Government ‘asleep at the wheel’ while taxpayer money helps cuckoo funds

Government ‘asleep at the wheel’ while taxpayer money helps cuckoo funds

– Matt Carthy TD

 

Cavan Monaghan Sinn Féin TD, Matt Carthy, has railed against government investment in cuckoo funds which have been revealed to be using taxpayer money to assist with purchasing large numbers of housing units.

 

Deputy Carthy said:

 

“It is bad enough that the Government appears to be blind to the solutions but we now know that it is an active contributor to the dysfunction in our housing system.

 

“Since 2016, house prices have risen by 30% and rents have increased by 44%.  The cost of a home in the first quarter of this year was 7.6% higher than in the same period last year.

 

“Behind every one of these increases in rent or house prices are ordinary families and workers struggling to get themselves into a home or to retain their homes.  Repeatedly, Government solutions are more of the same.  It is handouts, freebies and tax breaks but these are for the corporate landlords, the speculators and the vultures.

 

“We heard in here only last week speaker after speaker from the Government side feigning anguish and crying crocodile tears at the very thought that investment funds could be purchasing large swathes of family homes.

 

“It turns out that the Government, the same parties, were actually investing in those very investment funds.

 

“We need an increase in the delivery of social and affordable housing to deliver homes for those who need them and to reduce the pressure that is pushing up rents and house prices.

 

“Every single week Deputy Ó Broin and Sinn Féin bring forward the proposals that will do exactly that and every single week Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael and the Green Party TDs vote them down in the hope and blind aspiration that Darragh O’Brien’s policies, which are a repeat of the Fine Gael policies before him, will somehow deliver different results.

 

“We are calling for a doubling of the direct investment in public housing to €2.8 billion per year at the very least because that is what is needed. That is what Sinn Fein’s proposals will bring.

 

“This is another opportunity this week for Government Deputies. Do they stand for change and for delivering housing for those young people about whom they speak so eloquently or do they want to continue with the repeatedly failed policies that have not secured the homes that our young people deserve?”

 

Following the debate, Carthy commented:

 

“Week by week we are learning more about the role of these investment funds role in our ongoing housing crisis. It now appears that smaller funds are looking to the secondhand market, and there are also worrying reports in relation to agricultural land.

 

“It beggars’ belief that government seem not only entirely disinterested, but are actually bankrolling this fire-sale of nearly every type of property in this state.”

ENDS

Carthy warns ‘farm holdings will be lost’ if solution is not found to Fair Deal scheme

Carthy warns ‘farm holdings will be lost’ if solution is not found to Fair Deal scheme

 

Sinn Féin spokesperson on Agriculture Matt Carthy TD has welcomed the Nursing Homes Support Scheme (Amendment) Bill 2021 passing second stage in the Dáil, but remarked that in being ‘bittersweet for many, it represented only a resolution of a sort,’ and called on all parties to work to see if a solution could be reached for those the current Bill failed to deliver for.

 

The Bill will see contributions towards the cost of nursing home care based on the value of farms capped at 7.5% for 3-years but does not contain a mechanism of redress for any farmers who have paid above this up until now.

 

Teachta Carthy said:

 

“This Bill is a resolution of sorts to what has been fundamental unfairness in the so-called fair deal scheme, that has affected farming families in particular.

 

“In capping the contributions at three years as they relate to family farms, the scheme now essentially reflects the reality that in many cases, family farms are extensions of the family homes rather than a speculative asset that is hoarded or treated as a business or other type of asset.  That is most important.

 

“My fundamental regret is that the people who have highlighted this anomaly and campaigned for changes in the legislation will not get the benefit of it.  Those people who have been in nursing home care for more than three years will not receive a rebate.

 

“I appeal to all parties to work together and explore every avenue with a view to finding a legal basis by which the issue can be resolved so that those people can get their payments back.

 

“Undoubtedly, if that is not the case, farm holdings will be lost to families who simply do have the resources to pay the nursing home care bill.

 

“While the resolution makes the fair deal scheme fairer, it still does not make it entirely fair.

 

“In bringing this Bill to Committee Stage, I urge all parties to reflect on the stories that we have heard from our constituencies and ensure that we do not repeat the mistakes of the past.”

