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Dáil Éireann - Volume 31 - 04 July, 1929 Electricity (Finance) Bill, 1929—Second Stage. Minister for Industry and Commerce (Mr. McGilligan) Patrick McGilligan 363 Minister for Industry and Commerce (Mr. McGilligan): The Bill which has been introduced has [363] three main sections. I direct Deputies' attention in the first instance to the second sub-section of Section 1. It proposes that sub-section (5) of Section 11 of the Shannon Electricity Act, 1925, be amended by the deletion of the words “five millions, two hundred and ten thousand pounds” now contained therein and the insertion in lieu of the words so deleted of the words “five millions, eight hundred and thirty-five thousand pounds.” That is the first purpose of the Bill, to increase the money from £5,210,000, the sum which had previously been granted under the Shannon Electricity Act, to £5,835,000. The money is to be increased by the difference between £5,210,000 and £5,835,000. A comparison lies as between these two figures but it is not the comparison that is shown merely by subtracting the one item from the other. I will go into that in detail more fully immediately. The first purpose of the Bill is to increase the money previously voted for the purpose of the construction of the Shannon Electricity Works, as defined in the Electricity (Supply) Act of 1927. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Does the Minister not mean the Shannon Electricity Act of 1925? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: No. I am dealing with the definition in the Electricity (Supply) Act of 1927. 364 The second purpose of the Bill is set out in Section 2. Section 2 amends Section 12 of the Act of 1927 by deleting sub-section (2) of Section 12 of that Act, and reading for it what is down here. Again, I will go into this in more detail in a moment, but I want to get the purpose clear first. In Section 12 of the Electricity (Supply) Act of 1927 it is set out that certain sums of money are to be advanced to the Electricity Supply Board. While sub-section (3) of Section 12 of that Act, with which we are not dealing by way of amendment in this Bill, gave the amount of money which it was proposed and which it is still proposed to hand over to the Electricity [364] Supply Board for the purpose of distribution throughout the Free State. Sub-section (2) dealt with a different matter, and it is sub-section (2) that I am proposing to deal with on this occasion. I only mention sub-section (3) to indicate that we are not changing the amount granted under that sub-section to the Electricity Supply Board for their purposes. 365 Sub-section (2) had this purpose: Under the old Act a sum of £5,210,000 was voted for the purpose of carrying out the Shannon construction works. A certain division had always been assumed in this sum. These were the moneys to be expended actually on construction. There was a further sum of money to meet interest on the capital expended on the construction works during the process of building, and during the two or three early years in which it was recognised by the experts that Shannon revenue would not amount to the Shannon expenditure. Extra capital was provided by way of making up for the deficit. We made, acting on the experts advice, a rough and ready calculation in this way: the actual construction money worked out at £4,600,000, and a sum of money to an amount of £600,000 was to be devoted to the payment of interest on the construction moneys during the period of years in which the Shannon scheme was not expected to be a self-supporting scheme, and for the maintenance and operation of the Shannon works when handed over to the Electricity Supply Board in the early years in which their revenue would not equal their actual charges. Sub-section (2) laid down that there was to be handed to the Electricity Supply Board, in addition to the sum of £2,500,000 mentioned in the next sub-section, whatever portion of the £5,210,000 I did not spend, or else a maximum of £600,000. The maximum of £600,000 was put in to meet objections to the effect that I was trying to get two sums of £600,000, the old sum of £600,000 mentioned as being interest on erection money, and the new £600,000 that it was [365] presumed I was managing to hand over secretly to the Electricity Supply Board. It was stated that I was really giving them £3,100,000 instead of £2,500,000. To meet that objection it was laid down that the Minister shall hand over to the Electricity Supply Board such part of the £5,210,000 as he has not spent on construction, subject to the overriding maximum that that should not be a greater sum than £600,000. It is clear why that distinction was made. If I happened to get the works completed very much earlier than was anticipated—a year or one and a half years earlier—I would not have had to spend any portion of the £600,000 myself. That was the point put to me, although I could not see the circumstances in which I would have spent only the construction moneys and would have £600,000 interest and arrears money to hand over to the Electricity Supply Board. View now the more natural course of events, and it would have been this: I would spend £4,600,000 on construction works and I would spend some of the £600,000 in meeting interest charges on the moneys put into building from time to time as the work was proceeding and I would have to hand to the Electricity Supply Board some indefinite sum, something that was a subtraction at the most of £4,600,000, my construction costs, from £5,210,000 voted, or some lesser sum according as my construction costs grew, my liability for interest grew, and the time period went against me. We propose now to delete that sub-section and instead to put in a definite sum of £156,000. That represents 3 per cent. of the capital costs, and is in accord with the Siemens project and the opinion of the experts. It is now clear that by the autumn I shall have spent all the money voted for construction and shall have met all interest charges thereon to date of the autumn. 366 All that has to be handed over to the Electricity Supply Board now is the three per cent. on the increased capital cost of construction, [366] that being the sum which the experts said was the right sum to meet both interest on construction costs, and also the deficiencies during the early years when the revenue is not expected to be equal to the expenditure. That is somewhat involved. I do not know if I have explained it. We had £5,210,000. We had a division of that sum— £4,600,000 to be spent and actually put into building, and £600,000 to pay both the interest on the money put into building, and to provide the moneys which the Electricity Supply Board, or the Board operating the scheme, would have to obtain in order to be able to function and to preserve and maintain the essential works during the period in which their revenue would not be entirely adequate for their purpose. We know now that we will have spent a certain amount of money on construction work up to the late autumn of this year, and we will have met the interest on that with the principal sum of £5,800,000 which I am asking for. So we see we are able to determine accurately —it is not final, but it is fairly accurate—and we are in a position now to get away from the involved calculation of £5,200,000, minus whatever moneys have been spent on construction and meeting interest charges, up to a maximum of £600,000. We are in a position to determine it accurately, and to say that we are giving £156,000. That is the second purpose of the Bill. It is to determine the amount of money to be handed over to the Electricity Supply Board in addition to the two and a half millions for their own operating expenses, the building of new distribution network, and the taking over of other works, etc. 367 There are other clauses in the Bill, which amount simply to this, that the difficult question of navigation, which always complicated the Shannon construction works, and especially complicated the Shannon accounts, is dealt with here in a limited way. Previously the experts had reckoned that incidental [367] to the construction of the building, the excavation of the canal and the building of the earthworks, there could be brought about an improvement of navigation on the river. They added up all the incidentals that they saw occurring, and they estimated the cost of these to be about £94,000. As the Shannon electrification was interfering with navigation by the old channel they considered it equitable to charge against the scheme the cost of providing a lock in the Weir at Parteen Villa. They felt that a sum of about £20,000 would supply that lock. In the old scheme we set out to charge the £20,000 against the Shannon, against the consumers of electricity eventually, and £74,000 against the navigation to be got out of tolls paid by the users of the navigation. The amount spent in the improvement of navigation has gone up. We must later decide how this is to be met. That is not determined in this Bill, but the one thing determined is that that sum of money is not to be paid back, as at present things go, by the consumers of electricity. There is an increase of navigation facilities. Navigation has been improved. It is costing more than was previously estimated, and we say that navigation is not to be charged against electricity consumers except to the extent of £20,000, which was the estimate for the provision of the lock and the weir. We set aside that sum of £132,000. We say that how we shall repay that sum is not finally determined here. It will come up for settlement later on. 368 The fourth and last thing which the Bill sets out is that the Electricity Supply Board are not to be asked to pay interest on the £132,000, the amount now decided on as the figure that has been spent on the navigation of the Shannon. These are the purposes of the Bill:— First, the increase in the amount of money for the Shannon construction from £5,210,000 to £5,835,000. Secondly, the determination, as precisely [368] as we can at this moment, of the amount of money to be handed over to the Electricity Supply Board in addition to the two-and-a-half millions of distribution money to enable them to meet interest on money to be spent on buildings hereafter to be handed over to them, and to meet the deficiency in their revenue in the earlier years. We reckon this sum to be £156,000. The other purpose of the Bill is to segregate the amount spent on navigation and to say that in this Bill that money shall not be charged on the Electricity Supply Board. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: Do I gather from the Minister that the actual cost of navigation improvement has been £132,000 plus £20,000? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Yes. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: And what you are doing is that you are leaving the electricity consumers to pay interest on the £20,000 but not on the £132,000? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: To meet the charges on the £20,000. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: May I ask whether the £5,835,000 includes the £156,000? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: No, the £156,000 is additional to the £5,835,000. I want to make a comparison between the £5,210,000 and the £5,835,000 plus the £156,000. Originally there was a Vote for generation, transmission and distribution of Shannon power to the consumers. There were, as between the 1925 and the 1927 Acts, two sums of money, £5,210,000 and £2,500,000. The second sum, the £2,500,000, is not being charged, so that we can banish it from the present calculation. There remains, therefore, this comparison —the sum of £5,210,000 previously voted for generating, transmitting, and supplying Shannon current and the bigger amount now sought, £5,835,000 plus £136,000. 369 The first contrast is between the £5,210,000 and the £5,835,000, increased [369] by £156,000. As at present proposed, consumers of electricity are not going to meet certain navigation costs. Therefore, a deduction has to be made from some side of these accounts, possibly from both. The £5,210,000 did include a sum of £20,000 navigation money properly chargeable against consumers of electricity—the cost of providing a lock in the weir. The £5,210,000 included nothing else. It did not include the £74,000 which the navigation was known to cost additional to the £20,000. The £5,835,000 includes the £20,000 previously included in the £5,210,000 and in addition includes the £132,000. Let us wipe out the £20,000 that is common to both. The comparison therefore is between the £5,210,000, the old sum, and the £5,835,000 increased by £156,000 and decreased by the navigation costs of £132,000. I want to put it in that way because it shows the steps of the calculation. 370 I want to build up on the other side. £5,210,000 was the best estimate at the time when the Shannon Electricity Bill was going through the Dáil of the cost of the Siemens Schuckert project, but at the very time that legislation was going through the project which had been previously put up by Siemens Schuckert was being finally examined by four experts. These experts made suggestions as to improvements and modifications. Some of them were known to us, but it was undergoing a final examination when legislation was going through the House and I got what was referred to as an addendum to the Report when it was too late for me to have the sums voted increased. That addendum put on £100,000 to the scheme. The experts had modified the Siemens Schuckert Report at an increased cost of £100,000. In other words, if I had been coming to the Dáil two months later, the bill of costs would not have been any longer £5,210,000, but £5,310,000. There were modifications, mainly safeguarding modifications, introduced by them and they ran up the bill by £100,000. [370] There is one other addition to be made to the £5,210,000. Under the old project, payment for pole-sites, poles which carried transmission lines, was calculated on an annual rental basis. We have gone on a different plan in carrying out the work. We do not pay annually any rental. We buy out the sites and the moneys for the purchase of the whole sites are included in the £5,835,000. As a balance to this the yearly rents will not have to be found by the Electricity Supply Board, but they will have to find the interest on the money now capitalised for the purchase of the pole sites. Supposing we take the money set aside under the old project as rents for pole sites, and capitalise that, it adds another £100,000. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: Can the Minister give us the parallel figure, the actual cost of the pole sites? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I propose not to go into certain figures, and I ask the indulgence of the Dáil for not doing so. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: As far as possible, the House would, I think, be anxious to do that, but where we are offered two alternative figures and when we are asked to put one figure against the other we should have the two figures. We do not want to press for figures which might embarrass, but if a figure is offered as an alternative, a parallel figure, we should have both. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: I submit that as the Minister is dealing with moneys expended and is accounting for them, in a sense, it is no use giving figures unless we get what the capital value is. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 371 Mr. McGilligan: I would be happy to state the amount of expenditure incurred, if it were fixed and certain, but the difficulty I am in is that I have bought only about one-quarter of the pole-sites, and if I revealed my figures I may be mulcted more heavily. As long as costs are [371] in question I do not think that I should be asked about the moneys I paid so that owners of sites can put them in contrast with the money that I am allowed to pay. The comparison would not, in fact, always suit the people from whom I am buying sites or acquiring land. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: I am not asking the Minister to state exactly how many sites he bought or what he has spent on those he has bought. I am asking him to give us an idea, irrespective of what he has bought, what he thinks the total cost will be. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: I submit that the Minister ought to give the total cost. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 372 Mr. McGilligan: It is a simple matter to calculate the number of sites required and, if the cost were given, by a process of simple division, to find the cost per pole. If people think that what I am doing at the moment is cloaking expenditure I make this offer to the House. I am prepared, after the whole thing has been completed, to introduce a token Vote of £10 in order to enable Deputies to see what the actual difference is between estimates and costs when completed. The whole thing will be revealed hereafter. It will not be very long from now, nine months at the latest, when the actual amounts can be given without any item of estimates in them. I must keep to the region of estimates just now and consequently hide certain things at the moment. So I get back to my comparison. I was comparing £5,210,000 with £5,835,000, increased by £156,000 and decreased by £132,000. I have spoken of two sums of £100,000 each. There is one of these sums of £100,000 that may be in dispute. The experts' report added on another £100,000 to the cost, which, it might be said, should not be taken in here as it was not before the Dáil. One item of £100,000 may be wiped out of the comparison by people who accept that argument. Where the justice of the case lies will have to be seen afterwards. I am asking the [372] Dáil to allow this comparison to be made—£5,210,000 plus £100,000, the capitalised value of the pole sites, plus £100,000, the addendum made in the Experts' Report, the additions to the scheme, making a sum of £5,410,000 on one side to be compared with £5,860,000 on the other side. There is an increase of £450,000. Again, there are certain items that I cannot go into at the moment, but I can give the bigger items of increase. I would like to get one point firmly established at the moment, because establishing that point is a tribute not merely to the contracting firm who carried out the work, but to the Irish engineers who have watched and kept down the costs of building and kept the work within the limits of the moneys I have spoken of here. There is a sum of £450,000, or £350,000 in the case of people who accept the second £100,000, to be explained. £150,000 of that goes for administrative expenses during the period of construction. It is not all expended at the moment, but I have a calculation to cover all the administrative expenses I see ahead. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: Administration in the Minister's Department? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: In my own office and outside. It is the payment to engineers on the scheme of £150,000, for which no provision whatever had been made under the old scheme. 373 The idea at one time was there might be a free grant from the Government towards the suggested scheme. I am not accepting that as point because, when we come to a comparison of the estimates of consumption, we will see that there is no necessity to worry about that £150,000. Under the old accounts, there was no mention of contingencies. Of the £453,000, £53,000 is under that heading. I have included this time the sum of about £53,000 for contingencies. There was no item previously for contingencies. That was commented on at the time. I am giving [373] a fairly liberal allowance, but I say I am not asking for more money than I think the item is going to cost. I want to present the Dáil with the best picture I can of final costs, and I have included £53,000 for contingencies. That leaves over £250,000 or £350,000 spent on the work more than had been contemplated. There are two big headings. I will have to deal with this in two sets of figures, one set being addressed to the people who do not accept the £100,000 of the addendum, and the other set for those who do. The civil works have gone up by £234,000. The electrical and mechanical works have gone up by £134,000. For the people who accept the take-off of the second £100,000, the civil works have gone up by the sum of £140,000. Electrical and mechanical works have gone up by a sum of £133,000. May I put that figure in another way? As far as these two items are concerned, the Experts' addendum put on £95,000, roughly, to the civil works, and something short of £1,000 to the electrical and mechanical works; so that on the work done on the digging of the canal, the excavation of earth, the digging out of rock and earth, the building of banks, the building of the power-house, the installation of the turbines and the transmission system through the country, there has been an increase on the estimate for the actual construction costs, on the one hand, of £140,000, and on the other of £133,000 or £134,000. 374 When one considers the rather lugubrious forecast made when this Bill was going first through the Dáil, when one considers all the hidden items there were, all the things that might go wrong and the fact that it was alleged that sufficient borings had not been made or sufficient trial pits dug, and that nobody knew what was the alternation between rock and earth to be excavated, no one knew what the canal bank would cost and no one knew what was going to be the cost of the power house and the intake buildings and all the vast and innumerable hidden items one's [374] imagination could play about with in the early years, the increases I now show are amazingly low indeed. The canal is now dug to the point when we have almost come to the last item of expenditure on it. The mechanical and electrical works are so far through that we can see our final costs. In one case we find an increase of about £143,000 and in the other case an increase of £133,000. I think the presentation of these two figures constitutes in themselves a tribute to the power of estimation of the firm and the way they carried out the work and the engineers on the scheme who checked out every item on the work. I can go back on these figures to certain further points if it is required and they can be presented in other ways if Deputies view them from different angles. The costs of the scheme have therefore gone up. How much they have gone up is a matter people will debate for some little time, and these figures will only get properly established after they have been questioned and tossed about for a bit. There is something in the region of £500,000 or £600,000 extra to be spent on the scheme, and paid for by future consumers of electricity. In other words, I am contrasting the old sum of £5,200,000 and the new figure, which includes everything that must be charged against electricity consumers. I leave out of this new figure this £132,000 for navigation, but I include for navigation the £20,000 always thought to be a proper charge on electricity consumers. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: The civil engineering works have gone up £140,000. The difference between £132,000 which is estimated for navigation as a surplus and the £74,000 which was previously estimated as a surplus over and above the £20,000 is £58,000. Do I take it that the civil engineering works have increased £140,000 plus £58,000, that is £198,000? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 375 Mr. McGilligan: The civil engineering works have increased by £140,000 chargeable to electricity [375] consumers and by £58,000 chargeable against navigation. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Is there included in the figures which the Minister has just given the cost of compensation paid to people for acquisition of land? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Yes. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: All those costs are included. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: In the £5,835,000, yes. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Also contingencies —sums to be paid where agreement has not been reached? Mr. Gilligan Mr. Gilligan Mr. Gilligan: Yes—I include sums to cover the payment for all land acquired or to be acquired. There is, therefore, revealed as the cost of the Shannon development the sum of £5,835,000 plus £156,000 minus £132,000. What does the increase of £650,000 mean to future consumers? To show this I can make many comparisons and use many calculations. One such comparison is provided on the tables on page 103 of the Experts' Report. 376 The experts there worked on the basis of two assumptions—a sale of 110,000,000 units and a scheme costing £5,210,000. On this they calculated what the revenue of the scheme ought to be to meet the interest and charges, to meet the maintenance and repairs, and a variety of things set out in the Siemens Schuckert Report—all the charges that would fall against the scheme. They calculated all the revenue that would have to be secured by those afterwards working the scheme in order to make the scheme pay its way—to meet all necessary expenses. On page 103 they gave [376] their calculations. They showed what the price would have to be at the power-house bus bars— that is to say, what units would have to be sold there and at what price. There were other calculations of the cost of having the power delivered at the hundred kv. system and the 35 kv. transformer stations and a final cost for delivery of the power in bulk at the end of the ten kv. lines. 377 It is calculated if 110,000,000 units were to be sold finally to consumers the price for delivery at the power station would be .41 of a penny; at the end of the 100 kv. system it would be .52 of a penny; at the 35 kv. transformer stations it would be .74d.; at the 10 kv. transformer stations it would be .84d. The increased final costs now revealed mean that those figures have to be increased in this way: The .41 goes up to .46; the .52 goes up to .59; the .74 goes up to .81, and the last figure, and the figure, I think, I should fasten on for the purpose of comparison, the .84, goes up to .9. That is the difference in the scheme, looked at in this way. Instead of there being .84d. charge, there might have to be charged .9. So we are now in the position that as far as concerns one of the variables in the old Shannon project we can speak now with clarity and precision, and the figure I have quoted shows how much the increase has been. One of the variables was: How much were the works going to cost? We did not know that when the scheme was going through. There were all sorts of mournful prophecies of its eventually costing £11,000,000, £12,000,000, or £15,000,000. Of course, unit price per current would have to go according to the price of the constructional works and of the whole transmission system. That was one of the variants. The cost of the works might have been anything— one's imagination could multiply it [377] many times. Actually, here is what we have: The other variable that has to be taken into calculation is—consider it constant for the purpose of calculation — the 110,000,000 units to be sold to consumers which, if sold at .9d. instead of .84d. at the 10 kv. transformer station will make the scheme pay. That is the net difference. If people gave me calculations and time to work them out we could get them worked out in a variety of ways. That is one good way of looking at it. That is the net difference: .84d. at the 10 kv. transformer stations now has become .9d. I would like to show one further thing against myself in this. There are certain costs that are a sort of borderline costs between the Electricity Supply Board and myself. It is very hard to determine sometimes where distribution begins and transmission ends. At the moment, there are certain moneys that have to be met by the Electricity Supply Board out of the £2,500,000. I think they are properly met by that Board, but suppose these costs have to go against the Shannon scheme, and I think it is outrageous that they would have to, there would have to be a redistribution of the money, which would make a difference in the cost of the unit at the 10 kv. station. The highest it would go to in that unlikely event, would be .93d. which adds on another .03d. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: Do I understand that there are some other figures which may have to be included and which are not now included in the .9? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 378 Mr. McGilligan: Only on this basis, that there may have to be allocated against the supply in bulk charges which I think are distribution charges and should be met on the distribution side. It cannot possibly mean any enlargement of the moneys more than £5,835,000, [378] plus £156,000, plus the £2,500,000. The cost that I have put to the £5,835,000 might come off the £2,500,000. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: It might mean that the capital cost of the work would be increased by the amount taken from the £2,500,000. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Yes, in the very unlikely contingency I have referred to. I do not think it is a calculation that can ever be justified. I only mentioned it because there are borderline cases. We have had certain agreements with regard to charges made against each side, and I think there is a proper division there, but there may have to be a reallocation of the moneys. The distribution costs may come down and the transmission costs may go up, but I do not think it is probable. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: It would mean a figure of about £300,000? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: No. It would be lower. This is a figure that is completely in the air and that I am not going to get precise about. I say that the outside figure that the .9 might go to would be .93. I venture to say that in the debate that I have promised hereafter when we are able to see these things in the proper light, I do not believe there is anybody in the House who will want to have the figure increased from .9. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: The Minister must have some figure in his mind. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I have, and it is staying there. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: We can figure it out ourselves. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 379 Mr. McGilligan: The Deputy has made an attempt to figure it out, [379] but he is wrong. Let me get back to .9 of a penny. How many units are likely to be sold? 110,000,000 units is what we have to sell. Previously, when I spoke on this matter, I used to go on this type of calculation: First, how many units of electricity are actually being sold in the country? Look back over a period of years and see what was the normal increase in the electricity sold. Calculate one other point. Was there any suspicion that we had reached saturation point in certain areas, so that one would say an automatic increase is not likely to occur within the next four years? We used to calculate round about the time the works would be handed over that there would be an actual consumption in the country—this is without Shannon power being delivered to anybody—of about 70,000,000 units. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: What was the date of that calculation? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Made in 1924 with reference to 1929. This was one of the figures that was quoted here when argument was proceeding on the old Act of 1925. We find that actually on the returns given by statutory, authorised and permitted undertakers that there is a consumption in the country at the moment of 73,000,000 units. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: That includes such companies as the Tramways Company? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Everything— lighting, heating, cooking and power, including the tramways, public lighting and other purposes. When I said that the 110,000,000 units had to be sold at .9d. or .84d. under the old calculation I was slightly incorrect, because the 110,000,000 units were divided by the experts into 90,000,000 units for purposes other than heating, and 20,000,000 units for heating, and the 20,000,000 units for heating were to be sold at a very much less rate than the ordinary rate to be charged for lighting. 380 [380] So that again to get a calculation I think we should go on this basis: that there is to be sold 90 million units for purposes other than heating and there will have to be sold about 20 million for heating, the latter at a fraction of the price asked for the former. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Under heating would come power? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: No. By no means. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Heating for domestic use? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Mainly for domestic use. It might also, say, be for steam-raising in creameries. People might adjudge that to be a power use of it. I suppose you might call it power of one type, but certainly the twenty million units was not supposed to cover such things as the units used for the tramway system or anything like that. Take the total I have got from returns furnished by statutory authorities and permitted undertakers, not this year, but last year —1928. It then amounted to almost 67,000,000 units. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Can you segregate them? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I am going to. Of this 67,000,000, 17,000,000 were for lighting—I am giving round figures; 4¾ millions for heating and cooking, and 39½ millions for power; 3¾ millions for public lighting, and 1½ millions for other purposes, which mainly represent further power sales. The 39 millions there for power, I think, represents the power units in the three main cities using electricity, and the 1½ millions is for power sold elsewhere in the country. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Does that include power supplied after midnight? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: It would include everything used in the Saorstát in the year 1928. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe 381 [381] Mr. Briscoe: Might I ask whether the 1½ million units contain that class of power? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I have no figure on that. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: At a later date, if the Minister would get us a clear definition of the 1½ million units we would be glad to have it. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: These are returns furnished in statutory form, and I doubt if it would be possible to break up the 1½ millions in any better way, but I will see what can be done. Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy: Does the 39 millions include trams? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Yes. Mr. Murphy Mr. Murphy Mr. Murphy: Can the Minister say how much is for trams? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I cannot, at present. Sixty-seven million units is returned as being consumed in the year 1928. If I take the calculation back over the years from 1924, and take the automatic increase year by year, that 67 million units becomes, in 1929, 73½ million units; becomes 81 million units the year after; 89 million units the year after, and 98 million units in 1932, the date at which the experts thought the scheme should be able to pay its way. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: Has the Minister an estimate of the actual total consumption for the intervening years to 1929? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 382 Mr. McGilligan: Certainly. 1924, 48,662,000; 1925, 51,667,000; 1926, 55,726,000; 1927, 60,447,000. I have given the rest. There is the calculation based upon the automatic growth of electricity in the country at the price that ruled before the Shannon power came to be delivered, and without any effort made [382] by the Shannon Supply Board to push electricity into new districts, and without making any impression on the electricity consumers of the State, by reason of the fact that Shannon power was to be delivered by the Electricity Supply Board set up to push the sales. We are taking the calculation merely on the different rates that at present operate through the country in the towns and small places. If there was no incentive given to people to consume electricity at any greater rate than previously, if the old price held, if the increase of electricity simply advanced, as it did in the years since 1924, in 1932 we should reach a consumption of 98,000,000 units. Mr. Bourke Mr. Bourke Mr. Bourke (Limerick): Has the Minister made any provision for redundant workers and employees? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 383 Mr. McGilligan: That will arise later. I want to take another calculation—the calculation which the Electricity Supply Board has made as a result of investigations in the country and what they think is the likely result—at any rate, the result that they hope for, and their hopes are based upon a pretty firm foundation, in 1932. They divide the experts' figure of 110,000,000 units into three different sections. They take the 20,000,000 units for heating that I spoke of before, but they divide the other 90,000,000 units into lighting and household purposes, 43½ million units, and power, including tramways, 46½ million units. The actual consumption for 1928 for lighting and household purposes was 25¾ million units, and the Board calculate that on a very conservative estimate in 1932 we would have reached the 43½ million units which the experts thought likely. They point out that that would represent an increase of fourteen or fifteen per cent. per annum over the years intervening, and the actual consumption taken over a period of years back shows that that has been the increase for household and lighting purposes. Taking into consideration the fact that the Shannon will be [383] able to deliver current in bulk at less than one penny per unit through the transformer stations everywhere, and the fact that they are pushing into new districts and opening up new areas, they say that it is a conservative calculation that the experts' 43½ million units will undoubtedly be reached in 1932. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: When the experts were estimating the power units at 46½ millions—— Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I am going on to power immediately. Light and household purposes, 43½ million units. In 1928 the consumption was 25¾ million, and the Electricity Supply Board's calculation is that it is a very conservative estimate to hold that we will have reached the experts' figure of 43½ millions in 1932. The experts' division then allocated 46½ millions to power. In 1928 there was being sold 41 million units for power in the country. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Was that segregated as between the trams and industrial purposes? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: No, but I can get it. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: A very large element of group power in the consumption, which includes consumption by trams, is not expansible—that is the point. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: The only detail they give is that in 1928 power showed a consumption of 41,000,000 units. The three larger cities— Greater Dublin, Cork and Limerick —accounted for 39 million units and the rest of the Saorstát for two million units. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Can the Minister give us a rough estimate of the amount used by the Tramways? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 384 Mr. McGilligan: I have not got anything as to the amount of the tram consumption at the moment. [384] Deputy Murphy might supply that. I shall get it supplied later if necessary. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: Can the Minister get the consumption by the trams, because the whole figure of consumption of power is vitiated in ordinary calculation unless we have the tram power consumption. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 385 Mr. McGilligan: I am not quite sure that anything is vitiated, because we have people banking their reputations to a certain extent on the statements they give to me with regard to prospects. They are the people who have made the investigation and have had agents through the country for one-and-a-half years and they say, as a result of careful calculations, that they are satisfied there is an immediate market in the Saorstát, taking in the three large cities, for 30,000,000 more power units, and in the rest of the country that that two millions should be increased to seventeen million by 1932. In other words, instead of the expert figures of 46½ millions being reached for heating by 1932 they hope to have a consumption of 81 million units. Let me present the picture fully and then I shall answer any questions. They hold that the 20,000,000 units set down under the heading of heating will be reached in 1932 mainly through the use of electricity in steam-raising and industrial furnaces. And they calculate that in 1932 one can look forward to the consumption not of 110,000,000 units but to the consumption of 144,000,000 units. Making all the deductions necessary from that figure and remembering that what has to be reached is a sale of 90,000,000 units at ordinary prices for household convenience purposes and 20,000,000 units at a very low rate for heating, in the end we find there is a fairly secure calculation that by 1932 we will be selling so many units at .9d. that the Shannon scheme will be paying its way. That is the point to which the Deputies will have to address themselves now. The scheme is there and the [385] cost of the supply in bulk can be shown. We are not dealing with the other side, the distribution side, at all. There is the calculation, and we get back to the experts' figures that I quoted in the old debates, and I prefer in a conservative way to found more upon this calculation of the returns showing the number of units sold under the various heads I have described, showing the total last year of nearly 67,000,000 units and this year an estimated total of 73,000,000, and showing an increase by 1932 up to 98,000,000 units. That is the picture that I want to present of the Shannon scheme at the moment. Costs have gone up and are reflected in the change from .84d. to .9d. The previous estimate made in 1925 as to what would be the power market for electricity automatically arising in the Free State, in 1929, has been more than borne out if we take the 73½ million units reached this year. The whole thing to me is very encouraging. There was a big element of risk about the whole scheme when starting. It had to be dealt with in a most careful way. A very big firm of contractors came in and presented this project in particular circumstances. They had their scheme tried and judgment passed upon it by four experts of international repute, and they said there was a big prospect of the Shannon paying its way by 1932. They made certain calculations as to price and final costs, and they allowed a margin for error, and they made a calculation as to units of consumption, and we see the difference as far as cost is concerned —the .84d. increased now to the .9d., and the other calculations in regard to units to be sold. Mr. O'Hanlon Mr. O'Hanlon Mr. O'Hanlon: Do I understand this, that his estimate for 1932 is based on a consumption of 140,000,000 units? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: What estimate? Mr. O'Hanlon Mr. O'Hanlon Mr. O'Hanlon: The Minister said it was estimated that there would be 144,000,000 units used in 1932. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 386 Mr. McGilligan: That was what [386] the Electricity Supply Board on certain particulars calculated. I am not founding upon that. Mr. O'Hanlon Mr. O'Hanlon Mr. O'Hanlon: The Minister is not founding the statement that it will pay in 1932 upon that? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: If we get a demand for 144,000,000 units we would not have them to sell in 1932. from the Shannon, but the scheme will pay its way on whatever we have to sell. Remember we have a few power stations which we will have taken over to supply deficiencies. Professor Thrift Professor Thrift Professor Thrift: Would the Minister tell us what was the figure that we compared in 1925 with this figure, .84, say, for Dublin? I think the figure was .125 of a penny. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Does the Deputy mean the actual charge in Dublin? Professor Thrift Professor Thrift Professor Thrift: At present from the principal source of supply in Dublin we compared .84 with, I think, the figure .125. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: The Deputy wants to know what is the figure— the actual charges in Dublin. Professor Thrift Professor Thrift Professor Thrift: Yes, at that time. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I have not got that figure, but I shall get it later. If I understand Deputy O'Hanlon properly, I should say to him there is a calculation made that we will be selling more than the Shannon is guaranteed to supply in 1932. Mr. O'Hanlon Mr. O'Hanlon Mr. O'Hanlon: The Minister's statement that at .9d. it would be a paying proposition in 1932 was not based on a consumption of 144,000,000 units? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 387 Mr. McGilligan: No, on a basis of 110,000,000 units sold to consumers. Remember not even 110,000,000 units sold at .9d. but 20,000,000 units sold at something less than .9d. and the rest at .9d. That is the calculation that people have before them. I would like to give another opportunity of having this further discussed, simply in retrospect when the scheme will [387] have been definitely completed. We are at the point where, as far as the canal works are concerned, we are at the end, or almost at the end, of the construction works. There are certain things that will lag on for a bit, certain works which will not delay the filling of the canal and the delivery of power. Other work is proceeding, such as the erection of transmission lines through the country. That is a part I am not dealing with at the moment because the figures do not arise for consideration and it is more connected with the work of the Electricity Supply Board. From the point of view of expenditure the whole thing has gone much better than I think most of the prophets hoped that it would go. We have been within the limit, as can be seen, of the margin allowed for and spoken of in the experts' report. The conditions that have been met do not make such a variation in the whole scheme as to necessitate such an extra charge for units of electricity as would make one doubt whether there will be a demand for electricity at that price. The one thing that is still variable is this question of likely consumption. There we are more or less in the region of calculation; I am afraid some people might be inclined to call it guess-work. At the same time I think that the calculation that has been made is a fairly accurate one. It is founded on the results of past years and we are simply carrying that forward. The only argument that could be put forward would possibly be the argument as to whether the saturation point is reached. If and Deputy is inclined to query that and to argue that we would be still short of sales, I would like him to remember that we still have in the background an invention, not Professor Drumm's invention, but Deputy Moore's invention. That invention is that by reducing the price of electrically-propelled vehicles in this country we can, on the calculation of Deputy MacEntee immediately get a market for 14,000,000 units. Professor Thrift Professor Thrift 388 [388] Professor Thrift: I want to get a a little clearer about a possible fluctuation of the £150,000 for administrative purposes. Let me put the matter this way: There is an increase of from £400,000 to £550,000 now being asked for in this Bill and an increase of from .84 to .9 occurs on the basis of £150,000 going to administrative costs. Supposing that figure were to be so increased as to be doubled, would it be fair to say that the increase would be one-third of the .06 increase incurred? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: If the £150,000 increased to £300,000, it might go to .91. Professor Thrift Professor Thrift Professor Thrift: Quite so. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: There I am more or less in the region of certainty. I know my charges for administration and the moneys I have had to expend to date. I can see the end of the Shannon office in sight. The engineers will be discharged progressively from this onwards. There is not much chance of the £150,000 going up. Professor Thrift Professor Thrift Professor Thrift: That is satisfactory. Mr. Moore Mr. Moore Mr. Moore: Has the Minister taken into account, in calculating the potential demand for power, a possible change over from the present system of rail trams to trackless electrical trams, and has he considered whether that would make any substantial difference? No doubt the Minister is aware that such changes are taking place very rapidly in most cities in other countries. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: I would like to mention one matter to the Minister. I wish to ask him if he has figures relating to, or, if he has not the figures, would he ascertain for us, what proportion of tramway power is included in the total of 39,500,000 units? If the Minister has the figures, I would be glad if he would give them to the House. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I will have to look into the matter. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn 389 [389] Mr. Flinn: It would be important to have them, because a good deal of the arguments will turn on the expansibility of certain demands. The proportion of that 39,500,000 units, in so far as it is represented by tramway power, may have a hard core which is not, as far as we know, expansible. We want to know the size of the hard core in relation to the total in order to be able to treat it as an elastic figure. If the Minister has not the figures, will he ascertain them, and, if he will not give them to the House, will he tell us why he will not give them? He may have a perfectly good reason. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: That question could be addressed to me when I have refused to give information. The Deputy had better ask it then. Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy: The Minister mentions that in order to make the scheme pay they will have to supply electricity at some points at .9. Is that exclusive of distribution charges? Is it at the Shannon? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: It is a bulk charge. Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy: At the Shannon? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: No; at the 10 kilo-volt transformer station. Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy Mr. J.X. Murphy: What has to be added to that to cover the distribution charges and to make the whole scheme pay? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: The scheme has nothing to do with distribution. Mr. Moore Mr. Moore Mr. Moore: I would like to ask the Minister whether, in calculating the increase in the use of electricity, private electricity plants have been taken into account? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: No. If a person has a plant of his own he is not included. Mr. Moore Mr. Moore Mr. Moore: Can the Minister say whether there has been any notable increase in private plants within recent years? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 390 [390] Mr. McGilligan: I cannot say that, because before the 1927 Act was passed there was no way of getting returns from such people except what they liked to supply us with. One could not obtain returns compulsorily, although there is certain power given to the Electricity Supply Board under which they can see whether a plant is really a private plant and is not selling electricity or supplying electricity for sale purposes. I do not think they have gone to the trouble of getting particulars about private plants. At any rate, they should be left out of consideration, because they are not people who could be compelled to take Shannon power; they are free agents. Mr. Moore Mr. Moore Mr. Moore: If there was a great increase in private plants it is quite possible that that would interfere very much with the Shannon scheme. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: A man usually sets up a plant for himself in a district where there is no public supply, where there is no company supplying that would be prepared to meet his demands. Mr. Anthony Mr. Anthony Mr. Anthony: Will the Minister state when the power will be available in Cork City and County? There are a number of traders rather interested. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I cannot answer that. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: That is a different question. It is really a matter for the Electricity Supply Board. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Will the Minister facilitate us with the figures that Deputy Flinn has asked for and which I have referred to in connection with the units of electricity consumed by the Tramway Company? We want it for the purpose of the next day's debate, and not for this particular discussion. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Perhaps the Deputy would give me 15 minutes' indulgence. If people would stop asking questions the information would be more readily at their disposal. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 391 [391] Mr. Lemass: This is a Bill the purpose of which is to give the Minister power to pledge the credit of the State to get funds for the purpose of additional expenditure on the Shannon scheme. I think that a very large portion of the Minister's remarks was directed towards obscuring that fact. If one who is not an expert in electricity or one who is not an expert in finance can approach the consideration of this Bill without fear it is very largely due to the fact that those whom we always looked upon as infallible in the past have erred in its interpretation. I notice that the most infallible person in the country, the writer of the leading article in the “Irish Independent,” has been absolutely at sea in his interpretation of the Bill and if a person of that kind can go wrong I will not worry very much if I go wrong also. 392 This is a Bill to enable increased expenditure on the Shannon scheme to be undertaken. I say that whatever we may think of the circumstances that led up to the introduction of this Bill, this Dáil has practically no choice but to authorise the increased expenditure. As I said already, I am approaching the consideration of the whole question from the point of view of the man in the street and not from the point of view of the expert either in electricity or in finance. When the question of the Shannon scheme was originally before the Dáil I was not in the Dáil and I looked upon the debates that took place here in relation to it as an outsider. I still have to consider the matter largely as an outsider would and it is as an outsider that I intend to speak in reference to it, because certain remarks made by the Minister are at variance with the general public conception of what was undertaken when the Shannon scheme and the various commitments that were made at that time were embarked upon. The best course probably to take would be to follow the line that the Minister himself has taken. Under the old arrangement, a sum of £5,200,000 was mentioned and it was to represent the total all-in costs of the Shannon scheme. The [392] Minister has endeavoured to confuse that particular fact here this evening. He mentioned it as an estimate that could be secured for the Siemens-Schuckert project. But there was no ambiguity whatever about the various statements made by the Minister and other members of the Executive Council when the Shannon Electricity Act of 1925 was under discussion here. It was definitely stated that £5,200,000 would represent the maximum cost of the scheme and that under no circumstances was it likely that that figure would be exceeded. It is true of course, as some Deputies pointed out at that time, that it did not matter very much what figure was in the Bill. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: The Deputy has quotations, I presume, as to that. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: I have any amount of quotations if necessary. On the 3rd April, 1925, the Minister for Industry and Commerce said: “The prices are absolutely fixed and binding. They are maximum prices from Siemens-Schuckert's point of view. They are not the minimum from our point of view. We have checks and controls by which if we find a reputable firm in any other part of the world that would do any part of this work at less than Messrs. Siemens-Schuckert, then we can beat them down to that or give the contracts on those parts to other firms.” Before that he had said: “The only scheme that is under consideration at the moment is the scheme entailing a cost of £5,200,000. Nobody can question that is the amount which we are considering, because for that we have binding estimates, if we care to accept tenders here and now.” 393 I am not approaching this question from the point of view of the expert at all. I am approaching it from the point of view of the citizen. I was a citizen at the time when the scheme was introduced. I read in the papers the report that appeared there and the debates that took place here and I, like the vast majority of the citizens who took an interest in the matter, was left definitely with the [393] impression that the total all-in cost of the scheme was not to exceed and could not exceed £5,200,000. As I said, the actual figure that appeared in the Bill was a matter of small moment because once the Dáil decided on embarking on that scheme they gave the Minister a blank cheque. Some Deputy at the time pointed out that fact because as he stated if, when the scheme was three-fourths completed we found that the total amount mentioned had been exceeded, it would not be possible to leave it there in the air. The balance would have to be provided and the scheme completed. We have paid I think £4,600,000 which was mentioned originally as the total cost of the construction. At least that is the figure that appeared in the press a few days ago in relation to the Finance Account of the State up to the 30th June. I think it was something like that figure. I did not think also that there was any question of addenda to the scheme when it was originally brought before this House. The Minister very generously informs us that we might, if we liked, consider the £100,000 which has been set down additional to the scheme as extra expenditure or as part of the original project. There is no doubt that this item is for exceptional or for extra expenditure in so far as various items covered by it were not mentioned in connection with the original scheme on which this House decided. These items may have been present in the mind of the Minister. I do not know, but they were not conveyed to the Deputies or to the general public who have had an interest in this scheme. 394 The additional cost involved in purchasing outright the sites for the poles instead of paying an annual rental charge is probably an economy and there is very little to be said in that connection. The total net increase of moneys, the Minister informed us, was £100,000 for addenda, and his £100,000 represents the capital value of the rentals for the pole sites. Then there is £450,000, of which £150,000 is for administrative [394] expenses. Now, I want to be quite clear as to what is the meaning of this item “administrative expenses.” What are administrative expenses? Is that £150,000 intended to be a payment in respect of the services rendered by the officials of the Minister's Department for which provision was made in the various estimates of that Department submitted to this House from year to year? If not, what does it represent? To whom has this money been paid? I understand that portion of it has been paid already. If so, I want to know to whom? The Minister states it represents the expenses of his Department. I think he could give us some more information in the matter, because it seems an extraordinary method of getting funds for that purpose and paying the administration costs of a Government Department. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Who said it was a Government Department? Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass: The Minister informed me that it was the expense incurred by his Department. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: So it is, but it is not a Government Department. The engineers on the works are obviously not civil servants. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 395 Mr. Lemass: Then there is a sum of £53,000 provided for contingencies. I think that we should get more information on that item also, because that is an exceptional figure in view of the fact that the scheme is now nearly completed, and the possibility of contingencies arising must be very largely foreseeable. Does the Minister anticipate that that sum will be required, and if so, upon what basis was it calculated? I want to know on what basis was the actual figure of £53,000 arrived at? Taking away from the total additional cost of the scheme, the items for administrative expenses and for contingencies, we find that the actual additional cost for the civil side is £234,000, and the cost of the electrical and mechanical works is £134,000. The fact that that additional cost has to [395] be incurred, as the Minister indicated, involves a rise in the price of the current to be sold if the scheme is to meet out of revenue the charges for interest and sinking fund upon the moneys invested in it. When the Minister had completed dealing with the actual figures relating to the additional cost he proceeded to boost the scheme in the style that he alone can do. He is, of course, excellent as a booster. He made one short statement here in the Dáil a few days ago, and he boosted the selling value of the Great Southern Railways shares up by £5,000,000. As a booster he takes first place in the country. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: The golden voiced Minister. Mr. Lemass Mr. Lemass 396 Mr. Lemass: He has been very largely boosting here to-day, and I think that Deputies should examine the various figures which he mentioned very closely. It would not be possible to work out any calculations on them at the present time, but it seems to me that estimating that there will be a demand in 1932 for 144,000,000 units of electricity, is stretching the string too tight for credulity. I mean that we have only succeeded in finding sale for 73,000,000 units in this year, and even taking into account the effects of the propaganda campaign now in progress, and the fact that electricity from the Shannon scheme perhaps will be available, I do not think that we can look forward with any degree of confidence, no matter what the Minister might say to the contrary, that we will be able to consume all the electricity produced in this country during the next three or four years. However, the Minister says that it is not necessary that we should have a market for the 144,000,000 units in that year. He said that the 144,000,000 units would be more than the Shannon scheme would supply. I want to know does he wish us to take it that the total capacity of the scheme to produce electricity will not reach 144,000,000 units and [396] will be something less than that in a normal year. The rate of consumption of electricity in the Free State is likely to increase as a result of the activities of the Shannon Board, but I think that we should reckon, or take into our calculations, the fact that it will put us to the pin of our collar, to use a common expression, to secure that by the 31st December, 1932, we will be selling the 110,000,000 units which it will be necessary to sell to ensure that there will be no necessity to increase the charge for the current or to put an extra burden on the taxpayers, to make up the deficiencies in the Shannon Board revenue. I think that while optimism on the part of the Minister is undoubtedly desirable, undue optimism is likely to be dangerous. We have had experience of undue optimism from the same Minister in the past, and have had experience of seeing that optimism fade and being dispelled in such matters as the Trade Loans Facilities Act and other legislation. As I said, he is an excellent booster. Whenever he comes with a proposition to the House he can undoubtedly boost it in a very excellent manner, but we have to try to forget the fact that he is a booster and to get down to the hard facts of the situation. The hard facts of the situation do not justify an unbounded degree of confidence in the success of the Shannon scheme such as he has expressed this evening. I believe myself that the Shannon scheme will be a success, but it will be only made a success as the result of intensive effort. We certainly wish that it should be a success, and anything that can be done by the section of the community which we represent to ensure its success will be gladly performed, because results of the success of a scheme of this kind would be inestimable. In any case we cannot afford to risk failure at the present time. I hope the Minister will deal with the various points I have put to him when concluding and give us the various items in relation to the Bill which the Dáil is now asked to pass. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe 397 [397] Mr. Briscoe: Frankly, I was hoping to receive from the Minister a statement covering much more ground than he has covered in relation to the various matters contained in the Bill before us, particularly as there are so many interests affected not only by the establishment of the Shannon scheme proper, but also by the establishment of the Electricity Supply Board and its operations. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I would like to be clear as to whether on this Bill any matters in relation to the administration of the Electricity Supply Board are relevant. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: I do not think they are. A question was asked by Deputy Bourke which was not relevant. The Minister is not responsible in any way for the administration of the Shannon Electricity Board. Anyhow, if he were, it does not arise under this particular Bill. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Of course, so far, I have only made a general statement. I have made no detailed reference to the Shannon Electricity Board. Possibly the Minister anticipates that I may do so, and wants to rule me out immediately. There are various sections of the Electricity Supply Act to which I want to refer in this matter. If a Bill is before the Dáil to amend certain sections of the Act, are we not entitled to refer to other sections of the Act, as the section of the Act to be amended may have an indirect relation to another section of the Act? An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: I am not clear as to what the Deputy means by that. The Deputy at this stage is confined to the amendment of the Electricity Supply Act of 1927, which is contained in the Bill, and anything which is relevant to that amendment is relevant to the debate. That is what I understand he wants to know. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe 398 Mr. Briscoe: Would you, A Chinn Comhairle, rule that sections which are being amended in the Act are [398] not administrative sections relating to the Shannon Board? An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: I will have to hear what the Deputy says before I could give him a general ruling. The whole Act of 1927 does not arise here. There is only a particular amendment of the Act to be considered at this particular stage. I cannot know whether what the Deputy wants to say about the Act of 1927 is relevant until I hear it. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: The position I find myself in is that I want to make certain references to certain sections of the Act. I think that the section of the Act which it is sought to amend is an administrative section. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: The Deputy must not deal with the administration of the Electricity Supply Board. It is not affected by the Bill at all. In any event there is nobody responsible here for the administration of the Electricity Supply Board. The Act under which the Board is set up gives it a particular power, and the Oireachtas has come to a particular decision on that point. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: I am prepared to speak on the matter subject to your ruling. It is a matter which I consider is of the greatest importance to the whole community. The Electricity Supply Act of 1925 was introduced for a specific purpose. That was to supply electricity generally and to bring about, if possible, a very big increase in the use of electricity by the community at large. It was never contemplated, as far as I know, that while the State was going to monopolise the generation of electricity, it was going to monopolise the whole life and soul, as it were, of the electricity business in the Free State. Subsequent to the introduction of the Act, it was clearly indicated and distinctly understood that the main purpose behind this particular undertaking was to supply in bulk at a cheap cost. There was no suggestion of interference with the communal life of the citizens or the individual life of private individuals. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 399 [399] Mr. McGilligan: This Bill has no relation to that whatever. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: No, but operations arising out of this Bill have. This is an amending Bill. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: I would like to hear the Deputy conclude on that point as I wish to see what he is aiming at. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: I have asked question after question with the object of getting certain information as to the operations arising out of the particular Act and the functions of the Board. I contend that we are custodians of the Board at present. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: That is, the operations of the Electricity Supply Board? Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: The Electricity Board and the Shannon undertaking. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: They are two completely different things. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: They are both embodied in the same Bill. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: If the Deputy wants information it must be either about the Shannon scheme in regard to the generation of electricity or about the Electricity Supply Board. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: I do not want information at present, but I want to make a reference to a particular item. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: About which scheme—generation or distribution? Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: It is neither generation nor distribution. It is installation. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: That is clearly outside everything in this Bill. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: It is governed by a section of the Act. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes 400 An Ceann Comhairle: The Deputy must not refer to the operations of the Electricity Supply Board on this [400] Bill. The fact that the Act has been passed, and that there are certain repercussions is there. There is no remedy for it. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: In other words, has the State no relation whatever to what is going on in the administration of the Act? What I wish to make out is that the State has got certain funds at its disposal. It is using these funds for certain purposes. The responsibility for the payment of the funds is on the shoulders of the citizens of the country, and where the citizens are being adversely affected I contend that there is some relation between the spending of that money by the Minister or this body and our responsibility to the citizens. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: What is the Deputy getting after? Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: If the Minister will bear with me—— An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: The Ceann Comhairle does not want to prevent the Deputy from raising any particular matter which may be in order. I might have the most complete sympathy myself with Deputy Briscoe in the matter which he wishes to raise, but my personal sympathies are altogether beside the point in question. The Deputy must not initiate a debate on a matter which is outside the scope of the Bill. It is not a question of sympathy at all but of facts. I could not allow, on this Bill, any question to be raised on the administration of the Electricity Supply Board, and there is no use in trying to debate it. It is quite clear that the cost of the Shannon scheme, however, would arise. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: The Minister made the point that the cost of the electricity generated was estimated at a particular figure on the k.v. lines. The Minister now states that it will be higher if he has to charge to the scheme certain moneys expended by the Board. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I had not taken them into consideration. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe 401 [401] Mr. Briscoe: The Minister has referred to it. In that way he has given me a loophole to connect the Board with the Shannon scheme proper. He has made a certain calculation that the price will be so and so. I submit he has established a relationship between the scheme proper and the operations of the Electricity Supply Board at the present time. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: The Minister could not do it. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: He has done it. An Ceann Comhairle Michael Hayes An Ceann Comhairle: Nothing the Minister says could affect the ruling of the Chair. There is no use in saying that the Minister said something, and that his statement must be followed up by a statement from somebody else. It simply is not so. It could not be done. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: Very well. I will come on to some other point. I am sorry we have not here the figure— possibly Deputy Flinn will deal with it later—in regard to the current consumption of the tramways companies. Fifteen minutes have elapsed since we were promised it. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Does the Deputy realise that the procuring of that information is outside my Department and that it is one of the things handed over to the Electricity Supply Board? I will give it the moment I get it. Why this cavilling about giving information when I said repeatedly that I have not got it? Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: The Minister made certain points in connection with the cost of the Shannon scheme, the increase and so forth. I wonder if in calculating the final cost of the scheme he has taken into consideration the viewpoint held by many people that confiscated undertakings have had, and have at the present time, some capital value. I wonder has he set that side by side with the other basis of calculation? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan 402 Mr. McGilligan: There is no money being asked for at this [402] moment for the purpose of taking over any undertaking. It does not arise on this Bill. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: No, because they have been confiscated. The Minister talked about extra money being added to the cost of the scheme for the purchase of sites of poles in lieu of an annual expenditure for the rental of the sites. We have no idea of what the cost is going to be. Why does he not suggest rather than increasing the cost of the scheme in capital outlay that the scheme is going to cost so much, and in addition to that we are going to spend a certain sum separately for the purchase of pole sites in lieu of rental, which would have brought about certain overhead charges? Could the Board not have made certain arrangements whereby the cost of the poles or the sites of the poles would be recouped to the State? I think that would be a better arrangement, particularly when the Minister does not give the exact figure to be paid for the sites. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: How is it better? Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: It was agreed in the original undertaking that the rental of the sites would be part and parcel of the general overhead expenses. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Yes. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: If it was part of the overhead expenses it would have to be met out of revenue or profit. The point is that the capital cost is being increased by estimating an amount equivalent to the capitalised value of the rental. I contend if you are going to add that figure to the capital cost you should know and you should say that the figure is so much. If you do not know the figure or if you choose, for any purpose which may be correct, not to make it public, you should let it be judged on its own merits. I think it would be just as well to leave it outside. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: Why would it be better if you do not know? Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe 403 Mr. Briscoe: I do not say that the figure is any worse or any better, but for the purpose of trying to [403] arrive by some mathematical calculation at the cost of what is a business transaction, a hypothetical case is not something on which you can transact business. That is why I say that it would be better if it were treated on a separate basis altogether. 404 Now the Minister also discovers at this stage that it would not be right—we certainly agree to that—to charge the cost of the improvement in connection with navigation to the Shannon scheme proper or to the Electricity Supply Board. I perfectly agree with that. When the Minister sets aside this sum of money which is to be the cost of the work in connection with the Shannon Navigation proper, is he making any arrangement whereby the State will be recouped for that outlay? How is he going to deal with it? Is he going to bring in an estimate to the Dáil for the cost the Minister outlined of the work which is being done in the Shannon but which is purely a navigation matter and not chargeable to the establishment of this scheme of the Board afterwards? What I want to say is, I think the Minister should have stated to us how he is going to deal with that particular figure. When the State is going to make an improvement in the shape of the reconstruction of some destroyed areas they bring into this House an Estimate for that purpose. They tell us what is the estimated cost. How is the State going to recoup, if they are going to recoup at all, the certain sum voted for the Shannon scheme? That money was found insufficient. It is quite possible that it was not reasonable to expect it would be sufficient, but in the readjustment the Minister finds a certain figure for a particular class of work which he decides should not be chargeable to the Shannon scheme or harnessed to the power there. He says this should be a different matter. I say this figure should not appear in the Shannon scheme, and that the Minister should introduce an estimate [404] for the portion of the money which was spent on the Shannon scheme itself. If that is not the case, will he say how he is going to deal with it? Is it going to be given as a present or is the Minister going to take from the Board of Works certain functions which are prescribed by the Act? Is he going to debit that money of what is now Board of Works property and will subsequently become Shannon Board property? The Minister may have a simple explanation which will clear the matter up. 405 The Minister gave us a lot of figures with regard to the consumption of electricity in this country for various periods. We are not disputing these figures but it is very interesting to know whether the figure we have before us is the figure which may vary at a certain point. It is not the cost of current to the consumer so that we have no idea of the attraction there is going to be for the continued development of the use of electricity. We know that certain figures have been published for certain areas by way of charges on routes and also by certain supply sources being left as they are but can the Minister state where the relation is between the price charged at present or the price to be charged and the cost of generation? What I want to be satisfied on is this. Roughly we had at the time the Shannon scheme was entered into a total consumption of something like 60 million units in electricity. It is admitted that between Dublin and Cork and the surrounding districts of Dublin at least three-quarters of that amount was produced and consumed. In that connection a certain portion is current used by undertakings such as the Tramway Company. What I wish to be made more clear on is the ultimate position that the Shannon scheme is going to occupy, what is hoped to be accomplished in the shape of current consumed by the public for domestic use and consumed by the industries in this country rather than by the Tramway Company. I contend it would not be worth while making this expenditure of roughly £6,000,000 to get [405] current for a small portion of people already a consuming population, the only difference being that instead of existing generating stations which will be taken over, in their place the Shannon power is used. If the Minister's argument is going to be based on the saving to the State of the coal consumption let us have some figures. The Minister should be able to give us some figures on that by now. He is strangely lacking in information. As I said at the outset I was rather surprised that the statement he made was confined to the explaining of the Bill. We should be given some information which would give us a better idea as to the prospects and as to the general situation which arose. On March 6th, 1929, I addressed to the Minister a question and asked him if he could state the total amount paid to date to the contractors on the Shannon Power Development Scheme and further if he would state the amount which would accrue for payment on the completion of the work. The answer I got was “The total amount paid to the contractors up to February 1st, 1929, was: Civil constructional works, £2,140,557 11s. 0d.; electrical and mechanical works, £1,428,904 18s. 11d.; total £3,569,462 9s. 11d. The amount which will accrue for payment on the completion of the works can at present only be estimated. The sums will be approximately: Civil constructional works, £2,897,000; electrical and mechanical works, £1,906,000; total, £4,803,000.” That was last March. Since last March we find that that estimate has been increased to a further figure of roughly £73,000, which suggests that all the figures the Minister has given us to-day are to be taken as nearly final. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I said so. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: You said that on this we can start calculating the position as it is. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I said “Not regard it as absolutely final, but very nearly that.” Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe 406 [406] Mr. Briscoe: Would the Minister say how far out they would be? In March last year the Minister was out £73,000 on the excess. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: I do not think so. Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe Mr. Briscoe: I got a figure, in answer to a question that I addressed to the Minister in connection with the damage which had been caused by the sinking of a bank on the Shannon scheme. Now we are £73,000 beyond that. If the figure is not final to-day, I want to know what is the next figure going to be. 407 There is one other point I would like to develop. I addressed a question to the Minister in connection with the damage caused by the sinking of the bank in the Shannon scheme, and the answer I got to that was: “The estimated cost of the additional work necessitated by the subsidence of part of an embankment at Parteen village will not exceed £6,000. The subsidence is about 150 metres in length. Should any question arise as to the liability for the cost of this additional work, it will be determined in accordance with the relevant provisions of the contract. I do not, therefore, consider it desirable that I should express an opinion here on the matter.” What I want to try to get from the Minister is: Is this contract between the State and the contractor a contract to do a certain job at a certain price, with certain allowances for contingencies, or is it a time and material job? I have my own view and I would like a statement here with regard to the cost involved in the sinking of this embankment. We know that it was the contractors themselves who drew up the specifications and offered them to the State, subject to expert opinion on them. It was not the State that drew up the specifications and tendered them to the contractors to quote on. I contend that where contractors themselves draw up specifications to do a certain job, and where, subsequently, something is found wrong, the responsibility should be on the shoulders of the contractors. They should be liable for the repairs. If it is a time and [407] material job it would be different. The Minister might clear up that point by telling us whether it was a time and material job or a contract. I cannot understand why there should be so much secrecy about this thing. Time and again, the Minister was asked for closer details with regard to the relation between the contractor and the State. Various excuses were given at various times. The excuse was given early that the contract could not be exposed; that it would make it difficult for the contractors when purchasing raw materials if the suppliers knew they had to get them for this particular job. The time for that is now past. The contractors have supplied themselves with all the requirements for the contract. I would like to know if the Minister is going to facilitate the House some time in the near future in going over all the points in connection with the contract. We hear all kinds of rumours abroad some of which are not well-founded, and others of which should be taken account of. If the Minister would say, even now, whether that particular contract is a time and material one or whether it was a contract at a certain price, with certain allowances for contingencies and alterations, we would understand where we are. As far as I am personally concerned, I see no reason why the Minister should hesitate in putting the liability of the sinking of the bank on the shoulders of the contractors that supplied the specifications. If an architect proposed to build a house and prepared his specification he is responsible if the house sinks. If I employ an architect to prepare specifications and hand these specifications to a contractor, I am responsible if anything goes wrong. 408 The point I wanted particularly to stress has been ruled out by the Ceann Comhairle. I am not going to attempt, in his absence, to get it in in another way, but I would like to ask the Minister is he prepared to try to negotiate some understanding between the Board and people who are adversely affected by the operations [408] of the Board. If he is prepared to meet them and see if he can solve some of the difficulties they are up against I will be satisfied. If he is not prepared to do that, will he suggest some way? I do not believe that the Minister realises some of the things that have happened. A number of these people are hard hit and if their difficulties could be solved in some way there would be a little better harmony as regards this scheme. As the success of the scheme will depend on the co-operation of all sections affected, I would ask the Minister if he is prepared to meet these people without any other people intervening and see what their complaints are. Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: There are certain figures that I said I was prepared to give. The figures are: Dublin Tramways, 18,500,000 units, and the Cork Tramways, 1,250,000 units. These are the 1928 figures. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: Could the Minister give us the figures for previous years? Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan Mr. McGilligan: In the three years previously it was about 16,000,000. There was about a 2 per cent. increase. That is a calculation of my own. Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn Mr. Flinn: You cannot tie anybody down to two figures. Mr. Cooney Mr. Cooney 409 Mr. Cooney: I find myself placed in the | |||||||||||||||||||