logo
National Development Plan: Extra €4 billion for health and housing found by Government during negotiations

National Development Plan: Extra €4 billion for health and housing found by Government during negotiations

Irish Times22-07-2025
Jack White -
30 minutes ago
Main Points:
Details of the investment of some €200 billion in Ireland's infrastructure over the next decade will be unveiled by Government today.
More than €165 billion had been allocated to the current National Development Plan (NDP) which runs until 2030.
However, a review of the NDP was announced in April to allow for additional funding.
The revised NDP will be boosted by the €14 billion windfall in Apple tax, the proceeds from the sale of the State's stake in AIB and money that had been put away in State accounts, including the Infrastructure, Climate and Nature Fund.
It will cover costs out to 2035 with a particular focus on increasing investment to support housing delivery by investing in energy, water and transport.
Minister for Public Expenditure Jack Chambers said it will help 'bridge the infrastructure deficit we have in the Irish economy.'
The plan's unveiling comes as the Government considers a planning fast track for
key national infrastructure to accelerate project delivery.
Jack White -
4 minutes ago
Revised NDP to provide largest ever rise in military spending
The Defence Forces is to receive about €1.7 billion in new capital investment under the revised National Development Plan (NDP).
The move will represent the largest ever rise in military spending, Martin Wall writes.
The new funding will be focused on the introduction of new primary radar systems to identify aircraft in Irish skies as well as sonar equipment to detect objects under the sea.
There will also be investment in new armoured personnel vehicles to provide force protection for troops.
It is understood the Tánaiste and Minister for Defence Simon Harris has secured more than a 50 per cent increase on defence spending under the revised NDP.
It is understood the Government believes the €1.7 billion capital investment will allow Ireland to reach the mid-level point of military capabilities – known as Level of Ambition 2 set out in the report of the Commission on Defence in 2022.
Mr Harris has said that Ireland must get to Level of Ambition 2, which would mean that State infrastructure and capabilities on defence were at a point where it was in line with other smaller countries in Europe.
It is understood the Government believes the allocation under the revised National Development Plan for Defence will mean Ireland can work towards the Level of Ambition 2 target initially before moving over subsequent years to the higher Level of Ambition 3.
This would see Ireland develop more extensive defence capabilities including fighter jets and a larger Naval Service.
Housing and water investment are set to receive about €40 billion from the Government's overall €100 billion expenditure on infrastructure and capital projects over the next five years.
Jack White -
12 minutes ago
The Government found another €4 billion for health and housing during down-to-the-wire negotiations over the National Development Plan on Monday evening, The Irish Times has learned.
Jack Horgan-Jones reports:
The plan will see the allocation of more than €200 billion over the coming decade – with the figure ballooning in recent days as talks between Coalition leaders and Cabinet ministers continued.
Originally, some €20 billion was to be added to the National Development Plan – but Minister for Public Expenditure and Infrastructure Jack Chambers said over the weekend that figure would rise to €30 billion.
Senior Government sources confirmed on Tuesday morning that an additional €3.9 billion was added for health and housing on Monday night.
This means that there will be €34 billion extra when compared to the existing NDP, including €10 billion up until 2030 to pay for megaprojects in energy, water and transport.
In total, there will be €102.4 billion allocated to different sectors for the period 2026-2030, and another €100 billion for the years 2030-2035.
Government sources indicated that the review will take in total public investment of €275.4 billion, including exchequer and non-exchequer funding and the release of once-off payouts from the Apple tax money, the sale of AIB shares and State funds such as the Infrastructure, Climate and Nature Fund.
Jack White -
15 minutes ago
The plan being published today is one of the 'biggest ever investments in transforming fundamental infrastructure,' Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said.
The National Development Plan being published by Government today is one of the biggest ever investments in transforming fundamental infrastructure in this country.
— Micheál Martin (@MichealMartinTD)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Justin Kelly named as new Garda Commissioner to succeed Drew Harris
Justin Kelly named as new Garda Commissioner to succeed Drew Harris

