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'This isn't about how can we get lots of EU money, it's how can we work with Europe to deliver A and B?'

The era of the EU spending billions on Irish roads is over – instead, the focus is on a standardised Europe-wide transport network.

LAST OCTOBER AND November, Irish Rail passengers experienced some disruption to services as work got underway on a major project to improve signalling on Dublin’s railway lines.

The €120 million City Centre Resignalling Project replaced old equipment that had been in operation for decades with newer technology to improve the safety and speed of trains moving through the greater Dublin area.

At the time, Irish Rail chief executive Jim Meade apologised to customers for the disruption, but said the upgrades would “deliver us a modern system that enhances customer safety”.

Earlier that year, Transport Minister Eamon Ryan announced €8.8 million worth of funding to go towards the design phase of enhancing the Kildare railway line. The enhancement is part of the planned expansion of the Dart, and when completed will significantly increase the capacity of Ireland’s rail network.

Ryan said the project would “facilitate an important reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and a shift towards a climate resilient society”. 

The €8.8 million in funding, and part of the €120 million for the resignalling works, came from the EU, via the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF). 

Both projects are examples of money from the European Union being used to improve public transport in Ireland, as part of wider initiatives to increase connectivity between countries across the continent.

EU1Artboard 1

Travelling across the 27 countries of the EU, from one side to the other, involves passing through many different countries. While the free movement of people across borders is a core tenet of the European Union (at least during non-Covid times), there remain many barriers to smooth travel. 

These can range from unconnected railway systems from country to country, different local restrictions and signals for driving, or the varying quality of roads and ports, among others.

The Trans-European Transport Network (Ten-T) is an EU-wide policy aimed at addressing these issues. The goal is to create a Europe-wide network of railway lines, roads, inland waterways, maritime shipping routes, ports, airports and railroad terminals.

“The ultimate objective is to close gaps, remove bottlenecks and technical barriers, as well as to strengthen social, economic and territorial cohesion in the EU,” according to the European Commission’s website

Ten-T policy goes back decades to the 1993 Maastricht Treaty, the foundation treaty of the European Union. Major and minor infrastructure projects have progressed in fits and starts since then, sometimes languishing and changing focus as national and international priorities have changed.

It is planned that the core network of transport improvements will be completed by 2030, with a wider, comprehensive network in place by 2050.

The core network is made up of nine corridors that stretch across Europe, criss-crossing all the countries in the EU, and linking up with each other at strategic nodes. 

“These are massive transport networks and corridors that often involve building a transport route that goes from one end of Europe to the other,” said Ciarán Cuffe, Green Party MEP and a member of the European Parliament’s Transport Committee, which oversees the Ten-T implementation. 

“The Ten-T networks generally involve not just road and rail, but they can involve improvements at ports or inland waterways, canals or maritime improvements.”

As well as transport, there are policies in place for trans-European networks of energy and digital networks aimed at connecting the EU.

“It can be pipelines for gas or water, it can be digital networks, and clearly if you’re building a route from A to B and you put more than one thing into the mix you can deliver economies of scale,” said Cuffe.

EU2Artboard 42

Ireland’s corridor 

The reason that Ireland was able to secure funding for its Dart expansion was because Kildare sits on the North Sea-Mediterranean Corridor, which starts with the port of Foynes in Limerick, goes through Cork and Dublin and then onto France, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. 

Up until this year, the UK and Northern Ireland were also part of the corridor, with the Dublin to Belfast route securing significant investment. Ireland was linked with mainland Europe via the UK.

However, since the UK formally left the EU at the beginning of the year, Ireland is now linked with the port of Le Havre in France. 

As a result of Brexit, Ireland has also this year been added to the Atlantic Corridor, which stretches across the countries of the EU’s Atlantic seaboard, connecting Ireland with the port of Saint Nazaire in France. 

Projects in Ireland

Two years ago at a public event in Mayo, then-Taoiseach Leo Varadkar responded to questions about having Ireland’s Western Arc – a route from Cork to Belfast via the west coast  – reinstated as part of the country’s Ten-T network.  

“Some people seem to think that Ten-T is a big pot of money, that we can draw down money for roads and railways,” Varadkar told Mayo News

“There isn’t a pot of European money to invest in Irish roads and railways anymore. That era is over.”

Varadkar was referring to past transport projects funded by the EU Cohesion Fund, which greatly improved Ireland’s motorways and roads in the 90s and 2000s. In the 80s and 90s, Ireland had the lowest quality roads among the then-12 countries of the EU, and received billions of euros in funding to improve its road network.

In more recent years, transport funding to Ireland from the EU has dropped off as the country has become more prosperous. The funding that remains is targeted at measures designed to improve cross-EU connectivity. 

Road building is still financed on a smaller scale, along with improvements to ports, airline connectivity and railway infrastructure. 

Under the Ten-T policy, the EU also helps to coordinate the infrastructure projects, which Ciarán Cuffe said is an important part of its contribution.

“That’s what Europe wants to do and is good at. How can we deliver added value by working on a project at a European Union level?

“In Ireland the debate has shifted from how can we get lots of money from Europe, to how can we work with Europe to deliver A and B?”

