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29th December 2022
02:39pm GMT
"We need to turn the corner on housing," Varadkar told the Irish Times. "It is an emergency, it’s affecting people in so many different ways.
“It’s holding us back as a country, and it’s causing intergenerational division that I don’t like to see. It’s really going to be a case of let’s do everything, unless there’s a really good reason as to why we can’t."
Elaborating on possible solutions, the Taoiseach said he will potentially use a "carrot and stick" approach with developers to guarantee that developers who have residential planning permission use it to construct new homes. Referring to Ireland's collective response to the Covid-19 pandemic, Varadkar said that kind of "can-do" attitude needs to be applied to the housing issue in 2023. Earlier this month, the Taoiseach launched the Climate Action Plan for 2023, describing climate emergency as "the most pressing long term global challenge of our time". Varadkar also referred to "warmer homes" and "home working" in his related address, so you'd expect the whole 'supply and demand' element to factor in there, too.