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People walking in heavy snow in the Phoenix Park during the 2010 Big Freeze Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland

Dreams of a white Christmas dashed, with scattered showers and sunny spells in store

Met Éireann forecasts a mix of scatter showers and sunny spells for Christmas Day.

A WHITE CHRISTMAS isn’t on the cards this year, with Met Éireann instead forecasting a day of scattered showers with sunny spells.

A white Christmas occurs when there is lying snow at 9am on 25 December at one of the main primary stations.

It has always been a rare occurrence in Ireland and is becoming rarer still due to climate change – the average December day now has a mean temperature of around seven degrees.

The last time a white Christmas happened was during the Big Freeze of 2010, and it’s happened nine times in all since 1964.

During the Big Freeze of 2010, the highest total of lying snow in Ireland on Christmas Day was recorded – 27 centimetres at Casement Aerodrome.

A Met Éireann spokesperson told The Journal that “while there remains some uncertainty in the forecast”, it looks likely that Christmas Day “will bring a mix of scattered showers and sunny spells”.

There is also a chance of longer spells of rain in some northern and western parts.

And while there will be a brief cooler spell on Christmas Day, it won’t bring any snow.

The Met Éireann spokesperson said: “The models are currently trending towards a brief cooler spell on Christmas Day after a relatively mild few days this week.

“However, temperatures will not be cold enough to bring any wintry precipitation.”

While Ireland does get occasional cold snaps, environmental journalist John Gibbons told The Journal that the “general climatic shift in Ireland is that we’re moving towards drier, warmer summers, and wetter, milder winters”.

He noted that the “amount of rainfall in Ireland in the last couple of decades has increased by 7%”.

“It’s a huge change and one of the reasons we’re seeing more and more flooding events,” said Gibbons.

“With every additional degree of global warming, we get an extra 7% precipitation in the atmosphere.

“Assuming global warming continues on its current path, it’s going to get an awful lot wetter in Ireland.

“I think it’s far more likely that we’ll have sodden Christmases rather than white Christmases.”

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    Mute Torpedo
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    Feb 28th 2012, 9:02 AM

    Great news guys. Now get onto Hireland and pledge and give a few jobs.

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    Mute Oaklane1
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    Feb 28th 2012, 2:30 PM

    @torpedo, their focus should not be on giving a few jobs, they should focus on continuation of their successful growth strategy, if they succeed jobs will follow.

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    Mute Torpedo
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    Feb 28th 2012, 3:18 PM

    They made a pre tax profit of 700 million. I think the can afford to hire one or two people.

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    Mute Oaklane1
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    Feb 28th 2012, 3:36 PM

    It is that sort of attitude that leads to inefficiency and eventual ruin, you do not hire people just to sit on their arses.

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    Mute jimkennedy
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    Feb 28th 2012, 10:19 AM

    ‘Very challenging environment’ indeed. It’s a tough business building apartheid cement walls around Palestine, but some Irish firm has got to do it.

    http://www.ipsc.ie/campaigns/crh-divest/petition

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    Mute Peter Carroll
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    Feb 28th 2012, 9:52 AM

    They are obviously working in a very challenging environment and there is still some way to go before new jobs will emerge. A profit of less than 4% on sales suggest that further cost cutting will be needed to remain competitive.

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    Mute Damien Flinter
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    Oct 23rd 2012, 12:44 PM

    A challenging environment all right. Putting up Israel’s apartheid wall.

    But its good for tricky Dicky Bruton’s portfolio.

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    Mute Medium D
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    Feb 28th 2012, 1:27 PM

    Much of these profits have been made on the back of an illegal price-fixing cartel operating in the.concrete and cement industries. Ongoing legal actions taken by Framus Ltd and Goode Concrete serve to demonstrate the extent of the crippling stranglehold CRH have over many small businesses in this country. Compounding this is the negligence of the Competition Authority who steadfastly refuse to investigate the industry despite the severity of the allegations laid at the door of CRH. The term Regulatory Capture comes to mind here.

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    Mute I.S.B.A.
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    Feb 28th 2012, 2:29 PM

    CRH operate a cartel with others in the cement, concrete and tarmac markets in Ireland. They have been selling concrete below average variable cost in the Dublin concrete market and abused their dominant position in their upstream cement and aggregates markets by doing so. This is illegal and criminal but they are being protected by the successive Governments due to a term called political and regulatory capture.
    CRH has been found to have operated a price fixing cartel in Northern Ireland between 1985 and 1992. CRH was fined by the European Commission in 1994 for conducting a pan European cartel. In 2007 CRH was fined €530,000 for obstructing an antitrust investigation and destroying evidence. In 2009 CRH was fined €25 million for participation in a price fixing cartel in Poland.
    CRH is doing monumental damage to the Irish economy by overcharging for cement and tarmac and using this money to subsidise a corporate eviction strategy which is costing the economy jobs.

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