Micheál Boxty Ó Conaill made his comments on Cllr Chris Maxwell's turf stunt last week.
Green Party general election candidate in Mayo Micheál Boxty O’Conaill has hit out at Cllr Chris Maxwell’s stunt last week in the council chamber as 'political theatre' that is just outright misleading.
Cllr Maxwell brought a bag of turf to the Council meeting as a way of propping up a false claim that people can no longer cut their turf.
However, Boxty O’Conaill said that this was totally incorrect. People with turbary rights can still cut and give turf to their friends and neighbours. What is no longer permitted, however, is the commercial and large-scale 'strip-mining' of peat.
Smoky fuels regulations, introduced in 2022, were brought in to prevent debilitating air pollution and to save lives. In Ireland, it is estimated that 1,600 people a year die from air pollution, caused largely by damaging particulate matter found in smoky fossil fuels.
“I am sure Mr Maxwell – who is no longer just an Independent - is well meaning and I respect both his willingness to step forward and the mandate he represents,” Boxty O’Conaill said. “That said, I must be direct.
“This is not just political theatre, it is completely misleading, and frankly a lie.
“I suspect that Mr Maxwell is aware of the facts, but in case he is not, let me clarify them. Under new regulations, people with traditional turbary rights retain the right to cut turf and use it themselves. They may also share or sell turf informally with neighbours or family, providing it is not part of a commercial transaction.
“The issue of turf is itself largely a distraction anyway,” the small farmer’s son from Erris said. “The reality is that younger generations are unlikely to cut or save turf themselves. If there is any doubt about it, I challenge anyone trying to cut a plot of turf to find volunteers to save it. Turf is only a cheap stick our opponents think they can use against the Greens, no matter how false it is and nomatter how old the stunt gets.”
He also pushed back on the inaccurate misrepresentation of carbon tax. Analysis by the ESRI shows that it benefits less well-off households most. Carbon tax is ringfenced to pay for the fuel allowance and other social welfare payments to the most vulnerable households in the country. It is also being used to pay farmers to implement regenerative farming schemes. About half of the revenue is being used for retrofitting, with nearly half of this going to provide free retrofitting for low income and energy poor homes.
Boxty O’Conaill also said that if Ireland doesn’t reduce its emissions, and if politicians like Cllr Maxwell continued to mislead people, we will all end up paying dearly.
“The reality is that Ireland is already incurring hundreds of millions in carbon fines from the European Union and projections indicate that if targets continue to be missed, and if our public representatives continue to mislead people, these penalties could end up reaching €7 or €8 billion in fines every year. Nobody will thank Mr Maxwell and his other fake news brigade for that.”
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