Budget to help most vulnerable from rising energy costs Taoiseach
Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said the Government will use the upcoming budget to protect people with lower incomes from the impact of rising energy costs.
Mr Martin also said the Coalition is confident that power blackouts can be avoided this winter.
The Taoiseach was speaking during his visit to New York for meetings at the United Nations.
He said that the Government was âconcernedâ about energy prices which he said were rising as part of a global âinflationary spikeâ.
Mr Martin added: âIn the forthcoming budget we will seek to try and protect the lowest income groups and those most impacted by an increase in fuel prices.â
Asked if this would mean an increase in fuel allowance welfare payments he said the Government would have to decide on specific measures âbut a principle of protecting those most vulnerable to price hikes around energy is one that we will subscribe to and adhere to.
âWe want to protect people from the worst impacts of that.â
There have been amber alerts about electricity supply in recent weeks and warnings in early summer of potential electricity outages.
Mr Martin said Minister for Energy Eamon Ryan was âconfident that weâll get through this winterâ.
The Taoiseach said there were âchallenges aheadâ and this is why Ireland must push ahead with wind energy generation over the next decade.
Amid continuing concern over energy supplies, the Social Democrats and People Before Profit (PBP) on Tuesday called for a moratorium on new data centres in the Republic because of their high energy use.
Mr Martin said he hadnât seen the details of the PBP Bill seeking to ban new data centres. But he said such centres were needed for the technological transformation that was taking place and he didnât think legislating to ban them sounded like a âvery intelligent approachâ to the genuine issues that were raised.
He said that in recent times there had been efforts to bring in countermeasures to protect the environment like the creation of carbon sinks to offset the energy demands of data centres.
PensionsEarlier, Minister for Public Expenditure Michael McGrath said there was a need for the Government to respond to rising costs of living with welfare rates unmoved for the last two years.
Speaking after Cabinet, Mr McGrath said he was in discussions with Minister for Social Protection Heather Humphreys in advance of the budget, and that there was a recognition that inflation was putting pressure on incomes.
âWe certainly recognise that the cost of living is rising, there will be a need for the Government to respond to that, and I acknowledge the point that the core social welfare rates have not changed in the last two budgets,â he said.
However, he pointed out that the room for new spending measures in next monthâs budget is limited. While there is an overall âenvelopeâ of â¬4.2 billion.
Ms Humphreys said: âBoth of us are conscious that welfare rates, including the state pension have not increased over the last two years, the cost of living has gone up so all of these considerations will form part of our discussions.â
Maximum price ordersIn the Dáil, the Tánaiste said there was a need for a tax and social welfare package in Budget 2022 because of the rise in the cost of living as otherwise people on pensions and social welfare would end up âworse offâ.
Leo Varadkar also said the Government had not ruled out maximum price orders for the surge in gas and electricity prices but he warned of the potential for energy companies to go out of business as was happening in the UK because of a cap on prices.
He said if the Government imposed a price cap the retailers still had to pay for the energy and, in the UK, companies were going bust as a result.
âSo itâs not necessarily an example to follow but certainly not something that we rule out,â he said.
Labour leader Alan Kelly had warned that âyour Government is genuinely faced with a winter of discontent, unless you really genuinely act on these issues that really affect peopleâs everyday lives and living standardsâ as he highlighted an increase of between â¬400 and â¬500 in energy prices this winter.
The Tipperary TD said that âif gas and electricity prices really do soar this winterâ the Government should implement maximum price orders to stop energy companies further increasing prices in the wake of âamber alertsâ about power outages and rising prices across all consumer areas.
Mr Kelly said inflation had hit a 3 per cent high in August, the highest increase since 2008, and was only âgoing in one directionâ.
The Tánaiste said everyone could see the cost of living increases â" on the forecourt, in supermarkets and in home heating oil prices â" and this was caused by international reasons.
He said that there would be a tax and social welfare package to combat inflation and rising energy prices and the Government had reached agreement on the welfare package but not its composition.
Infrastructure and defectsOn other budgetary matters, Mr McGrath refused to be drawn on weekend reports that there could be delays to the Dart expansion programme and Dublinâs metro project, saying there would be further details on these projects unveiled as part of the National Development Plan. He said he is expecting to publish that in the next three weeks.
Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform Michael McGrath: âWe certainly recognise that the cost of living is rising, there will be a need for the Government to respond to that.â Photograph: Gareth Chaney/CollinsOn the issue of Mica redress payments, Mr McGrath said it was âan incredibly difficult issue for individuals and families who are impactedâ. The Government, he said, would âfind a solution and thatâs what we will do while at the same time recognising that we have an obligation to taxpayers generallyâ.
Government members and TDs, including current minister for agriculture Charlie McConalogue and his predecessor Dara Calleary, have indicated they expect a 100 per cent cost redress scheme to be brought forward by the Government. Mr Varadkar said he understood the stress faced by families and the need to bring forward a solution, but warned: âWe do have to bear in mind the impact on the general taxpayer as wellâ.
âUltimately itâs not the Government that pays for this, itâs the taxpayer, the average working person,â he said.
âThatâs why we have to make sure that thereâs some form of cost control on it,â he added, pointing out there were many other defective buildings, including defective apartment buildings in his constituency.
âWe need to do something for them too but we have to have some sense of what the total cost will be and we have to bear in mind that this is taxpayers money.â
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