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Huge local opposition to drone delivery hub on Dublin's southside as over 100 observations lodged
Huge local opposition to drone delivery hub on Dublin's southside as over 100 observations lodged

The Journal

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • The Journal

Huge local opposition to drone delivery hub on Dublin's southside as over 100 observations lodged

MORE THAN ONE hundred observations have been lodged over plans for a new food delivery hub for drones in Dublin, with the majority being objections. Politicians and residents' associations are amongst more than 110 objections received for the proposed hub in Dundrum on Dublin's southside. The window for objections closed this week. Plans were lodged by Irish startup Manna Drones Ltd for the lands at an existing car park site to the rear of Main Street and the rear of Holy Cross Church in Dundrum. Manna already operates two drone delivery hubs, one in Blanchardstown and one near junction 6 on the M50. The company has plans lined up to expand to Tallaght and Glasnevin. There have been over 100 complaints made to the company from those living in areas it already operates in. Manna CEO Bobby Healy has previously said the company is 'listening' to complaints and is investing in tech to make its drones, which are used to deliver products such as takeaway food, emit less noise when in use. Appearing before an Oireachtas Committee earlier this year, Healy said that drone deliveries are more sustainable, and remove traffic congestion from roads. 'Drone delivery offers a faster, greener and safer way forward, and does so while fully respecting the privacy of the communities we serve,' he said. Fianna Fáil TD Shay Brennan is among the objectors to the Dundrum hub. In his observation he noted that the idea of drones passing overhead daily has generated 'anxiety' in the locality. He also points out that there is currently no national policy or local planning framework to address the challenges posed by drone operations in urban and suburban settings. He called for a community impact assessment, robust noise studies, strict conditions on operational hours and flight frequency, and to defer approval until a 'community-centred' framework is in place. In Manna's application it proposes that the drones will be used to 'improve food delivery services in the Dundrum area'. One objector says that this is 'not a good use' of 'modern technology' and questions why only one use is listed. Another who also raised the same point noted: 'Dundrum already has ample food delivery services, making this proposal unnecessary and potentially harmful'. Advertisement One objector, who lives locally, wrote: 'A documentary I have viewed indicated a lot of local resentment to the current planning granted in Dublin 15.' 'The documentary I viewed talked about drones buzzing over adjacent properties, of which I am the occupant of one [in Dundrum],' they added, referencing the RTÉ Prime Time programme on the existing hub in Dublin 15. Another local resident wrote to Dún Laoghaire Rathdown County Council to object on privacy grounds. 'The presence of drones flying over residential homes raises legitimate fears around surveillance and data protection. Even if these drones are not recording footage, their presence in the skies creates a feeling of being watched and compromises residents' sense of privacy,' they said. One observation noted that the noise from and presence of drones could 'adversely impact' those with existing mental health conditions. The objector claimed that hyperacusis – noise sensitivity – is common in those with PTSD, those who suffer migraines, and those with some forms of epilepsy. Green Party councillor Robert Jones, who sits on the local county council, submitted an observation which noted that in his view adequate 'environmental scrutiny' and 'public consultation' had not been carried out. He said that there had been no ecological or acoustic assessments 'despite likely impacts on birds, pets and human health', and urged the council to reject the application. A management company representing the residents of Dundrum Castle House wrote to the council to object to the development on the grounds that drone activity overhead poses an 'unacceptable risk of damage' to the ruins of a 13th century Norman castle on the grounds of the residential development. Manna submitted a planning report from Downey Chartered Town Planners which stated that it will be introducing a 'much-needed service at this location'. The report said that drone delivery offers a 'sustainable alternative' to traditional delivery methods. Manna is applying for permission for an aerial delivery hub in Dundrum town centre for a temporary period of 5 years. In its planning statement the company said the development will consist of a single storey storage and ancillary office cabin container, perimeter fencing, and 'all associated site works necessary to facilitate the development'. A spokesperson for Manna Air Delivery has previously said that it would not be flying drones in Dundrum 'in the next few months'. They added that Manna Air Delivery has begun rolling out quieter propellers that reduce cruise-flight noise to 59 dBA—noticeably quieter than typical traffic outside a home, which averages between 70 and 75 dBA. Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal

Irish ports unsuitable to construct offshore wind projects, committee hears
Irish ports unsuitable to construct offshore wind projects, committee hears

