18 March 2021
Go to release: Ireland's UN SDGs 2019 - Report on Indicators for Goal 6 Clean Water and Sanitation
The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has today (18 March 2021) published ‘Ireland's UN SDGs 2019 - Report on Indicators for Goal 6 Clean Water and Sanitation’. This report is the sixth in a series of CSO publications which will monitor how Ireland is progressing towards meeting its targets under the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Previous reports published in the UN SDG series were ‘Goal 1 No Poverty’; ‘Goal 2 Zero Hunger’; ‘Goal 3 Good Health and Well-Being’, ‘Goal 4 Quality Education’ and ‘Goal 5 Gender Equality’.
Commenting on the publication, Kevin McCormack, Senior Statistician, said:
“Goal 6 Clean Water and Sanitation reports data for Ireland in 11 Indicators divided into three main chapters: Clean and Safe Water, Water Management and Water Policies. Data is disaggregated in categories such as gender, age group, vulnerable groups and geographical location, where possible. The SDGs and their associated indicators are, by design, wide-ranging in their coverage. As a result, the Irish data is provided from a number of sources in addition to Government Departments, official organisations, and international organisations such as the UN. This publication was developed in collaboration with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)."
The 17 UN SDGs are a set of global development targets adopted by the United Nations (UN) member countries in September 2015 to achieve a better and more sustainable future for all. The UN SDGs are driving the global development agenda towards 2030 (Agenda 2030). They address global challenges including those related to poverty, inequality, climate change, environmental degradation, peace and justice. The CSO has a central role in the identification, management, and presentation of the data needed to meet the requirements of the UN SDG Indicators.
Commenting further on the publication, Kevin McCormack, Senior Statistician, said:
“According to the 2016 Census, 99.9% of Irish households had a piped water supply and access to a sewerage facility. Public mains connection accounted for 77% of household supply, group water schemes represented 8%, private water schemes accounted for 10% of households with the remaining 4% not stated.
The EPA report 'Urban Waste Water Treatment in 2019' states that large urban areas collectively generate 92% of Ireland’s urban waste water. More than half of all the urban waste water collected in Ireland’s public sewers is generated in 19 areas that failed to meet mandatory EU standards in 2019. The number of areas that failed the standards has decreased however from 28 to 19 in the last two years. The main factor in Ireland’s poor compliance overall is the failure at Ringsend in Dublin, which treats almost half of the country’s urban waste water.
By mid-2020, untreated waste water (raw sewage) was still being released into our waters every day from 35 towns and villages. Most waste water is treated at plants designed to provide secondary treatment (67.2%) or secondary treatment with nutrient removal (30.4%). A small amount (1%) is conveyed to plants that provide a more basic form of treatment, known as primary treatment. The remainder (1.4%) is collected and discharged directly into the water environment without any treatment.
Good ambient water quality (‘Good’ or ‘High’ status based on the 2013-2018 Water Framework Directive assessment) was recorded in 59% of water bodies in Ireland. The proportion of rivers with good ambient water quality was 53%, while 50% of lakes and 92% of ground water bodies had a good ambient water quality. The main problem damaging our waters is the presence of too many nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen which come primarily from agriculture and waste water.
In 2019, €2.55 million was spent on water and sanitation for developing countries from Ireland’s Official Development Assistance (ODA) budget of €705.6 million, almost 1% of Ireland's total ODA budget.”
The CSO, Ordnance Survey Ireland (OSi) and Environment Systems Research Institute (Esri-Ireland) established a project team in April 2017 to engage with a combined UN Statistics Division (UNSD)/Esri research exercise, with a goal to develop and deploy a new approach for monitoring the UN SDG Indicators, using geographic information systems. The result of this exercise is an SDG website (Ireland's SDGs Data Hub, https://irelandsdg.geohive.ie/), hosted on OSi's Geohive platform, which is Ireland’s Central Portal for all SDGs and contains indicators data on the 17 UN SDGs for Ireland. All the indicators in this publication will be loaded onto the Geohive.
Kevin McCormack (+353) 21 453 5603 or Mary Smyth (+353) 21 453 5309
or email SDG@cso.ie
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