Eighteen Events Announced for Dublin City’s Local Enterprise Week 2026

Small businesses and budding entrepreneurs will have the opportunity to sample 18 events aimed at helping them to start or grow their business as part of this year’s Local Enterprise Week in Dublin City. The initiative of the Local Enterprise Offices, supported by Enterprise Ireland and the local authorities, takes place from the 2nd to the 7th of March this year across the country.

While there are hundreds of events taking place nationally during the week, there are plenty of events in Dublin City open to all. These events will focus on helping small businesses or anyone just looking to get started on their business journey to plan, start, sustain and grow.  From AI and Green regulations to Food and Finance workshops there will be something for every type of business across the week.

Each of the 31 Local Enterprise Offices will be running a full programme of events in their area that will cover a variety of topics relevant to small businesses and those starting up.  The events are open to all, from budding entrepreneurs to established businesses and offers the opportunity to get expert advice on key areas of business from raising funds, improving your online presence, the benefits of AI, to how to make your business more productive and save money.

Warren Cray, Head of Enterprise, Dublin City Council said on the upcoming events: 

“Local Enterprise Week is the highlight of the year for us at LEO Dublin City. It’s a real opportunity for businesses to step back and look at where they can grow, innovate, or perhaps become more sustainable — and to discover what support is right on their doorstep. Whether you’re running an established business or you’ve been sitting on an idea and wondering where to start, this is the week to do something about it. I’d encourage anyone with even a passing interest to come along, you might be surprised at what’s possible.”

The Local Enterprise Offices located in the local authorities and funded through Enterprise Ireland support thousands of small Irish businesses and entrepreneurs nationwide.  Since their establishment in 2014 they have been for the first stop for entrepreneurs and small businesses and providing a range of supports including funding, mentoring, training and sector specific expertise to help guide businesses at any stage of their development.

They also run key initiatives to foster entrepreneurship across the country including Local Enterprise Week, National Women’s Enterprise Day, the Student Enterprise Programme and the National Enterprise Awards.  The Local Enterprise Offices are also running a campaign encouraging small businesses to save time money and energy by availing of their competitiveness and productivity supports including Green, Lean and Digital for Business. www.AllInADaysWork.ie

For more information on the Local Enterprise Offices go to www.LocalEnterprise.ie

Details for all the events taking place across the country during Local Enterprise Week, from March 2nd to 7th March, are available at www.LocalEnterprise.ie/Week

For the Full List of Dublin City Events: Local Enterprise Week Dublin City Events 2026.

How Solar Technology is Revolutionising Residential Construction in Ireland

The Irish residential construction sector is undergoing a remarkable transformation, driven by an unprecedented shift towards renewable energy solutions. At the forefront of this revolution is solar technology, which has evolved from a niche consideration to a fundamental component of modern home design. As Ireland commits to ambitious climate targets and homeowners grapple with escalating energy costs, solar panels and associated technologies are reshaping how we conceive, construct, and inhabit residential properties across the Emerald Isle.

This transition represents more than a mere trend; it signals a fundamental reimagining of sustainable living in the Irish context. Despite the nation’s reputation for cloudy skies and frequent rainfall, advances in photovoltaic technology and supportive government policies have positioned solar energy as a practical and economically viable solution for Irish households. From Cork to Donegal, solar installations are becoming increasingly commonplace, heralding a new era in residential construction that prioritises energy independence, environmental responsibility, and long-term cost savings.

  • The Evolution of Solar Technology in Irish Residential Settings

Ireland’s journey with solar technology has been relatively recent but remarkably swift. Historically, the country’s overcast climate was perceived as an insurmountable barrier to solar adoption. However, technological breakthroughs in photovoltaic efficiency have shattered this misconception. Modern solar panels can generate electricity even on cloudy days, harnessing diffuse sunlight with remarkable effectiveness. This capability has proven particularly significant for Ireland, where direct sunshine may be limited but ambient light remains abundant throughout much of the year.

The past decade has witnessed dramatic improvements in solar panel efficiency, with contemporary systems converting upwards of 20% of captured light into usable electricity – double the efficiency of panels available just fifteen years ago. Simultaneously, manufacturing advances have reduced costs by more than 80% since 2010, transforming solar from a luxury addition into an accessible option for mainstream homebuilders and renovators alike. This convergence of improved performance and affordability has catalysed widespread adoption across Ireland’s residential sector.