Irish Times

time18 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Justin Kelly named as new Garda Commissioner to succeed Drew Harris

The Government has appointed current Garda Deputy Commissioner Justin Kelly to succeed Garda Commissioner Drew Harris , who is due to retire in a matter of weeks. Mr Kelly has been appointed to lead the Garda force after a recruitment process that began in May. Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan recommended Mr Kelly to his colleagues at Tuesday's Cabinet meeting, where the appointment was confirmed. In a statement, Mr O'Callaghan said he is 'very pleased' the Government has accepted his recommendation. READ MORE 'The role of Garda Commissioner is one of the most challenging and impactful leadership positions in Ireland's public service and the appointment process was suitably rigorous,' he said. 'I am satisfied that Justin Kelly is both qualified and particularly well suited to the role of Commissioner given his extensive leadership experience over the last 30 years in some of the most challenging issues facing An Garda Síochána including national security, domestic and sexual violence, and organised crime.' [ Justin Kelly interview: The changing Irish drugs trade: rocketing cocaine prices, gangs growing closer and Irish middlemen in Colombia Opens in new window ] A three-week recruitment campaign was held in May, including an international search for suitable candidates, which resulted in 14 candidates. The selection process included two interviews and a presentation by candidates as well as a detailed psychometric assessment. While Mr Harris is not due to retire until September 1st, after seven years in the role, the handover to Mr Kelly is expected to take place sooner than that. His appointment will be a popular one across the Garda force as he has spent the majority of his policing career involved in crime investigation work, mostly combating drugs and organised crime. As a result, he is regarded as someone familiar with the pressures facing frontline gardaí. A Dubliner, Mr Kelly joined An Garda Síochána as a recruit in the 1990s and has served, since last October, as deputy commissioner for 'security, strategy and governance'. Before that he was assistant commissioner in charge of the 'serious and organised crime' area of the Garda, including all the specialist units that tackle serious and for-profit crime. He has been one of the key figures in the Garda leading and managing the investigations into the Kinahan cartel, including its leadership tier based in Dubai and its Irish operation, which was previously headed by Dubliner Liam Byrne. In an interview with The Irish Times last year, Mr Kelly said the nature of Irish organised crime had changed, with far fewer gangland gun murders but significant co-operation around importing drugs. He said he believed drugs gangs had seen how the Garda wiped out the Kinahan and Hutch groups in Dublin during the operation targeting their feud and had decided not to engage in feuding or gun murders for fear of being targeted in the same way. Mr Kelly said although many people believed Irish crime groups were 'competing with each other and these groups would kill each other on sight, that isn't the way'. Instead, Irish gangs were 'coming together' to import drugs, or transit drugs through the country on to other final destinations. 'We used to be an end destination, now we're [also] a transit country, without a doubt. And in some ways, we're a production country now, around cannabis herb,' Mr Kelly said, in reference to the proliferation of cannabis growhouses in the Republic. 'We've even had large MDMA [and] methamphetamine seizures here that have been going out of the country. And some of the really big cocaine seizures ... some of them have been partly staying here, partly transiting through the country.' Earlier, the Garda Representative Association (GRA) said the key issues that the new Garda Commissioner will have to address are retention, the morale crisis within the force, the use of suspensions and discipline, lack of training and excessive bureaucracy. Speaking on Newstalk Breakfast on Tuesday morning, the GRA's general secretary, Ronan Slevin, said he hoped that whoever is appointed as Garda Commissioner will recognise those issues that need to be addressed immediately. When asked about the GRA's lack of faith in Mr Harris, Mr Slevin said that he had failed to address issues identified by the association over many years. 'He still is denying that there is a morale issue within An Garda Síochána. And I think that the resignation and retirement figures clearly demonstrate that there's a serious morale issue within the workforce.' Mr Slevin said that the new commissioner will have to address issues such as the inability to attract new members into the force, as well as the staff retention issue. 'Those are issues that he can address immediately, the use of suspension, discipline, the lack of training, the bureaucracy and administration tasks that members unnecessarily have to get involved in on a day-to-day basis. All of that is leading into a demoralised workforce and I think that the new Commissioner will have to address that,' said Mr Slevin. 'You have a force that are in some way in fear of working because they know that if they make any form of a mistake they will be disciplined severely as a result of that, and that strangles the workforce in the environment that our workforce is in.'

