The final item of business is a members’  business debate on motion S6M-11662,   in the name of Douglas Lumsden, on the  declaration to triple nuclear energy,   launched at the 28th United Nations climate  change conference of the parties—COP28.   The debate will be concluded  without any question being put.

I thank the members who signed my motion  to allow us to debate the topic tonight.   The purpose of the debate is simple: to  bring Scotland into line with the majority   of countries in Europe and the rest of  the western world in recognising that  

Nuclear power is a key component of modern,  zero-carbon and sustainable energy provision. At present, Scotland’s anti-science Scottish  National Party Government has shut the door   to considering that green, sustainable and  reliable form of energy. We are losing out   to our European and Scandinavian partners, and  we are at risk of becoming overreliant on fossil  

Fuels to supply our base energy levels.  Quite simply, we are falling behind the   rest of the world in an area in which we have  the skills and the potential to be leaders. Why is that? It is because the SNP  so-called green Government refuses   to accept the science behind  the technology and, instead,  

Listens to anti-science rhetoric on a  vital component of the green energy jigsaw. At COP28, the declaration to triple  nuclear energy was signed by many   countries that see and understand the  potential of nuclear to provide clean   sustainable energy as part of the move  to net zero. The declaration understands

“the importance of the applications  of nuclear science and technology” to continue contributing “to monitoring climate change  and tackling its impacts”. It emphasises “the work of the International  Atomic Energy Agency” and recognises “that nuclear … is already the second-largest  source of clean … baseload power”.

The International Energy Agency has said  that nuclear energy will more than double   before 2050. In addition, the agency  recognises that, by increasing nuclear,   we will reach our net zero targets more  quickly, and doing so will be less costly. The declaration was signed by 22 countries, and  it demonstrates international recognition of  

The importance of nuclear as part of the  picture in our journey towards net zero. The provision of nuclear power gives us the  non-weather-dependent grid stability and security   that we need across the United Kingdom, which is  essential as we go forward. Is that not right?

Mr Whitfield is absolutely spot on: nuclear  is part of the energy mix that is required   to provide the energy security that we need.  Indeed, many countries feel that the picture   is incomplete without nuclear and that the  jigsaw will have a gaping hole if nuclear  

Is not included as a key part of providing  for our energy needs in a carbon-free world. Does Douglas Lumsden share my  concern that, in a debate on   a matter that is as important as  our energy future and security,  

Not one single member of the Green Party is  willing to come to the chamber to debate it? Mr Hoy makes a very good point. I was expecting  to see some Green members in the chamber,   but obviously they do not want to  make an argument against nuclear.

A rational approach should be taken to energy  policy, because it is too serious a matter for   us to do anything else. However, are there not at  least three risks with nuclear? First, the costs   for Hinkley Point C, Olkiluoto 3 in Finland and a  third EDF plant have massively overrun. Secondly,  

The decommissioning costs are unquantifiable, as  we have seen at Dounreay. Indeed, the costs for   that site are still with us today, and it is still  providing employment, I suppose. Thirdly—although   I hesitate to say this—we need to consider,  looking at what happened with Nord Stream,  

That nuclear power stations are particularly  prone to terrorist attack in the future. With regard to energy security, it is much better  that the provision be built in this country. Yes,   the costs for Hinkley Point have increased, but so  has the cost of all our energy, including wind—the  

Costs have shifted considerably in the contracts  for difference allocation round 6 process. In the short time that I have left, I will address  some of those points further and set out the case   for nuclear in relation to energy security,  green credentials and economic viability. The  

War in Ukraine has revealed an overreliance  on Russian oil and gas in many European   states. Countries without a base load of nuclear  power, such as Germany, have found themselves in   economic hardship as a result of the fact that  they do not produce enough power domestically,  

And they have even turned to coal. We must ensure  that we, in Scotland, do not fall into the same   trap and that we provide energy domestically  rather than importing it from other countries. Although nobody could deny that we have good wind  generation in Scotland, it is weather dependent  

And does not provide the base load that is  required for our communities day to day. At   present, onshore wind provides 10.8 per cent  of our UK energy mix, whereas nuclear provides   14.7 per cent. Wind is unreliable and provision  depends on the ability to transport the energy  

From the turbines to where it is needed. In  order to ensure grid stability and security,   we require a form of energy that can supply a  reliable base load 24/7, which nuclear does.   It complements renewable generation, but it is  required to supply that base load in the system.

