Skip to main content

Parliament dissolved ahead of election

The Scottish Parliament is now dissolved ahead of the election on Thursday 7 May 2026.

During dissolution, there are no MSPs and no parliamentary business can take place.

For more information, please visit Election 2026

Loading…

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.  

Filter your results Hide all filters

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. Session 6: 13 May 2021 to 8 April 2026
Select which types of business to include


Select level of detail in results

Displaying 8272 contributions

|

Meeting of the Parliament

Ferguson Marine

Meeting date: 16 May 2023

Edward Mountain

I do not need to add to the comments that have been made about the feelings of betrayal among islanders. Vessel 802 is not going to be value for money, but does the Government still intend to commission it with the ability to use liquefied natural gas fuel, which the yard thinks would be a mistake?

Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee

Complaint

Meeting date: 11 May 2023

Edward Mountain

I agree.

Meeting of the Parliament

General Question Time

Meeting date: 11 May 2023

Edward Mountain

To ask the Scottish Government, prior to the signing by the Minister for Green Skills, Circular Economy and Biodiversity of the memorandum of understanding between NatureScot and financial partners, how much financing it had identified would be required to meet its net zero targets for tree planting. (S6O-02223)

Meeting of the Parliament

General Question Time

Meeting date: 11 May 2023

Edward Mountain

I did not hear the answer. How much is needed to reach the net zero target for tree planting? What is the actual amount?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Salmon Farming

Meeting date: 10 May 2023

Edward Mountain

I am concerned that a 168 per cent increase suggests that there are problems with fish health and that we are just using more antibiotics to cover it up, which could be to the detriment of our need for antibiotics.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Salmon Farming

Meeting date: 10 May 2023

Edward Mountain

You are saying that you are content to let mortalities increase by 35 per cent. The industry will say that it is producing more fish and that therefore accounts for more mortalities. However, compounding an error surely is not the way forward. I do not understand any industry that would accept a 25 per cent mortality rate. I understand that, with farming, there is a certain amount of mortality, but are you really happy with 25 per cent? Do you think that that is good for the environment around our coastlines or good for the industry?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Salmon Farming

Meeting date: 10 May 2023

Edward Mountain

I have two questions. My first question is about waste. One thing that has been clear in the industry is that the use of antibiotics has gone up by 168 per cent since 2017, and they are mainly used at sea. Are you comfortable that the industry is using such a high level of antibiotics at sea and that one of them, oxytetracycline, is one of the main ones used to treat human diseases, which is building up the risk of overuse of antibiotics? Are you concerned about that?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Salmon Farming

Meeting date: 10 May 2023

Edward Mountain

I can put some flesh on the figures that Christine Grahame referred to, just to help you, cabinet secretary. In 2016, 22,000 tonnes of salmon died in fish farms. In 2021, the figure had risen by 35 per cent to nearly 30,000 tonnes of fish. If you were to put that on lorries that were touching each other nose to tail, they would stretch for nearly 11 miles—that is 11 miles of articulated lorries of dead fish.

In its report “Salmon farming in Scotland”, the Rural Economy and Connectivity Committee said that mortalities were “too high” and made some recommendations in that regard. I have looked at the information that you provided to this committee, and I do not see that any of those recommendations have been taken on board. The suggestion from the industry was to move fish farms further offshore to prevent gill disease and infections. Another suggestion was not to allow farms where there is high mortality to continue—they are still continuing—and another was to consider a red, amber and green system for farms that are performing or not performing whereby, if they got to amber, they would have to reduce their production, and, if they got to red, they would have to cease it. Do you not think that those were wise recommendations by that committee that would protect the industry from itself? Will you push forward those recommendations?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Salmon Farming

Meeting date: 10 May 2023

Edward Mountain

Okay. I will leave it there.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Salmon Farming

Meeting date: 10 May 2023

Edward Mountain

However, I will leave that hanging and move on to my other question. The report by the REC Committee, which I was part of, stated:

“SEPA are neither adequate nor effective.”

You have made a comment in the charts on recommendations 62 to 65, which covered SEPA, but it does not cover the real problem that the REC Committee identified, which was that SEPA was not carrying out enough inspections, and particularly unannounced inspections. Do you have any evidence that, since the REC Committee’s report was published, SEPA has carried out more inspections? If so, have more of them been unannounced, so that fish farms have not been prepared for its visits?

10:15