* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Republic of Guatemala
2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference wikipedia , lookup
Effects of global warming on human health wikipedia , lookup
Economics of climate change mitigation wikipedia , lookup
General circulation model wikipedia , lookup
ExxonMobil climate change controversy wikipedia , lookup
Climate change denial wikipedia , lookup
Climatic Research Unit documents wikipedia , lookup
Climate resilience wikipedia , lookup
Politics of global warming wikipedia , lookup
Climate sensitivity wikipedia , lookup
Economics of global warming wikipedia , lookup
Climate change and agriculture wikipedia , lookup
Climate change in Tuvalu wikipedia , lookup
Climate engineering wikipedia , lookup
Citizens' Climate Lobby wikipedia , lookup
Solar radiation management wikipedia , lookup
United Nations Climate Change conference wikipedia , lookup
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change wikipedia , lookup
Attribution of recent climate change wikipedia , lookup
Climate governance wikipedia , lookup
Media coverage of global warming wikipedia , lookup
Climate change adaptation wikipedia , lookup
Climate change in the United States wikipedia , lookup
Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme wikipedia , lookup
Public opinion on global warming wikipedia , lookup
Scientific opinion on climate change wikipedia , lookup
German Climate Action Plan 2050 wikipedia , lookup
Effects of global warming on Australia wikipedia , lookup
Effects of global warming on humans wikipedia , lookup
Climate change and poverty wikipedia , lookup
Surveys of scientists' views on climate change wikipedia , lookup
Republic of Guatemala 28 December 2015 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 1 OF 10 Executive Summary (in one page) Country (or region) Republic of Guatemala Submission Date 28/12/2015 NDA or Focal Point Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources Focal Point: Name : H.E. Mr. Andreas Lehnhoff Position : Minister Email : [email protected] / [email protected] Tel : +502 2423 0500 ext. 1208 and 1230 Full Office address: 20 calle 28-58 Zona 10, Edificio MARN Contact Point (both NDA/FP and delivery partner) Readiness Area/s Delivery Partner: FAO Guatemala Name of contact person: Diego Recalde Position: Representative FAO Guatemala E mail: [email protected] Tel: (502) 22054242 Full Office address: 7a. Av. 12-90 zona 13, Edificio Infoagro, planta alta C.P. 1013, Ciudad de Guatemala, Guatemala 1. Establishing and strengthening National Designated Authorities (NDAs) or Focal Points 2. Strategic frameworks for engagement with the Fund, including the preparation of country programmes 3. Selection of implementing entities or intermediaries, and support for accreditation 4. Initial pipelines of programme and project proposals 5. Information Sharing, experience exchange and learning version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 2 OF 10 Readiness support is required to strengthen the capacities of the Focal Point (FP) to leverage a greater participation of different stakeholders at the national level, including the Private Sector, as well as to support appropriate oversight of Fund activities in the country and to establish a clear and articulated climate change priority investments framework. Request Summary (in 200 words) Through readiness support required for Activity 1 (Strengthening the NDA), the Focal Point will hire short-term consultants for 12 months (one year) to build the capacity of the team within the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, which will be responsible for coordinating with other ministries, as well as with other stakeholders, such as CSOs, PSOs etc., on matters related to the Green Climate Fund (the Fund). Through support required for Activity 2 (Strategic Engagement Framework with the Fund), the FP will hire short-term consultants for 9 months to formulate a Country Programme. Anticipated Duration Estimated total cost 01/04/2016 – 31/03/2017 (12 months) US$ 300,000 SECTION A: RATIONALE FOR REQUEST A.1 Background Ranking among countries with the highest economic risk exposure to three or more natural hazards, Guatemala is a country in which economic activities accounting for 83.3% of the GDP is located in areas at risk. The country also ranks in the top five countries in the world most affected by floods, hurricanes and earthquakes, with 40.8 % of the population exposed to five or more threats simultaneously (WB 2011). Guatemala has developed a base of work on climate change, under the leadership of the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (MARN); to date a Policy on Climate Change has been developed and, adopted by governmental agreement 329-2009, focused on the development of national capacities to tackle climate change, reducing vulnerability and enhancing adaptation to climate change and contribute to the mitigation of GHG emissions. In this context, there is a great potential for Guatemala to engage with the Fund to build on ongoing initiatives from national institutions, as well as from main donors such as IADB and UNDP, to promote a paradigm shift in relevant sectors for both adaptation and mitigation, building on existing synergies or on possibilities to take existing initiatives to scale to reduce the country’s vulnerabilities to climate change. Guatemala has participated in a country-owned initiative aimed at creating a network of developing countries in the region to foster exchange of experiences and good practices in preparation for engagement with the GCF, including formulation of proposals in the future Guatemala