Ireland is exposed. Gas will continue to play a vital role in Ireland’s energy system for years to come. And as oil/peat/coal infrastructure retires and energy demand rises, no equivalent system of resilience has replaced it. Without indigenous energy storage, we remain vulnerable to disruption and structurally out of step with EU best practice. Kestrel is not just an opportunity, it is a necessity. The cost of doing nothing is no longer theoretical. It’s real, rising, and nationally consequential.
Exposure Without Infrastructure
Ireland’s energy system is currently more exposed than at any point in the past two decades, with an ever-increasing demand for energy, zero gas storage, retired oil/coal/peat backup, and no energy security.
We’ve removed old protections without installing new ones. That gap is not theoretical, it’s structural.
Government’s own modelling confirms that the cost of not developing storage is measured not in millions, but tens of billions, making inaction the highest-cost option.
Energy security isn’t theoretical, it’s financial. When the system breaks, the economy pays.
Ireland is at a uniquely favourable point where existing infrastructure, validated data and policy alignment enable long-duration storage to be delivered before the next system stress event. Failing to act now risks prolonged reliance on external systems and reduced national control. The infrastructure already exists and is proven – Ireland had operational gas storage until 2017.
Strategic sovereignty in a decarbonised power system depends on long-duration molecular storage, not dependence on others when renewables are unavailable.