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 7545 contributions
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
The bill requires targets to be put in place within 12 months of its coming into force. That would be in 2026-27, and then 2030 is only three years down the road. Is there any chance at all that we might achieve the ambitions that are set out in the bill, with three years to reverse what is a biodiversity crisis?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
You mentioned traceability. How do you ensure that?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
I am just concerned that we are taking away a licence that ensures standards but there is nothing in its place.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
Tim, do you want to come in?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
I have one final question, but first I want to go back to the topic that Tim Eagle referred to and ask about how the decision on the list of aims was made. The bill states:
“Without limit to the generality of subsection (1), those aims include”,
and then it sets out a list.
We must be conscious that, for Galloway, which is potentially going to be designated as a national park, its economic future is not reserved to recreation, tourism or visitor management. The most significant commercial forestry in Scotland is based in an area of Galloway; we have the most significant dairy industry in Scotland and, potentially, in the United Kingdom; and one of our areas has the highest concentration of renewables. However, those industries have been excluded from the list. It must have been a conscious decision not to mention them. Given that Galloway is the only area to have been identified as Scotland’s next national park, why do the aims seem to exclude all economic activity other than tourism and recreation?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
At the moment, there are fixed-penalty notices for littering and fly-tipping in Loch Lomond and the Trossachs. Can you give examples of where else fixed-penalty notices might be used?
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
I am a bit confused. You said that NatureScot could ultimately say that the plan is the plan. However, section 16(3) amends an appeals process that is set out in schedule 2 of the 1996 act.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
Okay. Thank you.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
I can see there being issues in the future about legal obligations in the absence of any legal agreement.
Rural Affairs and Islands Committee [Draft]
Meeting date: 5 March 2025
Finlay Carson
It is not the process of the consultation that is the issue here. At no point during the consultation was it suggested that the rules under which the national park might operate would change. That is the issue. There was no opportunity for constituents to respond to the fact that the rules under which their area might have to operate will change.
It is not an ideal situation; it is not an ideal scenario that the two things are working in parallel. One should have been done before the other. The Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill, with the national park changes, would preferably have become legislation before a new national park was consulted on, surely.