  • Government Initiatives Driving Solar Adoption

Ireland’s regulatory landscape has evolved considerably to encourage renewable energy adoption in residential construction. The Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) administers several grant schemes that significantly reduce the upfront costs of solar installations. The Solar PV Grant scheme offers homeowners substantial financial support, covering a considerable portion of installation expenses for qualifying systems. This initiative has proven instrumental in accelerating solar uptake, particularly amongst middle-income households for whom the initial investment might otherwise prove prohibitive.

Beyond direct financial incentives, Ireland’s revised Building Regulations now incorporate stricter energy performance standards for new constructions. The Nearly Zero Energy Building (NZEB) standard, mandatory for all new homes since 2020, effectively necessitates renewable energy integration to achieve compliance. Solar photovoltaic systems represent one of the most straightforward pathways to meeting these requirements, consequently becoming a standard consideration in contemporary residential design rather than an optional extra.

The Microgeneration Support Scheme, whilst still developing, promises to further incentivise solar adoption by enabling homeowners to sell surplus electricity back to the grid at favourable rates. This feed-in tariff arrangement transforms solar panels from purely cost-saving devices into potential income generators, fundamentally altering the economic calculus for prospective installers like MMK Solar.

  • Integration into New Build Construction

The most profound impact of solar technology is evident in new residential developments, where integrated design approaches enable optimal system performance and aesthetic coherence. Forward-thinking developers now incorporate solar considerations from the earliest planning stages, orienting properties to maximise southern exposure and designing roof profiles that accommodate panel installations without compromising architectural integrity.

This holistic approach extends beyond simple panel placement. Modern developments increasingly feature coordinated systems where solar generation interfaces seamlessly with battery storage, heat pumps, and intelligent home energy management systems. Such integration enables unprecedented levels of energy self-sufficiency, with some new Irish homes achieving 70% or greater independence from grid electricity during warmer months.

Building Information Modelling (BIM) technology has facilitated this integration, allowing architects and engineers to simulate solar performance during the design phase. These predictive capabilities enable optimisation of panel placement, system sizing, and electrical infrastructure before construction commences, reducing installation costs and maximising long-term performance. Consequently, solar systems in new builds typically deliver superior returns compared to retrofit installations, as the entire property ecosystem is designed around home renewable energy from inception.

  • Retrofit Applications in Existing Housing Stock

Whilst new builds benefit from integrated design, the majority of Ireland’s housing stock predates modern energy standards, presenting both challenges and opportunities for solar retrofitting. Older properties often feature suboptimal roof orientations, structural limitations, and outdated electrical systems that complicate solar installations. Nevertheless, technological advances and innovative installation techniques have made solar retrofitting increasingly viable across diverse property types.

Lightweight panel designs now enable installation on roofs previously deemed unsuitable due to load-bearing constraints, whilst micro-inverter technology allows systems to function efficiently despite shading or non-ideal orientations. For properties where traditional rooftop installations prove impractical, ground-mounted arrays and solar tiles offer alternative pathways to renewable generation.

The economics of retrofit installations have improved markedly, with typical payback periods now ranging from eight to twelve years depending on system size and household consumption patterns. When combined with available grants, many homeowners achieve energy cost reductions of 40-60%, providing compelling financial incentives alongside environmental benefits. This economic attractiveness has stimulated a thriving installation sector, with hundreds of certified installers now operating across Ireland.

  • Battery Storage and Energy Independence

The integration of battery storage systems represents perhaps the most transformative development in residential solar technology. Traditional grid-tied systems without storage can only utilise solar generation instantaneously, necessitating grid electricity during evenings and overnight periods when consumption typically peaks. Battery systems fundamentally alter this dynamic, enabling households to store surplus daytime generation for evening use, dramatically increasing solar self-consumption rates.

Modern lithium-ion battery systems offer storage capacities ranging from 5kWh to 15kWh or more, sufficient to power typical Irish homes through evening peak periods and overnight. Combined with adequately sized solar arrays, these systems can deliver energy independence rates exceeding 80% during spring and summer months, with meaningful contributions throughout winter.

