https://data.gov.ie/feeds/custom.atom?openness_score=3&theme-primary=Energydata.gov.ie - Custom query2024-03-28T08:34:18.813418+00:00defaultpython-feedgenRecently created or updated datasets on data.gov.ie. Custom query: ''https://data.gov.ie/dataset/b4bf6667-58c3-44bd-99ed-47222f28bfc0Geothermal Vertical Closed Loop Suitability 1:40,000 Ireland (ROI) ITM2024-02-26T01:51:23.289427+00:00Geological Survey of IrelandGeothermal Vertical Closed Loop Suitability Classification.
Ground source heat energy, sometimes called shallow geothermal energy, can be collected from the ground and boosted with heat pumps. This can yield up to four times as much energy as is used to collect it, giving ‘four for the price of one’ in energy terms. Heat energy can be harnessed, or ‘collected’, using different types of collector systems:
Closed loop collectors are systems where heat is extracted from the ground (or cooling is gained) by pumping a heat exchange fluid through closed pipes within the ground. The pipes can be installed borehole(s) (vertical closed loop) or laid out horizontally (horizontal closed loop).
Open loop ground source heat systems operate by taking heat energy from abstracted groundwater using a heat pump. The volume of groundwater that can be abstracted from a borehole or taken from a spring each day (the ‘yield’) determines the total amount of heat energy available, and therefore the size of heat pump that can be used and the size of building that can be heated.
The ground source heating/cooling suitability maps indicate which type of ground source heat collector is most compatible with the geology below your site. All maps should be assessed together, since whilst some areas may be unsuitable for one type of ground source heat collector system (‘ground source heat pumps’ or GSHPs), the heat energy can be successfully harnessed by a different type of system. The maps show that there is a shallow geothermal solution for heating or cooling for every location in Ireland.
The suitability maps use a suitability rating ranging from 1 (worst) to 5 (best) for each type of heat collector/cooling system. Suitability maps for open loop (domestic/small commercial), open loop (larger commercial/industrial processes) and vertical closed loop systems are available.2021-10-14T20:38:03.656793+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/d1a0c379-c882-43d4-912e-036869c8c256Mean Annual Distribution of Wave Period around Ireland2024-02-26T01:52:47.190247+00:00Marine InstituteEstimated annual average wave period (seconds) created by a Pelamis Wave Model for Accessible Wave Energy Resource Atlas. Wave period values are measured as lower and upper values in seconds as calculated by the Pelamis wave model. Annual average wave period covers an area known as the Irish Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). Data model produced in 2005. The Pelamis Wave Model was an oceanographic model using the Pelamis wave energy converter device. The Accessible Wave Energy Resource Atlas produced to provide data and information on the accessible wave energy resource potential around Ireland. Wave model developed by ESB International (ESBI) as part of the Accessible Wave Energy Atlas Ireland published by the Marine Institute and Sustainable Energy Authority Ireland. Model completed for time period run.2018-12-07T22:14:54.183138+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/306a06e3-6998-4df5-9c9d-dba572c39bf0Belmullet Full Scale Wave Energy Test Site2024-02-26T01:53:43.578949+00:00Marine InstituteThe Full Scale Atlantic Marine Energy Test Site (AMETS) provides 30 minute observational data from two directional waverider buoys known as Belmullet A and Belmullet B observing and measuring wave height, wave direction and wave period. The AMETS buoys are located in the North Atlantic Ocean in waters off the coast of the Erris Peninsula in Co. Mayo at 50m and 100m bathymetry depths. AMETS has been collecting data since 2012. A directional Waverider is a wave motion sensor stabilised platform that can measure the properties of waves including height, direction and period. The AMETS programme has been jointly managed by the Marine Institute and the Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland. Data coverage 100% for when the buoys have been operational. Any data gaps in time period indicate the buoy(s) have been non-operational and have been under maintenance.2018-12-07T22:17:18.889693+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/e64a5259-4045-4e0c-9486-3dc7deb99751OREDP SEA Tidal Resource Shoreline 5Km2024-02-26T01:53:59.711270+00:00Department of Communications, Climate Action & EnvironmentDepartment of Communications, Climate Action & Environment commissioned Offshore Renewable Energy Development Plan Strategic Environmental Assessment measurement of the tidal resource potential up to 5km from the shoreline.2018-12-07T22:18:07.368011+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/6afd8227-d685-4c37-b8a7-f249faaec218Galway Bay 1/4 Scale Wave Energy Test Site2024-02-26T01:54:23.496282+00:00Marine InstituteDesignated wave energy test site for supporting ocean energy device research and development at 1/4 scale. The Galway Bay 1/4 scale wave energy test site is located 1.5km from Spiddal pier within inner Galway Bay on the west coast of Ireland. Data has been collected in Galway Bay since 2008. Data is collected from current meter sensors, wave device sensors and water temperature sensors. Data has been collected to support ocean energy research technological innovation and development. Data has been collected by the Marine Institute