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  1. Home
  2. Annual Reporting

Annual Reporting

2021 Annual Report and Accounts

2021 Annual Report and Accounts

2021 Annual Report and Accounts Read more

Published: 28th April, 2022

Author: Dearbhla Ryan

2020 Annual Report and Accounts

2020 Annual Report and Accounts

2020 Annual Report and Accounts Read more

Published: 31st August, 2021

Author: Dearbhla Ryan

2019 Annual Report and Accounts

2019 Annual Report and Accounts

2019 Annual Report and Accounts Read more

Published: 21st October, 2019

Updated: 28th May, 2021

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2018 Annual Report and Accounts

2018 Annual Report and Accounts

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Published: 1st May, 2018

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2017 Annual Report and Accounts

2017 Annual Report and Accounts

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Published: 1st January, 2017

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2016 Annual Report and Accounts

2016 Annual Report and Accounts

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Published: 1st January, 2016

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2015 Annual Report and Accounts

2015 Annual Report and Accounts

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Published: 1st January, 2015

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2014 Annual Report and Accounts

2014 Annual Report and Accounts

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Published: 1st January, 2014

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2013 Annual Report and Accounts

2013 Annual Report and Accounts

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Published: 1st January, 2013

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2012 Annual Report and Accounts

2012 Annual Report and Accounts

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Published: 1st January, 2012

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2011 Annual Report and Accounts

2011 Annual Report and Accounts

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Published: 1st January, 2011

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2006-2007 Annual Report

2006-2007 Annual Report

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Published: 1st January, 2007

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2005-2006 Annual Report

2005-2006 Annual Report

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Published: 1st January, 2006

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

2004-2005 Annual Report

2004-2005 Annual Report

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Published: 1st January, 2005

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

1999-2000 Annual Report

1999-2000 Annual Report

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Published: 1st January, 2000

Updated: 28th August, 2020

Author: Phoebe Duvall

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Showing 10 of 15

Latest

  • Statement from An Taisce re legal action in respect of Nitrates Action Programme

    Statement from An Taisce re legal action in respect of Nitrates Action Programme

  • Draft Kerry County Development Plan 2022-2028

    Draft Kerry County Development Plan 2022-2028

    An Taisce's submission to proposed material alterations to the Draft Kerry County Development Plan 2022-2028.

  • Take Action on Vacancy

    Take Action on Vacancy

    Concerned about a vacant or deteriorating old building in your area? Read An Taisce member, and heritage and planning buff, Kevin Duff's blog on how you can contact your Planning Enforcement Department.

  • You Are What You Eat: Is There Life After Steaks?

    You Are What You Eat: Is There Life After Steaks?

    In his latest blog, An Taisce member Eric Conroy reflects on trying to reduce meat and dairy in his diet.

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    Our Compost for Nature guide is now available! For years, the garden and landscape industry has been selling us peat moss as “compost.” In reality, this is peat-moss that is nutrient-poor and bad for our peatlands. The good news is that there is another more sustainable way to nurture soil health AND reduce waste - composting!

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  • An Taisce action on Kilkenny cheese factory planning decision

    An Taisce action on Kilkenny cheese factory planning decision

    An Taisce has sought leave to appeal the recent decision of the High Court dismissing its challenge against the decision of An Bord Pleanála to grant planning permission for the development of a cheese processing plant. We've written this explainer on why we've taken the appeal, the planning case behind it, An Taisce's role in the planning process, the wider environmental context on dairy expansion in Ireland, and our view for future development.

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Application by ESB for change of use from museum to residential at Fitzwilliam Street Lower, Dublin 2

Application by ESB for change of use from museum to residential at Fitzwilliam Street Lower, Dublin 2

This proposal by the ESB to close the Georgian House museum at Fitzwilliam Street would represent the loss of a thirty-year-old heritage and cultural visitor attraction and educational resource for the city Read more

Published: 7th February, 2021

Updated: 8th February, 2021

Author: Kevin Duff

Location: 19, Fitzwilliam Street Lower, Dublin

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Following an extended period of review, An Taisce last month (May 2022) made  an application to the High Court to seek a judicial review of the fifth Nitrates Action Programme (NAP) announced by the Government in March of this year. 

The application is rooted in the undisputed evidence of continuing deterioration of water quality in Ireland, where all the indicators are negative and continuing in a downward direction. These figures are damning proof that previous NAPs have failed to meet their purpose which is to enable Ireland to fulfill the objectives of the Nitrates Directive.

In that context, we could not responsibly stand by and do nothing. Our decision reflects the core remit of An Taisce to advocate for choices by, and in, Ireland that provide for a more environmentally sustainable future for the country as a whole. The NAP as proposed simply does not provide the level of protection that is needed for water quality in Ireland. 

The Nitrates Directive – which first came into force in 1991 – is the central legislative framework, emanating from Europe, that protects our rivers and lakes from the impacts of agricultural pollution. It requires member States to devise and implement a Nitrates Action Programme setting out specifically how water quality will be protected from agricultural impact for the next four years. 

The NAP provides a basis for binding regulations over agricultural practice - known as the Good Agricultural Practice (GAP) regulations. The effectiveness and implementation of these measures and regulations is critical given that intensive land use is the principal cause of the pollution of Irish waterways. To date, this approach has not worked, with agriculture negatively impacting on more than half (53%) of Irish waterbodies1.

 In the period leading into the March declaration of the NAP: 

  • An Taisce repeatedly challenged the new measures being put forward by Government in draft documents. Those proposed actions were based on a paucity of evidence that they would be any more effective than previous Nitrates Action Programmes, which the Government themselves admitted had failed. 
  • We also flagged up the legal weaknesses in the environmental assessments for the NAP. 
  • We repeatedly highlighted the scientific evidence which clearly makes the case for more ambitious and far-reaching measures, and far more rigorous assessment. 

To address those shortcomings An Taisce made a number of recommendations in the consultation process for this NAP. In particular we advocated for a NAP that provides for catchment and site-specific measures and assessment, rather than a programme of general one-size-fits-all measures without accountability.

These concerns were not addressed at all. Regrettably, instead of putting in place something that could help halt and reverse water pollution, the government has chosen to sideline the science and the law in framing a weak and inadequate NAP.  

Accordingly, and based on the evidence of an inevitable further deterioration in water quality – which has to be the ultimate measure of what is right here - An Taisce has no option but to challenge this approach. 

This legal step may be misrepresented as some form of attack on the farming community. This application is not against  people or communities. On the contrary, it is born of a longstanding commitment to ensure that the essential ingredients for flourishing rural life and agriculture - i.e. clean water and uncontaminated soil - are preserved for future generations. It is targeting misguided  legal and regulatory structures  that are actively contributing to water pollution and which thus must be challenged.

We cannot ignore the evidence of harm to our water courses by farming activity which has a direct impact on every citizen, and on Ireland’s standing as an environmentally aware and responsible society. 

An Taisce supports sustainable farming and we accept that farmers want to work in sync with the environment. That can only be achieved by working with the evidence and guidance of science, and not against it. 

—----------------------------ENDS—----------------------------

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