
Skellig Michael will not reopen to visitors due to legal challenge by boat operators
The Office of Public Works (OPW), which manages the Unesco World Heritage Site island also known as Sceilg Mhicíl, said it sought to issue permits for 2025 despite an initial legal challenge, but there has been a further legal challenge this week.
Guides have been specifically trained for the opening of the island along with maintenance and conservation crews and the OPW is 'acutely aware of the importance of the island to south Kerry', it said.
Rey (Daisy Ridley) and Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) in a scene shot on Skellig Michael from 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi', one of two films in the franchise that used the Kerry island as a shooting location. Picture: Jonathan Olley/Lucasfilm
The delay is leading to fears that the south Kerry area will lose millions of euro in business this season. There have been calls for temporary permits to be issued to boat operators including to those who were unsuccessful.
Villages claim they will be down hundreds of visitors this weekend alone because of cancellations.
The Skellig Michael landing season — with boats from Portmagee, Derrynane, Ballinskelligs, and Valentia — operates between May and the third week of September each year. A maximum of 180 visitors a day is allowed land on the seventh century monastic island 11.5km off the Kerry coast.
Skellig Michael boat permits for bringing passengers take into account sea vessel safety and restrictions on numbers visiting, as well as the unique and very challenging landing conditions on the fragile island which is both a heritage site and a special conservation area for birds.
As well as being the location of a monastic settlement founded some 1,400 years ago, Skellig Michael off the coast of Co Kerry in Ireland is a special area of conservation for birds including Atlantic Puffins. The island is also a statutory nature reserve and forms part of Páirc Náisiúnta na Mara, Ciarraí. Picture: Valerie O'Sullivan
Some 15 boat landing permits are normally offered for five-year terms, to be renewed annually under a public tendering system.
However, three operators whose permits were not renewed for 2025 have now taken a judicial review. Three other operators were selected but none of the approved 15 permits have been issued.
Mark Conway, who runs the shop and post office in Portmagee, said south Kerry would expect to see 250 people arriving in the area on Saturday.
The 180 people booked to visit the island would be accompanied by people who would wish to visit Valentia and other attractions, Mr Conway said.
It's a blow to south Kerry. All of south Kerry including Killarney is affected.
Bookings in B&Bs have been cancelled and pubs, restaurants, and coffee shops as well as shops were suffering, he claimed.
Ideal weather conditions this weekend would compensate for later in the season when boats would not be able to run but those days are now lost completely, Mr Magee said.
Rows over the awarding of permits to land on the Skellig have led to at least three legal actions in the past decade.
Local TD and Fianna Fáil spokesman for tourism, Michael Cahill, has called for 'common sense to prevail' and allow the existing licensees plus the newly-appointed three to operate as normal for the season, 'even if judicial reviews are pending'.
Andrea Paolucci and Giorgia Gallerani square off in Star Wars costumes at St Finian's Bay, Ballinskelligs, Co Kerry, with Skellig Michael and Skellig Beag in the distance. Tourism operators in the area point out that while access to the island itself is carefully limited, many tourists come just to see the island from villages and beaches along the coast. Picture: Valerie O'Sullivan
Permits could be issued allowing 18 boat operators this year with a reduction to 10 passengers per boat instead of the normal 12, he suggested.
In a statement, the OPW said it had sought to issue permits.
'The OPW has lodged a motion before the High Court seeking permission to issue Sceilg Mhichíl boat operator permits for Summer 2025 to the successful applicants in a recent competition.
"This follows a high court challenge from unsuccessful participants in the open competition to operate the boat licences.
'The OPW ran a competition in late 2024 to award 15 permits for summer 2025 and onwards. The number of permits is limited to protect the fragile ecosystem of Sceilg Mhicíl.
'In April 2025, two unsuccessful participants in the competition brought High Court proceedings challenging the outcome of the competition.
"Under Irish and EU law, this means that the OPW is precluded from issuing permits for summer 2025, until the proceedings are resolved (or unless the court gives permission to issue permits).'
Hashtags

