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Rosslare Europort had one of the busiest days in its history this month - thanks to Brexit

European trade volumes are up close 400% in the first nine months of 2021, according to the port.

SATURDAY, 13 NOVEMBER was a record day at Rosslare Europort, says Glenn Carr.

Over the course of the day, almost 1,000 units of freight travelled through the ferry hub, according to the port’s general manager, making it one of the busiest days in the history of the Wexford port.

This level of activity is something that Carr and his team have had to get used to in 2021.

So far this year, the volume of cargo travelling through the Wexford port has ballooned by 55%, according to Carr. Because of an increase in direct trade with Europe, continental freight volumes  — which have skyrocketed by 378%, Carr says — are driving the overall numbers.

Once upon a time not long ago, Stena Line’s Fishguard and Irish Ferries’ Pembroke services, both in Wales, accounted for most of Rosslare’s business.

“Our only services to the continent, going back over 18 months ago, would have been primarily Stena Line’s three services a week to the port of Cherbourg in France,” Carr explains. 

But there are now 30 weekly services operating to and from Rosslare and the continent, compared to just three or so pre-Brexit.

Overall, there are now 44 direct routes from ports in Ireland to continental Europe — up from around a dozen last year.

rosslare-1 Rosslare Europort on 13 November

What’s being captured by these numbers is a major shift in the rhythms of Irish trade, brought about by Brexit.

“Typically, prior to Brexit, you were probably looking at about 120,000 freight units a year going into the port every year and in or around close to a million passengers pre-pandemic,” Carr told The Journal last week.  

But in 2021, Irish importers are bringing in fewer goods from the United Kingdom than they were a year ago. At the same time, indigenous companies are exporting and importing more directly to and from the continent, fueling demand for direct sailings.

As a result, Rosslare — Ireland’s closest sea trading hub to the continent geographically — is now the main Irish port for roll-on/roll-off (RoRo) traffic serving Europe, Carr says. And having fixed its gaze firmly on Europe in recent years, the Iarnród Éireann-operated hub’s importance within the national port network looks set to grow even more over the coming months and years.

Further shocks

Carr took the reins at the port a little over three years when the question of what sort of Brexit, hard or soft, we would end up with was largely unanswered.

At the time, Rosslare had essentially just two customers — Stena Line and Irish Ferries.

While they were “very good customers to us”, Carr says,  Rosslare was massively dependant on their business.

This became abundantly clear when Irish Ferries pulled its Rosslare to France services in 2018, choosing to operate from Dublin Port instead.

Even without the threat of Brexit, it became obvious that the port would have to grow to protect itself from further shocks.

“We undertook a strategic review of the port and we identified a number of core areas that could be developed. One of those was the business role, the actual business itself,” Carr says.

He recalls, “We asked ourselves, ‘What are the fundamental strengths of Rosslare Port?’

And one of the fundamental strengths is that we’re the closest port geographically to Europe. Sailing-wise, you’re quicker getting to the main ports in Europe from Rosslare than any other port in Ireland. So that always struck me as an advantage.
“Obviously, we also saw that with the likely outcome that was emerging from Brexit, the chances were that supply chains were going to change fundamentally because the fundamental point was that Britain was exiting Europe and becoming a third [region].”

The port’s response was to “get out into the market”, Carr says, and aggressively promote Rosslare as an alternative ‘RoRo’ port to Dublin.

‘Roll-on/roll-off’ or RoRo refers to a type of cargo shipping service where trucks or trailers are loaded directly onto the ferry with the cargo they’re transporting, taking the journey along with the goods.

They’re considered quicker and cheaper than ‘Load-on/Load-off’ (LoLo) services — when the truck pulls up to the board and unloads the cargo, which is then loaded onto a container and put on the vessel.

‘RoPax’ services, then, are ones that facilitate roll-on/roll-off cargo transport and also passengers travelling aboard the ferries. 

As a RoPax port, Rosslare saw the passenger side of its businesses devastated by travel restrictions at the outset of the pandemic in March and April 2020. But around the same time, something else was beginning as businesses began to wake up to the potential for Brexit-related disruption.

