Údarás na Gaeltachta has raised questions with energy company Corio Generation about its withdrawal from the west coast’s first offshore wind farm project.
As The Sunday Independent reports, Corio had signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Údaras na Gaeltachta on training and related aspects.
The multinational energy company pledged a 30 million euro bond as part of its contract to the Irish state to provide offshore wind under the ORESS1 auction scheme.
Broadcaster and comedian Tommy Tiernan is among objectors to the plan to build up to 30 fixed offshore wind turbines to a tip height of up to 325 metres at the Skerd rocks and surrounding sea area, from five to 11.5km of the south Connemara coast.
There was also support for the project due to potential employment and the spin-off from a 70 million euro community benefit fund over 20 years.
“We've been in continuous contact with Corio since the MOU was signed and have raised questions about their decision,” a spokesman for Údarás na Gaeltachta told the newspaper.
Corio Generation has declined to comment on the decision, following the first report of the withdrawal in The Currency over a week ago.
The planning application for the project was submitted this January, just over a week before Storm Éowyn, and is still live on the Bord Pleanála website.
Fuinneamh Sceirde Teoranta was initially developed by a Galway consortium including the Lee brothers from south Connemara and Grattan Healy.
Cathal Groonell , cathaoirleach of Coiste Tacaíochta Chalaphort Ros-a-Mhíl, said that the consortium withdrawal was a “big loss” for “clean energy for Ireland” , given that it leaves Ireland short of climate targets.
It is also a “big loss for south Connemara, which stood to gain from a 70 million euro community benefit fund, and for Ros-a-Mhíl fishery harbour,”he said.
“Ros-a-Mhíl’s development as a deepwater port is a long term project, and wasn’t being built to provide infrastructure solely for Sceirde,”he said.
Groonell said the group had a commitment from Minister of State Timmy Dooley to ensure the planning issue was rectified at Ros-a-Mhíl with a revised application to the planning authorities.
As Afloat has reported, work on the 200-metre deepwater quay was three-quarters complete when it was suspended due to a legal challenge.
Read The Sunday Independent here

















































