H1 2026 Evaluation
Ireland Reservoir Transparency
C+63Below Average — Ranked #37 out of 167 countries
weight 30%
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weight 15%
weight 13%
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weight 8%
weight 5%
Primary source evaluated
Dimension breakdown
Data Availability
20% of total score
Water level data (in metres above ordnance datum) is publicly available in near-real-time through waterlevel.ie for ~380 stations including the ~30 lake and reservoir stations in the covered subset. ESB publishes daily PDF charts of water levels for Poulaphouca (Liffey), Shannon (Lough Derg/Ree), Lee, and Erne systems via esbhydro.ie. However, no agency publishes reservoir storage as volume or percentage-full — the universally useful metric for water supply management. Uisce Éireann's open data portal lists a 'Reservoirs' dataset but it contains only infrastructure location data (XLSX), not operational storage levels. There is no national reservoir storage dashboard analogous to Spain's MITECO or the US USGS NWIS.
Technical Accessibility
15% of total score
OPW waterlevel.ie provides a documented, machine-readable REST-style API (CSV and GeoJSON endpoints at http://waterlevel.ie/page/api/) under CC BY 4.0. Data for the covered reservoirs updates every ~15 minutes. However, the API exposes only water level in metres — not reservoir storage volume or percentage. The 5-week rolling window on the main API means long-term programmatic access requires a separate portal (Hydro-Data). ESB data is available only as PDFs, not machine-readable. Uisce Éireann open data is XLSX-only static download with no API. EPA HydroNet (WISKI) supports downloads but no documented REST API for external use.
Coverage
30% of total score
v1.3.0 capacity-weighted methodology applied 2026-05-29. Ireland total national reservoir storage capacity ~500 hm³ across ~50 reservoirs and regulated lakes combining ESB hydropower impoundments (Poulaphouca/Blessington dominant, plus Lough Derg/Ree on the Shannon, Inniscarra/Carrigadrohid on the Lee, Erne system) with Uisce Éireann drinking-water reservoirs (Vartry, Roundwood, Stillorgan, Cloosh and regional supply impoundments). COVERED capacity ≈ 350 hm³ via OPW EPA HydroNet (WISKI) + waterlevel.ie REST API (~30 reservoir/lake-level stations including Poulaphouca, Lough Derg, Lough Ree, Inniscarra) + ESB daily PDF charts for the Liffey, Shannon, Lee and Erne hydropower systems. coverage = round(100 × 350 / 500) = 70. The covered subset captures the strategic hydropower and Dublin supply reservoirs; smaller regional supply impoundments remain unpublished.
Historical Depth
13% of total score
Scoped to the 30 covered reservoirs, OPW's National Hydrometric Archive covers over 70 years for the oldest gauges, with data collection starting in the early 1940s. Digitally accessible processed flow records are most reliable from the early 1970s onward (~55 years) for most covered stations. The Hydro-Data portal (waterlevel.ie/hydro-data) provides quality-assessed water level and flow records from both active and inactive stations going back decades. ESB's hydropower reservoir level archive extends multi-decade. The median historical depth across the 30 covered reservoirs is approximately 55 years. The limitation: the historical archive covers water level/flow, not reservoir storage volume.
Update Frequency
10% of total score
OPW waterlevel.ie updates water level data approximately every 15 minutes from data loggers at the ~30 reservoir stations in the covered subset — excellent frequency. ESB publishes daily PDF charts for its reservoir/river systems (Liffey, Shannon, Lee, Erne). EPA publishes monthly Hydrology Summary Bulletins. Uisce Éireann's open data is static XLSX, updated infrequently. The high-frequency updating applies only to OPW's stage (water level in metres) data, not to any reservoir storage volume or percentage metric.
Methodological Transparency
8% of total score
OPW publishes station metadata (coordinates, reference numbers) in GeoJSON for the covered reservoir stations and explains sensor types and data encoding. Data is flagged as provisional/unchecked on the real-time feed, with quality-assessed data in the archive. However, no stage-to-volume conversion curves or reservoir capacity tables are published, so users cannot derive storage percentage from the water level data without independent bathymetric data. Uisce Éireann references a 'standardised methodology' for its capacity register but does not publish it. ESB provides no methodology documentation for its PDF charts.
Language and Usability
5% of total score
Ireland is an English-speaking country. All portals — waterlevel.ie, water.ie, epa.ie, esb.ie, data.gov.ie — operate exclusively in English. All documentation, APIs, metadata, and bulletins are in English. No translation barrier exists for any international user.
Evaluator notes
Ireland presents a paradox for the RTI: strong open data infrastructure but no reservoir storage transparency in the operationally useful sense. Under v1.2.0 strict linear coverage, Ireland scores 60 — around 30 of an estimated 50 reservoirs above 10 hm³ have public level or storage data, mostly through OPW's waterlevel.ie hydrometric network and ESB's daily PDFs. The OPW's waterlevel.ie is a technically sophisticated, well-documented, near-real-time hydrometric platform with a public API, CC BY 4.0 license, and 70+ years of archived data — superior to many much larger countries. However, none of Ireland's authorities (OPW, Uisce Éireann, ESB, EPA) publishes reservoir storage as volume or percentage-full, which is the metric that matters for water security monitoring. What is published is water level in metres above ordnance datum — requiring bathymetric survey data to convert to storage volumes. The institutional fragmentation is a structural barrier. Poulaphouca/Blessington (Ireland's largest reservoir) is operated by ESB for hydropower, with Uisce Éireann abstracting water from it for Dublin's supply — so no single agency has both the mandate and the data to publish a consolidated storage figure. ESB publishes daily water level PDFs for the Liffey headrace system, but these are chart images, not machine-readable data, and storage percentage is not computed. The Shannon system (Lough Derg, Lough Ree, Parteen Basin) similarly has ESB water levels published as PDFs, but these are run-of-river hydropower reservoirs where ESB explicitly states it no longer stores water for generation purposes. Northern Ireland provides a direct counterexample: NI Water publishes weekly reservoir storage percentages across its system, underscoring that the gap in the Republic is one of policy will rather than technical capability.
Evaluated by Jaime Delgado · 2026-05-29 · Methodology v1.3.0
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