INTERCONNECTOR DAY8

This section dealt with construction, including temporary access routes

Following a request by EirGrid’s lawyer Brian Murray SC, the presiding inspector allowed a change in how the modules had operated until then. The County Monaghan Anti Pylon Committee had been due to begin Tuesday’s proceedings with comments on the plans for construction of the 299 pylons in the Republic. Robert Arthur, transmission lines manager with ESB International who are acting as consultants for EirGrid, made a presentation in which he gave details of nineteen modifications to temporary access routes for tower sites. These are in addition to six routes which had been identified by an EirGrid representative at the start of the hearing.

MODIFIED ACCESS ROUTES

For all these ‘modified access routes’ he said they would be making use of existing access onto land and no new land holdings would be involved. He said 95 landowners had made submissions by January when they had been asked to identify issues regarding temporary access routes of which there were 584. But no direct contact had been made with any land owner.

In a document produced for the inspectors Mr Arthur described what he said were mapping anomalies that had arisen primarily from discrepancies in the translation of site vantage survey records onto the Environmental Impact statement drawings. In other words, while an access route might have been identified from an existing field gate, the access route from this existing gate to a tower location was incorrectly captured on the EIS mapping.

HEARING A FARCE AND CHARADE: NEPPC

A barrister for the NEPPC Michael O’Donnell BL told the inspectors the oral hearing had turned into a farce. He said the hearing could not proceed any further and called for it to be abandoned. He claimed that a new public notice would now have to be issued about the development and this was the only appropriate manner under the planning act. The responses by Mr Arthur had been entirely inadequate and inappropriate, he said.

Counsel for the NEPPC Esmond Keane SC described some of Mr Arthur’s replies as an insult to the integrity and intelligence of every member of the public. Some replies were ‘rubbish’ and he had not given a meaningful response. Mr Keane said it appeared EirGrid had produced utterly radical changes and was planning to go through to the pylon construction points using access to private homes in a number of cases, despite the company’s own environmental guidelines. He said there were many difficulties with the planning application, including some technical drawings that had been provided for the route design plan and profile. On one of them the scale was shown as a tiny bar at the top of the page. It also left ordinary members of the public guessing where ground level was shown.

This was different he said from the detailed drawings of the proposed towers and conductors produced by ESB International for the corresponding application in Northern Ireland by the EirGrid subsidiary SONI. In Tyrone and Armagh, stone roads were proposed to be constructed on just over half the 102 tower locations.

He also questioned Mr Arthur in detail on a proposal for washing down vehicles to remove mud and organic material from vehicles exiting tower sites. The ESB International representative said it was his understanding that vehicles would be washed down before they entered the temporary work area around the pylons. “That doesn’t make sense”, Mr Keane remarked.

Padraig O’Reilly of the NEPPC said the hearing had developed into a charade second time round and called on the inspectors not to go ahead with it. Unless Bord Pleanála responded in a meaningful way then his group would not be taking any further part.

Mary Marron of CMAPC said nineteen landowners did not know where access roads would be going over their land. They had no faith in any sense of fairness if the oral hearing continued and the Monaghan group fully backed the NEPPC stance.

EirGrid lawyer Brian Murray SC said the hearing should go ahead as only 19 out of 584 access routes were involved and EirGrid could begin notifying the affected landowners during the next week. The second part had been set aside to hear from individual landowners.

Michael O’Donnell BL for the NEPPC claimed this amounted to an acknowledgement by EirGrid that the hearing could not proceed, as it would now be necessary to issue a new public notice so that all affected landowners along with neighbours and members of the public could be informed.

But Jarlath Fitzsimons SC for EirGrid pointed out that development consent was not required for access routes. These had been included in the documentation. They formed part of the project and must be looked at by the Planning Board when they were considering the totality of the application. There was no requirement for a new notification, in EirGrid’s view.

The presiding inspector said she would give a decision on whether the hearing would continue when the proceedings opened on Wednesday.

 

INTERCONNECTOR DAY7

This section dealt with the impacts of the project on health

The third week of the oral hearing opened with presentations on the impacts on health of the interconnector. The County Monaghan Anti-Pylon Committee told the hearing local residents were terrified about the proposed 400kV line and felt they had been bullied and intimidated by EirGrid.

CMAPC FEARS ABOUT HEALTH ISSUES

Margaret Marron from Corbane, Shantonagh said the fact that the proposed line was going so close to their homes had already had a detrimental impact on their lives. The perceived risk of constant exposure to radiation sent shivers down their spines, she said. They had genuinely held concerns and fears about health issues arising from the planning application.

They knew their property would be devalued; they would not be able to provide (building) sites for their children; it would impact negatively on their work and farming practices; it would produce annoying noise. They were terrified it would affect their own physical health and more especially that of their children. This was the reality of life for people along the proposed route in Co. Monaghan.

They were very angry and felt that they had been bullied, intimidated and treated as second class citizens by EirGrid, she said. Almost 800 submissions to the Planning Board had referenced health as a huge issue. Farming including milking of cows would be totally unsustainable as there was no time frame on the project, no telling what time of year construction would start or finish and a farmer could not do his work without free and unrestricted access to his land.

Margaret Marron said there were a number of families with children with autism living in tranquil rural locations that were in close proximity to the proposed line. The quality of their lives would change irrevocably if the interconnector in its proposed format went ahead, she told the hearing.

Children with autism were highly sensitive to noises such as those emitted from power cables. One parent with a pylon construction site entrance 10 metres from the boundary of her home was absolutely terrified about the possible effect on her child with autism.

EirGrid’s spin doctors and PR consultants had failed miserably over the past eight years to assuage people’s concerns and fears regarding exposure to electromagnetic fields, a feature of the overhead high voltage power lines.

There were many landowners in the Monaghan area who were fitted with implanted medical devices (pacemakers) who worked in the open air and would have to work under and around the power line. This seemed to be potentially a serious health risk and EirGrid had just swept it under the carpet.

She said the committee believed that an EirGrid commitment not to place an overhead line within 40 metres of a dwelling house as a precautionary measure was simply not good enough. She hoped EirGrid would comply with any new pylon policy and siting guidelines that were currently being drawn up by the Department of Environment, which is updating a report published in 2007. The project is due to be completed this year.

The EirGrid CEO Fintan Slye had said he personally “would have no issue living next to a pylon” because he knows “it is technically safe and I have no problem with that” (December 2013). If that was the attitude of the CEO then it was no wonder all health concerns had been totally dismissed by EirGrid, the CMAPC representative said.

She concluded: “He is entitled to his view, the same as anyone else, but I can assure this hearing that it is not the view of CMAPC or of the landowners, residents and communities that we represent”.

NEPPC

Padraig O’Reilly said there had been no stakeholder input on the routing of this major new power line, despite a recommendation in the March 2007 report to the Environment Department by an expert group on health effects of electromagnetic fields. In the contention of the North East Pylon Pressure Campaign the application sought to impose wholly unacceptable and unnecessary risks on local communities in Meath, Cavan, Monaghan, Armagh and Tyrone.

He claimed EirGrid had failed to provide the Planning Board with an objective analysis of the documented risks relating to electromagnetic fields and high voltage power lines. Because EirGrid had failed even to consider mitigation against any of the risk factors, it left no option for the Board but to refuse the application.

MEATH COUPLE OUTLINE HEALTH RISKS

A County Meath couple claimed the cancer they were diagnosed with had been brought on by living “in a toxic environment” beneath a high-power voltage power line for over three decades. Paula and Mike Sheridan used to live at Curraghtown, near Dunshaughlin, in a house that is 35 metres from a 400kv high voltage line from Moneypoint running directly above their back garden towards a sub-station nearby at Woodland. Both of them were diagnosed with different types of cancer in recent years and have now moved to rented accommodation. Mrs Sheridan who is a medical scientist raised her concerns about the impact on health of electromagnetic fields.

She said they believed there was a connection between their ill health and their long-term exposure over thirty years to such high levels of an electromagnetic field. During all their suffering, the response from EirGrid had been appalling, they said. The company’s attitude along with the ESB during this sad and stressful period was to ignore and dismiss their concerns. This was despite a visit to their home by a senior EirGrid representative in August 2013 when the couple raised all their health issues.

EIRGRID REPLIES ON EMF FIELDS

EirGrid said there was an absence of any proven harm from electromagnetic fields. International experts brought in by the power transmission company explained that the scientific consensus was that there was no credible way to explain how electromagnetic fields could cause cancer. The overall results of scientific research on this issue did not confirm this fear, or explain how it could happen, according to EirGrid.

Dr William Bailey, one of two scientific consultants brought in from the United States, is an expert in applying assessment methods to environmental and occupational health issues. He explained how it was useful to understand the role of scientific research about electromagnetic fields and health. He said EMF fields could not reasonably be taken to be a carcinogen. He pointed out there was a difference between health hazards (such as being hit by a car) and health risks and the terms had to be used correctly. Along with Dr Gabor Mezei a senior managing scientist with over 25 years’ experience in health research, they set out to answer some of the points raised by the Sheridans.

EirGrid’s explanation in its supporting documentation is that electric and magnetic fields, or EMFs, are present in both natural and man-made environments. People everywhere are exposed to EMFs wherever they live. EirGrid says it operates the transmission grid to stringent safety standards set by national and European regulators. They set guidelines on the maximum amount of EMFs that the infrastructure can emit, and we work well within these limits.

EirGrid acknowledges that the issue of EMFs is an emotive and contentious one, powered by fears about health that are strongly held by some people. The company says some people fear that EMFs cause cancer. However, the overall results of scientific research on this issue do not confirm this fear, or explain how it could happen, according to the company. The concern that electric power lines may cause childhood cancer arose in 1979. It started with a single epidemiological study. Since then, many large-scale studies have investigated this initial finding. These studies have not convinced health authorities that EMFs are a cause of cancer, EirGrid points out.

 

 

 

INTERCONNECTOR DAY6

DAY SIX

This section dealt with the consideration of alternatives

Michael Fisher     Northern Standard

Kevin Traynor from Martry, Kells, County Meath, whose home is close to where the proposed interconnector would cross the River Blackwater, challenged Eirgrid’s assertion that undergrounding of this project was not a valid option to be considered.

His submission asked EirGrid to consider undergrounding all cables associated with the infrastructure in a full and properly costed way. He used the analogy that to build such an important piece of infrastructure in the provision of the nation’s future needs for electrical power, without considering the option of undergrounding, would be the equivalent of building the Eiffel Tower (Paris) in brick without considering iron as a construction material.

  1. Feasibility and technical ability to execute undergrounding.

We keep hearing from EirGrid that undergrounding of this project is not feasible or economically viable. We have been blinded with studies and reports from various sources which purport to support EirGrid’s case that an overhead line (OHL) 400kV interconnector is the only show in town. They all say that undergrounding of the project is not the optimum solution.

Following a joint report in 2004 by the Commission for Energy Regulation and its NI counterpart, the CER Director of Energy Networks confirmed in March 2006 in writing to EirGrid that the 400kV line was justified on the basis of both its higher energy transfer capability and its ability to be upgraded in the long run more practically and economically. This is when the decision was made to have 400kV as the optimal transmission. It is implied that this was to be an overhead line. What followed thereafter was a litany of reports commissioned by EirGrid to justify this decision.

It is factually wrong for EirGrid to claim that the decision to choose 400kV was arrived at after considering all the reports and industry standards that are prevalent in electrical power transmission. The decision had already been made in March 2006 prior to the published dates of all these reports used by EirGrid that have formed the grounds of their decision to construct overhead 400kV AC transmission line.

EirGrid has considered using an underground DC interconnector. In their evaluation their published conclusions did not justify this as being a potential solution for the building of the project. It did not consider the most up-to-date state of technology available in DC transmission capable of providing an underground DC interconnector now or in the near future.

For example, the recently commissioned 65km interconnector from Spain to France through the Catalan Pyrenees exploits new technologies in creating a 320kV 2000MW underground transmission. This is inclusive of having to drill a tunnel of 8.5km through the mountain and all at a cost of €700 million. The HVDC link was built as a joint venture between the French and Spanish grid operators RTE (Paris) and REE (Madrid).

The very fast control and protective intervention capabilities of the power converters provide for a high level of stability in the transmission system, which primarily serves to reduce grid faults and disturbances in the three-phase AC network. This significantly increases supply reliability for utility companies and power customers.

Mr Traynor continued: “I would have thought that many of the perceived technical problems that EirGrid have published about creating an underground DC solution for the North-South Interconnector are answered, or at the very least greatly reduced, by the employment of new technologies in this now commissioned France-Spain interconnector. There is also a Norway-Germany interconnector at an advanced stage.”