has not yet received any readiness support from other sources. The GCF readiness programmes represents an important opportunity to strengthen Guatemala’s FP so that it can, among other developments, convene a multi-stakeholder consultation process to identify priority investments in its relation with the GCF. version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 3 OF 10 A.2 Justification for request Readiness support is required to strengthen the capacities of the FP to leverage a greater participation of different stakeholders at the national level, including the Private Sector (whose participation has been very limited so far) as well as to support appropriate oversight of Fund activities in the country. One of the main challenges for the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources to fulfil its role and responsibilities as a FP is to improve knowledge and information within the Ministry’s staff about operations and procedures of the Fund. In this regard, readiness activities will improve understanding about the operations of the Green Climate Fund and allow the FP to become fully operational in regards to the definition of national GCFrelated priorities and the identification of relevant stakeholders for the implementation of these priorities. Despite the fact that Guatemala has developed several climate change policies and strategic instruments, another gap identified is the lack of capacity to coordinate these different instruments with a view to defining national climate change priorities. In this regard, GCF readiness support will allow Guatemala to establish a clear and articulated climate change priority investments framework that will guide identification and preparation of funding proposals to be presented to the Fund in 2016 and 2017; it will also allow country authorities to identify opportunities to facilitate direct access to GCF resources. The Government of Guatemala has also identified important gaps in the compilation of lessons learned from the previous experiences with the implementation of domestic and international resources targeting climate change-related initiatives. As a starting point to develop a successful and beneficial relation with the GCF, the FP capacities to be strengthened in the framework of the GCF readiness programme will focus not only on improving the capacities for management of potential GCF resources, and the dissemination and socialization of the main financial instruments at country level, such as the National climate change Fund, as potential opportunities for engagement with the GCF, but also will pay close attention to the lessons learned from the implementation of other international resources, as well as efforts carried out by other relevant stakeholders with relevant work on climate change in the country. SECTION B: SCOPE OF WORK B.1 Description of activities (Please provide detailed logical framework as an annex. See Annex I for template). (Please also refer to Annex I) Activity 1: Strengthening the NDA The Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, as FP will hire short-term consultants for 12 months (one year) to build the capacity of the team responsible for coordinating with other ministries, as well as with other stakeholders, such as CSOs, PSOs etc., on matters related to the Fund. More concretely, the consultants will support the FP in undertaking the following tasks: A) Consultants under the leadership of the FP will be responsible for the overall coordination with other Ministries on matters related to the Fund, and more particularly will support the FP in undertaking the following tasks: i) Providing strategic and political advisory support to the FP to strengthen its leading role for the coordination with other Ministries on all Fund-related matters, including to improve efficiency and efficacy of inter-agency processes, systems and procedures to prioritize, manage, implement and report on climate funding, taking in to account the lessons learned from other experiences and programmes financed whit international resources, as well as from efforts carried out by other stakeholders with relevant work on climate change. ii) Strengthening the knowledge, capacities, processes, systems and procedures of the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources to fully comply with its role as FP. iii) Defining the procedures for evaluation and nomination of entities with potential to become accredited by the Fund. iv) Defining the procedures and criteria to evaluate, within the FP, project/programme proposals intended to be presented for consideration by the Fund. In developing these activities, consultants should consider the different instruments of Guatemala’s version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 4 OF 10 climate change Law. B) Additionally, consultants will be responsible for the overall coordination of the capacity building component of this proposal, including the following concrete tasks: v) Organizing a training/diploma course for FP staff on matters related to the Fund. A three months training program, 8 hours per week will be designed and conducted. vi) Developing concept notes for and facilitation of two (2) follow-up and analysis workshops with participating stakeholders. vii) Preparing, publishing and transmitting brochures and other publications, containing operational manuals for national coordination and consultation mechanisms, based on the operative guidelines and norms deemed relevant for the engagement with the GCF; viii) Develop the mechanisms to make available to the public updated information on the Country Programme and the various instruments