Irish Times

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Irish Times

Irish ports unsuitable to construct offshore wind projects, committee hears

The Government will have to ringfence funding for the expansion of Ireland's ports, an Oireachtas committee heard on Tuesday, with just one port on the island capable of facilitating the construction of floating wind projects . While Belfast Harbour meets the spatial requirements to act as a construction hub for offshore projects, not a single port in the Republic is currently equipped to do so, Justin Moran, director of external affairs at Wind Energy Ireland (WEI), told the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Fisheries and Maritime Affairs . Mr Moran said the industry body has concerns about the availability of Belfast as a hub for the construction of floating wind schemes. He said the wind industry could build for Irish offshore projects using Cherbourg or ports in Wales as construction hubs. 'We don't want to do that,' Mr Moran said. 'We want to build them from Irish ports. 'We shouldn't act as if Belfast will simply be available, waiting for us,' Mr Moran told TDs and senators. 'Belfast has contracts to service British wind farms on their side of the Irish Sea, so having a port available to construct and develop a wind farm [in the Republic] is critical. While there had been some progress in the Republic, the development of port infrastructure requires substantial Government investment, Mr Moran said. He said a new national port strategy, which will be put out for public consultation in the autumn, must facilitate 'direct investment in our ports'. Mr Moran also said that the State could do more to allay the concerns of Ireland's fishing industry about the development of offshore wind and its impact on fisheries. 'Fishermen tell us they firmly believe that if wind farms are built, the Government or some other State agency will prevent fishing,' he said. 'It will be very helpful and provide reassurance to the seafood industry, if the committee could give courage to the Government to give a commitment on that matter and to ensure there is no ban on fishing near all offshore wind sites.' Capt Robert McCabe, chairman of the Government's Seafood/Offshore Renewable Energy Working Group, said stakeholders are keenly awaiting An Coimisiún Pleanála's first decisions on applications for offshore projects under the new maritime planning system instituted in 2021. 'The conditions [attached to those planning decisions] would speak to a lot of the issues that we raise,' he said.

Letters to the Editor, July 9th: On Gaza suffering, anti-Semitism and women in the home
Letters to the Editor, July 9th: On Gaza suffering, anti-Semitism and women in the home

Irish Times

time09-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Times

Letters to the Editor, July 9th: On Gaza suffering, anti-Semitism and women in the home