Major upcoming and ongoing projects part-funded by the EU under the Connecting Europe Facility include major improvements to Dublin, Cork and Foynes Ports and developing CNG (Compressed Natural Gas) networks through Ireland.

Funding new projects

The Dart expansion and City Centre Resignalling Project are two examples of CEF funding being used to enhance public transport provision in Ireland.

The Dart expansion grant came as part of a €2.2 billion investment in 140 transport projects across the EU. This is part of a shift towards supporting more climate friendly, low-emissions forms of transport, as countries work to meet their emissions reduction targets under the Paris Agreement. 

“We’re moving in the right direction but not fast enough,” says Cuffe. 

“The current European Parliament and European Commission are much greener than their predecessors but we need to do a lot more. But there are still many who want to see a massive expansion of aviation and of the road network in Europe. 

“From a Green perspective we’re saying we should really be putting public transport first.”

One of the barriers Cuffe sees in increasing investment in public transport is the fact that Ten-T policy and funding “tends to focus on infrastructure”.

“In other words, the concrete and tarmacadam. It’s been difficult to push the Ten-T funds into the actual purchase of vehicles, whether it be trains or buses.

“Part of what the Green group are trying to do is to push for direct European Union funding for these low carbon ways of travelling.”

Building the future

Earlier this month, the European Parliament voted to adopt a renewed CEF programme. MEPs voted to ensure that 60% of the funds will go to projects that help achieve the EU’s climate objectives.

Ciarán Cuffe said that it is hard to pin this shift down to “particular projects” but it represents a step in the right direction.

“When you’re talking about €20 billion or €30 billion, if you can push the low carbon funding from 50% to 60%, suddenly you’ve moved €3 or €4 billion from one type of transport into another,” he said.

“And that’s a good day’s work.”

In a statement to The Journal, Péter Balázs, European Coordinator for the North Sea-Mediterranean Corridor said that the EU had committed to making Europe “the world’s first climate-neutral content by 2050”.

“Transport is the backbone of our economy and a driver of territorial integration and social cohesion within the EU. But it is also the source of around 29% of all greenhouse gas emissions,” he said.

“Ambitious and coordinated infrastructure development is indeed a key pillar of our strategy to build the sustainable transport system of the future.

“I see a real opportunity for Ireland to modernise its transport network in a sustainable way, while at the same time enhancing its connectivity and taking account of its territorial specificities.”

This work is co-funded by Journal Media and a grant programme from the European Parliament. Any opinions or conclusions expressed in this work is the author’s own. The European Parliament has no involvement in nor responsibility for the editorial content published by the project. For more information, see here

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    Mute Mick Hannigan
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    Aug 4th 2021, 8:23 PM

    Underground is the way to go in the cities, should have started it years ago instead of the luas, not to late, start it next

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    Mute Jim Buckley Barrett
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    Aug 5th 2021, 7:38 AM

    @Mick Hannigan: it is but it does take decades to build

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    Mute speedy
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    Aug 4th 2021, 9:09 PM

    Meanwhile irelands four other cities of waterford cork limerick galway are connected by boreen roads from over hundred years ago.dublin gets everything as usual

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    Mute Sean Walsh
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    Aug 4th 2021, 9:25 PM

    @speedy: Yet Dublin is still larger than those 4 combined. What’s your problem? Dublin needs the investment more.

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    Mute speedy
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    Aug 4th 2021, 9:58 PM

    @Sean Walsh: stop talking bull.waterford city and south east region alone is 600k.

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    Mute Nigel Barlow
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    Aug 4th 2021, 11:44 PM

    @speedy: but they’ve spent 20c putting down stone chip dressing on those boreens. When you take into account dublins far greater population that the equivalent of €2b. Obviously yet more money needs to spent within The Pale. Next they’ll be taking water from the west. Oh they are

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    Mute Anthony Doyle
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    Aug 5th 2021, 3:11 AM

    @speedy: simple move to Dublin They even play GAA

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    Mute Anthony Doyle
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    Aug 5th 2021, 3:14 AM

    @speedy: so has Tallagh

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    Mute speedy
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    Aug 5th 2021, 8:23 AM

    @Anthony Doyle: Gaelic football haha is for wussies,come down here and we teach yeah a bit of hurling

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    Mute edward
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    Aug 4th 2021, 8:31 PM

    Freedom of movement will be the undoing of the EU. Massive population shifts from poor countries to richer ones is a recipe for disaster.

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    Mute David
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    Aug 4th 2021, 8:53 PM

    @edward: Seems to me that rich countries have been benefiting from such movement for decades if not centuries. Ultimately people go where the work is and is far as I’m concerned anyone who wants to contribute to society to the benefit of themselves and others should be welcomed

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    Mute Brendan Heery
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    Aug 4th 2021, 11:01 PM

    @edward: We’re arguably the country that’s benefited most from freedom of movement and immigration over the years. It wasn’t so long ago that we were the ‘poor’ country that people were trying to get away from. But I’m guessing it just people from other countries doing it that upsets you… you’ve just got that vibe about you. .

