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FactFind: How deep is Ireland's trade and investment relationship with China?

Ireland’s ties with Chinese companies and investors have strengthened significantly in the past decade.

AT A CONVENTION Centre event a couple of years ago to mark 40 years of diplomatic ties between Ireland and China, then-Minister for Justice Charlie Flanagan noted that relations between Dublin and Beijing were “growing stronger with each passing year”.

Flanagan’s statement is backed up by the numbers, which reveal just how strong those ties have become.

In 2020, Ireland had a trade surplus with China of over €3.5 billion after exporting over €10.5 billion worth of goods to China— an 18% increase on the previous year — despite the challenges of the pandemic.

In 2019, foreign direct investment by Chinese companies in Ireland soared by 56% at a time when Chinese interest in the UK, the US and Europe seemed to be waning.

A bevvy of major Chinese companies like the Bank of China have set up shop here in recent years.

Newer Chinese success stories like TikTok are also in the process of ramping up their presence in the State and, since 2012, Ireland has become a top destination for high net-worth Chinese investors and their families to live, work and study in.

But as a small, open economy, Ireland’s trading relationships are heavily influenced by our position within the European Union.

As we’ve covered previously as part The Good Information Project, EU-China relations have deteriorated substantially in recent months, culminating with the shelving of a blockbuster trade deal between the two jurisdictions last week.

So from where we’re standing at the moment, guessing at the trajectory of Ireland-China relations is a difficult task.

But where does it stand right now? Let’s take a look.

Property

Across the board, Ireland has been flooded with international capital in the decade since the crash.

No sector of the economy has been left untouched by the deluge but the property market, in particular, has been completely altered from its pre-crisis structure by this influx of foreign investors.

The downsides of this phenomenon have been made abundantly clear in recent weeks in the controversy over cuckoo funds and their power within the market.

But the flip side is that the market for investment in Irish property is “a lot deeper” than it was pre-crash, says Iain Sayer, director at commercial property consultancy HWBC.

“Before the crash, it was Irish fellas selling to Irish fellas with Irish bank debt. And we all know how that ended.

“So there’s a comfort in the depth of the market. Now, the market is reliant on large firms who tend not to borrow very large sums of money. They will use some leverage, but they’re not borrowing up to the hilt.”

Naturally, Chinese cash has been part of this but it’s difficult to get precise figures.

At the level of individual investors, Sayer says there’s not much evidence that Chinese capital is having any sort of an outsized influence on property markets here, either commercial or residential.

At the end of the day, Ireland is still a more popular destination for individual European and American investors, from his experience. “Now, that’s not to say that Chinese investors haven’t invested via other people’s funds.”

Sayer explains, “There are a lot of very large fund managers active in Ireland… So while we’re not seeing a huge number of inbound queries directly from China, I would expect that there would be Chinese capital invested here through other funds.”

There have, however, been some headline-grabbing forays into the Irish market by Chinese investors — like the purchase of the Fota Island Resort in 2012 by the Kangs, a hotelier family originally from the Heibei Province.

But Sayer says that when investors don’t know a market particularly well, they tend to dip their toes in gradually by investing in “core offices” in city centres — low-risk investments, in other words.

There’s certainly been some of that, he says, but Chinese interest in Irish property is still a new phenomenon.

“From Asia, most of the activity [in Ireland] would be from Korean investors and funds from Singapore. We would have seen some activity and interest from Hong Kong-based investors,” Sayer says.

“But from mainland China, less so.”

Social housing

Where we have seen substantial interest from individual Chinese investors in Irish property is in the area of social housing.

That’s mainly because Ireland operates something called the Immigrant Investor Programme (IIP), an initiative that allows investors from non-European Economic Area to obtain visas to study, work and live in Ireland.

Aimed at high net worth individuals, prospective applicants have to agree to plough between €500,000 and €2 million into certain, specified areas.

Investments of at least €1 million in Irish enterprises are at the top of the list.

“Particular preference is given” at the moment to investments in social housing, primary healthcare centres and nursing homes, according to the Department of Justice.

Applicants can also choose to invest at least €1 million in Central Bank-regulated investment funds, at least €2 million in publicly listed Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) or make philanthropic endowments to charitable, cultural or sports organisations of no less than €500,000.

