27 February 2026
Concrete policies backed by clear targets and timelines must be at the heart of the Scottish Government’s Climate Change Plan, says Holyrood’s Net Zero Committee.
In its report published today, the Committee says that key policies must also state clearly who will lead on delivery and, wherever possible, be costed.
A clear and accessible system to monitor progress will also be vital to catch policies and interventions at risk of going off track.
The report highlights the Plan’s reliance on electrification for delivery across many sectors. The Committee calls on the Scottish Government to work with the UK Government and other UK administrations on a joint plan of action for more affordable electricity.
The report also identifies areas of potential risk in plotting a pathway to net zero emissions, either because the Scottish Government is dependent upon others for key actions or because they have set ambitions that look stretching. These include, for example, a quite fast-paced switchover to electric vehicles; decarbonising Scotland’s homes; and using negative emissions technology at scale over the next decade to abate hard to decarbonise areas.
The Plan sets out how the Scottish Government intends to meet emission reduction targets across all portfolio areas and sectors of the economy. It covers the period 2026-2040 as Scotland looks to be ‘net zero’ in carbon emissions by 2045.
10 committees took part in the Scottish Parliament’s scrutiny of the draft Plan. Leading the cross-parliamentary effort, the Net Zero, Energy & Transport Committee considered the draft as a whole; including governance, monitoring, and fiscal arrangements; as well as three sectors relevant to its remit; energy supply, transport and waste.
Convener of the Net Zero, Energy & Transport Committee, Edward Mountain MSP, said;
“Scotland has lost momentum in reaching net zero and a new Climate Change Plan is the key opportunity for a reset. The Plan must be focused on delivery, with credible proposals and clear lines of accountability for each major policy.
“There are some good aspects to the draft Plan but it often falls short, with insufficient detail on key policies and the mechanisms to achieve specific outcomes, or on costs and who they will fall on.”
Edward Mountain MSP, continued;
“Public engagement is central to net zero delivery as it requires actions at a household level. People rightly want assurances that changes they are being asked to make are affordable and sensible. We reached out to the public and to grassroots community groups as widely as we could, within the time we had.
“Getting the Plan right also means the Scottish Government must listen to industry, NGOs and scientific experts, as well as the Parliament.“The Scottish Government has given itself a maximum of just three weeks to reflect on our recommendations and its own public consultation. This is not good practice. It lowers confidence that consultation is meaningful and will help shape the new Plan. It must not happen again.”
The Scottish Government has committed to publishing its final Climate Change Plan in advance of the dissolution of Parliament for the 2026 election.
In their reports, Committees highlighted a range of issues including, for example:
In relation to energy supply, transport & waste:
Read the Net Zero, Energy & Transport Committee's report
Read the Rural Affairs & Islands Committee's report
Read the Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee's report
Read the Economy and Fair Work Committee's letter sent to the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee (246KB, pdf) posted 02 February 2026
Read the Health, Social Care and Sport Committee's letter sent to the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee with further findings due to be published shortly (136KB, pdf) posted 30 January 2026
Read the Criminal Justice Committee's letter sent to the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee (97KB, pdf) posted 08 December 2025
The Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee sent two letters to the letters the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee:
Read the letter sent on 9 December 2025 (121KB, pdf) posted 15 December 2025
Read the letter sent on 23 January 2026 (158KB, pdf) posted 26 January 2026
Read the Constitution, Europe, External Affairs & Culture Committee's letter sent to the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee (217KB, pdf) posted 26 January 2026
Read the Social Justice & Social Security Committee's letter sent to the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee (117KB, pdf) posted 01 December 2025
Read the Public Audit Committee's letter sent to the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee (192KB, pdf) posted 07 November 2023
Scrutiny of the Plan has been a cross-parliamentary effort, led by the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee.
The Committee’s engagement with the public on the Plan spanned a Call for Views; a targeted online consultation; meeting Members of the Scottish Youth Parliament; and a visit to Aberdeen meeting community groups and management, staff and trainees at the new Energy Transition Hub near the South Harbour
Separately from joint committee scrutiny at the Scottish Parliament, the Scottish Government received feedback on the draft Plan through a public consultation.
The independent governmental advisor, the Climate Change Committee published its own analysis of the draft Plan on 25 February 2026. The Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee will take evidence on the draft Plan from the CCC on Tuesday 3 March
There will be a Scottish Parliament debate on the draft Plan on Thursday 5 March.
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