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2025 in Scotland

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Centuries: Decades: See also:List of years in Scotland
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2025 in Scottish television

Events from the year 2025 in Scotland.

Incumbents

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Events

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January

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  • 1 January –
  • 3 January – Public Health Scotland data released for the week ending 29 December shows the number of hospital admissions for flu has increased by 12% in a week, with influenza present in 52.6 per 100,000 people.[7]
  • 6 January – A 2.9 magnitude earthquake is recorded in Kinloch, 19 miles north west of Oban.[8]
  • 7 January – A fresh yellow weather alert for snow and ice is issued for large parts of Scotland, starting from midday and lasting for 24 hours.[9]
  • 8 January –
  • 9 January –
    • Following a trial at the High Court of Justiciary in Glasgow, the members of a Romanian grooming gang, consisting of four men and one woman, are convicted of the rape of ten women between 2021 and 2022.[14]
    • Former First Minister Humza Yousaf accuses Twitter owner Elon Musk of trying to inflame racial tensions after he posted about the murder of a Glasgow schoolboy.[15]
    • A pair of lynx released illegally are recaptured in the Cairngorms National Park. A second part are found in the same area the following day.[16]
  • 10 January – The UK records its coldest temperatures of the winter so far, with an overnight low of −14.5°C (5.9°F) in Altnaharra, northern Scotland.[17]
  • 11 January –
  • 12 January – Police focus their search for missing sisters Eliza and Henrietta Huszti on the River Dee.[21]
  • 13 January –
    • In a social media post, former First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announces that she and Peter Murrell, the former SNP chief executive, have "decided to end" their marriage and have been separated for some time.[22]
    • The CalMac ferry MV Glen Sannox begins timetabled sailings on the Arran route.[23] [24]
    • The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland says that four lynx illegally released in the Cairngorms National Park showed signs of starvation.[25]
    • Shell plc says it is investigating a "suspected unexploded ordnance" near the Far North Liquids and Associated Gas System (FLAGS) pipeline in the North Sea off Shetland.[26]
    • The Thistle, the UK's first drugs consumption clinic, opens in Glasgow.[27] It is used more than 130 times in its first week.[28]
  • 20 January – The bodies of a 36-year-old man and a six-year-old girl, later identified as Mark Gordon and his daughter Hope, are discovered at a house in West Lothian.[29] [30]
  • 21 January – Perthshire teenager James Maris, who attempted to construct a semi-automatic rifle using a 3D printer he received for Christmas, is sentenced to 300 hours community service, along with a three year supervision order and a twelve month night time curfew.[31]
  • 22 January –
    • The Scottish Government scraps its flagship policy of launching a National Care Service, although the Social Care Minister confirms that a proposed National Care Service Bill will still be presented to Parliament.[32]
    • MSPs pass the Welfare of Dogs Bill, requiring a code of practice for getting a dog to be drawn up in the next twelve months.[33]
  • 23 January –
    • The Scottish Government issues an emergency alert to mobile phones across Scotland ahead of Storm Éowyn.[34] The alert was received by approximately 4.5 million people across Scotland.[35]
  • 24 January – Storm Éowyn makes landfall in Scotland, causing significant damage and disruption to public services including transport networks and schools. Wind speeds as high as 102mph were recorded on the Tay Road Bridge, and approximately 117,000 homes across the country were left without power.[36]
  • 25 January –
    • The train line between East Kilbride and Glasgow Central closes for 16 weeks for electrification work to be carried out. It is scheduled to reopen on 18 May.[37]
    • A 19 year old man from East Ayrshire, Calum Carmichael,[38] dies from complications following a tree falling onto his car during Storm Éowyn on 23 January.[39]
  • 26 January – More than 14,000 homes across Scotland are still without electricity and power following Storm Éowyn.[39]
  • 27 January –
    • A notorious paedophile gang of five men and two women are sentenced to lifelong terms in prison and warned they may never be released on parole.[40] [41]
    • Police Scotland say they have completed a search of the River Dee in Aberdeen and that inquiries are ongoing on the investigation into the disappearance of two sisters.[42]
  • 28 January – Joe Fitzpatrick announces that he will not stand for re-election to the Scottish Parliament seat of Dundee City West at the 2026 Scottish Parliament election.[43]
  • 29 January – The Scottish Government announces the early release of around 390 prisoners beginning in February as the latest measure to reduce the prison population.[44]
  • 30 January – The Court of Sessions in Edinburgh rules that licences for the Rosebank and Jackdaw oil fields were granted illegally, and that their owners must seek fresh approval from the UK government.[45]
  • 31 January –
    • Police in Aberdeen searching for two missing sisters announce the discovery of the bodies of two unidentified women near to where they were last seen.[46] [47]
    • Transport for Scotland announces a 3.8% increase for train fares from April.[48]

