By Plenary Sessions: Mario Kadastik
Total Sessions: 7
Fully Profiled: 7
2024-05-30
15th Riigikogu, 3rd sitting, plenary sitting
The focus is exclusively on national macroeconomic and fiscal structure issues, such as GDP growth and the state budget's revenue-expenditure balance.
2024-05-29
15th Riigikogu, 3rd session, plenary session
The focus is primarily on national energy policy and international cooperation (IAEA, EU, Nordic countries). Regionally, potential nuclear power plant sites are mentioned, highlighting Ida-Virumaa and Lääne-Virumaa as the most likely areas due to optimal water resources and infrastructure access.
2024-05-16
Fifteenth Riigikogu, Third Session, Plenary Session
The focus is clearly at the national level (structural change in the Estonian economy, empowering Estonian businesses) and on international cooperation (European Space Agency, CERN). There is no regional or local focus; rather, the concentration is on global markets and the inflow of foreign capital.
2024-05-15
15th Riigikogu, 3rd session, plenary session
The focus is primarily on national legislation (renewable energy, the Road Traffic Act) and achieving regulatory objectives. Internationally, reference is made to Finland’s energy storage concept and the transposition of the European Union directive, indicating an interest in regulatory solutions used in other countries.
2024-05-09
15th Riigikogu, 3rd session, plenary session
The focus is both national (covering the Estonian e-voting system and the procedures of the National Electoral Committee) and international, comparing Estonia's solutions with the systems used in other countries. He refers to conversations with ambassadors from numerous countries who have expressed interest in adopting the Estonian system.
2024-05-08
15th Riigikogu, 3rd session, plenary session.
There is no regional focus; the discussion addresses national legislative issues (motor insurance, LKF) and the transposition of international (directive) law.
2024-05-07
15th Riigikogu, 3rd session, plenary session
The primary focus is at the national level (Estonia's e-voting system and digital identity) and the international level (comparisons with other countries, references to the EU Digital Market Act and OSCE reports). Regionally, only the case of the Tallinn City Council elections is mentioned to illustrate the problems associated with paper voting.