Timber lobby says ‘zero evidence’ of Government clearing licence backlog

Delays in tree-felling licence appeals leading to timber shortages

Politicians last month passed new laws streamlining the forestry licence appeals system. Photograph: iStock
Politicians last month passed new laws streamlining the forestry licence appeals system. Photograph: iStock

Lobby group Forest Industries Ireland (FII) says there is “zero evidence” that the Department of Agriculture will clear a backlog of tree-felling licence appeals that is starving the Republic of timber.

Politicians last month passed new laws streamlining the forestry licence appeals system in a bid to end the logjam, which has left sawmills running out of logs, endangering an industry that employs 12,000 people.

FII said on Wednesday that there was "zero evidence" that the Department of Agriculture would clear the backlog by January, as it had suggested after Oireachtas amended the Forestry Act, 2014 last month.

The group demanded that the department deal with at least 30 outstanding appeals a week by implementing the new laws, which allow it to split the Forestry Appeals Committee into subdivisions, so it can take on more work.

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“The department’s output is a fraction of its own project plan,” FII said. “The current approach and performance can only be described as dysfunctional and leaves the industry hanging on by a thread.”

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O’Halloran covers energy, construction, insolvency, and gaming and betting, among other areas