included in Guatemala’s climate change Law. The FP may also add other activities in accordance with the Fund’s defined resource envelope and scope of work in the Standardized Package for NDA or Focal Point Strengthening, available at: http://www.gcfund.org/fileadmin/00_customer/documents/Accreditation/Scope_of_Work_Package_1_NDA_ Strengthening.pdf. Activity 2: Strategic Engagement Framework with the Fund The FP will hire one short-term consultant (one individual or a firm) for (9) months to formulate a Country Programme. Development of this country programme will include the following activities: i) Identification of Guatemala’s development priorities with regards to the Green Climate Fund, ensuring consistency with the Fund’s Initial Investment Framework and the Fund’s Initial Results Management Framework, as well as with the National Development Plan K’atun 2032; and prioritizing the proposals that are in line with the instruments included in the climate change Law, developed in partnership with other state institutions such as the Ministry of Energy and Mines (MEM), the Ministry of Finance (MINFIN), the Planning and Programming Secretariat of the Presidency (SEGEPLAN) and the Superintendence of Tax Administration (SAT). Among other instruments, the consultant/consultancy should consider: • The National Plan of Action on Mitigation and Adaptation to Climate Change • The National Climate Change Fund, • The Information System on Climate Change -SNICC-. • The four instruments of the mitigation chapter of the referred climate change Law: a) National Plan of energy for production and consumption based on the use of renewable natural resources, the promotion of technologies for energy saving and efficiency and reducing greenhouse gases; b) Regulations to register Projects to remove or reduce emissions of greenhouse gases; c) Proposed regulations for a tax incentives and subsidies program to promote the use of clean energy for public and private transport; and d) The program of offsetting GHG emissions from fossil fuels and program of incentives to motivate voluntary action to reduce or remove emissions. ii) Identification of the main challenges and opportunities of the National Climate Change Fund created under the Climate Change Law, to channel climate finance resources from the Green Climate Fund; iii) Identification of the roles of prospective public and private sector entities that may be accredited by the Fund in implementing Guatemala’s programming priorities with respect to the Fund; iv) Identification of opportunities to engage the private and cooperative sectors, including micro, small and medium-sized enterprises, and leverage their capacity to implement Guatemala’s programming priorities; v) Identification of programmes and projects, including public-private partnerships, consistent with the Fund’s initial investment framework; and vi) Identification of how the GCF can build on ongoing work of other development partners in the country, and deliver its support in a manner complementary to the efforts of other partners in the country. version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 5 OF 10 The FP/NDA may add other elements to the country programme and will also undertake stakeholder consultations in a manner that is consistent with the Fund’s defined resource envelope and scope of work in the Standardized Package for Country Strategic Frameworks, available at: http://www.gcfund.org/fileadmin/00_customer/documents/Accreditation/Scope_of_Work_Package_2_Countr y_Programme.pdf B.2 Expected results - Development of strategic priorities of Guatemala for engagement with the Fund, in accordance and alignment with national plans and including a participatory process including other national stakeholders (involving stakeholders such as other ministries, public agencies, civil society, academia and the private sector) - Diagnostic and recommendations regarding FP and inter-agency procedures, systems and processes to effectively manage, implement and report on climate funding. - FP staff strengthened in their capacities to: a) Convene National Stakeholders b) Assess national entities to be accredited and provide nomination letters for direct access c) Evaluate project/program proposals and provide no-objection letters for project/programmes d) Provide Strategic oversight of Fund’s activities aligned to national priorities SECTION C: BUDGET (include total cost and share of GCF funding) Category Total (USD) Consultancy Travel and per diem of consultants Workshops (Venue, catering, travel, per diem, materials, etc) Other (incl. audit costs) 125,000 GCF Share (USD) 125,00 35,000 35,000 90,000 90,000 9,600 9,600 Contingency Project Management costs 13,200 13,200 27,200 27,200 Grand Total 300,000 300,000 SECTION D: IMPLEMENTATION PLAN D.1 Implementation arrangements The Government of Guatemala has identified the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) as its delivery partner for the readiness programme. FAO will take responsibility, under the leadership and guidance of the NDA, for the implementation of the proposed programme including fiduciary management. The FP will lead the implementation process of this programme in collaboration with FAO. FAO, under the leadership and guidance of the FP, will take the responsibility for fiduciary management of the readiness funding and will identify and hire individual consultants or a consulting firm to deliver Activities 1 and 2 in accordance with the procurement plan and a detailed implementation plan, both of which will be further elaborated in the inception document. FAO will provide counselling, support and supervision (as