Sir, – As the Oireachtas Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade this week continues its pre-legislative scrutiny of the Israeli Settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (Prohibition of Importation of Goods) Bill 2025, we must keep the reality of life for Palestinians in both Gaza and the West Bank to the fore. In the West Bank, illegal settlements, the separation wall, severe restrictions, forced displacement, and violence create a daily reality of profound suffering. Meanwhile, the situation in Gaza is catastrophic. The Israeli and US backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has replaced 400 UN aid distribution points with just four overcrowded militarised aid sites which have become deadly flashpoints. Armed groups, reportedly backed by Israeli authorities, routinely open fire on starving civilians, resulting in more than 500 desperate and hungry Palestinians being killed and nearly 4,000 injured while trying to access food in the last month alone. READ MORE The long-awaited and welcome draft Occupied Palestine Territory Bill proposes to ban the importation of goods from illegal Israeli settlements. However, it omits services, which make up around 70 per cent of Ireland's trade with Israel. This omission risks rendering the Bill toothless, leaving the bulk of Ireland's commercial ties with illegal settlements untouched. This is an issue close to home. For example, Airbnb, which operates its European headquarters in Dublin, continues to profit from illegal settlement activity and recording global revenues of $2.5 billion in 2024. If services are excluded, companies like Airbnb can legally continue facilitating and profiting from breaches of international law through their Irish operations. We urge Irish politicians to act with courage. Without a ban on services, Ireland risks this Bill being an empty gesture, when really our legal obligations to act against genocide demand much more of us. – Yours, etc, KAROL BALFE, Chief executive, ActionAid Ireland, Dublin 2. Anti-Semitism and Ireland Sir, – Fintan O'Toole is right to say there are many figures in Irish history who we can be proud to say stood up against the vile poison of anti-Semitism. However, reading his article (' Ireland has a proud history of opposing anti-Semitism ,'(July, 8th), an outsider would be forgiven for thinking that this island has no history of racism against the Jewish people. In 1904, the racist rantings of a priest in Limerick led many in the city to cruelly boycott the businesses of their Jewish neighbours, causing most to flee the city. During the Holocaust, while many Jews pleaded to be let into Ireland, the attitude of the State was that these people were not like us and their plight was none of our business. This callous indifference meant many of these Jews were instead condemned to die in the gas chambers of Auschwitz, Treblinka and Sobibor. More recently, last year a man in a Dublin nightclub was asked, 'Are you Jewish?' and when he replied that he was, he was allegedly beaten up by a gang of anti-Semitic thugs. So yes, let's remember with pride the brave Irishmen and women who stood up against anti-Semitism. But we should not delude ourselves that this island of ours is uniquely free of anti-Semitism. – Yours, etc, JAMES WILSON, Dublin 8. Sir, – Fintan O'Toole assures us that Ireland has a 'history of solidarity' with the Jewish people. Indeed it does, but had he relied on history more recent than the 19th century he might have reached a different conclusion about the current state of anti-Semitism in Ireland. – Yours, etc TERESA TRAINOR, Rathfarnham, Dublin 16. Sir, – I would like to commend Fintan O'Toole. Even if Ireland's record in relation to anti-Semitism is not unblemished, this piece constitutes an excellent tutorial for the new US ambassador to Ireland on the indivisibility of human rights and human compassion. It would seem that this principle needs to be relearned not just in the US but in Europe, particularly in relation to the Middle East conflict. – Yours, etc, MARTIN HAWKES, Terenure, Dublin 6. Sir, – The widely regarded architect of the deaths of at least 57,0000 Palestinians in Gaza writes to the Nobel Peace Prize committee nominating the person who supplies him with the funds and weapons to achieve this result. The Nobel peace award is given to a person who contributes most to 'the abolition or reduction of standing armies and the holding and promotion of peace congresses'. This is surely a case of 'return to sender'. – Yours, etc, MARTIN Mc DONALD, Dublin Women in the home Sir, – Regarding the article ' Ireland should hold another referendum on women in the home , UN committee says', July 8th): May I suggest that official Ireland ignore this advice, resist the habit of seeking a do-over when a referendum result doesn't align with its preferred outcome, and instead start to read the room that a majority of the electorate are in. – Yours, etc, LIZ FITZPATRICK, Rathfarnham, Dublin 14. Sir, – Last year, Irish people voted against the proposal to delete the word 'mother' from our Constitution in favour of ambiguous, nebulous gender-neutral wording. Now, we learn that the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) wants our Government to have another crack at it! We are a highly educated, literate, informed society. We read and debated the proposed wording last year, and we clearly understood that, far from diminishing a mother's status in society, the word 'mother' in our Constitution is a recognition of the unique role that a mother plays within the family –whether she works outside the home, within the home, or both. We have already had our say – and resoundingly so. –Yours, etc LORAINE McSHERRY, Nenagh, Co Tipperary Sir,– Over 70 per cent of the people who voted in 2024 rejected the proposal to remove Article 41.2 from the Constitution, despite the relentless onslaught of messaging in favour of a Yes vote from the government and so-called civil society organisations. I can only guess that many of those people were women. It strikes me as somewhat hypocritical of a committee for the elimination of discrimination against women to decide that those women didn't know their own minds when they cast those votes. – Yours, etc, EMER BOLGER, Dublin 9. They think it's all over. .. Sir, – The qualification rounds for the 2025-26 UEFA competitions are under way. Yet, the 2024-25 season is effectively still in progress, as the FIFA Club World Cup hasn't concluded yet. There used to be a clear boundary between seasons, but it has been whittled away so much that the seasons are now overlapping. – Yours, etc BRIAN QUIGLEY, Drumcondra, Dublin 9. Public access and Ireland Sir, – Keep Ireland Open welcomes Wicklow County Council's announcement that public access to the splendid Magheramore Beach has been secured (' Magheramore Beach: The €613,000 Wicklow council paid to secure access was likely less than cost of court challenge ,' (July 5th) However, we are dismayed that it required a payment of €613,000 to a Chinese investor who had recently bought the site at auction. This was the cost of avoiding the risk of having the High Court adjudicate if a right of way that has been