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Investing in water infrastructure to support capacity for new homes and sustainable growth

We are delivering strategic water services across Ireland

Uisce Éireann, Ireland’s public water and wastewater utility, is committed to delivering the infrastructure required to support sustainable growth across Ireland. This includes providing the capacity necessary to enable new housing delivery in line with the national target of 300,000 new homes by 2030, aswell as delivering essential capital investments to improve water and wastewater quality, increase network capacity, ensure environmental compliance  and meet national and EU regulations.

Uisce Éireann’s investment plans—while subject to Government and regulatory approval—are designed to support Local Authorities as they progress their programmes for economic development, community growth and housing delivery, while ensuring Ireland continues to meet vital public health, environmental and statutory compliance commitments.

These plans are grounded in Uisce Éireann’s €10.2 billion 2025–2029 national investment programme, approved by Government in November 2024, together with an additional €2 billion ring‑fenced under the National Development Plan in July 2025.

This extra NDP funding includes €1.7 billion for high‑growth areas and €300 million reserved for rural communities.

Taken together, this €12.2 billion combined investment supports not just housing capacity, but also major CIP works, environmental and regulatory compliance projects, network upgrades, resilience improvements, climate adaptation measures, and performance improvements across water and wastewater services nationwide.

Uisce Éireann workers digging up the road with a shovel in hand

Prioritising capacity delivery

To prioritise capacity delivery, Uisce Éireann has identified 71 strategic settlements across Ireland, based on detailed reviews of the National Planning Framework, Regional Spatial and Economic Strategies, County Development Plans and Local Area Plans. These include cities, Regional Growth Centres, Key Towns and other large settlements with substantial forecasted housing demand.

Two engineers working on site plans

Extensive Stakeholder Engagement has informed our plans

In preparing these plans, Uisce Éireann has met extensively with key stakeholders including developers, housing bodies, the Land Development Agency (LDA), the CCMA Housing Group and the Irish Home Builders Association. Engagement with house builders has been central to using up-to-date pipeline information to inform network planning, as well as exploring how developer-led infrastructure can accelerate delivery.

Ensuring Regulated, Targeted Investment for Ireland’s Housing Needs

All proposed capital investment must be assessed by the Commission for Regulation of Utilities (CRU). Its draft decision is now open for public consultation until early February. An interim approach for 2025–2026 is in place to maintain continuity, and Government funding can only proceed once the CRU issues its final determination. Close coordination across Government, State bodies and utilities ensures investment is focused where housing is most urgently needed.  

All projects must follow strict governance, planning and compliance processes and remain subject to statutory consents and timelines. Final plans will be published once approved later this year. Uisce Éireann will continue to engage with stakeholders and provide updates as plans progress.

Key Investment Highlights

Capital Investment and Capacity Delivery

The plan includes efficiency targets, enhanced reporting, and clear outputs, including:

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340

new or upgraded water and wastewater treatment plants and pumping stations.

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71

strategic areas identified for prioritised investment, including Ireland’s five cities, Regional Growth Centres, Key Towns and other large settlements.

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Compliance

with major EU directives (Drinking Water Directive, Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive, Water Framework Directive) supporting public health and environmental protection.

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900 km

of new or rehabilitated water and sewer networks.

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300,000

new homes by 2030, supported with water services capacity.

Addressing Service Challenges

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Informing the public

Uisce Éireann acts immediately to address service or supply issues, keeping customers, communities and public representatives informed.

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Incidents are investigated

Incidents are investigated thoroughly, with findings feeding into future investment planning.

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Regulated public utility

As a regulated public utility, Uisce Éireann operates within CRU frameworks, Government policies and public expenditure procedures.

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