described below) during the project version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 6 OF 10 implementation and will administer the GCF funds, in accordance with FAO rules and procedures and the agreement signed with the MARN. For these purposes, MARN and FAO will create a Operational Coordination Unit, as described below. The Operational Coordination Unit The Operational Coordination Unit consists of a national project coordinator (NCP) appointed by the MARN, and a technical coordinator appointed by FAO. Both functionaires will promote, negotiate, monitor and jointly coordinate the implementation of the project, by establishing synergies, eliminating potential duplication, and promoting the systematization of the experience. They will articulate and facilitate the execution of the activities related to each product. The coordinators will be selected according to the standard procedures of both institutions, the MARN and FAO. The NCP will carry out functions and activities specified in the Project Association Agreement. In some cases, FAO may consider it necessary to send written requests to the NCP, in order to assume specific commitments or obligations, or to make specific payments on behalf of FAO. In such cases, it is possible that funds are approved by the project budget, up to the amounts allowed by the FAO standard rules and regulations. In such cases, the Government will compensate to FAO the losses that eventually might arise from any irregularity done by the NCP related to the management of funds provided by FAO. As the Delivery Partner, FAO will have the following responsibilities: 1. To prepare the Project Operational Plan, under the guidance of the MARN and, under this framework, to provide supervision as well as all administrative and financial services required for project implementation. 2. To administer and disburse the funds provided by GCF, in accordance with the FAO institutional rules and procedures. 3. To monitor and supervise project execution, in accordance with the plans and budgets established in the Project Operational Plan, in accordance with FAO standard rules and procedures. 4. To provide guidance to ensure technical quality for all activities to be developed. 5. To report on project progress to the MARN, to the GCF Secretariat, and other instances indicated in the association agreement signed between MARN and FAO, providing also financial reports. 6. To approve the annual work plans and budgets as well as the necessary adjustments to achieve the expected results and direct effects. 7. To suggest corrective actions for strategic problems or operational problems that arise. 8. To guide the administration of project resources to achieve the effects and products defined. 9. To ensure accomplishment with all reports and justifications envisaged by the project. 10. To review work plans budgets and reports. 11. To supervise all activities envisaged in the annual operational plan (POA) which will include activities annual schedule, budget distribution, responsible entities and persons, outputs, outcomes and correspondent indicators. 12. To analyze reallocation of funds and perform budget reviews when necessary and in accordance with the Fund’s defined resource envelope and scopes of work. 13. To support the solution of all project administrative and implementation problems. 14. To identify and systematize lessons learned from the implementation of the project. D.2 Disbursement Schedule Activities under the two areas will be implemented in a 12-month period, in a parallel way. Activity area 1 – Strengthening FP – will be implemented in 12 months starting in April 2016 and is expected to be completed in March 2017. Activity area 2 – Development of a country programme - will start in April 2016 and is expected to be version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 7 OF 10 completed in January 2017. Disbursement will be made directly to FAO, the delivery partner, in three tranches: • The first disbursement, which amounts to US$120,000.00 will be transferred upon the submission of an inception report from the NDA, prepared with the support of FAO, in form and substance acceptable to the Fund, which includes a detailed implementation plan, procurement plan and budget; • The second tranche of US$130,000.00 will be transferred upon submission of an interim progress report and financial report, including an expenditure statement; and • The final disbursement of US$ 50,000.00 will be made upon submission of a completion report and financial report, including an audited expenditure statement. D.3 Procurement plan Under the guidance of and in close coordination of the FP, FAO will manage the readiness funding and will be responsible for providing and contracting the services described in this proposal, as well as reporting on the progress of this implementation. The procurement will be processed in accordance with the procedures of the procurement manual and acquisitions of FAO. In particular, FAO will adhere to its revised General Terms and Conditions for Goods (available here: http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/user_upload/procurement/docs/2015_April_FAO_General_TCs_Goods.pdf) and its revised General Terms and Conditions for Services (available here: http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/user_upload/procurement/docs/2015_April_FAO_General_TCs_SERVICES.pdf ) The FP will approve the inception document, the interim progress report and the completion report provided by the delivery partner. FAO, in collaboration with the FP, will competitively procure services consistent with its procurement policies: • Consultants