The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 1810 contributions
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
Thanks. I will come back later to ask about some of the changes that have been made.
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
Cabinet secretary, could you give a bit of clarity about the fees that will be introduced for electricity consent applications? Will those fees be ring fenced to support the work of the energy consents unit? I draw your attention to the views that we got from Scottish Environment LINK that, if we were to do that, it would be likely to lead to
“better resourcing of the determination process and therefore more timeous processing of applications, without being overly onerous for applicants.”
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
It is useful to get that on the record. For clarity, you said that you expect the fees to go to the energy consents unit, but can you confirm that that is definitely what will happen?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
That would be useful. I know from being in various local authorities recently the differences between places where people can drop materials for collection 5 feet away and places where they have a long walk to recycle things. In the latter case, it is just not happening.
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
I have a couple of questions about the practical changes that the SSI will make. First, the cabinet secretary referred to the polluter-pays principle. What is the estimated income that will be generated for our local authorities in implementing this piece of work? Also, what are the estimated costs to SEPA of implementing these enforcement powers, and can it generate any income from this?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
I want to put on the record what that means in practice. Is it moving from plastics to cardboard or reducing packaging entirely?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
I think that issue about there not being a gap is important for environmental standards—we do not want to see a reduction in standards here.
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
One thing that strikes me here is that significant changes will be taking place, which includes new duties for local authorities and SEPA, but there is gap in relation to advertising the changes. How will our constituents know about them? We need there to be publicity, led by the Scottish Government, so that people will understand what is happening, because it will impact their everyday lives. The changes that the cabinet secretary has mentioned are pretty significant.
I would also like there to be monitoring and analysis of the registration fees that SEPA will receive. Although no concerns have been raised about that, that will enable us to see what practical change is taking place once delivery is under way.
Providing a lot more information on and giving a lot more publicity to the issue would be very much welcome.
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
I welcome those answers, because the issue of small producers and retailers is huge and one that I certainly raised in the first instance.
You did not clarify whether there had been any discussions with local government or NGOs in the drafting of the current regulations.
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 27 May 2025
Sarah Boyack
I am not going to begin to answer that question. Let us have that conversation afterwards.
Another area that I think we have not focused on enough is heat in our communities—heat for our buildings and heat networks. The capacity is there. If we have ever more renewables, we need to think in a more joined-up way. That could involve pumped hydro storage, as well as providing a source for the use of that electricity.
Our amendment references the heat strategies that local authorities submitted last January. There is an opportunity for us—and there are huge opportunities for not-for-profit heat networks—to keep prices affordable for consumers.
Local authority or community ownership would give us more accountability. Denmark has been following best practice for decades. Throughout that time, Denmark has not just had local authority-owned heat networks; they have also decarbonised. That is a win-win that we are not making the most of.
We have examples. Aberdeen Heat and Power was established in 2002, and I have visited it several times.
Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP) rose—