Written answers

Thursday, 17 June 2021

Department of Rural and Community Development

Climate Action Plan

Photo of Eoin Ó BroinEoin Ó Broin (Dublin Mid West, Sinn Fein)
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425. To ask the Minister for Rural and Community Development the current and capital costs involved with each action item in the Interim Climate Action Plan under her Department’s responsibility. [32701/21]

Photo of Heather HumphreysHeather Humphreys (Cavan-Monaghan, Fine Gael)
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Climate Action Plan 2019, the Interim Climate Action Plan from earlier this year and Climate Action Plan 2021, when it is complete, are more than spending programmes. They include regulatory and taxation measures and aim to mobilise private investment. It would be difficult, and indeed misleading, to identify their Exchequer cost.

The Climate Action Plan sets out, for the first time, how Ireland can reach its 2030 targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and also put Ireland on the right trajectory towards net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. The step-up in ambition in each of the sectors covered by the Plan will require investment across the entire economy. Overall, through the mix of technologies and measures identified, the Plan sets out the pathway that represents the least-cost burden to the economy as a whole. A significant portion of the technologies and measures set out in the Plan will result also in net lifetime cost savings to the economy as a whole.

In terms of costs to the Exchequer and other public funding, the Plan will be funded through Project Ireland 2040 which provides €30 billion for low carbon and sustainable mobility investments in the period to 2027.

Many of the actions in the plan do not require public funding. The actions contained in this plan fall broadly into four categories:

- public funding provided in the annual estimates process and in Project Ireland 2040

- measures such as setting a long-term trajectory for the carbon tax, in order to change long-term behaviour and decisions to encourage investment in more sustainable choices

- new regulations to end certain practices (e.g. phasing out oil and gas boilers in homes or introducing low emission zones in cities)

- actions to promote public and community engagement and participation in reducing our emissions.

For the first time, a decarbonisation target has been set for each sector. Each Government Department must now determine the optimum approach to utilising the funding available to it to support the policies necessary to meet the targets proposed for each sector. The exact costs will be determined from the detailed policy design work which will consist of a mix of regulations, taxes, and subsidies which the Government may choose to deploy to achieve the target abatement range in each sector.

It should also be noted that there would also be a very significant cost to the Exchequer for not implementing any policies to achieve compliance with our 2030 targets, which would also lock Ireland into a high carbon trajectory that would be unsustainable in the long-run.

The NDP Review process is underway to update capital allocations for all Government Departments to 2030 and that, as per the phase one report of the NDP review that has already been published (), the NDP Review will be consistent with recent and upcoming commitments from the Irish Government to become carbon neutral by 2050 and to meet the more immediate climate targets by 2030.

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