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Validation Report Reference Number: PCV: LAO 2008-48 Project Number: 29210 Loan Number: 1688-LAO(SF) December 2008 Lao People’s Democratic Republic: Shifting Cultivation Stabilization Pilot Project Operations Evaluation Department ABBREVIATIONS ADB BTOR EA IMLNR Lao PDR MAF OED PCR PIO RRP SAPE–ANR – – – – – – – – – – – UNODC – VDC VDP – – Asian Development Bank back-to-office report executing agency integrated management of land and natural resources Lao People’s Democratic Republic Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry Operations Evaluation Department project completion report project implementation office report and recommendation of the President sector assistance program evaluation on agriculture and natural resources United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (formerly United Nations Office of Drug Control) village development committee village development plan NOTE In this report, “$” refers to US dollars. Key Words adb, capacity building, environmental conservation, institutional strengthening, income generation, irrigation, lao people’s democratic republic, lao pdr, operations evaluation, natural resource management, participation, project completion report validation, roads, shifting cultivation, sedentarization, social infrastructure Director R. B. Adhikari, Operations Evaluation Division 1, OED Team Leader Team Members S. Shrestha, Evaluation Specialist, Operations Evaluation Division 1, OED C. Infantado, Portfolio Evaluation Officer, Operations Evaluation Division 1, OED B. Q. Cafirma, Evaluation Assistant, Operations Evaluation Division 1, OED PROJECTCOMPLETION REPORT VALIDATION A. Basic Project Data Project Number: Loan Number: Project Name: Country: Sectors: ADB Financing ($ million): PCR Validation Date: 29210 1688-LAO[SF] Shifting Cultivation Stabilization Pilot Project Lao People’s Democratic Republic Agriculture and Natural Resources ADF: 5.6 OCR: Approval Date: United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime 11 May 1999 Signing Date: Project Officers: 15 July 1999 Name: Cofinanciers: Appraisal Implementation PCR Validator: Quality Control Reviewer/Peer Reviewer: Yoshiharu Kobayashi Robin Erickson Brette E. Coleman Henry Tucker J. H. Mir Akmal Siddiq J. H. Mir Sisavanh Phanouvong Sisavanh Phanouvong David Moffatt, Consultant Total Project Costs ($ million): Loan/Grant ($ million): (SDR equivalent) Total Cofinancing ($ million): Borrower ($ million): Beneficiaries ($ million): Others ($ million): Effectiveness Date: Closing Date: Location (HQ or RM): HQ HQ HQ HQ HQ HQ HQ RM RM Director: September 2008 Approved 8.8 Actual 9.2 5.6 5.6 4.1 1.3 2.1 1.8 0.1 1.4 0.1 13 October 1999 15 October 1999 31 December 2005 From (year) 04 May 2007 To (year) 7 July 1998 22 July 1998 May 1999 November 2001 December 2001 February 2002 March 2002 June 2003 July 2003 August 2004 September 2004 May 2005 June 2005 December 2005 January 2006 February 2007 16 February 2007 28 February 2007 R. B. Adhikari, OED1 Samjhana Shrestha, Evaluation Specialist, OED1 ADB = Asian Development Bank, ADF = Asian Development Fund, HQ = headquarters, OCR = ordinary capital resource, OED1 = Operations Evaluation Division 1, PCR = project completion report, RM = resident mission, SDR = special drawing rights, SF = special fund. B. Project Description (Summarized from the RRP) (i) Rationale: Most shifting cultivators live in poverty, their farming systems unable even to meet household food consumption needs. Their villages lack reliable access and basic community facilities. An already critical situation is being exacerbated by increasing population pressure, leading to shorter rotations and consequent lower yields, and to accelerated deforestation with its attendant impact on erosion and catchment water balance. Despite these problems, no tested and proven technologies have been widely introduced to create sedentary farming systems that can generate adequate cash incomes on land presently used for shifting cultivation. (ii) Expected impacts: (a) reduced poverty among the targeted shifting cultivators; (b) increased food production and incomes through on-farm and off-farm activities; (c) improved socioeconomic conditions; (d) elimination of illegal opium production; and (e) conservation of natural resources. 