By utilising nuclear energy, we were able to cut  gas imports by 9 billion cubic metres in 2022,   thereby reducing our exposure to international  gas markets. Nuclear makes sense for energy   security and is the only answer to ensuring  that we can meet our base-load requirements  

In a non-carbon way. Nuclear is a green  form of energy. According to the UN,   it has the lowest life cycle of carbon intensity,  the lowest land use and impact on ecosystems,   and the lowest mineral and metal use. In  addition, it is the only form of energy  

That is required to track, manage and make safe  its own waste, and it does so very successfully   and safely. As I should have mentioned, the  price of that is built into the initial cost. Nuclear energy is heavily regulated, has extremely  high safety standards and is well respected in  

The energy sector. To go against that is simply  hyperbole, made up by the Green wine-bar elites   who prefer to use pseudoscience, rather than  the real science, to back up their claims. Torness nuclear power station has the capacity  to power 2.2 million homes from one tenth of a  

Square mile of land; that is rather different  from the capacity of our onshore and offshore   wind farms. Soon, however, Torness, like  Hunterston before it, will be turned off,   and with it will go the future of many of our  young workers, who have not had the opportunity  

To work in the nuclear industry—unless, of  course, they up sticks and move down south,   where the Government does not have  a blinkered view of the world. That brings me to something that I remember from  the nuclear industry reception that my colleague  

Liam Kerr hosted a couple of months back. A  young apprentice—I cannot remember his name—gave   an inspirational speech on his career with EDF,  but he was looking to move away from Scotland to   continue his career. The highly skilled and bright  workforce of the future is being lost to Scotland.

Nuclear energy is produced where it is needed,  rather than in our precious rural countryside.   On Friday, I will attend a meeting of a local  community council that is very worried about   the impact on the local community of the  pylons and substations that are built to  

Transport the energy from wind farms to  where it is needed in the central belt. Will the member accept that power that is  generated by nuclear also has to be transmitted? Absolutely, but the minister misses the point—the  energy is produced near where it is needed,  

Which means that there is less distribution,  and fewer pylons are needed, across the country. The impact of pylons on our scenery in  Scotland should not be underestimated,   and communities are rightly concerned about their  impact on tourism and, therefore, on economic   development, as well as about the disruption  to ecosystems during their construction.

Finally, I will address the economic case  for nuclear energy in Scotland. Wind energy   has many hidden costs, such as the cost of the  transportation of energy and decommissioning costs   for turbines. Those costs are included up front  in the construction of nuclear power stations.  

Nuclear does not have to be the most expensive  option when it is done properly and at scale. In Scotland, the nuclear sector provides 3,664  jobs and £400 million in gross value added,   and—significantly—almost 25 per cent of the  sector’s direct employment is in the most  

Deprived 10 per cent of local authorities. Nuclear  has a key role to play in Scotland’s energy   future. To ignore it and use false arguments  against it is anti-scientific. The Government,   which apparently has superior green credentials,  is badly letting down the people of Scotland by  

Not investing in a vital technology that could  provide clean, green and sustainable energy for   years to come. The position that the Government  has taken is badly letting down our communities.   It is anti-science, based on false claims, founded  on fear and completely nonsensical. It lets down  

Our energy industry and our communities, and it  badly affects our standing with our neighbours. I call on the Government to join  countries such as the USA, Canada,   France, the Netherlands, Sweden,  Finland, Poland, Ukraine, Czechia,   Slovakia, Hungary, Romania and many others  in welcoming nuclear as part of the energy  

Mix and as an essential piece of  the jigsaw in reaching net zero. I refer members to my entry in the  register of members’ interests,   as I am a former councillor in Aberdeen  City Council. As it is traditional to do so,   I congratulate Douglas Lumsden on  bringing the debate to the chamber.

His timing in lodging the motion ties in  with what has happened not just in Dubai,   on the global stage of COP28, but in  our old stomping ground of Aberdeen City   Council. On the same day that COP28 came to a  close, Aberdeen City Council was due to discuss  

A petition calling for it to join Nuclear  Free Local Authorities, whose members aim to “tackle, in practical ways  and within their powers,   the problems caused by civil  and military nuclear hazards.” I understand from my former council  colleagues that the petitioners,   when they finally spoke to councillors  earlier this month, gave a very impressive  

Presentation, in which they spoke of how  renewable energy generation is cheaper   and does not leave future generations having to  deal with the nuclear waste that is left behind. During a cost of living crisis that has  been driven, in part, by high energy prices,  

