Dublin-born scientist Sir Adrian Hill (KBE) has been honoured with the European Inventor Award 2026 in the Research category for his role in developing R21/Matrix-M, a malaria vaccine now offering new hope in the fight against one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases.
Professor Sir Adrian Hill, KBE.
Sir Adrian educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and director of Oxford University’s Jenner Institute, received the award from the European Patent Office in Berlin for work that has helped overcome a challenge scientists had pursued for more than a century. More than 150 malaria vaccine candidates entered human trials before recent breakthroughs finally succeeded. Hill’s team redesigned the vaccine to present key malaria-specific protein regions more effectively to the immune system, while removing elements that could weaken the response.
Clinical trials showed around 75–80 per cent protection, exceeding the World Health Organisation’s target for malaria vaccines. The vaccine can also be produced at large scale, costs less than €3 per dose, and remains stable for up to two years under standard refrigeration, making it especially valuable for countries where malaria remains endemic.
According to WHO, there were an estimated 282 million malaria cases and 610,000 deaths worldwide in 2024, with children under five accounting for about three-quarters of malaria deaths in the WHO African Region. R21/Matrix-M is now being integrated into routine immunisation programmes in more than 20 African countries.
As stated above, Hill studied medicine at Trinity College, Dublin, before completing a DPhil in human genetics at Oxford. He also contributed to the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine, adding to a career focused on vaccines with global impact.
His achievement follows a long line of Irish men who have helped shape medicine. Donegal-born William C. Campbell shared the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work linked to avermectin, a discovery that transformed treatment for parasitic diseases such as river blindness and lymphatic filariasis. Dublin physicians William Stokes and Robert James Graves helped build the reputation of the Dublin School of Medicine, with their names still associated with major clinical conditions. Francis Rynd, a Dublin surgeon, was a pioneer of the hypodermic needle and injection.
Hill’s award therefore recognises not only one scientist’s breakthrough, but Ireland’s continuing contribution to medicine and global health.
It was with a great sadness that we learned of the death, yesterday 2nd of July 2026, of Mr Paul Stapleton, Gortataggart, Thurles, Co. Tipperaryand formerly of Longorchard, Templetuohy, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.
Pre-deceased by his mother Mary, uncles Billy, Joe and Gerry, aunts Margaret, Esther, Claire, Breda and Eileen; Mr Stapleton passed away peacefully surrounded by his loving family, while in the care of staff at University Hospital, Clonmel, South Tipperary.
His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving and heartbroken wife Jacqui, daughters Michelle and Roisin, son Joey, dad Billy, brothers Liam and Tom, father-in-law Gerard, mother-in-law Mary, sisters-in-law, brothers-in-law, aunts, uncles, nephews, nieces, extended relatives neighbours and friends.
Ireland’s new approach to AI chatbots is not a blanket ban on automated customer service. It is more subtle, and potentially more important; consumers should not be trapped inside an automated system when the issue is serious, confusing or financially significant.
The immediate change comes from Ireland’s implementation of updated EU consumer rules for financial services sold online or remotely. The new rules give consumers a right to request human intervention instead of being forced to rely only on an AI chatbot or automated online tool when dealing with certain distance-marketed financial services. The point is practical; if a person is buying, cancelling or trying to understand a financial product online, they should be able to speak to a real person where automated tools are not enough. Recent Irish reporting described this as a consumer-protection measure aimed at giving online buyers protections closer to those they would expect in person.
That matters because chatbots are no longer simple FAQ boxes. Many are becoming front doors to essential services. They answer billing questions, process account requests, triage complaints and increasingly use generative AI to produce conversational answers. Vodafone Ireland’s TOBi is a useful example. IBM says Vodafone Ireland worked with IBM Expert Labs to redeploy TOBi on watsonx Assistant, using generative AI capabilities, large language models and retrieval-augmented generation designed to ground answers in Vodafone’s own content.
For customers, that may mean faster answers and more convenient support. But it also raises a basic consumer-rights question: when does “digital assistance” become a barrier between the customer and a human being?
TOBi is not automatically caught by the new finance-specific right to human intervention in every situation. Vodafone is primarily a telecoms provider, so ordinary mobile, broadband, top-up, billing, roaming or account-support queries are not the same as buying a regulated financial product online. The finance rules are targeted at financial services contracts concluded at a distance, not every chatbot used by every company.