ENDS

 

RTÉ risk ‘integrity and reputation’ if they fail to reveal Revenue settlement

RTÉ risk ‘integrity and reputation’ if they fail to reveal Revenue settlement – Matt Carthy TD

 

Sinn Féin member of the Public Accounts Committee Matt Carthy TD has told the Committee that RTÉ has an obligation to publish how much it has paid the Revenue Commissioners if it is ‘to maintain its integrity, reputation and ability to investigate and challenge others.’

 

It was revealed at the Committee last month that RTÉ had made an ‘initial payment’ to the Revenue Commissioners on the foot of the Eversheds Sutherland report which found a number of contractors at RTÉ had attributes ‘akin to employment.’

 

When questioned as to the amount paid at that hearing, Carthy described the response of RTÉ that the information was ‘not to hand’ as ‘unfortunate.’

 

Upon reviewing supplementary written answers provided by RTÉ at the Committee today, Teachta Carthy said:

 

“RTÉ have made what we know to be an initial payment to the Revenue Commissioners as a result of their own questionable employment practices.

 

“They now maintain that per the terms of their voluntary qualifying disclosure, the amount has not been made publicly available.

 

“They go on to reference an ongoing process with the Revenue, and well as a parallel audit by the Department of Social Protection.

 

“Revealing the amount that has already been paid would in no way impede ongoing matters.

 

“Anyone who is familiar with these types of settlements will be aware that there is nothing to prevent RTÉ in making a voluntary disclosure to the public as to what they have already paid.

 

“RTÉ is a semi-state in that they are largely funded by what is effectively a compulsory charge on households.

 

“They are unique in that they are charged with investigating issues of public interest through their news and current affairs output.

 

“It is therefore imperative that they employ full transparency in these areas – their approach to the Public Accounts Committee to date has been disappointing and worrying.

 

“RTÉ are currently running a campaign titled ‘Truth Matters.’  Members of the Oireachtas Committee on Public Accounts would welcome if RTÉ delivered on this principle – they can start be revealing how much they’ve paid to the Revenue Commissioners.”

ENDS

 

Action needed on dental services crisis

Action needed on dental services crisis – Matt Carthy TD

 

Cavan Monaghan Sinn Féin TD, Matt Carthy, has expressed concern that the Covid-19 pandemic has resulted in near collapse of an already ailing dental service provision.

 

Deputy Carthy has said that he has been contacted by dentists who are withdrawing from the scheme in record number, themselves expressing concerns as waiting lists for dental and orthodontic treatment soar.

 

He said:

 

“Dental services in the state are at crisis point, with more than 33% of dentists leaving the medical card dental scheme in the last five years.

 

“The Dental Services Scheme had 1,847 dentists signed up in 2015, but now there are just 1,247.

 

“The fall in dental care expenditure from a peak of €60 million to just over €40 million exemplifies the crisis.

 

“In particular, I am concerned at the growing waiting lists for school-aged children.  Without a clear action plan to clear the backlog built up in the last year, we stand the risk of this becoming a permanent fixture.

 

“Lower-income groups, especially those who depend on medical cards, bear a disproportionate share of the burden.  Delayed treatment is care withheld, and over time this results in net greater cost to the exchequer.

 

“In the short term, the Minister of Health must address issues with the DTSS system while pushing forward with a new scheme that prioritises prevention and access to care.

 

“We will need a substantial increase in public dental capability, with more dentists and orthodontists working for the government.

 

“If we want to improve treatment and shorten wait times, we need to change from the ground up.

 

“Over the past year I have dealt with a number dentists incredibly concerned as to promises not being delivered when it came to matters such as the provision of PPE.

 

“Dentists, as front-line medical professionals have been the fore for the last year, and the Department must go some way towards repaying the good will it has squandered with them”.

ENDS

Carthy calls for end to EU militarisation agenda during Dáil ‘Europe Day’ debate

Carthy calls for end to EU militarisation agenda during Dáil ‘Europe Day’ debate

 

Cavan Monaghan TD, Matt Carthy, has warned against the intensification of an EU militarisation agenda that see billions of euro in public funding used to subsidise the arms industry.  Carthy, who is a former member of the European Parliament, was speaking during a Dáil debate to mark ‘Europe day’ last week.

