
Michael O'Leary criticised for ‘drive-by commentary' on Dublin metro
The 18.8km rail line, most of which will be underground, is to run from north of Swords to Charlemont in the south of Dublin city centre.
Various metro projects for the capital have been proposed in recent decades but none have proceeded to build stage.
On Tuesday, the Government announced that the MetroLink project would get a €2bn boost in funding as part of the national development plan, in what Taoiseach Micheál Martin said was 'a very definitive commitment to the metro'.
This Government wasted €330,000 on a bike shed, imagine what they do with an 18-kilometre underground train from an airport?
While Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe indicated the latest estimated cost for the MetroLink was €11bn, Mr O'Leary claimed it would cost €20bn, 'so about a billion a kilometre'.
'Dublin Airport doesn't need it, Dublin Airport passengers won't use it – they're already well-served by buses,' he told RTÉ Radio on Wednesday, while claiming that less than a third of the airport's passengers use buses.
He said that while the tube in London runs from Heathrow and through 'all of London', the Metro will only serve a section of Dublin city's residents – around 100,000 people, he claimed.
'Here's the madness of this. This thing is going to start at Stephen's Green in the morning. If you want to get to our first wave of departures, which leave at about 6.30 in the morning, you need to be at the airport at 5.30am.
'Are you seriously going to drive into the centre of Stephen's Green, where there's no car parking, to get this metro to get to Dublin Airport for 5.30 in the morning? No, you're not.
'Let me give you the alternative scenario: for €100m, this year we could buy 400 buses, and 400 buses would provide exactly the same capacity as this metro from Dublin Airport, in through Ballymun, in through Drumcondra, on bus lanes that already exist.'
He claimed the plan had not been properly costed and hit out at the Government's handling of public finances.
'This Government wasted €330,000 on a bike shed, imagine what they do with an 18-kilometre underground train from an airport?'
Micheal Martin announced two billion euro funding for the metro project (Phil Noble/PA)
He also criticised comments by Mr Martin, who said the Irish capital will not be sustainable without a metro.
'Does he not understand that the buses actually will all be electrified by the end of this decade, which will actually be greener than light rail?'
Labour TD Duncan Smith said Mr O'Leary's criticisms of public infrastructure were as sure 'as night follows day'.
'Dubliners are stuck in daily gridlock. MetroLink is their best chance at affordable, reliable transport that serves communities, not corporate profits.
'As a consistent advocate for MetroLink in Swords, I find it insulting to hear this kind of drive-by commentary from someone who clearly doesn't rely on public transport to get to work.
'Dublin deserves better than a transport plan from a billionaire whose only experience with buses is when he is pretending to be one.'
When asked about his endorsement of Enterprise Minister Peter Burke and junior minister Robert Troy during the general election campaign, Mr O'Leary claimed 'they're not in government' and criticised Mr Martin again.
'I endorsed Peter Burke, who actually topped the poll despite the criticism. I also endorsed Robert Troy – and they're not the government.'
Read More
Ryanair chief cites lower costs after moving aircraft from Cork Airport to Shannon
Hashtags

