
How the North-South Business Cooperation Awards can drive growth across the island of Ireland
They embody a commitment to building a better, more connected future on the island of Ireland. Through this initiative, the Stelios Philanthropic Foundation is providing a platform for businesses to grow, hire employees and contribute meaningfully to the all-island economy.
According to Ian Jeffers, CEO of Co-operation Ireland, the Awards offer practical support for businesses with cross-border ambitions to take their operations to the next stage of growth. With a total prize fund of €500,000, the Awards are designed to celebrate and support entrepreneurs who are building commercial bridges between North and South, helping to fuel job creation and deepen economic integration across communities.
'These Awards are about more than recognition - they offer tangible support to help businesses grow, scale and deepen their cross-border collaborations,' Jeffers explains. 'Whether it's investing in infrastructure, expanding headcount or reaching new markets, this support can make a real difference.'
The Awards align with Co-operation Ireland's mission of promoting peace, prosperity, and shared understanding through practical collaboration.
'Business has a unique ability to transcend boundaries. Entrepreneurs are solutions-focused by nature, and when people work together on shared goals like building a successful company, trust grows organically. That's why these Awards align so closely with our mission at Co-operation Ireland,' he says.
The Awards take inspiration from similar business awards run by the Stelios Foundation in Cyprus, the birthplace of Sir Stelios' parents, for the last 16 years. The bi-communal awards in Cyprus reward Greek Cypriot entrepreneurs and Turkish Cypriot entrepreneurs who are engaged in joint business on the island. The success of this model in Cyprus has demonstrated the power of entrepreneurship in bridging divides and now forms the blueprint for this all-island initiative in Ireland.
The island's prosperity depends on connectivity and collaboration, and these awards support that vision. They highlight real businesses doing real work and succeeding because of cooperation. North-South trade has grown significantly - from €2 billion in 1999 to €15 billion today - yet there remains untapped potential, particularly for SMEs, which account for over 80pc of cross-border trade. These awards seek to harness that potential by supporting businesses already working across the island.
'The prize fund of €500,000 is significant. For businesses that are already demonstrating cross-border success, that next stage of scaling requires investment,' Jeffers explains. 'This initiative is about giving those businesses the means to grow further and faster.'
The prizes will be awarded as follows: the overall Gold-winning team will receive €150,000; two Silver-winning teams will receive €100,000 each; and six Bronze-winning teams will receive €25,000 each. The prizes can be paid in Sterling or Euro.
Moreover, these awards are not about politics - they are about economic partnerships. They celebrate business success stories that happen to cross a geographic line. This aligns with Co-operation Ireland's wider ambition to build a shared and cohesive society through practical cooperation.
The Stelios Foundation has a proven 20-year track record of philanthropy across Europe, with Ireland now a key focus. Its work spans both high-impact charities and grassroots initiatives, with a consistent emphasis on supporting entrepreneurship, education, disability rights, food security, and cross-community peace.
'This isn't just a PR exercise. The Stelios Foundation has consistently provided tangible support in areas where it can make a difference. These awards build on that commitment and bring it to Ireland in a way that aligns with both business needs and social cohesion,' Jeffers says.
The North-South Business Co-operation Awards also reflect the broader history of connection between the Stelios brand and the island of Ireland.
'Just as easyJet brought people together across Europe, these Awards bring together businesses across the island of Ireland, empowering them to grow, hire and contribute to a stronger all-island economy.'
The awards ceremony will take place on Thursday, 30th October 2025, at Castle Leslie Estate in County Monaghan, a symbolic location close to the border, chosen to honour the spirit of cross-community partnership. Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou will personally present the awards and meet the finalists.
Looking ahead, Jeffers hopes these Awards will inspire further cooperation: 'These awards are not just about businesses - they're about people. They help entrepreneurs create jobs, build partnerships, and strengthen the social and economic links that connect communities across the island.'
Hashtags

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


Reuters
27 minutes ago
- Reuters
South African court rescinds TotalEnergies oil exploration permit
CAPE TOWN, Aug 14 (Reuters) - A South African court has rescinded an environmental authorisation granted to TotalEnergies ( opens new tab and its joint venture partner Shell (SHEL.L), opens new tab to explore for oil in a block off the Cape coast, a court judgment seen by Reuters showed. However, the court said TotalEnergies should be given a chance to rectify deficiencies identified, including a failure to properly assess the potential socio-economic impacts of any oil spills, or take climate change into consideration. "Total must be afforded opportunity to submit new or amended assessments ... to cure the deficiencies identified," Western Cape High Court Judge Nobahle Mangcu-Lockwood said in her August 13 ruling. A TotalEnergies spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The French company said last year it intended to exit the concession, Block 5/6/7 located between Cape Town and Cape Agulhas, leaving the operatorship to Shell, with South Africa's PetroSA holding a minority share. The order is the latest in a series of court challenges between environmentalists and oil companies looking to explore along South Africa's coast. Oil companies are making a major push into the west coast of South Africa, where they are looking to replicate the success in neighbouring Namibia following a cluster of discoveries in its part of the prolific Orange Basin. The basin extends into South African waters, but has remained largely unexplored there. Welcoming the judgment, non-profit organisation Natural Justice, one of the applicants in the case, said it was a victory in the growing opposition to oil and gas exploration in South Africa. "This judgment again confirms that companies must follow due process, undertake comprehensive assessments and provide communities with an opportunity to be heard," Melissa Groenink-Groves, a programme manager at the group, said in a statement.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
South Korea to expand securities settlement hours for global investors
SEOUL, Aug 14 (Reuters) - South Korea will extend operating hours for transaction settlement systems at the central bank and the securities depository starting April 2026, aiming to ease access for foreign investors across different time zones, the finance ministry said on Thursday. The Bank of Korea's operating hours will expand to 9 a.m. and 8 p.m. local time (0000-1100 GMT), from 9 a.m. and 5:30 p.m, aligning closer to those of countries included in FTSE Russell's World Government Bond Index, which South Korea is set to join in April 2026. The measure is the first step taken by the government since forming a task force to upgrade South Korea's domestic stock market to developed-market status from emerging market classification by Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI). Achieving MSCI's developed status remains a long-standing national goal and a key pledge by President Lee Jae Myung.


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
North Northamptonshire Council forecasts £9.4m overspend
A Reform UK-led council has forecast a budget overspend of £9.4m in its first quarter of the financial two-thirds of the overspend from North Northamptonshire Council sits with the Northamptonshire Children's Trust (NCT), which has exceeded its budgets year on year, with the council picking up extra costs of nearly £ trust's budget pressures were down to high costs and demand for placements for children in care, as well as spends on staffing, the council was Cheatley, executive member for finance, efficiency and change, said the forecast "reflects the increasing financial challenges that local government is facing around social care for both adults and children". According to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, the financial pressures on the council were down to growing demands for statutory services, which were often subject to expensive outsourcing costs to independent council also heard there was a £2.7m overspend in adult services for residential and nursing care, staffing and social care was almost £2m pressure due to higher demand for the council's Home to School Transport said the financial challenges facing the council were "a theme that we've obviously seen and had to accept over the last few years"."I am confident that the officers will continue to seek mitigations to provide efficiencies," he predicted spend for the year represents a 2.9% increase on the authority's £405m budget, which the former Conservative administration set earlier this UK took control of the council in the May local authority has set aside a contingency fund of just under £3m to combat "exceptional expenditure", which has not yet been could be employed later in the year to help balance the books, but that it will look to achieve alternative mitigations and efficiencies first, the authority said. Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.