The latest figures from the department, released this week, show that just 3% of the €185.6 million raised through the IIP last year went into REITs, bonds and a mix of other investments.

The lion’s share, some 41%, went towards Irish enterprises.

The programme has been a big draw, mainly for Chinese investors, since its inception in 2012.

China had the highest number of approved applications last year at 254 with the US far behind in second place at just six.

In fact, this has been general trend observed across the lifetime of the scheme. According to an Irish Times analysis of the figures, some 1,088 applications from China had been approved since the IIP’s inception in 2012 to 2019.

Americans were second with just 21 approvals.

It’s worth noting that Ireland isn’t an outlier when it comes to attracting foreign investors in this manner. In fact, according to the BBC, more than half of the nations in the world — including the UK — operate similar systems.

So what’s the attraction of Ireland, exactly?

Ireland’s low-tax environment is certainly a factor. The threat of Brexit and Ireland’s status as a gateway to Europe may also have helped to turbocharge applications in recent years.

Foreign direct investment

It’s difficult to put a precise figure on it at the moment.

According to IDA Ireland, Chinese-owned companies employed at least 900 people in Ireland by the end of 2019.

Since then there have been some high profile jobs announcements by companies like TikTok and Huawei. So it’s possible that the total number of Irish jobs directly supported by Chinese investment has grown to around 2,000 or above.

A plethora of Chinese-owned companies have set up in Ireland in recent years, the result of a concerted effort by the government and the IDA.

Once upon a time, “most of our big FDI projects came from either the United States or Europe,” says Eileen Sharpe, head of Global Business Development for Growth Markets at the IDA.

“Over recent years, we have pivoted to look at investment in what we call growth market areas. Of them, China would probably be the most important.”

Across areas like financial services, technology and pharmaceuticals, Sharpe says the IDA has secured a number of “really strategic investments”.

Wuxi Biologics is one of the most eye-catching.

The pharma company is building a major production facility in Dundalk, which represents “the largest greenfield life sciences investment by a Chinese company into Europe to date,” according to the IDA.

Huawei — which has been at the centre of European and American concerns over data protection at Chinese companies — is also “very well embedded here”, Sharpe says.

“It’s been here for a number of years, but it continues to expand its presence,” she says.

Huawei has three research and development centres in the Republic — in Cork, in Dublin and in Athlone — and recently announced the creation of 110 new R&D jobs.

TikTok is another big win for the IDA.

Amid increased focus on its own data processing policies last year, particularly from the Trump administration, the social media platform announced plans to create a ‘trust and safety’ centre in Dublin and 1,200 jobs along with it.

The company declined to provide a spokesperson to be interviewed for this article.

Asked about trust issues around Chinese companies, Sharpe says that “view is there” but she “hasn’t experienced” any evidence that it’s justified.

“I can only tell you this: the companies that we’re dealing with, they’re highly sophisticated; they’re very commercially driven; they’re good to deal with,” she says.

“They take account of all the protocols in Ireland, to be fair, and they’re very careful to be within regulations etc.”

Exports

China has become an increasingly lucrative market for Irish exporters in recent years.

It’s a case of a rising tide lifting all boats, says Mary Kinnane, Enterprise Ireland Regional Director for Greater China.

“The Chinese market has been growing exponentially for several years and this growth has led to increased opportunities in almost every sector,” she says.

Ireland’s export strategy was a key factor in the economic recovery after the Great Recession and in that time, China emerged as a major trading partner.

Last year, Ireland exported over €10.5 billion worth of goods to China, including Hong Kong and Macau, according to CSO figures.

That made China Ireland’s sixth-largest export market and the third-largest outside the European Union, behind only the US and the UK.

Machinery and transport equipment — including aircraft purchased by Irish-resident leasing companies — made up the lion’s share of exports (€6.8 billion).

But Ireland’s pharmaceutical sector, which boomed in 2020 during the pandemic, was another major contributor.

Chemical and related product exports — which includes medical and pharmaceutical goods — to China increased to €1.7 billion in 2020 from €1.4 billion.