Beyond economic benefits, battery storage enhances energy security, providing backup power during grid outages – an increasingly pertinent consideration given climate-related disruptions to electricity networks. This resilience aspect is particularly valued in rural areas where service restoration may require extended periods following severe weather events.

  • Environmental and Economic Impact

The cumulative environmental impact of Ireland’s residential solar revolution is substantial and growing. Each installed kilowatt of solar capacity reduces annual carbon emissions by approximately 0.5 tonnes, collectively preventing thousands of tonnes of greenhouse gases from entering the atmosphere annually. As installations multiply, this contribution towards Ireland’s climate obligations becomes increasingly significant, complementing larger-scale renewable projects like offshore wind farms.

From an economic perspective, widespread solar adoption reduces pressure on the national grid during peak demand periods, potentially deferring or eliminating the need for costly infrastructure upgrades. At the household level, solar installations provide hedge against future energy price volatility, offering predictable, low-cost electricity generation over system lifespans typically exceeding 25 years.

The solar sector itself has become a notable employer, with installation, maintenance, and related services supporting thousands of jobs nationwide. This growth in green employment aligns with broader economic development objectives whilst contributing to the low-carbon transition.

  • Challenges and Future Prospects

Despite remarkable progress, challenges remain. Grid infrastructure in some areas requires upgrading to accommodate high penetrations of distributed generation, whilst planning regulations in certain contexts can complicate installations, particularly in conservation areas or protected structures. Ensuring installer quality and consumer protection as the market expands requires ongoing regulatory attention.

Looking forward, continued technological advancement promises even greater possibilities. Emerging technologies including perovskite solar cells, bifacial panels, and building-integrated photovoltaics may deliver efficiency gains and aesthetic improvements that further accelerate adoption. As battery costs continue declining and vehicle-to-home technology matures, the integration of electric vehicles into home energy systems presents exciting possibilities for enhanced self-sufficiency.

  • Conclusion

Solar technology has unquestionably revolutionised residential construction in Ireland, transforming renewable energy from aspiration to mainstream reality. Through supportive policies, technological advancement, and growing environmental awareness, solar systems have become integral to modern Irish homes, delivering economic, environmental, and energy security benefits that extend far beyond individual households.

As Ireland continues its journey towards carbon neutrality, the residential sector’s embrace of solar technology represents a cornerstone of success. The revolution is not merely technical but cultural, reflecting a fundamental shift in how Irish society conceptualises sustainable living. With each installation, Ireland moves closer to a future where clean, renewable energy powers our homes, strengthens our economy, and safeguards our environment for generations to come.

Dell Technologies Expands AI Offerings to Accelerate Secure Generative AI Initiatives

Dell Technologies (NYSE: DELL) introduces new offerings to help customers quickly and securely build generative AI (GenAI) models on-premises to accelerate improved outcomes and drive new levels of intelligence.

New Dell Generative AI Solutions, expanding upon our May’s Project Helix announcement, span IT infrastructure, PCs and professional services to simplify the adoption of full-stack GenAI with large language models (LLM), meeting organizations wherever they are in their GenAI journey. These solutions help organizations, of all sizes and across industries, securely transform and deliver better outcomes.

“Generative AI represents an inflection point that is driving fundamental change in the pace of innovation while improving the customer experience and enabling new ways to work,” Jeff Clarke, vice chairman and co-chief operating officer, Dell Technologies, said on a recent investor call. “Customers, big and small, are using their own data and business context to train, fine-tune and inference on Dell infrastructure solutions to incorporate advanced AI into their core business processes effectively and efficiently.”

“Generative AI can help every enterprise transform its data into intelligent applications that enable them to solve complex business challenges,” said Manuvir Das, vice president, Enterprise Computing, NVIDIA. “Dell Technologies and NVIDIA are building on our long-standing relationship to enable organizations to harness this capability to better serve their customers, more fully support their employees and fuel innovation across their operations.”

