The European Commission has taken a significant step in enforcing the European Union’s cybersecurity framework by referring Ireland, Spain, France and the Netherlands to the Court of Justice of the European Union over delays in implementing the NIS2 Directive.
The case centres on the four countries’ failure to fully notify the Commission of national measures transposing the Directive into domestic law. NIS2 is one of the EU’s key cybersecurity laws and is designed to strengthen the resilience of essential and important services across the bloc. It applies to organisations operating in 18 critical sectors, including healthcare, energy, transport, public administration, digital infrastructure and other services vital to the functioning of society and the economy.
The Commission’s action follows earlier stages in the infringement process. Letters of formal notice were sent on 28 November 2024, followed by reasoned opinions on 7 May 2025. Since the Commission considers that complete transposition has still not been notified, it has now escalated the matter to the EU’s highest court.
This move comes at a time when cyberattacks against governments, public bodies and private companies are becoming more frequent, more sophisticated and more disruptive. Across Europe, ransomware incidents, attacks on public services and threats to critical infrastructure have underlined the need for consistent cybersecurity standards across all Member States.
The NIS2 Directive is intended to reduce fragmentation by setting common rules on cybersecurity risk management, incident reporting, supervision and enforcement. Its full implementation is important not only for individual countries, but for the EU as a whole, because cyber threats rarely stop at national borders. Weaknesses in one jurisdiction can create vulnerabilities across wider supply chains, public networks and cross-border services.
By asking the Court to impose financial sanctions, including a lump sum and daily penalties until full notification is made, the Commission is signalling that cybersecurity implementation is not optional. The referral also sends a wider message to Member States that delays in transposing critical digital and security legislation will attract consequences.
For organisations operating in affected sectors, the development is another reminder that NIS2 compliance remains a priority. Even where national laws are still being finalised, businesses and public bodies should be preparing their cybersecurity governance, risk management processes and incident response capabilities now.
The Commission’s decision marks an important enforcement moment for EU cyber policy. As cyber threats continue to grow, the EU is pushing to ensure that its legal framework is not only adopted on paper, but implemented in practice.
Irish Rail and Córas Iompair Éireann have brought High Court proceedings against Tipperary County Council in a dispute over a train signalling mast near the old Cahir railway station.
Irish Rail
The case centres on whether the mast, located about 130 metres from the old Cahir Rail Station, should be treated as exempted development or whether it affects the setting of a protected structure. The station, described in reports as a Gothic revival railway building dating from the 1850s, is at the heart of the planning disagreement.
Tipperary County Council served an enforcement notice in June 2026 under the Planning and Development Act 2000. That notice requires Irish Rail to cease using and remove the signalling mast by September 2026. Irish Rail is now asking the High Court to quash the council’s decision.
Irish Rail argues that the local authority made errors “in law and in fact” when deciding the mast was not exempted development. It also disputes the council’s view of the “curtilage”; the land or setting attached to a protected structure and says the mast is too far from the station building to fall within that protected area.
The rail operator further says it has installed more than 700 similar masts around Ireland without complaint from other planning authorities. It claims the protected status at the Cahir location now applies only to the station building, rather than other nearby railway structures previously listed in older development plans.
The council’s position is that the mast impacts the character and setting of the historic station. The matter is expected to return before the High Court on July 20th 2026.
Ireland’s latest greenhouse gas figures bring a welcome headline: emissions fell again in 2025. But behind that progress lies a much harder truth. The country is still nowhere near the pace of change required to meet its legally binding climate targets, and the next few years are likely to be far more difficult than the last few.
The Environmental Protection Agency’s provisional figures show that Ireland’s greenhouse gas emissions decreased by 2.2% in 2025, equivalent to 1.2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent. It was the fourth year in a row that emissions fell. Reductions were recorded across all main sectors, with the biggest falls in energy industries, buildings, industry and transport.
That is encouraging. It shows that emissions can fall while Ireland’s economy and population continue to grow. It also suggests that policy, investment and cleaner technology are beginning to have an effect.
But the scale of the challenge remains stark. Ireland’s national climate law requires a 51% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 compared with 2018 levels. By 2025, emissions had fallen by only 14.5% when land use, land-use change and forestry are included. The EPA has warned that emissions must now fall by more than 10% every year to 2030 if Ireland is to meet its national climate target.
That is the central difficulty. A 2.2% annual fall is progress, but it is not enough. Ireland is moving in the right direction, yet not nearly fast enough. The easier gains may also be running out. The energy sector has delivered major reductions, helped by renewable electricity, less fossil-fuel generation and changes in the power system. Emissions from power generation and large industrial companies fell by 5.5% in 2025, according to the EPA. But future reductions will increasingly depend on harder-to-change parts of daily life: how people travel, how homes are heated, how farms produce food, how industry uses energy, and how quickly infrastructure can be built.
