President Higgins warns planet is ‘in peril’ as he launches Bloom festival

President Michael D. Higgins and Sabina Higgins pictured with Mary Van Lieshout (left), Deputy Chief Executive Officer at GOAL Global, visited the GOAL Global Garden, at Bord Bia Bloom 2023. Photo: Mark Stedman

Deirdre and Janette O’Rourke from Kay's Flower School at the first day of Bord Bia’s 17th Bloom festival in the Phoenix Park, Dublin. Photo: Collins

Minister for Enterprise Simon Coveney TD with Aoife Phelan, her mother Bridget and sister Shelly, from Waterford at Bord Bia Bloom in the Phoenix Park. Photo: Collins

A garden designed by children for the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth won three awards for its ‘First 5 Garden of Wonder and Discovery’ at this year’s Bord Bia Bloom Festival.  The Garden achieved overall ‘Gold Medal’, ‘Best in Category – Large Garden’ and ‘Best Planting’. Photo: Maxwells

Oberstown Children's Detention Campus unveiled its show garden, designed by young people detained on the campus, at the Bord Bia Bloom Festival 2023. Pictured at the garden was Áine Kerr, Avril Ryan CEO Gaisce, Damien Hernon, Director of Oberstown, and Michelle Griffin, Oberstown

thumbnail: President Michael D. Higgins and Sabina Higgins pictured with Mary Van Lieshout (left), Deputy Chief Executive Officer at GOAL Global, visited the GOAL Global Garden, at Bord Bia Bloom 2023. Photo: Mark Stedman
thumbnail: Deirdre and Janette O’Rourke from Kay's Flower School at the first day of Bord Bia’s 17th Bloom festival in the Phoenix Park, Dublin. Photo: Collins
thumbnail: Minister for Enterprise Simon Coveney TD with Aoife Phelan, her mother Bridget and sister Shelly, from Waterford at Bord Bia Bloom in the Phoenix Park. Photo: Collins
thumbnail: A garden designed by children for the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth  won three awards for its ‘First 5 Garden of Wonder and Discovery’ at this year’s Bord Bia Bloom Festival.  The Garden achieved overall ‘Gold Medal’, ‘Best in Category – Large Garden’ and ‘Best Planting’. Photo: Maxwells
thumbnail: Oberstown Children's Detention Campus unveiled its show garden, designed by young people detained on the campus, at the Bord Bia Bloom Festival 2023. Pictured at the garden was Áine Kerr, Avril Ryan CEO Gaisce, Damien Hernon, Director of Oberstown, and Michelle Griffin, Oberstown
Gráinne Ní Aodha

Michael D Higgins has warned that the planet is “in peril” as he launched the Bloom garden festival in Dublin’s Phoenix Park.

This is the 17th year of the Bord Bia Bloom event, where gardens, plants and food are showcased to thousands of visitors over the June bank holiday weekend.

The president said that the Bloom festival had become “more important” than an event to promote garden designs, and had developed into “a gathering in celebration of the role of nature and the importance of biodiversity”.

Garden Designer Tom Leavy at Bloom Bord Bia says Charlie and the Chocolate Factory The Musical garden ignited his "creativity"

But he warned of the “alarming rate” at which biodiversity loss and climate change is happening.

“Bloom’s success is undoubtedly a reflection, too, of our welcome collective acknowledgment across society that we live on a planet in peril, one that is facing catastrophic climate change and runaway biodiversity loss, and that we must share our efforts in response,” Mr Higgins said.

Deirdre and Janette O’Rourke from Kay's Flower School at the first day of Bord Bia’s 17th Bloom festival in the Phoenix Park, Dublin. Photo: Collins

He warned that “a rhetoric of war and arms production” should not “sideline” global aims related to climate change and sustainability.

Referencing a recent study published by Queen’s University, which found that almost half of the world’s species are in decline, he said that this represented a “species failure” and that humans had shown “an inability to live in harmony with the wide diversity of life on our planet”.

Minister for Enterprise Simon Coveney TD with Aoife Phelan, her mother Bridget and sister Shelly, from Waterford at Bord Bia Bloom in the Phoenix Park. Photo: Collins

Mr Higgins also said that the findings of a recently concluded Citizens’ Assembly on biodiversity loss had the potential to bring about change in Ireland, and emphasised the importance of the Government acting on its recommendations.

“The Citizens’ Assembly is an important opportunity for reflection and it has produced 159 recommendations that have the potential to transform dramatically Ireland’s relationship with our natural environment,” he said.

“However, the responsibility for execution and implementation lies with those whom the people have elected.

A garden designed by children for the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth won three awards for its ‘First 5 Garden of Wonder and Discovery’ at this year’s Bord Bia Bloom Festival.  The Garden achieved overall ‘Gold Medal’, ‘Best in Category – Large Garden’ and ‘Best Planting’. Photo: Maxwells

“Central to the 159 recommendations is the need for the State to take prompt, decisive and urgent action to address biodiversity loss and restoration and to provide leadership in protecting Ireland’s biodiversity for future generations.

“This calls on the State to adequately fund, implement and enforce existing laws and policies, both national legislation and EU biodiversity-related laws and directives.”

Mr Higgins urged that farmers be “supported in conserving and restoring biodiversity”, and highlighted conclusions made in the Citizens’ Assembly report to make a constitutional change to protect nature.

Oberstown Children's Detention Campus unveiled its show garden, designed by young people detained on the campus, at the Bord Bia Bloom Festival 2023. Pictured at the garden was Áine Kerr, Avril Ryan CEO Gaisce, Damien Hernon, Director of Oberstown, and Michelle Griffin, Oberstown

He said: “The report also proposes a series of changes to the constitution to ensure and guarantee that people have a right to a clean, healthy and safe environment, and the report recommends that nature be provided with protections within the constitution to allow it to continue to provide the necessities of life, including food, clean freshwater and air, as well as providing a clean and healthy environment for wellbeing now and in the future.

Gardener Robert Moore introduces The Marie Keating Foundation's 'Catching Cancer Early Garden' at Bloom in the Park

“Such recommendations follow a growing international trend highlighting the necessity to protect nature in order to protect humans.”

Mr Higgins also said that people with gardens can contribute to improving biodiversity by choosing a “suitable selection of plants and trees”, or by cutting grass less frequently.

He said that after an audit of species on the grounds of Aras an Uachtarain in 2021, he requested measures to improve the grasslands in order to cultivate habitats.

Mr Higgins also said that swift boxes had been installed, measures to encourage bat roosting had been taken, and new beehives are in the Aras’s vegetable garden.

Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment Simon Coveney was also in attendance at the festival on Thursday.