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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 17 February 2026
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Displaying 2517 contributions

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Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee [Draft]

Draft Climate Change Plan

Meeting date: 13 January 2026

Willie Coffey

Your constituents must tell you what my constituents tell me, which is that they do not know who they can trust, where they can go to buy a heat pump, or whether the company that they might buy one from will still be there next year or the year after. Is there a role for local authorities to somehow step into the territory and become the trusted partner? Perhaps they could be the volume supplier in order to bring prices down. We expect local authorities to sustain until 2040 or 2045; they could be a trusted partner that local people can go to for help, support, maintenance and so on. There is not much evidence of that; perhaps there is some kind of legislative barrier to it.

Where I live, my neighbours ask me all the time whether councils can play a role for residents in the private sector, in which the retrofit problem that we face is nine times higher in volume terms than in the public sector. My neighbours and constituents ask me whether the council can help to supply heat pumps, maintain them or provide them at a better price. It could be attractive and worthwhile for local authorities to be able to step into that space, possibly. In looking at the scale of the challenge and at how we can go from 8,000 installations a year to 100,000 installations a year, could Scotland look at engaging councils much more directly in the work?

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Draft Climate Change Plan

Meeting date: 7 January 2026

Willie Coffey

Professor Turner, our draft climate change plan assumes that the UK ETS will work. Is that how you see it? What happens if it does not? Can Scotland’s climate change plan succeed if that does not happen?

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Draft Climate Change Plan

Meeting date: 7 January 2026

Willie Coffey

I am conscious, convener, that, when our successor committee has a conversation on this issue in two or three years’ time, its members will possibly ask questions about how the situation has progressed and who is responsible for enabling progress to be made quicker, better and so on. It will be important to have that data at that time, so that we can react and respond positively in a way that ensures that we can develop the climate change plan and take it forward.

I thank our witnesses for responding to my questions.

11:45  

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Draft Climate Change Plan

Meeting date: 7 January 2026

Willie Coffey

Richard Woolley, to what extent does the UK ETS work in harmony with Scotland’s draft climate change plan proposals?

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Draft Climate Change Plan

Meeting date: 7 January 2026

Willie Coffey

My last query is on how well the on-going monitoring to advise both Governments about progress towards reaching the targets is working. Who will do that monitoring? Who is best placed to do the monitoring and to revise the plans, targets and schemes and so on as we go forward? Can anyone offer a view on that? Richard Woolley, how will we know that we are achieving what we set out to achieve?

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Draft Climate Change Plan

Meeting date: 7 January 2026

Willie Coffey

Could Scotland do that almost independently as we move forward?

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Draft Climate Change Plan

Meeting date: 7 January 2026

Willie Coffey

That was nice to hear.

As Stephen Kerr mentioned earlier, we probably would not need a CBAM at all if the UK was still within the European Union. The EU has its emissions trading scheme and, as I understand it, the UK has felt obliged to invent its own. The CBAM arrangement is necessary to try to prevent businesses in the UK and the European Union from being disadvantaged relative to one another.

I want to ask our witnesses for their views on the extent to which the UK’s ETS dovetails—or works harmoniously, let us say—with Scotland’s draft climate change plan. It seems to me that, if the ETS were to fail in any respect, Scotland would have great difficulty complying. Do our witnesses share that view? Does our draft climate change plan recognise that and try to compensate for it? Professor de Leeuw, would you like to start?

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Draft Climate Change Plan

Meeting date: 7 January 2026

Willie Coffey

Good morning. I did not think I would hear “Parliamo Glasgow” mentioned at a committee meeting in the Scottish Parliament.

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Digital Assets (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 17 December 2025

Willie Coffey

I would like to hear your reflections on where Scotland stands in comparison with other jurisdictions. We have had a brief discussion about what other countries are doing. Where does the bill stand? Are we playing catch-up or are we ahead of the game? Some of those who gave evidence in recent weeks described the bill as being particularly elegant, so I want to get a flavour of where you see it in relation to the law in other jurisdictions.

Economy and Fair Work Committee [Draft]

Digital Assets (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1

Meeting date: 17 December 2025

Willie Coffey

There is an international and global dimension, with many countries having peculiar and specific legal frameworks. How will problems and disputes be resolved if jurisdictions take different approaches to what are essentially global digital commodities?

That may be a question for Fraser Gough.