* Green Party leader eyes 10-euro flight tax
* Party plans huge boom in offshore wind
* Bogs could absorb 15% of carbon
By Conor Humphries
DUBLIN, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Ireland's Green Party, likely to
be a kingmaker after Saturday's election, would re-introduce an
aviation tax opposed by Ryanair and push two
megaprojects to cut carbon emissions if it enters government,
leader Eamon Ryan said in an interview this week.
While recent opinion polls show the Green Party in fourth
place with around 8% support, the country's two dominant
parties, Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, have consistently named the
Greens as a preferred partner. Analysts say most possible
governments would seek the Greens' support.
Support for the party collapsed in 2011 after a disastrous
four-year stint in coalition with centre-right Fianna Fail,
which saw the Irish economy collapse after a property bubble
burst. But support has bounced back amid a political "green
wave" across Europe.
"We have four other green parties in government across
Europe, I am hoping we can make it a fifth," Ryan told Reuters
in the interview on Wednesday, adding he was targeting around
10% of the 160 seats in parliament.
Ryan said he was open to being in a coalition with any party
and said the key aim would be to increase planned cuts to carbon
dioxide emissions to 7% per year from 2% per year. Anything less
"won't work," he added.
One of the most achievable goals would be the
re-introduction of an air passenger travel tax, scrapped in
2011, that charged 10 euros for each passenger flying to an
airport more than 300 kilometres (185 miles) from Dublin, he
said.
"I don't see that as a particularly difficult negotiation,"
he said, adding he was confident it would be secured in any
coalition talks. "It's not a huge (thing), it's a 10 euro a
ticket tax. ... It signals intent."
Persuading partners to end the construction of major new
motorways on the island, on the other hand, would be a "real
challenge".
The greens would pursue two megaprojects, he said: huge
floating wind farms off the Irish coast and the "re-wetting" of
the country's bogs, which cover 16% of its land.
The latter involves blocking drains of dried-out bog land to
restore the water level up to the vegetation level, creating a
huge carbon sink.
"We think could save something like 10 million tonnes of
carbon a year. So that is big," he said of the bog project.
Current emissions are around 60 million tonnes.
The offshore boom would have two phases - first 5 gigawatts
of wind capacity added in the Irish Sea in the 2020s followed by
30 gigawatts in the Atlantic to the west and northwest of
Ireland in the 2030s.
That, he said, would help ease concerns about a boom in data
centres, many built by large employers in Ireland like Google
and Amazon. Such centres could be consuming
30% of Ireland's electricity use in 10 years time, he said.
"This is complex ... we have 60,000 people working in this
city (Dublin) in the tech sector," he said. "We have to make
sure that their use is compatible with our climate targets."
(Reporting by Conor Humphries
Editing by Frances Kerry)