  1. EirGrid’s commitment to analysis of undergrounding other projects.

Grid West Project

On the 21 July 2015, EirGrid published details of underground and overhead options for the Grid West project, as outlined in its report to the Government-appointed Independent Expert Panel. The Grid West report sets out, in detail, the technical, environmental and cost aspects of three technology options:

  • a fully underground direct current cable;
  • a 400kV overhead line and;
  • a 220kV overhead line with partial use of underground cable

Grid Link Project

Eirgrid has confirmed that the original proposed overhead powerline from Cork to Kildare will not go ahead. An Independent Expert Panel said that the company is more likely to use a ‘regional model’. This would involve the strengthening of the existing infrastructure. It meets the needs of the project without building new large scale overhead infrastructure, according to the company.

EirGrid’s regional option alternative uses a technology known as ‘series compensation’. This would be the first time it will be deployed on the Irish transmission grid. It is an advanced, smart grid technology that will enable more power to flow through existing lines, and so does not require new 400 kV overhead lines.

The East-West Interconnector (EWIC)

The EWIC, which links the electricity transmission grids of Ireland and Great Britain, has been voted ‘Engineering Project of the Year’ by the Irish public in an online vote in the fourth annual Engineers Ireland excellence awards, in association with ESB. At 264km in length, some 187km of which is beneath the Irish Sea, the EWIC transports energy from a converter station in Co. Meath to North Wales. It is the largest voltage-sourced conversion scheme currently in operation in the world.

Fintan Slye, chief executive of EirGrid, said the interconnector was a key enabler towards meeting the ambitious target set by Government to generate 40% of electricity demand from renewable sources by 2020. It is the largest project of its kind to be undertaken in Ireland. He said: “The benefits to the community are immense and the boost to Irish competitiveness has meant that jobs that could have been lost to other countries have remained at home”.

  1. Upkeep and Maintenance Cost Effectiveness

Grid resilience is increasingly important as climate change increases the frequency and intensity of severe weather. All overhead transmission lines are exposed to more risk to extreme weather conditions as compared to correctly installed underground cabling. Underground cabling has an enhanced protection to weather events and affords significantly reduced risks of power transmission failure. Modern underground cables also offer superior performance characteristics and lower losses in bulk power transmission. Underground cable and its associated technologies can also enhance national security by bolstering the nation’s defences against cyber-attacks and terrorism.

  1. Future expansion capability

Because connection of wind farms, solar farms and other renewable forms of energy offers so many challenges in providing bulk power transmission and its intermittent mode of generation, DC power transmission and its associated DC convertor stations is largely becoming the preferred methodology. In addition, future connections by Ireland to any part of the European Grid system will necessitate the use of DC undersea cables with the associated DC Convertor stations to transmit and receive power from the European Grid system. As time elapses, and the investments increase across Europe in this preferred technology, we will find ourselves in a good position if we make the correct decisions on our current project like the North-South interconnector.

  1. What is the best option for all?

Any professionally designed and costed project of this magnitude would evaluate all the options and methodologies that could be used to provide its construction. It could then be objectively demonstrated the advantages and disadvantages of each option, the associated costs, their negative and positive impacts on the countryside, property, economy, environment and society. When options are discarded without such scrutiny, the project suffers because potential innovative technologies are not considered, cost savings may not be realized and the nation may get an inferior product which may not be fit for purpose or obsolescent in a few short years. Smart economies and smart businesses do not make these mistakes!

Undergrounding has not been scrutinized as yet in this manner and certainly not in the public arena for this project. It should be properly assessed and with the advancement of new cable technology and groundbreaking projects across the world, there is ample information and evidence available to actively consider this alternative.

EIRGRID RESPONSE

Mark Norton EirGrid’s Network Planning Manager explained in response that the North/ South interconnector was sized correctly. He said it was designed with a 1500MW capacity in line with the company’s statutory obligations to develop a sustainable solution. This point was reinforced by the Commission for Energy Regulation and the Single Electricity Market committee.

He said similar projects across Europe were designed to transfer more power than what the actual network could supply. This additional capacity was designed to allow for intermittent nature of renewable energy and to develop solutions that are sustainable and therefore can accommodate future growth.

Mark Norton showed a table comparing nine projects of common interest. It detailed the designed capacity of a project and the corresponding capacity the grid has to transfer. The table showed the proposed north south interconnector had a grid transfer capacity of 73% – the highest of all the projects.

EirGrid put a huge amount of time and effort into assessing alternative technology options. This included the commissioning of independent reports into undergrounding and consideration of government expert reports, he said. Mr Norton added that after considering all this information and technology developments EirGrid believed the overhead line proposed was the best solution for this project.

Jarlath Fitzsimons SC for EirGrid replied to comments by a lawyer for the NEPPC about environmental impact assessments. He said recent case law indicated that an assessment of alternatives by the developer was not required. He said the EIS they had provided was more than adequate. There had been more than adequate consideration of route options by the developer and in preparing the planning application clear reasons had been given for the choice.

CONSTRUCTION COSTS

Nigel Hillis of CMAPC asked Aidan Geoghegan of EirGrid about the costs of the project. The Project Manager confirmed that the construction cost was €286m for the whole route and allowing for landowner compensation. But this did not include a figure of €8.7m for what the company describes as ‘community gain’. Under the local community fund EirGrid pays €40,000 a kilometre for communities near 400 kV pylons and sub-stations.

Asked about the merits of underground technology instead of overhead lines, Mr Geoghegan pointed out one of the reasons EirGrid had proposed the overhead option was because it could take 25 days to repair a fault on a high voltage DC underground cable system.

Colin Andrew for the NEPPC said apart from capital expenditure the costs of the project had never been broken down sufficiently. He said the costs must include the impact on the local community, which was resolutely opposed to the development, as EirGrid was well aware.

Following a question from the presiding inspector, Mark Norton of EirGrid gave an explanation of some of the technical terms that had been raised. But Nigel Hillis suggested what was needed was for Bord Pleanala to arrange to bring to the hearing the three members of the International Expert Commission who had drawn up a report on undergrounding opt

INTERCONNECTOR DAY5

 

 

DAY FIVE

This section dealt with the consideration of alternatives

Michael Fisher    Northern Standard

MONAGHAN COUNTY COUNCIL

A senior planner from Monaghan County Council Toirleach Gourley talked about alternative routes for the proposed interconnector. He told the two planning inspectors from An Bord Pleanála there was a lack of robust consideration of alternative routes along the West Louth and South Armagh corridor near Crossmaglen. He said the preferred route chosen in the application had gravitated towards the County Monaghan area. Furthermore there was a pre-defined border crossing (into County Armagh at Lemgare near Clontibret) and no alternative had been given.

EIRGRID SAYS LINE CAN’T AVOID MONAGHAN

EirGrid senior planner Des Cox in response to Mr Gourley said the routing alternatives had been subject to a detailed re-evaluation following the initial proposal in 2005. The content of the documents published then had been re-visited. The technical needs and environmental constraints had been taken into consideration in the Cavan/Monaghan study area. There were a number of urban areas near the proposed route such as Carrickmacross, Castleblayney and Ballybay which the engineers attempted to avoid in drawing up the line. He explained why the company proposed to divert the line through County Monaghan.

Regarding the proposed crossing point into Northern Ireland at Lemgare near Clontibret, Mr Cox said the planners had identified the Battle of Clontibret site as a heritage area. Because of the heritage, roadside housing and the high ground there were significant environmental constraints in that area.

Mr Gourley questioned why EirGrid did not decide to identify an alternative line that would run close to the existing interconnector that crossed the border near Crossmaglen in South Armagh. He appreciated that there had to be separation between the lines but said the company had not given robust consideration to an alternative.

Mr Cox said he was satisfied EirGrid had considered the options at strategic level and that the options were dealt with. But Mr Gourley repeated that no consideration had been given to an alternative border crossing and said Monaghan County Council was not satisfied on this issue. The response from Mr Cox was that EirGrid had considered the alternatives and “we’re satisfied it (the line) can’t avoid Monaghan”.

CO. MONAGHAN ANTI PYLON COMMITTEE

Nigel Hillis of the County Monaghan Anti Pylon Committee said they did not speak or give any evidence on this subject at the previous oral hearing in 2010. They were not experts on transmission systems or interconnectors, indeed how could they be expected to be, nor did the committee have the funds to employ any such experts. They had to approach this module from a discrete prospective and glean whatever knowledge from published documents such as relevant technical studies and public records of meetings.

He reminded the inspectors about the history of the project, pointing out that formal discussions about increased cross-border transmission reinforcement between Northen Ireland Electricity and ESB-NG started around 2001 and culminated in December 2005 with a joint decision paper entitled: ‘Additional North South Interconnector Selection of Preferred Option’.

Out of five options, the preferred route was stated as Kingscourt in Co. Cavan to Drumkee near Coalisland in Co. Tyrone. This was the least cost option which complied with the criteria for additional interconnection:

  • increase transfer capability significantly in both directions;
  • the additional interconnector must avoid situations where a single event could lead to system separation.

The report did not decide on the voltage or whether the line would be single or double circuit. The final recommendation was to go for a 400kV single circuit at 900MW capacity having the potential to expand to 1500MW at any time in future if the demand was there. It was to be linked into the planned Dublin to North East 400kV line utilising the planned substation at Kingscourt. So what started out in reality as two different projects for different needs then joined up at the proposed Kingscourt substation.

Mr Hillis said all the alternatives considered to that point in time were for traditional overhead lines. He said no information could be found that undergrounding was in any way considered. “I do not believe it even entered their heads – although I am absolutely open to correction by EirGrid on that. And as we know an overhead 400kV line along three alternative routes in Monaghan, not sure how many in Meath, was presented to the public at the end of 2007”.

There was then a massive public outcry and immediate calls to underground the line to the extent that forced the Energy Minister at the time Eamonn Ryan to commission an independent report into undergrounding early in 2008. The report by German energy systems consultants ECOFYS report ‘Study on the comparative merits of overhead electricity transmission lines versus underground cables’ never really gained much traction and like a lot of government reports it ended up on the high shelf gathering dust. There seemed to be general dissatisfaction with it in all quarters, according to Mr Hillis.

QUARRY OWNER SAYS N.E. TREATED UNJUSTLY

A local quarry owner, Phil Connolly from Carrickamore, Corduff, Carrickmacross, explained that he had land in the route corridor and his dwelling is 200m above sea level and 500m from the proposed line. His quarry is 100m from the corridor. “We will be able to view, at a conservative estimate, twenty (proposed) pylons from our holding”, he said.

LACK OF ALTERNATIVE ROUTE CORRIDORS

He said this was a totally new application for a project from Tyrone to Meath and differed greatly from the 2009 application.

“Critically this new application does not contain a sub-station in Cavan at all. Why? Is it piece meal development or will it likely, never be required at all? If it’s the first it’s wrong in planning, if it’s the latter it would have opened up this project to a far greater choice of options for area and route selection.”

*The needs outlined for the 2009 application are totally changed in the second.

*There is no strengthening of the network locally as previously stated.

*An expert independent commission has reported in 2011 that undergrounding, using D.C., is feasible for the project.

Therefore, starting with Stage 1., of Eirgrids development and consultation road map, this new project warrants a whole new scoping and appraisal of firstly the study area, then route corridors and then preferred route corridor. Not a re-evaluation of old obsolete and discredited information.

Did Eirgrid consult with stakeholders on routes B and C in Monaghan and Cavan for this new application? No! Simply put, no consultation was carried out for this project in the three corridors.

To compound matters the so called consultation carried out in 2007 is generally considered to be useless and totally inadequate. It only lasted for a few short months over the Christmas period. My first knowledge of the project and experience of meeting with Eirgrid representatives was at a public meeting in late 2007 in Monaghan town. I had stated that I would allow Eirgrid to access my land to carry out undergrounding of the lines but that I certainly would not want them on my lands to erect overhead lines. An Eirgrid representative then told me and my then teenage family that QUOTE “We will come in the front door of your home and out the back door if we have the need and you won’t be able to stop us.” That was the level of consultation we received.

Stage 2 of the road map is to “consider all feedback from Stage 1” and is based on nine year-old consultation from a different project! Again to put it in perspective, if I was to apply to MCC for planning on my quarry using 2007 consultation reports I would be laughed at.

How many people have emigrated, passed away, moved house, might be affected by Community Gain or changed their views in nine years on routes B and C? How many people on lines B and C routes know that it is all one project now? Not two sections? No sub-station in Kingscourt? That undergrounding is feasible?

This application is like building a house with no foundations. No matter what amount of cement you put in the walls it will still sink.  All those tables covered with folders are useless if the basics are wrong. It is impossible to choose a preferred route corridor without consultation with all three corridors.