Meanwhile, agricultural and live animal exports were worth €810 million, down slightly due to public health restrictions in China at the start of the pandemic in the early part of the year.

“Overall future projections are difficult to predict,” says Kinnane.

“However, the Enterprise Ireland clients who are active in the market are predicting post-pandemic growth.

“It must be acknowledged that given distance China is a challenging market and is not in the main a realistic destination for early-stage exporters.

“That said, for companies who have the experience, scale, management and balance sheet strength China offers very significant potential.

This work is co-funded by Journal Media and a grant programme from the European Parliament. Any opinions or conclusions expressed in this work is the author’s own. The European Parliament has no involvement in nor responsibility for the editorial content published by the project. For more information, see here.

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    Mute Dj
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:32 PM

    The treaty is about as useful as a packet of vegetarian burgers in Brian Cowens fridge.

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    Mute Kerry Blake
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:59 PM

    @Liam Doyle: Yup nothing like a symbolic victory that really resonates through the ages…..

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    Mute Gus Sheridan
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    Sep 20th 2017, 8:01 PM

    @Dj: agreed

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    Mute Gus Sheridan
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    Sep 20th 2017, 8:03 PM

    @Dj: about as useful as an aerial photograph of a bacon sandwich, he should attend to problems at home and stop grandstanding

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    Mute WinSomeLoseSome
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    Sep 20th 2017, 8:14 PM

    @Dj: It might not be useful, but that is due to the countries who didn’t sign it, not the ones who did. It enshrines Ireland’s stance on the matter.

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    Mute Stephen murphy
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    Sep 20th 2017, 11:23 PM

    @Dj: It’s a start, gets the conversation going and a journey of a thousand miles begins with a few steps.

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    Mute Fiona deFreyne
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:30 PM

    Nuclear weapons are a true obscenity. They are weapons of potential mass indiscriminate murder of human beings.

    Respect to Ireland on the position it adopted.

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    Mute Meanderingsz
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:37 PM

    @Fiona deFreyne: <——- thanks for your official statment

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    Mute Liam flag
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:53 PM

    @Fiona deFreyne: God you’re about as boring and insufferable as Tony Daly. You guys related?

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    Mute Emmet Dillane
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:59 PM

    @Fiona deFreyne:
    Fiona, can we club together and send you to North Korea to have a chat with yer man?

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    Mute Paddy Hayden
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    Sep 20th 2017, 8:18 PM

    @Emmet Dillane: A background in Basketball would be an advantage .

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    Mute Patrick J. O'Rourke
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    Sep 20th 2017, 10:50 PM

    @Fiona deFreyne: Tony, all weapons of mass destruction are obscene. For example
    in the 1950s the US dropped more ordnance on NK than Japan got in WW2. The US destroyed 78 cities and thousands of villages using mainly the new wonder weapon of napalm and roasted somewhere between 1-2 million people although the figures are complicated but the destruction is well documented even if nobody in the US has ever heard about it. Japan got off lightly. I think there was a piece in the IT today about it too. My own research years ago turned my stomach.

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    Mute Patrick J. O'Rourke
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    Sep 20th 2017, 10:57 PM

    @Liam flag: Fiona, Tony…and it needs another one to be the holier than thou trinity. Its father, daughter and holy indiscernible.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 20th 2017, 11:17 PM

    @Emmet Dillane: I hear that Elton John is touring Australia and the far East at the moment – the original ‘rocket man’.

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Sep 21st 2017, 12:52 AM

    @Fiona deFreyne: Red mercury fusion bombs that kill life but keep the infrastructure in place???

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    Mute Emmet Dillane
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:31 PM

    ‘Ireland is proud to have played a leadership role’
    This Coveney guy eh?

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    Mute Boyne Sharky
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    Sep 20th 2017, 8:29 PM

    @Emmet Dillane: Yeah that’s very true Emmet, Ireland will toe the UN line when it comes to certain issues – but not abortion, eh?

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    Mute Kerry Blake
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:40 PM

    So just like North Korea, America will be facing trade sanctions for working on nuclear armaments now Simon. Will you be leading that charge Simon??