However, that does not mean TOBi or similar systems sit outside regulation. First, the EU AI Act introduces transparency duties for AI systems that interact directly with people. In simple terms, users should be told when they are dealing with an AI system, unless that is already obvious from the circumstances. EU guidance on Article 50 states that providers must inform users when they are interacting directly with an AI system, and that AI-generated or manipulated content may also need to be clearly marked.
Second, GDPR still applies where personal data is processed. A chatbot dealing with account details, identity checks, complaints, billing information or customer history is likely to involve personal data. That means companies must consider lawful basis, transparency, data minimisation, security, retention, accuracy and user rights. If a generative AI assistant produces inaccurate information about a customer’s account, mishandles personal data, or makes it difficult to exercise rights, the issue is not just bad customer service; it may become a data-protection problem.
Third, Ireland is preparing a broader AI enforcement framework. The Irish Government published the Regulation of Artificial Intelligence Bill 2026 to give effect to the EU AI Act domestically. The Department of Enterprise says the Bill will establish the AI Office of Ireland as an independent institution at the centre of Ireland’s AI regulatory system and give competent authorities investigative and sanctions tools. The European Commission says the AI Act entered into force in 2024 and becomes fully applicable on August 2nd 2026, with some provisions applying earlier.
So where does this leave Vodafone’s TOBi? A fair reading is that TOBi should, at minimum, be transparent, accurate, privacy-conscious and supported by clear escalation routes. Customers should know they are using an automated or AI-powered assistant. They should be able to reach a human where the issue cannot reasonably be resolved by automation, especially where the matter involves complaints, cancellation, vulnerability, account access, fraud, security, disputed charges or important contractual consequences.
The strongest legal right to human intervention currently appears in the financial-services context. But the direction of travel is wider. Regulators and lawmakers are recognising that automated customer service can create real-world harm when it blocks access to help. A chatbot that works well can be useful. A chatbot that traps people in loops, gives wrong answers, refuses escalation or hides human support can become a consumer-protection issue.
For companies, the lesson is clear: AI assistants should not be designed only to reduce call-centre demand. They should be designed around customer rights. That means clear disclosure, good records, safe handling of personal data, tested accuracy, accessible alternatives and visible routes to a human.
For consumers, the message is equally important. When dealing with a chatbot such as TOBi, keep screenshots or transcripts if the issue is serious. Ask clearly for a human agent where the automated answer is inadequate. Use formal complaints channels where necessary. And where the matter involves regulated financial services, remember that the new rules strengthen the case for human intervention.
Ireland’s chatbot clampdown is not anti-technology. It is a reminder that automation should serve people, not replace their rights.
Ireland is set to introduce tougher penalties for littering, with on-the-spot fines increasing by €100 from September 1st 2026. The current fine of €150 will rise to €250 as part of a renewed effort to protect towns, villages, beaches, parks, green-ways and other shared public spaces.
Minister of State for the Circular Economy Mr Alan Dillon said the increase is intended to send a clear message that littering and dog fouling will not be tolerated. The move comes alongside the publication of the 2025 National Litter Pollution Monitoring System results, which show that litter levels across the country have improved.
New Support for Cleaner Communities. A new €250,000 fund is also being introduced to help local authorities keep public areas clean. Councils will be able to apply for funding to support practical measures such as extra dog waste bins and bag dispensers in places where they are most needed. Here in Thurles, a few extra bins at the lower end of the public park and river walk might encourage people from dumping directly into the river Suir.
The aim is to make it easier for responsible dog owners to clean up after their pets and to reduce the amount of dog fouling in public spaces. Local authorities will receive a circular outlining how they can apply for the funding.
Dog Fouling Enforcement Under Review. Dog fouling remains a major challenge, despite only 48 fines being issued nationwide last year. Minister Dillon said officials are examining whether DNA testing of dog droppings could help identify owners who fail to clean up after their pets.
One idea being considered is linking dog DNA samples with dog licences, so enforcement officers could trace fouling back to registered animals. However, the minister said the cost and practicalities must be reviewed before any such system could be introduced. He added that Ireland should look at examples from other European countries before deciding whether DNA-based enforcement is workable here.
Sinn Féin, like Father Murphy, will attempt to “Spur up the rocks with a warning cry”, here in Thurles.
There is no doubt that households in Thurles, across Tipperary, and throughout Ireland are under real pressure. Electricity bills, grocery prices, rents, mortgage repayments, insurance, childcare and transport costs have all eaten into family budgets. Nobody in Government should dismiss that. But equally, nobody in Opposition should pretend that reliefs, credits, freezes and subsidies come without a cost.
That is the part of the cost-of-living debate that too often gets lost. The crisis Ireland has faced was not invented in Leinster House, Dublin. It came from a series of international shocks; the aftermath of Covid-19, supply-chain disruption, the surge in gas and oil prices, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, higher food and fertiliser costs, and interest-rate rises across the eurozone. Ireland, as a small open economy, cannot simply opt out of global energy markets or European monetary policy. The Government can cushion the blow, and it has done so, but it cannot abolish reality.
Budget 2026 shows the Government trying to do that difficult balancing act. It increased most weekly social welfare payments by €10, increased Fuel Allowance by €5 per week, extended the 9% VAT rate on electricity and gas to the end of 2030, extended the Rent Tax Credit, and adjusted the USC band so minimum-wage workers would not be pulled into the higher rate because of the minimum-wage increase. These are not slogans; they are practical measures aimed at helping people, while keeping the public finances under control.
That is the difference between responsible government and permanent protest. Government has to decide not only what people would like to receive, but how it is paid for, who pays for it, and what is sacrificed elsewhere.
Sinn Féin’s alternative budget proposed a €2.5 billion cost-of-living package, including €450 energy credits, a double child benefit payment, higher welfare and pension increases, rent measures and the abolition of USC on the first €40,000 of income. Those proposals may sound attractive when listed at a public meeting. Who would not like lower bills, higher payments, lower taxes and cheaper rent? But politics is not a wishing well. A €2.5 billion package must be funded by someone.
And that “someone” is usually the worker, the taxpayer, the business owner, or the next generation.
If the State pays for broad energy credits, the money comes from taxation, borrowing, or less spending elsewhere. If taxes are raised on “someone else,” they rarely stay neatly confined there. Business taxes can affect investment and jobs. Higher taxes on workers reduce take-home pay. Borrowing passes today’s relief bill to tomorrow’s taxpayers. Cutting or delaying spending elsewhere means less money for housing, schools, hospitals, roads, disability services, Garda resources, water infrastructure and energy investment.
This is why the Government is right to be cautious about turning every pressure into a permanent spending commitment. Ireland’s public finances look strong on paper, but independent watchdogs have repeatedly warned that the headline figures hide real risks. The Irish Fiscal Advisory Council warned in June 2026 that Ireland remains heavily reliant on corporation tax from a small number of foreign-owned multinationals. It also said that, excluding excess corporation tax, the State is forecast to have an underlying deficit of €11 billion this year. That means we are not as flush with money as some political speeches expected from Sinn Féin suggest.
The same watchdog warned that most corporation tax receipts are being spent rather than saved, with only €1 in every €6 being set aside under the Government’s plan. It also warned that spending growth is running faster than the sustainable growth rate of the economy. These are not Fine Gael or Fianna Fáil talking points. They are warnings from Ireland’s independent fiscal watchdog.
The Central Bank has also warned that Ireland faces downside risks to exports and corporation tax receipts if US tax or industrial policy changes, with possible effects on investment and incomes. In plain English, the tax money we are relying on today may not be guaranteed tomorrow.
That is why the Government cannot responsibly govern as though every surplus is permanent and every demand can be met by writing another cheque.
Of course, Opposition parties will always say more should be done. That is their job. But there is a danger in turning every genuine hardship into a rallying cry against the State. Public meetings can easily become exercises in stirring-up anger, rather than solving problems. The old cry of “Arm, arm” may be poetic, but it is not an economic policy. Ireland does not need a politics that spurs up resentment while avoiding the hard question: who pays?
The responsible answer is that support should be targeted, temporary where possible, and affordable. Help should go to those most exposed: pensioners, carers, low-income workers, families with children, people with disabilities, and households facing energy poverty. But permanent giveaways funded by unstable revenues or future borrowing are not compassion. They are deferred taxation.
The Government’s position should be defended because it recognises both sides of the truth: people need help, but the State must remain solvent; households need relief, but workers cannot be taxed into the ground; today’s pressure is real, but tomorrow’s taxpayers also matter.
There is no such thing as free cost-of-living relief. There is only a choice about who pays, when they pay, and whether politicians are honest enough to admit it.
Ireland needs action, yes. But it also needs prudence, honesty and responsibility. Demanding everything immediately may win applause in a public meeting. Governing requires asking whether the applause today becomes the tax bill tomorrow.
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