douglas Lumsden said that there will be no delays because we have the timescale. However, we have no idea whether SPT will continue with the process if it now has uncertainty about how...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
I did not say that I am confident about that; I said that it is a possibility. SPT is putting huge amounts of time and resource into the process of looking at its financial model and everything else that it will have to do. The current position means that we are going to stall...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
I have not had any discussions with SPT. I am merely making the point that a huge amount of time and resource goes into the work that it is having to do around the process. If the instrument stalls today, I anticipate there being a risk that SPT could say that, until there is ...
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
If we carry on with the legislation as it is, there will be a panel, regardless. That goes back to the point that Mr Lumsden made. Interruption. I will let you finish your point. I apologise; that was rude.
Jim Fairlie SNP Committee
29 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
There does. It is in primary legislation.
Jim Fairlie SNP Chamber
30 Oct 2024
Parliamentary Bureau Motions
In the interests of time, I will continue, because there are a lot of points to get through. As the regional bus strategy continues to be developed, with franchising as one of the options, it needs certainty of direction. These regulations deliver that certainty, and annulment...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP Committee
20 Nov 2024
Subordinate Legislation
Good morning to you, convener, and to the committee. Thank you very much for having me today for your consideration of these regulations. The regulations were laid using powers conferred by the Agriculture (Retained EU Law and Data) (Scotland) Act 2020 that enable us to impro...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 29 January 2026 [Draft]

29 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 want to take a moment to thank, from the bottom of our hearts, on behalf of Gillian Martin and Mairi Gougeon, our bill teams, our legislation teams, our policy development teams, our officials, our private office and the parliamentary staff. They have put in a hell of a lot of work to get the bill to where it is today, and we owe them an enormous debt of gratitude. I thank them very much from all of us.

I also want to say, as this is Mairi Gougeon’s final bill, that she will be an enormous loss to the Parliament. She has been an amazing person to work with, and rural Scotland has been bettered by the work that she has put in.

At its heart, the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill is about respect for nature, for our land and for the people who steward it and care for it. It is a bill with both people and nature at its heart, and that is something that I care deeply about. It will deliver for nature and people with ambition and balance at its core. That is why, for the first time, we are putting in place statutory nature restoration targets, which will drive positive on-the-ground actions that will keep us on the trajectory to restore and regenerate nature by 2045.

If future Governments are found to be wanting in that ambition for nature, the bill contains the mechanisms to ensure that the Scottish Parliament can hold them to account. However, it does much more than that. It strengthens the legislation underpinning our two fantastic national parks, and it provides us with additional tools to manage our deer in a way that will be positive for the environment while creating entrepreneurial opportunities as we develop our world-class venison product, delivering new jobs and healthy food for the Scottish nation.

Through the amendments that members have championed, the bill will, if passed, deliver in a range of areas. It will give the Scottish ministers new powers to develop legislation relating to wildfire management and forestry management and new rights to enable crofters and tenants to control deer. That is to name but a few of the progressive amendments that have been added to the bill.

The twin crises of climate change and biodiversity loss represent the existential threat of our times. Scotland’s natural environment underpins our economy, our agriculture, our wellbeing, our quality of life, and the pride that we all feel in this land. We all know that not doing anything now is absolutely not an option—it is not an option for any responsible Government. If we want the Scotland of tomorrow to be one in which we have healthy communities, sustainable and quality food production, food security and vibrant rural industries, we need to ensure that our ecosystems thrive.

The bill is not about environment over economy; it is about both. They are two sides of the same coin, and we cannot have one without the other. The bill matters, not because of what it symbolises but because of what it will enable us to deliver. It will create a practical delivery chain and ambitious targets, which will drive real action on the ground—action that will be delivered not just by Government but by the people who know the land best.

The Scottish Government is determined to ensure that its key stakeholders have the tools and support that they need to protect and restore nature in a way that works for rural land managers and communities while building on their stewardship and recognising and respecting their role as the custodians—which we all are—of our iconic land and the species that coexist with us. We will continue to work in partnership with our farmers, crofters, keepers, stalkers, land managers, environmental non-governmental organisations and community organisations to ensure that the measures that we put in place are proportionate, workable and successful and that they deliver benefits not just for nature but for the people of Scotland.

Of course, one bill cannot do everything, although we have certainly packed plenty into this one. Members and stakeholders have raised important points and demanded more action in areas such as marine protection, non-native species, guidance, monitoring and delivery frameworks. We are making headway in those areas, but some issues, particularly those requiring specific technical detail, are better delivered through secondary legislation, strategies or implementation programmes. It is crucial that we focus resources on delivery rather than introduce greater complexity and duplication of effort.