will be procured on a competitive basis and the terms of reference of consultants will be developed further to include the tasks outlined in the request summary above. The FP may also add other tasks to the ToRs of the consultants in accordance with the Fund’s defined scopes of work for Readiness Areas 1 and 2, within the resource envelope in this proposal and any supplementary resources secured from other sources. • For items such as venues and travel for stakeholder workshops to be organized, a shopping method will be used to procure such services consistent with FAO’s procurement policies. Information on the process and the results of procurement to be undertaken will be included in the inception document where such information can be provided in advance and, in any case, in interim progress or completion reports once such procurement has been undertaken and completed. SECTION E: MONITORING & REPORTING PLAN version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 8 OF 10 The reports to be submitted will be as per what is included in section D.2, and will include reporting against the logical framework included in Annex I. SECTION F: RISK & MITIGATION MEASURES FAO has been identified as the delivery partner for the readiness programme, but it is also an institution – as several others around the world – with potential to become an international Accredited Entity (AE). In such a Case, FAO may have interest in presenting project/programme funding proposals from Guatemala for consideration by the Fund. It is therefore imperative to mention that, in such a case, the FP will not assure exclusiveness to FAO as an AE, and that nevertheless FAO is not excluded from the implementation process. There might be a possible conflict of interests. The FP will implement the following measures to manage this conflict of interest: - Sign a Memorandum of Understanding with FAO as delivery partner for readiness support within the scope of this proposal, in which the roles of coordination and facilitation between the FP and FAO respectively are clearly differentiated. - The role of the FAO as an AE, if such a scenario presents itself, should be clear in order to prevent any conflict of interest. Thus, the prioritization of investments and projects to be included in the country programme will be made through a broad consultation process with relevant stakeholders, including other potential implementing entities for Guatemala, and the final validation of the country programme will be carried out with the participation of other government agencies, as well as representatives from civil society and private sector, to ensure chosen priorities are fully aligned with national plans and strategies and adequately includes inputs from consulted stakeholders. version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 0 OF 10 Annex I. Logical Framework OUTCOMES PROJECT SUMMARY INDICATORS 1. NDA capacity to undertake Fund-related responsibilities and engage national stakeholders strengthened 1.1 Capacity to coordinate across stakeholders and facilitate effective consultation and communication 1.2 Knowledge on climate and finance priorities strengthened 1.3 System for reviewing proposals and issuing recommendations (or noobjections) established 1.4 Capacity and systems to monitor, evaluate and report on the activities of the Fund and other relevant finance mechanisms and institutions established 1.5 Information, including in local languages, on procedures of the Fund to disseminated to country stakeholders 1.6 Knowledge strengthened on procedures, systems and processes to manage, implement and report on climate funds 2. Strategic framework for engagement with the Fund developed 2.1 Engagement of private sector, civil society, government and local government stakeholders on priorities for engagement with the fund 2.2 Priorities for project and concepts to be developed for accessing the fund 2.3 Country programming document developed and published in adherence with the initial guidance from the Fund BASELINES version 1.0 | 15 December 2014 READINESS AND PREPARATORY SUPPORT PROPOSAL PAGE 1 OF 10 OUTPUTS 1.1 A process for supporting coordination across stakeholders and facilitating engagement (including periodic meetings / workshops) 1.2 Annual report on activities of the Fund and other relevant funding mechanisms and institutions in the country 1.3 Information materials on the operational procedures of the Fund in local languages (where relevant) and distribution lists of recipients 1.1.1 1.1.2 1.2.1 1.3.1 1.3.2 2.1 Country programme, including elements provided in the Fund’s Initial Guidelines for Country Programmes 2.2 Summaries of meetings of multistakeholder engagement, including list of participants 2.1.1 2.1.2 2.2.1 2.2.2 Write up of the coordination process, and convening schedule Meeting minutes and participant lists documenting engagement of at least xx groups Electronic copy of the annual report, and details of public dissemination channels Links to electronic copies of presentations, information materials, climate and development information disseminated to distribution lists where relevant. At least xx information materials on the fund developed and disseminated to at least xx people Copy of country programme, completed using the initial guidance on country programmes prepared by the GCF secretariat Background documentation on the programme, and links to public dissemination channels Agendas and summaries from workshops convened as part of the country programme process Short note on lessons learned from country programming, and good practices in stakeholder engagement version 1.0 | 15 December 2014