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National Parks and Wildlife Service and Intel launch bog restoration project to increase water storage by millions of litres

  • Collaboration aims to restore 60 hectares of blanket bog to increase water storage levels in areas that supply much of the Greater Dublin region
  • Project also aims to protect biodiversity and improve carbon storage
  • Public-private project collaboration is one of the first of its kind in Ireland

On 20 May, 2021, the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) and Intel Corporation launched a blanket bog restoration project in the Wicklow Mountains National Park (WMNP). The restoration project, taking place over the coming months, will see 60 hectares of drained bog re-wetted to increase water storage levels in part of the River Liffey headwaters by an expected 50-90 million litres. These headwaters supply the Poulaphouca (Blessington) reservoir, a drinking water source for the Greater Dublin Area. The bog restoration will also protect biodiversity, improve carbon storage, and is likely to improve water quality.

This is the first project funded in Europe as part of Intel’s 2030 RISE goal (responsible, inclusive, sustainable, and enabled) to achieve net positive water. By funding collaborative projects to support local watersheds, Intel is committed to restoring water in quantities greater than the water it consumes, closing the gap in its water balance. This public-private project collaboration is one of the first of its kind in Ireland for water restoration and the protection of biodiversity.

There is an estimated 4,000 hectares of degraded blanket bog in the National Park. Degraded blanket bog is caused by a range of land use activities including drainage. It is much more susceptible to damage from extreme weather events such as intense rainfall and extended periods of drought, which are projected to occur more frequently with climate change.

The first phase of this project will involve:

  • Baseline studies, including scoping surveys of potential sites for management in the WMNP and ecohydrological characterisation of selected pilot sites and restoration planning design.
  • Restoration works, principally re-wetting the bog through drain blocking to raise the lowered water levels. This will provide conditions to enable recovery of the main peat-forming species, especially the Sphagnum mosses.
  • Pre- and post-restoration monitoring to quantify the project’s impact on vegetation, carbon storage, water levels and any improved water storage capacity in study sites.

 

Welcoming the agreement, the Minister for Heritage and Electoral Reform Malcolm Noonan TD said:

Restoring our degraded bogs is central to revitalising nature and improving resilience to climate change. These beautiful habitats are vitally important for a range of species and also provide important carbon stores and sinks. National Biodiversity Week is an appropriate time to welcome Intel’s support for the NPWS objective of protecting biodiversity in the Wicklow Mountains National Park.

The biodiversity emergency demands an emergency response. We need all sectors of society to take science-led action for biodiversity, and this includes the private sector. I hope that this innovative pilot project will encourage a broader movement of financing and strategic engagement to support the achievement of Ireland’s biodiversity objectives.

Companies like Intel rely on natural resources like water and the ecosystems that provide those resources in order to manufacture their products. It’s vital that private sector organisations address the protection of the natural assets that they depend on in the same way as other types of risk. I welcome the leadership that Intel is showing and I look forward to seeing this pilot project progress.

Eamonn Sinnott, the General Manager of Intel Ireland added:

We are very proud to be announcing this restoration project in partnership with the National Parks and Wildlife Service. The project not only provides an important opportunity to increase water storage levels but also restores valuable ecosystems that are an integral part of our biodiverse landscapes.

Water is essential to our manufacturing process. Over the last decades, our sustainable water management efforts here in Ireland have enabled us to conserve over 9 billion litres of water and return approximately 87% of our water back to our communities. Now, we are broadening our focus to achieve net positive water by 2030 through onsite conservation and restoring more than 100% of our water consumption and I am delighted to see part of that effort happening here in Ireland, in the Wicklow Mountains National Park.

Industry has an important role to play in driving environmental sustainability and I hope that this project collaboration will lead the way for many others like it.

The project, to be overseen by the NPWS, is due to commence in the summer of 2021. Indicative results and data from the project should be available in 2022.

To date, Intel has funded 32 other water restoration projects globally that benefit water basins that support Arizona, California, New Mexico, Oregon, and Texas in the United States, as well as in India and Costa Rica. This project in Ireland brings the number of projects to 33.

Ends

Notes to editor

Pictures attached: At today’s launch in the Wicklow Mountains. Featuring Malcolm Noonan, Minister of State for Heritage and Electoral Reform and Lisa Harlow, Stakeholder Relations Manager, Intel Ireland.

  • Shane Regan, an NPWS ecohydrologist working on the project, is available for media interviews about the project. To organise a media interview please contact the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage’s press office.
  • This project will involve baseline and post restoration vegetation; carbon and hydrological studies; and restoration of 60 hectares of drained bog within the Liffeyhead blanket bog. Liffeyhead Bog, a deep upland blanket bog system, is considered to be the best remaining area of blanket bog in eastern Ireland. It supports important flora and fauna and is one of the few surviving systems of bog pools in the Wicklow Mountains.
  • Though this project is only on 60 hectares of drained upland blanket bog, part of the project’s significance is the recording of scientific data on water, carbon and vegetation - both before and after drain blocking. This will not only help to gauge the efficacy of proposed restoration works but help to improve knowledge on appropriate methods for rewetting similarly degraded bogs within the WMNP and in other Irish uplands.
  • Restoration at the site will mainly involve rewetting by drain blocking to raise the lowered water levels. This enables recovery of the main peat-forming species, especially the Sphagnum mosses, which require consistently high bog water levels. This will re-start peat formation, carbon capture and water retention by the bog. It will also improve the protection of the deep store of carbon already held within the peat mass. It is also hoped that water quality in streams draining the pilot site will improve when vegetation recovers on exposed peat.
  • The project is estimated to increase natural water storage by an expected 50-90 million litres of water (enough water to supply Limerick City for a day). The water restoration volumes will be estimated by monitoring water levels and run-off, using instrumentation at selected restoration site(s), before and after restoration by NPWS and hydrological contract support staff.
  • It’s estimated that 4,000 of the 60,000 hectares of the WMNP is degraded blanket bog, suffering from drainage and desiccation (removal of moisture). Degradation has been principally caused by drainage, peat extraction, forestry operations, uncontrolled fires, overgrazing and recreational use. Damaged blanket bogs are also considerably more susceptible to the effects of extreme weather events such as intense rainfall and extended periods of drought. These are projected to occur more frequently with climate change.
  • Where restoration of drained upland bogs is deemed feasible, there are potentially multiple environmental and associated societal gains through positive effects on biodiversity, soil, water, landscape and other features. The resilience of bogs to climate change is also improved through rewetting. There has been and continues to be significant investment in upland peatland restoration work in the UK (see International Union for Conservation of Nature - UK Peatland Programme) involving partnership approaches between water utilities, NGOs, Government bodies, companies and other organisations.
  • Most of the WMNP is designated as a Special Area of Conservation (SAC) and Special Protection Area (SPA) under the EU Habitats and Birds Directives. The SAC and SPA supports several terrestrial and aquatic habitats of international importance and many rare or threatened plant and animal species. Blanket bog is a globally rare habitat and listed as a priority habitat in the Habitats Directive. Ireland holds a significant area of the world’s blanket bog resource.
  • The Wicklow Mountains are drained by several major rivers including the Liffey, Dargle, Dodder, Slaney and Avonmore. The SAC, SPA and National Park blanket bog systems contain the river headwaters supplying the extensive Poulaphouca (Blessington) Reservoir to the west and the Vartry Reservoir to the east - key sources of drinking water for the Dublin and areas of the Greater Dublin region.