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

The Journal
3 days ago
- The Journal
Terence Stamp, Superman villain and 'swinging sixties' icon, dies aged 87
BRITISH ACTOR TERENCE Stamp, who perfected the role of the brooding villain and starred in 'The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert', has died aged 87, UK media cited his family announcing today. 'He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come,' media quoted the family saying. From Pier Paolo Pasolini's 'Theorem' to George Lucas's 'Star Wars', the 'swinging sixties' icon captivated audiences in both arthouse films and Hollywood with his magnetic presence, making more than 60 films during his genre-spanning career. The London actor from a working-class background, born on 22 July, 1938 had his first breakthrough in the role of a dashing young sailor hanged for killing one of his crewmates. Peter Ustinov's 'Billy Budd' earning him an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe for Best New Actor. Carving out a niche for his alluring depictions of broody villains, he won Best Actor at Cannes in 1965 for his role as a psychopathic character in 'The Collector', a twisted love story by William Wyler. His 1967 encounter with Federico Fellini, who was searching for the 'most decadent English actor' for his adaptation of 'Extraordinary Stories', was transformative. Advertisement The Italian director found his 'Toby Dammit', a drunken actor seduced by the devil in the guise of a little girl. And Pasolini, who cast him in the cult classic 'Theorem', saw him as a 'boy of divine nature'. In 1969, Stamp played an enigmatic visitor who seduced an entire bourgeois Milanese family. He also had a relationship with Jean Shrimpton — model and beauty of the sixties — before she left him towards the end of the 1960s. 'I was so closely identified with the 1960s that when that era ended, I was finished with it,' he once told French daily Liberation. But a dry spell did not last long, with Stamp reviving his career for some of his most popular roles, including in 1980′s 'Superman II', as Superman's arch-nemesis General Zod. Other roles followed, including that of Bernadette, a transgender woman in 'Priscilla, Queen of the Desert' (1994), in which Stamp continued his exploration of human ambiguity, this time in fishnet stockings. He continued to pursue a wide-ranging career, jumping between big-budget productions like 'Star Wars' and independent films like Stephen Frears' 'The Hit' and Ken Loach's British drama 'Poor Cow'.


Irish Independent
5 days ago
- Irish Independent
Over 125 events planned across Meath for 20th annual national heritage week
From archaeology digs to nature walks, exhibitions, and family activities, the week will celebrate the county's rich natural, built, and cultural heritage. Visitors can try their hand at archaeology at the Black Friary Community Dig in Trim, learn about Ireland's bogs and pollinators in local libraries, explore the heritage of Duleek, and hear talks on barn owls and butterflies in Meath. Guided tours will showcase the architecture of Navan, Dunboyne, Kells, Oldcastle, and Athboy, while railway enthusiasts can visit an exhibition marking 175 Years of Navan Railway. Nature lovers can experience the Bog Bothy at Girley Bog, and on Wild Child Day (Saturday, August 23), young visitors can dig for treasure at the Hill of Tara with the Office of Public Works. Water Heritage Day will also be marked with an event by Ratoath Tidy Towns, focusing on the health of local rivers. This year's Heritage Week theme, 'Exploring Our Foundations', invites participants to reflect on the legacies of the past and the roots of their communities, cultures, and identities. The events well run from Saturday, August 16 to Sunday, August 24. Cathaoirleach of Meath County Council Cllr Wayne Harding said: 'Heritage Week is a fantastic celebration of our wonderful natural and cultural heritage and offers everyone the opportunity to get out, explore and enjoy their local area. I'm delighted to see such an exciting and diverse range of events and activities planned.' Chief Executive of Meath County Council Kieran Kehoe said: "National Heritage Week has become one of Ireland's largest cultural events, celebrating Ireland's built, natural and cultural heritage and aiming to generate awareness, appreciation and preservation of our wonderful heritage resource.' He also thanked the organisers, saying: 'Without their hard work, dedication and voluntary commitment, Heritage Week would not be possible.' Most events are free to attend, with many suitable for children. Full event listings for Meath are available on the National Heritage Week website.


Irish Independent
6 days ago
- Irish Independent
Catherine Prasifka: The robots are here, and there's a creeping sense the tech bros have created a world to which we never consented
We may already have the word of the year, if not the decade: clanker. Originating from the Star Wars universe, it has become a catch-all term used to refer to robots and AI. Any technology can be referred to as a clanker. There is something about the term that has captured imaginations and gained popularity online, above other sci-fi terms: Battlestar Galactica's toaster, for example.