CIÉ
, or CIÉ, is a statutory corporation of Ireland, answerable to the Irish Government and responsible for most public transport within the Republic of Ireland and jointly with its Northern Ireland counterpart, the Northern Ireland Transport Holding Company, for the railway service between Dublin and Belfast, via Drogheda, Dundalk, Newry and Portadown. The company is headquartered at Heuston Station, Dublin. It is a statutory corporation whose members are appointed by the Minister for Transport.
Services
Since the enactment of the Transport Act, 1986, CIÉ has been the holding company for Bus Éireann, Dublin Bus and Iarnród Éireann/Irish Rail, the three largest internal transport companies in Ireland. It was originally to have operated the Luas tram system in Dublin, but that project was transferred to the newly created Railway Procurement Agency.CIÉ's services are provided through three operating companies:
- Dublin Bus, which provides bus services in the Greater Dublin Area, including most bus services within Dublin city and the County Dublin;
- Bus Éireann, which provides intercity and regional bus services outside Dublin city and county and from Dublin to the rest of Ireland, as well as operating the city buses in Cork, Limerick, Waterford, and Galway and a number of other small urban bus systems;
- Iarnród Éireann, which operates InterCity, Commuter and DART trains, and – together with NI Railways – the Dublin–Belfast Enterprise train service. Iarnród Éireann also operates Rosslare Europort.
Other than in the railway sector, CIÉ is not a monopoly provider of public transport services: a number of other operators exist; however, under the Transport Act, 1932, these may not compete directly on any route for which CIÉ has been granted a licence. However, legislation was enacted in 2013 to provide for the tendering of 10% of routes operated by Dublin Bus and Bus Éireann. This public competition includes these two operators, along with private operators such as Go-Ahead Ireland, and was completed in January 2019.
History
Córas Iompair Éireann was formed as a private company by the Transport Act 1944 and incorporated the Great Southern Railways Company and Dublin United Transport Company, adopting the logo of the latter company, the so-called "flying snail". Great Southern Railways was incorporated in 1925, having been Great Southern Railway since 1924. Essentially the GSR became – especially as it started to broaden its business interests into road transport – a monopoly transport operator. The Transport Act 1950 amalgamated CIÉ and the Grand Canal Company and formally nationalised CIÉ, changing its structure from that of a private limited company to a corporation under a board appointed by the Minister for Transport. The Great Northern Railway Act 1958 and the Transport Act 1958, passed by the Parliament of Northern Ireland, transferred the lines of the Great Northern Railway Board in the Republic of Ireland to CIÉ.Until 1986, CIÉ operated as a single legal entity, although it was internally organised into rail services and two bus divisions – Dublin City Services and Provincial Services. The vast majority of services were branded CIÉ, although long-distance provincial buses were branded "Expressway" and Dublin electric trains DART. In 1987, CIÉ was reorganised into a holding company and three operating companies. In 1990, it sold its nine Great Southern Hotels, including its hotel in Derry, to Aer Rianta, the airports authority.
Image:Córas Iompair Éireann.png|thumb|right|"The Broken Wheel" Logo introduced in 1964 and modernised in 2000
The company does not run any services on Christmas Day.
Financial losses and the future
CIÉ was established to provide road and railway transport, and later took on some of the canals and ports. It was empowered as both a provider and a licensor of other providers.For most of its existence, CIÉ, in particular its railways division, made large losses and was subsidised by the taxpayer. This provoked demands from the public and politicians to "make CIÉ pay". In a similar pattern to that seen in many other states, Ireland's railways were accordingly rationalised, and suffered severe cutbacks while at the same time the road division was expanded.
The Baker Tilly report found an amount of corporate malpractice in 2004–08. CIÉ did not pass on the report to the Minister for Transport until it was mentioned in the media.
Losses in 2009:
- Iarnród Éireann/Irish Rail — €4.0m
- Bus Éireann — €54.1m
In 2013, Dublin Bus and Bus Éireann made a profit of €500,000 and €400,000 respectively, for the first time in a number of years.