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'Unsustainable' one off rural homes why thousands still without power

More than a week after the storm, there are still 25,000 homes without power - down from 768,000 in the immediate aftermath. 
James Wilson
James Wilson

10.21 4 Feb 2025


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'Unsustainable' one off rural...

'Unsustainable' one off rural homes why thousands still without power

James Wilson
James Wilson

10.21 4 Feb 2025


Share this article


An “unsustainable pattern” of one off homes in rural Ireland is partly why it has taken so long to reconnect homes without power after Storm Éowyn, a planning expert has said. 

More than a week after the storm, there are still 25,000 homes without power - down from 768,000 in the immediate aftermath. 

On Newstalk Breakfast, Brendan O’Sullivan of University College Cork’s Planning School said most people are unaware how difficult one off rural homes make building and repairing infrastructure. 

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“People like me, involved in the planning system, would think about it quite a lot and we’ve looked at it quite a lot,” he said. 

“Generally speaking, people don’t think about it as a problem until something like this occurs and people realise this pattern can be very, very inefficient in trying to get essential infrastructure and ordinary, everyday infrastructure to people. 

“But it’s one of the things that pops up every now and then when [there’s something] like the storm or flooding issues or perhaps road accidents.” 

AAGTXJ Ireland County Kerry Dingle Peninsula Ventry seafront houses below slopes of Mount Eagle Houses in County Kerry. Picture by: Alamy.com. 

Mr O’Sullivan acknowledged that making it harder to build one off rural homes would be a “tricky issue politically”, but added that isolated homes throw up all sorts of problems.  

“It’s the same for water supplies, for sewerage - it’s an incredibly inefficient pattern,” he said. 

“The number of square kilometers of road is way higher than most other European countries. 

“So, it’s very, very tricky.” 

Work beginning on a new site in rural Ireland, County Donegal. Work beginning on a new site in County Donegal. Image: Piere Bonbon / Alamy Stock Photo

Despite this, Mr O’Sullivan said local authorities are generally relaxed about one off rural developments. 

“Individual houses in the countryside are a form of development that has been supported,” he said. 

“So, local authorities might have very good reason to constrain that pattern in some locations - perhaps, say for example, areas that are very beautiful, areas that are on the edge of cities that are sprawling. 

“They have less and less control because the sense is that it’s a form of development that is supported generally.” 

Going forward, Mr O’Sullivan said such an “unsustainable pattern should at least be acknowledged” and then followed by a “mature discussion” at a national level.

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Main image: Homes in rural Ireland. Picture by: Piere Bonbon / Alamy


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