Atlantic Endeavour v OPW ([2025] IEHC 324): Contractual Duration as the Determinant for Lifting Automatic Suspensions under the 2017 Review Procedures Regulations

Atlantic Endeavour Ltd & Anor v Office of Public Works ([2025] IEHC 324)
“Contractual Duration as the Determinant for Lifting Automatic Suspensions”

1. Introduction

This High Court decision, delivered by Mr Justice Garrett Simons on 5 June 2025, arises from a public-procurement dispute concerning landing permits for tourist boats on the UNESCO World Heritage site of Skellig Michael (Sceilg Mhichíl) off the coast of County Kerry. Two unsuccessful tenderers— Atlantic Endeavour Ltd and SMBT Ltd (trading as “Skellig Michael Boat Trips”)—challenged the Office of Public Works’ (“OPW”) decision to award fifteen permits following a competitive tender process.

Under the European Union (Award of Concession Contracts) (Review Procedures) Regulations 2017, institution of judicial-review proceedings automatically suspends the contracting authority from concluding the contract. The OPW therefore sought an order to lift that suspension so the 2025 landing season (already delayed) could commence. At the heart of the dispute was a technical yet crucial question: what exactly is the duration and legal effect of the contract OPW wished to sign with the successful bidders?

2. Summary of the Judgment

The Court granted the OPW’s application, allowing it to execute the pro-forma “Permit Terms & Conditions” (Appendix 1 of the Request for Tenders) with the fifteen successful operators. Justice Simons held that:

  • The contract is confined solely to the 2025 landing season; it creates no contractual rights for 2026-2029.
  • Because the contractual rights are temporally limited, damages—backed by an OPW admission that any proven breach would be “sufficiently serious” for Francovich purposes—are an adequate remedy for the applicants in relation to 2025.
  • Balancing the competing interests (operators, local economy, heritage site, public), the balance of justice favoured lifting the suspension so landings could proceed.
  • No determination was made on whether OPW may, in due course, create a five-year framework or whether landing permits may instead issue under national-monuments statutes without any concession contract. Those matters are reserved for the substantive July 2025 hearing.
Key Precedential Holding
When assessing an application to lift an automatic suspension, courts must identify with precision the contractual rights that would crystallise upon execution; if those rights are narrowly time-limited, damages may be adequate and the balance of convenience may favour lifting the suspension even where serious issues exist.

3. Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

  1. Word Perfect Translation Services v Minister for Public Expenditure & Reform (2018 IECA 35) (“Word Perfect 2018”)
    —Structured the two-limb test (serious issue + balance of convenience) for lifting suspensions; emphasised inadequacy of Francovich damages absent a serious-breach concession.
  2. Word Perfect (2021 IECA 305) (“Word Perfect 2021”)
    —Highlighted complexity of quantifying “loss-of-chance” damages, making injunctions more attractive where contracts run for many years.
  3. CHC Ireland v Minister for Transport [2023] IECA 229
    —Re-affirmed the Word Perfect principles and the requirement to weigh public interests (continuity of vital services).
  4. Casey v Minister for the Arts [2004] IESC 14
    —Recognised the statutory (non-contractual) nature of access to Skellig Michael, used by the applicants to argue permits could issue without a concession contract.
  5. Powerteam Electric Services v ESB [2016] IEHC 87
    —Warned courts against re-designing a procurement; invoked here to show that allowing OPW to sign the very contract advertised is not an impermissible modification.
  6. Sanofi-Aventis Ireland v HSE [2018] IEHC 566
    —Cited by applicants for the proposition that certain breaches (e.g. failure to give reasons) might still elude damages. The Court distinguished but did not reject this authority.
  7. Braceurself Ltd v NHS England [2023] EWCA Civ 837 (UK)
    —Illustrated the danger of lifting suspensions without a sufficient-serious-breach admission; guided the Court in valuing OPW’s concession.

Collectively, these authorities required Justice Simons to conduct a nuanced balance-of-justice assessment, focusing especially on (a) adequacy of damages and (b) the length of time the suspension would remain in place.

3.2 Legal Reasoning

  1. Identify the “contract concerned”. The Court dissected the procurement documents to decide whether a multi-year framework contract or only a one-season permit was on the table. It found the latter, based on clear wording in §§1.4–1.5 of the Appendix 1 terms and the absence of any drafted framework agreement.
  2. Apply the injunction test hypothetically (Reg. 9(2)(a)). Because OPW admitted a serious breach would meet the Francovich threshold, damages became a plausible compensatory pathway. The applicants themselves accepted a damages-only remedy for 2025. Conversely, keeping the suspension would prolong economic loss to successful tenderers, local communities, and the heritage-tourism sector.
  3. Public-interest considerations. The landing season is short (mid-May – Sept). A further six-week delay (until the July trial) would squander almost half the 2025 season. Heritage management, local livelihoods, and visitor expectations were weighed heavily.
  4. Effect of future rights. Because rights beyond 2025 remain inchoate, lifting the suspension does not relegate applicants to damages for 2026-2029, preserving the essence of their challenge at trial.

3.3 Likely Impact of the Decision

  • Procurement Litigation Strategy: Contracting authorities may limit initial contract duration to reduce injunction risk, knowing courts will scrutinise the actual rights conferred.
  • Use of “Serious Breach” Admissions: The judgment reinforces that a frank admission can swing the adequacy-of-damages analysis, encouraging authorities to deploy this tool early.
  • Heritage & Tourism Operations: Demonstrates a legal pathway to keep seasonal, environmentally sensitive sites open while litigation is pending—balancing conservation, economic and justice considerations.
  • Framework vs. Permit Dichotomy: Clarifies that public bodies must draft and identify any multi-year framework separately; silence or ambiguity will be resolved against them when courts examine automatic-suspension applications.
  • Judicial Economy: The High Court’s willingness to make limited findings of law (contract duration) at interlocutory stage may streamline substantive hearings.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

Automatic Suspension Once judicial-review proceedings are issued against a procurement decision, the contracting authority is automatically barred from signing the contract until the court decides otherwise (Reg. 8 & 9, 2017 Regulations).
Francovich Damages EU-law remedy for losses caused by a Member State’s serious breach of EU rules. In procurement, damages only flow if the breach is “sufficiently serious”, i.e. manifests a grave and manifest disregard for the law.
RWIND Tenderer “Reasonably Well-Informed and Normally Diligent” tenderer—the objective standard for interpreting unclear tender documents.
Framework Agreement vs. Concession Contract Framework sets the umbrella terms under which future contracts may be let; a concession contract itself grants the right to exploit a service (here, landing passengers) for profit. Justice Simons stressed no framework existed yet—only a single-season concession.

5. Conclusion

Atlantic Endeavour v OPW establishes an important refinement in Irish procurement jurisprudence: courts must isolate the precise contractual rights that would vest if a suspension is lifted. Where those rights are narrowly delimited (here, one tourist season), the balance of justice will often favour allowing the contract to proceed, provided an adequate damages admission is on the table. The decision offers a pragmatic template for reconciling urgent public-interest needs with the EU-law imperative of effective judicial protection, and it signals to contracting authorities that opacity around contract scope can be fatal—yet clear, limited permits can unlock stalled projects without prejudicing substantive challenges.

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