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President Michael D. Higgins & President of Portugal, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa welcomed by Minister McConalogue on visit to Ireland’s new National Marine Research Vessel RV Tom Crean in Dublin

 

Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine Charlie McConalogue has today welcomed President Michael D. Higgins and President of Portugal Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa on a visit (hosted by the Marine Institute) to the newly commissioned national research vessel, RV Tom Crean, berthed in Dublin’s docklands. President de Sousa is currently on a state visit to Ireland.

President Higgins and President de Sousa met with Minister McConalogue, Marine Institute CEO Dr Paul Connolly, and the Institute’s Chairperson, Dr John Killeen and the Presidential delegations were given a tour of the new marine research vessel following its return from a fisheries assessment survey in the Celtic sea. The vessel was commissioned on October 6th   at a ceremony in Dingle, Kerry, involving the Crean family.   Marine Institute staff outlined the state of the art technology on the ship which will greatly enhance Ireland’s capacity to undertake many diverse ocean science surveys, participate in international collaborative research projects and acquire the ocean data and knowledge essential to inform and inspire the sustainable management of our vast marine resources.

The Presidential delegations were given a tour of the new marine research vessel following its return from a fisheries assessment survey in the Celtic sea. The vessel was commissioned on October 6th   at a ceremony in Dingle, Kerry, involving the Crean family.   Marine Institute staff outlined the state of the art technology on the ship which will greatly enhance Ireland’s capacity to undertake many diverse ocean science surveys, participate in international collaborative research projects and acquire the ocean data and knowledge essential to inform and inspire the sustainable management of our vast marine resources.

Representatives of the several government Departments including the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, the Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications, Department of Foreign Affairs along with several Marine Institute staff were present on the vessel.  The itinerary also included a short meeting to discuss emerging ocean policy areas in Ireland and Portugal and how improved cooperation on ocean science and research can benefit policy, our people and our planet.

Minister Charlie McConalogue said “We are honoured to welcome President Higgins and President de Sousa to the RV Tom Crean today, to showcase the cutting-edge technology of our new state of the art research vessel and to discuss the importance of ocean science.  This vessel gives Ireland the capacity to deepen our understanding of the ocean in addressing the great global challenges of climate change, biodiversity and food security. The scientific work carried out by the vessel will help to deliver sustainable management of our living marine resources and to ensure that the provision of sustainable seafood remains at the forefront of our ocean science agenda”.

The global policy landscape has changed significantly over the last few years, driven by recovery from COVID19 and the ongoing impacts of the war in Ukraine.  The ocean has the potential to address many of these new policy areas including food and energy security and climate change.   Science has a key role to play and cooperation between Atlantic countries will be key.  This presents opportunities for Ireland and Portugal in the ocean science space.  The informal discussions on the ship focused on sustainable seafood, how we manage our ocean space (marine spatial planning), how we protect marine biodiversity (marine protected areas), offshore renewable energy, how the ocean impacts climate change and climate change impacts the ocean.

Dr Paul Connolly, CEO of the Marine Institute, said, “Ireland and Portugal are on the frontiers of the Atlantic and given the importance of the ocean to our very existence, these discussions are critical. We have developed a strong working relationship with Portugal over the years and this State Visit builds on these strong ties and paves the way for more cooperation particularly in relation to EU funded projects on the Atlantic”.

In June of this year, the Marine Institute and the Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera (IPMA) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), designed to build on their long established cooperation and to build new partnerships particularly in relation to strategic cooperation on Atlantic ocean research.

The implementation of cooperation within the MoU's framework will include capacity building, training and exchange of expertise and staff, and developing strategic alliance to build research proposals. It also includes conducting joint research projects, co-organisation of conferences, seminars and workshops.