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    Mute edward
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    Aug 5th 2021, 12:30 AM

    @Brendan Heery: How have we benefitted? All this mass immigration has done, is lower wages and increased house prices.

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    Mute RZ
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    Aug 5th 2021, 12:12 PM

    @edward: Economy movement is inevitable and unstoppable. The only way to make it net zero is to equalise economies.

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    Mute Mentis Green
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    Aug 4th 2021, 8:46 PM

    The Shinkansen are Japan’s gleaming symbol of technological development.
    The Shinkansen are bullet trains that connect cities throughout Japan with top speeds in excess of 320kph.
    It is also one of the safest means of transportation, one of the few transit systems in the world that can boast of having no fatal accidents.

    Planning for the bullet train system began in late 1930s, Inauguration in 1964.

    Ireland is still in the dark ages with our old rail transport system or lack of any throughout a much smaller Island in 2021.

    We can do so much better if we just plan ahead & think a little bigger
    (but still implement all necessary bid contract precautions/protections to ensure the tax payer public isn’t ripped off by private companies after making low bids to secure projects) .

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    Mute Anthony Doyle
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    Aug 5th 2021, 3:18 AM

    @Mentis Green: bullet train’s you’re on about
    Half the people in Ireland wouldn’t train for a game of 25’s

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    Mute John Mulligan
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    Aug 5th 2021, 8:44 AM

    @Mentis Green: our population is small and our rural housing model is scattered, so empty trains costing 40 or 50 euro per passenger journey in subsidy aren’t the answer in many cases. Rail has a key role in moving people in large urban areas, and between the capital and a few larger cities, but buses are generally more efficient and greener.

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    Mute thesaltyurchin
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    Aug 5th 2021, 9:40 AM

    @John Mulligan: Crap way to travel tho, if your going to be on the same road you would be in except surrounded by people I don’t see how anyone wants that downgrade? don’t try to lower the bar, raise it. Bullet train 100%

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    Mute pat seery
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    Aug 4th 2021, 8:41 PM

    BUSEIEANN HAS JUST STOPPED THE GALWAY DUBLIN 20 AND 20X SERVICE AND HANDED IT OVER TO A PRIVATE OPERATOR WHAT A JOKE WHERE IS RYAN NOW HIDING UNERD LEO COAT I GUESS

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    Mute Ronan McKeon
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    Aug 4th 2021, 9:41 PM

    So in other words, no EU money for the Cork to Limerick motorway in this decade?

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    Mute Hugh Mc Donnell
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    Aug 4th 2021, 8:45 PM

    Let’s hope they will get funding for the navan rail line even if this generation does not fully use it the following generations will I hope and appreciate it

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    Mute kevin mc cormack
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    Aug 5th 2021, 1:34 AM

    A little island off the coast of Europe, and considering Europe’s relentlessness
    in pursuing and trying to obstruct out sovereign tax affairs I can’t see them investing to much in our infrastructure

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    Mute thesaltyurchin
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    Aug 5th 2021, 9:41 AM

    @kevin mc cormack: Raise coorpo tax to 13% problem solved.

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    Mute Hubert Morris MIPAV
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    Aug 5th 2021, 8:09 AM

    Dublin to Derry via Letterkenny , starabane , Omaha,clones , Virginia, kells , Navan , Ashbourne, Dublin airport, Dublin Connolly.
    Northwest high speed with cross border funding.

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    Mute Tom McBride
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    Aug 5th 2021, 8:17 AM

    @Hubert Morris MIPAV: that’s some route, how does the bus get to Omaha?

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    Mute Gregory Pym
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    Aug 5th 2021, 10:14 AM

    Stop putting everything in to Dublin. Its allready dysfunctional due to over crowding. Develop other cities around the country.

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    Mute DJ François
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    Aug 4th 2021, 11:45 PM

    Bus connects is a start for Dublin, however fares should be half of what they are.

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    Mute Gary Kearney
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    Aug 5th 2021, 3:58 AM

    @DJ François: Bus Connects is all smoke and mirrors

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    Mute Cormac Mckay
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    Aug 4th 2021, 10:31 PM

    We can do better than Dart! http://www.thedublinloop.ie

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    Mute Hubert Morris MIPAV
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    Aug 5th 2021, 8:08 AM

    Dublin to Derry via Letterkenny , starabane , Omaha,clones , Virginia, kells , Mavan , Ashbourne, Dublin airport, Dublin Connolly.
    Northwest high speed with cross border funding.

    2
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    Mute David Crosbie
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    Aug 5th 2021, 12:00 PM

    Maglev network:
    North/south line from magherafelt to cork via Cavan, tullamore cashel
    East/west lines: Belfast to derry via Magherafelt
    Dundalk to sligo via Cavan
    Dublin to Galway via Tullamore
    Waterford to limerick via Cashel

    1
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    Mute David Crosbie
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    Aug 5th 2021, 11:52 AM

    Maglev network:
    North/south line from magherafelt to cork via Cavan, tullamore cashel
    East/west lines: Belfast to derry via magherafelt
    Dundalk to sligo via Cavan
    Dublin to Galway via tullamore
    Waterford to limerick via cashel

    1
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