It is particularly important that we consider  how much it costs to generate energy,   especially if there is a risk that those  costs will be passed on to consumers. Will the member take an intervention? No male Opposition member took an  intervention from any of the females  

On the SNP side of the chamber yesterday, so I  will not give way to any male MSPs tonight. If   we cannot intervene on the gentlemen, I will  not take an intervention from the member. I understand that, as things stand,  nuclear costs £92.50 per megawatt hour,  

Whereas offshore wind costs £37.65 per megawatt  hour. The major driver of that higher price   is the up-front costs of constructing the  power stations. That ties into the Scottish   Government’s position, whereby it supports  extending the operating lifespan of Torness,   provided that strict environmental and safety  criteria continue to be met, but it does not  

Support the building of new nuclear fission power  stations in Scotland with current technologies. That cost remains high—too high, I believe—despite  significant investment by the UK Government.   Meanwhile, greener renewable technologies are not  getting anywhere near the same level of financial  

Support. An example is pumped storage hydro, which  the minister has spoken of previously. It is able   to plug gaps in the intermittent supply that can  result from other forms of renewable generation. Douglas Lumsden and I, along with Audrey  Nicoll, who is also in the chamber, have  

The great privilege of representing Aberdeen,  which is—I will keep saying this—the future net   zero capital of the world. Alongside our hugely  skilled workforce, which I maintain is our biggest   asset, we also have, across and around Scotland,  an abundance of renewable energy sources. The motion that we are discussing  states that nuclear technologies

“can be located where they are needed”. Before I finish, I pose an open question.  In a Scotland that has as much potential to   generate wind, wave, tidal and hydro energy as we  have, where exactly do Conservative members think   should be fully considered for hosting  new nuclear plants in the future?

Will the member take an intervention? I know that the motion mentions industrial zones— The member is concluding her remarks. —but I want to hear place names,  and which parts of Scotland— I will take an intervention from Mr Hoy, because  he is chuntering from the sidelines, as usual. Briefly, Mr Hoy.

The member asked for a location and a place name.  I say Torness, near Dunbar, in East Lothian. In case the member did not realise what I meant,   I was referring to places where new  plants would be built, because Mr  

Lumsden seems to have decided that they should  be near the places that they are going to serve. There might be a role for nuclear in Scotland  at some point in the future but, at present,   the cost of new power stations runs  into billions of pounds, they take  

Years to construct, and they look set to  cost about three times as much per unit   as can be achieved from renewables sources. I  firmly believe that, as we look to tomorrow,   our focus should remain on clean,  green and cheap renewable energy. I call Graham Simpson, who joins us remotely.

It has been interesting to  listen to the debate so far,   and I congratulate my colleague Douglas  Lumsden on bringing it to the chamber. Jackie Dunbar asked where new nuclear provision  should be sited. Well, it cannot currently be   sited anywhere, because the SNP is blocking  it under the planning rules. If she wants to  

Remove those planning restrictions, she  might see applications coming forward. Douglas Lumsden is absolutely right to  highlight that the main point of all this   is energy security. I would have thought that  members on all sides of the chamber—by the way,   I share Douglas Lumsden’s disappointment  that there are no Green members taking  

Part in the debate—would recognise the  need for Scotland and the rest of the   UK to be energy secure, in particular in the  light of the conflict in Ukraine. Surely we   do not want to be held to ransom for our  energy by despots such as Vladimir Putin.

We need a mix of energy. We need wind farms, and  there is a role for hydro, too. However, we have   to accept that the wind does not blow all the time  and that there is a need to cover that base load,  

Which is why nuclear has a role. I was delighted  when the UK Government announced that it would be   setting up Great British Nuclear to herald the  introduction of small modular reactors. I can   tell members, if they do not know already, that  those reactors do not have to be built on site;  

They can be built in factories and then  transferred to their ultimate locations.   That is a great development—it is good  for the economy, for jobs and for skills. The UK Government has an ambition—I wish  that the Scottish Government would get on   board with this—to have a quarter  of our energy provided by nuclear  

By 2050. I would like Scotland to be part of that. What does nuclear provide? It provides the energy  security that I spoke about. Countries that phase   out nuclear—Germany is a good example—become  critically dependent on natural gas generation   to guarantee security of supply. Nuclear  provides grid stability and security and  

Provides a non-weather-dependent 24/7 base load.  It also provides green energy—it is as green   as renewables. According to the UN, nuclear  has the lowest life cycle carbon intensity,   the lowest land use and impact on  ecosystems, and the lowest mineral   and metal use. One would have thought that  Green Party members would welcome that.