ROUTE CORRIDOR SELECTION

When you examine this old route constraints report 2006/07 you will find; no consistent, transparent or reliable method was used in Route Corridor Selection and it contains many inaccuracies, for example; In county Meath a 10% difference in route length resulted in a negative rating for that route, while in Monaghan a 10% difference in route length was ignored. WHY?

Cultural Heritage: The red line in Monaghan, is identified as having the greatest impact on cultural heritage however they then enter a bizarre paragraph in an attempt to neutralise this. “There is a possibility that those sites that are directly impacted may in fact not be, and vice versa those sites which are indirectly impacted may actually be directly impacted”. It’s like a line straight out of a farcical comedy. What use is that?

Land Use: In their calculation of the number of dwellings, AOS states that their findings are “subject to erroneous data”, “by no means definite” and only an “approximate idea”. Route selection should not have been chosen using this type of unreliable data.

Visual impact: Examination of their data shows that the main difference, incorrectly given, between both routes is the medium to high assessment given to the 8km stretch of the B route where it crosses the R178 and the low assessment given to the similar stretch of the A route where it crosses the R178. Why did the B route get this high rating? What visual receptors were used? In this section of the B route there are no areas of population, scenic routes or lakes affected and as they were unsure of the number of dwellings within 100 meters then it is reasonable to assume that they had no acceptably accurate assessment of how many dwellings there were within the 1km wide corridor or further away. This section of the A route, on the other hand, is clearly visible for miles from the R178. I believe a proper independent assessment would show route A to have a greater visible impact along the R178. It is also in close proximity to 2 churches, a factory and a number of dwellings. The simple fact is that Route A if visible from a far greater length of the R178 than Route B.

Economic Impacts: With regards route selection in the EIS (section 5.3), Existing quarries, in County Meath route A gets a blue rating for Trim quarry located 0.8km and Keegans quarry 0.3 km away from this indicative route. In relation to County Monaghan it gives no negative rating on any of the three routes for existing quarries.

I own a substantial quarry at Carrickamore, Carrickmacross, Co. Monaghan. It is within 0.1 km of route A, the selected route. It was not mentioned nor taken into account but should obviously have resulted in a blue rating for route A if there was any consistency in the methodology used. Furthermore it bizarrely states that there are 12 quarries within 6km of all three routes. I would like them to name these quarries in all 3 cases as this information is substantially wrong.

These are just a sample of the inaccuracies. Did the re-evaluation report correct these and factor in correct data to enable their choice of preferred route?? The re-evaluation report is just a useless paper exercise, this application still relies on 10 year old incorrect, ancient data.

In 2012 Eirgrid announced 2 new 400kv projects i.e. Grid Link, 300km and Grid West which is 100km long, similar to this project. When you look at “needs and justification “outlined by Eirgrid for these projects, you will see they are very similar in a lot of ways to this project.

  1. The existing transmission infrastructure in the two regions needs substantial investment.
  2. To facilitate wind energy development
  3. To meet E.U. targets
  4. Will help all regions to attract the type of industry that requires a secure high voltage supply

Up to 2014 they had progressed both projects the same as this one and had 3 route corridors for overhead lines chosen. In Grid West there was an emerging preferred route. The only major difference being that the consultation was carried out with the public at a far earlier stage and to a far greater extent than this project.

As with this project, undergrounding was put forward by the affected stakeholders and the reasons given by EirGrid for not considering it as follows:

  1. It does not deliver future flexibility/ extendibility.
  2. It does not deliver same security/ reliability of supply when compared with overhead A/C.
  3. It causes additional operational difficulties
  4. It is untried and untested as part of an integrated A/C network
  5. It would be cost prohibitive to tap in or avail of the power in D/C line

And on these grounds it was not feasible.

UNDER GROUNDING MUST BE PART OF PROPOSAL

IN January 2014 due to local and regional pressure in the West and South from public who were now aware of the massive long term impacts of overhead pylons, Minister Rabbitt set up an independent expert panel (I.E.P.) to look into both projects.

The panel’s terms of reference were for a  “comprehensive, route specific studies/ report of fully undergrounding and overhead options for both projects including assessments of potential environmental impacts, technical efficiency and cost factors.”

Then later that year the Minister, after pressure from local politicians in this area, reluctantly asked the same group to give an opinion on this project just to see if the compatibility of the methodologies to be employed on the North South link compare with those on Grid Link and Grid West, critically, up to May 2nd 2014

This consisted of the panel, on May 7th, asking EirgGid to submit an assessment of the extent to which in EirGrids view, the methodologies used were compatible. So we get EirGrids view on how EirGrid was carrying out the three projects. We didn’t need an expert panel to answer that question at that stage as EirGrid had progressed Grid West to an emerging preferred route stage for pylons and undergrounding was not considered as feasible.

When EirGrid quote the findings of the I.E.P. several times in the application that the compatibility of the methodologies used were the same in Grid link and Grid West as the North South, it means nothing. Only that at that stage of the projects, 2nd May 2014, they had treated the people of the West and South somewhat like they had treated us.

The I.E.P. then, in July 2014, got involved in both Grid West and Grid Link projects, using this wide terms of reference for the studies/reports and overseen Eirgrid carry them out. Then everything changed. In Grid Link by October 2014 Eirgrid had dropped plans for a 400kv line and put forward a new plan, with no new poles. As the I.E.P described it “But a new option” not previously known or anticipated by the panel.

In Grid West the I.E.P. report allows for undergrounding and overhead options to be compared against each other, hence a new underground feasible option that would cost just twice the amount of overhead lines is part of this projects proposal. The compatibility of the methodologies used would not have been the same if they were compared in September 2015.

Reading the I.E.P report it clearly shows me and hopefully An Bord Pleanala that:

  1. EirGrid changed everything when they were challenged by a body with the right Terms of Reference
  2. Underground D/C is feasible, even in the middle of a small total A/C network, at twice the cost, when you identify a proper route.

This is totally at odds with what EirGrid states in this application.

  1. When the general population who are directly affected and become aware of the massive long term impacts of overhead lines on their region, they are rightly, totally opposed to them.

So it’s not just us in the North East.

  1. Technical, costs and other excuses or reasons put forward by Eirgrid don’t stand up to expert scrutiny
  2. That we here in the North East are being treated unjustly and that a proper, realistic and definite underground D/C alternative solution must be part of this proposal from an early stage. I believe, with this standard of alternative, not made available in this application that it doesn’t meet planning regulations. There is a genuine, reasonable, workable, cost effective, alternative option proven to be available.

We deserve and demand to be treated with equality. This expert group should have been given the same terms of reference as Grid Link and Grid West.

The review from the international expert commission in 2011 confirmed what we had said at the last oral hearing. That is, that a high voltage D/C solution is a feasible option for this project and that it would not cost anywhere near the 10-20 times extra that Eirgrid has wrongly been touting for years. The report also quotes Gridlink report from 2009 that states technical difficulties can be overcome and that this will be the 2nd all Ireland interconnector and this makes balancing power etc. very possible. Even the C.A.O at Eirgrid has, under pressure, recently admitted that D/C is a feasible option.

I have been a self-employed business man all my adult life. I am very much in favour of progress and development to benefit our communities and our country. I also believe in peoples’ rights to be treated equally and fairly. With regards to this project, the Stakeholders of the North East have not been given the same regard as those in the West and South. We have been subjected to miss information, wrong information, wrong data, cost exaggerations and poor consultation for 8 years.

The I.E.P. did EirGrid a favour when they forced change in Grid West and Grid Link. Both these projects will likely progress quickly without prolonged aggravation for the people of the regions and long term damage to the countryside. I believe at this point that this application should be suspended and an expert group taken in. They should be given the similar terms of reference as the I.E.P. This would save this community many more years of aggravation and indeed save EirGrid time and money

NEPPC

POREILLY.JPG

Padraig O’Reilly  NEPPC  Pic: Michael Fisher

Padraig O’Reilly of the NEPPC claimed EirGrid had failed to consider objectively all realistic alternatives. There was also a failure by the government and Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources to ensure an objective examination of realistic alternatives. From 2007 onwards EirGrid had made policy statements about an overhead line. Their initial statements on undergrounding had been misleading and they then made reluctant concessions to examine ‘the barriers to undergrounding’. They claimed incorrectly to have examined realistic options.

Mr O’Reilly said no real examination of changes in the marketplace had occurred and there was no allowance for the reduced need in the market. He pointed out that underground cable technology was advancing rapidly, with a progressive reduction in costs. It was of proven reliability, producing no electric field. It was being used increasingly in other countries. There were no issues surrounding health, devaluation of property, agriculture, noise, tourism or the landscape.

According to the NEPPC, up to this day an appropriate high voltage DC underground cable alternative along public roads had never been identified, consulted on or costed.

EIRGRID RESPONSE

The company confirmed the cost of the proposed line from Woodland in Co. Meath through Cavan and Monaghan to Turleenan in Co. Tyrone would be €286 million, consisting of construction expenditure and compensation to landowners. An EirGrid representative told the inquiry he would have a look at getting a breakdown of the figures but that he couldn’t see what that had to do with alternatives.

The North East Pylon Pressure Campaign and Co. Monaghan Anti Pylon Committee pressed EirGrid on why an environmental impact statement regarding the proposed infrastructure had not considered and costed an underground alternative. A consultant brought in by EirGrid said in response to their questions a high voltage DC underground cable was certainly a possibility.

Padraig O’Reilly of NEPPC asked again if the possibility of placing such cables alongside public roads had been considered. He said there was a serious deficiency in the company’s application as such an analysis was not included. But consultant engineer Dr Norman MacLeod responded that considerable excavation would be required for underground cabling. It would require either two trenches on one side of the road or one trench on either side and the verges would have to be dug up and the large swathe along the 135km route would have to be protected.

Aidan Geoghegan of EirGrid said Ireland’s local and regional roads were simply not wide enough to accommodate such construction.

INTERCONNECTOR DAY4

Proposed Interconnector Vital for Society and Economy in North East: EirGrid

 Michael Fisher     Northern Standard

DAY FOUR

 This section dealt with the need for the development

Nigel Hillis addressed the oral hearing on behalf of the Co. Monaghan Anti Pylon Committee. He said up until now the group had never challenged the need for the project. But in the light of the unbelievable scrapping of the 400kV overhead line for Grid Link and the downsizing of Grid West to an alternative 220kV with multiple underground options they now had the right to and indeed must challenge the need for the project in its current form.

“How did EirGrid get it so very wrong with regards to those other two flagship projects. Can they now be trusted when they say that this project can only be delivered as an overhead 400kV line or is this all just a huge face saving exercise?” he said. “There is now no doubt that the need for this interconnector is not our need – it is Northern Ireland’s need”.

EirGrid’s Your Grid, Your Views, Your Tommorow states: “In the Re-examination of generation assumptions carried out in this update, the requirement for increased power to flow between Ireland and Northern Ireland in future years is confirmed. This is mainly driven by changes to the future all-island generation portfolio, plant retirements and the relative operational costs of generation plant in each jurisdiction.

The plant retirements referred to here are in Northern Ireland where very dirty plant must close down by 2021 and other, lets say, not quite so dirty plant must be restricted from 2023 onwards.

It is clear from the statements and speeches made by high level politicians and the Ulitility Regulator in Northern Ireland, in recent months, that panic has now set in regarding this situation which seemingly can only be addressed by the delivery of the North South Interconnector.

No provision is being made to address this security of supply issue within their own jurisdiction by way of replacing these dirty plants with modern clean ones. Indeed, the utterances and statements that have emanated from political, regulatory, business and economic commentators on both sides of the border but particularly from Northern Ireland, since this application was lodged with An Bord Pleanala, have been persistently vociferous to the extent that if this were a legal case it would be totally prejudiced at this stage.

This is clear proof that there is only one game in town with regards the need for the project and that is security of supply for Northern Ireland to prevent the “lights going out”. There is no talk about how it will be of mutual benefit to us down here – it’s all about Northern Ireland. Some of the statements have been hysterical to the extent that there would be a risk to life and limb in the absence of the Interconnector.

It would seem to us that all this has been a carefully orchestrated and choreographed effort intended to bring maximum pressure to bear on the respective decision makers and put them in a position whereby they could not possibly refuse permission.

I want to give you some examples of what I am talking about. EirGrid have often used the analogy of a three legged stool with regards to this development and the three legs are:

Security of supply; to facilitate increased renewable energy (mostly wind); to enhance the operation of the Single Electricity Market.

