The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 659 contributions

Speeches by Downie.

Every Hansard contribution by Graeme Downie this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 241260 of 659 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

Finally, should we change the name of the Department? Would you like to?

13
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

I am interested in the key motivation. Is it to stop the increase of forest fires and reduce the risk of flooding? A lot of that would come back to how the Department communicates.

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4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

You mentioned that 79% of people support action on climate change. Is there any data further to that on what their motivation was for supporting action on climate? Was it saving the planet, lower bills, jobs or investment? I believe the statistic—it sounds right—but the motivation matters almost more than a quick answe

68
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

Ryan, is there something from a civil service point of view about those policy languages? That policy language is, of course, the right scientific term to use, but how do we make sure that the Department does not reflect that in its public communications, and that that language is kept for scientific or internal discus

55
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

What might be better terms to use? Does the Secretary of State need a new title?

16
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

You have just been describing some of the good actions you are taking and net zero was running through a lot of the things you were describing. If we want the public to engage with the agenda—I think you were right to point out that the motivation of individuals or businesses is around cost—would it not be more helpful

81
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

You mentioned in your introduction the importance of effective communications. What do you think the public think that net zero means?

21
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

There is a risk that if we do not tackle this, food prices will increase and health crises will increase, partly precipitating climate change, because we have not deterred effectively and told that story.

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4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

I will be joining you on it in a second. Is that also the case when we are telling a narrative about the threats that are caused by or that precipitate climate change, rather than just describing a climate change narrative? In the same way as we say, “Why is renewable energy important? Because it brings your bills down

82
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

Can I jump in briefly, Chair? As you know, this is one of my pet projects.

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4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

You are saying there would be merit in formalising that kind of arrangement, as part of energy security in the most physical sense.

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4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

And that is done quite informally at the moment, or done between militaries.

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4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

In an increasingly fractured world, can you see something—I’m not suggesting the Hamburg declaration—but some kind of security force and collaboration coming out of that that is cyber and physical?

30
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

Recently, I was speaking to someone in Scotland who is involved in energy generation in the north-east offshore. They said, “If a Russian submarine appears next to my installation, who do I phone?”

33
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

In terms of the more physical and cyber-security elements that are covered in the Hamburg declaration, where do you see the line for them? How close should that co-operation be? We have got something like the joint expeditionary force that covers physical security in the High North. Are you almost asking for a physical

76
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

On that point about interconnectors and renewables, the challenges came up in a previous evidence session. If it is sunny in the south-east of England, the odds are it is sunny in the north-west of France. At what point do we say, “We can or can’t share, because we have got our own as well”? Where is that balance, in t

67
4 Feb 2026Energy Security and Net Zero Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 734)

Professor Morisetti, in your introduction after answering the Chair’s first question, you talked about Russia attacking Ukrainian energy infrastructure as a weak point. We saw the UK sign up to the Hamburg declaration in January, which covers a range of energy security issues, and is a sign of international co-operatio

77
3 Feb 2026Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2026-02-03)

My position is similar to that of my two colleagues. This is one of the biggest issues we get in the mailbag. The issue has been ongoing for years. It is a very difficult one to tackle. I think more time for colleagues to discuss that in detail and to find the correct solutions, which will have a short-term and long-te

66
3 Feb 2026Town and City Centre Safety

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Dowd. Last Friday I was at a roundtable with local businesses, creative organisations and city centre groups in Dunfermline to discuss the safety of the town centre and how we can make Dunfermline a prosperous city in the future. What struck me was the unanimity of exp

crimelocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
392
22 Jan 2026 Business of the House

Dunfermline is both Scotland’s ancient capital and its newest city, and we are starting to plan for what Dunfermline can become and how it can truly fulfil its potential. I have launched a survey to ensure that local people have a great say in that, and can give me their ideas about what the city should be. Will the Le

energyeconomy-jobshealth
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.