Of course, there is an economic case for  nuclear, too. Douglas Lumsden spoke about   skills. We both attended the meeting in  Parliament where, as he mentioned, we   heard a powerful presentation from a  young apprentice, who might well have  

To leave Scotland if we end up with no nuclear  industry here. That would be a crying shame. Scotland needs nuclear, and I thank Douglas  Lumsden once again for securing the debate. It is a pleasure to contribute to the debate,  which allows me to talk about Torness in  

East Lothian, in South Scotland. I  thank Douglas Lumsden for bringing   the debate to the chamber when we are entering a  period in which debates about nuclear energy have   to take place. Those debates are taking place  across the United Kingdom, but unfortunately,  

In Scotland, we seem to have a Government that has  closed its eyes to the future. That is important,   because Torness is the last remaining nuclear  power station in Scotland. To answer Jackie   Dunbar’s question, the obvious site for  a new nuclear plant is where the Torness  

B nuclear reactor was designed to be,  which is right next door to Torness, so   that the very same generation hall can be  used for on-going electricity production. It has been announced—it is in the public  domain—that 2028 could be the last year  

Of generation for Torness. As we have  heard, that would mean that Scotland   would lose all its production capacity  for maintaining the stability of the grid. Will the member give way on that point? I am more than happy to give way.

I thank my friend for giving way on that important  point. He raised the issue of capital costs. One   of the huge capital costs of building a  nuclear power station is the turbine hall,   which already exists at Torness and  can continue operating for many decades  

To come. Adding on some new modular  reactors to that turbine hall would   massively reduce the capital costs of  a new nuclear station, would it not? I am grateful for that intervention, and  my friend is right. It is worth taking a   moment to discuss that aspect, because  we frequently hear about the high cost  

Of nuclear power generation, but it is the  only form of energy production for which   the consequences at the end of the life of  the power station are taken into account. On 19 February, the Scottish Government  published a paper on the challenges  

That are faced in offshore wind decommissioning.  However, the Government is unable to tell us   the period in which it will conclude its  analysis and decide what it is going to   do at the end of the generation period, in  particular with regard to wind turbine blades,  

Which are an intricate engineering marvel but  are not easily recyclable or repurposed. That   production charge for the wind turbine  is not included in wind energy costs. I am sure that Martin Whitfield will be aware  of the onshore wind sector deal, which includes  

A blade remanufacturing site. That means that  the ability to recycle the blades is imminent. I have spoken to a number of  onshore turbine manufacturers,   and I know that a significant number of  primary schools already have beautiful   rain shelters for their bicycles  made from former turbine blades.

I recognise that that is a challenge,  and I hope that the Government does too,   because it puts to bed the argument that nuclear  power is so expensive. It is expensive because   it takes into account the whole life cycle—and  beyond—of the production of green technology.

In the short time that I have left—I will not  press you for more, Presiding Officer—I note that,   last year, Torness generated 8TWh of low-carbon  electricity. We can bandy around figures,   as we do quite a lot in debates, but I also want  to talk about the nearly 700 people who work at  

Torness. That includes not only the apprentices  whom we have heard about, who are so skilled— Will the member take an intervention? If it is short, Mr Hoy. A very brief intervention, Mr Hoy. Thank you. Mr Whitfield may be coming to this  point. He, too, will have met Matthew French, the  

Talented employee at Torness power station who was  named apprentice of the year, and who told us when   he came to the Parliament that he wants to  continue working in nuclear and in Scotland.   It would be deeply regrettable if we were to lose  talent like that from Scotland, would it not?

Yes. I am grateful for that intervention. That is  not just an issue for Matthew—there are all the   families who rely on the income from those jobs,  the more than 8,000 people who, during a shutdown,   come to ensure the safety of the nuclear power  station site, and all the small and medium-sized  

Businesses that rely on that income, with more  than £10 million coming into East Lothian alone. The fact remains that for the Scottish  Government to take a simple ideological   stance against an energy source that will be  needed to maintain the grid and to ensure our  

Security is short-sighted and wrong. I say that  with the greatest respect. We need to readdress   that point, and the Government, rather than  hearing us shout “U-turn!”, will find support   from us on that. We need to support the nuclear  power industry as we go forward, in particular for  

The apprentices, the employees and the families,  and for East Lothian, Scotland and the UK. I am pleased that Douglas Lumsden has  brought the debate to the chamber, and I   am pleased in particular to see that the Minister  for Energy and the Environment will be responding,  