in association with SmartBay Ireland. Data has been incomplete given periods of outage of wave energy sensors. Data has been complete and quality controlled for period devices are observing and measuring in the marine environment.2018-12-07T22:19:16.579656+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/b14f0057-591f-4a80-8641-332158668aacOREDP SEA Tidal Resource Shoreline 5-10Km2024-02-26T01:54:27.008614+00:00Department of Communications, Climate Action & EnvironmentDepartment of Communications, Climate Action & Environment commissioned Offshore Renewable Energy Development Plan Strategic Environmental Assessment measurement of the tidal resource potential between 5-10 km from the shoreline.2018-12-07T22:19:20.810055+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/774e50c5-7942-4f17-9d85-11893dd114d5Mean Technical Energy Resource (Pelamis) GWhe/km2024-02-26T01:54:28.872740+00:00Marine InstituteThis dataset represents an initial comparison between several years of hourly wave forecasts (using WAM) on a grid of points located off the Irish coast with corresponding records from a number of buoys installed pre 2005. Based on the level of agreement found the wave forecasts were then modified slightly and used to estimate the mean annual and seasonal (Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter) technical energy resource in GigaWatt hours around Ireland for the Accessible Wave Energy Resource Atlas. The Mean Technical Energy Resource (Pelamis) values are measured as lower and upper values in GWhe/km as calculated by the Pelamis wave model. Mean Technical Energy covers an area known as the Irish Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). Data model produced in 2005. The Pelamis Wave Model was an oceanographic model using the Pelamis wave energy converter device. The Accessible Wave Energy Resource Atlas was produced to provide data and information on the accessible wave energy resource potential around Ireland. Wave model developed by ESB International (ESBI) as part of the Accessible Wave Energy Atlas Ireland published by the Marine Institute and Sustainable Energy Authority Ireland. Model completed for time period run.2018-12-07T22:19:24.798547+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/c3b917a3-2596-4916-8def-34ce5b493e77Geothermal Open Loop Domestic Suitability 1:100,000 Ireland (ROI) ITM2024-02-26T01:55:12.648041+00:00Geological Survey of IrelandGeothermal Open Loop Domestic Suitability Classification.
Ground source heat energy, sometimes called shallow geothermal energy, can be collected from the ground and boosted with heat pumps. This can yield up to four times as much energy as is used to collect it, giving ‘four for the price of one’ in energy terms. Heat energy can be harnessed, or ‘collected’, using different types of collector systems:
Closed loop collectors are systems where heat is extracted from the ground (or cooling is gained) by pumping a heat exchange fluid through closed pipes within the ground. The pipes can be installed borehole(s) (vertical closed loop) or laid out horizontally (horizontal closed loop).
Open loop ground source heat systems operate by taking heat energy from abstracted groundwater using a heat pump. The volume of groundwater that can be abstracted from a borehole or taken from a spring each day (the ‘yield’) determines the total amount of heat energy available, and therefore the size of heat pump that can be used and the size of building that can be heated.
The ground source heating/cooling suitability maps indicate which type of ground source heat collector is most compatible with the geology below your site. All maps should be assessed together, since whilst some areas may be unsuitable for one type of ground source heat collector system (‘ground source heat pumps’ or GSHPs), the heat energy can be successfully harnessed by a different type of system. The maps show that there is a shallow geothermal solution for heating or cooling for every location in Ireland.
The suitability maps use a suitability rating ranging from 1 (worst) to 5 (best) for each type of heat collector/cooling system. Suitability maps for open loop (domestic/small commercial), open loop (larger commercial/industrial processes) and vertical closed loop systems are available.2021-10-14T20:40:40.270428+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/4be82d0a-5978-4cf4-b453-22cb7e7135eaRiver & Bathing Water Sample Points DLR2024-02-29T05:10:35.981309+00:00DLR GIS OfficerLocations of water quality sampling points for bathing water and river water within Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown. The beaches and bathing areas in Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown are popular swimming spots. Bathing water is tested at nine locations and river water quality is tested at 42 locations. For annual water quality ratings and historic water quality results see www.beaches.ie
This file contain the name of each location, ITM and IG coordinates. 2022-09-21T18:42:04.483516+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/6cbabf95-6b81-48e7-a2b8-b2345bbe80a1Public Bin Locations DCC2024-03-02T05:30:43.408434+00:00Dublin City CouncilCSV & GeoJSON datasets of DCC's public bin locations.2022-09-21T18:45:38.618543+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/27ddb287-ce1d-4e23-8778-ad8925a08aa3Salt Bin Locations SDCC2024-03-09T06:10:24.490198+00:00South Dublin County Council<div>Road Maintenance provide salt bins at strategic locations through the County. Find your nearest salt bin or drop here. </div>2024-03-09T06:10:24.490189+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/9b27fdc3-c483-46bb-ba0e-c3ddc6b0b664Public EV Charging Points SDCC2024-03-10T06:20:49.850065+00:00South Dublin County Council<span style='font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Segoe UI",sans-serif; color:#323130;'>The
