A LICENCE GRANTED by the environmental watchdog for a plant located near data centres used by tech giants in west Dublin has been challenged by environmental campaigners in the courts.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued the license in July for the combustion of natural gas, a fossil fuel, to power a data centre operated by Data and Power Hub Services Limited on Peamount Road, Newcastle.
According to operator Data and Power Hub Services, the installation’s total greenhouse gas emissions will account for a remarkable 8.6 % of the electricity sector’s emissions ceiling by 2030.
In its report approving the plant, the EPA accepted that while there was “no denying” the impact the project makes to the State’s emissions ceiling – but it believed that there was “insufficient justification” to halt the project due to its greenhouse gas emissions.
However, in its statement setting out its reasons for bringing the case, environmental charity Friends of the Irish Environment said it’s brought what it described as the novel challenge against the EPA’s industrial emissions licence for the facility.
The NGO is claiming that there was no clear evidence showing the project’s emissions were factored into national carbon budgets or the climate action plan.
The group further alleged that the EPA “underestimated” the emissions from the plant and is challenging the site on the grounds that the EPA is failing to meet Ireland’s climate obligations by granting the license.
It previously brought a significant 2020 challenge which saw the Supreme Court quash the then-Government’s climate plan on the grounds that it lacked the specificity required by the 2015 Climate Act. It’s seeking to use that legislation as part of its arguments in this case.
The environmental charity’s director Tony Lowes told The Journal that the EPA’s mandate is “to protect, improve and restore our environment through regulation, scientific knowledge and working with others”.
He argued it was failing to meet it’s own standards by greenlighting projects like the west Dublin facility.
According to the site’s planning documentation, it will have the capability to operate 24 hours a day but its actual operation will be non-continuous and correspond to periods of high grid demand.
It is also designed as a ‘peaking plant’ to provide electricity to the national grid during periods of high demand.
There has been growing concern over the shift from data centres to fossil fuels in Ireland, as their backup and emergency generators release huge quantities of carbon dioxide emissions – as revealed by The Journal Investigates last November.
There will 36 standby generators at the Peamount Road site.
In the judicial review lodged by Friends of the Irish Environment, it will argue that significant additional greenhouse gas emissions arising from the site will breach climate legislation.
Government climate and infrastructure targets
The case is a part of a trend of environmental groups such as Friends of the Irish Environment seeking to find new legal methods to disrupt the likes of data centres and other large projects that they argue are harmful.
It comes at a time when the government has looked to ramp up infrastructure developments to meet demands from industry while also securing climate targets.
Three carbon budgets have been set leading up to 2035, with the overall aim to set Ireland on a pathway to climate neutrality by 2050.
Ireland’s energy-related emissions in 2023 – the most recent data available – were at their lowest level in over 30 years. Electricity accounted for 24% of energy emissions.
The facility, consisting of seven combustion engines, will have a total output of approximately 116 megawatts.
Around one kilometre away is Grange Castle Business Park – it’s home to data centres that power the operations for the likes of Google, Amazon and Microsoft.
Data and Power Hub Services is a part of Dublin-based data centre group Echelon. The group is involved a number of data centre projects in Ireland and the UK.
The company declined to comment when contacted. The EPA pointed The Journal to licensing database for the site in place of a comment.