H1 2026 Evaluation
Togo Reservoir Transparency
F19Opaque — Ranked #104 out of 167 countries
weight 30%
weight 20%
weight 15%
weight 13%
weight 10%
weight 8%
weight 5%
Primary source evaluated
CEB — Communauté Électrique du Bénin (joint Togo-Benin electricity authority operating Nangbéto Dam)
https://www.ceb-net.orgDimension breakdown
Data Availability
20% of total score
Togo's sole significant reservoir is the Nangbéto Dam (65 MW, ~1,715 Mm³) on the Mono River, operated jointly with Benin by CEB. CEB publishes periodic operational reports and some water level data, but releases are infrequent, non-systematic, and often in PDF or image format. The dam resumed full operations following a CFA 25.5 billion rehabilitation in recent years. No real-time or machine-readable storage data is published.
Technical Accessibility
15% of total score
CEB publishes data primarily as PDF reports and PNG images, with no structured data downloads, APIs, or machine-readable formats. Historical operational data from the Nangbéto power plant is referenced in academic literature but not directly downloadable from CEB's website.
Coverage
30% of total score
Capacity-weighted (v1.3.0): Nangbéto reservoir (~1,715 Mm³, shared with Benin and operated by CEB) dominates the national hydropower denominator and receives partial operational data coverage. However, smaller hydropower and irrigation facilities are absent from any public reporting. Score lowered from 80 to 70 to apply a conservative discount: smaller hydropower facilities not captured by CEB's dominant-reservoir disclosure, and CEB's coverage itself is partial/lagged (multi-year publication lag, PNG format only). Prior justification (preserved for context): Methodology denominator counts reservoirs with capacity >10 hm³. Togo has 1 qualifying reservoir: Nangbéto (~1,715 Mm³, jointly operated with Benin by CEB; physically located on the Mono River at the Togo-Benin border). Adjarala remains unbuilt. Nangbéto receives partial public coverage through CEB's annual PNG production charts (with multi-year publication lag) and academic literature citing CEB historical records, but no current storage level data is published. Coverage = round(100 × 0.5 / 1) = 50, reflecting that the one qualifying reservoir has degraded/lagged public data rather than no data at all.
Historical Depth
13% of total score
The Nangbéto Dam has been operational since 1988, meaning approximately 38 years of operational records exist internally at CEB. Academic publications on Mono River hydrology reference historical discharge data from CEB's archives, but these records are not publicly accessible through a national portal.
Update Frequency
10% of total score
CEB data releases appear to follow project-based or annual reporting cycles rather than real-time or monthly publication schedules. Water level interruptions affecting electricity supply (reported seasonally in media) confirm operational monitoring exists, but the results are not regularly published for public access.
Methodological Transparency
8% of total score
CEB's monitoring methodology is partially described in World Bank project documentation from the original 1980s Nangbéto construction. Updated post-rehabilitation monitoring protocols have not been publicly documented. The Mono River variability (event-driven, seasonal, and multi-year) is described in peer-reviewed literature using CEB source data.
Language and Usability
5% of total score
CEB and Togolese government documentation is in French. French is widely understood internationally and provides reasonable accessibility for Francophone West Africa and European researchers. No English-language national data portal for reservoir data exists.
Evaluator notes
Togo's RTI score is constrained primarily by the joint-authority nature of its only significant reservoir. The Nangbéto Dam is a binational facility operated by CEB (Communauté Électrique du Bénin), a joint Togo-Benin entity. CEB publishes some operational information but data releases are irregular, non-standardised, and not designed for public transparency — they serve as institutional communications rather than open data. The Mono River system's high hydrological variability has historically caused multi-month supply interruptions at Nangbéto, demonstrating the importance of reservoir monitoring for the country's electricity security. Despite the recently completed CFA 25.5 billion rehabilitation (which restored full 65 MW capacity), no improvement in public data transparency has been observed. The planned Adjarala Dam downstream, if built, would create a second reservoir requiring monitoring, but no construction timeline has been confirmed as of 2026.
Evaluated by Jaime Delgado · 2026-09-15 · Methodology v1.3.0