used by the public for decades, at least, is in fact a public right of way. Unfortunately, Magheramore is but one of many beaches and seashores that are rendered inaccessible to the public because Irish law permits paths that were traditionally used to access the sea, and the countryside generally, to be blocked with barriers and barbed wire. Contrast this with the situation in England where the default is to manage land for the benefit of people and nature – as recently described in your pages (' No denying that King Charles is a climate visionary ', (July 1st). The 2,700 miles long King Charles III England Coast Path will be the longest managed coastal path in the world. It is a scandal and a disservice to our citizens that traditional access routes continue to be lost to the public because neither legislation or the political will exists to protect them. A clause legally obliging local authorities to identify and preserve public rights of way which give access to seashore, mountain, lakeshore, riverbank, cemetery, monument or other places of natural beauty or recreational utility by marking them on maps and indicating their location on a list, was removed from the Planning and Development Act 2024. There is still an opportunity to have this clause reinstated as the legislation passes through Leinster House. Keep Ireland Open calls on politicians to implement legislation to protect the social, economic , health (mental and physical) and environmental benefits of outdoor recreation in the same way as they are respected and protected in English law. – Yours, etc, TONY McDERMOTT, Director, Keep Ireland Open, Dublin 6W. Buses and timetables Sir, – I can empathise with Gillian Lawless' experience regarding Dublin Bus delays en route (Letters, July 7th). As a regular bus user, I dread hearing the announcement 'there will be a short delay ...'. Firstly, how 'short' is short? I once experienced a delay for the best part of six or seven minutes. In that time, a number of buses overtook us, as we languished at a bus stop, counting down time. Secondly, any delay on the bus has consequences for me and no doubt many others ( in my case missing a connecting train, waiting up to 45 minutes for the next train, and being late home in the evening). Thirdly, there is no indication on the outside of any bus that it may be subject to a delay en route. Why not put an initial beside the bus number (to indicate the possibility of a scheduled delay), so that passengers can make an informed decision prior to embarking? Or better yet, get rid of this 'on schedule' requirement entirely. – Yours, etc, MARY FOGARTY, Balbriggan, Co Dublin. Sir, – Ms Lawless feels passengers who are already on board buses are penalised by buses being held at stops to get back on schedule. Surely the customers who would be penalised are those who turn up at their stop to find the bus has departed earlier than time-tabled? One of the basic aims of any transport provider is to stick to the published schedule where possible. Buses being held at stops to stay on schedule is common in many other countries. – Yours, etc, DAVID GORDON, Clondalkin, Dublin 22. Ireland's links with Japan Sir, – During my years in Japan I have noted with bemusement the surprising manifestations of Ireland's soft power: the presence of Lafcadio Hearn (1850-1904), famous in his adoptive country though forgotten in Ireland until a few decades ago; the Japanese fascination with Yeats (translated into Japanese in the 1890s), Wilde, Joyce, and Beckett; the visits of Irish writers (Heaney, Montague, Muldoon, Mahon, Kennelly, Welch, O'Toole) as guests of the Japanese branch of the International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures, flourishing since 1984; the children singing Beidh aonach amárach i gContae an Chláir at the St Patrick's Day parades in a dozen cities; the brilliant young performers of the harp and of Irish dancing; the diligent Japanese students of the Irish language. Now, with the opening of Ireland House, which dominates an attractive new piazza in the very centre of Tokyo, proudly displaying the Irish and European flags, and combining Japanese and Irish spaces in an architectural poem which provides a radiant new platform for Irish hospitality, it is clear that the affinity and interaction between the two nations is something wider and deeper than I had suspected. Ireland has made a weightier investment in the new embassy than in any other overseas project. And it is a sound investment, injecting new life and colour into the Tokyo landscape, confirming economic opportunities for both countries, and sealing an alliance in devotion to the values of democracy and peace. A threshold has been crossed, and the Irish-Japanese entente is no longer a matter of sentiment, but a significant factor in global civilisation today. – Yours, etc JOSEPH S. O'LEARY, Tokyo, Japan. Sir, – Your correspondent Denis Staunton contributed an interesting article regarding the life of Lafcadio Hearn (' Celebrating the Irish writer whose ghost stories still grip Japan, ' (July 4th). Should anyone want to further their knowledge of the writer's life and times they would be well advised to visit the beautiful Lafcadio Hearn gardens in Tramore , Co Waterford. They celebrate his peripatetic life with a section of the garden given over to Victorian, American, Greek and Japanese gardens. – Yours, etc, DARREN MAGUIRE, Co Meath. Guardian ad litems Sir, – The Association of Guardians Ad Litem (AGALI) was established last year and is mandated to represent the majority of guardians ad litem in Ireland. The guardians are independent, court-appointed professionals who are charged by the court in child care proceedings to represent the voice of the child and what is in the child's best interest. AGALI notes Harry McGee's article (' Unregulated court guardian service cost €21m last year ', June 27th) and welcomes the Child Care (Amendment) Act 2022 which provides, inter alia, for the setting up of the national guardian ad litem service, and has met the officials appointed to lead the service. AGALI is committed to collaborative engagement with the new service and will continue to seek appropriate resourcing, professional standards and effective legal representation for children. This is part of creating a nationally consistent, child-centred and trauma informed service; one that upholds the integrity and effectiveness of the crucial independent service that guardians provide to the 3,500 children who are the subject of current active child care proceedings. AGALI is concerned the plans as outlined for the new service will dilute the voices of children. The service is also to be a division within the Department of Children, Equality, Disability Integration and Youth, when the State continues to fail so many children in its care. Guardians work tirelessly in the discharge of their duties under close review of the court. The role of the guardian is one element of our childcare system that has, because of its independence, been able to continue to deliver a high quality service that responds to the individual needs of our most vulnerable children. – Yours, etc, Dermot Simms, Chairperson, AGALI, Dublin.

