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EU Approves €5 million for Charity-Run Helicopter Emergency Medical Services

17th May 2022
Air Ambulance Service - There is one charity HEMS service in the Republic of Ireland – the Irish Community Air Ambulance based in Rathcoole Aerodrome in Co Cork
Air Ambulance Service - There is one charity HEMS service in the Republic of Ireland – the Irish Community Air Ambulance based in Rathcoole Aerodrome in Co Cork Credit: Irish Community Air Ambulance

The European Commission says it has approved a €5 million Irish scheme to support "charity operators" of helicopter emergency medical services in Ireland affected by the coronavirus pandemic.

The aid will not exceed €2.3 million per beneficiary; and will be granted no later than June 30th 2022, according to the Commission.

It was approved under the State aid temporary framework, and will take the form of direct grants, it says.

There is one charity HEMS service in the Republic – the Irish Community Air Ambulance based in Rathcoole Aerodrome in Co Cork.

The European Commission says the measure is aimed at mitigating the liquidity shortages that the beneficiaries are facing and at ensuring the operation of a vital emergency medical service.

The Commission said it found that the Irish scheme is in line with the conditions set out in the Temporary Framework, whereby the measure is “necessary, appropriate and proportionate to remedy a serious disturbance in the economy of a member state”

“On this basis, the Commission approved the measure under EU State aid rules,” it said.

Published in Rescue, Island News
Lorna Siggins

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Lorna Siggins

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Lorna Siggins is a print and radio reporter, and a former Irish Times western correspondent. She is the author of Search and Rescue: True stories of Irish Air-Sea Rescues and the Loss of R116 (2022); Everest Callling (1994) on the first Irish Everest expedition; Mayday! Mayday! (2004); and Once Upon a Time in the West: the Corrib gas controversy (2010). She is also co-producer with Sarah Blake of the Doc on One "Miracle in Galway Bay" which recently won a Celtic Media Award

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