Ireland's water infrastructure now main block on growth, committee hears
Oireachtas Committee on Budgetary Oversight
was told on Tuesday.
'Ireland is a very heavy user of water and that's why we're struggling to keep up,'
Irish Fiscal Advisory Council's
(Ifac) chief economist Niall Conroy told the committee.
Members of Ifac appeared before the committee on Tuesday to discuss the economy and other issues.
'When we looked at how Ireland's infrastructure compares to other countries in Europe, we actually found that Ireland, for water, was about average, which we were surprised at,' he said.
READ MORE
The problem lies more with demand, he said, noting the State's pharma, data centre and tech industries were big users of water.
Uisce Éireann
, formerly Irish Water, has already stated that it will not be able to support much more than 35,000 new house completions a year 'in terms of connecting them up' without additional funding, he said.
[
Coalition spending overrun likely to be more than €2bn this year
Opens in new window
]
Ifac chairman Seamus Coffey said there was capacity within the economy to ramp up the production of the water infrastructure 'but it is certainly a bottleneck that is slowing down the economy'.
In his opening address to the committee, Mr Coffey said Ireland's infrastructure was about 25 per cent behind its peers.
'Regardless of what happens to the international environment, these infrastructure deficits need to be addressed,' he said.
'If the economy weathers the changing environment, it will have high levels of employment and high demand for infrastructure,' Mr Coffey said.
IATA Director General Willie Walsh on airline profits, air fares and why the Dublin Airport passenger cap makes Ireland a laughing stock
Listen |
35:56
'If there is some form of downturn, then having adequate infrastructure would be key to restoring low unemployment and a prosperous society,' he said.
Mr Coffey said the Government needed to ensure
budgetary policy
reduces the ups and downs of the economic cycle.
'This means showing restraint when the economy is strong and being more generous when the economy is struggling,' he said.
Mr Coffey warned that overruns in day-to-day public spending
are likely to top €2 billion this year.
[
EU's new fiscal rules pose risk to public finances - Ifac
Opens in new window
]
'The Government needs to improve how it forecasts spending. When formulating Budget 2025, the department didn't account for the money they were going to overspend in 2024 when planning for 2025,' he said.
'This created unrealistic budget figures from the beginning – a problem that keeps recurring. To avoid repeating this mistake, Budget 2026 and future medium-term plans must start with accurate baseline figures that includes all likely overspends in 2025,' he said.
'Otherwise, spending projections will be wrong from the outset,' he said.
Ifac has previously criticised the Government for pursuing what it describes as an 'everything now' approach to spending by simultaneously presiding over tax cuts, higher day-to-day spending, a continued ramp-up in capital investment and for fuelling domestic price pressures by providing across the board cost-of-living supports.
Mr Coffey also said Ireland currently had no effective framework for fiscal policy.
'The European fiscal rules don't work well for Ireland. They rely on GDP (gross domestic product) and ignore the risks linked to corporation tax,' he said.
'As a result, Ireland is unlikely to face external scrutiny at an EU level,' he said.
