
Peat trade laws ignored as councils refuse to intervene with illegal €40m extraction
The failure of county councils to properly crack down on illegal peat extraction 'flies in the face' of Ireland's climate and biodiversity obligations, the Environmental Protection Agency has warned.
A new report by the EPA released today reveals that the agency has investigated 38 sites across seven counties where 'local authority enforcement performance is patently inadequate'. Pic: Eamonn Farrell/RollingNews.ie
'Local authorities have been conspicuous in their lack of enforcement of environmental law,' the report noted.
It highlighted that Offaly had the most unauthorised sites with nine in the county, followed by Westmeath at eight, Roscommon and Tipperary at six, Longford and Kildare at four, and Sligo with one site.
It's estimated that these sites are responsible for 300,000 tonnes of peat being exported annually, valued at almost €40million. The main markets for the peat are the North, Britain, the Netherlands, Australia and Japan. Pic: Shutterstock
The director of the EPA's Office of Environmental Enforcement, Dr Tom Ryan, said that there could be even more than 38 large-scale sites in Ireland, but that the agency has put considerable effort into monitoring them over the past few years.
'We've been engaging with the local authorities for a number of years on this. We've identified all of these sites, given them all the important information that we have, including aerial photography of the sites,' he said.
'We have sent out draft notices to them as part of our role in overseeing them, and they've responded to that part of the process. They've said that what we are asking for, they don't have the resources for or that a regional enforcement authority might be set up years down the line that will deal with it. Pic: Shutterstock
'With the exception of one local authority, they aren't planning to take any action at all.'
Dr Ryan noted that of the seven local authorities the EPA has been engaging with for years, only Longford County Council appears to be making genuine efforts to combat the diversity-harming unauthorised extraction of peat.
He said: 'They've issued notices under the Planning Act. There is still a long way to go, but it's a positive move in the right direction.'
Dr Ryan added that while a regional enforcement authority could be established in the future to help combat the issue, this is no excuse for current inaction.
'Right now, local authorities have the statutory responsibility in this area and they need to step up to those obligations and prioritise the resources to develop a county-wide plan,' he said.
The Environmental Protection Agency's report pointed out that it has 'deployed significant resources' to carry out 170 inspections between 2021 and 2024, despite the fact that primary responsibility for regulating all commercial peat extraction lies with local councils.
Peat extractors are required to be granted Environmental Impact Assessments, Appropriate Assessments associated with protected habitats, and planning permission from local authorities before they can begin operating.
However, the EPA states that these regulations are being ignored by peat extractors and that local authorities are failing to act on these violations.
Dr Ryan said: 'Local authorities have been conspicuous in their lack of enforcement of environmental law. They need to step up to meet their legal obligations as regulatory authorities, prioritise their resources and use the ample enforcement powers at their disposal to bring these illegal activities to an end and to protect our environment.'
The seven local authorities mentioned in the EPA report as being 'inadequate' in their enforcement were contacted for comment, but no response was forthcoming at the time of going to press.
Peat extraction can lead to the destruction of ecosystems vital for biodiversity as well as the loss of important carbon sinks, which remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.
Mr Ryan said: 'If you are destroying peatlands, that goes against our climate efforts. 'It's also irreplaceable. If it has to be done, it can be done in a regulated way like Bord na Móna did, but what's taking place now flies in the face of our efforts to protect biodiversity and aid the climate.
'Operators engaged in unauthorised peat harvesting activities are in flagrant violation of environmental law. They are destroying our precious natural environments, and this needs to stop,' he said.
The EPA has also taken legal action at the District Court and High Court levels against operations on areas exceeding 50 hectares – approximately 45 GAA pitches.
These legal actions have resulted in several sites ceasing operations, while 'a number of actions remain live before the courts', the EPA stated.
The EPA's 38 notices to the seven local authorities in relation to the large sites they identified could lead to legal action.
In extreme cases, the Environmental Protection Act of 1992 allows the EPA to 'carry out, cause to be carried out, or arrange for' vital environmental actions if a local authority refuses to comply, and then charge the local authority for the cost.
The report added that 'the EPA will continue using its powers to ensure all seven local authorities fully implement and enforce environmental requirements pertaining to large-scale peat extraction'.
A 2024 study funded by the EPA found that carbon emissions caused by peat extraction for domestic use have been vastly under-reported in Ireland's greenhouse gas reports to the UN.