“I definitely got a sense from around March, April last year, exporters and importers were beginning to look at alternative suppliers,” Carr says.

Rosslare 3 Glenn Carr, Rosslare Europort's general manager

The UK landbridge — which usually refers to a route linking Dublin, Holyhead, and Cherbourg or Le Havre in Northern France — was once considered the cheapest, quickest way to get goods into Ireland from Europe or move them in the opposite direction.

But with Brexit, at that stage, looming over the horizon and with it the prospect of customs checks, additional costs and lengthy queues in Great Britain, alternative arrangements for trading with Europe were quickly becoming very appealing.

Then everything started to change for Rosslare Europort.

Traffic congestion

“In the March before Brexit, Brittany Ferries made a move to come to Rosslare. So that was the first thing,” Carr says.

“Brittany were operating to Spain from Cork but the service wasn’t doing very well and the haulage industry was telling them that they needed to operate from Rosslare.”

Traffic congestion at Dublin and Cork ports in 2019 and the fear that it would only get worse as a result of Brexit had created demand from hauliers for new services from Rosslare, Carr explains.

He says, “We’re just over 90 minutes from greater Dublin. There were times where hauliers were telling me they were 90 minutes in traffic trying to get into Dublin Port.

“So I believed that there was demand — in Dublin and Cork — from hauliers, given their geographical location, who would prefer to come to Rosslare. We proved that then when Brittany Ferries came to Rosslare.” 

After that, things began to snowball. 

Around the same time, Danish shipping company DFDS approached Rosslare about a new direct route from the port to Dunkirk in France. That service got up and running shortly after Britain’s formal withdrawal from the EU in January 2021. 

Rosslare 2 Ships lining up ahead of Brexit Day last January

Earlier this month, Brittany Ferries announced a new sailing from Rosslare to Le Havre in Northern France. The port’s existing customers have also increased capacity on direct European routes.

All of this is being driven by demand from Irish businesses and hauliers.

Part of it is companies wanting to avoid the landbridge, Carr says. 

‘There’s definitely been more engagement from both importers and exporters about direct sailings,” says Carr.

That’s on two fronts. One is that the landbridge, which was traditionally the way you went. The reality is now, though, when you add in all the extra preparation, the customs checks that have to be cleared, the risks that you could get stopped at border inspections and the time that’s lost there — when you add that altogether and you look at a direct route, you can basically go hassle-free. So a significant number of companies have directed that their supply chains move away from that immediately.

But the other factor is Irish businesses finding new customers and new suppliers in Europe as an alternative to Britain.

“In particular industries, we’re definitely seeing where traditionally a lot of goods were sourced in the UK or exported to the UK, there’s been a switch to Europe,” he says.

“We definitely see it in the port in terms of the mix of goods that are there now — ingredients, food, dairy, pharmaceuticals.”

In the year so far, Carr says overall freight volumes travelling to and from the UK through Rosslare are down 55% compared with the same period last year. Earlier this month, Dublin Port said its overall UK trade volumes were down 21% while Central Statistics Offices figures published last week revealed overall Irish imports from Great Britain are also down 21%.

He expects these trends to continue in 2022. Asked what his biggest Brexit-related concern is for the coming year, Carr claims he doesn’t have any major ones.

“We would like to see our UK traffic return to a more appropriate level than what it is at the moment,” he says.

“We’ll be working with our shipping lines on what we can do as a port to help them get more trade going. But I don’t have concerns about next year. I have great excitement about further opportunities.”

At some stage next year, the UK is set to finally implement long-delayed checks on goods coming into Great Britain from the EU. 

“We’ll see if that happens,” Carr says, and depending on how that happens, and the degree of what happens, we could see even further substantial demand for additional direct services.”

“We’d like to think, however, that we will find a sensible solution that will ensure we ultimately will always trade with the UK.”  

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 Good Early
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:22 PM

    But…but…but… the news said everyone paid!

    So if everyone paid, they still only collected €160million?
    And didn’t the ‘water grant’ cost €94 million?

