Food crisis plan on the menu
Sunday July 27th 2008, 1:25 pm
Filed under: Sunday Independent, News

Published on 27 July, 2008. By John Reynolds 

FOOD Minister Trevor Sargent is to spearhead a wide-ranging review of farming policy and food security later this year amid increasing fears that an oil shock or hauliers’ strike could hit food supplies and deliveries to supermarkets.

The plans emerge as an investigation by the Sunday Independent reveals today that the Government currently has no food security plan in place for the country.

“Ireland now faces a similar challenge as Britain experienced during the Second World War, when its government realised there was a clear need for food security. They went from being 120 days self-reliant for food to 160 days. Their land under cultivation for food went from seven million acres to almost 20 million acres,” the minister said.

The Departments of Health, Environment and Enterprise, Trade and Employment will co-operate on the review, which came to light after Feasta, a Dublin-based environmental economics organisation, urged the Government to draw up a food security roadmap and an emergency food plan.

“There’s probably not a week’s supply of food here for everyone in Dublin, let alone the country. The shelves would empty of food very quickly in the event of an emergency. We’ve seen food riots around the world, but it could easily happen here” said Bruce Darrell, an expert with Feasta.

Following reports that the British government recently discussed the possibility of supermarkets stockpiling food in the event of a national strike by hauliers there, Minister Sargent revealed he will raise the matter with stores here.

“Food security will be on the agenda at my next meetings with supermarkets. We are self-sufficient in meat and self-sufficient in butter and food exports far exceed our imports. But we need to build food security that is removed from the energy crisis and the oil price,” he said.

Although Ireland is reasonably self-sufficient in fresh produce, a spokesperson for one supermarket here who asked not to be named, said that most processed and packaged foods were imported, and, therefore, at risk from any disruption to deliveries.

Stockpiling food would add to its costs and it currently had no contingency plan for an oil shock or hauliers’ strike, he said, adding: “We’d probably rely on the army prioritising food deliveries in such a situation.”

Jimmy Quinn, president of the Irish Road Hauliers’ Association, supported this view, adding that stores typically managed the risk of disruption to deliveries by having a number of their own trucks and drivers as well as using outside contractors.



Wind Energy Gets Backing of Ryanair Boss
Sunday July 06th 2008, 2:00 pm
Filed under: Sunday Independent, News

Published on Sunday July 06 2008. By John Reynolds

IT’LL have Ireland’s eco-warriors choking on their muesli — but Michael O’Leary has developed a green streak.

Flying in the face of a public image that has seen the Ryanair chief executive wage a wars of words on environmental matters, he has now invested some of his €400m personal fortune in eco-friendly wind energy.

“I’ve looked at a lot of potential investments in the area of clean technology and renewable energy, and I have invested in wind energy technology twice,” he told the Sunday Independent, although he declined to reveal specifically which companies he has invested in.

His turbulent relationship with environmentalists has seen him dismiss them as “half-witted loons,” amongst other derogatory names, in recent years. Mr O’Leary is seen as the scourge of the environment by many greens for his airline’s sky-high greenhouse gas emissions — 3.6m tonnes last year alone — and the damage done to the planet by giving away free flights on his gas-guzzling planes.

With oil approaching the $150 a barrel mark, however, and predicted by investment bank Goldman Sachs to soar over $200 within two years, he admits his planes have been flying slower than other airlines “for years,” in order to guzzle less of it.

“People are finding ways of avoiding burning oil because it’s recently trebled in value. No airline wants to burn more than it has to. We have all the incentive we need with oil at over $140 a barrel.”

His “anti-environment” public persona flies in the face of the truth, the Ryanair CEO claims. “I get portrayed as being ‘anti’ the environment, but my passion is farming. I’m all pro-environment, but I’m all for taking effective, sensible measures to enhance the environment, not stupid and ineffective measures like raising taxation.

“Climate change, if it happens, will affect everybody’s business. We all have a role to play in minimising our impact on the environment. Flying Ryanair is making a contribution to reducing your impact on the environment by switching from noisy, polluting and fuel inefficient airlines such as British Airways and Aer Lingus,” he added.

The Mullingar-based mogul achieved further notoriety last month at a press conference in Dusseldorf, in Germany. He told a stunned audience that a Ryanair transatlantic spin-off airline would offer “beds and blowjobs” to high fare-paying business class passengers, while offering economy fares for as little as €10.

The current recession may bring about an opportunity to secure cheap planes for such an airline, as it did when Boeing was reeling from the aftermath of 9/11, he believes. However, Mr O’Leary also sees the downturn as an opportunity to add to his own investment portfolio, and recently advertised for a personal investments adviser to be based in his home town.

“I’m always on the lookout for investments. There are undoubtedly going to be some interesting investment opportunities around in the next 12 months.

“The world is clearly heading for a recession. The oil price is at an all-time high, and just look at the state of the property market in Ireland. It’s been crazy for the last few years and there will be some great bargains to be had in the next year or two.