Results 1-20 of 1,058,387 for in 'Dáil debates' OR in 'Committee meetings' (speaker:Máiría Cahill OR speaker:Catherine Byrne OR speaker:Mairead Farrell OR speaker:Aindrias Moynihan OR speaker:Bernard Durkan OR speaker:Michael Lowry OR speaker:Louise O'Reilly OR speaker:Darren O'Rourke OR speaker:Pat Buckley)
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action: COP29: Discussion (5 Nov 2024)
Paul Murphy: Yes. I thank the witnesses for their presentations and their work. I also mention the presence of representatives from Friends of the Earth, who similarly have obviously been doing a lot of work on this. They have not been invited due to an oversight which we attempted to resolve earlier but were unable to due to various rules about privilege. Hopefully we will not make that mistake in...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action: COP29: Discussion (5 Nov 2024)
Paul Murphy: Could our guests give their opinions on the idea of a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty? We are seeing the real structural limitations of the COP process, although that does not mean we should throw it in the bin, particularly as it is global in nature. Effectively, the slowest moving and most powerful countries in the world, which are beholden to fossil fuel interests, are able to stop...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action: COP29: Discussion (5 Nov 2024)
Paul Murphy: To focus on the climate finance question, what are the obstacles and the forces behind those obstacles to the sort of agreement and ambition that our guests are arguing are necessary? I agree with what they have said.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action: COP29: Discussion (5 Nov 2024)
Alice-Mary Higgins: On where Ireland can come in, Ireland has committed to €225 million. Mr. Fitzpatrick has made it clear that our share of the €100 billion would be closer to €500 million per annum. Interestingly, when loans come through they are very much attached to very strict conditionality to debt repayment. I refer to the pledges and promises that have been made by developed...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action: COP29: Discussion (5 Nov 2024)
Alice-Mary Higgins: I will quickly mention two things and then I will wait for a third round. The danger of money going the wrong way has been mentioned, that is, the danger of money going to fossil fuels companies and others that have created the crisis. They have got these huge subsidies, as mentioned, of many trillions of euro and yet it seems that a lot of new climate finance is, potentially, being...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action: COP29: Discussion (5 Nov 2024)
Ms Siobhan Curran: The wider context for public finance is a strong campaign by wider civil society to reform the international financial institutions, IFIs, and also to look at debt cancellation. These are parallel campaigns but completely related. On the one hand we are looking at a figure that for decades has not been delivered and is amounting in paltry benefits for developing...
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
Question put.
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
Bernard Durkan: In accordance with Standing Order 80(2), the division is postponed until the next weekly division time on Wednesday, 6 November 2024.
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
Cuireadh an Dáil ar athló ar 5.27 p.m. go dtí 2 p.m., Dé Máirt, an 5 Samhain 2024. The Dáil adjourned at at 5.27 p.m. until 2 p.m. on Tuesday, 5 November 2024.
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
James Lawless: Are there no other speakers? It is that time of the evening and that time of the cycle. Only a few of us brave souls are left.
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
Martin Browne: It is the graveyard shift.
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
James Lawless: I thank Deputy Browne. I thank Deputy Tóibín for introducing the Bill and provoking the debate. He has attempted to address a significant issue. I have given reasons, which I will recap, as to why the Government is not in a position to support the Bill but, notwithstanding that, I commend the Deputy on his initiative in bringing it forward. I listened with interest to Deputy...
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
Peadar Tóibín: The Government is missing two massive points. First, it is missing the point that the market is already distorted. I have a degree in economics. Anybody who analyses the food market in this country will tell you that it is, by definition, a distorted market. It is not unusual for the Government to preside over distorted markets. Much of the economy, such as the insurance industry,...
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
Martin Browne: I appreciate the introduction of this Bill. For too long, our farmers have had to navigate a marketplace that is not designed with their needs in mind, while at the same time having to comply with measures that are outdated and schemes designed and rolled out by the Department in a manner that can, at best, be described as inefficient. Farmers are workers too. They are involved in one...
- Equitable Beef Pricing Bill 2020: Second Stage [Private Members] (24 Oct 2024)
James Lawless: I thank Deputy Tóibín for bringing this Bill forward and for his passionate contribution to the debate. I have listened with interest to his setting out of his stall and I have taken careful note of what he has said. We can all agree that farmers should receive a fair and equitable price for their produce. The programme for Government recognises the economic and social role of...
- Saincheisteanna Tráthúla (Atógáil) - Topical Issue Debate (Resumed): Coastal Protection (24 Oct 2024)
Thomas Pringle: The crux of the problem is that Donegal County Council says that if it does this work that is funded by the OPW, it will have to maintain it in the future and the responsibility will be on it to do that. It says it will not do that for private property, as private land is affected too. There is a public walkway across the land, which has been concreted by the council to facilitate the...
- Saincheisteanna Tráthúla (Atógáil) - Topical Issue Debate (Resumed): Coastal Protection (24 Oct 2024)
Kieran O'Donnell: Is that because it is on private land?
- Saincheisteanna Tráthúla (Atógáil) - Topical Issue Debate (Resumed): Coastal Protection (24 Oct 2024)
Thomas Pringle: Yes.
- Saincheisteanna Tráthúla (Atógáil) - Topical Issue Debate (Resumed): Coastal Protection (24 Oct 2024)
Kieran O'Donnell: What if it was on public land?