TD calls for referendum on joining EU patent court to be held before next summer
referendum
on Ireland joining the European Union's
Unified Patent Court
(UPC) should be held before next summer, according to Fianna Fáil TD
Malcolm Byrne
.
He said Ireland's membership of Europe's unified patent system would 'make life easier' for Irish inventors, content creators and small businesses.
The Irish Times
reported on Monday
that there have been tentative moves within Government to revive the referendum.
The vote on Ireland joining the 18 other EU member states that have signed up to the UPC system was originally due to take place in June 2024.
READ MORE
Mr Byrne, a Wicklow-Wexford TD, was to be Fianna Fáil's director of elections for the referendum.
However, the last government decided to defer the UPC vote in the aftermath of the defeat of the Family and Care referendums to allow more time for public engagement on the matter.
In recent months the Department of Enterprise has contacted business organisations and Government departments, seeking feedback on the level of engagement taking place on the UPC issue and views on the appropriate timing of a rescheduled vote.
The UPC is designed to provide a one-stop shop court for litigation on patents. The court's decisions will be binding on participating EU member states. Business groups have long called for Ireland to join the UPC.
The Department of Enterprise said the Government is committed to holding the referendum, but 'the timing remains under consideration'.
Mr Byrne urged the Government to commit to a referendum and an 'informed campaign' before next summer.
He said: 'For someone who invents something in Ireland to protect that idea or product, they have to seek a patent in every jurisdiction in the European Union and the recognition of the creation is not always enforceable in a uniform way.
'Ireland joining the unified patent system will make that much easier and it will heavily reduce costs and the administrative burden on inventors.'
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Mr Byrne added: 'This is probably not the issue that most people are thinking about but for inventors and businesses it is really important.'
Ireland has to vote on it because the Constitution requires a vote for joining such a European structure, he said.
'The decision will mean transferring some judicial sovereignty, but only in the area of patents, to the new court. It has only to do with patents.'
In May, Mr Byrne asked Taoiseach Micheál Martin in the Dáil if he would consider holding the UPC referendum on the same day as the presidential election this year.
Mr Martin said he did not anticipate that happening, but he indicated his support for Ireland joining the UPC.
He added: 'We need to prepare properly for when we decide to have a referendum. We have to do the homework and be in a position to convince people of the merits of the case.'
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Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Letters to the Editor, August 8th: On questions on Gaza, prescribing opioids, and big cars
Sir, – The world will eventually get into Gaza, and establish that the 61,000 reported killed so far by Gaza's health ministry is only a fraction of the dead. Many more lie under the rubble, or were not able to be brought to hospital to be counted. The following questions will then demand answers. Why did the United Nations (UN) and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) allow a full famine to develop after four months of Israel blocking food, medicine and fuel to Gaza, when they could have forced the aid through under Article 7 of the UN charter? Why did the world not stop Israel's war crimes when the first hospital was shelled, instead allowing all 36 hospitals to be repeatedly bombed? Why did the world's media accept a ban on their journalists reporting inside Gaza, and why did RTÉ continually refer to the Hamas-controlled health ministry, long after CNN and Channel 4 dropped this nomenclature? 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Irish Times
5 hours ago
- Irish Times
Air Corps had to pull out of show in England due ‘significant challenges' for air traffic control
The Air Corps had to pull out of a British air show due to 'significant challenges' in air traffic control at Casement Aerodrome. Irish aircraft had been expected to appear at the RAF Cosford Air Show, near Wolverhampton in the English midlands, on June 8th, but this did not happen. The Irish Times had reported in May how Irish military flight operations were to move to part-time hours, consisting of a five-day-a week daytime-only flying schedule, due to a shortage of trained air traffic controllers. Five personnel were due to depart for the private sector, necessitating the move to a reduced schedule, which was to take effect from June 7th. READ MORE At one point an Irish Air Corps Pilatus PC-12 aircraft had been expected to be on static display at the air