Consumer rights watchdog ordered 180,000 products recalled or removed last year

Competition and Consumer Protection Commission’s annual report shows it carried out four dawn raids in 2023

Unsafe products removed from the Irish market by the CCPC include travel adaptors, hurling helmets, water beads and toys with chemicals. Photograph: Leah Farrell/RollingNews.ie
Unsafe products removed from the Irish market by the CCPC include travel adaptors, hurling helmets, water beads and toys with chemicals. Photograph: Leah Farrell/RollingNews.ie

The Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) ordered the recall or withdrawal of more than 180,000 unsafe products from the Irish market last year.

That is according to the CCPC’s 2023 annual report, which also outlines how four dawn raids were also carried out as part of two separate competition investigations.

The CCPC completed 37 competition compliance investigations across a range of sectors, it said. These included compliance reviews into online registration for athletic events and graduate gown procurement by technological universities.

The agency carried out 2,214 consumer protection and product safety inspections in 2023; the compliance inspections in 2023 covered unannounced visits to business and retail premises, online sweeps and inspections with Customs.

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The report also states that in 2023, the CCPC drove compliance with seven manufacturers to ensure they urgently discharged their safety obligations towards 2,800 Irish consumers affected by unsafe gas hobs which presented a serious risk of poisoning, burns, explosion and fire.

In the compliance review concerning the supply of graduate gowns, the report states that the CCPC secured commitments from several Irish technological universities to change their procurement practices in the supply of graduation gowns.

This arose from the CCPC receiving a complaint alleging possible anticompetitive conduct by Atlantic Technological University Donegal (ATU Donegal) regarding communications from ATU Donegal to students that they should source graduation gowns from only one supplier.

However, the CCPC concluded that “ATU Donegal did not contravene competition law”.

In the report, chairman Brian McHugh said that, in 2023, “we removed more than 180,000 unsafe products from the Irish market, including travel adaptors, hurling helmets, water beads and toys with chemicals”.

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The report states that the CCPC’s “proactive market surveillance resulted in 58,193 unsafe products being recalled or withdrawn from the Irish market”.

It added that the CCPC “investigated 139 notifications on unsafe products, resulting in the withdrawal or recall of over 122,225 products from the Irish market”.

Mr McHugh said: “We know that 66 per cent of Irish consumers who follow influencers reported buying a product as a result of an influencer mentioning it.”

He said that, in 2023, “we took part in a Europe-wide sweep and reviewed 40 Irish-based social media accounts to ensure they were disclosing adverts and we also published new guidance with the Advertising Standards Authority for Ireland.

He added: “Our increased activity to protect consumers is reflected in the doubling of compliance notices sent out to traders for issues such as misleading pricing and incorrect returns information. The number of fixed payment notices for offences such as failing to provide price labels increased by 206 per cent.”

Gordon Deegan

Gordon Deegan

Gordon Deegan is a contributor to The Irish Times