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Results 61-80 of 1,889 for peat

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Joint Oireachtas Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Brexit Adjustment Reserve Fund: Discussion (29 Nov 2023) See 2 other results from this debate

...aid for energy, efficiency, automation and processing for commercial mushroom producers and the 2023 scheme of investment aid for commercial, non-primary producers in the mushroom sector and for peat replacement by commercial mushroom producers. Both these schemes were designed to accelerate investment in the mushroom sector to reduce inefficiencies caused by Brexit. The Senator is...

Written Answers — Department of Communications, Climate Action and Environment: Energy Infrastructure (28 Nov 2023) See 1 other result from this answer

Eamon Ryan: ...Dec 2023. Scheduled to close thereafter Moneypoint 820MW Coal Modelled as not available from October 2024 Edenderry 118MW Peat Will now run exclusively on biomass from Jan 2024 As part of the Commission for Regulation of Utilities Security of Supply Programme, plans have been put in place to extend the...

Written Answers — Department of Housing, Planning, and Local Government: Horticulture Sector (28 Nov 2023) See 1 other result from this answer

Matt Carthy: 321. To ask the Minister for Housing, Planning, and Local Government if he has proposals to amend planning laws to permit the excavation of peat for horticulture purposes in tandem with efforts to determine alternatives to the use of peat by the sector; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [52104/23]

Written Answers — Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Agriculture Industry (28 Nov 2023) See 1 other result from this answer

Matt Carthy: 442. To ask the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine his proposals to allow the mushroom sector to source peat from within the State while it continues to identify potential alternatives; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [52106/23]

Ceisteanna Eile - Other Questions: Energy Policy (16 Nov 2023)

Eamon Ryan: ...made a comparison, which I think is a useful one. Looking at Bord na Móna, four years ago it found itself in really challenging circumstances. It was legally required to stop the production of peat. It has turned matters around and is probably the most successful, fastest-growing, biggest-investing green company in the country, if not Europe. It is a model for how to transition...

Seanad: Nithe i dtosach suíonna - Commencement Matters: Heritage Sites (15 Nov 2023)

Dara Calleary: ...maintenance and works for the protection of monuments in its care. As the Senator referenced, in 1984, a major prehistoric trackway of large oak planks was discovered during a Bord na Móna peat harvesting operation at Corlea. Wood samples from Corlea subjected to tree ring analysis indicated a felling date of 148 B.C., thus dating the track back to the early Iron Age. This track was...

Written Answers — Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Forestry Sector (14 Nov 2023) See 6 other results from this answer

Michael Fitzmaurice: ...and the Marine given that at a recent forest service training day in Killaloe, County Clare, the forest service representative stated that the new protocol or procedure for assessing and measuring peat-oregano mineral soil was trialled on 25 sites across Ireland prior to it being implemented as department policy and procedure, if he will detail, in tabular form, the counties in which the...

Written Answers — Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Forestry Sector (14 Nov 2023)

Charlie McConalogue: ...sensitivities, such as habitats and species (including NATURA sites, Freshwater Pearl Mussel and Hen Harrier, Breeding Curlew, open habitat birds, Annex I habitats), high nature value farmland, peat soils, hedgerows, water quality (including fisheries sensitive areas, waterbody status, acid sensitive areas), archaeology, landscape, and local sensitivities.” It has been necessary...

Energy Charter Treaty: Statements (9 Nov 2023)

Richard Bruton: ...from sectors we allowed to develop to a very considerable scale, whether we did so wittingly or unwittingly. I do not think anyone would be fully satisfied with how we have managed the exit from peat, which is a particular case in context. The exit was driven to a considerable extent by the courts. I was in government at the time and we created the role of the just transition...

Seanad: An tOrd Gnó - Order of Business (9 Nov 2023)

Victor Boyhan: ...journals in the Library downstairs today. They are full of questions asking why the Government is singling out mushrooms and excluding them from the horticultural crisis fund. I will tell the House why. It is because they are linked to peat, which is the subject of controversy. Mushrooms should not be penalised. Irish mushrooms are a fantastic crop. Indeed, three or four aeroplanes...

