By Plenary Sessions: Mart Maastik

Total Sessions: 5

Fully Profiled: 5

2025-04-16
15th Estonian Parliament, 5th session, plenary session
He advocates for the principles of a free, open, and unsubsidized electricity market, stressing the objective of achieving a competitive price. He criticizes state grants and subsidies (particularly those directed at offshore wind farms), claiming they distort the market and drive up costs for the final consumer. He directly links the sharp increase in electricity prices (over 60%) to Estonia's economic recession and the suppression of its export capability.
2025-04-14
15th Riigikogu, 5th session, plenary sitting
The economic views are strongly pro-market and anti-subsidy, stressing that businesses need stability, not handouts. The speaker is fiscally conservative, criticizing overly expensive infrastructure projects and the price of CO2 quotas, which is killing the economy. He advocates using domestic raw materials (oil shale) to ensure a competitive energy price, and, if necessary, seeking a reduction in CO2 quotas from the European Union.
2025-04-09
15th Estonian Parliament, 5th session, plenary session
Economic perspectives are leaning toward fiscal fairness, supporting the taxation of windfall profits that arise as a result of measures aimed at curbing inflation. Preference is given to channeling the revenues into the state coffers so they can be put to practical use, rather than distributing the profits solely among depositors.
2025-04-09
15th Riigikogu, 5th sitting, information briefing
The individual/party advocates for fiscal responsibility and cost-effectiveness, taking a stand against projects that are estimated to be exponentially more expensive than available alternatives. They stress that the state should not pursue activities that are simply beyond Estonia's financial capacity, pointing to the 1.5 million cost of the specific development plan as outright waste.
2025-04-08
15th Riigikogu, 5th session, plenary sitting
The economic outlook is firmly rooted in free-market principles, stressing that the primary objective of private enterprise (such as PLCs and Ltds) is profit generation, economic growth, and the creation of added value. The speaker is staunchly opposed to government regulation that dictates the gender composition of private company boards, arguing for competence over quotas.