Automatically translated from Basque, translation may contain errors. More information here. Elhuyarren itzultzaile automatikoaren logoa

Dema gigantesca in Ireland: Apple and everyone versus just one man

  • The multinational Apple, which brings happiness to the smartest people on the planet, aims to build in Ireland the largest data warehouse in Europe, with an investment of EUR 850 million over the next 15 years. Despite the fact that it has already stolen billions of euros in unpaid taxes, almost all Irish people want Apple to re-elect for their businesses. But not everyone. There is someone who is still fighting in court against the intention of the golden apple.
RTE Irlandako Irrati-Telebistaren irudian, Athenryko herritarrak irailean Appleri herrira etortzeko eskatuz burututako manifestazioan. 4.500 biztanleko herrian 2.000 jende bildu ziren. Applek agindu die 300 lanpostu sortuko dituela, horietatik erdia eraik
RTE Irlandako Irrati-Telebistaren irudian, Athenryko herritarrak irailean Appleri herrira etortzeko eskatuz burututako manifestazioan. 4.500 biztanleko herrian 2.000 jende bildu ziren. Applek agindu die 300 lanpostu sortuko dituela, horietatik erdia eraikuntza lanek iraun artean. Multinazionalari bakar-bakarrik aurre egiten dion Allan Dalyk dio herritarrak ez direla jabetzen sakoneko arazoaz, Irlandak diru asko galtzen duela: gobernuak zergak barkatzeaz gain, herritarren zergekin antolatzen dizkie azpiegitura berriak Apple eta beste erraldoiei.
Zarata mediatikoz beteriko garai nahasiotan, merkatu logiketatik urrun eta irakurleengandik gertu dagoen kazetaritza beharrezkoa dela uste baduzu, ARGIA bultzatzera animatu nahi zaitugu. Geroz eta gehiago gara, jarrai dezagun txikitik eragiten.

After two years of litigation in the courts, in early October the courts have left the door open for Apple to build Europe’s second largest data centre in the Galway region. In Athenry, where they declared their love of the multinational in September for a demonstration on the street, people are crazy. On the contrary, the three who came to the hearing have expressed their intention to appeal the judgment.

One is Brian McDonagh, who has spent EUR 22 million on buying other so-called Apple-appropriate land, and who now does not want to lose. The second is Attorney Sinead Fitzpatrick, who lives next to the area where the project takes place. The third and truly controversial one is Allan Daly, an American woman married to an Athenian who works online with environmental counsel Sierra Search from California.

Allan Daly was visited last summer by journalist David Gilbert to gather his arguments in the middle Vice in the chronicle “A man from a small Irish town can walk Apple’s plans for Europe.” "Daly's concern is that Apple's new data center will be a huge burden on the Irish electricity grid. Apple also has no plans to reduce the large emissions of gases that will be produced in the new buildings of the city. The place they have chosen for the project is not the right one either, in Galway there are more suitable spaces among those nominated on the planet.”

In August 2015 he received a visit from Apple representatives in the UK. In an appointment at the only hotel in Athenry, they spoke with great sweetness, “but they made it clear that they would not change anything, that they would do the same in the form and in the deadlines that they told them.” The most valuable company in the world is used to acting like this.

In these times of crisis, with the sale of the most deteriorated iPhones, the iTunes, the App Store, the iMessage, the iPhoto and the other services, which need data department stores, are particularly important to ensure results. And as the European parliaments are concerned about the worldwide dissemination of their citizens’ data, their collection in Europe has become a necessity. Apple wants yours not to depend on anyone in that fundamental part of their business. It already has one built in Denmark and this one from Ireland will be the second built outside the United States.

Daly will not be the first or the only one to say that Ireland has very low environmental control in this type of project, but as most have gone back, he has gone ahead. Incidentally, it is also against another EUR 1 billion data centre that Amazon wants to carry out on the university campus in Dublin.

It denounces that the Dublins authorities conceal from the people, through the Irish Development Agency, the real environmental effects of the projects in their obsession with bringing multinationals. It is no wonder that the majority of the inhabitants of Athenry and surrounding areas are outraged at Daly for the fear that they will lose the opportunity to revive the region. At Athenry for Apple, you can hear his arguments, the hopes for Apple's progress and the outrage against Daly.

As Vic’s journalist was with the members of this team, Daly, quoted by one of them, told her that “if she continued to obstruct large projects, she would end up like Michael McCoy.” McCoy, who in another town in the Dublin area was engaged in obstructing projects, found his body at the end of last year, killed by beatings. If you look at the newspaper library, you can read that the police haven't found any murderers.

New colonialism in Europe

Allan Daly estimates that if a date store is built in Athenry, Apple will consume 240 Megawatts, which accounts for 6% of electricity consumption in Ireland, equivalent to a quarter of the country’s total housing. Apple has announced that within a maximum of five years, the Basque company will reach the 30 Megawatts. Daly replied that Apple excludes from the accounts the consumption of its many services in Ireland.

The fact is that Ireland has become a strategic place for many companies. On the one hand, with Brexit, he could remain the only English-speaking country in the European Union. On the other hand, taxes on company profits are the lowest in Europe. Microsoft was the first to land, imposing in 2009 a nearly five-hectare building in Dublin. Then you've got Alibaba, Google, Amazon, Facebook ...

The multinational’s date stores last year consumed more than 300 Megawathies. To this end, Ireland has had to make major adjustments to the electricity grid, taking billions of euros out of the Irish pocket. In return, they generate very few jobs, Apple quotes 150 for Athenry, while Amazon has created 15 for Dublin.