Security of supply

At the 2010 oral hearing EirGrid gave clear evidence that the security of supply in the North East region would be below acceptable standards by 2012. This was why there was a critical need for the sub-station at Kingscourt to link into the North East. In fact it was stated that even if planning permission for the interconnector was refused in Northern Ireland, the section from Woodland to Kingscourt would still be required to reinforce the North East. So it was with complete astonishment that in May 2011 less than a year after the previous oral hearing collapsed EirGrid stated in their Preliminary Re-evaluation Report that the sub-station at Kingscourt would not be required for at least 10 years. That would have brought us up to 2021 at that time. Their stated position regarding the sub-station in these application documents is the exact same – it will not be required for at least 10 years bringing us now up to 2026.

Will it ever be required? In March 2015 EirGrid published a series of consultation documents entitled “Your Grid, Your Views, Your Tomorrow”. A discussion paper on Ireland’s Grid Development Strategy.

In Appendix 1 entitled EirGrd Technical Analysis page 34 with regards to the North East region it states “The north east region has renewable energy resources and conventional generation sources. There is an excess of generation in the area”. The need for the sub-station in the Kingscourt area now seems to be an unanswerable question.

The renowned economist Colm McCarthy is on public record many times in many different forums, television, print media and public meetings as saying that Ireland is “awash with generating capacity” and any more whether it is wind, gas, biomass or whatever is simply not needed and makes no economic sense whatsoever.

How did EirGrid get it so wrong? In effect EirGrid applied to An Bord Pleanala in 2009 for permission under the Strategic Infrastructure Act for permission to construct a large 400kV sub-station that was not needed then, is not needed now and may never be needed in the future. But yet they built a technical and needful case for it at the oral hearing in 2010 that on the face of it could not be challenged. In fact, whatever about EirGrid’s record regarding public consultation and all the other discrepancies in the previous application no-one, at the previous oral hearing ever questioned their assessment of the need for the development or the sub-station – only the form in which it should be delivered i.e. overhead or underground. However this time the need for the development insofar as it is of benefit to this jurisdiction must be questioned.

A second link to Northern Ireland has nothing to offer us with regards to security of supply as they simply just want the interconnector to replace the old dirty generating plants that have to be retired. The CEO of EirGrid supported by his senior management team appeared twice last year in front of the Oireachtas Committee for Transport and Communications on the 21st April and 4th November.

The April meeting was specifically to discuss the North South Interconnector and the November meeting was to discuss Grid Link but ended up with most of the discussion on the North South Interconnector. At both meetings the one thing that the EirGrid could not explain to the satisfaction of the Committee members was why the proposed second interconnector needed to be rated at 1,500 MW. The big picture that the members of the Oireachtas Committee saw straight away was that there was already a double circuit 1,200 MW interconnector in place that could easily be upgraded to 1,500 MW. The existing Moyle interconector from Scotland to N. Ireland is rated at 500 MW. EirGrid’s own East West interconnector from Wales to Dublin is 500 MW and the new interconnector from France to Ireland is proposed to be 700 MW. Why did the second interconnector linking into Northern Ireland, which only has a peak daily demand of approx 1,200 MW, need to be rated at 1,500 MW.

The Oireachtas members did not question that there was a need for extra connectivity but they did robustly question the need for it to be at 1,500 MW. It did not make sense to them the need for effectively two interconnectors both to potentially carry 1,500 MW to link into the Northern Ireland grid that has no demand for anything close to that amount of power flow. It must also be said that Colm McCarthy, despite his opposition to any more generating capacity being built does recognise that there is a need for some sort of enhanced connection between Northern Ireland and Ireland, but nothing to do with security of supply down here.

If we have extra generating capacity down here then nobody wants to deprive our fellow citizens on the island from sharing in it to meet their needs and “keep the lights on”. However, the figures that I have seen would suggest that approx 400 megawatts of dirty plant will have to be retired but 250 megawatts of that will be replaced when the Moyle interconnector is repaired (on schedule of the middle of this year last I heard) which leaves a security of supply deficit of approx. 200 MW. Indeed EirGrid’s own graph bears this out.

Building a second 1,500 MW interconnector to address this deficit is like taking a hurley stick to swat a fly. This deficit could easily be addressed by a 500 or 700 megawatt HVDC underground cable laid along public roads which is one of the options for Grid West and was an option for Grid Link before it was scrapped altogether. It must be remembered that both Grid West and Grid Link were brought forward as 400kV 1,500 MW overhead lines to address the perceived need of both those major projects.

Now Grid Link has been scrapped and no line either overhead or underground is needed at all and Grid West can be downgraded to 220kV overhead line or an underground 500 MW HVDC cable. In this light it is right and proper to question EirGrid’s assumption that an overhead 400kV 1,500 MW line is needed. This has not been satisfactorily or clearly demonstrated. Unfortunately the question must be asked in the light of now no requirement for the sub-station at Kingscourt, in the light of the unbelievable volte face regarding Grid Link and the multiple options now on the table for Grid West – the question must be asked can EirGrid be believed regarding the need for a 1,500 MW interconnector?

This was the question posed by the members of the Oireachtas Commmittee last year and this is the question we are posing now at this oral hearing. We accept that there is a need for enhanced power flow into Northern Ireland but not at this level. Grid Link was initially proposed as a 400kV overhead line but that was not needed. Initially EirGrid proposed to underground it using VSC HVDC at a power rating of 700 MW costing 1.57 times the cost of overhead. And then it was scrapped altogether.

What is required here is an Interconnector defined by EirGrid as an electrical link, facilities and equipment that connect the transmission network of one EU member state to another. We would submit that the additional electrical link required to address the security of supply issue in Northern Ireland does not need to be 1,500 MW. Once this is accepted then other alternatives open up which will be addressed in the next module.

Renewables (wind)

Power lines are required to conduct electricity from one place to another on demand. It is a demand and not a supply driven system. Maybe smart grids and smart devices in home appliances may change that somewhat is the future but that is quite a long way down the road. So at present what we have is a demand driven power system and the available supply at any one time must meet the demand to, in EirGrid’s favourite colloquialism, “keep the lights on”.

Conversely it cannot be more than the demand or load will have to shed somewhere along the line. Unlike water it cannot be produced and stored in a large reservoir and drawn down as required. It must be produced in real time to exactly meet the demand. So on the island of Ireland we have a daily peak demand usually in that 5 – 7 pm time frame that must be satisfied and obviously a much reduced demand during the night hours.

The power that flows in the lines is normally a mix produced from various generating plants i.e the base load plants such as the coal burning Moneypoint, peat fired plants, the peaking plants such as gas, we have a little bit of hydro and of course wind. Hydro, wind and biomass are lumped in together under the heading of renewables but by far the biggest one is wind. The amount of wind in the mix obviously varies according to how windy it is but on my last electricity bill from ESB Networks it was 19.4% renewables which is mostly wind. I would hazard a guess that the full 19% was wind and the 0.4% hydro.

So, it does not matter in the slightest how much wind is available or none at all, whatever the demand is at that particular time of the day then that is all the electricity that is required. There may be the potential to produce twice the demand or even three times the demand but it cannot be produced because it cannot be stored to any great extent. Storage is what is referred to in the industry as the holy grail.

The only reason that an upgrade of a power line or a new power line is required is that wind has what is called priority dispatch. In other words because of CO2 targets wind energy must be prioritised and allowed onto the system to the greatest extent that can be safely accommodated without risking system failure. So for example in Grid West the need for the power line is allow priority dispatch to get the potential wind energy out of Mayo which the existing lines cannot carry.

Now of course in giving priority dispatch to wind means that other plant, invariably gas plants have to close down or more likely ramp down but still keep what is called a spinning reserve in order to come in again quickly when the wind dies down. It seems now that unless the wind farms in Mayo receive planning permission, bearing in mind that a large one has already been shot down by ABP, Grid West will go the way of Grid Link and not be required at all.

So in that regard it was very much a bespoke power line to cater for priority dispatch of wind from a single outlying area in Mayo. The planned overall wind energy production in the Mayo region was approx. 640 Megawatts, before this large wind farm was shot down. 140 Megawatts can be accommodated on existing 110kV lines and therefore the new line is required to carry 500 Megawatts. This is exactly the power rating of the HVDC underground option for Grid West. It is essentially a one way street.

With regards to the North South Interconnector there is no wind power in the midlands that requires any such bespoke power line to cater for wind. However as we have already seen there is the RIDP in the North West waiting in the wings, so to speak with a potential of up to approx 500 MW, much the same as Grid West, if it was fully developed between now and 2025. The RIDP as I have said is situated in the North West of N. Ireland and in Donegal and will require grid reinforcement which as Mr Fitzsimons pointed out last week has been superficially addressed in EirGrid’s Grid 25 SEA Implementation Report but only within the jurisdictional boundaries of the ROI.

The RIDP, if it is developed to its fullest extent, and I say if because there are obviously other factors in play here, has essentially nowhere to go without the North South Interconnector. So again this is very much the same scenario as Grid West – to get wind power from an outlying region to the market. However, it is unlike Grid West in this regard. If 500 megawatts of wind power from Mayo could be got onto the grid and I am not at all sure that it could for technical reasons. EirGird DS3. It would simply act like the East West Interconnector from Wales and just in simple terms shoot 500 megawatts up the line straight into the substation at Flagford. That is not what would happen with regards to the RIDP if 500 megawatts were to be produced from wind because due to the fact that it will be taken onto the existing grid, which has to be reinforced, as outlined in the SEA report, then a lot of that 500 megawatts would be disappeated onto the local grid before it got to the interconnector.

So, the point I am making is that regardless of where the power comes from only so much is required at any one time to meet demand and a second interconnector at 1,500 MVA is not required to meet demand nor is it required to meet priority dispatch of wind either from ROI or NI.

The Single Electricity Market SEM

The SEM went live on the island of Ireland in 2007. It is a pool system whereby all generators over 10 Megawatts come together in a wholesale market pool and essentially the retail providers draw out of that pool by what is called an order of merit. In other words the cheapest are taken first. Now on the face of it that seems like a good system except that every generator in merit gets paid the marginal rate. So how does this marginal rate work? EXPLAIN. There are approx 80 generators participating in the market pool etc.

And then we have wind energy – now wind does not participate in the pool because wind is free. Or so the wind lobby would have us believe. As we have already seen wind has priority dispatch and it gets paid at that marginal rate, the highest rate. So as more wind comes onto the system it will start displacing other generating plants, which may reduce the marginal rate because they will be taken off line from the top down. However, if the marginal rate drops too much then a floor price kicks in to support wind. It just depends what the marginal rate is at the time if there is any actual saving or not.

Indeed a recent report commissioned by IWEA dated March 2015 entitled the Value of Wind Energy to Ireland concluded that when all factors were taken into account wind was cost neutral on the system. This report concludes that wind generation will decrease wholesale prices, resulting in savings to the consumer, but will be offset by other system costs. The report states:

It is not transparently clear what proportion of EirGrid’s planned investment in the electricity network is required solely for the development of wind capacity. Nor has it been determined how the system services outlined in the DS3 program will be paid for. But if all these are passed through to customers, they offset the wholesale price benefit, meaning household and industrial electricity prices rise slightly”.

EirGrid say that there will be an immediate saving of €20 million per annum and rising over the years depending on various visions within the wholesale market. These forecasts have been reviewed by the CER and in evidence given to the Oireachtas Committee on Transport and Communications in June last year they said they were happy with at least a saving of €10 million. However, this saving is only in the wholesale market by way of “pass through” costs but the CER cannot guarantee that these savings will be passed through to the consumer in the final analyses. When energy prices started to fall dramatically in 2014 it eventually took a direct intervention by Minister Alex White to put pressure on the retail suppliers to ensure that even a small percentage was passed back to consumers by way of direct reductions.

In the UK the utility regulator Ofgem has referred the energy market to the Competition and Markets Authority CMA for a full investigation. In the light of this what confidence can the consumer have that any savings with regards to these hidden pass through costs will be passed back in any transparent and verifiable manner. I would confidently say absolutely none whatsoever. Remember these savings, if they actually exist at all are in the wholesale market and we are totally at the mercy of the half dozen or so retail suppliers to pass them back. Their track record to date in this respect is not encouraging to say the least.

In any event just to do some maths let us be generous and give the benefit of the doubt to the higher number €20 million. There are approx. 2.5 million electricity consumers (bill payers) on the island of Ireland. 1.8 in the South and 0.7 in the North. Just do simple arithmetic and divide €20 million by €2.5 million = €8 per year or 2 cent per day. We have just withdrawn the 1 cent and 2 cent coins because they were worthless. Take the average annual domestic electricity bill to be €800 – its actually around €900 but lets keep the maths simple. A saving of €8 represents 0.01% of the annual bill.

Let us do the maths another way. The value of the electricity market last year on the island of Ireland according to the SEMO website was €1,854,638,645. If my calculator is giving me the right answer then €20 million represents 0.01% of that market value. We have done the maths two ways and we get the same answer 0.01% saving and that is assuming it is even passed back. How do you see a saving of 0.01% on your electricity bill never mind verify it is totally beyond me.