 

Highlighting the disconnect between citizens and EU institutions in Brussels, Carthy warned that investment in the arms industry at the cost of investment in communities risked undermining support for the European Union..

 

Teachta Carthy told the Dáil:

 

“My experiences of Europe Day have been a bit strange.  Before I was an MEP, I did not even know that such a day existed.

 

“When I was in the European Parliament, I often found it bizarre that European institutions treated the day as if it was being marked on every street corner and in every community centre in each member state.  MEPs would gather in Strasbourg where the EU flag was flown everywhere, including a massive one unfurled at the centre of the Hemicycle; Beethoven’s Ode to Joy, which somebody decided was the EU’s anthem, would blare out across the sound system before speakers from each institution would rise and decry nationalism.

 

“It was a surreal experience that was far removed from the reality of the citizens across member states who, on that day, were simply getting on with their lives.  Many were struggling and I suspect, like the pre-MEP me, the majority were unaware that it was a day that the great and good expected them to mark.  That experience was a good reflection of the European institutions which all too often are far removed from the communities, workers and families affected by their decisions.

 

“The European Union has delivered much that should be celebrated. It has established universal rights and embedded peace among its members.  The Common Agricultural Policy, CAP, has created an open market that has sustained many farming communities in Ireland and across Europe.

 

“The cohesion policy has diverted infrastructure resources to regions that were long neglected by national governments.  The role the EU played in supporting the Irish peace process is something we are all grateful for.

 

“The people of Ireland want to be part of the European Union. We saw that most recently in the Six Counties when a majority voted to remain part of the European Union against a Brexiteer agenda that was led by the right and the Tories in Britain.

 

“But, in recognising the Irish people’s wish to be part of the European Union, it is important to also recognise some of the deeply worrying flaws and moves the European Union is currently taking.  Just last week, Members of the European Parliament voted to endorse €7.9 billion as part of the next multi-annual financial framework, MFF, going towards a so-called European defence fund.  In reality, that fund is a massive subsidy taken from the peoples of Europe to go to the European arms industry.  I am not sure any ordinary citizen in Europe believes that is the correct way to spend money.

 

“At the end of the next MFF, we in this country will contribute an additional €1 billion per annum to the European Union budget but we will get less back in the most important EU programmes, those that made the Union popular in the first place.

 

“There will be less money coming back to Ireland in the Common Agricultural Policy and very little money coming back in cohesion funding.  Instead, every single line in the EU budget is facilitating and creating the wherewithal for the EU arms industry to draw down even more money than the €7.9 billion allocation.  Some estimates suggest upwards of €15 billion from the next seven-year financial programme could end up in the hands of that industry.  That is not the Europe that Irish people want.

 

Palestine

 

“The days in which the EU can celebrate itself as a peace process will be numbered unless the European Union at every level, including our Government, takes a stand on behalf of the people of Palestine.  The state of Israel, which is recognised as an apartheid, rogue state that is trampling on the human rights and lives of the Palestinian people, is considered a favoured nation by the EU. That needs to change.

 

“Today is a day for reflecting on the positives but it must also be a day on which we collectively determine that we will create a better and fairer EU and that Ireland will ensure that the EU delivers for citizens rather than corporations and arms companies.”

ENDS

Sinn Féin will seek changes to Climate Bill to protect rural communities and the vulnerable

Sinn Féin will seek changes to Climate Bill to protect rural communities and the vulnerable – Matt Carthy TD

 

Sinn Féin spokesperson on Agriculture, Matt Carthy TD has said that his party will propose amendments to the Climate Action and Low Carbon Development Bill 2021 in order to ensure that protections are in place for rural communities and vulnerable workers and families.

 

He was speaking as the Bill moved from Second to Committee Stage in Dáil.

 

Teachta Carthy said:

 

“The climate crisis is real and a legal framework to address it is absolutely needed.

 

“Meeting these objectives will require buy-in from all sectors of society.  Climate action must mean more than increased taxes & charges and job losses in real terms for real people.

 

“The approach of government to-date has left the burden of Climate action on rural communities, ordinary workers, families and farmers.  There is a need to re-shift the focus onto the corporate polluters that caused the climate crisis.