    So they actually only collected, and need to refund, €66 million?

    How in sweet jaysus was that going to “safe-guard our water network”. I think they were telling porkies!

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    Mute Frank Cauldhame
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    Jul 12th 2017, 6:03 PM

    @Good Early:

    How can anyone in this country have respect for Fianna Gael after this embarrassing fiasco? Leonard lying again today in Leinster House after Paul Murphy rightfully demanded an inquiry into the mass perjury by gardai during the “Jobstown” trial. The “thugs” Leonard referred to are himself and his colleagues. They will pay for their corruption at the next general election.

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    Mute DaisyChainsaw
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:33 PM

    It would be rank hypocrisy for loyal FG and Labour voters to look for a refund. Ye were so vociferous in support of IW, Hogan and Kelly so don’t go looking for it back!

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    Mute Dante Marquinhos
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:25 PM

    @DaisyChainsaw: But you know they will because that’s the sort of people that support FFG and Liebour.

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    Mute Frank Cauldhame
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    Jul 12th 2017, 6:12 PM

    @DaisyChainsaw:

    Totally agree. Some of that money should be used to compensate the victims of the Jobstown stitch-up.

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Jul 12th 2017, 6:56 PM

    @Frank Cauldhame: that comment has to be a wind up !

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    Mute Frank Cauldhame
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    Jul 12th 2017, 7:42 PM

    @Suzie Sunshine: Oh no it does’nt ! The whole “show” trial was nothing but a pantomime by the establishment to put manners on good citizens who done nothing wrong as was established by the unanimous verdict by a jury of their peers. The victims had to endure 6am dawn raids in front of spouses/children/mothers/fathers/sons/daughters, some lost their jobs, incarceration at garda stations and all were lied about. I’d seek compensation.

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    Mute Ronan Sexton
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:36 PM

    Anyone who willingly paid into this corrupt scam and cheer led it on deserves nothing. The half wits should have stood in solidarity with the rest of the population that had the intelligence to see this corrupt, fake billing company for what it was.

    199
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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:40 PM

    @Ronan Sexton: You couldn’t sell your house without paying it. Do you think people should put their lives on hold over a very small charge?

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    Mute Elaine Brehony
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:42 PM

    @Ronan Sexton: we were forced to pay in order for the sale of our apartment to go through. There was legislation that wouldnt allow the sale to go through with outstanding property tax and a water bill. So we were forced to pay it. A refund would be lovely. I was forced to pay it

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    Mute Ronan Sexton
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:46 PM

    I said “willingly” Words are important.

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:51 PM

    @Ronan Sexton: So are you going to stand and judge who should get a refund? How much should we spend figuring out who is worthy of a refund?

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    Mute Good Early
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:53 PM

    @Kal Ipers: Which was an absolute lie it turned out. The barrister in the Land Registry said it was a charge on a property that has no basis in Irish Land Law.

    It turns out that the Land Reg would never even ask for proof of payment or registration. To put a charge on a property there’s a lengthy process you would have to go through.
    So, unless Irish Water were to take someone who was selling their house, to court, claiming they didn’t register, and the judge agreed, THEN a charge could be placed on the property stopping the sale, and this would be registered by Irish Water with the Land Registry.

    Since no such legal charge was placed, it was absolutely lawful for anyone to sell their property without registration.

    The government basically got solicitors to go along with the scam. Shows how inept they are if they didn’t read up the law on it.

    Go figure. They lied.

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    Mute Ronan Sexton
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:54 PM

    @Kal Ipers: Jaysus, a simple tick the “I willingly paid into this blatantly obvious corrupt scam” box or the “I was forced to pay into this blatantly obvious corrupt scam” box would do the trick.

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    Mute Good Early
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:56 PM

    @Kal Ipers: And that came for Liz Pope. The head of the Property Registration Authority Ireland

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:58 PM

    @Good Early: You really don’t know what you are talking about. Just because a barrister said that doesn’t mean you can ignore it. You would have had to fight it in court and/or your solicitor. You had to pay it to sell in the real world

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    Mute Good Early
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:11 PM

    @Kal Ipers: If the head of the Property Registration Authority says it, it is true. I work there ya numpty!

