
In Irlanda non è nota alcuna estrazione commerciale legale di torba. Eppure l’anno scorso ha esportato 40 milioni di euro
https://www.irishtimes.com/environment/2026/03/12/peat-exports-increased-last-year-despite-crackdown-on-commercial-extraction/
di DaCor_ie
6 commenti
This isn’t a secret. When BnM stopped producing peat briquettes a few years ago, there was a significant stockpile of peat either dried and waiting for processing or being dried to be turned into briquettes.
Those exports would be that peat being sold rather than remaining in storage indefinitely.
If only they had some way of find out who exported the peat and follow the paperwork and money to find source of said peat.
We need to completely lock down the west coast until we figure out the suppliers. Cut all electricity and water supplies. Full road blockade.
Massively reduce production/ supply and increase prices via a tax levy, but don’t outlaw it, make it a luxury item, but burning peat is part of our heritage and culture. The smell of a peat fire in a country pub is a national institution that needs to be protected, perhaps pubs could be exempt from the tax levy. It could even become a novelty / tourist attraction to sit in front of a peat fire, but it can’t be lost.

This stood out to me. What are they doing with 23k tonnes of peat in Israel?
>The 371,884 tonnes of peat were sold to 21 countries, including [Israel](https://www.irishtimes.com/tags/israel/) which bought more than 23,000 tonnes worth €3.146 million.
edit: I did some reading and I saw that they were also involved in peat extraction in Scotland. [https://www.theferret.scot/israeli-enforcement-peat-extraction-scotland/](https://www.theferret.scot/israeli-enforcement-peat-extraction-scotland/)
I also saw that peat is used in horticulture, so I suppose it’s probably that.
[https://peatlands.org/peat/](https://peatlands.org/peat/)
“Peat is used in horticulture, as a soil improver and ingredient of growing media.”