 

“Sinn Féin will bring forward amendments aimed at ensuring that all carbon budgets are accompanied by social, economic, and rural impact assessments and an obligation on government to take action to mitigate any negative consequences.

 

“In order to protect farmers, we will seek agreement that will ensure that no future measure adopted at a domestic level actually results in a net increase in global emissions.   There is no point in reducing production of sustainable Irish food if the alternative leads to the importation of less sustainable product.

 

“There is a serious lack of trust that Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael or the Green Party will deliver for either the environment or rural communities.

 

“We need to move beyond the rhetoric of a Just Transition to spelling out what that means in real terms.  That will be the objective of Sinn Féin amendments to this bill.  I hope that government and other parties will engage with us constructively in this regard”.

ENDS

Public will reject any attempt to reintroduce water charges or other stealth taxes

Public will reject any attempt to reintroduce water charges or other stealth taxes

– Matt Carthy TD

 

Sinn Féin TD Matt Carthy has warned that any attempts by government to introduce water charges or similarly regressive taxation measures will be roundly rejected once again by Irish communities.

 

Carthy was speaking in response to the publication of an OECD report on Ireland that made recommendations varying from re-visiting water charges and introducing congestion charges, to removing VAT exemptions on farming products.

 

Teachta Carthy said:

 

“Attempts to equate climate action with stealth taxes on ordinary workers and families are becoming all too common.

 

“We know that the instinct of government parties in wholly in line with the proposals in this OECD report.  But any attempt on their part to penalise households with stealth taxes or water charges will again meet huge resistance from communities across the country.

 

“Many people will be concerned by this report precisely because the approach to climate action has, in all too many cases, simply meant additional charges on families that are already struggling.  Just over a week ago the latest increase in carbon tax took affect – further penalising families, businesses, farmers and motorists who have no alternatives.

 

“The OECD report also proposes increases in the costs of farming products which would ensure that farms that are already stretched to the limit will be forced of the land and ensuring that sustainable Irish product is replaced by intensive produce from the other side of the globe.

 

“None of this will deliver for the environment.  For too long Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, the Green Party, the Labour party and others have believed they can tax their way out of the climate crisis.  They can’t.  The Irish people are at their limits.

 

“It’s time for real climate action that tackles corporate polluters; not tokenistic measures that punish ordinary families, workers, businesses and farmers”.

ENDS

Carthy discusses role of farmers in tackling Climate Change with An Taisce

Carthy discusses role of farmers in tackling Climate Change with An Taisce

 

Sinn Féin Agriculture Spokesperson, Matt Carthy, engaged with the Environmental organisation An Taisce in the Oireachtas last week on the role of farming in tackling Climate Change on a global level.

 

During a meeting of the Oireachtas Agriculture committee, Deputy Carthy told the An Taisce representatives that no country that had higher agricultural standards than Ireland.

 

An Taisce were before the Committee to discuss the development of the Climate Action Plan.  The Sinn Féin Deputy has repeatedly said that the proposition of reducing Irish product for less sustainable imports is non-sensical and hypocritical.

 

The exchange went as follows:

 

Deputy Matt Carthy:

“Can Mr. Lumley name the countries that enforce higher agricultural standards than Ireland?”

 

Mr. Ian Lumley:

“Yes. I can refer to the report of the European Court of Auditors published in May 2020 which took an overview of Europe.  It was not good news.  It shows a number of countries, including Poland, Germany and Ireland—–”

 

Matt Carthy:

“We take it that the standards Irish farmers are expected to adhere to are set at EU level.  What countries have higher agricultural standards for their farmers than Ireland?”

 

Ian Lumley:

“When we look at standards, we need to look at outcomes.  Overall, Europe is really not doing well on outcomes.  One must look at different outcomes in different countries. Some countries will be doing better on climate and others on biodiversity.”

 

Matt Carthy:

“Can Mr. Lumley name countries that have higher standards in terms of environmental obligations for their farmers than Ireland?”

 

Ian Lumley:

“Europe has standards. The difficulty is that Europe has set an ammonia emissions ceiling threshold but that has been breached in Ireland since 2016.”