These figures of €20 million rising to €40 million by 2030 that EirGrid and the Regulator in N. Ireland are bandying about may seen nice chunky figures but they are absolutely miniscule in the context of the overall market. Both Grid Link and Grid West were initially confirmed as 400kV overhead lines on the basis of long and extensive studies costing tens of millions.

Now the situation is that Grid Link as a 400kV 1500 MW line or indeed even as a 700 MW underground cable is no longer needed. What increased power flow can Series Compensation cater for? 200 MW 300 MW whatever it is then that was all that was realistically needed in the first place.

Likewise for Grid West when the need changed the options changed as well.

From our prospective there is no need for this development in its current form as we do not see any tangible benefits accruing to the consumers on this side of the border. It is not needed to “keep the lights on” down here. The scale of it is not required for renewables and in our opinion the savings are illusionary. If there is a need for it from Northern Ireland’s perspective, which there undeniably seems to be, then that need can be solved by underground cabling.

EirGrid’s statutory brief as they constantly remind us is to operate and ensure the maintenance of and, if necessary, develop a safe, secure, reliable, economical and efficient electricity transmission system, and to explore and develop opportunities for interconnection of its system with other systems, in all cases with a view to ensuring that all reasonable demands for electricity are met and having due regard for the environment;

Statutory Instrument 445 (2000)

We do not believe that this SI applies to Northern Ireland and we would contend that in that context all reasonable demands for electricity in this state are currently being met with absolutely no danger of the “lights going out” due to generation or transmission inadequacies in the foreseeable future.

A second interconnector of 400kV 1500 MW has not, in our opinion, been robustly justified to satisfy the need for the development which in our view is simply to get power into Northern Ireland to replace generating plants that must be retired to meet EU emissions legislation.

EIRGRID RESPONSE

EirGrid Manager of Transmission Network Planning Mark Norton told the oral hearing this afternoon (in response to the issues raised by observers) why the company needed to develop a second North/South electricity interconnector. Answering a question from Nigel Hillis of Co. Monaghan Anti-Pylon Committee, he revealed that the main flow on the interconnector operating at near its capacity (1100MW) would be for one to two hours per year.

Mr Norton explained why there had to be a sustainable solution for a long-term  economic benefit and provide flexibility for future regional and national development. If the network in the Republic was not meshed this way with the system in the North then there could be a system-wide loss of capacity if it was not built to cater for a 1500MW flow. It would instead be necessary to have multiple routes in order to match existing capability.

Mr Norton said that for long-term planning the interconnector would provide sufficient capacity for the market to make best use of the generation portfolio in both jurisdictions. It was the equivalent of building a motorway in order to cater for the traffic expected today and into the future.

The EirGrid representative said it would help to increase the network capability in the North East in order to meet demand and economic growth. Continuing the transport analogy he said it would act in the same way as a road by-pass, diverting power for the regions network. A high capacity line would permit the development of large-scale industry, he said.

In summary, Mr Norton said a second interconnector was required because modifying the existing smaller interconnector would not address future need. It would ensure security of supply. It would ensure an efficient single electricity market. It would integrate the generation of renewables. Finally, it would serve in the long term to reinforce the position of the North East area (of Cavan/Monaghan) in the Republic.

CMAPC CHALLENGE EIRGRID FIGURES

Nigel Hillis of County Monaghan Anti-Pylon Committee claimed that in his presentation Mr Norton had failed to show that EirGrid had provided a detailed cost benefit analysis for the project, taking all the facts into consideration such as the option for undergrounding compared to the costs of an overhead line. No details had been produced for example about the economic impact on tourism in County Monaghan. The type of analysis they had used was not a business model that would be sustainable in any other sphere, he said.

Mr Norton said that the semi-state company had complied with the statutory requirements and had looked at the wider impact.

Nigel Hillis asked Mark Norton about how often the proposed interconnector was to be used at full capacity for transferring electricity, 1500 MW in either direction S/N or N/S. Mr Norton explained that according to their modelling it would generally run up to 1100 MW total transfer capacity. When pressed by Mr Hillis how frequently it would be required at this level, the EirGrid representative revealed it would be between one and two hours per year. So on that basis (of one to two hours per year) EirGrid intended to construct a 1500MW high voltage interconnector, Mr Hillis said, adding that this was “unbelievable”.

BICYCLE FOR A MOTORWAY

A representative of the North East Pylon Pressure Campaign was also surprised at the revelation by Mr Norton. Colin Andrew used the analogy of EirGrid proposing to build a three-lane motorway for use by a bicycle.

NEPPC

Mr Andrew who is a chartered engineer said the group was not objecting in principle to the proposed EirGrid overhead electricity interconnector. But it was opposed to the technology applied, along with the associated giant pylons that would carve the heart out of the community in Meath, Cavan and Monaghan.

Colin Andrew told the presiding planning inspector Breda Gannon that over the past nine years since the project was initially made public, NEPPC believed EirGrid had singularly failed to demonstrate conclusively beyond any reasonable doubt the real need for the interconnector. This failure had involved contradictory statements more designed to provide arguments against counter proposals to use underground cabling or even alternatives such as the use of HTLS conductors on existing infrastructure.

Mr Andrew said an “open cheque book” proposal had been brought before the Planning Board that EirGrid could not cost as they had no land owner agreements and they did not know the cost of legal actions for devalued properties nor the costs associated with a vastly extended construction period due to access difficulties.

EirGrid have claimed that delay costs equate to €30 million per annum but refuse to accept that such annual costs are very likely to continue indefinitely as the project faces almost universal community and landowner opposition, until alternative technological proposals are presented to communities along the route.

Mr Andrew said the NEPPC believed that the need for the link had not been unequivocally demonstrated and thus any plans for such an interconnector were premature, ill-founded and unachievable.

Referring to EirGrid media and public statements about the ‘lights going out’ in the event of the delayed construction of the interconnector, Mr Andrew accused the company of scaremongering and being irresponsible. These scare tactics were being used to manipulate people into believing that life and limb would be put in danger if it did not go ahead.

He claimed that the second interconnector would be of no real benefit to the North-East area in the Republic. He also criticised EirGrid for failing to provide any economic model and hiding behind the veil of commercial sensitivity.

NEPPC contend that EirGrid have singularly failed to demonstrate that there is any strategic need or financial model that shows any form of cost-benefit analysis to justify this proposed interconnector and that technology exists to upgrade existing infrastructure, Mr Andrew said. This upgrading would offer substantial savings over the lifetime of the project resulting in significant reductions in power costs to the end user and being of significant benefit to the economy.

In conclusion Mr Andrew said the “open cheque book” approach by EirGrid to a “white elephant” project such as this was not only spendthrift but wholly unnecessary as it faced universal opposition from threatened communities and virtually all landowners. Thus the project even if permitted cannot be built as EirGrid have admitted. If the need really existed, then the only solution was to adopt underground cables or to upgrade existing infrastructure.

Earlier the hearing was told that the EirGrid plan is a key project forming part of the government’s energy policy. It would allow access to a wider electricity market in Europe and would bring benefit to all electricity users.

The overhead power line with up to 300 pylons in the Republic would run from Woodland near Batterstown in Co. Meath through part of Cavan and into County Monaghan, where 42 townlands would be affected. It would cross the border at Lemgare near Clontibret, into County Armagh and would terminate at Turleenan near the Moy in County Tyrone. The proposed interconnector would be in addition to the current double circuit AC 275 kV overhead transmission line that runs on a single set of pylons between the Louth sub-station in the Republic and Tandragee in Northern Ireland.

GOVERNMENT POLICY

Day four began with a section on the need for the development. The first person to address the two Bord Pleanála inspectors was Kevin Brady, principal officer in charge of strategic energy policy at the Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources. He said a green paper on Irish energy policy had been issued in May 2014. Ten weeks had been given for comments to be made in response and during that time 1250 written submission had been received. Four regional workshops had been held and the department had heard the views of a wide range of people including community groups, businesses and trades unions.

In accordance with EU energy policy a white paper on energy (Ireland’s Transition to a Low carbon Energy Future) was approved by the government in December last year, setting out a vision and framework for energy policy from 2015-2030. It set out the context of the significant role played by EU institutions in determining market regulations.

He said Ireland valued its relationship with Northern Ireland including energy matters and they were part of an all-island electricity market. Mr Brady said the need for an appropriate energy infrastructure including interconnectors underpinned all energy policy. But the government was not seeking to determine specific details of the interconnector.

EU energy strategy reiterated support for an all-island single electricity market and this was established in 2007. But the current system did not operate efficiently as there was limited interconnectivity between Ireland and Northern Ireland and it can’t operate as a single system, so it limits the benefits of the single electricity market. A second interconnected was necessary, he said, and this would lead to benefits to energy consumers across the island of Ireland.

The proposal had been designated as an EU project of common interest. They needed to ensure there was access to wider markets and both Ireland and Northern Ireland would benefit from security of supply by having a single system across the island.

EirGrid was the established national transmission operator. It played a key role in economic and social development, creating a modern (transmission) infrastructure. Effective management of it was critical to achieving Ireland’s strategic energy objectives.

In conclusion, the Department’s representative said the interconnector would help to reduce electricity transmission costs across the island and ensure competitiveness. It would ensure the efficient working of the single electricity market to the benefit of all users, offering access to a wider electricity market. It was a key project supported by government policy, Mr Brady said.

Nigel Hillis of the County Monaghan Anti Pylon Committee later welcomed a clarification from the Department of Energy representative. Kevin Brady said national policy does not seek to determine the specific details of schemes. The policy statement clearly states: “The Government does not seek to direct EirGrid and ESB Networks or other energy infrastructure developers to particular sites or routes or technologies”.the white paper on energy gave very clear direction regarding government policy. The department was very much involved in energy policy but it was not directing EirGrid regarding sites, routes or technology or where to draw lines on a map regarding the interconnector.

COMMISSION FOR ENERGY REGULATION

Next to address the hearing was the chair of the Commission for Energy Regulation, Gareth Blaney. He outlined the role of the Commission as a regulator. The CER is the independent economic regulator responsible for the natural gas and electricity sectors in Ireland. Its remit is to ensure the security of supply of Ireland’s electricity system and that Irish consumers have access to fair and reasonable electricity prices.

The CER is also a member of the Single Electricity Market Committee which is the body responsible for implementing and overseeing the electricity markets of Ireland and Northern Ireland as a single All Island electricity market (SEM), and thus must protect consumers across the island.

The CER reviews and monitors the expenditure of Eirgrid, which has a statutory role to develop the electricity transmission network, to ensure that these are delivered efficiently and so minimise the costs to the Irish and all-island consumer.

Mr Blaney said the regulator believed that the North-South Interconnector was an important development for the electricity network and would provide a range of benefits for the electricity consumers in both Ireland and Northern Ireland.

The interconnector would increase the security of supply of electricity against both long term and short term events. It would also help to reduce the wholesale cost of electricity on the island of Ireland, by allowing the system operator to have better access to the most efficient set of electricity generators for the whole island, benefitting both electricity consumers in both jurisdictions.

Mr Blaney said the lack of a second interconnector was a major constraint on the all-island system. This results in additional constraint costs that are borne by the all-island consumer.

The cost of this constraint would be in the order of €20m p.a. in 2020 rising to €40-60m by 2030. This figure was based on constraint costs alone and did not value the other strategic benefits from the development proceeding, including security of supply benefits.
In terms of numbers, the ESRI looked at this in 2013 and estimated that the new North-South interconnector would reduce wholesale electricity prices by 0.9% by virtue of being better able to schedule the most efficient or lowest cost generators.  Wholesale prices make up about half the electricity cost to consumers. On an average household bill of €1,200 per year that would equate to a saving of €6 per year.

Mr Blaney explained that the CER had approved an allowance for the expenditure on this project on the basis of the application EirGrid had submitted to An Bord Pleanála. “We will encourage EirGrid to ensure all transmission developments, including this one, is delivered in a cost effective manner”, he said.

On the basis of those benefits, the CER considered there was a clear need for the construction and commissioning of the North- South interconnector. Material delay of the North South Interconnector is, in our view, against the interests of Irish and all-island electricity consumers.

ELECTRICITY ASSOCIATION OF IRELAND

Chief Executive Owen Wilson spoke on behalf of the Electricity Association of Ireland, representing over 90% of electricity generation and supply activities and all distribution activities within the Single Electricity Market. Neither EirGrid nor SONI are members.

In considering compliance with EU and national policies, Mr Wilson said the development as proposed was confirmed Governmental policy, and was central to the delivery of a number of key government objectives in the field of energy and environment, in particular the maintenance of a single market. It was in the national interest both in terms of Ireland’s strategic economic and social development and Ireland’s relationship with a neighbouring state.

He explained that approximately 70% of electricity demand on the island lay east of a line from Cork to Belfast. The proposed development would provide the backbone for this corridor and create the opportunity to maximise the efficient development of renewable generation. It would also support growth in demand through substitution of fossil fuels by low-carbon electricity in line with the expectations of the EU.

In parallel with developments in energy policy the EU Commission has been undertaking a review of energy markets, including electricity. The review again highlights the critical importance of interconnection if effective balancing and intraday markets are to be established and the goal of a fully integrated energy market achieved. Legislation in this area is anticipated towards the end of this year, which will again reiterate the call for cross-border interconnections to be further developed.

Regarding complince with national policies, the EAI Chief Executive said documentation supporting the proposed development had highlighted the need for the project to support national energy and environmental policy in Ireland. The most recent reiteration of policy support for the proposed project had been given in the Energy and Climate White Paper published in December 2015. This commits the Government to promote and facilitate interconnection with other countries and regions and reaffirms the July 2012 Government policy statement on the Strategic Importance of Transmission and other Energy Infrastructure. This Statement specifically endorsed delivery of the North-South interconnector as Government policy.

With respect to Northern Ireland, the EAI said the development was in the strategic national interest of Ireland as it maintained and enhanced a critical relationship with a neighbouring jurisdiction. Non-delivery of the project or even delayed delivery beyond 2020 would have energy, environmental, economic and social policy implications for the North that were proportionately much more significant than those arising in Ireland. It would place a significant cost burden on Northern Ireland electricity consumers and taxpayers as the region attempted to meet its Renewable Energy Sources and Greenhouse Gas emission reduction commitments and maintain security of supplies locally.

Northern Ireland Ministers, policy makers and regulators have expressed with increasing frequency their concern and frustration at the delayed delivery of this infrastructure, the costs already being incurred as a result of this delay, the longer-term risk it poses to the security of electricity supply and affordability of that electricity and the consequences for more general social and economic development and the delivery of climate and renewables policy obligations in Northern Ireland.

The NI Utility Regulator commented in October at an EirGrid conference in Belfast that security of supply was becoming a dominant concern of the energy “trilemma” in Northern Ireland and emphasised that the North- South Interconnector must be delivered by 2021. In her view an underground solution cannot be delivered in sufficient time to avoid a real risk of blackouts. Her view has been endorsed by Minister Bell (DETI) who commented in December 2015 that “The requirement for this project is irrefutable as it is critical to long term security of supply for Northern Ireland.” and that “We all need to do everything we can to get behind bringing it to fruition”

In addition to the above, the previous comments in respect of European policy have similar effect in NI and the development of the proposed project will have equal benefit in this regard. While we in Ireland have time to make decisions on this proposal that luxury does not exist for our neighbouring jurisdiction whose future economic well-being is intimately linked to this project. EAI is of the view that a loss of trust by Northern Ireland policymakers arising from the delay or failure or delay in delivering this infrastructure risks significant damage to the national interest.

In terms of the need for this development from an industrial perspective I would like to draw the Board’s attention to a report published in January 2015 by EY “Powering the economy” which was commissioned by EAI. It noted that:
“The high quality of its electricity system plays an important role in the All-Island’s economic competitiveness. Surveys carried out by the World Economic Forum for their Global Competitiveness Report rank ROI and NI highly in terms of the quality of electricity supply compared to many other countries. The survey asked participants about the reliability of electricity supplies in their country, specifically in terms of supply interruptions and voltage fluctuations. The results show that the quality of electricity supply in the All-Island market is high.”

Using data from the updated 2016 WEF report, Ireland’s electricity system maintains its ranking at 17th among the 151 countries surveyed – ahead of Germany, Italy, and Spain and equal with the USA. The EY report also noted that two-thirds of indigenous and multinational companies view access to a high-quality electricity supply as ‘very important’ to their continuing operations in Ireland. This is reflective of Government policy in seeking to attract energy intensive, high-technology companies.

The proposed development enhances the robustness of the network infrastructure on the island ensuring the needs of the exiting industrial base continue to be met and maintains the relative advantage of both jurisdictions in attracting FDI.

The National Competiveness Council, which reports and makes policy recommendations to Government, notes in its latest Competitiveness Report published in December 2015 that: “Ireland remains a relatively expensive location for energy compared to most of our EU peers. Electricity costs are a particular issue for energy intensive sectors and many SMEs. Average SME expenditure on electricity amounts to 9 per cent of total non-wage costs”.

It further notes in respect of Grid 2025 that:
“it is important that investment to address key competitiveness gaps is prioritised and the investment is efficient.” adding that “Competitiveness, sustainability and security of energy supply are critical issues for Ireland and for enterprise. Achieving an appropriate balance between these three pillars requires the availability of an adequate energy infrastructure framework. It is important that such investment is at least cost and delivered in a timely manner.”

In its “Electricity Costs and Competitiveness Bulletin” published in June 2015 the NCC commented that:
“Changes in relative energy price competitiveness can have far-reaching effects on investment, production and trade patterns in internationally trading sectors, and directly affect the ability of enterprise to retain and grow output and employment.

The NCC recommended that: Policy should aim to deliver energy infrastructure investment at least cost: Ireland needs to ensure adequate network capacity to meet additional enterprise demand, especially in the main urban centres. This is particularly relevant for large, energy intensive manufacturing activity.

In the context of the NCCs commentary it is important to recognise that the electricity system in Ireland and Northern Ireland is structurally different in a number of respects from our competitors in Europe and elsewhere. These structural differences relate to the island’s remote geographical location and small size, topography unfavourable to hydro development and a geographically distributed population that increases the length of network required to serve customers. Our position in the investment cycle relative to international competitors is also a factor. All of the foregoing mean electricity prices are already structurally more expensive in Ireland and emphasise the need for cost efficiency in all aspects of the sector in support of national competitiveness.

The project as proposed will enhance and ensure into the future the quality and stability of the electricity network, improve system efficiency and reduce costs. IN so doing it will also improve the electricity price competitiveness of Ireland. Alternative measures do not provide the same level of quality, efficiency or cost saving.

Additionally, because of the relative ease and low cost of making new connections to the development as proposed along its route, the overhead line provides an easily accessible gateway in support of economic and industrial development in line with the BMW regional and county development plans for Monaghan, Cavan and Meath. The opportunity to access the proposed infrastructure becomes significantly more expensive and, consequently, of reduced value in terms of supporting such regional and local development, where underground cabling is used.

Home energy needs

The members of my Association engage with almost every household on the island. These companies are acutely aware of the weakened financial circumstances of a significant proportion of electricity customers, exacerbated by the recent severe recession. As an organisation we have put in place on a voluntary basis additional measures to support those customers experiencing difficulty in paying their bills.

I raise this point because we are not talking here about a small minority. The 2015 CSO Survey on Income and Living Conditions indicates some 16% of individuals suffer energy deprivation in Ireland rising to 31% for those at risk of poverty (income below 60% of the national median). Statistics are calculated on a slightly different basis in the UK, nonetheless the 2015 Annual Fuel Poverty report published by DECC indicates that while in the UK on average some 17% of households experience fuel poverty this rises to 42% in Northern Ireland. Thus a significant cohort of the population North and South have difficulties paying for energy today.

The Strategy to Combat Energy Poverty, published by Government in February 2016, highlights the significant consequences of fuel poverty for individuals and families, stressing in particular the negative health impacts of such deprivation and the additional strain imposed on the health services as a consequence. The Strategy specifically states that “the portion of energy costs that DCENR can control, i.e. those related to the delivery of Government policy on climate change and security of supply, need to be minimised as far as possible. This will involve ensuring that the energy market works for consumers, and that the distributional impact of policy decisions, which have an effect on energy costs, are assessed”.

Government Strategy notes that fuel poverty is a function of the thermal efficiency of dwellings, household income and energy prices. The proposed development, if constructed as submitted, will directly affect energy prices as it will deliver savings to customers from avoided costs in the order of €20m by 2020 and incrementing annually thereafter as a result of the more efficient operation of the electricity system on the island. It also has the potential to indirectly impact household income as it improves the competitiveness of the overall economy which in turn improves the employment environment.

As a consequence of the scale of the numbers of people affected by energy poverty and Government policy as articulated in the Fuel Poverty Strategy, it is appropriate for Eirgrid to ensure that the proposed project is delivered at the lowest practicable cost. This, in our view, is the case with the current application. Imposing additional costs can only exacerbate an existing challenging situation.

EAI suggests that the Board, in taking its decision in relation to this application, should also recognise the need for this project in terms of improving energy affordability for households and in particular the significant proportion of households affected by fuel poverty.

EAI wish to make a number of points In terms of the technical need for the project.

  1. The latest Generation Capacity Statement (2016-2025) published in February 2016 confirms that under all growth scenarios there will be a shortfall in generation capacity in NI from 2021 absent completion of the proposed development. This Statement incorporates the current out-of-market intervention by the Utility Regulator to assure supplies over the coming 3 years which is adding costs for consumers in Northern Ireland.
  2. An AC connection permits the full integration of NI and RoI networks and the additional system stability and supply security this provides. A less robust level of integration is delivered using a DC option.
  3. We note that current modelling indicates unconstrained flows in a meshed system of more than 1,000 MW. In our view this supports the scale of the proposed project and reflects a prudent assessment of future demand. In this context we would suggest that confidence in the demand forecasts is improved as a consequence of additional recent policy decisions including:
    1. The delegation of powers to adjust Corporate Tax rate to the NI Assembly which all policy-makers anticipate will add to economic activity and
    2. The impact of EU 2030 framework and related implementing measures on encouraging the provision of future energy demand in the heating and transport sectors from low-carbon electricity
  4. We are conscious that the capacitance factors place a physical limit on the length of underground AC cable nationally and are of the view this resource should be kept available for locations where public safety is an over-riding factor
  5. We reiterate our previous point that an OH AC option facilitates quick, low-cost tie-ins in support of local economic development along line route
  6. We are not convinced that the availability and average repair times for DC cable approximate to that of OH lines (it is too early to say given the very limited amount of cables installed in Europe to date and their age). This is relevant given the importance of enhancing security of supply as a feature of this development
  7. We are satisfied the development proposed by Eirgrid is in line with ENTSO-E standards.

The original evaluation of the regulatory authorities in 2004 still stands in that a strengthened meshed network on the island will best protect the interest of electricity consumers – which is their principal duty. Upgrading the exiting interconnector would assist in this regard, however this would not remove the risk associated with failure of a single line, including through physical damage. Given the social and economic importance of secure electricity supplies a physically separate second interconnector minimises this risk.

In conclusion, EAI members remain convinced that the development as proposed by Eirgrid fully respects Government energy, environmental, economic and social policy, supports the national interest in respect of Ireland’s relationship with Northern Ireland, meets the needs of affected regional and county development plans and is in the best interests of our domestic and business customers across the island.

 

INTERCONNECTOR DAY3

 

DAY THREE

Michael Fisher  Northern Standard

Brian Murray S.C. for EirGrid confirmed that any work around the pylons would be within the 19m red line space indicated on maps supplied to the Planning Board. He clarified that there would also be a 30m working area around each of the pylons.

This working area would have fencing around it but the erection of the fencing would not involve excavation in any circumstances as the fencing would be free-standing.

Replying to a claim that in some cases temporary access routes to a pylon crossed walls, Mr Murray said if they had been identified, then EirGrid had addressed them by alternative routes and they were happy to address such matters if they were drawn to their attention. His colleague Jarlath Fitzsimons S.C. pointed out that the laying of mats and temporary fencing at a site did not constitute a development and EirGrid had clearly stated this. There would be no removal of gateposts at any location in the Republic, he added.

This section dealt with public and landowner consultation.

CMAPC VIEWS ON CONSULTATION

Allen McAdam, a representative of the County Monaghan Anti-Pylon Committee, said the public consultation process had been selectively used by EirGrid to produce the desired outcome. He said the project would bring no economic benefit to Monaghan. However EirGrid said it had carried out consultation that had been meaningful and accountable in accordance with international principles. It also acknowledged that lessons had been learned from feedback received regarding the proposed development. All comments had been brought back and used by the project team.

The social and economic development consultant from Carrickmacross said CMAPC had major concerns in relation to the methodology, approach and execution of the public consultation undertaken by EirGrid and its agents. In the absence of generic national guidelines on best practice in public consultation, the experience by consultees along the proposed line route of the methods used for this project varied from confusing to chaotic.