As we draw the debate to a close, it is worth reflecting on the shared effort that has brought us here today. The bill reflects the Parliament at its best. It has been shaped by members across the chamber. We have improved it through engagement, and we are building consensus, including through today’s debate. I hope that the unity of purpose shown by members to tackle the biodiversity crisis and to push the Government to go faster and further to deliver the nature-positive outcomes that we all want will now be reflected in members’ support for the bill.

However, I have to say that I am disappointed in the Tories, because we have made significant efforts to find solutions to the many issues that were raised. We brought them in and asked for their input so that they could contribute to making the bill the success that it is. I can only imagine that it is politics that is getting in the way of passing good legislation.

I welcome the great co-operation from the Labour Party, the Liberal Democrats and all the other—

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
::Before we move to the debate on the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill at stage 3, I call Gillian Martin to signify Crown consent to the bill.
The Cabinet Secretary for Climate Action and Energy (Gillian Martin) SNP
::For the purposes of rule 9.11 of standing orders, I advise the Parliament that His Majesty, having been informed of the purport of the Natural Environment ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
::We move on to the debate on motion S6M-20549, in the name of Gillian Martin, on the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill. I call the Cabinet Secretary for C...
The Cabinet Secretary for Climate Action and Energy (Gillian Martin) SNP
::I open the debate by thanking members across the chamber and members of the Rural Affairs and Islands Committee for the positive spirit in which they have ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
::I call Tim Eagle to open the debate on behalf of the Scottish Conservatives.17:10
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
::I start by reminding members of my entry in the register of members’ interests.At stage 3 of the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill, it is right that we s...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP
::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 o...
Tim Eagle Con
::I could spend the next hour telling the minister the ways in which the Government does not support the people of Scotland, but I will not go into that. If ...
Sarah Boyack (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
::I apologise to the cabinet secretary and colleagues for not being in the chamber at the start of the debate. I missed the entire opening speech because I w...
Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green) Green
::The purpose of the bill is to tackle the nature emergency. We should be in no doubt that, sadly, Scotland is a nature-depleted country. However, the green ...
Sarah Boyack Lab
::I am proud to have delivered for our national parks. It is key that we learn lessons from the good that has been done there and about what more needs to be...
Mark Ruskell Green
::The big lesson is that we need political leadership, and I am not just talking about from whoever happens to be the minister at the time. We need leadershi...
Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
::I am pleased to speak this evening for the Scottish Liberal Democrats. Throughout the bill’s process, it has been encouraging to see the passion and care f...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
::We move to the open debate.17:32
Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP) SNP
::The 26th President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, noted:“Conservation means development as much as it does protection. I recognize the right and...
Finlay Carson (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con) Con
::My remarks will focus not on any one provision in the bill but on its underlying principles. As my colleague Tim Eagle said, my colleagues and I will not b...
The Presiding Officer (Alison Johnstone) NPA
::Mercedes Villalba is the final speaker in the open debate.17:41
Mercedes Villalba (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab
::Throughout the passage of the bill, I have consistently made the case that it should seek not simply to prevent further degradation of the natural environm...
The Presiding Officer NPA
::We move to winding-up speeches.17:45
Mark Ruskell Green
::I take the opportunity to thank the clerks of the committee, my fellow committee members, the Scottish Parliament information centre and all the witnesses ...
Rhoda Grant (Highlands and Islands) (Lab) Lab
::I thank all those who assisted with the scrutiny of the bill, including Parliament staff who support the committee. I offer a very special thank you to the...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
::I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests. I am a partner in a farming business and a member of NFU Scotland, SLE and the Royal Hi...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP
::I want to take a moment to thank, from the bottom of our hearts, on behalf of Gillian Martin and Mairi Gougeon, our bill teams, our legislation teams, our ...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con
::Will the member take an intervention?
Jim Fairlie SNP
::No. The debate is finished, Mr Halcro Johnston.
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con
::No, you have just raised a point.
Jim Fairlie SNP
::We have had these discussions, and I really am disappointed—Interruption.
The Presiding Officer NPA
::Let us not shout at one another.
Jim Fairlie SNP
::I am disappointed that the Conservatives will not vote for a bill that has had so much work put into it by everybody. I welcome the support that we are get...
The Presiding Officer NPA
::That concludes the debate on the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill.