Michael Noonan 'Water Charges Required Under European Law' is a Lie

Article by James Quigley

Former Fine Gael finance minister Michael Noonan's comments made to RTE on March 07, 2016,  have been exposed as lies by Kathy Sinnott.  Ms Sinnott was a member of the European Parliament from 2006 to 2009 and has written extensively on the Water Framework Directive and the River Basin Management Plan, with particular reference to Ireland's derogation (exemption) to the Water Framework Directive, 2000/60/EC .

Mr Noonan said on RTE News, Mon March 07, that "Under European law, Ireland was obliged to charge consumers for water.  There was a derogation up to 2010 where Ireland wasn't obliged to charge for water, but the derogation was ended by the Fianna Fáil-Green government, so legally now under European law water must be charged for in Ireland."

 

Kathy Sinnott - Mr Noonan is incorrect.

Kathy Sinnott Independent MEP 2004-2009

Kathy Sinnott Independent MEP 2004-2009

Ms Sinnott said "Mr Noonan is incorrect.  Our derogation is included in the first Irish River Basin Management Plan (RBMP) 2008-2015. This was supposed to be a 7 year plan but Ireland is behind schedule. The next Irish River Basin Management Plan was supposed to come out this year for the period of 2016-2021, however, there is a delay and it may not come out until 2017"

Ms Sinnott said that "as long as we are functioning under the first plan that was put in place when I was an MEP,  then we have a derogation, the so called Irish Exemption".  She believed that"Alan Kelly may haveput water charging in the second River Basin Management Plan for 2016-2021.  However, if this new plan is not activated then we are still functioning under the 2008 plan." 

Michael Noonan is misinformed or maybe lying when he says our derogation ended in 2010.  It could be he is getting mixed up between the Water Framework Directive and the River Basin Management Plan.   A mix up that is quite easy to make for ordinary folk but for a minister, well, that is another matter.

Ms Sinnot said that" the EU was functioning at that time under the 2008 plan and would have continued for at least the next 7 years.   When I was checking it out I spoke to an official In the European Commission in the section that deals with the European Water Framework Directive which the River Basin Management Plan comes under.   I was informed that we still had the derogation.  The official assured me that the EU could not take the derogation away from us and that the only way we could loose it was for Ireland to give it up voluntarily." 

The official told Ms Sinnott that the then Minister for Environment, Alan Kelly was going to get rid of the derogation.  However, any detail of the new plan has not been made public.  Whether it will be passed remains to be seen especially in light of developments in relation to the issues around Irish Water and water charging.

See full details of Kathy Sinnott's “The Irish Exemption”  in Attack The Tax

 

Nessa Childers querying Alan Kelly's new River Basin Management Plan 2016-2021

Nessa Childers MEP Incumbent

Nessa Childers MEP Incumbent

Buncrana Together contacted Ms Nessa Childers, MEP Dublin, who has written extensively on the Water Framework Directive, Childers Welcomes Clarification from European Commission Re Water Charges and European Law

Bronwen Maher on behalf of Ms Childers said that
" the 2016-2021 River Basin Management Plan was submitted by the Irish Government last year and included water charges (the Government thereby opting out of the non domestic charge clause in the Water Framework Directive).  I suspect as the last Government has submitted the next RBMP that it cannot be withdrawn but we will table a question with the Commission to seek clarification on this issue.  Please note that it can take up to four weeks,  if not longer, for an answer to be returned to an MEP "

Ms Childers in the above article,  December 2015, welcomed clarification from the European Commission that member states, including Ireland, do not have to apply individualised domestic water charges to comply with the Water Framework Directive. 

She said "Each EU member state is obliged to draw up plans under this directive to show how water sources are protected from pollution, and how the cost of water services is carefully priced, including domestic usage.  It is an extremely good piece of European environmental legislation – and we have much work to do to improve water quality in Ireland.  However I am perplexed about reports that Ireland will formally submit a plan to include domestic water charges under our EU Water Framework Directive.  I strongly recommend that we reserve the option to design our water services funding to suit our needs in Ireland."

Interestingly the article gives a response to Ms Childers questions to the Commission, Dec 05, 2015 where Mr Vella on behalf of the Commission stated

" The responsibility for implementation of the Water Framework Directive (WFD)  lies with the Member States and there is no obligation to follow particular schemes or methods. However, methodologies for calculation of cost recovery of water services do exist and are being developed further. For example there is work under way within the Common Implementation Strategy for the WFD implementation on further guidance on assessment of environmental and resource costs.

There is no specific requirement in Art 9 of the WFD for cost recovery to rely on individual consumption. However, for the Commission, an adequate implementation of the principle of incentive water pricing included in the provisions of Art 9, as well as of the more general polluter-pays principle embedded in the Treaties, requires a clear link between water tariffs and actual individual water consumption. In this context, water metering seems to be a basic precondition for proper implementation of the WFD."

Make of that what you will. Notice the work 'seem' in the last sentence.   It seems to be in the interpretation. 

 

Fliuch Off Irish Water Ltd - zones in on article 9 of Water Framework Directive

Fliuch Off Irish Water Ltd, a Cork City based anti Irish Water organisation stated that" Irish people have paid for their water infrastructure over the years via income tax – this was the understanding that Irish people had – now we are being fed the lie that we must be like our EU neighbours and pay for our water – while €11 billion of water infrastructure is given to Irish Water gratis.

What Irish media and government politicians fail to point out is that most other EU citizens get a far higher quality of public services – i.e. a bigger bang for their buck. You simply cannot compare the current system in Ireland to any other EU country – it’s like comparing apples and oranges." 

Noel from Fliuch Off directed our attention to Article 9 of the Water Framework Directive and emphasising the complete article pointed out clause 4 and in particular phrase *established practice*.   He said " what they've done now is tried to say that direct domestic charges are now and 'established practice'.  This is patently untrue.

 

Water Framework Directive 2000/60/EC

Read full text, in particular Ariticle 9 of the Directive 2000/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 October 2000 establishing a framework for Community action in the field of water policy

Article 9
Recovery of costs for water services
1. Member States shall take account of the principle of recovery of the costs of water services, including environmental and resource costs, having regard to the economic analysis conducted according to Annex III, and in accordance in particular with the polluter pays principle.

Member States shall ensure by 2010

- that water-pricing policies provide adequate incentives for users to use water resources efficiently, and thereby contribute to the environmental objectives of this Directive,
- an adequate contribution of the different water uses, disaggregated into at least industry, households and agriculture, to the recovery of the costs of water services, based on the economic analysis conducted according to Annex III and taking account of the polluter pays principle.

Member States may in so doing have regard to the social, environmental and economic effects of the recovery as well as the geographic and climatic conditions of the region or regions affected.

2. Member States shall report in the river basin management plans on the planned steps towards implementing paragraph 1 which will contribute to achieving the environmental objectives of this Directive and on the contribution made by the various water uses to the recovery of the costs of water services.

3. Nothing in this Article shall prevent the funding of particular preventive or remedial measures in order to achieve the objectives of this Directive.

4. Member States shall not be in breach of this Directive if they decide in accordance with established practices not to apply the provisions of paragraph 1, second sentence, and for that purpose the relevant provisions of paragraph 2, for a given water-use activity, where this does not compromise the purposes and the achievement of the objectives of this Directive. Member States shall report the reasons for not fully applying paragraph 1, second sentence, in the river basin management plans.

 

Questionsthe Commission must be asked

As well as Ms Childers submitting questions to the European CommissionBuncrana Together has already sent questions to Mr Enrico Brivio, spokesperson for Environment, Maritime Affair and Fisheries, European Commission.  In particular this isimmediate question we would like answered - 
Is Ireland at present operating under the River Basin Management Plan 2008-2015?

 Other questions are we have to ask is

1. Has the last Government presented a new plan?  

2. When and how will it be ratified?

3.  Is it possible to view the contents? 

4.  Has Mr Kelly implemented charging for water and if so has his submission done away with the Irish derogation as implied in the RBMP 2008-2015?

5 Last but not least can Ireland revoke Mr Kelly's plan?

The above questions must be asked by all our newly elected TDs and parties, especially those who have promised the abolition of Irish Water and Water Charges.  However, they must go a lot further and question the bona fides of Mr Kelly and the former government in their handling of the Irish Water and Water Charges issue and in particular the veracity of any submission to the European Commission.    We have to question Mr Alan Kelly and Mr Noonan's constant misrepresentation of fact especially in light Mr Kelly possibly not renewing the Irish derogation and his inclusion of Water Charges into the River Basin Management Plan 2016-2021.

 
The Pensive Quill

The Pensive Quill

Buncrana Together would like to thank all the above contributors.  We would like to make special mention of Anthony McIntyre editor ofThe Pensive Quill.  He has tirelessly championed truth and justice.  His constant and recent facebook and twitter posts kept to the fore the question of the Water Framework Directive.  See the article in Pensive Quill, written by Direct Democracy Ireland EU Say Ireland’s Domestic Water Charge Exemption Is Safe, Unless Alan Kelly Gives It Away On January 1st



Galway Boil Water Notice Highlights Once Again The Politics of Water

Why are the people of Ireland not up in arms, insisting that they be told the truth about their drinking water?  The truth that there are cancer causing chemicals in our drinking water and that over 1 million us are consuming it?   The truth that coming into contact with these carcinogenic chemicals is adding substantially to our risk of cancer.  The truth that the Irish Government, Irish Water, the EPA and HSA all know abouttrihalomethanes chemicals and their links to cancer. 

The Government know the truth and theyknow that it is caused by adding chlorine to water.  However, they prefer to keep it quiet.

In fact they were advised by the European Commission in 2007 that it was not the right method to use and that it could cause worse problems.  And this is exactly what has come to pass.   It is the reaction of chlorine and organic matter in the water that causes, among other things, Thrihalomethane (THMs). 

(See EU Commission warned Ireland Not to add chlorine)

 

Boiling water increases the concentrations of Trihalomethanes

Boiling water increases the concentrations of Trihalomethanes

The Big Question Is Who Made That Decision?

Whether it was a combination of years of neglect, penny pinching or it was a race to comply with Europe's Water Framework Directive,  Ireland's water quality and its state of the art treatment system are years behind what the Government are telling Europe. 

The government took wrong decision by ignoring the Commission's advice in 2007 that chlorine was the wrong way to go for Ireland. 

The big question is who made that decision?  (read our article Here covering this and information on trihalomethanes and other chemicals)

Whoever made the decision to ignore Europe and take the cheaper chlorination route has a lot to answer.  It has been all downhill since then with outbreaks of Cryptosporidiums and Trihalomethanes in the water supply.  Instead of admitting the mistake and taking sound advice from Europe not to add chlorine, the government and our monitoring agencies decided to continue with the approach.  In this recalcitrant way they cooked the books, fooling the Irish people and took advantage of the bureaucratic nature of the EU.  Their expensive reports were like the water itself,  outwardly crystal clear but on scrutiny totally contaminated. 

Government Do Not Want To Mention Cancer but Cry Bacteria

The government and Irish Water are scaring the public with the big bacterial bug but are hiding the fact that the their so called remedy is worse.  What is worse is the fact that they are responsible in the first place for not heeding Europe.  To cover up they are fooling the public by media articles, (code reds),  telling the public that they are doing everythingto provide safe drinking water.  Trust them they are experts. 

But there is even worse.  What they are telling us to do, i.e 'Boil Notice' may kill the bacteria but it will intensify the trihalomethanes, in turn putting our health further at risk.  They do not want to mention THMs or cancer.  No they do not want to go down that road.  Instead they cry bacteria and they don't mention the skeleton in the closet.

Irish Cancer Figures

The below figures are taken from www.cancer.ie.  The reason we are publishing them is to counteract the argument that Cryptosporidiosis is somehow less than trihalomethanes. 

  • Cancer accounts for over one-quarter of the annual death toll.

  • Cancer is the second most common cause of death in Ireland.

  • The most recent figures show that 8,585 people died from cancer in 2009. 

  • We sourced this data from the Central Statistics Office.

The following is taken form the Irish Examiner, Jan, 2011

"IRELAND has some of the highest cancer rates in the world.  Figures compiled by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) show Ireland’s cancer rates are continuing to dwarf those in other regions.
According to the findings, based on age-standardised 2008 WHO statistics, at 317 cases per 100,000 people, this country currently has the second highest diagnoses of all forms of cancer out of 50 nations analysed worldwide. These figures put us below only Denmark at 326 cases per 100,000.
In the women-only category Ireland has 285 cases per 100,000 people, placing us as the country with the third highest cancer rate behind Denmark (325) and New Zealand (287).
Among men the figure stands at 356 per 100,000, again placing us in third place behind French metropolitan areas (361) and Australia (361)
"


 

Galway Boil Water Notice Greates further Health Risks

The following is a statement from Tony Lowes, Friends of the Irish Environment, Mar 09, 2016.

"Trihalomethane’s [THMs], carcinogenic chemicals have created an additional health risk to water consumers in Carraroe, County Galway because of Irish Water’s 'Boil Water' notice. The Carraroe group water scheme is recorded as exceeding the WHO/EU limits in 4 of the last 5 water quality tests.

THMs are a group of more than 60 chemicals, including chloroform which is classed as a carcinogen, created in drinking water as a result of reaction between organic materials, such as peaty soil, to chlorine added as a disinfectant.

It is universally accepted that THMs are volatile chemicals that present a specific and particular danger through inhalation. Yet this is exactly what Irish Water has instructed consumers to do by bringing the water to a “vigorous, rolling boil”

Absorption through the skin and inhalation of THMs associated with everyday tap water use such as showering can result in ‘THM blood concentrations rising 5- to 15-fold, according to USA study.

FIE is not suggesting that Irish Water stop chlorinating the water before the infrastructure is rationalised, but it borders on the criminal to instruct consumers to boil the water without informing them of the necessary precautions, including ensuring adequate ventilation to protect themselves and their family from inhaling the dangerous chemicals released from boiling THM-laden water. An EPA Direction issued to Irish Water required completion of works including filtration and UV to address cryptosporidium in this supply by 30/11/15.’

FIE is continuing its campaigning to have consumers informed directly on their bills of exceedances of the WHO/EU permitted level of THMs in their water supplies."

 Read the full Rriends of the Irish Environment Press Release

Are we missing something?

Maybe the newly elected Teachtaí Dála are more preoccupied with affairs of state, thinking about 'the good of the country', more like a euphemism for 'ourselves' than to bother with minutia of trihalomethanes and our drinking water.  Maybe they don't bother to look at the small print whilst in committees, sitting in their soft leather seats and instead rubber stamp anything that comes their way.  In either case the people of Ireland are not being served.







The Hub - Ireland is bent so lets unbend it

 

The Hub Ireland is calling on newly elected TDs to follow some practical points to alleviate the suffering thousands of families are subjected as a result of mortgage debt, the banking system and government ineptitude or inability to do anything about the root causes.  The Hub says that it's wish list is not exhaustible but is achievable and are calling on people to apply pressure on local TDs.
 

The Hub-Ireland, 21 Little Mary Street, Dublin 7, 01 534 9118 - http://www.thehub-ireland.com/

The Hub-Ireland, 21 Little Mary Street, Dublin 7, 01 534 9118 - http://www.thehub-ireland.com/


Suggestions For Our Representatives

The separation of power between the Registrar and the Sheriff.

A separate office and distinction between the Registrar and Sheriff, no poundage on possession!

A complaints board before a judicial review against the action of the County Registrar.

The suspension of the pooling system of solicitors in the Circuit Court.

A suspension of all eviction and ejectment notices for two years to allow a resolve to the present crisis to fully unfold.

A halt to receivership where the local business is viable but for debt that the banks erroneously added: allow Ireland to recover.

A mechanism to ensure observation of Circuit Court and High Court rules.

A mechanism to stop the banks selling ‘toxic’ loans.

A control mechanism to stop vulture funds buying loans at €0.19 cent in the €uro and demanding 100 % of the loan value.

More control over the institutions of the Land Registry Ireland, the Companies Registration Office and the Valuations Office: making them more accountable to the people of Ireland and the justice System.

 

 

The Hub- click image opposite to go to it's facebook page


Following graph and info from 'Failure of Irish Politics' by Padraig O'Mara
 

                                Graph from 'Failure of Irish Politics' by Padraig O'Mara  

                                Graph from 'Failure of Irish Politics' by Padraig O'Mara

 

 

Padraig O'Mara in 'Failure of Irish Politics' said“vulture funds are preparing to pull the trigger on hundreds of business foreclosures and property receiverships in the aftermath of the election

This is certainly consistent with news in late 2015 that the Government had ordered county registrars to lay off on evictions until after the election, for fear of a voter backlash.