Because I am confident, from  my previous dealings with her,   that she will take a more thoughtful  approach than her predecessors did. Almost exactly two years ago, I spoke in a debate  on nuclear and dealt with all the Government’s  

Objections at that time, some of which we have  heard again today. One such objection was the   economic argument; I have tried to help Jackie  Dunbar with her misunderstanding of that today.   At the time of that debate, the price of power  from Hunterston B—until it was retired—and  

From Torness was about £45 per megawatt hour.  Meanwhile, data suggests the average price of   16 operational wind contracts for difference in  Scotland is £82 per megawatt hour. I am pleased   to inform Jackie Dunbar that the current  offshore wind strike price is actually £73  

Per megawatt hour, rather than the figure  that she offered, which is way out of date. On the build cost, the Scottish Government at  that time kept referring to Hinkley. However,   while the smaller, cheaper SMR is, in any event,  the preferred model that we would use in Scotland,  

The actual construction and operating  cost of Hinkley Point accounts for only   £30.50 per megawatt hour of the strike price  of £92.50 per megawatt hour; the other two   thirds relate to the cost of borrowing money.  Interestingly, the National Audit Office said that  

The UK Government’s regulated asset base model  might reduce the cost of Hinkley by 40 per cent. Furthermore, with wind, decommissioning  costs are not included, unlike with nuclear,   and constraint payments to compensate wind-farm  operators for curtailing their generation when   supply exceeds demand cost £380 million in  2022—that is roughly £11 per megawatt hour.

The Government has, historically, pointed to  nuclear being high risk in terms of safety,   but—touch wood—there have been no  major nuclear safety incidents in   the UK industry in its nearly 50 years of  operation. Anyone who has done their homework   knows that all current operating stations have  extraordinary levels of built-in redundancy,  

While being subject to one of the most  robust regulatory regimes in the world. The minister’s predecessors were also worried  about waste, but they seemed to be unaware   that the nuclear industry is the only one to  track, manage, make safe and—crucially—pay for  

Its own waste. Indeed, I recall that EDF and  the UK Government set aside £14.8 billion to   decommission existing power stations and  dispose of waste from them. In any event,   the amount of waste that is produced by nuclear  is very small. Almost all the radioactivity is  

Found in a tiny fraction of the waste, known as  high-level waste, which is robustly dealt with. The final point is about what we do  if we do not have nuclear in Scotland. Does the member recognise that the evolution of  modern fourth-generation and fifth-generation  

Nuclear reactor designs means that they  actually consume nuclear waste as energy,   thus creating a closed waste loop? Absolutely—Paul Sweeney makes a fantastic point. I move on to what we do if we do not  embrace that technology and do not   move forward with nuclear. To pick up on  Martin Whitfield’s well-made intervention,  

Wind turbines tend to operate for about 25 to  40 per cent of the time, as against nuclear,   which operates for just over 90 per cent of the  time. Without nuclear power, when wind turbines   are not operating or solar is not producing,  the grid would have to use sources such as gas.

The point about energy security has been  raised several times, and it is notable   that nuclear cut our gas imports by 9 billion  cubic metres in 2022. That is key. In 2022,   I put to the then Minister for Just Transition,  Employment and Fair Work the following point:

“According to the Climate Change Committee’s  report ‘Net Zero—The UK’s contribution to   stopping global warming’, to hit net zero,  the United Kingdom will need four times more   clean power by 2050. It further says that 38  per cent of that needs to be ‘firm power’” —in other words, base load. I asked the minister:

“From what source will Scotland get that 38  per cent of firm electricity generation ”— Of course, he never answered the question. Nobody  can answer it, and no one has done so since. I am, therefore, looking forward to listening to  the minister respond to that point, because I am  

Confident that, in closing, she will eschew the  approach of her predecessors. I am confident that   she will not make false comparisons or question  the safety of the technology and the waste issue,   and that, above all, she will answer the question:  if base load is not to be generated in Scotland by  

Nuclear, from where will the Government generate  it? The facts that I have set out do not mean that   we should not build wind farms—they mean that we  should not try to move forward with wind alone. We should follow the advice of expert  modelling organisations such as the  

Climate Change Committee, the Organisation for  Economic Co-operation and Development, the UN,   the International Energy Agency, Massachusetts  Institute of Technology, Imperial   College London and the Energy Systems  Catapult, and build both nuclear and wind—and   everything else—in Scotland in order to build  a strong, secure, resilient net zero economy.