Mr McAdam is a former chief executive of Cavan/Monaghan LEADER with experience of public consultation processes. He is not one of the landowners directly affected by the construction of pylons but his house is 350m away from the nearest pylon.

He said the consultation process had failed from the outset to provide the general public with adequate visibility of the project. Almost eight years after the process came into the public domain, EirGrid representatives started contacting schools, community groups to try and infiltrate local communities and bribe them with ‘community gain’ money. Mr McAdam claimed this was an underhand approach and a serious interference in the planning process, which the committee understood was a semi-judicial process.

The marketing of mis-information about the project was executed very professionally, he claimed. When the regional action plan for jobs was published by the Department of Jobs Enteprise and Innovation, the interconnector project featured as a driver of job creation, without any evidence to suggest benefit. This was the type of spin consultees on the project had to deal with, he told the inquiry.

Mr McAdam continued: “Let us be clear: this project has no economic benefits to Co. Monaghan. This project can be compared to a motorway going through Monaghan with no roads on or off. No electricity can be put onto this line except in Tyrone or in Meath, as there is no substation in the area.”

“The time has come for the smoke and mirrors to be pushed aside. This line is being developed solely to supply electricity to Northern Ireland, plain and simple. When we talk of strategic infrastructure, of strategic importance to whom are we referring. The answer is quite simple our neighbours in Northern Ireland, not of strategic importance to the Republic of Ireland.”

“The question needs to be asked as to why are the needs of the people of Monaghan in terms of protecting their properties, they livelihoods, their countryside and their beautiful corner of rural Ireland being sold out to accommodate the needs of Northern Ireland, who through lack of foresight and proper future- and resilience-proofing of their electricity supply needs, find themselves in a position where they will run out of electricity in a few short years. I ask the question: are the views and needs of the residents of Northern Ireland more valued than the residents of County Monaghan?”

There was no evidence to suggest any meaningful feedback was collated and relayed to the people of Monaghan, he said. In a number of cases regarding the route access point for construction of pylons, the landowners were not approached or contacted by any means to inform them of the proposal contained in this planning application until a few short days prior to the lodging of this second EirGrid application.

Accountable consultation meant a project only moved forward once each phase had been appropriately dealt with. Obviously EirGrid thought it was appropriate to move from the final re-evaluation stage to the preferred project solution stage in just six weeks without taking into account the consultation that was held in Co. Monaghan.

Mr McAdam told the inspectors that in March 2015, EirGrid reviewed the line and moved eleven pylons in Monaghan without so much as a shred of public consultation or indeed consultation with the affected landowners. They were just issued new maps and in essence told to like it or lump it.

County Monaghan Anti Pylon Committee organised three consultation/information events in May 2013 in the local community centres of the affected areas (Cremartin, Aughnamullen and Corduff-Raferagh) in order to facilitate EirGrid. In excess of 600 people attended these events but yet again the genuine concerns presented to EirGrid were dismissed and relegated to an appendix in their final report which was published swiftly a few short weeks later.

A short one-page questionnaire was developed and made available for completion as attendees left the consultation after meeting EirGrid representatives. Of the 600 or so that attended, 460 questionnaires were completed.

Summary of key findings

  • 65% of respondents were local residents, 34% landowners directly affected and 1% public representatives.
  • 95% of respondents attended the consultation sessions to lodge an objection.
  • 99% of respondents indicated that they were not in favour of the project in its current format.
  • 53% felt that there questions were only partly answered by Eirgrid staff and 38% felt that their questioned were unanswered.
  • 58% went to the consultations with a specific question they wanted answered, 9% had their question answered, 53% had it partly answered and 38% not at all.

The numbers of landowners with property directly in the path of the line route who have participated in the consultation process has not been documented or acknowledged, nor has the large percentage that have expressed concerns or opposition to the project through their properties.

It is therefore factually correct to say that the results of the consultation process were skewed and interpreted in an unfair manner, with a pre determined result in mind, which is in keeping with the pre-planning consultation meeting for the first attempt at this application with An Bord Pleanala in July 2007.

To this day no detailed breakdown of the results of the consultation process with the general public has been published. The opinions and views of landowners, community organisations or the broader local community have not been published. The only information that has been published is correspondence from state agencies that are in support of the project. This selective publication has proven divisive and counter productive and does nothing to generate any confidence in the planning and consultation process.

In conclusion Mr McAdam said the Anti-Pylon Committee felt strongly that the consultation process had fallen far short of what should be required for a project of this magnitude. They accepted that levels of engagement did improve the second time around, however no credence was given to the views of the vast majority of those that did participate.

NEPPC EVIDENCE

Padraig O’Reilly of North East Pylon Pressure Campaign said there was a widely held view that the consultation process was a sham and a pretence. It was quite clear, he said, that EirGrid had pre-determined the type of application and the overhead nature of the line. From day one there were no plans to make any changes despite EirGrid’s rhetoric about consultation with landowners and members of the public.

Mr O’Reilly referred to the fact that the ballroom where the public hearing was taking place was quite empty on Wednesday compared to the previous hearing in 2010 when many objectors were present. He claimed this highlighted the lack of confidence and disillusionment among landowners in the way the process had gone over the last six years since EirGrid withdrew the previous application.

He added that the lack of public attendance was not a message that there was any reduction in resistance to the overhead lines proposal. It was still a very live issue and his group had held a number of very well attended public meetings in the past year to discuss their opposition. He told the inspectors there was no genuine plan by EirGrid to consult or to get information on landowners. The manner they had gone about it was unacceptable, he said.

He said a large number of landowners were totally unaware that EirGrid intended to use their land and property to get access to construct pylons on a neighbour’s lands. In addition, some of those landowners that were designated for having pylons erected on their property were unaware of plans by EirGrid to seek an access route that would go on a neighbour’s land.

The NEPPC representative quoted a letter from one landowner the group was representing at the hearing. He told them he had been totally unaware of what was being proposed for his property until they told him. EirGrid was planning to use his house entrance for an access route that would go through his property. He would be obliged to demolish a stables to allow access to his neighbour’s property.

The NEPPC representative pointed out that there had been no public or site notices about the proposed access routes for construction of the pylons. He claimed that in the current application the EirGrid submission had used a lot of the information that had been shared with them six years ago.

A company that had loads of resources should be doing its own job properly, he said. For that reason he was not in a position to give the company information about the problems of individual landowners on this occasion.

Mr O’Reilly claimed that photomontages submitted by EirGrid were not representative of the impact on the environment of the planned pylons. The photos rarely showed a house, he said. He compared three pictures provided by the Board with three of their own, which he said showed more clearly the effect of having a pylon close to a house

EIRGRID RESPONSE

Neasa Kane is a consultant with RPS Project Communications which has been advising EirGrid on handling the public consultation exercise. She said that the company had learned lessons since the last application. Consultation had been meaningful and accountable. The feedback received regarding the proposed development had been brought back and used by the project team.

She said the company had adopted multiple channels in reaching out to people to ensure there was an awareness of the project at all stages. These included the establishment of a low-cost phone line, publishing brochures, opening information centres including one in Carrickmacross, extensive media campaigns and additional events.

Regarding a claim by the NEPPC and CMAPC that some landowners affected by the construction of the pylons were not identified by Eirgrid, project engineer Shane Brennan said as they as far they were aware, all landowners were identified based on the most recent and up-to-date land registry information.

The presiding inspector accepted that Eirgrid were constrained by the land registry information, but said the issue would come up at a later point in the oral hearing.

SINN FÉIN REACTION

Sinn Féin MEP for the Midlands North West Matt Carthy attended the first day of the oral hearing along with Meath West TD Peadar Tóibín. Mr Carthy said: “The plan to construct 299 pylons at 26-51 metres height each through the counties of Monaghan, Cavan and Meath is fiercely opposed by the vast majority within our communities.”

He went on: “It is my firm belief that EirGrid have failed to understand the depth of local opposition to the construction of these pylons. Sinn Féin representatives have been working closely with all those groups and communities across Monaghan, Armagh, Cavan and Meath who have been campaigning on this issue since 2007 and it is clear that their determination is as resolute as ever. The concerns of local communities are very real; there are genuine concerns in relation to health, safety, the environment and economic development of the areas concerned.”

“The position of these communities is very clear – this project can only proceed if undergrounded. Sinn Féin supports this stance – the party has prepared a submission to an Bord Pleanála and my colleague Peadar Toibín prepared legislation on this issue during the last Dáil term. The fact is that EirGrid have been able to underground other projects on a similar scale such as Grid West and Grid Link and it has been confirmed that undergrounding is also possible in this case.”

“Indeed, many argue that in the medium to long term, undergrounding is economically beneficial. Of course, in order to address this issue in the comprehensive manner it requires there is an onus on the new government, when it is in place, to direct that all high voltage power line networks proceed only on the basis of undergrounding.”

INTERCONNECTOR DAY2

DAY TWO

This section dealt with the legal and statutory processes.  

Michael Fisher    Northern Standard

Esmond Keane SC for NEPPC told day two of the oral hearing in Carrickmacross that the North/South interconnector planning application by EirGrid was entirely invalid, fundamentally flawed and would be detrimental to landowners. He said EirGrid had not been given statutory power to construct the lines themselves and it was the ESB which had such power. So this was not a valid application from a person entitled to apply to carry out the development, he claimed.

The barrister said there was a possible conflict of interest in An Bord Pleanála deciding the planning application also being designated as the relevant authority in the Republic to manage an EU energy infrastructure Project of Common Interest. Referring to the environmental impact statement, Mr Keane said it failed to comply with what was required. There must be early and effective participation of the public in the consultation process. But this was utterly misconstrued by EirGrid. There had been no effective opportunity for the public to participate about how undergrounding of the power lines could be carried out.

Mr Keane said planning drawings showing proposed 400kV line pylons were utterly incomplete and inadequate. EirGrid said the towers ranged in height from 26m to 51m (80ft to 165ft). It was utterly inappropriate for members of the public not to be shown details of the insulators, conductors and points of connection for the towers in each area and how they related to their own homes. The drawings had failed utterly to give proper notice of what this development comprised of.

“One would have thought EirGrid on this occasion would have shown all the elements of the development and shown all elements of each tower at each location”, the barrister said. There was no idea from the drawings where a fibre optic cable mentioned in some of the documentation would go and if it would be strung between the pylons with the other wires.

Michael O’Donnell, a barrister representing Braccanby Irish Farm LLC and NV Irish Farm LLC in County Meath, told the hearing the entire basis of the planning application had been predicated on a fundamental error. It was not even clear who the applicant was because the construction work was purportedly to be carried out by the ESB, acting as an agent of EirGrid. He said the Planning Board was being put in an impossible position in deciding the application because it was also acting as the competent authority for a project of common interest.

EirGrid’s response was given by Brian Murray S.C. who confirmed that they were the applicants and all planning documentation stated this. So there could be no doubt who the applicant was. He explained that EirGrid exercised a close monitoring role regarding any construction carried out by the ESB on its behalf and such work was monitored by EirGrid engineers. EirGrid was the electricity system operator and was the proper applicant, he insisted. He said there was no legal inhibition on Bord Pleanála operating as a planning assessor and having a separate unit to consider PCIs.

EirGrid senior planning consultant Des Cox was asked by the NEPPC counsel Esmond Keane about arrangements for construction work around pylons and access routes. He explained that the temporary routes would not involve excavation or the laying of stones or wooden sleepers, but instead rubber mats or aluminium tracks would be laid on land required to gain access to pylon sites.

Asked if it would require the removal of hedges and the construction of entrances, Mr Cox replied that regarding hedges there would be a cutting down in some cases but not removal. Regarding a specific site near Kingscourt in County Cavan where the NEPPC claimed a new entrance would be needed, Mr Cox replied: “I do not know; I am not down at that level of detail”.

 

 

 

ORAL HEARING RE EIRGRID’S PLAN

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Northern Standard Thursday 28th January p.1

The EirGrid application for a second North/South electricity interconnector using a high voltage 400kV overhead power line with over 400 pylons from Meath through Cavan and Monaghan to Armagh and Tyrone is to go to an oral hearing in early March. Two senior inspectors have been appointed by An Bord Pleanala to hear submissions concerning the chosen route in the Republic. Planning authorities in Northern Ireland have still to announce whether a hearing will take place in NI. The County Monaghan Anti-Pylon committee is one of the groups that will be represented at the hearing, due to commence before Easter. It has asked An Bord Pleanala for an extension of one week to February 11th to submit its reply concerning the agenda and organisation of the oral hearing, in order to comply with the Board’s suggestions about how the hearing should proceed. The Board says the hearing could last twelve weeks

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EirGrid CEO Fintan Slye  Photo: Michael Fisher 

ORAL HEARING IN MARCH ON INTERCONNECTOR

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Electricity Pylons beside a SONI/NIE sub-station in County Antrim  Photo: Michael Fisher

The controversial plan by EirGrid for a North/South high voltage 400 kV electricity interconnector with overhead lines on 400 pylons from Meath to Tyrone is to be the subject of an oral hearing by two inspectors from An Bord Pleanála in early March.

