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Elaine Thompson AP/Press Association Images

Seaweed could shield Ireland's food and drink business from Brexit fallout

Demand in Europe for marine vegetables is growing by up to 10% each year.

IRELAND SHOULD GROW its seaweed sector to help weather the effects of Brexit on the food and drinks industry, a government committee has said.

A report from the joint committee on agriculture, food and the marine singled out seaweed as an underdeveloped commodity that Ireland could use to “help mitigate some of the damage” caused by a hard Brexit.

“Seaweed represents an opportunity for diversification of Irish aquaculture output,” the report said.

“While not sufficient on its own, promotion of seaweed and other opportunities can help diversify Irish agrifood, developing the long-term viability and robustness of the sector.”

The joint committee recommended this week that the country should “diversity its economic output” to resist future shocks.

“A focus on the most profitable sectors may prove short-sighted, and leave Ireland exposed in the longer-term,” it said.

According to a 2015 report from the state’s seafood development agency, BIM, demand in Europe for sea vegetables is growing by up to 10% each year.

However, many food firms based in Europe import the material from Asia and the Americas because there is not enough indigenous supply.

As a result, there are other “substantial European markets which Irish seaweed growers can avail of” in addition to tapping the UK market, the agriculture committee said.

0025  Agriculture Committee report on Brexit_90503997 Agriculture committee chair Pat Deering Rollingnews.ie Rollingnews.ie

Pound drop

Since the June 2016 referendum, it has been widely reported that Ireland’s food and drinks sector is highly vulnerable to any fallout from Brexit since about 40% of our food exports are UK-bound.

Bord Bia estimated that the fall in sterling last year after the Brexit vote cost Irish food and drink exporters €570 million.

It was reported last month that the value of exports to Britain fell by 8% in 2016 to €4.1 billion as a weaker sterling made Irish produce comparably more expensive.

The agriculture committee also noted in this week’s report that the mushroom sector is particularly vulnerable to fluctuations in the value of the pound.

The problem is two-fold: the majority of Irish growers export all of their produce to the UK, and many contracts are negotiated in sterling.

Some sectors are expected to perform well after Brexit. The committee said Ireland’s alcohol industry “is in good health despite internationally challenging circumstances”.

It noted that Irish whiskey is the fastest growing spirit in the world, with exports up 8% in 2016, resulting in sales worth €505 million.

Food Irish Whiskey Irish whiskey Michelle Locke AP / Press Association Images Michelle Locke AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

Exports to the US, continental Europe and Asia drove that growth, according to analysis from Bord Bia.

The committee report said that if the drinks sector here is managed properly, it can “maintain growth in markets beyond the UK in the coming years.

It suggested that the Irish Whiskey Trail should be further developed and that “it may also be of interest to determine if a network of breweries and distilleries may be formed to create a combined trail”.

“It may be beneficial to consider international experience such as best practice in vineyard tours in France, Spain, and Portugal or the nearer Scottish gin trail,” it said.
“While this is primarily a tourism initiative, advertising and potentially increasing sales of Irish beverages should positively impact upon Irish grain farmers.”

Written by Conor McMahon and posted on Fora.ie

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    Mute Kian David Griffin
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 7:38 PM

    This was actually the work of a secret government experiment underground. There are 8 letter in bulls**te, minus 1 is 7. 6 letters in “Madrid” plus 1 is 7, 7+7 is 14, same number alonso used to wear at Liverpool. Therefore the UK is the next target for fart bombs…

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    Mute Glen
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 8:14 PM

    The cult of Frank!!

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    Mute Charles Rex
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 8:14 PM

    Went to the alhambra in granada years ago. The architects hundreds of years ago factored these quakes into their building designs and placed lead inside the stone columns. This enabled them to sway slightly. Clever lads in fairness. Well worth a visit.

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 7:57 PM

    The earthquake that struck Lorca was not 10km deep, it was only 1 km deep. This was extremely unusual. It explains why this modest earthquake caused so much damage. Today’s earthquake is more typical, at a depth of 8 miles. It should not be as bad.

    Some scientists claimed the Lorca earthquake was provoked by water wells that removed ground water, that the removal of water reduced pressure that otherwise clamped the fault shut, allowing it to move.

    http://www.independent.ie/breaking-news/world-news/spanish-quake-was-manmade-study-3266682.html

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    Mute Genius
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 7:30 PM

    We had a large 7.1 quake in the Northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge Off the west coast Of Ireland on 13th

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 8:07 PM

    That’s big for the Northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge, very interesting. It was on Charlie-Gibbs fracture zone. Here’s a nice article about the earthquake.

    http://www.iris.edu/hq/files/programs/education_and_outreach/retm/tm_150213_nmidatlantic/150213_nmidatlantic.pdf

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    Mute twonky kong
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 6:51 PM

    Ay caramba!

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    Mute Protect Democracy!
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 7:23 PM

    Paul Murphy is on his way, he blamed the quake on the local police!

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    Mute Sean J. Troy
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 6:59 PM

    I knew it wasn’t the journal reporting this when I spotted they didn’t mix moment magnitude and the Richter scale.

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    Mute Gerard Casserly
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 7:17 PM

    And the mixture of metric and imperial.

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    Mute Sean J. Troy
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 8:13 PM

    It’s maddening. Nobody has used the Richter scale in decades.

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    Mute Guy Flaneur
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    Feb 24th 2015, 8:22 AM

    The moment magnitude scale (abbreviated as MMS; denoted as MW or M) is used by seismologists to measure the size of earthquakes in terms of the energy released. The magnitude is based on the seismic moment of the earthquake, which is equal to the rigidity of the Earth multiplied by the average amount of slip on the fault and the size of the area that slipped.The scale was developed in the 1970s to succeed the 1930s-era Richter magnitude scale (ML). Even though the formulae are different, the new scale retains the familiar continuum of magnitude values defined by the older one. The MMS is now the scale used to estimate magnitudes for all modern large earthquakes by the United States Geological Survey.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moment_magnitude_scale

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    Mute John J Rambo
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 7:25 PM

    There’s absolutely no threat from Fionna Foil so long as Mehole is in charge

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    Mute Feri Ximax
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    Feb 24th 2015, 2:48 AM

    Do you know any kind of earthquake early warning app? I found one here http://remotegun.com/earthquake-early-warning-system but it is under development right now. do you know another one?

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    Mute Kian David Griffin
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    Feb 23rd 2015, 10:33 PM

    All hail the glorious frank…

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