Thursday, April 21, 2011

Ireland's Environmental Pillar says forests must remain in public hands

Environmental Pillar of Social Partnership
PRESS RELEASE: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

21st April, 2011


Ireland's Environmental Pillar says forests must remain in public hands   

Dublin - 21st April 2011. The Environmental Pillar of social partnership has called on Fine Gael and Labour to restate their commitment to the continued public ownership of Coillte. This follows Minister Brendan Howlin's indications that he would not delay in moving on the sale of state assets identified in the McCarthy Report published yesterday.

Monday, April 11, 2011

IWT Press Release: Illegal Hedgerow Cutting


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Patrick Treacy

Development Coordinator
Cork Environmental Forum

www.cef.ie

T:  086 361 9139 / 021 4647 818
F: 021 4647 818 (call first)
E: patrick@cef.ie

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1 ream of paper = 6% of a tree and 5.4kg CO2 in the atmosphere
3 sheets of A4 paper = 1 litre of water



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: corkbranch <corkbranch@iwt.ie>
Date: Fri, Apr 8, 2011 at 10:43 PM
Subject: press release
To:
Press release – IRISH WILDLIFE TRUST, 7th April, 2011

ILLEGAL HEDGEROW CUTTING STILL CONTINUES

The Irish Wildlife Trust is highlighting the issue of illegal hedgerow cutting that typically starts around now and continues well into the summer months. Unless for reasons of health and safety this practice is in contravention of section 40 of the 1976 Wildlife Act, as amended by Section 46 of the Wildlife Amendment Act, 2000, which prohibits hedge cutting from March 1st to August 31st each year.

Despite this, County Councils and land managers seems only to address the issue of hedge-cutting during these months. Either they are unaware that they are breaking the law and causing tremendous environmental damage or simply dont care.

Last year the IWT made over 20 complaints about illegal hedge-cutting to Local Authorities, the Department of the Environment, and the National Parks and Wildlife Service. In the vast majority of cases we got no response at all but the few Local Authorities that did get back us invariably used the health and safety loophole in the legislation. While genuine health and safety issues should never go unaddressed the IWT believes that this clause is being used in a blanket manner to excuse hedge-cutting anywhere and at any time.

Hedgerows provide an invaluable habitat for much of our wildlife. They provide pollinators, clean the air, define the landscape and store carbon. They also provide our countryside with dazzling displays of early flowers.

Most of the Irish songbirds nest in hedgerows. The first to breed are song thrushes, blackbirds and robins. Yellowhammers also nest in the hedge bank and there has been a substantial decline in Yellowhammers due to the decline in hedgerows and current maintenance practices. Other birds like the song thrush nest deep within a hedgerow but will often desert the nest is disturbed. Blackbirds and goldfinch nest in the branches of hawthorn trees, as do chaffinch and greenfinch later in the season.
Good intact hedgerows are essential for these birds to breed successfully.

The IWT are appealing to the public to report illegal hedgerow cutting with the date, time, location and if possible the name of the peson or organisation involved. Please send any reports to enquiries@iwt.ie or call 01 860 2839
ENDS

Contact:
For further information please contact Joanne Pender IWT Development Officer Ph: 01 860 2839 or E-mail: enquiries@iwt.ie


Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Support structures completed and article in You and Your Money

CEF members don't often reside in Spain! However, Tomas and Paul of Granite Solar are Corkonians and have a brilliant and interesting project going on near Barcelona involving solar panels and local factory rooftops.  I asked them to keep us up to date on progress, so read on...