I had the privilege of being the energy minister  for five years, from 2011 to 2016. That allowed   me to meet and learn from experts in Scotland  and the UK, some of whom Mr Kerr just mentioned. It struck me that, to have a functioning  electricity system, you need to have a  

Variety of different provisions of electricity,  because each has pluses and minuses. There is a   difference between electricity and most goods and  services. I happen to like Mars bars, Maseratis   and Mâcon Rouge wine, but I could live without  them. If there was a shortage in the supermarket  

Or the car showroom, it would not matter one jot.  With electricity, however, you need to generate   enough to keep the lights on and the factories  going. If you do not do that, you have a very   serious problem—as Germany has discovered, with  much of its industry having had to shut down.

The maxim that applies best when it comes   to electricity supply is that of Winston  Churchill, who said that the solution is “variety and variety alone.” The question is, what is that variety? I  am agnostic on future new nuclear power.   When I was minister, the Government  modulated its position to support  

The continued operation of Torness  and Hunterston, which was welcome. I am agnostic now, because the technology has  driven forward, but so has the technology of   advanced gas turbines, which has improved  massively in the past 20 years. I am no  

Expert in any of that, I have to say, but  I think that base load and backup will be   an essential feature of an electricity grid  system; it cannot be entirely stochastic. The risks of wind power are less pronounced  than some argue, because of the way in which  

The electricity system is operated, as I learned  when I visited National Grid in Warwick some years   ago. It is more reliable, because one can predict  within 24 hours where the wind is going to blow. Floating offshore wind—as Fred Olsen told me over  breakfast in Orkney—is advantageous for Scotland,  

Because our waters are deeper and  fixed platforms are more expensive.   Floating platforms allow us the  opportunity to station the wind   farms where the wind is blowing in a  different direction and therefore make   more money and generate more electricity.  However, perhaps that is a red herring.

Douglas Lumsden asked a fair question: if  not from nuclear, from where do we get the   base load and backup? On that, I think that  advanced gas turbines should be considered,   because they have improved so massively, can  be built very quickly and the technology is  

Established and clear. I am not quite sure  that the technology has been fully developed   in respect of some of the smaller nuclear  power stations; it may have been, it may not. Does Fergus Ewing think that  the Government’s partners,   the Green Party, would support him in  advocating new gas turbine production?

If I said that rain was wet, the Green  Party would not support me. They are   not here, which is a bit disappointing,  but hey ho—I will leave that to one side. There is far too much partisanship  in these debates, which will not get  

Us very far. Rationality alone is what  is required. We need to look at things   with an open mind and recognise that  technologies have increased massively.   The problems of the past will not  be the problems of the future. Are we going to have too many wind farms  and too much generating capacity from wind?  

There is a risk around that, and the  profitability and economic benefits of   wind are nowhere near matching those of oil  and gas. I am afraid that that is a fact,   no matter how successful wind power becomes. We should listen to the experts. In  this debate about electricity supply,  

Can we not have less heat and more light? I thank Douglas Lumsden for bringing forward  this timely debate. It is timely because,   when it comes to energy, we in Scotland  are at an inflection point—indeed,   it is perhaps more accurately described as  a tipping point. Minister, are we about to  

Tip forwards—to maintain and renew our  nuclear future—or backwards into what   could be an intensely vulnerable  position in our energy security? If the answer is yes to the latter, the SNP  Government must reconsider its approach to   Scotland’s nuclear future, because nuclear  is a critical part of the journey to net  

Zero. That is why it is regrettable  not to see Green members this evening,   because they talk about net zero but neglect  the fact that, in very many countries,   nuclear will be a fundamental part of that  journey. The declaration to triple nuclear  

Energy, which was signed at the COP28  summit, underlines the vital role of   nuclear in achieving global net zero targets by  2050. Regardless of what we do here, therefore,   other countries’ nuclear capacity will help  us on that journey. As John Kerry said at COP,  

The target simply cannot be met without it.  There is, in effect, no net zero without nuclear. In my region, EDF Energy has signalled its  ambition—at this stage, it is no more than   that—to extend the life of the  Torness power station; indeed,  

It says that it plans to extend the life  of four nuclear power stations in the UK,   potentially, and increase investment in  its nuclear fleet. Scotland will lose out   on that unless it reconsiders its position  now. It will make the decision whether to   extend the lifespan of those stations  that have advanced gas-cooled reactors.