show. However, a social media post by RAF Cosford on May 17th said this aircraft would no longer be there. Attendees were told they would still be 'able to get up close' to two Air Corps helicopters, but a further online post on June 5th said: 'We have just been informed that the Irish Air Corps' AgustaWestland AW139 and Eurocopter EC135 [helicopters] will no longer be attending.' Labour Party TD Ged Nash asked Minister for Defence Simon Harris about the matter in a parliamentary question. Mr Harris said the Air Corps' participation in air shows was a 'worthwhile endeavour, with many relationships forged and knowledge shared at such events'. He said requests to take part in overseas exhibitions 'are subject to domestic operational commitments being met'. 'Given the significant challenges being experienced in relation to air traffic control at Casement Aerodrome at the time of this particular air show, and the focus of the Air Corps necessarily being on essential operations, I am advised that attendance at an air show in the UK could not be approved by my officials and this position was accepted by the military authorities,' Mr Harris said. In response to queries, neither the Department of Defence nor the Defence Forces offered information on the levels of air traffic control staffing and flight operations at Casement Aerodrome in Baldonnel, Co Dublin, on the weekend of the air show in June. A Department of Defence statement said: 'Currently the military authorities are operating a seven day-per-week, 12 hour-per-day, air traffic control service at Casement Aerodrome. 'Where required for particular security and operational reasons contingency services can be deployed. Given the sensitive nature of such operations, it would not be appropriate to comment further.' A Defence Forces statement said it did 'not comment on air traffic control-related queries of this nature due to operational security'. Mr Harris has previously promised investment in the Air Corps, including military radar and new aircraft. It is to be renamed the Irish Air Force.

Irish Times
6 hours ago
- Irish Times
The Irish Times view on the exchequer figures: Ireland should not bank on outperformance continuing
Forecasts over recent years that Ireland's extraordinary reliance on surging corporate tax receipts would, one day, cause the State problems are beginning to sound a bit like the fable of the ' boy who called wolf.' Even with global uncertainty brought on by the policies of US president Donald Trump, this week's exchequer returns for July showed that Ireland's tax take from big business keeps on climbing and could exceed €30 billion this year. Estimates from the Department of Finance and the Fiscal Advisory Council (IFAC) suggest that around half of this total could be what they term windfall receipts. This means that they relate not to economic activity in Ireland, but to tax planning by the big multinationals. Ireland's vulnerability lies in two areas – the longer-term relocation of manufacturing activity, were this to happen due to Trump's policies, and changes in tax planning structures and pricing policies . Perhaps, politically, it is best to take a 'glass half full' approach to these issues, focusing on the money that Ireland is now receiving and the opportunity it creates. A key point here is that putting money away now – as the Government is doing into two funds – does create some leeway for future years both to avoid cutbacks in current spending or higher taxes and to maintain vital State investment. READ MORE However, the ability of the Irish political system to learn the lessons of the past is questionable. The amount which has been put into the two funds is useful, but still relatively modest. And there is already talk of raiding one of them to pay for investment projects under the revised National Development Plan. Meanwhile, a debate is heating up on the October budget, centred on how much money people will get and to what extent taxes will be reduced. A key part of this is whether there should be another 'cost-of-living' package comprised of once-off payments. This would be a mistake. As well as higher investment, it is time to focus on permanent improvements aimed at those who need it – and the provision of better services to the public in areas like health, education and childcare. The political problem is that the State may well have leeway in its budget sums, creating demands for more largesse. But a key goal of Budget 2026 must be to reduce risk. Ireland cannot rely on exchequer returns continuing ahead of forecasts each year. Some day, its luck will turn. Nobody knows whether, in two or three year's time, the €30 billion we may collect this year in corporation tax might be €35 billion or €20 billion. In case the wolf does arrive, this budget cannot afford to spray money around to households again in once-off payments, pretending to address the ' cost of living' but in fact giving cash to many who do not need it, as well as some who do.