
MEETING OF SOUTH DUBLIN COUNTY COUNCIL
Monday, April 14, 2025
QUESTION NO. 7
QUESTION: Councillor M. Johansson
To ask the Chief Executive for a report on actions N14 (Implement a countywide reduction of the usage of chemicals, such as glyphosate, across all council departments) and N15 (Develop a Strategy for the phase out of harmful products such as glyphosate and acrylic paint) of the South Dublin County Council Climate Action Plan?
REPLY:
In support of Actions N14 and N15 of the South Dublin County Council Climate Action Plan this Council partnered with Kildare County Council and a number of other local authorities on a research programme which led to the 2024 publication Guidelines for Increasing Biodiversity & Alternatives to Herbicides in Public Open Spaces. This guidance promotes the reduction of glyphosate through alternative weed control methods, native planting, and biodiversity-led maintenance approaches.
A number of alternative weed control methods such as Hot Foam and Hot Water treatment were trialled as part of the research however these methods have not proven viable to date due to low weed mortality rates and the need for frequent reapplication. Further efforts have been made recently to identify suitable alternatives and in this regard 'electro-physical' destruction of weeds has also been trialled. Again this method did not prove to be satisfactory however further trials will continue to be carried out until such time as a range of alternative treatment methods have been identified as suitable in the varying types of locations that the Council maintains.
Glyphosate-based herbicides are currently used by the Council's Public Realm Operations Section primarily on high profile entrance roads into the county and in the provision of the road sweeping services contract for the control of weeds on hard surface areas. The usage of herbicides is decreasing in the Council's maintenance operations with 993 litres of herbicide used in 2022, 964 litres in 2023 and 868 litres used in 2024 and this represents a 13% reduction in usage over those three years. The Council has now entered into a new contract for road sweeping services including weed control and this is the single largest user of herbicide in the Council's maintenance operations. A requirement has been included in the new contract for a 10% reduction annually in the use of glyphosate based herbicide through the control of weeds by alternative environmentally friendly means and this will reduce the Council's use of glyphosate by half over the life of the contract. This reflects the Council's proactive efforts to minimise reliance on glyphosate in line with the Sustainable Use of Pesticides Directive as well as our own Biodiversity, Pollinator and Climate Action Plans.
A partial ban on glyphosate adopted by the elected members in July 2017 remains in place and is enforced in public parks, gardens, and play spaces. In these areas weed growth is managed through hand removal, strim/mow or by allowing vegetation to grow to promote biodiversity. There are currently no alternative products in use by the Council or its contractors in areas not covered by this ban. As already mentioned above the terms of the new road sweeping contract allow for a switch to non-glyphosate methods once a suitable alternative is identified and proven effective. Complementing these measures the Council has significantly shifted its approach to open space management since 2019 with over 210 hectares of meadows (long and short flowering meadows) now in place across the county. This supports biodiversity and aligns with the aims of the Council’s Pollinator, Biodiversity, and Climate Action Plans.