Top Stories

Ireland led the offshore industry 20 years ago, but “we haven’t installed a turbine since”

James O'Hara, leader of the Arklow Bank 2 offshore wind farm, talks crystal-ball gazing, data centres, and how Ireland can create certainty and credibility for the offshore renewable market.

JP McManus company snaps up Massimo Dutti building on Grafton Street

The building was put on the market earlier this year by the commercial property developer Iput, guided at just under €19m. McManus already owns two buildings on the bustling shopping thoroughfare.

Kroll’s global CEO Jacob Silverman on crisis, capital, and cyber threats

Jacob Silverman, global CEO of risk advisory giant Kroll, is navigating a rapidly shifting landscape. He shares insights on leadership, private equity, and staying present in an unpredictable world.

Johnny Ronan is working on a plan to build a new hospital in Dublin

A report commissioned by the developer estimates that a new healthcare facility on the site of the former Irish Glass Bottle factory could cost up to €190 million and treat 70,000 patients in its first year.

Bloodstock tycoon “slightly hostile” before €15m handshake for Barne Estate, court hears

Richard Thomson-Moore, the hereditary heir of the Barne Estate, said he shook on a "price", not a deal, for the 751-acre property with the Coolmore boss John Magnier.

Powerscourt Distillery back in receivership as examinership bid dropped

Two shareholders have withdrawn a High Court petition to place Powerscourt Distillery into examinership, leaving the business once again in receivership.

“Genuinely fresh evidence”: Revival in the case of CAB and the $9.95 Swedish email accounts

The Supreme Court ruled this week that a Swedish businessman challenging the Criminal Assets Bureau’s seizure of €600,000 can present new evidence in a “limited hearing”.

One of Dublin’s largest bar and dining complexes is quietly on the market

The Market Bar Group which owns multiple venues in the Fade Street area of Dublin 2 has appointed estate agents to find a buyer. The combined venues can hold almost 900 people.

Top Voices

Flight plan for growth: Part four – How to keep Ireland’s edge in aircraft leasing

Aircraft leasing is one of Ireland’s greatest economic success stories, but global competition is heating up. To stay ahead, policymakers must double down on what works.

Candidate sentiment survey: Part one — expectations, remote working, and the balance of power

Some 1,796 candidates—from junior management to “C” suite level—completed The Panel's Candidate Sentiment Survey. In part one of the findings, we look at hybrid working future expectations and the shifting balance of power.

Company failures, personal consequences: Rewinding the week that was

When directors abuse the trust placed in them, the fallout can be devastating—not just for creditors, employees, or the taxman, but for the public at large.

Paul Flynn: I shouldn’t say this, but I have a soft spot for Meath. This is why

Paul Flynn admits something no one expected — a soft spot for Meath, shaped by friendship, legacy, and a changing GAA landscape.

Two months on, the Spanish blackout casts a long shadow on a record of growth and integration

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez was proving that socialism could work in Spain, but then the lights went out. Now, for the first time since he became prime minister in June 2018, he’s looking vulnerable.

Ireland’s budget blind spots: Capital commitments and the cost of abandoning neutrality

Warnings about unsustainable spending have gone unheeded as government promises mount, from regional wish lists to defence upgrades. Neutrality has quietly delivered one of Ireland’s greatest fiscal dividends, and abandoning it could cost more than any infrastructure project ever has.

Is there a monetary tsar in the White House?

The United States is now in the unprecedented position of being the issuer of an unanchored global reserve currency. However reluctantly, the rest of the world is now in the unenviable position of being the user of the unanchored US dollar.

Haunted by the Celtic Tiger: How old myths still shape Ireland’s housing crisis

To tackle a national emergency – a housing deficit of 300,000 homes and growing each year – we need to pay less attention to national myths and more attention to good policymaking.