Powerhouse for Ireland’s economic development
The Shannon Estuary can become the “green digital powerhouse for the country” and its future economic development and benefit Europe in the process, An Taoiseach Leo Varadkar stated as he launched the Shannon Estuary Economic Taskforce report. The 200 page report is the output from an estimated 5,000 hours of commitment by the voluntary Taskforce appointed by Government 15 months ago to make recommendations on the economic development potential of the Shannon Estuary region.
Based on the unique natural assets of almost unrivalled deep-water, proximity to one of the world’s largest offshore wind resources with an estimated 70GW generation capacity – ten times our current national requirement – and available development landbanks for offshore wind supply-chain, green fuels generation and large scale FDI and indigenous industries, the estuary can, the Taskforce found, become the staging post for the ‘Atlantic Green Digital Corridor’.
This, its Chairman Barry O’Sullivan stated, would be the world’s leading green powered digital hub, stretching from Donegal through to Cork and further inland and delivering unprecedented benefit to the State by way of not alone sustainably powering the nation but being the 21st century draw for FDI and indigenous business growth.
A key recommendation to government in the report to enable this is the creation of a National Floating Offshore Wind Development Agency, a one- stop-shop – as recommended in the EU Green Deal – to ensure that the plan becomes a reality. The Taskforce also recommends that the region, described by Barry O’Sullivan as “the green front door to Europe”, be given EU renewable energy ‘go-to area’ status.
The report targets, in terms of green jobs alone, the creation of 10,000 jobs by 2035 and 50,000 by 2050, having 2GW of green energy capacity in development by 2030, and up to 30GW installed by 2050. The investment value of the entire viable wind resource off the Atlantic seaboard is estimated at up to €120 billion.
The significance of the report was reflected in the attendance of An Taoiseach Leo Varadkar to launch it but also Minister for Environment, Climate and Communications Eamon Ryan, Minister for Enterprise Trade and Employment Simon Coveney, Minister for Education Norma Foley, Minister of State with Responsibility for Local Government and Planning Kieran O’Donnell, TDs, Senators and Mayors from counties across the Shannon Estuary region.
The report was launched at the Ardnacrusha Generating, which almost a century ago on its launch delivered a global renewable energy revolution as it became the world’s most cutting edge hydroelectric station, transforming a fledgling state as it electrified Ireland for the first time and, in tandem, saw the roll-out of the world’s first national grid.
Commenting on the report, An Taoiseach Leo Varadkar (pictured left) said: “It is a really visionary piece of work in my view. And what we want to do here in the Shannon Estuary region is to make this the green digital powerhouse for the country.
“If you speak to the history of this place, Ardnacrusha, built here 100 years ago, we went from being a country with an undeveloped electricity network to being the first with a national grid. It’s (the Shannon Estuary Region) is also the home of Shannon Airport, a lot of heavy industry, port infrastructure and, of course, the city of Limerick with its universities. So, a lot happening in the region already, from North Kerry through to Clare, Limerick and North Tipperary.”
Leo Varadkar said the region can become one of the powerhouses for “Ireland’s future economic development, harnessing the enormous renewable energy that we have here and building new industries, producing green fertiliser, producing sustainable synthetic aviation fuels, powering the nation and also creating power for exports”.
It is something, he continued, that will take decades to deliver but “we get it started right away”.
“That’s why I was very keen to be here personally to launch the report, but also to be here ministerial colleagues, to show that is very much going to be a whole of government approach to realising the potential of this region for the benefit of the whole country and indeed for Europe as a whole.
“I see this as an Ireland project and an all-of-Ireland project. We have a single electricity market north and south, and we’re keen to approach this opportunity, this green energy revolution, as something that will involve the whole country, north and south.
Taskforce Chairman Barry O’Sullivan (pictured right) commented: “We see this region as the green front door of Europe, leading to an Atlantic Green Digital Corridor where we can take the infinite green energy from the Atlantic and convert that into a new economy and a new society for Ireland. The scale in terms of time is infinite because the wind will be around forever. And we’ve enough power out there for about 70 million people. We’ll want to export some of that and play our part in the decarbonisation of Europe. But also we want to attract new industries here and develop our own industries to take that power, create value-add and take the economy to a new level.”
Minister for Environment, Climate and Communications Eamon Ryan said that the Estuary has the capacity to rebalance the national economy and be an answer to climate change. “This is bringing power to the people, but it’s also bringing industry to where the power is. The big story here is a move-west, northwest, southwest, rebalancing our country. There’s so much development in the east that’s good for everyone but if it’s all in the East the country is imbalanced. Using this power in the west to bring jobs to create energy but also to balance our country, real strong growth right along the west coast, north west, south west, I think that’s the big story here. It’s a balancing of the country, the economic development heading west, I think that’s a good news story for everyone.”
He continued: “If 100 plus years ago we could build this damn to power the country, spending a quarter of our total wealth and income, yes, we can achieve that today. We’re inspired by what was done in the past and we repeat it today at scale. We’re good at renewable power. There’s a revolution taking place in the world and we happen to have some of the best resources, wind and solar. And yes, we will develop this for sure.
“This will be the warmest week in history. This is a wake-up call. We have to act now and act fast. Switching to renewables is one of the things that gives us hope. So today is the answer to the to the fear. We have ways ahead.”
Minister for Enterprise Trade and Employment Simon Coveney added: “There’s a reason why the government is producing an industrial strategy linked to offshore wind. And that is because, of course, this is an energy strategy. It’s a climate strategy. It’s about reducing emissions and it’s about responding to the climate emergency. But it’s also it’s also about reshaping the Irish economy very fundamentally. And the reason why we’re actually launching this report at Ardnacrusha was that’s exactly what happened 100 years ago.
“We’re talking about actually reshaping the Irish economy from east to west, counterbalancing the dominance of the East Coast. And this in many ways is an international project. You know, we’re talking about on the Western frontiers of the European Union building this energy and technology hub, powered and driven by renewable energy. It’s a powerful, powerful vision.”
He added: “This I think will be a day that people will look back on in five years’ time, in ten years’ time, in 20 years’ time, and say a vision was outlined on that day that actually reshaped Ireland’s economy and our Irish society in a way that was a catalyst for extraordinary investment in the west of Ireland.”