The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 46 tabled · 44 answered

Written questions by Stone.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by Jamie Stone this session, with the full answer and department. Back to the MP page.

Department:All (46)Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (12)Department for Transport (5)Treasury (4)Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (4)Ministry of Defence (3)Department for Business and Trade (3)Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (3)Northern Ireland Office (2)Department of Health and Social Care (2)Department for Culture, Media and Sport (2)Wales Office (1)Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (1)

Showing 13 of 3 · Ministry of Defence

17 Mar 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

What assessment he has made of the levels of imported ammonia required for munitions manufacturing.

Reply

Ammonia, an important precursor in the production of energetics and munitions, is one of many chemicals critical to defence manufacturing and, as such, supply levels are kept under review. The levels of ammonia required for munitions manufacturing differs between programmes. The fulfilment of those requirements is managed by Defence suppliers, and the MOD works closely with them to monitor and review national and international supply networks to ensure availability and manage risks to Defence outputs.

25 Apr 2025·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

If he will make an assessment of the potential merits of recognising the Royal Observation Corps as having served as a (a) regular and (b) reserve for the armed forces.

Reply

The Royal Observer Corps (ROC) was formed by a Royal Warrant on 21 May 1947; this Warrant was re-issued by Her Late Majesty The Queen several times, most recently in July 1966. The Warrant laid down that, while the Defence Council would be responsible for the ROC’s organisation, training, financing and conditions of service, amongst other elements, for operational control it came under the Home Office. This was reflected in the ROC’s own Regulations which stated that it was a uniformed civilian organisation, subject to the provision of the Ministry of Defence’s (MOD) civilian pay, staff and travel regulations. In addition, the regulations stated that the Commandant ROC was responsible to the Home Office for its operations, and to the MOD for administrative matters with direct access to the Assistant Under-Secretary Civilian Management (Administrators). From this, it is very clear the ROC was a civilian, and not a military, organisation, which, even when interacting with the MOD, was treated on the same terms as Civil Servants rather than Service Personnel. For that reason, the MOD does not believe there is any rationale which would justify the retrospective recategorisation of past members of the ROC (or any other civilian defence organisation) as having been Regular or Reserve members of the Armed Forces. However, this in no way diminishes the Government’s admiration of those who performed such a vital role during the Cold War.

12 Nov 2024·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

What steps he plans to take with his European counterparts to help develop defence projects.

Reply

European security is this Government’s foreign and defence priority. We will strengthen relationships with key European Allies through bilateral defence agreements, such as our recent Trinity House Agreement with Germany, and an ambitious UK-EU security pact which will bolster Euro-Atlantic security and complement our commitment to NATO.

Sources
SourceUK Parliament Members API
MethodQuestion and answer text as published. Question preamble (“To ask the…”) trimmed for readability; answers shown in full.