Part of the debate – in the Senedd at 3:27 pm on 6 June 2018.
The spatial plan—wherever that went to. Then, all of a sudden, we're getting various announcements now about how the Government is being progressive in its thinking around the planning system. Well, actually, there doesn't seem to be much progress, I would suggest, that residents, certainly in the west of Cardiff, are pointing to at the moment to say that they feel that their voices and their needs are being listened to and we are getting the modern cities that have the environmental solutions, such as the green spaces on the tops of roofs. This document highlights that, in Singapore, for example, there are 100 hectares of green space on rooftops in Singapore. That's 240 acres for the old imperialists in this Chamber like myself, who measure things in acres. That, in the middle of one of the most densely populated cities, shows what can be achieved if you open your mind to some of these solutions.
We can be at the forefront of breaking some of this technology and developing that technology, and I really do hope that the Minister in her response will offer a road map of where the Welsh Government is taking some of these tricky questions and putting answers to those questions. Because, actually, the amendment today gives an indication that there is a lot of activity going on, but like a swimmer who is kicking like hell under the water but not really moving very far forward— that certainly is the sense that I feel when I look at much of the activity coming from the Welsh Government on many of these issues. Yes, there are many groups that you can point to, and think tanks that are advising, but we are not seeing the game-changing solutions put in place, and we need to see that because, as I said, 70 per cent of the population of Wales is written up as living in an urban environment and, if we are going to be a successful and dynamic economy for the twenty-first century, we have to develop those urban environments that have that liveability, that have that economic dynamic, and, above all, are beacons of excellence that other countries look at for the problems that they face. That's why I urge the house this afternoon to support the motion that is down in the Welsh Conservatives' name.