Speech from Ms. Catherine Martin, Budget 2025 Dáil Éireann, Wednesday 2 October at 8.30pm
From Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
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From Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
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Last updated on
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A Cheann Chomhairle agus a Theachtaí,
Is cúis áthais dom an deis an Teach a chur ar an eolas faoin maoiniú iomlán de luach €1.27 billiún atá curtha ar fáil do mo Roinn i mBuiséad 2025. Tabharfaidh mé achoimre freisin ar chuid de na bearta lena ndéanfar cothú, feabhsú agus forbairt ar na hearnálacha a bhfuil freagracht agam astu.
The sectors supported by my department form a vital part of the mortar which binds society on this island together. They give us a sense of our identity, individually, and as a nation, set against the backdrop of increasing global challenges.
These sectors provide also significant levels of employment, in all areas of the country. They lift the lives and spirits of those living here and visitors through sporting participation and fandom, through cultural preservation and presentation and foster an ecology for new, exciting, and vibrant cultural expression. The Irish language forms a unique cornerstone of who we are and the richness of this history behind us.
And, in an age of increasing falsehood, the security of an independent media, in all its forms and on all its platforms, is crucial to maintaining a sense of truth locally, nationally, and internationally.
The global challenges are momentous, with increased global conflict and increasingly damaging weather events as a result of climate change. Against this setting, the contribution of the creative energies and community participation fostered by the sectors in my department is, I believe, more important than ever.
My departmental colleague Minister Byrne will address the House on specific measures around Sport and Gaeltacht elements. I will focus on the sectors of Tourism, Culture, and Media.
Budget 2025 maintains and increases funding across a wide range of key initiatives. Additional current funding of €54 million has been provided as well as retention into the baseline expenditure of my department of the €57 million in non-core funding provided in 2024. A further €16 million in capital uplift has been allocated including provision for funding across culture, Gaeltacht and tourism sectors under the Shared Island Initiative.
The 2025 allocation of €226.3 million for Tourism will allow Tourism Ireland to continue its major marketing campaigns overseas, and facilitate Fáilte Ireland in continuing its work in areas such as destination development, tourism careers, and home holiday promotion. It will also support both agencies enhancing the tourist experience and supporting tourism businesses in Ireland in areas such as festivals, digital transformation and sustainability.
To this end, the allocation to the Tourism Marketing Fund has increased to €61.4 million. This support will be crucial to ensure Ireland’s presence is maintained for longer-term success in an increasingly complex and competitive marketplace.
I have put in place specific funds of €3.2 million be put in place to extend the tourism season and ensure all regions of the country benefit, thus supporting tourism businesses. This includes funding for the delivery of a new Business Events Strategy; additional funding under the Regional Cooperative Access Scheme to support new and existing access to regional air and sea ports, and funding to support both tourism agencies to continue to develop and promote Ireland as the Home of Halloween.
2025 also sees a continuation of government capital support for the development and enhancement of the tourism product, with €36.5 million in capital funding allocated for new attractions and projects.
In relation to arts and culture, Irish artists are reaching new heights in terms of international recognition, and I am pleased therefore that funding totalling €379.7 million has been secured for this sector for 2025. In political life, I have made no secret of my personal background in the arts and my affinity for all forms of art, and music in particular.
The almost doubling of arts funding compared to Budget 2020, the last Budget before I took office, has been achieved through record increases in funding for the Arts Council, Screen Ireland, Culture Ireland and Creative Ireland and through a major programme of investment in our national cultural institutions.
But it is the Basic Income for the Arts which is the signature legacy achievement of this government in arts funding and of which I am most proud. I want to acknowledge the role of the National Campaign for the Arts who again and again have been an effective voice for the sector and tireless advocates for Basic Income. I am therefore pleased to announce that:
Furthermore, as announced by the Minister for Finance, the Section 481 film tax credit will receive a further 8% uplift for feature film productions with a maximum qualifying expenditure of €20 million, to help the sector remain competitive and build on recent international successes, again subject to State aid approval.
I also welcome the announce by Minister Chambers that his department will monitor trends in the VFX sector internationally over the coming year with a view to introducing a specific measure in Budget 2026.
Finally, the new tax credit for Unscripted Production, subject to European Commission approval, will also be a boost for the sector.
Funding for the Media and Broadcasting sector in 2025 will total €328.3 million.
I am confident that the ongoing commitments to my department reflected in the 2025 allocation will lead to a sustainable and strengthened tourism industry, an invigorating arts and culture sector with increased opportunity for creatives, continued national and international success sporting success and participation, greater development of the Irish language and its usage, and a safer, more transparent, and rejuvenated media sector.
Go raibh maith agaibh.