Crown Estate Devolution 2025-03-12

2025-03-12

TAGS
Response quality

Questions & Answers

Q1 Partial Answer
Stephen Gethins SNP
Arbroath and Broughty Ferry
Context
The SNP committed in their 2011 manifesto to generate 100% of Scotland’s electricity from renewables, which they claim was achieved due to devolving the Crown Estate and working with industry. The question arises as to why Wales should not have similar opportunities.
In the 2011 Scottish National party manifesto, we committed to having the equivalent of 100% of Scotland’s electricity generated from renewables. The SNP met that target and then some, thanks to the devolution of the Crown Estate and to working with industry. It is now delivering jobs and clean, green energy to Scotland and throughout the UK. Why should Wales not have the same opportunity?
I will not take any lectures on the Crown Estate from the hon. Member, whose party’s mismanagement of the Scottish seabed resulted in Scottish assets being sold off on the cheap. We are focused on doing whatever it takes to secure more than 5,000 jobs in Wales and the billions of pounds of investment that the Crown Estate can unlock for Wales.
Assessment & feedback
The questioner's request about devolving the Crown Estate was not directly addressed. Instead, the answerer criticised the Scottish National Party’s management of the Crown Estate assets in Scotland.
Criticising Opposition Changing Subject
Response accuracy
Q2 Direct Answer
Context
The Secretary of State previously mentioned that the Crown Estate can unlock over 5,000 jobs in Wales through floating offshore wind development. This question seeks to confirm if devolving the Crown Estate would hinder these developments.
Does the Secretary of State agree that the Government’s priorities should be ensuring that the Crown Estate can unlock thousands of new well-paid jobs in Wales that will come with floating offshore wind, rather than being distracted by calls to devolve the organisation in the middle of this national mission, which would risk the investment, jobs and lower energy bills that Wales desperately needs?
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Like her, I want people in Wales to benefit from those 5,300 new jobs, particularly young people, so that they do not have to leave Wales, where they have grown up, to earn or learn. I want that £1.4 billion boost to the economy. We are not prepared to put all that at risk of market fragmentation, undermining or potentially destroying developer confidence in FLOW, and have to watch that investment go elsewhere in the world.
Assessment & feedback
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Response accuracy