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United Nations Environment Programme A Partner In The Global Environment Facility Presentation prepared by the POPs Uni

United Nations Environment Programme A Partner In The Global Environment Facility Presentation prepared by the POPs Unit of UNEP Division of GEF Coordination November 2006. The Global Environment Facility.

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United Nations Environment Programme A Partner In The Global Environment Facility Presentation prepared by the POPs Uni

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  1. United Nations Environment Programme A Partner In The Global Environment Facility Presentation prepared by the POPs Unit of UNEP Division of GEF Coordination November 2006

  2. The Global Environment Facility Funding the incremental costs of actions by developing countries and っCountries with Economies in Transition that provideglobal environmental benefits in six focal areas: • Biological Diversity • Climate Change • International Waters • Protection of the Ozone Layer • Land Degradation • Persistent Organic Pollutants • Implementing Agencies: UNEP, UNDP, World Bank

  3. The Global Environment Facility • Implementing Agencies (IAs) : • Play key roles in preparation and in managing GEF projects on the ground. • Through them, the GEF has quickly amassed a diverse project portfolio serving the developing world, Eastern Europe, and the Russian Federation - more than 140 countries altogether. Moreover, GEF teamwork by these partners reinforces their individual efforts to mainstream or incorporate global environment concerns into all of their policies and programs.

  4. The Global Environment Facility • Executing Agencies (EAs): • contribute to the management and • execution of GEF Projects. • Executing Agencies : • Asian Dev. Bank, African Dev. Bank, Inter-American Dev. • Bank, European Bank for Reconstruction & Development, • Food & Agriculture Organization, UNIDO, • Int. Fund for Agricultural Development, (more expected…..)

  5. UNEP Role in GEF • Catalyzing development of scientific and technicalanalysis and advancement of environmental management in GEF activities • Guidance on relating GEF activities to environmental assessments, policy frameworks and plans, and to environmental agreements • Secretariat support to Scientific & Technical Advisory Panel (STAP)

  6. UNEP - GEF Projects during GEF-4 for the Persistent Organic Pollutants focal area: Mission: The GEF’s overall objective in the POPs focal area is to assist countries to reduce and eliminate releases of POPs in order to protect human health and the environment

  7. UNEP - GEF Projects during GEF-4 for the Persistent Organic Pollutants focal area: POPs: • Aldrin • Chlordane • DDT • Dieldrin • Endrin • Heptachlor • Hexachlorobenzene • Mirex • Toxaphene • PCB’s, Dioxins, Furans

  8. UNEP - GEF Projects during GEF-4 for the Persistent Organic Pollutants focal area: Funding Priorities & Types of Projects (valid for all GEF agencies): Strategic objective 1 (NIP program and Dissemination of best practices): + Enabling activities and some knowledge management projects focused on disseminating practices. Strategic objective 2 (Strengthening capacity for NIP implementation): + Projects oriented towards technical assistance and capacity building, with some limited investment included.

  9. UNEP - GEF Projects during GEF-4 for the Persistent Organic Pollutants focal area: Funding Priorities & Types of Projects (valid for all GEF Agencies): Strategic objective 3 (Partnering in Investments for NIP implementation): + Projects will be oriented largely towards investments, with some technical assistance and capacity building. Strategic objective 4 (Partnering in the demonstration of feasible, innovative technologies and practices for POPs reduction): + Investment projects including limited capacity building and technical assistance. Emphasis on replication and dissemination of project outcomes.

  10. UNEP - GEF Projects during GEF-4 for the Persistent Organic Pollutants focal area: Summary: Strategic objectives: 1) Continuation of the GEF National Implementation Plan (NIP) Program; 2) Strengthening national capacities for NIP implementation; 3) Partnering in investments needed for NIP implementation to achieve impacts in POPs reduction; and 4) Partnering in the demonstration of feasible, innovative technologies and practices for POPs reduction.

  11. UNEP - GEF Projects during GEF-4 for the Persistent Organic Pollutants focal area: General: - Activities under GEF-4 will shift from preparation to implementation; - Strong emphasis will be placed on the sustainability of GEF interventions, focusing especially on countries whose policies and actions demonstrate their firm intention to follow-through on their commitment to the Convention; - It is suggested that UNEP will be ‘Leading Agency’ for chemicals related issues.

