To speak to a member of our team, please call us on +353 (0) 1 4199 505 or +353 (0) 1 4199 525
Link sent to your email address
We have sent an email to your address.
Please click on the link in this email to reset
your password. If you can't find it in your inbox,
please check your spam folder. To speak to a
member of our team, please call us on
+353 (0) 1 4199 505 or +353 (0) 1 4199 525
Email address not recognised
There is no subscription associated with this email
address. To read our subscriber-only content.
please subscribe or use the reader loyalty code.
This content is available to digital subscribers and loyalty code users only. Sign in to your account, use the code or subscribe to get unlimited access.
This content is available to digital subscribers and loyalty code users only. Sign in to your account, use the code or subscribe to get unlimited access.
Martin Heydon, Minister for Agriculture, with the stallion Justify at Ashford Stud this week
NEWS on Wednesday that US President Trump has paused his plan to impose heavy tariffs on American imports from dozens of countries has caused further uncertainty in the racing and bloodstock world over their potential impact on transatlantic trade.
Minister for Agriculture has announced €8.2m in funding for the service on Friday which will aim to support farmers, including equine, to assess and implement biosecurity measures in the
“Nearly a quarter of horses sold at last year’s Go For Gold sale, which is our premier sale, went to the USA"
Save to a collection
Recent collections
This article has already been saved
This article has been saved
Create a collection
Subscriber only
This content is available to digital subscribers only. Sign in to your account or subscribe for just €1 to get unlimited access for 30 days.SIGN INSUBSCRIBE FOR €1
SHARING OPTIONS: