Published on 

Reimagining our Country: Government launches €116bn Project Ireland 2040

  • First time in Irish history that Planning & Investment have been linked
  • Four new funds totalling €4bn for rural & urban growth, climate action & innovation
  • Major transport focus linking all parts of Ireland & filling gaps in North West
  • €22bn climate change programme as well as major public transport investment
  • Preparing Ireland for Brexit by investing in the future & targeting at risk sectors

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar and the Government today launched a €116 billion plan to re-imagine Ireland and prepare for the future following a special Cabinet meeting at the Institute of Technology in Sligo. 

In front of an audience of college students, the Cabinet unveiled Project Ireland 2040 which aims to build the Ireland of tomorrow, and prepare for a future society which will have an extra one million people and 660,000 more people at work. 

Project Ireland 2040 takes a radically different approach to future planning by focusing not just on bricks and mortar, but on social, economic and cultural development. It links planning and investment for the first time in Irish history, balances rural and urban investment, and will avoid the mistakes of the past. 

Three quarters of new growth will be outside Dublin, with 50% of the projected population growth planned for our towns, villages and rural areas and 50% for our cities. Dublin, our capital city, must grow up and not out. And it’s underpinned by a 10 year €116 billion National Development Plan. This is a dramatic increase in public investment for Ireland, and makes Ireland a European leader for investment, leaving behind the lost decade since 2008. 

Above all, Project Ireland 2040 aims to Brexit-proof Ireland by investing in the future with a particular focus on the Border Regions. 

It includes four new funds designed to stimulate renewal and investment in rural and urban areas, the environment and innovation:

  • €2 billion Urban Regeneration and Development Fund;
  • €1 billion Rural Development Fund;
  • €500 million Climate Action Fund;
  • €500 Disruptive Technologies Fund.

There is also a significant focus on the environment with €22 billion allocated to tackling and dealing with climate change across transport, energy and commercial State agencies.

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said:

This is a plan for all our citizens – the old, the young, and the yet to be born, living in towns, in cities and in the countryside. It follows the spirit of Collins and Lemass, people who always strove to raise the prospects of every Irish citizen. It’s about ensuring that all parts of Ireland fulfil their potential. As we approach our 100th anniversary as a sovereign nation, it’s about investing to ensure our country is insulated against any possible challenges like Brexit. It’s a path to a positive, sustainable future.

Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe said:

This National Development Plan will change how we invest in public infrastructure in Ireland. It moves beyond the approach of the past, which saw public investment spread too thinly and investment decisions which didn’t align with a spatial strategy. These practices contributed to some of the major issues that we, as a country, face today, particularly the predominance of Dublin in terms of economic growth, alongside the challenges facing rural communities. In order to meet the needs our citizens, a number of major innovations are being introduced. Among them are a longer-term (10 year) strategic approach to public capital investment; a sustained increase in that investment to meet the infrastructural needs of all communities; four new Funds to target urban and rural renewal, climate action and ‘disruptive technologies’; and the establishment of a new National Regeneration and Development Agency to help to drive growth and renewal in towns and cities across the country - all of which will enable us to work towards making a more equal and a fairer Ireland a reality.

Housing Minister Eoghan Murphy said:

Ireland stands on the cusp of great change. In the next 20 years we will grow by an extra one million people.  This raises a series of important questions for our consideration, the most basic being where will all these people live and work, what kind of quality of life will we each enjoy, and how will a country of almost six million people impact on our communities and on our built and natural environment?

We have a responsibility to answer these questions; we have a responsibility to plan for the changes that we face – to manage our future growth in a productive and sustainable way. This is a challenge certainly, but it is also a great opportunity for a new generation to imagine, and implement, a shared vision for each community on this island.

Project Ireland 2040 represents an important shift from previous approaches to long-term planning and investment by Government. It is an approach that joins up ambition for improvement across the different areas of our lives, bringing the various government departments, agencies, State owned enterprises and local authorities behind a shared set of strategic objectives for rural, regional and urban development.

Find out what #projectIreland means for you at gov.ie/2040