    There are also Constitutional issues regarding a private company, or even the government, neither of which are party to the sale, interfering on such a level. The only way it could be done, is if it was a tax by the government. If it wasn’t paid they could put a lien, via the court, on your property. But it’s not.

    Just because something is legislated for, doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s lawful, or enforceable. According to the Land Registry, if ANYONE, had of challenged the legality of it, it would have be knocked in a second.

    Again, this was a typical case of “if it looks real, and the people believe it, so be it”. It was a bit like saying they could garnish your wages, even though there is no legal basis in Ireland, from which they could do so.

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:28 PM

    @Good Early: Yet nobody did challenge it because in the actual world where you are selling your house delays are not what you want. In the real world you had to pay it even if it was just for convenience. Doesn’t matter a damn what a barrister says about it until there is a challenge to assert it.

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    Mute Good Early
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:39 PM

    @Kal Ipers: Fair enough. But my point is, your buddies in Fine Gael were caught lying, again. Everything they do is underhanded. And then they labelled all of us against this double-tax; terrorists, “sinister fringe” and other such nonsense.

    Makes you wonder why know one in the media, and I mean no one, read any of the Acts, and challenged either Phil Hogan or Alan Kelly on the legality of their claims/statements.

    One thing working in the PRAI has taught me is that the vast, vast, majority of solicitors who work in conveyancing, haven’t a clue what they are doing! Doesn’t exactly inspire confidence in the legal framework of the State, when they can’t get a simple form correct.

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Jul 12th 2017, 6:26 PM

    @Good Early: I think of all politicians are pretty much the same and have no favourite which you obviously do. You didn’t learn not to judge people in your job

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    Mute Mark DeFriest
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:51 PM

    Have to say it’s positively wonderful watching Fine Gael eating humble pie.

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    Mute Dáithí Ó Raghallaigh
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:23 PM

    Ironic benefiting from the actions of water protesters, if you felt the payment was just, forget it ….

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    Mute Laurence O Neill
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:38 PM

    They shouldn’t br refunded no way …thwy were told not to pay so let them live without a refund

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:46 PM

    @Laurence O Neill: Told? Was that by the people threatening workers or the group that stopped people going home from work?
    Excuse me if I don’t listen to mobs.

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    Mute Ronan Sexton
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:51 PM

    @Kal Ipers: I think he probably meant they were informed of the corrupt scam.

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:53 PM

    @Ronan Sexton: Didn’t you just say words are important? He didn’t say what you are claiming

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    Mute Ronan Sexton
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:55 PM

    @Kal Ipers: Get a life like a good lad.

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    Mute Ronan Sexton
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:56 PM

    @Kal Ipers: “probably”

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    Mute Dante Marquinhos
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:52 PM

    Many people that paid, did so under pressure and scaremongering. It saddened me to hear some people did pay but I completely understand why. Those of us that didn’t must stand together with those that did and not let this divide us.

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    Mute Mark DeFriest
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:13 PM

    @Dante Marquinhos:
    Elderly folk paid their bills when Big Phil the Fine Gael Bully Boy threatened them with disconnection.
    He should be brought back from Europe and dragged through the streets.

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    Mute Dante Marquinhos
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:30 PM

    @Mark DeFriest: Of course and then consider how far the government were prepared to go. Joan Burton and the Gardaí lying in court. Alan Kelly aggressively pushing water charges, while his brother was buying up water infrastructures all over the world but very few would point out the conflict of interest. Among a myriad of other examples that could be given.

    If you still think that Irish Water was not being set up to be privatised, then you are partly whats wrong with this country.

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    Mute Adrian
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:50 PM

    It’s funny they have such a hard time calculating how much should be given back. I’d imagine it’s pretty close to the amount they collected. In the opposite scenario, they’d know well how much they’d be getting and they’d be freely adding millions onto their figures.