Just under 65,000 hectares of raised bog across Ireland have been cut up for domestic use, the study found, which is nearly 162 times more than the 400 hectares reported in Ireland's annual UN report.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Agriland
3 days ago
- Agriland
Planning exemption for slurry storage is 'urgent priority'
The introduction of a "credible" planning exemption for slurry storage facilities is an "urgent priority", the Irish Farmers' Association (IFA) has said. According to IFA environment chair John Murphy, this is a "crucial step" in helping farmers to manage organic nutrients "more effectively and maximise the value of this important resource". His comments come as the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has published its latest water quality monitoring report, which showed there was a 10% national reduction in river nitrate concentrations during 2024, 'with reductions observed in all regions'. However, the EPA cautioned that 'nitrate concentrations remain too high in many parts of the country'. According to the EPA's 'Water Quality Monitoring Report on Nitrogen and Phosphorous Concentrations in Irish Waters 2024', phosphorus concentrations in rivers are stable – with 'no significant change in the last year'. Murphy said the latest EPA report "shows that the collaborative, whole-of-sector and whole-of-government approach is yielding results in improving water quality across the country". 'We have seen a massive effort in recent years to refine the advice and support to farmers, so they better understand the pressures on their local waterbodies, to support them to take targeted action to mitigate the risks and improve water quality," Murphy said. "It is great to see that this work and investment by farmers is delivering water quality improvements. 'These results confirm that we are on the right path. "However, further progress is still needed - particularly in the south east and midlands/eastern regions - where nitrate concentrations remain above good ecological thresholds." Murphy highlighted the importance of ongoing advisory and financial supports, such as the Better Farming for Water campaign and the Farming for Water EIP, which "help farmers adopt new practices and invest in infrastructure to mitigate agricultural pressures on water". 'It is vital that we continue to support farmers in their efforts," he added.


The Irish Sun
27-07-2025
- The Irish Sun
Air India crash victim's mum horrified as authorities send wrong body back to the UK in a casket
A MUM whose son died in the Air India plane crash has been left horrified after authorities sent the wrong body back to the UK. Amanda Donaghey, 66, was left heartbroken and appalled after DNA evidence proved Advertisement 6 DNA evidence proved Air India crash passenger Fiongal Greenlaw-Meek's casket actually belonged to another victim Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 6 Fiongal and husband Jamie filmed themselves waiting to board the doomed plane Credit: Instagram 6 All but one passenger died when the Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner aircraft crashed in Ahmedabad, India Credit: Reuters Fiongal, 39, had been to India celebrating his wedding anniversary with husband, Jamie, 45. The pair were all set to fly home to Britain on the doomed Flight AI171 when Moments after takeoff from Ahmedabad airport, the pilots lost altitude as the plane came Footage captured the moment it smashed into a medical college hostel. Advertisement read more in Air India crash A total of 241 passengers and crew plus 19 people on the ground were all killed in the tragedy - including 52 Brits like Fiongal and Jamie. Amanda initially believed the two men had caught a flight home two days earlier until she received an emotional phone call from the dad of Fiongal. A brave Amanda then flew out to India shortly after being told both men were on the plane when it crashed. She went to look for her son or, in the worse case scenario, bring his remains home. Advertisement Most read in The Sun Exclusive Breaking She told "I remember all these burnt trees. The trees were scorched black. But there were still birds and squirrels in those trees, which I found quite profound. How pilots cutting engines sparked TWO plane disasters after South Korea & India crashes as calls for cockpit CCTV grow "It was like a bomb site. You would think it was from a war scene, but there were still these small birds twittering." Hours after the crash, it was confirmed that only Advertisement Despite the tragedy, Amanda remained determined to help find Fiongal's remains. She gave blood to help find a DNA match before being informed officials had found the body and sent it back to the UK. Jamie had already been identified by this point with both men's families hoping to lay them to rest next to each other. Amanda rushed back to the UK hoping to say her final goodbyes after being assured that Fiongal was in the casket. Advertisement The family had started to plan Fiongal's funeral when they received a gut-wrenching phone call from the police. A British coroner had completed a second, more thorough DNA test on the remains which were inside the casket. Fiongal's tragic final video A HEARTBREAKING final video posted by Fiongal came just hours before their tragic death in the Air India crash. In the chilling final clip filmed at Ahmedabad airport, Fiongal and Jamie, dressed in floral shirts and visibly happy, reflect on their trip. Fiongal says: "We are at the airport just boarding. Goodbye India. Ten-hour flight back to Jamie responds: "I don't know," prompting Fiongal's laughter and a teasing, "Thanks for your contribution." Fiongal jokes that his main lesson was "don't lose your patience with your partner," to which Jamie smiles and replies, "You snapped at me at the airport for having chai." Passengers mill in the background as Fiongal adds: "I'm going back to Britain happily, happily calm." Earlier social media posts from the couple showed their experiences in Ahmedabad, including a seven-hour car journey to a stunning hotel. In one clip, Fiongal lies on a large bed beside a giant swing, describing the hotel as "beautiful" and saying he felt "very, very happy." Their time in India was captured in a series of posts showing henna tattoos, shopping for fabrics and gifts, and riding in a tuk-tuk through busy streets. On their final night, Fiongal reflected: "So, it's our last night in India and we've had a magical experience. Some mind-blowing things have happened. "We are going to put all this together and create a vlog. It's my first ever vlog about the whole trip and we want to share it." Jamie added: "We have been on quite a journey and then spending our last night here in this beautiful hotel, it's really been a great way to round off the trip." They did not belong to Fiongal. "It was heartbreaking," Amanda said. Advertisement "We don't know what poor person is in that casket. This is an appalling thing to have happened." Amanda's experience is tragically just one of many parents struggling to find closure after the crash due to a mix up of many caskets. NHS microbiologist Shobhana Patel, 71, and her husband Ashok, 74, both The couple, from Orpington, Kent , were repatriated in different coffins but DNA tests in Britain Advertisement One And in another It is thought that only Indian authorities carried out DNA tests on victims with no input from any international agency. India's Ministry of External Affairs said: 'All remains were handled with professionalism.' Advertisement Brit families previously slammed the chaotic ground operation following the horror smash on June 12. One relative reportedly blasted the "lack of transparency and oversight in the identification and handling of remains". 6 Brit families previously slammed the chaotic ground operation following the horror smash on June 12 Credit: AFP 6 Vishwash Ramesh was the sole survivor of the Air India crash Credit: Dan Charity Advertisement 6


Irish Examiner
26-07-2025
- Irish Examiner
A gay man's road to parenthood: 'Three adoption agencies turned me down flat'
Vincent Ryan always knew he wanted to be a father... and today the Manchester-based Co Kilkenny native is a proud dad to two boys, Alfie, seven, and Theodore, three. 'The three of us are a little tribe and it just works,' he says. Ryan's route to parenthood hasn't been conventional or easy. Both boys are adopted and Ryan, who is gay and single, had to contend with preconceptions and prejudice from the moment he sought to be considered as a parent. Three adoption agencies turned me down flat.' A fourth agreed to take him on, with the caveat that it would be 'a challenge'. Once the adoption agency had completed its rigorous assessment, a report was sent to an independent adoption panel, which further scrutinised Ryan. He not only had to contend with the intense (albeit necessary) interrogation that comes with the adoption process but felt he faced an unwarranted focus on his sexual orientation. 'The questions weren't so much based always around my capability [to be a parent] but around my sexuality,' he says. 'But I'm very determined, so I don't really believe in the word 'no'. I'll always fight the cause and find a way. And thankfully I managed to get through.' Managing to get through has been a leitmotif of Ryan's life. Growing up in a small Irish rural town through the 1980s and '90s, he knew he was 'different' but, in a time when gay visibility was practically non-existent, he found himself unable to 'put a label' on that difference. 'I didn't know anyone like me,' he says. 'Back then, [being gay] wasn't ever spoken about. There was no reference to it whatsoever.' Vincent Ryan with his kids Alfie and Theo Ryan 'struggled massively' at school and was bullied for being 'clearly different'. Things 'weren't great' at home, either, he says, and he 'didn't have the best relationship' with his own father. Towards the end of his time in secondary school, Ryan developed anorexia. 'I didn't finish school with any qualifications and I almost ran away.' He didn't, though; instead, serendipity intervened when he spotted an ad for cabin crew on Aertel, RTÉ's teletext service. 'I researched it and I thought, 'OK, I can fly and get away and escape.'' Ryan got the job and 'that was the start of finding out who I was; mixing with other people like me'. The support of his newfound friendships in Dublin gave him the courage to come out to his family at 19. 'None of them were surprised. None of them were shocked.' Sadly, however, some of his extended family 'disowned' him and remain estranged. Ryan loved his job but his goal had always been to work for Virgin Atlantic and, in 2002, he applied for a cabin crew position and was accepted. This precipitated a move to London aged 19 which, he says, was 'really tough because at that point I was still really insecure'. Ryan, now 43, still works for the company (although he no longer flies) and finds its inclusive work environment 'so accepting' and 'so lovely'. A 'horrible break-up' and his father's untimely death at 52 prompted a move to Manchester in 2013. His goal of being happily settled 'just never happened — and it's still not happened for me'. In 2015, Ryan read a magazine article about LGBT+ adoption. The piece was 'couple-based' but it got him wondering if he could adopt solo — something he'd never realised could be an option — and he set about looking for an agency to take him on. Vincent Ryan and his two children, out and about RESILIENCE The resilience he had acquired from past adversities stood to him throughout the challenging process of becoming approved as an adoptive parent. 