Apple says it's going to get all the energy from renewables. Greenpeace has also applauded this activity. Daly believes that it is not acceptable to absorb this huge consumption of existing renewables, but that Apple authorities should force their environmental impact to be reduced. Denmark, for example, requires that a data centre be built so that computers can take advantage of the heat generated by the heating of neighbouring houses, as they have asked Seatl Amazon; in California, Google collects the rain from roofs to cool the machines. Apple would have been able to make similar compensation if it had accepted another land in Athenry instead of 200 hectares of forest, heating up the city's public buildings. But Apple is already used to doing everything he wants in Ireland.

In the same days when the Dublin judges gave the green light to the Athenry date store, the European Commission has sued Ireland for forgiving EUR 13 billion in taxes on Apple. In September of last year, the European authorities have already ordered Apple to claim these unpaid taxes from the Dublin authorities. Tremendous amounts like two-thirds of Ireland's annual social spending. But in addition to the government, citizens are also in favour of not claiming debt, according to the surveys.

The Celtic tiger that the neoliberals have been citing since the 1980s as a model of development for all others has offered the multinationals the conditions of a tax paradise. When the 2008 crisis broke out, no one touched their tax obligations. Ireland will do its best to avoid this European measure and to delight these large corporations: It has many characteristics of a 21st century colony, including dependence on citizens. Under those conditions, see who teaches Apple's teeth.


You are interested in the channel: Irlanda
Europe imposes a fine of EUR 15 billion on multinationals Apple and Google
The European Court of Justice (ECJ) has sentenced the Apple and Ireland case and has ratified the conviction of Google for abuse of a dominant position.

The Spanish State, Norway and Ireland announce recognition of the Palestinian State
The measure will be formally adopted on 28 May. They have recognized the limitations of Palestine prior to 1967 and have moved in favour of the solution of both states. Israel says the decision rewards terrorism.

2024-02-05 | Cira Crespo
SMALL EUROPEANS
Marginal

The mystery of the origin of the Basque country has intensified with the hand of Irulegi. For me, the discussions on this hand are being nice, because we reiterate that history sometimes flees from the logic we establish from the present and is as human as the people who... [+]


No mobile for up to 13 years: Decision taken by all parent associations of an Irish city
If all the families and schools of a town agree that they are not going to buy smartphones to the children, the pressure to give their children a mobile is over, the exclusion of those few children without a mobile phone is over. Well, the eight schools in the Irish city of... [+]

2023-05-25 | Axier Lopez
EUR 1.2 billion on Facebook for violating citizens' privacy
Metic, the company that owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, has been the one that has imposed the most fines on a company in the European Union for violating citizens’ data protection rules. In any case, this 1.2 billion penalty represents only 5% of Met’s profits in... [+]

Sinn Fein calls for the unlocking of Stormont
Sinn Fein won the municipal elections in Northern Ireland for the first time, earning 144 councillors from the 462, 39 more than four years ago. For the Republican Party, this should serve to resume the Stormont Parliament, which blocks unionism.

2023-04-19 | Axier Lopez
Justice on the way?

The Treaty of Good Friday of Northern Ireland, which has become a world benchmark in the resolution of armed conflicts, has reached a quarter century. The 1998 agreement was aimed primarily at ending violence. Violence has been greatly reduced, but it does not disappear. For... [+]


2023-04-17 | Mikel Aramendi
The most damaging IRA mole
Stakteknife, tribute

Looks like he's died. Everything about the so-called stakecnife is a tribute, so we will have to say so in your obituary too. C.A. Freddie Scappaticci "Stakteknife", the most pernicious mole that the IRA has suffered in its long history, seems to have died last month of Holy... [+]


2023-03-01 | Leire Artola Arin
Agreement between London and Brussels
Are the unionists going to unlock the Northern Ireland Parliament after almost a year?
The Northern Ireland Parliament has been blocked since May by the DUP unionist party’s protest, which disagrees with the trade controls established by the European Union in Northern Ireland after Brexit, among others. The new agreement between the United Kingdom and the... [+]

Ireland, first official language in Northern Ireland
On 6 December 2022, one of the historic demands of the Republican movement in Northern Ireland was realized: from that date, it is for the first time the official language of Ireland in the six counties of Northern Ireland.

The London government will convene elections in Northern Ireland after the Unionists’ veto
Sinn Fein won the Stormont Parliament elections last May for the first time and that gives him the opportunity to lead self-government, but the DUP Unionist party has resigned to appoint its members.

2022-07-19 | ARGIA
Referendum for the reunification of Ireland will be held during this decade
Mary Lou McDonald, President of Sinn Fein, believes that the future of Ireland will be decided in this decade and that the issue will really be resolved. This has been expressed in the newspaper El País.

2022-06-28 | Karmelo Landa
Irish and us

The Irish have lost their language and won English. What else have you gained? What else to lose? I've spent a week in Dublin, living and analyzing Bloomsday, a festival based on James Joyce's vibrant novel Ulysses.
I have previously been in Ireland, north and south, east and... [+]


2022-05-23 | Declan Kearney
After the elections, it's time for democracy.
The statue of the six counties was born 101 years ago in northern Ireland. It was designed to perpetuate the Unionist majority. A system, in which it emerged, divided the electoral constituencies in such a way that unionists always got more votes than Irish nationalists.

Eguneraketa berriak daude