THE SCOTTISH Greens will draw up plans to create more than 100,000 jobs in a bid to power a sustainable recovery from the pandemic and face up to the climate emergency.
The party’s co-leader, Lorna Slater, will use her speech to the Scottish Greens conference today to announce plans to invest in renewable energy, public transport, retrofit homes to tackle fuel poverty and restoring nature.
The party says the strategy would create jobs in engineering, construction, trades, forestry and tourism and more, and will be well paid and unionised, according to the plans. Further details of each plan will be revealed during the campaign.
Ms Slater is expected to say: “The Scottish Greens have detailed investment plans that will see at least £7.5bn going to public transport, warm homes, restoring our natural environment, and the sector I work in, renewable energy, creating over 100,000 jobs in the process.
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“There is broad consensus that we need to see an investment led recovery. That a return to austerity would be even more devastating than last time round. The real question is what will we invest in?
“The Tories have been clear. They want to spend untold amounts of money on expanding their nuclear arsenal, which we in Scotland are forced to host, while at the same time cutting the budget for most public services next year by 8%. Delivering yet more grinding and cruel austerity for ordinary people.
“The SNP have also failed to break from the status quo. Continuing to plough billions into road building, and pinning their hopes on fossil fuel hydrogen and carbon capture and storage.
“Only the Scottish Greens have the solutions to tackle the climate emergency and ensure a green recovery from the pandemic.”
Fellow co-leader Patrick Harvie will make the case for urgent action on the climate emergency.
Tory leader Douglas Ross has called on the SNP to support jobs in the oil and gas sector and not "cosy up to the Green party” and instead “work with the people of the North East to protect jobs”.
He pointed to UK Government funding which means “£16 billion going in over the next few years”, which he said is “supporting vital jobs in the North East” as industries are transformed into green industries.
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