Bleach & Lough Graney

WFD Referral Code Protect referral (DRAFT)  

Referral Date:  13/12/2021

PAA name  Bleach & Lough Graney Catchment

Significant Pressures Description: The EPA initial characterisation identified forestry as the significant pressure on the waterbody. 

Sediment is the significant issue.  Findings of LAWPRO 2019 stream walk assessments indicate that forestry is the sole significant sediment pressure here but SSIS results showed no significant impact at the EPA monitoring point. In March 2020, Conservation Services, an ecological consultancy, was commissioned by LAWPRO to carry out Q ratings at the EPA monitoring point. The Q-rating obtained was Q4-5. This indicates that Bleach 10 has recovered to at least Good Status. This protect referral is being issued to highlight additional mitigation measures that may be needed in advance of future felling to minimise risk of sediment loss to the river.   Waterbody Code IE_SH_25B070100

Waterbody Name Bleach_010    Referral point Bleach _010_Referral_01 Description of Referral Area Main channel and unmapped pathways (forestry drains) above the WFD monitoring point ‘Corlea Br.’


Forestry (Owner) Coillte    

AIE – Whether the Department was justified in withholding information pertaining to pig herd numbers and associated location data under article 8(a)(i) of the AIE Regulations

OCE-136328-V5X4B6 is the case number for a decision from the Office of the Commissioner for Environmental Information regarding a request for information on large pig herds. The case involved an appeal by Right to Know CLG against the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine’s refusal to release a register of pig herds with over 1,000 pigs. The Commissioner’s decision was that the information should be released, outweighing the public interest in withholding it.

Case details

Case Number: OCE-136328-V5X4B6
Public Body: Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine
Appealing Party: Right to Know CLG
Subject: A request for a register of pig herds with over 1,000 pigs, including herd number and location 

Background and decision

Right to Know CLG requested the information in January 2023.
The Department initially withheld the information, citing the undue burden of  contacting all keepers and stating that the information was captured during the annual pig census.

Right to Know CLG appealed the decision to the Office of the Commissioner for Environmental Information (OCE-136328-V5X4B6).

In its decision published on September 3, 2025, the Commissioner directed that the information be released.

The Commissioner found that the public interest in disclosing the environmental information outweighed the public interest in withholding i

AIE: register of cattle herds with over 500 cattle per herd, to include the herd number and location of each cattle farm

OCE-136207-Y3Q4N3 Office of the Commissioner for Environmental Information (OCEI).

https://ocei.ie/en/ombudsman-decision/48305-right-to-know-clg-the-department-of-agriculture-food-and-the-marine-the-department

The case concerns a request by Right to Know CLG for information about large cattle farms from the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine. The appeal was decided on September 2, 2025.

Case Number: OCE-136207-Y3Q4N3
Public Body: Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine
Appellant: Right to Know CLG
Subject: A request for the herd numbers and locations of large cattle farms (over 500 cattle)
Date of Decision: September 2, 2025



EU FOI on Habitat Directive and Nitrates Derogation (Ireland)

Under the right of access to documents in the EU treaties, as developed in Regulation 1049/2001, I am requesting documents which contain the following information:

Under the right of access please provide any correspondence between Ireland and the EU on the issue of compliance with the Habitats Directive

For the purposes of this request please only include the Year 2025

By way of background:

Ireland breached the EU Habitats Directive by failing to designate sufficient Special Areas of Conservation (SACs) and implement site-specific conservation measures for its Natura 2000 sites. In 2023, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruled against Ireland in case C-444/21 for these failures, which occurred primarily by January 2019. The judgment highlighted that Ireland also failed to address a general and persistent infringement across its Natura 2000 network. In addition, Ireland has not acted to stop peat extraction in Special Areas of Conservation (SACs).

The European Commission has now told Ireland it “must demonstrate compliance” with the Habitats Directive when granting farmers a nitrates derogation. It is unclear how Ireland can demonstrate compliance as recent CJEU rulings show non compliance. Hopefully the correspondence will illustrate what is now required, as it is unclear from media coverage to date

Yours faithfully,

Right to Know CLG, Registered in Dublin, Ireland No. 565565
Registered Office: 25 Herbert Place, Dublin 2