With Dell Generative AI Solutions, the breadth of Dell’s portfolio, including Dell Precision workstationsDell PowerEdge serversDell PowerScale scale-out storage, Dell ECS enterprise object storage and a broad set of services, provide the reliable tools to deliver GenAI solutions from desktops to core data centers, edge locations and public clouds.

CyberAgent, a major Japanese digital advertising company, selected Dell servers as the key IT infrastructure for its generative AI development and digital advertising.

“We decided to select Dell PowerEdge XE9680 servers equipped with NVIDIA H100 GPUs, which are optimized for generative AI applications,” said Daisuke Takahashi, solution architect of CIU, CyberAgent. “In addition, we value the ease of use of the Dell iDRAC management tool for secure local and remote server management.”

Full-stack GenAI for enterprises

The Dell Validated Design for Generative AI with NVIDIA is an inferencing blueprint, jointly engineered with NVIDIA, optimized to speed the deployment of a modular, secure and scalable platform for GenAI in the enterprise.

Until now, traditional inferencing approaches have been challenged to scale and support LLMs for real-time results and ensure data can be easily used by AI infrastructure. This solution helps customers generate higher quality, faster time-to-value predictions and decisions with their own data.

With a comprehensive verified inferencing approach, organizations can rapidly deploy GenAI projects and scale applications to transform processes in key areas, such as customer operations, content creation and management, software development and sales.

Dell Validated Designs are pre-tested, proven configurations to power GenAI inferencing efforts with Dell infrastructure, such as the Dell PowerEdge XE9680 or PowerEdge R760xa, with a choice of NVIDIA® Tensor Core GPUs, NVIDIA AI Enterprise software, the NVIDIA NeMo™ end-to-end framework and Dell software at its core. Customers can combine this with resilient and scalable unstructured data storage, including Dell PowerScale and Dell ECS storage. The infrastructure is available via Dell APEX, offering customers an on-premises deployment with a cloud consumption and management experience.

Services drive faster, more holistic GenAI outcomes

Dell Professional Services deliver a broad spectrum of new capabilities to help customers accelerate GenAI adoption to improve their operational efficiency and advance innovation.

These services begin with creating a new GenAI strategy that identifies high value use cases and a roadmap to achieve them. Dell also offers full-stack implementation services, based on the Dell Validated Design for GenAI with NVIDIA, and adoption services that apply the platform to specific use cases, such as customer operations or content creation. Once integrated into the business, Dell’s scaling services help improve operations through managed services, training or resident experts.

“Dell’s AI solutions offers enterprises the potential to right-size their GenAI efforts and help streamline operations as customers look to quickly deliver products and services across industry-specific use cases,” said Ashish Nadkarni, group vice president and general manager, worldwide infrastructure and BuyerView research, IDC. “In the era of intelligent automation, Dell Technologies is meeting organizations wherever they are in their GenAI journey, helping them position themselves for success in an increasingly intelligent and technology-driven world.”

Precision workstations provide secure GenAI development locally on the device

As the global leader in workstations,1 Dell Precision workstations allow AI developers and data scientists to develop and fine-tune GenAI models locally before deploying at scalePrecision workstations provide the performance and reliability – with up to four NVIDIA RTX 6000 Ada Generation GPUs in a single workstation – to run AI software frameworks 80% faster than the previous generation.2

Built-in AI software, Dell Optimizer, learns and responds to the way people work, improving performance across applications, network connectivity and audio. The latest feature allows mobile workstation users leveraging GenAI models to improve performance for the application in-use while minimizing impact to battery runtime.

“Our customers are looking to use generative AI in every aspect of their business, from monitoring agent behavior to detecting fraud,” said James Laird, chief operating officer, Intelligent Voice. “Recent advances in AI combined with the power of Dell’s AI solutions allows us to quickly build, test and deploy high-quality models at the speed our customers require.”

Availability

  • Dell Validated Design for Generative AI with NVIDIA is available globally through traditional channels and Dell APEX today.
  • Dell Professional Services for Generative AI are available in select countries now.
  • Dell Precision workstations (7960 Tower, 7865 Tower, 5860 Tower) with NVIDIA RTX 6000 Ada Generation GPUs will be available globally in early August.
  • Dell Optimizer adaptive workload will be available globally on select Precision mobile workstations on August 30.