State to oppose Omagh bombing survivors' bid to bring cases over failure to hold inquiry, court told
State to oppose Omagh bombing survivors' bid to bring cases over failure to hold inquiry, court told

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

State to oppose Omagh bombing survivors' bid to bring cases over failure to hold inquiry, court told

The State will oppose applications by two Omagh bombing survivors seeking to bring lawsuits aimed at compelling the Irish government to establish a public inquiry into the atrocity, the High Court has heard. Emmet Tunney and Shawneen Conway, both survivors of the 1998 dissident republican bombing, say the Government is obliged to establish a public inquiry in circumstances where state authorities allegedly held 'actionable intelligence' relating to the attack. A total of 29 people, including Ms Conway's 18-year-old brother Gareth and a mother pregnant with twins, died when a car bomb planted by the Real IRA exploded in the centre of the Co Tyrone town on August 15, 1998. The survivors, who are seeking to bring separate but similar cases, both point to a judgment of Northern Ireland's High Court, which found that the British and Irish government bore responsibilities 'arising from the cross-border nature of the attack and the intelligence failings that preceded it'. 'The High Court in Northern Ireland found that there was a real prospect that fresh investigative measures could yield new and significant information regarding the atrocity, including the possibility of preventing it had certain intelligence been acted upon,' the survivors' court papers state. Their cases state that a public inquiry is required to ensure an effective investigation of the atrocity. They allege the State's failure to hold such an inquiry is a breach of their rights under the Constitution and under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). According to their court documents, article two of the ECHR requires an 'effective, independent, prompt, and public' investigation in circumstances where State agents knew or ought to have known of a real and immediate risk to life. Articles 40 and 41 of the Constitution require effective investigations of deaths involving potential State failures, their papers say. An independent inquiry into the bombing established by the UK government opened in Omagh in January and is continuing. That inquiry is examining whether the atrocity could have been prevented by UK authorities. Ms Conway and Mr Tunney say the Irish government should hold a parallel inquiry. In the High Court this week, Stephen Toal KC, for the survivors with Ruaidhrí Giblin BL and Karl McGuckin BL, moved an application seeking permission to bring the proceedings against the Government, Ireland and the Attorney General. Mr Toal said the State had indicated it would be opposing their application seeking permission to bring the proceedings. Ms Justice Mary Rose Gearty said she would hear Mr Toal's applications for permission to bring the proceedings in early November. The judge said the State should be put on notice of the applications. Both survivors are seeking various orders, including one compelling the Government to establish a public inquiry into the bombing, and a court declaration that the Government's failure to establish such an inquiry to date is in breach of their rights. Mr Tunney, of Omagh, Co Tyrone, is represented in the action by Strabane-based firm Roche McBride Solicitors. Ms Conway, from Dungannon, Co Tyrone, is represented by Pa Duffy Solicitors in Dungannon.

Omagh bombing survivors' attempt to compel inquiry in the Republic will be opposed, High Court hears
Omagh bombing survivors' attempt to compel inquiry in the Republic will be opposed, High Court hears

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Omagh bombing survivors' attempt to compel inquiry in the Republic will be opposed, High Court hears

The State will oppose applications by two Omagh bombing survivors seeking to bring lawsuits aimed at compelling the Irish government to establish a public inquiry into the atrocity, the High Court has heard. Emmet Tunney and Shawneen Conway, both survivors of the 1998 dissident republican bombing, say the Government is obliged to establish a public inquiry in circumstances where state authorities allegedly held 'actionable intelligence' relating to the attack.

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