Government inaction on climate will cost the public

04 July 2025

Government inaction on climate will cost the public - The Labour Party

Responding to EPA data that shows emission reductions slowed in 2024, Labour Party Spokesperson on Climate, Environment and Energy, Deputy Ciarán Ahern, has said that Government needs to get its act together on climate action if we are to avoid potential fines of up to €26 billion.
Deputy Ahern said:
“The EPA data released today should come as a stark warning to Government that it needs to double down on its efforts to combat the climate crisis. This comes during the same week in which Minister O’Brien admitted to the Climate Committee that we would, at best, only reduce our emissions by half of the 2030 target.
“The effects of the climate crisis are already being felt around the world. We’ve seen extreme weather events in America, in Spain and in just the last week we’ve seen almost 50 people killed as a result of flash floods in Pakistan. Ireland won’t be immune from such events. We’ve had our warnings – Storm Éowyn, Storm Ophelia and the ‘Beast from the East’ show an increasing frequency of extreme storms here.
“The publication of this EPA data is particularly concerning given it comes at a time when the Government has overturned a ban on highly-polluting fracked gas, is greenlighting more and more fossil fuel-powered energy-guzzling data centres, and the key tenet of their transport policy is to pour more tarmac.
“Not alone are the Government being reckless in terms of mitigating climate catastrophe through their inaction, but they’re also being hugely irresponsible in terms of protecting public finances. This slow-down in emissions reductions makes it all the more likely that we’ll face €26 billion in fines for failing to meet out vital targets. That’s €26 billion that could be used for a proper State retrofitting programme to give people warmer, more energy efficient homes and lower bills or for investment in our public transport to reduce transport emissions.
“Government need to realise the enormous opportunities in climate action. Yes, reducing our emissions is about securing our future, but it’s also about providing new, decent jobs for people, improving public health and protecting our environment.
“Minister O’Brien needs to get the finger out, drop the regressive climate policies we’ve seen from his Department so far and take the ambitious and absolutely necessary steps we need to radically reduce our emissions.”

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