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    Mute Adrian
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:54 PM

    Sur what’s a couple of million difference to a grouping of incompetent politicians who manage to quadruple the state debt from 50 billion to 200 billion!

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    Mute Colin Morris
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:10 PM

    Any news on when Irish Water will be abolished in its entirety.

    I don’t mind paying for water (which I am doing currently anyway).

    But as a company IW is an unmitigated disaster and needs to close down entirely.

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    Mute Ciaran
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    Jul 12th 2017, 8:43 PM

    @Colin Morris: ah sure the councils have done a stellar job over the last 30 years

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    Mute Denito
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    Jul 13th 2017, 12:21 AM

    @Colin Morris: We shoud shut down Irish water and fire all of the people in the local authorities who mismanaged our water and sewage systems for decades.

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    Mute Willy Malone
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:35 PM

    FF FG Liebour destroying the majority to benefit a few. This will continue untill we change it …

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    Mute Henry Clapham
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:08 PM

    The Irish people should done the same thing with the property tax but it is possible !!!

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    Mute ciaran
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    Jul 12th 2017, 4:55 PM

    looks like everything bad in the economy is down to the refunding of a 2nd tax which was pretty sneaky considering the plan was to sell off the water company. you (the politicians) caused huge financial penalties(billions on crappy 2nd hand water meters) at a time the contry hadnt a penny now we still havent a penny yet it is our fault???
    hard luck pascal can still see through your waffle

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    Mute Stephen Grehan
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:50 PM

    Let the Irish Water saga be a lesson to the maggots in leinster House that the vast majority of people will not tolerate being ripped off any longer. The same applies to bin charges and tv licence increases. Its time the pocket stuffing shysters in the Dail realised who they’re employer is.

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    Mute Stephen Maher
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    Jul 12th 2017, 6:41 PM

    So how are water services actually being paid for now?
    Oh ye, through taxation like allways.
    And yet FG Alan sourpuss kelly and big phill wanted us to believe that it wasnt a double tax.

    Irish people have thankfully started to see through their lies

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    Mute Henry Clapham
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:01 PM

    Well in fairness they are entitled to a refund but they should not have paid it in the first place and let it up to other people to do their dirty work for them . They should have stood up for the Irish people instead of kissing the Irish governments ass but if they have a conscious they should give it to the homeless as the government is doing nothing at all

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    Mute whitecross
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:22 PM

    Older citizens paid because of all the threats and propaganda and people forced to pay to sell their property .,The rest were sheeple who were not willing to stand up to re-charging of water .If it was possible to separate those who were frightened into paying from those simpering gutless fools who paid without a whimper to get their money back from the super quango Irish Water i would be happy the rest ha ha .Organize a protest to get your money back .

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    Mute Alan
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:00 PM

    Don’t deserve it.

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    Mute @mdmak33
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    Jul 12th 2017, 9:32 PM

    Fg,FF, labour, corruption has destroyed the country.remove them from local council’s and Leinster house.doesnt matter with who, anything would be better to what we have suffered.

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    Mute Anto Brennan
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:09 PM

    Da bunch of saps da paid should go out and protest for their moola back

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    Mute Gerard Heery
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    Jul 12th 2017, 11:05 PM

    Refund should come with a letter of apology, for bullying, threatening, antagonising, stress,anxiety, loss of sleep,blood pressure,arguments it causes coughs ,cold ,flu they cause to poeple marching in the cold wind and rain to stop the complete and utter nonsense of a audi, bonus culture quango called IW

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    Mute Dominick Lodola
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    Jul 12th 2017, 7:01 PM

    @Ronan Sexton: your very ill informed – I could not sell my house unless I paid up to date my water charges- One of the first things my solicitor asked me!

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    Mute Ronan Sexton
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    Jul 13th 2017, 1:50 PM

    @Dominick Lodola: Where did I mention anything about selling a house?

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    Mute àine nì cleirigh
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    Jul 13th 2017, 12:24 AM

    Just received a boil notice this evening. Some water

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    Mute Henry Clapham
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    Jul 12th 2017, 5:04 PM

    You don’t deserve what the criticism !

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