Shannon LNG has plans for a €650 million liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal, 600-megawatt electricity plant and battery storage at Ballylongford, Co. Kerry.

An Bord Pleanála will assess the proposals under strategic infrastructure legislation. Parties cannot appeal these decisions, but they can get the High Court to review them should they believe there are grounds for this. So, there is a risk that this proposal could end up being litigated, as Shannon LNG’s previous plans for the site did.

Last May, minister for the environment Eamon Ryan said it would not be appropriate to permit any LNG plant in the Republic, including Shannon, pending the outcome of an energy security review which his department will complete next year.

His main concern is that an LNG plant could potentially process gas obtained by fracking, a drilling method involving fracturing rock, which environmentalists oppose. However, most of the gas used to supply such facilities comes from conventional drilling, although fracking does account for some of it. Shannon LNG has indicated that the Irish terminal will only accept shipments that are not fracked.

The pros of Shannon LNG’s plans get far less coverage than the cons. Ireland as a whole will continue to need natural gas well into the future, but its own supply, the Corrib Field, will run out at some point in the next decade, leaving it depending on a pipeline running from Scotland.

While 70 percent of the electricity should come from renewable sources by then, they will still need gas to generate the other 30 percent. Also, that 30 percent will itself be proportionately bigger, as electricity demand in Ireland is rising rapidly.

A state whose electricity demand is growing, but which has dwindling natural gas resources to meet that need, is going to have to consider alternatives, including building an LNG plant.

For more information visit www.pleanala.ie

26th August 2021