The No. 171 “Slieve Gullion” Steams into Thurles at 11:57am This Morning, Marking Another Milestone for Irish Main Line Steam.
Great Northern Railway (Ireland) S Class 4-4-0 No. 171 “Slieve Gullion”, arrived into Thurles Railway Station at 11:57am this morning, drawing a warm welcome as the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland’s (RPSI) flagship steam locomotive continues its return to regular main line operation.
Today’s working forms part of the RPSI’s “An Sáirséal” Steam & Diesel Special operating between Dublin Connolly and Limerick, with No. 171 hauling the train from Dublin Connolly to Thurles, before an 071 Class diesel takes over for the onward run to Limerick.
Built by Beyer, Peacock & Co. in Manchester in 1913, No. 171 is one of the celebrated GNR(I) S Class express passenger locomotives, named after a mountain in the south of County Armagh, Northern Irelandand, is synonymous with the golden age of Irish main line steam.
Following an extensive overhaul and a long period out of traffic, No. 171 returned to steam in July 2024, officially launched back into service at Whitehead in September of that year, and later resumed main line, revenue-earning passenger work in November 2025, its first such duties since 2002.
An RPSI spokesperson said the Thurles arrival is “another proud moment for everyone who contributed to bringing ‘Slieve Gullion’ back; proof that Irish main line steam remains very much alive, and still capable of turning heads wherever it goes.”
Wexford delegate tops first-count ballot as Ger Ryan and John Murphy fall short.
Verified vote breakdown. Total votes cast: 277 Quota: 139 Derek Kent (Wexford): 169. (elected on the first count) Ger Ryan (Tipperary): 76. John Murphy (Sligo): 32
Wexford’s Derek Kent has been elected Uachtarán Tofa (President-elect) of the Gaelic Athletic Association at GAA Congress 2026, held at Croke Park yesterday evening. Mr Kent will become the 42nd President of the GAA at Congress 2027, when outgoing President, Mr Jarlath Burns, completes his three-year term.
A total of 277 votes were cast in the presidential election. Mr Kent secured 169 votes, reaching the 139 quota on the first count. Mr Ger Ryan (Tipperary) polled 76 votes, while Mr John Murphy (Sligo) received 32 votes.
Mr Kent, a Taghmon-Camross clubman, brings extensive administrative experience to the role, having served as Wexford GAA Chairperson (2017–2020) and recently completing a three-year term as Leinster GAA Chairperson. He has also chaired the Central Competitions Control Committee (CCCC) and the Infrastructure, Health & Safety Committee.
In being elected President-elect, Mr Kent becomes the third Wexford native to hold the Association’s top office, following Mr Patrick Breen (1924–1926) and Mr Michael Kehoe (1949–1952).
Tipperary’s Ger Ryan had campaigned strongly to bring the presidency back to the Premier County, with Tipp GAA noting his recent service as Munster GAA Chair (2022–2025) and the county’s previous holder of the office, Mr Séamus Ó Riain (1967–1970).
Data Centres Usually Pay Less per Unit of Electricity Than Households in Ireland, Official Figures Show.
New analysis of Ireland’s official electricity price statistics shows that very large electricity users; latter a category that includes many data centres, typically pay a lower price per unit (kWh) than households.
Key findings (official statistics). Figures published by the Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) for January to June 2025 show:
Households (average, including all taxes): ~31.7 cent per kWh
Business customers (average, excluding VAT) ~24.3 cent per kWh
Very large business users (“Band IG”, over 150,000 MWh); ~ 19.5 cent per kWh (excluding VAT)
In simple terms, the biggest users pay less per unit than households, on average, in the published data.
Why this happens (in plain English). This difference does not necessarily mean data centres are “getting a special deal.” It mainly reflects how electricity bills are structured for different types of customers:
Household prices include more taxes. The household figure is reported with all taxes included, while business figures are commonly shown excluding VAT (and many businesses can reclaim VAT).
Big users buy electricity differently. Large industrial-style customers can often use different contract types and buying arrangements than households (who usually buy through retail tariffs).
Important note A lower “cent per kWh” figure doesn’t automatically mean the total bill is low. Very large users can still face substantial overall costs because they consume huge volumes and can have significant capacity-related charges.
Homelessness in Emergency Accommodation Reaches New Record High of 17,112 in January 2026.
The latest monthly Homelessness Report, published by the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, shows that 17,112 people accessed local authority-managed emergency accommodation in January 2026, the highest figure recorded to date.
The report indicates that 11,793adults and 5,319 children were in emergency accommodation during the month. The January total represents an increase of 378 compared with December 2025 (16,734).