Hashtags

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


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Uisce Éireann warns of 'critical constraints' in water capacity
Uisce Éireann has warned that its capacity to serve could hit critical constraints resulting in housing delivery coming to a standstill in the next few years. Concerns were raised at the Oireachtas housing committee that housing delivery could be stymied in the next three or four years as the water utility urged for the situation to be treated as an emergency. The committee heard that an additional €2bn — paid out over five years — would be required in order to deliver on the Government's housing targets. Uisce Éireann's Strategic Funding Plan had set out a requirement of €10.3bn investment in capital infrastructure based on the Housing For All targets of 33,000 new homes per year for 2025 to 2029. "The Government has now moved to increase national housing targets by 17,000 additional units a year to 2030," CEO of Uisce Éireann, Niall Gleeson said. The challenge for infrastructure providers like Uisce Éireann is to work out how we can mobilise our workforce, funding, processes and supply chains to support these targets on top of our existing obligations. Mr Gleeson said Uisce Éireann "is not a housing delivery body" but is tasked with ensuring the provision of water and wastewater infrastructure for the construction of new developments and for the homes when they are completed. The Dublin area in particular is "running out of road" in terms of headroom and that projects in Dublin and the Eastern and Midlands region are on the cusp of critical phases, the committee heard. "Until we address the challenges highlighted in planning, consenting and funding, Uisce Éireann remains concerned about the level of risk in these projects," said Mr Gleeson. With the demand outstripping the supply in Dublin on certain days already this year, it was warned that the area could be one fine day away from the introduction of water restrictions. Funding is just one element that is needed to deliver the big and small projects that need to be delivered. Infrastructure projects need to be prioritised when it comes to planning, the process needs to be streamlined and the committee heard that when it comes to consent, there is an element of 'nimbyism' (not in my back yard). Mr Gleeson told the committee that the utility has "consistently advocated for an urgent approach" to addressing the issues facing infrastructure projects and reiterated the need for a sense of urgency. Read More Ireland facing sand and gravel shortage due to planning delays, industry warns


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Russia denies stalling peace efforts amid claims it has made fresh gains in Ukraine
The Kremlin rejected allegations from a US envoy that it is delaying attempts to end its war on Ukraine , amid claims that Russia's invasion force now controls the whole of its neighbour's Luhansk region and has seized territory in Dnipropetrovsk region for the first time. Keith Kellogg, a special envoy appointed by Donald Trump , decried as 'Orwellian' the claims from Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov this week that the pace of peace efforts depended on Washington and Kyiv. 'Russia cannot continue to stall for time while it bombs civilian targets in Ukraine,' Mr Kellogg said. But Mr Peskov said on Tuesday: 'No one is stalling anything.' READ MORE Using Russia's official term for its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which began in February 2022, he also said: 'Naturally, we are primarily interested in achieving the goals we have set for the special military operation through diplomacy. That is why we are not interested in stalling. 'Naturally, we are thankful for the efforts that Washington and the Trump team members are making to promote talks on the Ukrainian settlement.' The US president's administration has put intense public pressure on pro-western Ukraine to accept the need for painful concessions to Moscow, while showing deep reluctance to criticise the Kremlin or strengthen sanctions on Russia. [ Russia grooms Ukrainian teens as spies, saboteurs and unwitting suicide bombers ] US senator Lindsey Graham said on Sunday that Mr Trump had encouraged him to seek a vote in Congress on a new sanctions Bill that would impose 500 per cent tariffs on countries that continued to buy Russian oil. Mr Peskov said of Mr Graham: 'His position is well known to us, and it is well known to the whole world. He belongs to a group of inveterate Russophobes, and if it were up to him these sanctions would have been imposed long ago. Would that help the settlement? That is a question for those who initiate such actions.' Kyiv continues to urge the US and European states to impose and enforce stricter economic sanctions on Russia and to expand and accelerate provision of weapons, ammunition and air defence systems to the Ukrainian military. Despite high losses in troops and equipment, Russia continues to grind forward in parts of eastern Ukraine and has seized about 200 sq km of the northern Sumy in recent months. Moscow-installed officials in occupied eastern Ukraine have now claimed that all of Luhansk region is under Russian control and that the village of Dachne has become the first territory in Dnipropetrovsk region to fall to the invasion force. Kyiv has not confirmed either claim. Ukrainian forces have held only small parts Luhansk for several years, but if Russia has established full control there it would be the first entire region to fall to Moscow's troops since they seized Crimea in 2014 with barely a shot being fired. Ukrainian towns and cities are also coming under intense nightly bombardments from Russian missiles and drones. Data from the country's air force showed that Russia launched 5,337 Shahed-type drones against Ukraine last month, more than 1,100 more than in March, which was the previous record month. The Shahed is a 'kamikaze' drone with a warhead of between 15kg-50kg that explodes on impact. Russia received large numbers of them from Iran , but now makes its own version. The warring neighbours traded missile and drone strikes early on Tuesday. Sources in the Ukrainian security service said its long-range attack drones had hit Russia's Kupol military plant in the city of Izhevsk, more than 1,000km from the front line. Local governor Alexander Brechalov said three people had been killed and 35 injured in a drone strike on a factory that he did not name.


Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Banks and defence sectors weigh on European shares
European shares fell on Tuesday on the back of poor performances from the banking and defence sectors, as uncertainty continues to weigh on investors. London bucked the European trend to close in the green. Dublin The Iseq All-Share index started the third quarter of the year in the red, down 87.71 points to 11,334.00. The Dublin stock exchange's losses were led by Kenmare Resources which dropped 3.61 per cent. Further developments around a possible acquisition of the firm by former boss Michael Carville emerged in recent days. In a mixed day for the banks, AIB fell 2.79 per cent to €6.79, joined by Bank of Ireland which dropped 1.66 per cent to €11.885, while Permanent TSB was steady. Defensive stock Uniphar plc, the healthcare services group, dropped 2.27 per cent to €3.665, while Ryanair dipped 0.83 per cent. READ MORE Of the big caps, Glanbia were the winners on the day, rising 2.64 per cent to €12.83 as its share price continues to recover. LONDON London's internationally oriented FTSE 100 rose 0.28 per cent, while the domestically-focused midcap index added 0.54 per cent. Midcap stocks ended June by logging their best quarter in over four years while the blue-chip index logged monthly losses. Drugmaker AstraZeneca's shares rose 2.7 per cent after multiple sources told the Times that chief executive Pascal Soriot was considering moving the company's listing to the US. Traders are currently pricing in a 78 per cent chance of a rate cut by the Bank of England in August. Precious metal mining stocks led sectoral gains, rising 2.4 per cent as safe-haven gold jumped over 1 per cent on the weaker dollar and US tariff uncertainty. Endeavour Mining and Fresnillo added 2.8 per cent and 1 per cent, respectively. Hochschild Mining gained 5.3 per cent. Losses were led by aerospace and defence index, which declined 2.2 per cent. Rolls-Royce fell 2.9 per cent and Babcock lost 2.5 per cent. Food retailer Sainsbury's shares slid 1.1 per cent despite reporting a higher-than-expected rise in quarterly sales. Standard Chartered Bank shares fell 2 per cent after liquidators for Malaysia's sovereign wealth fund 1MDB sued the bank in Singapore alleging fraud that led to more than $2.7 billion (€2.29) in losses more than 10 years ago. In other news, Britain's competition watchdog cleared Aviva's £3.7 billion ($5.08 billion) takeover of smaller rival Direct Line that will create the UK's largest home and motor insurer. Shares of Aviva were up 0.8 per cent, while those of Direct Line rose 0.5 per cent Europe European shares ended slightly lower on Tuesday, with industrials and banks the biggest drags as investors weighed uncertainty over US trade deals with the July tariff deadline fast approaching and discussions on a US tax bill. The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.2 per cent lower, coming off a more than 1 per cent fall for the month of June. Most regional bourses clocked declines, though UK's blue-chip FTSE 100 was an outlier with a 0.3 per cent rise. Industrials led losses among the major STOXX subsectors with a 1.7 per cent fall. Defence-related companies including Germany's Rheinmetall, Sweden's Saab and Italy's Leonardo all fell more than 5 per cent each. Banks also slid 1.3 per cent, with Germany's Deutsche Bank down the most with a 3.6 per cent decline. New York The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq fell from record highs in midafternoon trading on Tuesday, as Tesla shares were hit by a renewed spat between chief executive Elon Musk and US President Donald Trump, while better-than-expected economic data backed the US central bank's patient stance on rate cuts. Tesla dropped after Mr Trump threatened to cut off the billions of dollars in subsidies that Mr Musk's companies get from the federal government, after Mr Musk revived his criticism of Mr Trump's wide-ranging tax-cut and spending bill. The major indexes were mixed, but technology stocks led the decline among the major S&P sectors, while material stocks and the healthcare sector climbed. Shares of US-based casino operators rose after Macau reported a rise in June gambling revenue. Wynn Resorts and Las Vegas Sands, as well as MGM Resorts International climbed. – Additional reporting, Reuters, PA.