 

Matt Carthy:

“Can Mr. Lumley name the countries that have higher agricultural standards for their farmers than Ireland?”

 

Ian Lumley:

“Could I ask my colleague to come in on this?”

 

Mr. Ruaidhrí O’Boyle:

“Hopefully, I will be able to give some sort of answer.  A few years ago, the Dutch Government insisted that there would be a reduction in its bovine number because of the fact it was exceeding its emissions targets at that point.”

 

Matt Carthy:

“I am sorry for interrupting.  There may be different levels of production.  However, the question I am asking is about the standards to which farmers are expected to adhere.  In what countries are those standards higher than in Ireland?”

 

Ruaidhrí O’Boyle:

“I do not understand. What does the Deputy mean by standards?”

 

Matt Carthy:

“The rules under which they are obliged to farm.”

 

Ruaidhrí O’Boyle:

“We are all obliged under European law because we have the same targets. The difference in Ireland is that we have not insisted that those targets be met.”

 

Matt Carthy:

“That point is a debatable. I take it that the highest standards in place anywhere internationally for farmers to adhere to are in Ireland. The enforcement of those standards may be a separate point.

 

“I want to go back to the point on carbon leakage. Earlier, it was argued that if we reduce beef and dairy production in Ireland, it would be met somewhere else. An Taisce said that this is being rebuffed by the Farm to Fork strategy, which states that we cannot make a change unless we take the rest of the world with us. In its response to the climate Bill, An Taisce stated that references to carbon leakage should be removed entirely because such leakage would need to be resolved at EU level.

 

“Am I to take it that An Taisce’s argument is that we need to reduce our suckler herd because we are going to take the rest of the world with us when it comes to environmental standards but we cannot address carbon leakage because that would require action at EU level?”

 

Ruaidhrí O’Boyle:

“Taking the world with us is us taking a lead and setting an example for the world. In terms of carbon leakage, the principle is that we should not cut our agricultural emissions because to do so would cause increased emissions somewhere else.  If that is an accepted idea, it will be for the Oireachtas to decide what other sectors should increase their emissions reductions this decade in order to meet the targets in the climate Bill.  Polluting Irish waterways on the basis that someone else might do it if we do not do it is not a road we should go down.”

 

Matt Carthy:

“This committee is agreed that we should protect our waterways and go to significant lengths in order to do so.

 

“Many in the beef sector will have been concerned by what happened with the horticultural peat sector.  From Mr. Lumley’s stated position, is it the case that An Taisce thinks it is okay to import horticultural peat in order to facilitate the likes of the mushroom sector and others?

 

“Is An Taisce suggesting that those sectors should essentially be wound up and that we should just lose the mushroom sector because we cannot produce horticultural peat?”

 

Ian Lumley:

“Ten years ago, the EPA published an important report, Bogland, on the need to ensure that the continued loss of biodiversity and carbon from the peatlands through power generation, domestic burning and horticulture needed an exit strategy.  Bord na Móna adopted one for 2030 that was subject to legal actions.  Now Bord na Móna has adopted a more immediate exit strategy which is supported under the just transition initiative. The horticultural peat industry, over the past decade, has deliberately resisted regulation and legal enforcement of—–”

 

Matt Carthy:

“I want to bring our guests back to the original question.  What is the solution, in the here and now, for the mushroom sector, for example?  As I see it, if we cannot extract horticultural peat in Ireland, the two options that are available to us are to import peat or export the mushroom sector.  Which one of these options should we choose?”

 

Ian Lumley:

“The Deputy will be pleased to hear about what is happening today.  The Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage has set up a working group, which is mainly composed of industry representatives, including representatives of the mushroom industry and the IFA.  The working group has a chair with a background in public research. As we speak, it is preparing a report to the Minister on dealing with the immediate issue, as recognised, that we need to protect Irish horticulture.”

 

Matt Carthy:

“I asked for An Taisce’s position. I take from Mr. Lumley’s answer that he will not set out its position. I have one final question and I will be as brief as possible.”

 

Ian Lumley:

“We have endorsed that document. We need to take action.”

 

Matt Carthy:

“An Taisce’s opening statement is comprehensive.  I note that the concept of a just transition is mentioned just once, on the second last page.  I have seen a number of An Taisce’s other submissions in which just transition is not mentioned at all.

