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Bioenergy CAP supports sought to help decarbonise farming
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Log prices still at record high
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IrBEA disappointed and dismayed by report s omission of biogas potential
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SHARING OPTIONS:
From left: Des O’Toole, Coillte and president of IrBEA; Hildegarde Naughton TD, chair of the Oireachtas committee on climate action; and Seán Finan, IrBEA chief executive.
To get a handle on what the bioenergy industry wants, the
Irish Farmers Journal sat down with former Macra na Feirme president Seán Finan, who is CEO of the Irish Bioenergy Association (IrBEA), to see what is in the new roadmap.
JK: What is the Irish Bioenergy Association? Who funds it and what’s the role of the association?
SF: The IrBEA, established in 1999, is the representative association for the bioenergy industry on the island of Ireland covering the bioenergy sectors of biomass, biogas, biofuels, energy crops, wood fuels and biochar.
May 6, 2021 5:49 pm
Renewable Energy Ireland (REI) has today (Thursday, May 6) published ‘40by30’, a roadmap to an Ireland where 40% of heat can come from renewables by 2030.
According to REI, this would reduce Ireland’s CO2 emissions by 7% annually, in line with the climate bill.
40% of Ireland’s heat can be provided by renewables
This plan was developed by XD Consulting on behalf of REI and with the advice of organisations working in district heating, bioenergy, heat pumps, renewable gas and geothermal.
The plan outlines that 40% of Ireland’s heat can be provided by renewable sources primarily from bioenergy, heat pumps, renewable gas and district heating networks.