February

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  • 1 February – Police confirm that a second woman's body has been discovered close to where two sisters disappeared in Aberdeen.[49]
  • 3 February – First Minister John Swinney says there will be no ban on cats in Scotland after the Scottish Animal Welfare Commission suggested restricting them in some areas because of a potential "significant risk to wildlife populations".[50]
  • 4 February –
    • Teachers in Glasgow belonging to the Educational Institute of Scotland vote to strike over planned cuts to education funding.[51]
    • Aberdeen councillor Kairin van Sweeden of the SNP is cleared by the Ethical Standards Commissioner of breaching the code of conduct after describing Labour's Deena Tissera as a "new Scot" during an Aberdeen City Council meeting in 2023.[52]
  • 6 February –
    • BBC News reports the case of a woman from the Highlands who, after being assaulted by her husband, was unable to find a divorce lawyer to represent her through legal aid despite approaching 116 different law firms.[53]
    • Nickolas Chenier becomes the first person to be convicted under the Hunting With Dogs (Scotland) Act after pleading guilty at Wick Sheriff Court. He is fined 750ドル and banned from keeping a dog for five years after the animal attacked a deer while he was using it for illegal hare coursing.[54]
    • Chris McEleny is suspended as general secretary of the Alba Party following allegations of gross misconduct.[55]
  • 7 February –
    • First Minister John Swinney rules out the legal reintroduction of lynx into the wild in Scotland.[56]
    • Teachers in Glasgow schedule a strike for Thursday 20 February.[57] The strike is subsequently called off after Glasgow City Council agrees to drop its plans to go ahead with job cuts.[58]
    • Deaf teenager Niamdh Braid wins a legal case against Fife Council to have a British Sign Language interpreter in her class for school lessons.[59]
  • 11 February – Police confirm that two bodies found in a river in Aberdeen are those of missing twin sisters Henrietta and Eliza Huszti.[60]
  • 13 February –
  • 14 February – In a speech at the Munich Security Conference, US Vice President J D Vance criticises Scotland's Safe Access Zones Act, which provides buffer zones around abortion clinics, claiming people who live within safe access zones have been sent letters by the Scottish Government warning them about praying within their homes.[65] In response, the Scottish Government accuses Vance of "spreading misinformation" and says that no such letters have been sent out, while the Act would only cover "intentional or reckless behaviour". Green MSP Gillian Mackay, who drew up the legislation, describes the Vice President's comments as "shocking and shameless misinformation".[66]
  • 16 February – The Crown Office takes over the management of post mortem examinations in Aberdeen due to a shortage of qualified personnel in the city.[67]
  • 17 February – BBC Radio Scotland presenter Janice Forsyth announces she is stepping down from presenting after being diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's disease.[68]
  • 18 February –
    • Scotland begins the early release of a further 390 prisoners in an attempt to reduce overcrowding in the country's prisons.[69]
    • East Lothian Council becomes the first Scottish council to confirm a double-digit council tax increase, after announcing it will rise by 10% from April.[70]
  • 19 February – A 74-year-old woman becomes the first person to be arrested and charged under a Scottish law banning protests outside abortion clinics following an incident at Glasgow's Queen Elizabeth University Hospital.[71]
  • 20 February – Five local authorities in Scotland confirm the largest council tax increases in two decades; they are North Lanarkshire and Scottish Borders (10%), Fife (8.2%), Edinburgh (8%) and Glasgow (7.5%).[72]

Predicted events

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Deaths

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References

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  8. ^ "Earthquake shakes homes on west coast of Scotland". BBC News. BBC. 6 January 2025. Archived from the original on 9 January 2025. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
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  11. ^ Keane, Kevin (8 January 2025). "Former Lanarkshire coal mine to be turned into giant battery park". BBC News. BBC. Archived from the original on 21 January 2025. Retrieved 8 January 2025.
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  14. ^ Ogston, Graeme (9 January 2025). "Grooming gang convicted of raping women in Dundee". BBC News. BBC. Archived from the original on 17 January 2025. Retrieved 9 January 2025.
  15. ^ "Yousaf accuses Musk of inflaming racial tensions". BBC News. BBC. 9 January 2025. Archived from the original on 11 January 2025. Retrieved 9 January 2025.
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Years in Scotland (843–present)
11th century
12th century
13th century
14th century
15th century
16th century
17th century
18th century
19th century
20th century
21st century

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