Top Stories

Camden Yard to go back on the market after exclusivity talks end with European real estate fund

Camden Yard, a prime site in Dublin city centre, had appeared close to being acquired by a European real estate fund. However, the deal has failed to close, and the property is now expected to return to the market.

From legend to pariah: Court hears of DJ Carey’s spectacular fall from grace

The judge said a custodial sentence is "inevitable" for the former all-star Kilkenny hurler who traded on esteem and regard to dupe friends, family, and associates out of close to €400,000 to help fund cancer treatment he did not need.

H2 where? Part 2: Ireland could pump green hydrogen across Europe. But should it?

While converting renewable power into carbon-free fuels seems like a no-brainer, the challenges involved raise many questions about the future of Irish and EU energy systems.

X takes watchdog to court over complaints into alleged online abuse of female chess players

Media regulator Coimisiún na Meán is accused of breaching fair procedures and acting outside its powers in the handling of a series of complaints against X under the Digital Services Act.

Revenue legal action to be resolved “amicably”, says McKillen Jr

The tax authority has launched High Court proceedings against the former majority owner of the Press Up group.

Examiner finally appointed to foodtech company Senoptica

Creditors fought to install an examiner over the objections of Senoptica CEO and co-founder Brendan Rice. An “unusual” committee of creditors has been installed to allay his concerns. 

From school friends to biotech innovators: The story of Lir Therapeutics (so far)

Scientists and co-founders, Killian Hanlon and Hugh O’Brien, are using AI to redesign viruses for gene therapy. Lir Therapeutics has already raised $3m and is showing early results that could transform how diseases are treated.

H2 where? Part 1: How Ireland (almost) became Germany’s green hydrogen quest partner

Cut off from Russian gas, the German economy is hungry for alternatives from renewable-rich countries. One year ago, the stars appeared to align with Ireland.

Top Voices

Chicago II: Ireland return to where belief was born, looking to shake off rust

To beat the All Blacks for a second time at Soldier Field, Andy Farrell's men must follow the Joe Schmidt playbook in 2016, when ghosts were exorcised: attack, attack, attack.

Thomas Hubert: Whom should the State sell PTSB to – and to do what?

The Government will want as high a price as possible for its shares in the last bank it owns, but there is more at stake in this sale for the Irish economy than just cash proceeds.

Humanoids raising funds: Where are Asia’s top VCs placing their chips? 

Electric cars are old school. China’s investors are betting on the next technology trends, with live-in robots among the hottest tickets, writes Ian Lahiffe in Beijing.

Ronan McGovern: Would we be better off without this AI bubble?

Bubbles create winners and losers, and artificial intelligence has yet to reveal who they will be. This means it is risky to be involved – but also risky not to be.

Arrival reimagined: How Irish start-up Wayleadr created a new category in parking 

From driving in circles around Dublin to powering seamless arrivals for Google and Amazon, Garret Flower’s start-up is building the invisible infrastructure that will define how people move through cities, between home and office, in an autonomous future.

Catherine Connolly read the room, and won the presidency: Rewinding the week that was

Yes, Catherine Connolly spoke much of smear campaigns and anti-media bias. And yes, she spoke all too frequently of a military-industrial complex. But she spoke and people listened.

Siobhán Brett: Trump thinks he’s ending wars. The Democrats are still fighting theirs

The president’s fixation on “winning” abroad is in sharp contrast with a party that can’t stop arguing about what it stands for at home.

Dan O’Brien: Leftist populism is embedded in Ireland’s tax-and-spend drift

If a balance in policy between pro-enterprise and pro-redistribution is to be maintained, those who believe in that balance, and the pro-enterprise part of it in particular, will need to up their game in the years ahead.