FAI seek to postpone Wednesday's Oireachtas committee hearing
FAI seek to postpone Wednesday's Oireachtas committee hearing

Irish Times

time07-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Times

FAI seek to postpone Wednesday's Oireachtas committee hearing

The Football Association of Ireland have requested a four-week deferment of their scheduled appearance before the Oireachtas sport committee. Senior members of the Association are due in Leinster House on Wednesday but have sought more time due to 'the complexity introduced by the committee seeking material that relates directly to an ongoing Garda investigation'. The FAI also requested that the 'scope of the session is clearly defined'. The Oireachtas Committee on Tourism, Culture, Arts, Sport and Media has been approached for a response. READ MORE [ FAI board holds unscheduled board meeting after standoff with Oireachtas sport committee Opens in new window ] The ongoing Garda investigation relates to allegations against former male coaches of inappropriate relationships with female players and unwanted sexual advances dating back to the 1990s. The allegations were first made public last year by a joint project by RTÉ Investigates and the Sunday Independent. Gardaí have confirmed they are investigating at least one complaint concerning the matter. The former coaches have denied any wrongdoing. The FAI board held an unscheduled meeting on Friday before seeking the four-week postponement from the Oireachtas committee on Monday morning. 'When the formal invite was received on Friday 27th June the committee requested a broad range of documents, many that relate specifically to an ongoing Garda investigation,' a statement from the FAI read. 'Given the complexities involved in collating and considering our ability to comply with this request and to enable adequate preparation time we have sought a deferral of four weeks. Any disclosure must also be assessed carefully for legal and GDPR compliance given the sensitive and confidential nature of safeguarding information requested. 'Over the intervening period we will continue to liaise with the committee to ensure the scope of the session is clearly defined to ensure that no parties could inadvertently compromise an ongoing investigation. 'We fully respect the important work of the joint committee and acknowledge the critical oversight role it plays in relation to legislation, policy, governance, expenditure and administration of the Department of Culture, Communications and Sport. The FAI is fully committed to engaging constructively with the Committee on this matter and we look forward to them defining a revised date where this session can proceed.' Speaking under Dáil privilege last month, Fianna Fáil TD Pádraig O'Sullivan said the FAI knew of the allegations in 2023, 'despite the FAI stating publicly that it only learned of these allegations in early 2024'. Mr O'Sullivan said he had seen correspondence dating to May 4th, 2023, which laid this out in 'black and white'. Minister of State for Sport Charlie McConalogue subsequently stated his department and Sport Ireland believe the FAI had engaged appropriately with the allegations, and that once it received a formal complaint in January 2024 it acted swiftly and contacted Gardaí. Despite requesting the four-week postponement, the FAI has accepted the invitation to appear before the Oireachtas sport committee on Wednesday.

Occupied Territories Bill must not 'disadvantage Ireland unduly'
Occupied Territories Bill must not 'disadvantage Ireland unduly'

RTÉ News​

time04-07-2025

  • Politics
  • RTÉ News​

Occupied Territories Bill must not 'disadvantage Ireland unduly'

Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said the aim of the Occupied Territories Bill must be to apply pressure on Israel to end the war in Gaza, rather than "disadvantage Ireland unduly". He said this meant the Government had to take into account, when framing its approach, anti-boycott legislation in the United States which was introduced to protect Israel. "We do have to factor in the presence of American legislation, the boycotting divestment legislation, which is already passed by numerous states in America, which would penalise any company that, from an American perspective, participates in boycotts," he said. Mr Martin made the comment when asked whether legislation currently before an Oireachtas Committee should be expanded to include services as well as goods. "There's no point in Ireland coming out worse if it has no impact on Israel. That's the only point I'm making, we have to be clear-eyed in terms of the impact. People should know about the impact."

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