Seanad: Energy (Windfall Gains in the Energy Sector) (Cap on Market Revenues) Bill 2023: Committee and Remaining Stages (9 Nov 2023)

Ossian Smyth: ...energy support scheme. This demonstrates that a double-sided contract for difference which involves payback when market prices exceed €120 per megawatt hour does not hinder investment in wind generation. Coal, oil, peat and biomass by comparison will experience no increase in unexpected revenue due to the variable cap proposed by the Department. The variable cap contained in...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Concerns for Sourcing Winter Animal Feed in Shannon Callows Area: Discussion (8 Nov 2023) See 2 other results from this debate

Michael Fitzmaurice: ...be fighting to keep your land. Those are the facts and there is no point in waffling. If the nature restoration law that is being voted on goes through in Europe, and all our MEPs are backing it, peaty-type soil, which is in the witnesses' area, will be in trouble. There is no point in saying anything different. Second, how many Ministers have there been down through the years? I...

Ceisteanna - Questions: Departmental Reports (7 Nov 2023)

Leo Varadkar: -----and, of course, it can be fuelled by biogas, which is a sustainable form of gas. Another company is turning the old peat-powered power station infrastructure in Shannonbridge to battery storage, so we can store excess wind energy when we have it and put it back into the grid. When it comes to beef, it is not necessarily about increasing production. We are seeing herd stabilisation...

Written Answers — Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Departmental Policies (7 Nov 2023)

Charlie McConalogue: ...Scheme along with several European Innovation Partnership (EIP) research projects, to provide the required data for the development of future policy options in this area. An example is the RePEAT project working to accurately identify the extent of organic soils under agricultural management while investment in European Innovation Projects in the Midlands is developing a results-based...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action: Citizens' Assembly Report on Biodiversity Loss: Discussion (Resumed) (7 Nov 2023) See 2 other results from this debate

..., it is indeed the case that we have to be more careful and conscientious in terms of our forestry plans to avoid impacts on water quality. Also, traditionally, a lot of forestry went in on peat soils, which is not positive from a climate change perspective. In terms of the development-----

Seanad: Energy (Windfall Gains in the Energy Sector) (Cap on Market Revenues) Bill 2023: Second Stage (26 Oct 2023)

Eamon Ryan: ...does this by implementing a cap of €120 per MWh on electricity produced from renewable sources, namely wind, solar and hydropower. In addition, a variable cap, of at least €180, is applied to coal, oil, peat and biomass fuels. On the basis of economic appraisal conducted by my Department, I note that these cap levels strike the balance of capturing excess revenue in the...

Electricity Costs (Emergency Measures) Domestic Accounts Bill 2023: Committee and Remaining Stages (25 Oct 2023)

Mattie McGrath: ...prices being charged in this country in comparison to our EU colleagues. We have the highest prices by far. We can blame the climate crisis or whatever but the Minister's actions in shutting down peat stations and the bogs-----

Ceisteanna ó Cheannairí - Leaders' Questions (25 Oct 2023)

Holly Cairns: ...decision-making in recent decades, rivers have been stripped of their natural defences. Planning has been granted for building on floodplains. Ditches, culverts, hedgerows and tree cover have been removed, peat bogs have been drained and poorly planned concrete flood defences have been installed. All of these simply push flooding downstream at top speed. Restoring these natural flood...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine: Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine's Response to Ash Dieback: Limerick and Tipperary Woodland Owners (25 Oct 2023)

Michael Fitzmaurice: ..., they need to get the new grant. This is the only way forward. It is not complicated to decide how to do this. The Department was long enough going over and back to the EU about the depth of peat and the 30 cm and 50 cm. I cannot understand how under state aid rules we could not have got this across the line also. It should be across the line. It is a straight and simple case where...

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