It is important to make the distinction  that the Scottish Government is very   supportive of extending the life  of the existing plant at Torness. Precisely—and I welcome the  minister’s saying that. However,   if in principle the Government would like  to see it extended, why not renew it? If the  

SNP and the Greens are really committed to net  zero, they will have to tease out that question. The four stations are Torness, Heysham  1 and 2 and Hartlepool, and a decision   will be taken by the end of the year. The  minister has pre-empted me, though, and it  

Is good to hear that she welcomes the idea of  an extension. Nevertheless, it will require   regulatory approval. The fundamental question  here in Scotland is whether we want nuclear to   be part of our journey to energy security. In the  words of Fergus Ewing, are the Government’s mind,  

Eyes and ears completely closed to  the benefits that nuclear brings? I will summarise those benefits. Torness opened in  1988, and EDF Energy confirms that it is still one   of its most productive nuclear power stations.  Despite what the nuclear doomsayers claim,  

It generates clean, safe power. Since it opened,  Torness has produced nearly 280TWh of zero carbon   electricity. Let me put that into context:  that is enough electricity to power every home   in Scotland for 28 years and losing it will be a  critical loss to our energy capacity and security.

As Martin Whitfield has said,  Torness provides many stable,   high-skilled and high-paid jobs. Its pioneering  apprenticeship programme, which delivers for the   local community and the local economy, will be  lost, and those skills, in turn, will be lost   to the Scottish economy. It also remains  one of East Lothian’s largest employers,  

With 500 staff and 250 contractors; its  salary bill totals £40 million per year—and   much more than that through supply chain-related  jobs. I hate to say it—and it is not a partisan   point—but all of that is at risk because of  what is now an illogical, dogmatic and, frankly,  

Environmentally and economically illiterate  approach to nuclear energy in this country. As Douglas Lumsden has made clear, the Scottish  Conservative Party supports a nuclear future   for Scotland. Extending the lifespan of the  existing stations will help cut gas imports   and carbon and relieve winter pressures on  our grid. That would be the short-term prize;  

The longer-term prize would be for Scotland to  follow the rest of the UK, France and the many   other European nations whose virtues the  SNP regularly extols and look forward to a   new fleet of nuclear stations here in Scotland.  Frankly, the policy that the SNP is adopting at  

The moment beggars belief, and Scotland will pay  a heavy price if Scottish ministers do not think   again on Scotland’s nuclear future. It is a  fundamental part of our net zero ambition. Despite all the accusations of our  being dogmatic and ideological,  

The Scottish Government’s position is, as everyone  knows, that we do not support the building of new   nuclear power stations in Scotland under current  technologies. Our main objection is that it is   expensive, creates toxic waste and, we believe, is  not needed for our future net zero energy system.

However, I want to talk about Torness,  which has been mentioned by a number of   members and in which, obviously, Martin  Whitfield and Craig Hoy have an interest. Will the member give way? I will do so once I have finished my point.

We recognise the contribution that Torness  and other nuclear generation plants have made,   historically, to Scotland’s people and economy.  It was important for me to mention to Mr Hoy that   we are supportive of the operating lifespan of  Torness, Scotland’s last remaining nuclear power  

Station, being extended, if strict environmental  and safety criteria continue to be met. The minister said that the main issue that  the Scottish Government has is with the   cost and the waste, but the points  about the cost and the waste have   been comprehensively debunked throughout  the debate. How can the minister sustain  

The Government’s objection on  the basis of cost and waste? Mr Kerr might think that he has debunked  the cost issue. I beg to differ,   and I will come on to that later in my  speech. Jackie Dunbar was quite right to  

Point out the difference with regard to  terawatt-hour cost and so on, but there   is also the cost of building such facilities  in the first place, which I will come on to. Historically, nuclear power has undoubtedly played  an important role in electricity generation in  

Scotland. At the moment, however, it  accounts for only 16 per cent of the   total amount of electricity generated in Scotland.  Meanwhile, electricity generated from renewables   accounts for about 71 per cent of the total.  Those figures are for the same period—that is,  

From last year. When it comes to consumption,  the equivalent of 113 per cent of Scotland’s   gross electricity consumption  is generated by renewables. The reduction in the amount of electricity  generated by nuclear power plants in Scotland   will be compensated for, to a great degree, by  the vast expansion of renewables and flexible  

Technologies. I thank Fergus Ewing for making the  point that we are in a fast-moving technological   situation. We have existing and emerging  technologies, particularly in wave and tidal,   but also in battery storage. In addition,  we have existing technologies that have   not had the support that nuclear energy  has had, such as pumped hydro storage.  

