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← Reservoir Transparency Index H1 2026

H1 2026 Evaluation

Samoa Reservoir Transparency

F3

Opaque — Ranked #123 out of 167 countries

Coverage0

weight 30%

Data Availability0

weight 20%

Technical Accessibility0

weight 15%

Historical Depth0

weight 13%

Update Frequency0

weight 10%

Methodological Transparency0

weight 8%

Language and Usability68

weight 5%

Primary source evaluated

EPC — Electric Power Corporation Samoa / Samoa Water Authority

https://www.epc.ws/
✗ No API

Dimension breakdown

Data Availability

20% of total score

0

Afulilo Reservoir (approx. 10 Mm³, built 1992) is Samoa's primary hydropower and water supply asset, operated by EPC for power generation via the Ta'elefaga Power Station. Samoa Water Authority (SWA) provides urban water supply. EPC and the National Meteorology Division have developed an internal water storage outlook model (COSPPac-supported) for operational planning, but this is an internal decision-support tool — not a public data publication. No downloadable reservoir level dataset, API, or public dashboard has been identified for Afulilo or any other Samoan water body.

Technical Accessibility

15% of total score

0

EPC's website (epc.ws) and SWA's portal (samoawaterauthority.ws / e-water.swa.gov.ws) are publicly accessible, but neither exposes reservoir storage data. The SWA consumer self-service portal relates to billing and service requests. No data API or structured download of Afulilo water levels has been found.

Coverage

30% of total score

0

Methodology v1.3.0 (capacity-weighted). Samoa's only significant surface reservoir is Afulilo (~10 hm³, EPC, 1992), at the lower threshold of qualifying capacity. EPC operates an internal COSPPac-supported water storage outlook model for operational planning but publishes no Afulilo storage data — no dashboard, no monthly bulletin, no machine-readable feed. Covered capacity is 0 hm³. Coverage = round(100 × 0 / 10) = 0.

Historical Depth

13% of total score

0

EPC's internal water storage outlook model incorporates historical rainfall and reservoir data for operational modelling, implying a multi-year internal record exists. However, this dataset is not published. The GEF-Pacific IWRM diagnostic report (2020) references Afulilo's role in Samoa's water system without providing downloadable historical storage time series.

Update Frequency

10% of total score

0

No regular public reporting cadence for Afulilo water levels has been identified. EPC publishes annual reports covering generation statistics. No weekly, monthly, or real-time reservoir bulletins are publicly available from EPC or SWA.

Methodological Transparency

8% of total score

0

The COSPPac-developed water storage outlook model is described in a news article (Samoa Observer) and in regional programme documentation, indicating the methodology involves coupling NMS rainfall forecasts with reservoir operating curves. However, no formal methodology document has been published publicly. The model's parameters, calibration data, and uncertainty bounds are not accessible.

Language and Usability

5% of total score

68

English is a co-official language alongside Samoan, and all EPC and SWA materials are published in English. Websites are fully accessible to international English-speaking audiences. No language barrier applies, though the near-total absence of public reservoir data limits usability regardless.

Evaluator notes

Samoa presents an instructive case of institutional capacity outpacing transparency: EPC operates a sophisticated internal water storage outlook system for Afulilo Reservoir, developed in partnership with the National Meteorology Division and supported by the Australian COSPPac programme. This system enables EPC to plan generation dispatch across wet and dry seasons. Despite this operational sophistication, no component of the system's output is published for public access — not the storage level, not the forecast, not the historical record. The Samoa Water Authority similarly operates a consumer portal (e-water.swa.gov.ws) focused on billing and service requests, with no water resource monitoring data visible. Samoa's RTI score is constrained almost entirely by the gap between internal data capability and public data release. Publishing even a monthly Afulilo level figure — the type of data EPC already produces internally — would substantially raise the country's score. SPC and SPREP regional frameworks (PRIF, Pacific Water) provide a peer context in which peer nations have begun publishing water monitoring data.

Evaluated by Jaime Delgado · 2026-09-15 · Methodology v1.3.0

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