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Pringle to raise issues around Donegal bog slippage in the Dái
- Updated: 16th November 2020
Independent TD for Donegal, Thomas Pringle, said the bog slippage near Meenbog Wind Farm, outside Ballybofey, was shocking but should not have been surprising.
Deputy Pringle said: “Experts looked at it and said the potential was there, and we’ve seen this at a number of other sites across the country.” A video of the bog slippage was posted to social media, showing a row of standing trees slipping downstream.
Deputy Pringle said he will bring the issue to the Dáil this week.
Deputy Pringle said: “We have seen this before across the country. And we have to take the view that this can’t be allowed to go on. This can’t be allowed to happen again.”
The deputy said that there are steps that could be taken more quickly to prevent similar occurrences, saying independent environmental assessments are crucial for these works.
Speaking to Highland Radio this morning, Deputy Pringle said that currently, applicants commission assessments as part of their submission to local planning authorities.
Instead, Deputy Pringle said, developers should be required to fund an independent assessment.
He said: “If you want to develop a wind farm you pay 100,000 euro to the council and the council actually carries out an independent assessment of it, and if that independent assessment recommends that controls be put in place, that would be included in the planning permission.
“That would go very quickly, I think, in sorting all these problems out,” Deputy Pringle said, adding that those steps could be taken while looking at longer-term measures that may also be needed.
Deputy Pringle also said he had serious questions about the level of contact that took place between the developer and the local authority since planning permission was granted, the conditions that were to be in place for construction of the wind farm, and how the work was monitored.
“And that’s the problem – the planning system is very strict and robust up until the point when you receive planning permission,” Deputy Pringle said.
Donegal County Council has said a full investigation is underway by all agencies.