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    Mute Michael Collins
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    Sep 21st 2017, 8:51 AM

    @Kerry Blake: the treaty doesn’t work like that

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    Mute Paddy Hayden
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:36 PM

    Fair play to them , but it won’t make a jot of difference to countries who already have them .

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    Mute Dave Hogan
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:36 PM

    Hilarious.

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    Mute Dave Hogan
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:56 PM

    Fair play Simon Your role is critical to world peace. But it’s not only country’s we need to thwart from attending nuclear weapons. Ireland needs to be leading the way in stopping terrorists organisations like the Muslim brotherhood Whose members might attempt to acquire one. No doubt our intelligence department are up to speed.

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    Mute Seth Cheffetz
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:33 PM

    What reason could the journal have for closing comments about jobstown trials being dropped? Pathetic.

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    Mute Honeybadger197
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:34 PM

    @Seth Cheffetz: Its explained at the end of the article.

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    Mute Emmet Dillane
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:35 PM

    @Seth Cheffetz:
    Pathetic policy, particularly when there’s an open comments section on a murder case when the suspect has already been charged.

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    Mute Pat Troy
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:35 PM

    @Seth Cheffetz: what’s the difference between our media and North Korea, nothing.

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    Mute Emmet Dillane
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:38 PM

    @Honeybadger197:
    ‘Formalities’

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    Mute WinSomeLoseSome
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    Sep 20th 2017, 8:19 PM

    @Pat Troy: I never thought of it, but yeah the Irish media is exactly like North Korea in every way. Especially the way north Korea stops comments on articles, and the way the journal kills the families of defectors. So similar.

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    Mute Aaron O'Leary
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    Sep 20th 2017, 9:58 PM

    @Pat Troy: The freedom of the press index by freedom house should give you a fair idea.

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    Mute Emmet Dillane
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    Sep 20th 2017, 8:24 PM

    There will never be world peace without a proper deterrent. Placing ones faith in human nature is a recipe for disaster.

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    Mute Aaron O'Leary
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    Sep 20th 2017, 10:01 PM

    @Emmet Dillane: I agree, Nuclear weapons are a great deterrent to war. Without them, it wouldn’t have been called the cold war, it would be called ww3

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    Mute rory conway
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    Sep 20th 2017, 7:36 PM

    Ban the bomb and then talk to North Korea? No thanks.

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    Mute Michael Devlin
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    Sep 20th 2017, 9:30 PM

    It will take years for Ireland to decommision its nuclear weapons lol

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    Mute tom McCormack
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    Sep 20th 2017, 9:31 PM

    It is good that Ireland is not following the EU/ NATO line and making its own mind up on this issue.

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    Mute Donal O Cofaigh
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    Sep 20th 2017, 9:29 PM

    I’m so relieved, thank you Simon thank you

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    Mute Kathleen Henderson
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    Sep 20th 2017, 8:46 PM

    Big bloody deal….the world’s shivering in their shoes.

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    Mute Colin Morris
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    Sep 21st 2017, 12:43 AM

    Poor old Coveney – the emblem of failure rewarded.

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    Mute Karl
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    Sep 21st 2017, 7:43 AM

    “Despite boycott from NATO”, why would their policy matter a damn for us given we’re not members, or as with everything in Ireland are we also expected to copy and paste defence and foreign policy positions from others too. Heaven forbid we come up with our own position.

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    Mute Paul Flood
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    Sep 20th 2017, 9:17 PM

    ‘Ireland backs UN Treaty’………Kim young dung will be crapping himself now!

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    Mute Wes O'Toole
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    Sep 21st 2017, 1:13 AM

    LOL..As if countries around the world care what our country has to say..! Don’t makd me laugh..!

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Sep 21st 2017, 12:44 AM

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zangger_Committee
    That is funny as there is the Zangger agreement Ireland signed, what happened to that?

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    Mute Barry morcom
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    Sep 21st 2017, 2:15 AM

    @Alois Irlmaier: haha left hand doesn’t know what the rights doing…..
    no change there then…

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    Mute Damocles
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    Sep 21st 2017, 6:36 AM

    Let’s hope the fallout from any nuclear incident pays attention to this and doesn’t fall on Ireland.

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