H1 2026 Evaluation
Palau Reservoir Transparency
F13Opaque — Ranked #110 out of 167 countries
weight 30%
weight 20%
weight 15%
weight 13%
weight 10%
weight 8%
weight 5%
Primary source evaluated
Dimension breakdown
Data Availability
20% of total score
Palau does have surface water infrastructure: Babeldaob, the main island, hosts the Ngerimel Reservoir (approx. 15 million gallons / 57,000 m³) and the Ngerikiil watershed, which supply the Ngeruobel Water Treatment Plant serving Koror. The Palau Public Utilities Corporation (PPUC) monitors reservoir levels operationally — documented readings such as 13.66 feet at 93% capacity have been cited in public drought advisories issued by the National Emergency Committee (NEC). However, PPUC does not publish reservoir levels on a public data portal or website; disclosure occurs only during drought emergencies through NEC press releases and newspaper reporting in the Island Times.
Technical Accessibility
15% of total score
Data accessibility is limited to narrative press releases and news articles. No structured format (CSV, JSON, XML) or API is available. A 2020 US Department of Interior assessment of Palau's water treatment plants is available as a PDF, providing infrastructure detail, but this is a one-time audit document rather than an ongoing data stream. PPUC's corporate website does not host any operational datasets.
Coverage
30% of total score
Methodology v1.3.0 (capacity-weighted), conservative. Palau's identified reservoir storage is dominated by Ngerimel (~0.057 hm³ / 15 Mgal on Babeldaob) plus the Ngerikiil watershed system supplying the Ngeruobel WTP; together with the Metemellasch dam serving northern states, total national reservoir capacity is below 0.1 hm³ and well below the 10 hm³ analytical threshold. PPUC discloses reservoir levels only reactively during NEC drought activations (e.g. Ngerimel at 13.66 ft / 93% capacity in 2016) — crisis-only, no structured feed. Conservatively, effective covered capacity (qualitative crisis-only reporting on Ngerimel) is approximately 15% of identified storage. Coverage = round(100 × 0.009 / 0.06) ≈ 15.
Historical Depth
13% of total score
Drought reports (e.g., the June 2016 Drought Report published by the Palau government) contain historical rainfall and reservoir level snapshots, providing limited retrospective data. The US DOI 2020 Preliminary Assessment includes infrastructure condition assessments. However, no continuous time-series dataset is publicly accessible. Historical depth is limited to discrete event-driven snapshots.
Update Frequency
10% of total score
Updates are event-driven, not scheduled. PPUC reports reservoir levels to the NEC during drought conditions, and the NEC issues public advisories. Outside drought periods, no public water level updates are issued. The Island Times newspaper serves as an ad hoc disclosure channel. There is no weekly, monthly, or seasonal publication routine.
Methodological Transparency
8% of total score
The 2020 US DOI Water Treatment Plants Preliminary Assessment documents the physical infrastructure, treatment capacity, and condition of PPUC's water assets, providing methodological context. The 2016 Drought Report documents PPUC's monitoring process during emergency conditions. However, no publicly accessible protocol document defines measurement methods, calibration standards, or data quality procedures for routine reservoir monitoring.
Language and Usability
5% of total score
English is the co-official language of Palau (alongside Palauan) and is the language of all PPUC, NEC, and government documentation. The Island Times is published in English. All technical reports and drought advisories are accessible to international researchers without translation. Score is partial because data availability is sparse regardless of language.
Evaluator notes
Palau is the only country in this evaluation group with confirmed surface water reservoir infrastructure. Babeldaob, the main island, has the Ngerimel Reservoir (approximately 57,000 m³ / 15 million gallons) fed by the Ngerikiil River watershed (mean annual rainfall 3.7 m), plus the Metemellasch Dam serving northern states. The Palau Public Utilities Corporation (PPUC) manages water treatment and distribution for the national capital area. Hydropower is not currently exploited — electricity is generated entirely by diesel. PPUC monitors reservoir levels operationally and reports to the National Emergency Committee during drought events; reservoir percentages have been publicly cited (e.g., Ngerimel at 93% during a 2016 drought watch). However, no public data portal, scheduled reporting, or machine-readable dataset exists. Water data disclosure is purely reactive, triggered by emergency conditions. The US Department of Interior's 2020 infrastructure assessment provides the most detailed publicly available technical documentation. Palau scores lowest in data_availability and technical_accessibility among its peers not because data is absent internally, but because no proactive public disclosure mechanism exists.
Evaluated by Jaime Delgado · 2026-09-15 · Methodology v1.3.0