Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 

Dumping fears for Lough Foyle 21.12.09

SENATOR Cecilia Keaveney has expressed her concern at plans to increase the amount of dumping in Lough Foyle.
The Port of Derry Company has a permit to dispose 15,000 tonnes of dredge spoil at a specified dumpsite. The port now wants to increase this to 80,000 tonnes.
Senator Keaveney said the increase, if allowed, could have "potentially huge implications for the Foyle and its users, and in particular for the aquaculture industry".
She said she was alarmed that the Fisheries Minister in the Republic, Brendan Smith nor his department had any knowledge of a request for a licence to expand levels of dumping in Lough Foyle.
“When I contacted him about this, Minister Smith said that he shares my views that nothing should happen in the Foyle which might have a significant detrimental impact on the aquaculture industry generally. The aquaculture industry in Lough Foyle is a very valuable natural resource based industry which provides critical employment and wealth generation in the Inishowen area," she said.
“To approve an increase in the existing license to 80,000 tonnes with no consultation with his Department is contrary to the spirit of the Good Friday Agreement i.e., talk ‘co-operation’ and then act unilaterally,” said an angry Senator Keaveney.
In a letter to the local senator, Minister Smith said "it would be expected that the authorities would seek his Department’s views of an application of this scope and nature". He said he had now instructed his officials to engage immediately with the Northern authorities regarding the proposal with a view to obtaining precise details of the nature of the application. Mr Smith said he wanted assurances "regarding the trans boundary consultation aspect of this and applications of a similar nature".
Meanwhile, Senator Keaveney said she was confident her intervention "was important from an environmental and economic perspective".
“We have a great resource in the Foyle. However if there are multiple agencies and departments that make decisions in isolation without due regard for how they impact on the ‘bigger picture’, we are in danger of ruining that resource entirely," she said.
Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home