list refers only to Chargers available to the public. Certain restrictions may
apply as some equipment may be on private property.</span>2022-09-21T18:50:55.535847+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/a1968356-bf75-4e11-9796-3b9551fc97d0Polling Station Locations 2024 SDCC2024-03-10T06:20:51.479524+00:00South Dublin County CouncilPolling Station Locations 20242024-02-16T03:21:45.213364+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/b0dad2d0-b5f0-4645-9382-2e0469144b6dGlass Recycling DCC2024-03-13T06:51:01.765305+00:00Data and Analytics UnitGlass Packaging Recycling from the public bring bank network. Weights are in Tonnes2022-09-21T18:53:34.951418+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/8ac4fcf2-7e40-4403-b2d7-4ecc8120f9e2Derelict Sites Register SDCC2024-03-16T07:00:59.574017+00:00South Dublin County Council<p>A Derelict Site is defined in the Act as any land which detracts, or is likely to detract, to a material degree from the amenity, character or appearance of land in the neighbourhood of the land in question because of -<br />(a) The existence of structures which are in a ruinous, derelict or dangerous condition<br />(b) The neglected, unsightly or objectionable condition of the land or any structures on the land<br />(c) The presence of litter, rubbish, debris or waste on the land.</p><p>The Act places a duty on every owner and occupier of land to take all reasonable steps to ensure that the land does not become or continue to be a derelict site.<br /></p><p>Under the Act, the Council has the authority to:<br />(a) Serve a Notice on the owner/occupier specifying works to be carried out to prevent or abate dereliction<br />(b) Acquire by agreement or compulsorily any derelict site situated within its administrative area<br />(c) Impose an annual levy on any derelict site, which is considered to be urban land, within its administrative area which stands entered on the Derelict Sites Register on the 1st January of that year. From January 2020, the levy shall be 7% of the market value of the land/site.</p><p>To report a derelict site, contact the Enforcement and Licensing Section by email at info@sdublincoco.ie or by telephone at 01 4149000.</p>2023-09-09T07:01:07.045101+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/84c75fba-0808-418b-b6aa-1eae14436d4bBridges Data FCC2024-03-21T07:40:46.683724+00:00Fingal County CouncilInteractive map and listings of Bridges within Fingal County Council2022-09-21T18:48:08.733270+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/a26f3ea3-94b7-4461-a4e1-4d457fbf4426Static Reduce Speed VAS Signs FCC2024-03-21T07:40:55.889916+00:00Fingal County CouncilListing of Static Reduce Speed VAS signs in the Administrative area of Fingal County Council, these are in use to make drivers aware of their speed and no data is collected from these its for information purpose of locations see disclaimer below.<div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>" Disclaimer - Please note that this data set is for citizen to be aware of the Location of Static VAS Sings and no data is available on the stats. This is for information purposes only and imparting information of Locations "<br /></div>2022-09-21T18:51:39.168705+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/3d2c563e-7c51-4d7a-b59c-4fcf5d258c54EV Charging Location Points Public FCC2024-03-26T08:10:32.077081+00:00Fingal County Council<p><span style='font-size:11.5pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif; color:#4C4C4C; background:white;'>Electric Vehicle charging
facilities owned by Fingal County Council. </span></p>
<p><span style='font-size:11.5pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif; color:#4C4C4C; background:white;'>This data set list
refers only to chargers available to the public which are owned and managed by
Fingal County Council. Fingal Fleet have Electrical Points and Chargers in all the Fingal County Council Buildings and Depots</span></p>
<p><span style='font-size:11.5pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif; color:#4C4C4C; background:white;'>Further charging points
are run by private companies and can see the link below. There are more an more Electric Charging points been added to the network by ESB
Networks Ireland and other network providers. E.S.B own and maintain around 1350 public points approx. See link below</span><span style='font-size:13.5pt; font-family:"Arial",sans-serif; color:#232323; background:white;'> </span></p>
<p><span style='font-size:11.5pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif; color:#4C4C4C; background:white;'><span> </span>www.esb.ie/ecars and follow the link to see
nationwide points</span></p>2022-12-14T17:21:16.100764+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/afd10def-ba81-4fa9-8df6-8195ca2f4355Public Bins Locations MappingFCC2024-03-28T08:30:56.180390+00:00Fingal County CouncilPublic Litter Bins within Fingal County Council shown on a map with each bin been a point which shows bin type and location.2024-03-26T08:11:02.401750+00:00https://data.gov.ie/dataset/e1fb58f1-4c88-487e-ae76-b6be4c97ad8ePublic Bins Locations Dataset FCC2024-03-28T08:31:09.570960+00:00Fingal County CouncilPublic Litter Bins within Fingal County Council shown on a map with each bin been a point which shows bin type and location.2024-03-26T08:11:16.353140+00:00