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Naval Service Operations

Dáil Éireann Debate, Wednesday - 8 February 2012

Wednesday, 8 February 2012

Questions (10)

Martin Ferris

Question:

10Deputy Martin Ferris asked the Minister for Defence the costs of any visits outside of Irish waters by any of the Naval Service vessels during each of the past five years; the locations to which they sailed; and the purposes of these sailings. [6836/12]

View answer

Oral answers (3 contributions)

The Naval Service commits a number of its annual patrol days to foreign deployments. In 2011, 54 days out of a total of 1,480 patrol days were committed to visits outside Irish waters. Following discussions between the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, my Department, and the Naval Service, locations are considered on the basis of the optimum yield that can be derived for Ireland.

The tabular statement contains information on the locations visited by the Naval Service over the past five years and the purpose of these deployments. Details of the costs in relation to these visits are also included for 2010 and 2011, and the costs in relation to 2007 to 2009, inclusive, are currently being compiled. I will ensure that the outstanding data is forwarded to the Deputy as soon as possible.

Year

Destination

Purpose of Visit

Cost

2007

Oslo, Copenhagen, Klaipeida, Kiel (vessel 1)

For diplomatic purposes and also both voyages were structured to facilitate high intensity training of Naval Service Cadets & Officers over short period of time.

Oslo, Aalborg, Gdansk, Kiel (vessel 2)

Malaga, Burgas, Constanta, Valetta

For diplomatic purposes

Zeebrugge, Belgium

For cultural purposes (Naval Service invited to attend Belgian Navy Days – a celebration of the Belgian Naval Service.)

Rotterdam, Netherlands

For diplomatic purposes

London, UK

For cultural and diplomatic purposes (Naval Service participated in St Patricks Day festivities)

Bilbao, Spain

For diplomatic purposes

Bordeaux, France

For economic purposes (Requested by Enterprise Ireland)

Toronto, Canada

For diplomatic, cultural and economic purposes (President McAleese opening of Famine Park Toronto)

2008

Miami, Charleston

For economic purposes (Host receptions for business communities attending cruise ship convention)

Mediterranean/ Black Sea

For diplomatic and cultural purposes (Maritime Festival)

Canada(Quebec/ Montreal/Halifax)

For diplomatic and cultural purposes (Quebec 400 celebrations)

Kiel, Hamburg

For economic purposes (Kiel Week and Enterprise Ireland event in Hamburg)

Zeebrugge, Belgium

For cultural purposes (Naval Service invited to attend Belgian Navy Days – a celebration of the Belgian Naval Service.)

Liverpool

For diplomatic and cultural purposes (City of Culture)

Lisbon

For operational purposes (Headquarters of “Maritime – Analysis and Operational Centre – Narcotics”)

La Rochelle, France

For economic purposes (Annual Boat Show – invite from Failte Ireland)

2009

London

For cultural and diplomatic purposes (Naval Service participated in St Patricks Day festivities)

Edinburgh

For training and operational purposes (Hosting a Fisheries Operations Coordination meeting with the Scottish authorities)

Helsinki

For cultural and diplomatic purposes (200th Anniversary of Finnish independence)

Boston/ Philadelphia

For cultural and diplomatic purposes (Tall Ships Atlantic Challenge & commemoration for Admiral Browne)

Oporto

For diplomatic purposes (Standing invitation from Portuguese)

2010

South America – Argentina/Chile /Mexico/Colombia

For cultural, economic and diplomatic purposes (Requested by Dept of An Taoiseach – Bicentennial celebrations of Argentina & Chile)

€331,257

Zeebrugge, Belgium

For cultural purposes (Naval Service invited to attend Belgian Navy Days – a celebration of the Belgian Naval Service.)

€18,535

Copenhagen, Denmark

For diplomatic purposes (500th Anniversary of Danish Navy)

€6,602

La Rochelle, France

For economic purposes (Annual Boat Show – invite from Failte Ireland)

€7,721

2011

Oslo, Kiel, Hamburg

For diplomatic, cultural and economic purposes (Requested by Dept of Foreign Affairs and Trade).

€44,093

Helsinki, St Petersburg, Tallinn, Riga

For diplomatic, cultural and economic purposes (Requested by Dept of Foreign Affairs and Trade – Helsinki visit built on the success of previous visit in 2009. Tallin was European Capital of Culture in 2011. Riga was a stopover).

€44,770

Brest

For operational and training purposes (Joint Deployment Patrol with the Community Fisheries Control Agency (CFCA))

€5,508

Greenock

For cultural purposes (Tall Ships communications vessel)

€4,722

Brest

For operational and training purposes (North Atlantic Coast Guard Forum(NACGF) exercises)

€6,072

The costs shown reflect the marginal costs of these trips when compared to the costs that would have arisen if the ships had patrolled in Irish waters for the same periods.

Before I ask a supplementary question, I wish to echo the sentiments expressed by Deputy Calleary about the role of the Naval Service in Glandore which has brought home to the public the importance of the Naval Service and the credit due to the personnel for what they have undertaken in Glandore.

The Minister referred to the locations being chosen with regard to the optimum yield to be derived for Ireland. Are these optimum yields in terms of training or promotion? What criteria are applied during discussions with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade? Are the benefits of these trips solely for the Naval Service personnel or do they also aim to promote Ireland as a destination? Are these criteria taken into account when these decisions are made?

I join with both Deputies in acknowledging the extraordinary work following the dreadful tragedy that occurred in Glandore. I refer not just to the work of the Naval Service but of all those individuals and agencies which have been engaged in dealing with a tragedy which we all wish had not happened.

To reply to the Deputy's question, the particular visits or voyages serve a range of purposes. For example, the voyages offer an ideal opportunity to reach out to the Irish diaspora around the world in an effort to attract inward direct investment to our economy. A naval ship offers the ideal platform for State agencies such as Enterprise Ireland to host receptions attended by local business interests where relationships can be developed. However, I am also cognisant of the costs of deploying the Naval Service to foreign locations and in 2011 I approved only those deployments which I believed yielded the optimum economic, diplomatic and cultural return.

I will give the Deputy some examples of the visits arranged, all of which are detailed in the tabular return. In 2007, before my time as Minister, the Naval Service undertook a visit to Oslo and Copenhagen for diplomatic purposes. Voyages and training visits were structured to facilitate high intensity training of Naval Service cadets and officers. Visits were made to Malaga, Burgas, Constanta and Valetta for diplomatic purposes. A visit was made to Zeebrugge in Belgium for cultural purposes. Further information is contained in the tabular statement. I refer to more recent visits such as a visit to Hamburg for diplomatic, cultural and economic purposes and which was requested by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade; a visit to Helsinki, St. Petersburg, Tallinin and Riga, for diplomatic, cultural and economic purposes at the request of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The Helsinki visit built on the success of a previous visit by the Naval Service to Helsinki in 2009. Tallinin was the European capital of culture in 2011 and Riga was visited on the way. There is a series of visits for a range of different purposes and they are either training-related or are related to diplomatic, cultural or economic activities or trade promotions in order to attract business to Ireland.

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