*Equnior and Shell have exited the Irish market.ย 

CLARE COUNTY COUNCIL have been urged to deliver added income in development levies from renewable energy companies.

While Clareโ€™s potential for offshore renewable energy has been well flouted, dividends have yet to bear fruit with both Equinor and Shell opting to exit the Irish market having previously committed to separate projects off the coast of West Clare.

Cllr Cillian Murphy (FF) in a question to the local authority cited โ€œthe extremely significant future investmentsโ€ to be made in Clare in the area of offshore renewables โ€œand in the absence of rates incomeโ€ for these developments when he asked โ€œwhat mechanisms might be available to the Council under planning legislation that could deliver added income through development levies for the provision of housing, amenity, waste, roads and other infrastructure necessary to ensure our communities can capitalize on this increased economic activityโ€.

Under Section 48 of the Planning and Development Act, planning authorities must have a development contribution scheme in place to set out the basis for contributions payable in respect of public infrastructure and facilities benefitting development in the area of the planning authority.

In Clare, the Development Contribution Scheme 2017 โ€“ 2023 was adopted by elected representatives on April 24th 2017.

Director of Economic Development with the Council, Liam Conneally outlined that the Economic Development Strategic Policy Committee (SPC) has commenced preparatory work on the new scheme. โ€œA full review of contributions payable for all types of development will be undertaken as part of the preparation of the new Scheme which, subject to adoption by the Members, will come into effect in 2023โ€.

Under the Maritime Area Planning (MAP) Act 2021, the nearshore area for coastal planning authorities is defined as an area extending three nautical miles (5.6km) from the nearest point of the high-water mark. Conneally advised, โ€œthe new development contribution scheme will provide for contributions payable for developments on land and on this 5.6km nearshore areaโ€.

He acknowledged, โ€œOffshore renewable energy projects are unlikely to be developed within the nearshore area, however offshore renewable projects will need to bring electricity generated to land to connect to the national grid and there will be a requirement for other development on land (assembly of wind turbines, dry ports, wet ports, green hydrogen electrolysis facilities, etc) to support any offshore developments. This category of development will be considered in the preparation of the new development contribution scheme and a basis for levying contributions will be included in the 2023 Schemeโ€.

Strategic infrastructure development (SID) applications made under the MAP Act to An Bord Pleanรกla may also be subject to the payment of development contributions. The MAP Act amended the Planning and Development Act 2000 allowing An Bord Pleanรกla attach a condition when it is viewed that the construction of a facility โ€œwould provide a substantial gain to the community, or the provision, or the financing (in whole or in part) of the provision, of a service that, in the opinion of the Board, would provide such a gain, in the area in which it is proposed to carry out the developmentโ€.

Conneally also flagged that the Planning and Development Act provides for the conditions requiring the payment of a contribution in respect of public infrastructure and facilities benefiting development in the functional area of any coastal planning authority in which the development concerned is (in whole or in part) proposed to be situated.

This prompted him to surmise, โ€œI consider that there are sufficient mechanisms in legislation to deliver community benefit from all future strategic infrastructure development proposals on and off the coast of Co. Clareโ€.

According to Cllr Murphy, this detail โ€œgives us a real sense of the development fees open to this Council in light of the hundreds of millions of euros to be invested in Clare in the futureโ€. He suggested a working group be established immediately. โ€œWe need to look down the road and see whatโ€™s coming down the track. I think the developers are quite critical to this with public consultation in communities and work on the ground ongoingโ€. The Kilkee representative noted โ€œsignificant community benefitsโ€ associated with the developments as another argument to set up the working group.

โ€œIt brings to the fore what community really means,โ€ Cllr Joe Garrihy (FG) stated. He felt a strategy would prevent developers from paying off local areas through sponsorship. โ€œIt might help to stop what some groups can get away, sponsoring a community garden or building a GAA field in a community isnโ€™t enough, we need to be more strategicโ€. This approach has led to communities โ€œfighting over what is a relatively small amount of moneyโ€.

Further support was voiced by Cllr PJ Kelly (FF). โ€œWe have to be careful that we donโ€™t forget onshore development. If we have too much emphasis on something which isnโ€™t guaranteed to be a winner, we have to be carefulโ€.

Referencing his almost two decades involvement with community based and commercial renewables, Cllr Johnny Flynn (FG) quoted a survey of industrial figures which labelled Irelandโ€™s targets for offshore energy as โ€œunrealisticโ€. He said, โ€œBecause the State owns waters there are no landowners with property rights. I donโ€™t believe private developers should be let own the wealthโ€.

Addressing the meeting, Conneally outlined that it takes โ‚ฌ2.8bn of investment to deliver 1GW of renewable electricity. Members of the North Seas Energy Cooperation (NSEC) earlier this year set Ireland the non-binding target of reaching 7GW of renewable energy power by 2030. To reach this, the Director said โ€œthere would have to be significant investment by the State, semi-state and primarily the private sectorโ€.

On the comments relating to communities by councillors, he said โ€œproper governanceโ€ needs to be established in the area.

Concluding the discussion, Cllr Murphy said companies looking to start construction in 2028 need to be in the planning stage presently. โ€œWe have to look at community the benefit pot coming down the trackโ€.

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