Fianna Fáil Senator Thomas Byrne confirmed that the Board is set to begin public hearing sessions from next March. The hearing is likely to be held over a twelve weeks period in Carrickmacross, where a previous oral hearing took place in May 2010.

Senator Byrne is one of a number of public representatives who are  strongly opposed to the project. He says he will be making a submission to the hearing to outline the serious concerns that residents in Meath have regarding the proposals.

“I’ve long held the view that this project is unworkable. There needs to be community consensus for the project and a far greater emphasis needs to be placed on upgrading existing infrastructure alongside ensuring that the new transmission line is placed underground,” said Senator Byrne.

“People in Meath feel that their concerns have not been taken on board by those pushing this project. They are not being treated equally as the development of new transmission lines in other parts of the country are proceeding with the lines being placed underground. However Meath residents are being told that the North South Interconnector has to be developed over ground. It’s unacceptable.

“Meath residents now have their chance to make their voices heard in relation to these proposals. I’ve been informed by An Bord Pleanála that the public hearing for the project will begin in March. I’ll be making a strong submission outlining why I think the proposals have to be cast aside. I encourage others with similar concerns to make a submission during the public hearings.

“In Fianna Fáil’s energy policy launched this year, we outlined that grid development such as planned under the North South Interconnector should be subject to a full economic review in light of our reduced energy needs. Fianna Fáil maintains that undergrounding the North – South Connector is the most preferential route along with upgrading existing infrastructure and this will form a key part of my submission,” concluded Senator Byrne.

Nigel Hillis of the County Monaghan anti-pylon committee said the fact the oral hearing is to take place has to be welcomed. He said a number of parties would be making a formal oral submission at the hearing. Formal notice of the hearing, including the agenda and the details of venue will be sent to all parties approximately two weeks in advance of the announcement.

In a letter to the 900 interested parties including individuals who made submissions (with a fee of €50) to the planning application submitted by EirGrid in June last year, An Bord Pleanála said that owing to the scale and complexity of the case, and the large number of written submissions received, parties are requested to indicate their intention to make a formal oral submission at the hearing, before 5.30pm on February the 4th.

Eirgrid Statement 

“We welcome An Bord Pleanála’s decision to convene an oral hearing and note that it is likely to commence in early March. Each aspect of this process is managed by An Bord Pleanála. We await further detail from An Board Pleanála with regard to the upcoming oral hearing. Our offices in Carrickmacross, Cootehill and Navan will continue to be open in the coming weeks for anyone who has queries about our application.”

EirGrid’s plans to build the overhead 400kV power line from Woodland in County Meath through parts of Cavan, Monaghan and Armagh to Turleenan near Dungannon in County Tyrone were lodged in June 2015. Observations had to be lodged with the planning authority in Dublin by 5.30pm on Monday 24th August. Over 900 submissions were received and because groups of people got together to lodge a single submission, the names of over 1500 were submitted, most of them opposing the plan and calling for it to be put underground.

Monaghan County Council was one of the prescribed bodies notified of the application.The planning department made a submission to the Board including comments made about the project by Councillors at a meeting. Cavan County Council and Meath County Council were also notified and the Cathaoirligh of each of the three councils including Councillor Noel Keelan of Monaghan have joined together to oppose the plans.

The Minister for Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht Heather Humphreys T.D. was notified along with her Cabinet colleague, the Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources Alex White T.D. The Environmental Protection Agency, National Roads Authority, An Chomhairle Ealaíon, Fáilte Ireland, An Taisce, The Heritage Council, Irish Aviation Authority, Údarás na Gaeltachta, Health Service Executive, Commission for Energy Regulation, Inland Fisheries Ireland, Iarnród Éireann, Railway Safety Commission, Northern and Western Regional Assembly, Eastern and Midlands Regional Assembly and Irish Water were informed of EirGrid’s plans and given the opportunity to make submissions. Additional notifications were made to Birdwatch Ireland, Irish Peatland Conservation Council, and the North’s Environment Department.

According to the Bord Pleanála website, submissions were received initially from Dominic Halligan T.D. (Meath East, Labour), members of Meath County Council; Michael Halpin; Meath Farm Machinery, Navan; Sean Byrne; Cyril Darcy and family, Robinstown, Kells, Co. Meath; Noel Meade; Eugene Connolly; Fred Smyth; Navan Municipal District Councillors of Meath County Council; Scoil Bláithín Íosa, Ballynagearn N.S., Magheracloone and separately, All Saints National School Doohamlet and Doohamlet Childcare Ltd.; Patricia and Coleman Ryan; Hugh and Bernadette Duffy; Eamonn McNally; Irish Water; Kingscourt Stars GAA Club; Philip Smith; Michael Coleman; Fr Brendan Madden; Meath Cllr Ronan McKenna, Trim (FF); Meath Cllr Damien O’Reilly, Ratoath (FF); Meath Cllr Claire O’Driscoll, Ashbourne (FF); Brendan Doyle and Barbara Doyle; Eastern and Midland Regional Assembly; North and Western Regional Assembly; David Murray; Eugene and Rosemary Cunningham Corlea, Kingscourt; Meath Co Cllr Shane Cassells, Navan (FF).

The North East Pylon Pressure Campaign said it would continue to provide support to all individuals, groups  and organisations willing to make a submission and has been working closely with 97% of landowners who are in complete opposition to the planning application and who favour undergrounding.

When EirGrid made its submission in June to An Bord Pleanála, it contained detailed plans to erect over 400 giant pylons along the route of the interconnector. NEPPC says communities across the North-East are being discriminated against by Eirgrid and by the government because there is no underground option under consideration, unlike the Grid West and Grid Link projects. It says Eirgrid has changed nothing of any material relevance since 2007, when the project was first announced..

The grid operator for its part says an additional high capacity North-South interconnector will provide multiple technical and other benefits.  These include improving competition by reducing the constraints that are currently restricting the efficient performance of the all-island Single Electricity Market; improving security of supply and supporting the development of renewable power generation by enhancing the flexible exchange of power flows over a large area of the island. It says these benefits will accrue to all electricity consumers on the island of Ireland.

EirGrid has stated that the proposed interconnector will also provide sufficient additional transmission capacity in the North East area of Ireland to cater for growth in electricity consumption for many years and will also put the area in a good position if an even stronger economic recovery should emerge in the coming years.

The new interconnector will increase the capacity, and the reliability, of interconnection between the two networks. This will allow the two independent networks to operate together as if they were one system for the mutual benefit of residents and businesses in both jurisdictions.The increase in interconnection capacity will effectively eliminate current restrictions in cross border support in the event of a shortage of electricity in one jurisdiction, thus enhancing the security of electricity supply throughout the island of Ireland.

Operating the two networks as if they were one system will bring cost savings for all electricity consumers as larger electricity systems can be operated more efficiently than smaller ones. The increase in interconnection capacity will also facilitate further and greater connection of wind generation in both parts of the island which will help achieve Ireland’s renewable energy targets.

EirGrid’s counterpart in the North, SONI, also believes that the new link is vital to ensure the effective operation of an efficient all-island electricity market, to support the realisation of strategic renewable energy targets and to exert downward pressure on electricity prices for customers in Northern Ireland. It will allow the all-island wholesale electricity market to work more efficiently, enabling wider competition between power generators and electricity suppliers throughout the island, and therefore ensuring that future electricity prices will be as competitive as possible. It will enable more renewable generator capacity (mostly wind generation) to be connected to the electricity network. The governments in both jurisdictions have set challenging targets for the amount of electricity to be generated from renewable sources, 40% by 2020, and these targets cannot be met without additional interconnection.

2015 REVIEW

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How I reported the closure of the Bose factory in January in The Northern Standard Photo: © Michael Fisher

Northern Standard  Thursday 7th January 2016

Michael Fisher looks back on some of the main stories of 2015:

BOSE CLOSURE

It was the first major story I wrote for the Northern Standard when I began covering the Carrickmacross area on a temporary basis a year ago. The news came out of the blue, creating shockwaves in Carrick that are still being felt.

In a statement of 290 words issued by a public relations company in Dublin, Bose Ltd. announced it was closing its County Monaghan facility with the loss of 140 jobs. It was probably just a coincidence that the news was released on a Thursday afternoon, the day on which this weekly newspaper is published. So the coverage had to wait until the following week. But this was a decision that had been taken some time beforehand at the company’s headquarters in the United States, where a plant in South Carolina was also being shut down.

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Workers at the BOSE factory in Carrickmacross react to news of the plant’s closure Photo:  Michael Fisher

What offended the workers most was the way the news was relayed to them. They were called into the canteen at 4pm that black Thursday (22nd January 2015) and by video link were addressed by the company President. They thought it was going to be part of the usual quarterly update on company performance. Instead they were being told they would be made redundant in April.

After lobbying by union representatives and local politicians, the date for the shutdown was postponed until the end of May, in the hope that some workers might be able to find alternative employment. Some like Pat McNally had been with the company since it was established by Dr Amar Bose in July 1978. The plant provided final assembly for select home cinema systems and Wave radios for the European market, and some remanufacturing for the region.

Councillors pressed the IDA to find an alternative employer but so far no replacement has been found, although some clients have viewed the premises. In the aftermath of the closure it was discovered that the factory premises was now owned by a private group, following new arrangements regarding IDA leases.

The last day at Bose (May 29th) was sad for all concerned. The workers came in small groups to collect their redundancy payments. The car park gates were locked and a few days later, the plant and machinery inside the building were put up for auction, bringing to an end a 37-year history of production at the site.

As they left the plant, the workers again pointed out that this had been a profitable operation for Bose, and their Irish base in Europe had never been affected by industrial disputes. They said they had always shown their loyalty to the company and had generally been treated well by their employer, until the founder of the company Dr Amar Bose had died two years ago.

In the words of the Carrickmacross-based Sinn Féin MEP Matt Carthy, the closure of the plant was devastating for the local economy and community who felt they had been let down by the government. It was the end of an era and a huge blow forthe whole of South Monaghan and beyond.

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Minister for Arts, Heritage & Gaeltacht Heather Humphreys T.D. congratulates Frances Treanor on her winning self-portrait Photo: Michael Fisher

TEXACO ART WINNER

In April an art student from County Monaghan won the overall prize in the Texaco Children’s Art competition. A great achievement by my neighbour, Frances Treanor from Drumdart, Tydavnet. The 18 year-old was rewarded with a trip to Tokyo to represent Ireland in an international art exhibition, along with a cheque for €1500. Her self-portrait drawing done in black ballpoint pen was part of the 16th International High School Arts Festival along with some other Texaco award winners. Back at her home in Tydavnet she told me about her experiences in Japan, a country she said she would return to if she got a chance.

Her five days there introduced her to Japanese food such as tempura (fish and rice) for which chopsticks were used. She was served dishes of sushi and sukiakki and also got time to do some sightseeing. This included areas such as Harajuku, the Meiji shrine and Takeshita-dori street. Frances also visited a rural area a few hours outside Tokyo and saw a red panda being fed in the zoo. She noticed that the streets were very clean, as well as being busy and hectic. Everyone was carrying an umbrella, Frances told me, and there were special holders at the entrance to the museum where visitors could leave them.

The winning self portrait was completed by her in two weeks and was described by the chair of the judging panel, Professor Declan McGonagle, as having been executed “with the skill and delicacy of a master”. The talented Frances had featured among the prizewinners in 2012 when she won second place in her age category for her work “Lighting Up the Imagination”. She is one of seven children and is studying art at the National College of Art and Design in Dublin, alongside her twin sister Maeve.

Frances was keen to thank her former art teachers at St Louis Secondary School in Monaghan, Teresa Mahony and Stephen Penders, who she said had always encouraged and developed her talent.

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Electricity pylons beside SONI/NIE sub-station in Co. Antrim  Photo: Michael Fisher  

EIRGRID PLANS FOR INTERCONNECTOR

EirGrid has begun a fresh attempt to get permission for a second North/South electricity interconnector. It would involve the erection of over 400 pylons carrying a 400 kV high voltage cable across five counties from Meath to Tyrone, including Monaghan. There has been strong opposition to the plan, with over 900 submissions to An Bord Pleanála since the new planning application was submitted in June. The Board is expected to make a decision later this year on whether to hold another public enquiry into the plan. More details of the EirGrid response to the submissions and objections can be found on p.14 and the Northern Standard will continue to report on this controversial issue in the coming months.