  12. Over 140 countries participate already in UNEP GEF Project Activities

  13. UNEP’s Portfolio of GEF-3 Activities:2002 - 2006 • Focal Area GEF Total • ($m) ($m) • Biodiversity 78.7 158.0 • Biosafety 33.7 49.3 • Climate Change 46.4 77.2 • International Waters 88.8 175.7 • Land Degradation 37.6 91.1 • Ozone 12.7 11.8 • POPs 38.3 55.9 • Multifocal 20.3 42.7 • Total 356.4 661.8

  14. From NIPs to Projects Accessing the GEF and other donors

  15. The project cycle Country situation Measure Impact NIP Implementation Projects Priorities Action Plans

  16. Basis of project proposals • Action Plans within the NIP • GEF OP14 (POPs) • Technical assistance guidance from COPs to GEF Eligibility for implementation projects • Party • NIP as foundation • Activities BEYOND the NIP

  17. Financing the action plans • Issues need to be sustainable within government • The GEF is NEVER the only source of funding • The GEF only finances the incremental costs • All actions need to be COST-EFFECTIVE

  18. Other sources of funding • Bilateral • Link NIP actions to development and assistance strategies ‘Why should we fund this project if you haven’t shown it as a priority in the planning?’ • National • Link Stockholm objectives to other policies & strategies • incorporate Stockholm objectives into normal Government business • Industry initiatives & Public-Private Partnerships • Seeking private capital to increase total investments

  19. Article 13: Incremental costs • The EXTRA costs associated with doing things the way the Convention requires, rather than the way you are doing them • Need to know current costs in order to calculate • Need to be able to predict new costs • Calculate a ‘unit abatement cost’ • Incremental costs provide • Local benefits • Global benefits The GEF only funds this part

  20. GEF –Project types • Planning • ENABLING ACTIVITIES • Capacity building • Demonstration activities • Implementation projects • R&D and ‘normative’ projects • Targeted research MSPs & FSPs

  21. GEF projects • MSP = Medium Sized Projects (1-3 years) • Up to US$ 1 Million from GEF • No limit to total budget • FSP = Full Size Projects (2-5 years) • GEF contribution > US$ 1 Million • No limit to total budget • BOTH require at least 50% co-financing

  22. GEF Project preparation grants • PDF-A • Up to US$50,000 for project preparation • Usually 3 – 6 months • Stakeholder and activity planning • PDF-B • Up to US$ 700,000 • Usually 6 – 12 (18) months • Feasibility study • Outputs = Project documents

  23. GEF project preparation PDF-A Medium Size Project PDF-B Full Size Project

  24. Proposals and submissions • Access to GEF via ‘GEF agencies’ • World Bank • UNDP • UNEP • UNIDO • FAO • Regional Development Banks Agencies to help you prepare country driven proposals

  25. Project Implementation • GEF Agencies IMPLEMENT • GEF Agencies, Regional and national institutions EXECUTE "Executing Agencies" contribute to the management and execution of GEF Projects. GEF UNEP/GEF implements (direct relation with GEF) UNEP technical branch/ reg- national institution executes National institutional counterparts

  26. GEF: opportunities • About US $ 3 billion for all Focal Areas in GEF IV • US$ 300 million allocation for POPs in GEF IV for all Agencies • Potential for major & costly projects beyond capacity of other individual grant donors • Availability of grants for project development (PDF-A, PDF-B) • Country driven • Linked to needs identified in the NIP

  27. GEF: things to be aware of • Lengthy project cycle • 2-4 years from initial concept to start of a Full-Size Project • Incremental cost calculations • GEF funds the ‘global element of new and additional costs’ • Concentration on new and innovative rather than ‘investment’ • Council & CoP priorities • Cofinancing difficulties & donor fatigue • Proposed 1:1 ratio if < $5m from GEF, 1:5 if > $5m from GEF • How are chemicals prioritised on the national level ? • Resource Allocation Framework (RAF; not for POPs yet) • Allocations based on country potential to generate global benefits + country performance

  28. Contacts The Director Division of GEF Co-ordination The United Nations Environment Programme P.O. Box 30552, Nairobi, Kenya Jan Betlem Task Manager POPs UNEP Division of GEF Coordination Tel.: +254 20 762 4607 jan.betlem@unep.org www.THEGEF.org www.unep.org/gef gefinfo@unep.org

