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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
Shauna Corr

Amazon data centre to power Ireland’s first publicly owned energy firm

Ireland's first publicly owned energy company has been launched in South Dublin.

Tallaght District Heating Network and Energy Centre will provide low carbon heat to 32,800 square metres of public buildings using free excess energy from an Amazon data centre.

It was officially launched by Environment, Climate & Communications and Transport Minister Eamon Ryan alongside South Dublin Mayor, Emma Murphy at the Heatworks Energy Centre in Tallaght.

Read more: Ireland coming up short with climate crisis contributions to developing nations

SDCC and Technological University Dublin are both customers.

Buildings to be heated by the project include County Hall, Tallaght County Library, the SDCC Innovation Centre - Work IQ, and 133 affordable apartments, which will connect in early 2025. University buildings that will be connected this year include the Main Building, the Sports-Science, Health and Recreation Building, followed by the new Catering College.

It is estimated that in the first phase of delivery, carbon emissions reduction in the Tallaght area will be over 1,500 tonnes per year.

Trading as Heatworks, the not-for-profit energy company and low-carbon initiative has been led by SDCC with help from its energy agency, Codema.

The network uses excess heat from Amazon Web Services' data centre to provide low carbon heat to its customers. AWS has included heat-collection systems in their new facility which provides this recycled heat at no cost as part of its broader sustainability commitments.

Minister Ryan said: "This is a leading example of how energy that would be otherwise be wasted is now being used to heat local public buildings, a university and people’s homes, and I know that there are plans to go beyond this in time. It’s also a working demonstration of smart private-public partnership and an indication of the transformative role that district heating can play in our new more energy efficient and decarbonised energy mix.

"In our Climate Action Plan 2023, we have set out our increased ambition for district heating. I anticipate that our district heating steering group will shortly publish its recommendations on how we can reach these targets, led by our local authorities and facilitated with private sector involvement as is the case here in Tallaght."

The Tallaght District Heating Network was partly funded by the European Union's Interreg NWE programme (Heatnet), Project Ireland 2040 Climate Action Fund, SEAI and through direct funding from SDCC. In the Governments Climate Action Plan 2023, the increased ambition is that Ireland will reach up to 0.8 TWh of district heating by 2025 and up to 2.7 TWh by 2030.

Heatworks contracted Fortum, a large Finnish energy company with extensive district-heating experience throughout Scandinavia and Eastern Europe, to carry out the design, construction, operation and maintenance of the Tallaght District Heating Network.

South Dublin Mayor, Emma Murphy, said: "It gives me great pleasure to be here for the official opening of such an innovative project in South Dublin. Through the delivery of a project of this scale and ambition, South Dublin County Council are truly leading the way when it comes to climate change innovation and sustainability in Ireland, which citizens in the county can be incredibly proud of. We look forward to seeing the next step come to fruition, when the district heating network will provide sustainable heating to new homes in the Tallaght area."

Mike Beary, AWS Country Lead added: "AWS has been investing in Tallaght for 15 years now and we are proud to be a part of the community. We love the ambition and spirit of innovation that this first-in-the-nation project embodies. HeatWorks will benefit our neighbours for years to come and help the country meet its 2030 renewable energy targets."

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