 

“For An Taisce, the National Trust for Ireland, where does the maintenance and development of rural communities fit into its objectives?  Where should they feature in the objectives of this committee as we prepare a response to the climate action Bill?  In its submissions to various Departments, what documents has An Taisce produced aimed at promoting development and enhancing rural communities as they exist in Ireland?”

 

Ian Lumley:

“I am pleased to say that this is something on which we are at one with Deputy Carthy and other rural public representatives.  That is a major part of the consensus document produced by 72 coalition organisations that was published last week and circulated to the committee.  That document, in its second half in particular, sets out constructive recommendations on public health, sustainable contribution, meaningful food and nutrition security, and the need for a dialogue and participation structure. We have a good precedent with the Citizens’ Assembly and the major input that had to advancing consideration of climate action in Ireland. We welcome the potential for similar dialogue.

 

“If Deputy Carthy closely reads a number of sections of this document, which we have endorsed and circulated to the committee, he will see constructive recommendations for the future of rural Ireland, including recommendations that are applicable to his area. We had a much more complex and diversified food and land use system in the past. Across the Border, we produced apples in Armagh and there was a great flax growing area in Ulster, as well as around Dublin. We produced grain and more fruit and vegetables than we do now. We have an opportunity to diversify and that has the potential to be of enormous benefit to rural communities. The farm to fork strategy, the European biodiversity targets and consumer trends such as the increasing interest in organic goods offer enormous potential for areas such as the Border countries. We are already actively involved, through the landholding which we have been bequeathed, in advancing high-nature value farming with local communities. Outside of this committee, I would welcome the opportunity to engage with the Deputy on issues to do with his local area.”

ENDS

“Housing crisis is not an accident”

“Housing crisis is not an accident” – Matt Carthy TD

 

Cavan Monaghan Sinn Féin TD Matt Carthy described the ongoing housing crisis as the result of government policy pursued by Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael.  Deputy Carthy was speaking during a debate on a Sinn Féin Private Members Motion tabled to address issues facing renters.

 

The Motion proposed to implement a three-year ban on rent increases, return a months rent through a refundable tax credit and address sub-standard accommodation.

 

Deputy Carthy told the Dáil:

 

“The housing market in this State is dysfunctional.  That is not an accident.

 

“The outworking of this dysfunction is that the majority of renters do not want to be renters. Most want to purchase their own home and others need the security and fair rent that a council house brings.

 

“The motion that Sinn brought before the Dáil calls for a break for those who are renting, a three-year ban on rent increases, the cost of a month’s rent to be returned to renters, and for adequate standards for rental properties to be enforced.

 

“Let the record show that Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael and Green Party TDs intend to vote against these proposals.

 

“Their response to the housing crisis is to offer more of the same with new fancy packaging. They have offered a shared equity scheme that everybody who has examined it objectively says will increase the cost of homes.  They propose an affordable housing scheme that includes as ‘affordable’ properties that cost €450,000.

 

“There is a continued expenditure of billions of euro on subsidies to private landlords and ongoing scandalous tax avoidance measures for vulture funds and other parasites of the financial services industry.

 

“None of that is an accident.

 

“It is Government policy, led by an ideology that believes speculators and bankers should not just be allowed, but encouraged, to dominate the housing market.

 

“Meanwhile, young workers can expect a future in which home ownership will never be more than an aspiration.  Rents are too high to save a deposit and investment funds are ready to buy up the limited supply that makes it onto the market.  Mortgage rates are far too high for those who manage to buy a house and the vulture funds are ready again to pounce as soon as they get into difficulty.

 

“There is an ongoing faith on the part of the Government that the private sector will resolve the problem that was created by housing policy being handed over to the private sector in the first place.  It is a system where even public land is handed over to private developers and where, no matter what, the obvious and proven long-term solution of building public homes on public lands is avoided at all costs, other than in the most limited and tokenistic way conceivable.

 

“The housing crisis is not an accident.

 

“It is Government policy and only a Government with the correct policies can resolve it.  Only a Government with determination, commitment and principles can turn the tide.

 

“This motion sets out Sinn Féin’s first steps to support renters.  That too is not an accident.

