Casement to get £50m from government in Spending Review

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Jayne McCormack & John Campbell

BBC News NI

PA Media An aerial view of Casement Park, an empty football stadium, with housing developments in the surrounding areas. PA Media

The redevelopment of Casement Park is estimated to cost about £260m

The government is to make a financial contribution of £50m towards the redevelopment of Casement Park

The move comes as part of the chancellor's Spending Review, which allocates money to day-to-day public services for the next three years.

Rebuilding the west Belfast stadium is estimated to cost about £260m - of which £120m is jointly in place from the Stormont Executive, the Irish government and the GAA.

The government's decision will be welcomed by the GAA and some political parties, but it still leaves a shortfall of about £90m.

The Spending Review directly affects what Stormont ministers have to spend on public services in Northern Ireland.

Ministers are also expected to find out if they have succeeded in persuading the Treasury that Stormont's finances require a more generous "needs-based" top-up.

Last week, Finance Minister John O'Dowd said he believed the Treasury was in "solution-finding mode" when it came to reaching agreement on funding for Casement Park.

The Stormont executive is contributing £62.5m towards the project, the GAA will pay £15m, while the Irish government has pledged about £43m.

The GAA has acknowledged it will need to increase its commitment.

Casement Park, with a proposed 34,500 capacity, had been earmarked to host football games at the Euro 2028 football tournament but, with the project on hold, the plan was shelved.

PA Media Rachel Reeves is smiling, with her eyes not looking directly at the camera. She is has brown hair with a fringe and is wearing a navy jacket and a necklace with two  circles. There are people sitting alongside her but they are mostly blurred as she is the focus.PA Media

Chancellor Rachel Reeves made a financial contribution of £50m towards the redevelopment

Stormont's Communities Minister Gordon Lyons has defended his handling of the planned Casement redevelopment and insisted the hold-up is not his fault.

He has said the GAA will need to make its plans for the stadium more affordable if the government fails to cover the gap for the current proposed rebuild.

"What we do need to make sure is that any additional public funding that comes forward for sport is done on a fair and equitable basis," he said.

Could Stormont get a bigger top-up?

When devolution was restored in 2024, Stormont ministers persuaded the Treasury that Northern Ireland's public services were being funded below an objective level of need.

As a result any additional funding Stormont gets from Westminster now comes with a top-up - an additional 24p for every pound.

That will be worth more than £800m over five years, the independent Fiscal Council has estimated.

The Treasury also left the door open for a bigger top-up if there was credible, independent evidence to support it.

Stormont ministers believe they have provided that evidence in the form of an analysis by the devolution finance expert Prof Gerry Holtham.

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