Irish Independent

Sustainabi­lity plan eyed for for Shannon Group amid tough outlook

- John Mulligan

SHANNON Group, which operates Shannon Airport and tourist attraction­s around the country, is hiring consultant­s to help draft a major sustainabi­lity programme.

The programme is expected to be delivered over a threeyear period, but comes at a time when the group is facing significan­t challenges due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The semi-State company, whose chief executive is Mary Considine, has sought experts to draft the sustainabi­lity blueprint to provide advice and guidance to the Shannon Group sustainabi­lity team “in respect of producing a sustainabi­lity plan strategica­lly tailored to the Shannon Group’s needs”, it said in a request for tender document.

The foundation­s of the programme will require extensive input from more than 60 stakeholde­rs, the Shannon Group noted.

The company said it’s expected that the consultanc­y service will initially be employed to produce a detailed engagement plan that will include internal and external stakeholde­rs.

Shannon Group said a second stage of the sustainabi­lity engagement might extend to a “wide range of services”, including regulatory compliance, workshop preparatio­n, identifica­tion and assistance with key sustainabi­lity drivers and challenges as well as action plans.

Apart from Shannon Airport and its operation of tourist attraction­s, Shannon Group also has significan­t property interests and an aviation services division.

The tourist attraction­s it manages include Bunratty Castle in Co Clare and King John’s Castle in Co Limerick. In Dublin, it manages the GPO Witness History exhibit, as well as Malahide Castle and Newbridge House and Farm.

The head of Shannon Heritage, Niall O’Callaghan, recently announced his departure from the position, while last week, the managing director of Shannon Airport, Andrew Murphy, left to work elsewhere in the aviation sector.

On Tuesday, Shannon Airport unions rejected plans by management to slash pay for workers by 20pc and introduce a number of other costsaving measures as the gateway struggles with the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

While flights have resumed at the airport, it is facing a stark future until passenger traffic recovers. It handled 1.7 million passengers last year.

“The announceme­nt by management at Shannon Airport that it intends to cut members’ pay by up to 20pc is completely unacceptab­le and any unilateral pay cuts will be strongly resisted,” said Siptu sector organiser Neil McGowan.

 ??  ?? Shannon’s Mary Considine
Shannon’s Mary Considine

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