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Data centres and other large users of electricity to be allowed to build and operate own lines to power plants

Data centres and other large users of electricity to be allowed to build and operate own lines to power plants

Irish Times3 days ago

The Government is to make it easier for large energy users such as data centres to power themselves independently under a new policy to be published next month.
The impact of demand from data centres on the electrical power system has become a significant policy hurdle in recent years, with the secretary general of the Department of Energy most recently indicating that the State faced a stark choice between providing energy for housing or for data centres.
The Government has rejected this contention, though Minister for Energy
Darragh O'Brien
is to publish next month a new policy on so-called 'private wires' that will expand the rights of private operators to build and operate electricity infrastructure, including between power sources and data centres.
When the new policy is put in place, it will represent a departure from the current practice where in almost all circumstances the
ESB
, the commercial semistate company, has an exclusive legal right to own such infrastructure.
READ MORE
The Government believes the reforms will enable private investment into such infrastructure and free up grid capacity for housing or other sectors of the economy. Coalition figures argued it would also bring new flexibility for small businesses and households.
A spokeswoman for Mr O'Brien confirmed a national policy statement will be published in July and that the Government would then make necessary legislative and regulatory changes.
'The private wires policy will unlock private sector resources to build new electricity infrastructure by expanding the rights of private undertakings to connect supply directly with demand,' she said.
She said that the Coalition believed it would support Irish companies to compete globally and attract more inward investment.
The Programme for Government, which guides policymaking, contained a commitment to expedite the publication of the policy.
It is expected that primary legislation and updated regulations will be needed to give effect to the policy, which is also thought to entail significant additional work for the
Commission for Regulation of Utilities
, the regulator responsible for permitting such wires. Its legal powers and resources will also be beefed up.
The policy is expected to allow for the construction and operation of private wires in several specific scenarios when it is determined that allowing private investment in an electricity line is the most efficient approach to a new connection and in the public interest.
These will include private electricity lines from a generator to a consumer – such as from a power plant to a data centre – and hybrid connections where two facilities, such as a solar farm and wind farm, could share a single grid connection.
There will also be changes to legislation to allow for lines to be run in public or shared spaces to allow on-street charging.
It will also allow for the expansion of self-supply and will clarify that connection between two separate firms is allowed.
It is understood that Taoiseach
Micheál Martin
is pushing for the policy to be fast-tracked.
However, industry sources said that even with moves on private wires, Ireland had become a less attractive destination for data centres due to wider constraints on the energy system and the scale of resources needed by the facilities involved in processing
artificial intelligence
-related work.
The construction of new data centres has been held back in recent years, especially around Dublin where the electricity grid is close to capacity.
Last year, the Department of Energy, then led by former Green Party leader
Eamon Ryan
, published a set of guiding principles that hinted at how energy infrastructure might change, but made no immediate changes to policy.

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Scotch Broth – Frank McNally on Michael Cusack's frustrated hope for a pan-Celtic sports alliance
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Scotch Broth – Frank McNally on Michael Cusack's frustrated hope for a pan-Celtic sports alliance

Soon after he helped set up the GAA in 1884, Michael Cusack was also involved in a campaign for a pan-Celtic alliance to link the cultural and sporting traditions of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. One of his confederates in this enterprise was a Dublin-based Scot of socialist leanings, A Morrison-Miller, whose Caledonian Games exhibitions had already been a spark for the GAA. Together, in 1887, he and Cusack founded a newspaper to promote their joint cause: The Celtic Times. Alas, as it is in Ireland, the first item on the agenda in Scottish politics is the split. Thus in May 1887, to Cusack's disgust, Morrison-Miller was expelled from his own Caledonian Games Society by a Presbyterian faction opposed to the Irish outreach programme. Apart from having a stand in Croke Park named after him, Cusack went on to be immortalised by his portrayal as 'the Citizen' in James Joyce's Ulysses. Or at least by the perception that he is the Citizen. 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Cruelty to animals so it is to let that bloody povertystricken Breen out on grass…And she with her nose cockahoop after she married him because a cousin of his old fellow's was pew opener to the pope.' If the 'U.P.: Up' postcard was hinting that the pious Breen had secretly joined the United Presbyterians, that might indeed be grounds for a libel case. At the very least, it would explain why his goat was so much – as the expression puts it – up.

Sunbed business fined for selling session to minor
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timean hour ago

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Minimum pay for childcare workers to rise to €15 an hour
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Minimum pay for childcare workers to rise to €15 an hour

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