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Thousands of Jobs at Risk in Irish Nursery/ Horticultural Industry
Business

Thousands of Jobs at Risk in Irish Nursery/ Horticultural Industry

Peat Shortage crisis threatens the very existence of Irish Nursery/ Horticultural Industry

A group of Ireland’s leading nursery owners have warned that thousands of jobs are at risk in the Irish Horticulture Industry due to shortage of peat production.

Representing the group, Larry Doran of Doran Nurseries in Timahoe, Co. Kildare says “The Irish horticultural community has been thrown into sudden crisis with fears that Bord na Mona will be unable to supply any peat for next year’s growing season”.

“Bord na Mona previously assured the growers that they had enough stockpiled peat and compost allocated to get them through the next growing season. The nursery industry got confirmation on Friday the 11th of Dec, following a high-level meeting with IFA President, Tim Cullinan and CEO of Bord na Mona, Tom Donnellan that there will not be any peat available to the nursery industry from March. The remaining allocation is being diverted for packing in domestic garden compost for the Irish and being exported to the UK market.  500,000 cubic meters of suitable peat is being stored in close proximity to Edenderry Power Plant, there is a suspicion that this may be earmarked for burning for power generation”

Larry Doran, pictured here in his nursery, fears big job losses in his industry.

“Peat is the essential growing medium that all growers use to produce their crops. Although an essential raw material for plant growth, the industry typically only uses 1% of Irelands Annual Peat Harvest. The twin concerns of pollution from peat burning and loss of biodiversity and habitat, has led to a complete cessation of peat harvesting since June 2020 due to legal and political challenges. The gross irony of this decision is collapsing the very industry that helps sustain Irelands biodiversity”.

“Nursery stock growers primarily located close to the midland bogs (Bog of Allen), produce millions of plants per annum that have a very positive contribution to our environment (Co2 absorbed and biodiversity). Nurseries will be forced to import poor quality growing material, from the Balkans or Malaysia, 2,300km and 10,000km from our shores respectively. This will have a compounding detrimental effect on the environment, as we as a people strive to keep our obligations to the Paris Agreement. There is an epidemic failure within the government to understand the issues facing the environment and impact of short-term objectives and poor decisions on the entire horticulture industry”.

“It appears that this locally-based, long-standing and successful industry has been an unintended casualty of the environmental challenges that the country is facing. One of the gems of Ireland’s environmental battle is seriously threatened, by becoming the victim of the environmental war it is helping to fight”.

“We are in absolute crisis about this at a time when Covid and Brexit are threatening our very existence, this additional problem comes to the fore. We are significant employers and speaking for my Nursery alone , we are established 40 years, we employ some 30 hardworking staff and this is the worst ever crisis we have faced”.

“All our group would echo this sentiment”.   

Time is critical. This is vitally urgent. To be clear there are two distinct issues here:

  1. Getting through the potting season 2021

     2.  The continued use of horticultural peat going forward into the future.