 

“It is a signal that better policies are coming.”

END

Department must carry out comprehensive analysis of Feedlot Figures

Department must carry out comprehensive analysis of Feedlot Figures– Matt Carthy TD

 

Sinn Féin spokesperson on Agriculture, Matt Carthy, has said that the dramatic increase in factory feedlots in recent years ‘is a certain factor’ in the poor beef prices farmers receive.  He has written to the Minister, Charlie McConalogue, requesting that the department carry out a comprehensive analysis of the impacts of Factory owned feedlots in the market, including their impact on prices and the effect on the environment.

 

In response to a parliamentary question it was revealed to Deputy Carthy that the number of slaughtered cattle at Controlled Finishing Units (CFUs), which the department used as a proxy for factory feedlots, had increased by over 34% between 2015 and 2020.

 

Teachta Carthy said:

 

“The intervention of factory feedlot cattle is a certain significant factor in the stagnating beef prices received by farmers.  Figures from a recent Parliamentary Question response I received confirm that, but also raise questions as to validity of the departments metrics.

 

“The Department has reported 295,000 cattle slaughtered from CFUs in 2018, however contemporary reporting compiled independently but based upon departmental data placed this figure in excess of 315,000.  This discrepancy needs to be explained.

 

“But, regardless, what the Departments own figures do indicate is an increase of over 33% since 2017.

 

“The meat industry has been telling farmers since the onset of Covid-19 that demand in the hospitality sector has been ‘decimated’ with retail increases not sufficient to offset the effect.

 

“They should also explain why, in that case, feedlot slaughter figures for the first two months of 2021 were comparable to 2020.

 

“Unfortunately, the government have never carried out a comprehensive analysis of the element in meat production, including its impact on prices and its environmental affects.  Statutory agencies such as Competition and Consumer Protection Commission have appeared as at best disinterested in farmers questions as to whether this level of market presence presents the ability to control price.

 

“The continued growth of factory feedlots presents an existential threat to the Irish beef product.  Consumers all over the world purchase Irish beef on the back of the image of the farmer in the field alongside their cows and calves.  But, if the proportion of beef being produced in this country coming from factory feedlots continues to grow then so too will that image.

 

“By its very nature, beef produced through this style of more industrialised agriculture is less environmentally sustainable.

 

“I have written to Minister Charlie McConalogue requesting that his department carry out a comprehensive analysis of Factory Feedlot production to include its impact on prices, effect on the environment and its potential to undermine the marketing of Irish beef into the future.”

ENDS

 

For Written Answer on : 31/03/2021
Question Number(s): 1288 Question Reference(s): 17329/21
Department: Agriculture, Food and the Marine
Asked by: Matt Carthy T.D.
______________________________________________

QUESTION

To ask the Minister for Agriculture; Food and the Marine the number of cattle slaughtered that originated in feedlots in each of the years 2015 to 2020, inclusive; the proportion this represented of the total State-wide kill in each respective year in tabular form; and if he will make a statement on the matter.

REPLY

There is no legal definition of a feedlot herd. The Department defines certain herds as Controlled Finishing Units (CFUs) in the context of the Bovine TB Eradication Programme.  This definition is unique to that programme and does not necessarily mirror the use of the term “feedlot” by the public and/or other institutions. CFUs are subject to enhanced biosecurity measures as part of the TB Programme and can only sell direct to slaughter. Please see below two tables as follows:

Kill numbers (rounded) at EU approved slaughter plants originating in Controlled Finishing Units and percentage of total state kill for years 2015 to 2020.

Year Animals slaughtered in EU approved plants, originating from TB restricted CFUs Percentage of Total State Kill
2015 198,000 11.89%
2016 238,000 13.64%
2017 263,000 14.20%
2018 295,000 15.56%
2019 288,500 15.57%
*2020 299,000 15.91%

* The figures provided in respect of 2020 are provisional and may be subject to minor modification.

The above figures are published on a monthly basis here in respect of Controlled Finishing Units

https://www.gov.ie/en/collection/f55f2-bovine-birth-and-movements-monthly-reports/#kill-numbers-at-eu-approved-slaughter-plants-originating-in-controlled-finishing-units

 

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