  29. THE UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME A Partner In The Global Environment Facility

  30. The United Nations Environment Programme A Partner In The Global Environment Facility PROJECT IDENTIFICATION

  31. GEF Filters • The Eligibility Test – Conventions • Eligibility under Stockholm Convention (for POPs related issues) • The Global Significance Test (Impact) • The National Priority Test • The Co-Funding Requirement • The Portfolio Test: Eligibility under GEF Operational Programme (for POPs: OP 14) • The Strategic Objectives Test: GEF IV Strategic Objectives for POPs Focal Area

  32. UNEP - GEF Projects during GEF-4 for the Persistent Organic Pollutants focal area: Summary: Strategic objectives: 1) Continuation of the GEF National Implementation Plan (NIP) Program; 2) Strengthening national capacities for NIP implementation; 3) Partnering in investments needed for NIP implementation to achieve impacts in POPs reduction; and 4) Partnering in the demonstration of feasible, innovative technologies and practices for POPs reduction.

  33. Why select UNEP as IA ? • Because you trust UNEP to be a partner which brings an added value to your project • The project fits within the mandate of UNEP for GEF 4 • UNEP is (proposed as) GEF Lead Agency for the specific topic (for example for ‘chemicals issues’) • Because UNEP is one of the three Implementing Agencies and has huge experience with GEF procedures.

  34. UNEP GEF--Criteria at submission level within UNEP (Assessment of project through DROC) • Main objective--> expected global impact • Indicators to monitor project success? • What baseline of data -- from where? • What method or approach? • Innovative ? Guiding ? Setting standards ? • Basic foundation on which project is based? • If policy changes, how? • How is the project planning to promote country-drivenness? • stakeholders – stakeholder analysis • If demonstration or pilot, criteria for selection? • Cost effective? • Sustainability? • Replicability? • Budget allocations for these?

  35. remember….. • Good proposals always get funding….

  36. remember….. • Good proposals always get funding…. • on condition that there is political or commercial interest in the subject.

  37. remember….. • Good proposals always get funding…. • on condition that there is political or commercial interest in the subject. • Gaining political support is the key to access funding.

  38. remember….. • Good proposals always get funding…. • on condition that there is political or commercial interest in the subject. • Gaining political support is the key to access funding. • Politicians and commercial companies are sensitive for publicity….

  39. remember….. • Good proposals always get funding…. • on condition that there is political or commercial interest in the subject. • Gaining political support is the key to access funding. • Politicians and commercial companies are sensitive for publicity…. • so increased publicity on the subject will eventually lead to increased funding.

  40. Good examples of ‘GEF-able’ initiatives • Africa Stockpiles Program aiming at the disposal of with POPs contaminated pesticides wastes in Africa, awareness raising, prevention. (regional; about 50 countries) >> IA: Worldbank >> EA: FAO & others

  41. Good examples of ‘GEF-able’ initiatives • DDT related regional projects aiming at reduced application of DDT for malaria control (projects in Central America -8 countries-, Africa-3 countries-, North Africa & Middle East -8 countries-, South East Asia & Pacific -10 countries-) >> IA: UNEP >> EA: WHO & others

  42. Good examples of ‘GEF-able’ initiatives • Demonstration of alternative approaches in Termite management (global; 6 countries) >> IA: UNEP >> EA: FAO & others

  43. Good examples of ‘GEF-able’ initiatives • Regional PCB management in West Africa (regional; 4 countries) >> IA: UNEP ? >> EA: UNIDO ? UNDP ?

  44. And how to start…? • www.thegef.org

  45. And how to start…? • www.thegef.org • /operational_policies/eligibility_criteria

  46. And how to start…? • www.thegef.org • /operational_policies/eligibility_criteria • view information on submitting projects

  47. And how to start…? • www.thegef.org • /operational_policies/eligibility_criteria • view information on submitting projects • Project Identification Form (PIF)

  48. Project Identification Form • questions asked: • Country eligibility • GEF Focal Area (POPs) • GEF-4 Strategic Objectives • Fit with Focal Area Strategy • Project Objective • Global environmental benefits expected

  49. Project Identification Form • questions asked about Financing Plan: • Co-funding • Contribution from involved countries • Management budget (international and local recruited staff, training, office equipment, travel)

  50. Thanks for your attention & good luck with project identification & formulation! • We are available to advise you ! • Jan.Betlem@UNEP.org

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