Top Stories

“Getting to that stage”: Version 1 CEO on US expansion, investing in AI and a looming exit

Swiss private-equity firm Partners Group acquired the Irish digital transformation business in 2022. New CEO Roop Singh talks about the prospect of a sale and building out its business in the US.

$257m, 17 years: Tullow Oil’s long-running dispute with a French manufacturer will move ahead

The oil explorer claims Vallourec’s tubing, installed at an oil field in Ghana via a contract in 2008, was faulty, which the supplier denies. Nearly 20 years on, the case will move ahead in a London court.

The €100m plan: Karl Fitzpatrick on scaling Chevron College

Four years ago, Chevron College was a 56-person training provider with a founder determined to triple the business. Today, Karl Fitzpatrick has delivered on that promise — and now he wants to build a €100m education group spanning Ireland and the UK.

With projects winding down, German engineering firm Exyte’s revenues in Ireland have halved

At one time, Exyte, which works on data centres and pharma plants, was raking in more than €1bn in Ireland. As long-term projects conclude, the company is on the hunt for new business.

Backlogs, reputation, and judicial reviews: ACP boss says planning is back on track

“I think an awful lot of the criticism is based upon knowledge of our organisation three years ago,” says An Coimisiún Pleanála’s new CEO. In his first major interview, Peter Mullan explains how he is turning the ship around.

Investor dispute brings insect farming start-up before the High Court

One investor backed Hexafly after a rescue process two years ago. Now, another one is taking legal action against the agtech company.

Dark horses win “hugely competitive” offshore wind round with market-beating bid

ESB and Orsted, which have both faced challenges offshore in recent times, have secured state support for a large wind farm off Ireland's south coast in an auction that acted as a test for the industry's attractiveness.

Inside Sonder’s collapse: A US bankruptcy drags down a stable Irish business

The US luxury short-term letting firm collapsed suddenly this month after a deal with the Marriott hotel chain went sour, pulling its Irish business down with it.

Top Voices

The Irish economy is in for a soft landing – unless risks materialise

The slowdown is not yet pointing to a recession. But why run both a security and political risk when there is no need to run either?

Willie O’Reilly: Irish-made TV faces the hypocrisy of viewers

The majority of television watched in Ireland is imported, mostly from the UK. Public clamour for indigenous programming doesn’t match the private choices made in Irish homes.

Return to stability or the nightmare before Christmas: UK to wean off debt but growth question remains

The chancellor’s budget manages to create £22bn (€25.1bn) in desperately needed fiscal headroom as tax rises look to reduce the public finances' reliance on debt in the long term. But the question of growth still looms large.

Ronan McGovern: Why build data centres in Ireland at all?

The high-risk stall in data-centre development raises deeper questions about how the national grid procures electricity, how green it is, and when it is available for use.

Get in early and pass special laws: Lessons from France on how to get a metro built

France is broke but can double the size of the Paris metro, while cash-rich Ireland faces another judicial review in Dublin. Are there any lessons to be learned?

Peter Kinsella: The return of the UK’s doom loop?

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to ditch her plans to increase income taxes but, should November's budget do little to kickstart Britain's stagnant economy, it may force a rethink.

Candidate sentiment survey: Part two — the shifting balance of power between employees and employers

Part two of the candidate sentiment survey examines hybrid working, employee expectations and the balance of power between employees and employers

A bold gamble on Merrion Street: Rewinding the week that was

The job of a party leader is to galvanise the troops. The job of a finance minister is to put them on rations. Simon Harris will now have to marry these competing demands.