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Districts in Samoa, limited metadata

Direct link to all of Samoa's species occurrences on GBIF records

Link to the Samoa's datasets hosted on GBIF website

direct internet link to Samoa's climate change data portal.

The Tuanaimato Solar Farm comprises of 3 separate Power Producers
Solar Samoa
Green Power
Electric Power Corporation

The Piu Biogas system is located in Falealili District. The Biogas system is in pilot phase where it is co managed by both the Ministry of Natural Resources - Renewable Energy Division and the Community of Piu.
This photo was uploaded by Roland

This short film was produced for The Last Straw - Preventing our Oceans from becoming Dumps side event during the Third International Conference on Small Island Developing States.

Access to resources for practitioners in their battle against invasive species.

The TC Outlook is based on statistical analyses of historical tropical cyclones data that occurred dating back to the 1970’s in similar ENSO-Neutral conditions, the same methodology developed by regional centers, with national Tropical Cyclone Outlooks utilizing national datasets.

For Samoa, (7) analogue (mapped) seasons are identical to the current ENSO conditions. Analogue Seasons (1986/87; 1990/91; 2003/04; 2004/05; 2006/07; 2009/10; 2014/15)

*Data Extracted from pdf*

The results of the National Water and Sanitation Baseline Survey (NWBS) indicate that 91.3% of Samoans have access to a piped water supply.

*Data extracted from National Water and Sanitation Baseline Survey 2015 (refer to pdf for more information)*

For survey purposes piped water quality was assessed based on enumerator’s observations of water quality (namely visual appearance, taste and smell) at the time of the interview. No scientific measurements of water quality were undertaken as part of this survey.

*data extracted from National Water and Sanitation Baseline Survey 2015 pdf*

.cvs format of the excel data on Piped Water Quality 2015

Average water consumption for SWA customers is in the range of 140 to 180 litres per person per day (L/c.d) which is comparable to international norm of between 150 and 200L/c.d. The SWA aims to further reduce per capita water through demand management practices to encourage wise water usage to preserve and conserve water resources.

*Data extracted from the Water and Sanitation Sector Plan 2016 - 2020*