logo
Political opposition hinders electricity projects

Political opposition hinders electricity projects

Irish Timesa day ago
Political opposition continues to hinder projects designed to guarantee electricity supplies and aid the Republic in hitting
climate targets,
TDs and senators heard on Wednesday.
Noel Cunniffe, chief executive of industry group, Wind Energy Ireland, told the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate, Environment and Energy, that Eirgrid's north-south interconnector, which has cleared all planning hurdles, continued to face opposition.
'There is a general consensus that investment in national grid projects is good, but when it comes to local level, that gets challenged,' he said.
Mr Cunniffe pointed out that both Dáil deputies and councillors tended to oppose electricity projects at local level.
READ MORE
Justin Moran, the organisation's director of external affairs, argued that 'opposition to grid projects is not a victimless crime'.
He was responding to committee members who raised this week's news that families cannot move into new homes in Portlaoise, Co Laois, because their estate does not have electricity connections.
[
Electricity squeeze hits grid projects
Opens in new window
]
Mr Moran pointed out that while EirGrid received permission for plans to boost the national electricity grid supplying Laois and Kilkenny in 2014, continued opposition meant that work was only under way now.
Nicholas Tarrant, managing director, ESB Networks, said 'there are places on the network where there is limited capacity, and we are working on that'.
They include Portlaoise, other similar towns along with areas such as Dublin north and west, according to the State company boss.
Regulators are weighing proposals to allow ESB Networks to spend €11.6 billion up to 2030 on boosting the systems that supply electricity to homes and businesses.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Homes available to rent on State HAP social scheme fall by nearly a quarter
Homes available to rent on State HAP social scheme fall by nearly a quarter

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Homes available to rent on State HAP social scheme fall by nearly a quarter

The number of homes available to rent under the State's main social housing support scheme has fallen again by almost a quarter, according to new research. The Simon Communities of Ireland (SCI) published its latest Locked Out of the Market report on Friday, which surveyed the number of properties available to rent across 16 different areas over three days in June. It found just 32 properties were available to rent within the discretionary rate of the Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) scheme, a decrease of nine properties, or 22 per cent, since March 2025. It found 978 properties were available to rent at any price, a 17 per cent reduction from the 1,178 properties available in March. READ MORE The area with the biggest reduction in availability at any price was Dublin city centre, with 52 fewer properties than in March, followed by Dublin city north which was down 47 homes and Cork city suburbs, which was down 23 homes. Ber Grogan, executive director at the Simon Communities of Ireland, said the findings 'must act as a wake-up call for policymakers'. The HAP scheme is a social housing support and it is paid by local authorities directly to landlords, with tenants then paying a rent contribution to the local authority. Those approved for HAP must find a property on the private rental market that is within the HAP rent limits of their local authority. [ 'The stress is inhumane': Second Dublin council pauses scheme to buy homes of tenants at risk of homelessness Opens in new window ] Local authorities have the flexibility to go above the HAP rent limits by up to 35 per cent if the tenant can't find accommodation within the limits. This discretionary rate goes up to 50 per cent in Dublin under the Homeless HAP scheme. Despite this flexibility, there were no properties available in eight of the 16 areas surveyed – these include Athlone, Cork city centre, Cork city suburbs, Co Leitrim, Limerick city centre, Sligo town, Portlaoise, and Waterford city centre. Some 22 of the 32 HAP properties available were found in Dublin, reflecting the increased flexibility there under the Homeless HAP scheme. Just five of those 32 properties were available under the standard HAP limits, the remaining 27 were only available when using discretionary HAP rates. Studio apartments were not included in the survey 'due to the inherent inadequacy of studio apartments as long-term housing solutions', the report stated. It noted there were 27 studio apartments available within HAP limits during the study period. Only two of these properties were available within standard HAP limits. Of these 27 studio apartments, 26 were in Dublin, and one was in Cork city suburbs. Reacting to the findings, Ms Grogan said Ireland's rental market was 'failing those most in need'. 'We urgently need accelerated delivery of social and affordable housing, meaningful reforms to HAP rates, and a targeted strategy to prevent homelessness,' Ms Grogan said.

Palestine GAA and visas refusal
Palestine GAA and visas refusal

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Palestine GAA and visas refusal

Sir, – How Minister for Justice, Jim O'Callaghan, and those officials in the Department of Justice, who refused the children of Palestine GAA visas to visit the home of Gaelic games can sleep at night is beyond me. I just hope their children are never faced with such devastating disappointment. It's not just shameful, but despicable. I hope GAA clubs in every constituency make their TDs aware of their disgust, particularly those that are members of the Coalition parties. – Yours, etc, DANNY BOYD, READ MORE Belfast.

Workplace deaths at a record low, HSA report shows
Workplace deaths at a record low, HSA report shows

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Workplace deaths at a record low, HSA report shows

Work-related fatalities dropped to 34 in 2024, according to the annual report of the Health and Safety Authority (HSA), published on Friday. The number of reported workplace deaths was down to 34, a drop of nine since 2023 and the lowest number of fatalities in a single year since the HSA was set up in 1989. The reduction in workplace deaths was attributed to significant improvements in workplace safety in the agriculture and construction sectors, according to the annual report. In 2024, the HSA conducted more than 11,600 workplace inspections and investigations across all economic sectors, with a particular focus on high-risk areas including construction, agriculture, manufacturing and healthcare. READ MORE The rate of fatalities per 100,000 workers decreased from 2.7 in 2015 to 1.2 in 2024. Agriculture, forestry and fishing accounted for 12 fatalities in 2024, all of which were farming incidents, representing more than a third of all fatalities from a sector employing just 4 per cent of the workforce. Water supply, sewerage, waste management and remediation activities accounted for five deaths, as did construction activity. Wholesale and retail trade, and the repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles accounted for a further five deaths. There were two deaths in transportation and storage; two deaths in accommodation and food service activities; and two deaths in administrative and support service activities. The mining and quarrying sector accounted for one death. A total of 31 deaths were of men, with three women. The HSA said vehicle-related incidents (10 fatalities), incidents involving heavy/falling objects (six fatalities) and falling from heights (five fatalities) were the leading causes of work-related fatalities in 2024, accounting for 64 per cent of all fatalities.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store