Transport is one of the biggest warning signs. Emissions fell in 2025, helped by more biofuel use and rising electricity consumption in road transport. But transport still exceeded its sectoral ceiling. This points to a deeper problem: Ireland is making improvements, but car dependency, slow public transport delivery, rising travel demand and freight emissions continue to make transport one of the most difficult sectors to decarbonise.
Industry faces similar pressure. Industrial emissions fell in 2025, but the sector still overshot its ceiling. Some reductions can come from fuel switching or lower fossil-fuel use, but long-term progress will require deeper changes in manufacturing, cement production, industrial heat and investment in cleaner processes. That will not be simple, cheap or quick.
Agriculture remains perhaps the most politically sensitive challenge. The 2025 fall in agricultural emissions was very small. Lower cattle numbers helped, but this was offset by increased fertiliser use and higher milk production. Agriculture is central to rural Ireland and the national economy, but it is also a major source of methane and nitrous oxide. Reducing these emissions at the speed required will involve difficult choices about land use, herd size, fertiliser, food production and farm incomes.
Buildings offer another mixed picture. Emissions fell in 2025, helped by a warmer winter and reduced fossil-fuel use. Residential emissions are now much lower than in previous decades. But warmer weather is not a climate policy. Lasting reductions will require faster retrofitting, more heat pumps, improved energy efficiency, skilled workers and financial supports that make upgrades realistic for households and businesses.
Ireland also faces a serious EU compliance challenge. Under the EU Effort Sharing Regulation, Ireland must reduce emissions in sectors such as agriculture, transport, buildings, waste and smaller industry by 42% by 2030compared with 2005. The EPA says Ireland is projected to miss that target, with a maximum projected reduction of 23% by 2030 even under a scenario with additional measures.
The cost of missing targets could be significant. Reuters reported that Ireland’s fiscal and climate watchdogs warned the State could face EU compliance costs ranging from €8 billion to €26 billion by 2030, if emissions-reduction plans are not delivered. That means failure would not simply be environmental. It could become a major financial burden on the public purse. There is a risk that one positive year creates a false sense of security. Falling emissions are welcome, but climate targets are not judged by headlines. They are judged by cumulative reductions, carbon budgets and legally binding limits. Ireland may be provisionally under its first carbon budget, but future budgets will be tighter and harder to meet.
The real test now is delivery. Targets have been set. Carbon budgets have been agreed. Sectoral ceilings have been created. The legal framework is in place. What Ireland needs next is faster implementation; more renewable power, stronger grids, cleaner transport, warmer homes, lower-emission farming, industrial investment and public policies that make low-carbon choices affordable and practical.
Ireland’s emissions are falling. That matters. But the road to 2030 is getting steeper, not easier.The 2025 figures should be welcomed, but they should not be mistaken for success. They are a reminder that progress has begun, and that the hardest work is still ahead.
Pre-deceased by parents Eamon and Kitty; Mrs Simpson passed away peacefully at her place of ordinary residence, following a long illness bravely borne with great courage and dignity.
Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving and heartbroken husband Tom, brothers Seamus and Noel, sisters Margaret (Leahy) and Anne (Breen), cousin Kaye Wallace, sisters-in-law Elizabeth and Viva, nephews, nieces and godchildren, special friends Mary and Christine, , extended relatives, former work colleagues and the past pupils of Presentation Secondary School, Ballingarry, Thurles, loyal neighbours and many friends.
For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mrs Simpson, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.
The extended Simpson andHayes families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
The Simpson family wish to express their heartfelt gratitude to all those who cared for Mrs Simpson throughout her illness, especially those who helped fulfil her wish to remain in the comfort of her own home. They also wish to thank everyone who has shown such kindness, support and sympathy during this difficult time. Your thoughtfulness and prayers are deeply appreciated.
Pre-deceased by her beloved husband Patrick, her sisters Nelly, Biddy, Margaret and Alice (in infancy); Mrs O’Neill passed away peacefully surrounded by her loving family, while in the care of staff at Cherry Ward, University Hospital, Waterford City, Co. Waterford.
Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving sons Martin and Patrick, daughters Lorraine, Breda and Ann Marie, their partners Louise,Finbarr, Gerry and Sean, her adored grandchildren and great grandchildren, sisters Judy, Kathleen and Christine, extended family, neighbours and friends.
Requiescat in Pace.
Funeral Arrangements.
The earthly remains of Mrs O’Neill will repose at Dermot Ronan’s Funeral Home, Ballingarry (SR), Thurles, on this afternoon Tuesday, July 7th, from 5:00pm until 7:00pm this evening. Her remains will be received into the nearby Church of the Assumption, Ballingarry, (SR), Thurles, on tomorrow morning, Wednesday July 8th, to further repose for Requiem Mass at 11:30am, followed by interment in the adjoining old graveyard section.
The extended O’Neill and Cashin families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
Solas na bhflaitheas agus leaba i measc na n-aingeal di.
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