I am not giving way to members—there  are some points that I want to make. I come back to Liam Kerr’s point. We cannot  ignore England’s current experience of the   nuclear developments that are taking place there.  The new nuclear power stations that are being  

Built in England will take many more years than  was predicted, and it will be decades before they   become operational. Those projects are pushing  up energy bills even before they come online. I want to mention the contract for  difference for Hinkley Point C, which was  

Agreed in 2013 and is for 35 years. As Jackie  Dunbar said, that contract provides for a strike   price of £92.50 per megawatt hour. That is far  higher than the strike prices set for offshore   and onshore wind in the sixth allocation  round, which were £73 and £64 respectively. Will the minister take an intervention?

No—I will carry on. I also want to mention the fact  that, whereas nuclear energy has   had a great deal of support from the UK  Government, other existing technologies   that incur high capital expenditure  costs, such as pumped hydro storage,   have not benefited from the same scale of  direct investment by the UK Government.

Does the minister accept that the UK’s largest  pumped storage station, which is in Wales,   can produce only the same amount of  electricity as Torness does in 7.5   hours? Does she not recognise that  that is completely inadequate? My point was about the fact that a great  deal of investment has been put into  

Nuclear energy—it is almost as though the nuclear  sector has been propped up while other sectors   have, in effect, been ignored. Given Scotland’s  geography, we have a major geographical advantage   when it comes to pumped hydro storage. Indeed,  Graham Simpson recognised its value in his speech.

As for the nuclear gamble that the UK  Government is taking, members should not   just take my word for that; the International  Energy Agency published research suggesting   that new nuclear power in the UK would be more  expensive than in any other country. However,  

The UK Government continued to commit  significant sums of public money to it. Hinkley Point C was due to be completed by 2025,   at a cost of £23.5 billion—that is what was  said at the time. With inflation taken into   account, EDF Energy estimated last month that  the project might not be completed until 2031,  

At a cost of up to £46.5 billion. I  thank Fergus Ewing for pointing that out. Will the member give way? I have taken as many interventions  as I think that I can manage. Despite those delays and cost  overruns—and indeed the price  

Per megawatt hour—the UK Government continues  to stake taxpayer money on its nuclear gamble. Many times in Douglas Lumsden’s speech and in  other speeches by members, we were described as   being anti-science. Are all the other  countries that have decided not to go   down the nuclear route anti-science,  too? Are Austria, Denmark, Ireland,  

Italy, Estonia, Latvia, Luxembourg,  Malta and Portugal anti-science? Will the minister take an intervention? No, I have taken as many interventions  as I think that I can manage. Liam Kerr mentioned small modular reactors— I  will battle on through the constant barrage of   chuntering, Presiding Officer. Last week, the  UK Parliament’s Environmental Audit Committee  

Said that the Government’s approach to SMRs  “lacks clarity” and that they are unlikely   to play a role in decarbonising the grid by  2035. SMRs are innovative—I am not blind and   deaf to innovations in any sphere that  can decarbonise the grid and give us a  

More secure energy future—but they use the  same method of electricity generation as   traditional nuclear fission and leave  the same type of radioactive waste. I was struck by what Liam Kerr said about  £15 billion being set aside to deal with  

Nuclear waste. What else could be done  with £15 billion? Could we invest it in   pumped hydro storage? Could we invest it in  moving battery storage to where it needs to   be? One thing that I have noticed since taking  this job and from going on many visits is that  

Battery storage is really coming on in how it  deals with the intermittent nature of wind. Will the minister give way? I have already said that I am coming to an end. We know that Scotland needs to  deliver cleaner and greener energy,   but new nuclear is not the  answer. We are energy rich—

Members, let the minister respond. As has been pointed out many times by many  members, we will have more electricity than   we can use domestically—we are almost in  that space already. Instead of wasting   money on the wrong solutions, we  will continue to support clean,  

Green technologies that support energy  security and a just transition to net zero,   as well as fund the innovations that  will be able to store that electricity. I thank Douglas Lumsden for bringing  the debate to the chamber, but we  

Will just have to disagree on this. I  can see that Liam Kerr thought that I   was going to make a massive U-turn based on  his arguments. However, although we disagree,   what we will all agree on is that this is  a very fast-moving area of technology. We  

Cannot say never to any technology, but at  the moment nuclear is far too expensive and   waste is still very much a live issue. For  that reason, our position has not changed.

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