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


Irish Examiner
14 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
EU-US trade deal criticised by German business leaders and French minister
The EU-US trade deal, clinched in a ballroom at Donald Trump's golf resort in Scotland on Sunday, has been criticised by France's prime minister and business leaders across Germany. The deal, which will impose 15% tariffs on almost all European exports to the US including cars, ends the threat of a punitive 30% import duties being imposed on Mr Trump's August 1 deadline for a deal, but it is a world apart from the zero-zero import and export tariff the EU offered initially. It also means European exporters to the US will face more then triple the average 4.8% tariff now in force, with negotiations to continue on steel, which is still facing a 50% tariff, aviation, and a question mark over future barriers to pharmaceutical exports. The deal has been cautiously welcomed on the Irish side, with Government sources saying it provides certainty to businesses. One senior source said 'nobody was jumping with joy' over the deal due to baseline tariffs, but that it did provide certainty to businesses. Reacting to the deal, Taoiseach Micheál Martin said it brought 'clarity and predictability to the trading relationship between the EU and the US'. 'That is good for businesses, investors and consumers. It will help protect many jobs in Ireland,' Mr Martin said. 'We will now study the detail of what has been agreed, including its implications for businesses exporting from Ireland to the US, and for different sectors operating here. However, Mr Martin said the baseline tariff would make trade between the EU and US 'more expensive and more challenging'. France's prime minister, François Bayrou, said Europe had submitted to the US, on a 'dark day' for the union. 'It is a dark day when an alliance of free peoples, gathered to affirm their values and defend their interests, resolves to submission,' Bayrou posted on X. The German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, rapidly hailed the deal, saying it avoided 'needless escalation in transatlantic trade relations' and averted a potentially damaging trade war. German exporters were less enthusiastic. The powerful BDI federation of industrial groups said the accord would have 'considerable negative repercussions', while the country's VCI chemical trade association said the accord left rates 'too high'. It is also clear that the US tariff of 15% on automotive products will place a burden on German automotive companies in the midst of their transformation, hitting sales and profits. The president of the car industry federation VDA, Hildegard Müller, said it was 'fundamentally positive' that a framework deal was agreed but warned of huge costs to come. European stock markets hit a four-month high at the start of trading on Monday, amid relief that a deal had been reached. Germany's Dax jumped by 0.86%, and France's Cac 40 index rose by 1.1%. France's minister for Europe, Benjamin Haddad, said on Monday that the agreement would provide 'temporary stability … but it is unbalanced'. Victory for Trump The German bank Berenberg said the deal brought to an end the 'crippling uncertainty' but said it was a victory for Mr Trump. 'It is great to have a deal. In two major respects, however, the outcome remains much worse than the situation before Trump started his new round of trade wars early this year,' said Holger Schmieding, Berenberg's chief economist. 'The extra US tariffs will hurt both the US and the EU. For Europe, the damage is mostly frontloaded,' Mr Schmieding said in a note to clients on Monday morning. 'The deal is asymmetric. The US gets away with a substantial increase in its tariffs on imports from the EU and has secured further EU concessions to boot. In his apparent zero-sum mentality, Trump can claim that as a 'win' for him,' he added. The Italian bank UniCredit also said Mr Trump had got the better out of the EU. 'Is this a good deal for the EU? Probably not. The outcome is heavily asymmetrical, and it leaves US tariffs on imported EU goods at much higher levels than EU tariffs on imports from the US,' UniCredit said in a note to clients. '15% is not to be underestimated, but it is the best we could get,' the European Commision president Ursula von der Leyen acknowledged. Initially the EU had tried to hardball the US by threatening but pausing €21bn worth of retaliatory measures in April, and adding another list of €73bn-worth of US imports that would be taxed earlier this month. But it pivoted to a quick UK-style deal after the Nato summit in June, swapping a comprehensive trade deal for security and defence promises from Mr Trump. By contrast, China, which threatened the US with a cascade of punitive tariffs, is still negotiating with Mr Trump, who over the weekend froze technology transfer restrictions to create space for a deal with Beijing. Berenberg said the deal would affect the German economy, but the decline in growth would be offset by the Bundestag's recent growth stimulus package, it added. The EU had pushed for a compromise on steel that could allow a certain quota into the US before tariffs would apply. Mr Trump appeared to rule that out, saying steel was 'staying the way it is', but Ms von der Leyen insisted later that 'tariffs will be cut and a quota system will be put in place' for steel. He also ruled out a carve-out for pharmaceuticals but later Ms von der Leyen said the 15% tariff would apply to EU medicine exports and that any other tariffs were up to the US president. The EU is now subject to a 25% levy on cars, 50% on steel and aluminium, and an across-the-board tariff of 10%, which Washington had threatened to increase to 30% in a no-deal scenario. The bloc had been pushing hard for tariff carve-outs for critical industries from aircraft to spirits, and its car industry, crucial for France and Germany, is already reeling from the levies imposed so far. The Guardian


Agriland
15 minutes ago
- Agriland
‘No upside for Ireland' in US-EU trade deal
Independent Ireland MEP Ciaran Mullooly has slammed the US-EU trade agreement saying that 'there is no upside for Ireland'. US President Donald Trump met with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen for announced the agreement following talks yesterday (Sunday, July 27) during Trump's visit to Scotland. The agreeement will see a baseline tariff applied of 15% applied to EU goods entering the US. Trade MEP Mullooly said that the trade deal imposes permanent tariffs on Irish exports to the US and deals a major blow to Ireland's agri-food and beverage sectors. 'By any stretch of the imagination, this is not a good deal for Ireland. 'It's a damaging agreement for our exporters, and it appears EU leadership has simply capitulated to the US on this issue, ' he said. The Midlands North-West MEP was also critical of the Irish government's response to the agreement. 'I'm not sure how the Irish government could call this a good deal: it's certainly not for Irish companies – now facing 15% tariff hikes. 'We are still facing ongoing uncertainty. The nightmare of instability continues for distillers. [President] Von der Leyen has admitted that there is still no deal, at least not until the next round of negotiations. 'This means the uncertainty is far from over for companies like Drumshanbo Gin, Tullamore Dew, and dozens of others. When will it end?,' he added. Ireland The MEP claimed that Ireland, as the most export-dependent economy in the EU, stands to lose more than any other member state under the terms of the new deal. He said the tariffs will affect approximately €1.9 billion worth of Irish agri-food and beverage exports, with an estimated annual impact of €285 million. 'This agreement leaves our producers less competitive in the US market. These are not theoretical numbers – this is real money lost from Irish businesses, rural communities, and jobs,' Mullooly said. The MEP said he will be writing to both the Irish government and the EU Commission to demand urgent support, including: A financial rescue package for industries most affected by the new tariffs Increased promotional budgets, both at national and EU level, to help Irish producers retain market share in the US 'We cannot allow key Irish industries, dairy, prepared foods, beef, and seafood-to absorb this shock unaided. They need a safety net and a strategy. 'The government and the EU must step up without delay,' Mullooly said.


RTÉ News
44 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Government reaction to the new EU-US trade deal
Peter Burke, Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, outlines the Government reaction to the new EU-US trade deal