'There were lots of tears and many times I rang my mom to say, 'I just can't do this.' But there's always been a determination in me since I was young from being bullied and the anorexia. I'd sit and think, 'Do you know what? I didn't give up then, and I'm not going to give up now. There will be a way through.'' And there was. In August 2017, Ryan was signed off as a concurrent carer and an approved adopter. The former comes with in-built uncertainty and extreme emotional challenges. 'The child has contact with their birth family once or twice a week in a contact centre [while] you're doing everything a parent does,' Ryan explains. 'But you can never refer to yourself as 'dad'. You're not dad until the courts rule that they stay with you for adoption but, in the back of your mind, there's always that thought that you could get a phone call one day… and then you literally get a limited amount of time to pack up, get everything ready, and hand them back.' Despite his mother's urging to choose the straightforward adoption route, Ryan was adamant being a concurrent carer was the right path for him. 'It was important for me to do it that way. I think maybe [because of] what I'd gone through growing up.' Twice, Ryan had his nursery ready only to be told they had 'found other carers'. Then, that October, he got a call to say: 'We've got this little boy, he's a perfect match but we need to move quickly.' Twenty-four hours later, 10-week-old Alfie arrived 'and he's been with me since'. He took a year's adoption leave. 'For the first couple of months, we shut ourselves away and just got to know each other and got settled into a routine.' His employer was incredibly supportive and worked with him to rewrite its adoption leave policy to make it more LGBT+ friendly so that 'anyone coming behind me would have the same [support] I had'. Almost two years passed before Alfie's adoption was finalised. Ryan recalls the emotion of the day he'd longed for but knew might never come, when he was finally able to tell his toddler son he was his dad. I walked in the door and Alfie ran down the hallway and I said, 'I'm Daddy now.' That word 'dad', after two years, was incredible. When Alfie was three, Ryan felt he should have a sibling who was also adopted — 'so they'd always have that common bond and that understanding of each other' — and began the process again. When he arrived, four-day-old Theo was so tiny that Ryan 'could literally hold him in one hand'. Ryan and Theo's birth mother built up an incredible relationship on Theo's twice-weekly visits and, when his adoption was signed off, she sent a letter. '[It] said, 'I know I can't look after him but he's with you and he's with the right person.' It was humbling. It was beautiful.' Theo was not meeting his milestones, and tests found he has Noonan syndrome, a rare genetic condition that comes with multiple health challenges, including growth restriction, cardiac issues, and hearing difficulties. It's a lot but Ryan says 'we cope incredibly well' and that Theo, whom he officially adopted in July 2024, is ' a little warrior'. Alfie and Theo are deeply bonded and 'have this incredible relationship'. Vincent Ryan and kids: 'It's the most rewarding thing you could ever do'. He set up the Instagram account @dadonthego_ as a 'diary for the boys' but it has also become a way to spread awareness of Noonan syndrome and of LGBT+ adoption. 'If you have the home and the space and the love and the time, then look into it and invest into it because it's the most rewarding thing you could ever do,' he shares. He admits that he faces a lot of trolling which is 'hurtful to read,' but says, 'I've always been driven on by bullies. It just lights something in me where I go, 'Do you know what? I'm not having that.' It gets exhausting but I do drive on to try to make that change.' And he is making change. He believes in 'give and take'. 'It's got to be acceptance and education on both sides. Otherwise, ignorance just breeds ignorance. And where does it end?' He now sits as a chair on an independent adoption panel with members who had previously interviewed him. Through his openness and honesty, he was able to raise awareness of what he felt were discriminatory lines of questioning and have them removed from being asked at future panels. 'To be able to play a part in changing that dynamic and how we look at LGBT+ adoption and filter questions that are not needed… it was an incredible turnaround to make sure nobody else has to go through what I went through when it comes to wanting to be a parent.' The boys adore visiting their Irish nana, and it's a full-circle moment for Ryan. 'When I think about younger Vince who was so sad, so depressed, anorexic, really lonely, never in my wildest dreams would I have thought that years down the line my sons would be playing in the garden I played in. I'm a massive believer in everything leads you to where you're meant to be. What I went through built my resilience to have the boys. I don't regret any of it; it happened and it's made me who I am today.'