In terms of nationality among adults in emergency accommodation, 5,897 were Irish, 3,572 were from outside the European Economic Area(EEA), and 2,324 were from within the EEA or the UK.
The report also shows that the largest adult age cohort was 25–44 years(6,232), and that the Dublin region accounted for the majority of adults in emergency accommodation (8,267).
Government response and measures: Minister for Housing James Browne said he is “very conscious” of the rising levels of homelessness and described the situation as unacceptable. The Minister pointed to tenancy terminations as a key driver and said the Government is strengthening tenant protections, through recently enacted rental legislation, aimed at improving security of tenure and reducing the frequency of notices to quit.
The Residential Tenancies (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2026 was enacted this week and is due to apply to new tenancies created on or after March 1st 2026, introducing new measures intended to provide greater certainty and stability for renters.
Tipperary visit: Minister Browne was speaking during a visit to Nenagh, in North Tipperary, where he viewed a new housing scheme nearing completion. The development is being delivered by ‘Respond‘ in partnership with Tipperary County Council, with construction by ‘WhiteBox Ltd‘.
Reactions from organisations and opposition. Homelessness service providers again urged faster delivery of solutions that reduce homelessness, particularly for families and children. The Dublin Simon Community said the figures underline the need for measures that will have the greatest impact, while Focus Ireland described the latest record as deeply distressing, highlighting the number of children affected.
Separately, opposition representatives criticised the Government’s rental policy direction and called for emergency action to prevent further increases in homelessness, but failed to offer any real solutions.
Electricity arrears rise to nearly 320,000 households as energy credits end and costs remain elevated.
New figures published by the Commission for Regulation of Utilities (CRU) show 319,459 domestic electricity customers were in arrears in December 2025; around 14% (approximately one in seven households), representing a 19% year-on-year increase from December 2024.
Electricity arrears rise to nearly 320,000 households.
The CRU data indicates the average electricity arrears balance was €466 in December last. Arrears pressures are also evident in the gas market, with reports this week noting domestic gas arrears rose year-on-year. The latest arrears rise follows the Government’s decision to end universal electricity credits (previously €250 per household) in the most recent budget.
Why are electricity prices so high in Ireland? Ireland’s electricity bills are driven by a mix of wholesale energy costs, network costs, and policy/levy components:
Strong exposure to gas-priced power. Ireland’s power system has historically relied heavily on gas-fired generation, and in many hours the marginal unit setting the market price is gas, so gas price volatility feeds through into electricity costs. (This exposure was widely felt during the 2021–2023 energy crisis and remains a key structural factor.)
High network costs per customer. Ireland has a dispersed population and extensive rural networks, which increases the cost per customer of maintaining and upgrading the grid.
The cost of upgrading the grid to meet rising demand and decarbonisation. The CRU has approved a major investment programme for EirGrid and ESB Networks of up to €18.9bn over five years. The regulator has said this could add about €1/month (baseline) to network tariffs, rising to about €1.75/month under the higher investment allowance.
Taxes, levies, and the changing mix of supports. Across the EU, Eurostat notes that tax/levy shares and the withdrawal of consumer relief measures can blunt the impact of falling pre-tax costs on final bills.
Where does Ireland rank on electricity prices in Europe? This depends whether you mean households or business (non-household): Households: In the first half of 2025, Eurostat reported the highest household electricity prices in Germany, Belgium, Denmark, and Italy (Ireland was not the highest by € per kWh). However, Ireland recorded one of the largest year-on-year household price increases in that period: +25.9% (second only to Luxembourg at +31.3% in Eurostat’s summary).
Non-household (business): Eurostat reported Ireland had the highest non-household electricity prices in the EU in the first half of 2025 at €0.2726/kWh.
(Note: rankings can shift by half-year depending on wholesale markets, hedging, taxes/reliefs, and network charges.)
Are electricity suppliers upping prices to fund further development? In general: Grid “development” (wires infrastructure) is primarily funded through regulated network charges (set/approved by the CRU), not by suppliers deciding to increase margins. The CRU has explicitly linked recent network charge increases to the need to invest in a more resilient and cleaner grid.
Retail suppliers set tariffs mainly based on wholesale energy costs (often hedged in advance), operating costs, customer service, and bad-debt risk. They don’t directly “raise prices to build the grid” in the way a network operator does, network tariffs are a pass-through item on bills that reflects regulated investment allowances.
Households struggling with bills should contact their supplier early to discuss payment plans and supports, and check eligibility for targeted state supports.
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