Kildare County Council has given the green light to plans by Intel for a $4bn (€3.53bn) manufacturing fabrication facility at its Leixlip plant.

The planning authority has given the computer chip manufacturer the go-ahead in spite of a small number of objections against the proposal, including one from local farmer Thomas Reid, long regular opponent of Intel's plans.

The 10-year permission to Intel will provide a windfall of €9.723m for Kildare County Council – if work on the project proceeds.

The planning permission comes three years after Intel secured planning permission for the first phase of the work.

Largest Investment in Ireland

In total, two planning permissions approved by Kildare County Council represent a $8bn (€7bn) investment by Intel. The facility will require 6,000 construction workers at peak and create 1,600 full-time jobs on completion.

The projects represent the largest single private investment in the history of the State on one project, if given the go-ahead by Intel's head office.

Consultants for Intel have told the Council that the firm has already invested $12.5 billion on its site at Leixlip.

The Council gave the plan the go-ahead after concluding that the proposal accords with national, regional and local planning policy and would not be injurious to the general amenity of the area and would be in proper accordance with the planning and sustainable development of the area.

In giving the project the go-ahead, the Council had regard to the Government’s Project Ireland 2040 National Planning Framework and the planning history of the site.

Appeals

However, the Council’s grant of planning permission is almost certainly to be appealed to An Bord Pleanála.

This will result in a planning permission – if granted by the appeals board – being finalised towards the end of the year.

Well known environmentalist, Peter Sweetman wrote to the Council last month to say that he would be appealing any decision to grant planning to the appeals board or to the High Court.

Mr Sweetman – who had lodged an earlier submission with the Council on the Intel plan – told the planning authority that he failed to understand why it did not inform him of the significant further information submitted by Intel on the application.

He wrote: “The fact that Kildare County Council have excluded me from participating in the Environmental Impact and Habtitats Assessment leaves me no alternative but to appeal any decision to grant permission to An Bord Pleanála or to the High Court.”

Local farmer, Thomas Reid of Hedsor House, Blakestown, Carton, Maynooth has also lodged an objection against the plan. It is the seventh Intel application the farmer has objected to since 2012.

Mr Reid unsuccessfully opposed the $4 billion first phase of the plan in 2017 when lodging an objection against the application and then appealing the Council decision to An Bord Pleanála.

In 2015, Mr Reid emerged victorious in his battle with IDA Ireland where the Supreme Court found that the IDA's Compulsory Purchase Order for Mr Reid’s 72 acre farm adjacent to the Intel campus was in excess of the IDA’s powers.