2 (iii) Objectives or expected outcomes: (a) Improve the income of upland farmers; and (b) conserve natural resources through (i) establishment of environmentally sustainable, diversified sedentary farming systems as alternatives to shifting cultivation; and (ii) provision of basic rural infrastructure in an environmentally sustainable manner. The Project would also pilot test promising farming technologies and establish appropriate land allocation procedures through extensive beneficiary participation. (iv) Components and/or outputs: (a) Component 1: Institutional strengthening and capacity building (1) Capacity strengthening for land use planning and allocation. Technical assistance to assist the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (MAF) in procedures for land allocation in upland areas, support land allocation through the establishment of additional land use planning and land allocation teams, and strengthen natural resource data management capacity of MAF through training and the establishment of an integrated management of land and natural resources (IMLNR) office. (2) Strengthening agriculture and forestry services. Train provincial and district subject matter specialists; domestic and international training for selected staff of MAF and the provincial government of Houaphanh; provide training facilities at the provincial and district levels for trainers and beneficiaries; strengthen agriculture, veterinary, and aquaculture services; and establish two seed-multiplication nurseries. (b) Component 2: Diversified sedentary farming systems development (1) Consulting services. (2) On-farm trials and demonstrations. Test and evaluate promising varieties and/or species, technologies, and improved farming systems, and establish on-farm trials and demonstrations in each village. (c) Component 3: Village-based development (1) Village and community development. Assist villagers in forming village development committees (VDCs), establish a local development center in each subproject area, train 10 villagers per village as trainers, and provide funds for volunteers to support village planning and development activities. (2) Irrigation. Develop 160 hectares (ha) of irrigation in seven locations with permanent diversion structures and irrigation canals. (3) Water supply and sanitation. Construct new or renovate existing water supply systems. (4) Rural tracks. Provide small-scale earthmoving equipment for road construction to upgrade about 50 kilometers (km) of rural tracks using International Labour Organization's labor-based road construction method. (5) Village revolving funds for agriculture and income generation. Provide a seed fund of $157,000 for short- and medium-term credit in a project revolving fund managed by the Lao Women’s Union, provide training for the Lao Women’s Union, monitor needs for long-term credit, and assist beneficiaries in gaining access to the Government's Agricultural Promotion Bank. Although not noted as a subcomponent in the project description, the activity schedule refers to the reduction of opium poppy cultivation. (d) Component 4: Rural infrastructure development (1) Rural access roads. Upgrade or construct 55 km of access roads. (2) Rural markets. Construct three rural markets and support market research in assessing potential for new products, developing market and prices information, and identifying opportunities for value-adding and processing of local products. (e) Component 5: Project management (1) Provide office space, office equipment, service vehicles, and motorcycles. (2) Provide incremental staff for project management and implementation supervision at the field 3 level. (3) Finance operational and travel costs, per diem expenses, and training in administrative and accounting procedures. Although not specified as a subcomponent, the report and recommendation of the President (RRP) stated that an environmental awareness campaign focusing on forests, fisheries, and biodiversity conservation generally would be designed and implemented. C. Evaluation of Design and Implementation (PCR Assessment and Validation) (i) Relevance of design and formulation: The project completion report (PCR) affirmed the relevance of the Project at design stage. The Project attempted to address the key concerns of the national Government as expressed in its national development plan for reducing poverty and improving access to public services, while providing economic opportunities to remote upland communities. It was consistent with the Government’s New Economic Mechanism, initiated in 1986 with the main goals of economic stability and increased market orientation. This included stabilizing shifting cultivation, which was given as one of the five priorities of the national agenda. Since 1976, the Government has addressed the challenge of shifting cultivation, its initial solution leading to the resettlement of upland villages in new, more accessible locations. More recently, its policy developed to incorporate in-situ initiatives aimed at sedentarization, and the Project provided the opportunity to pilot a new approach through natural resource management. When the Project was designed, the country strategy and program of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) for the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR) targeted sustainable economic growth through infrastructure development, connecting feeder roads to the main road network, markets, and other commercial opportunities. It specifically promoted the inclusion of ethnic groups in mainstream economic activity. Consequently, ADB’s country strategy and program was directed at rural inhabitants in an attempt to increase their participation in the market economy and to stabilize cultivation systems that were then recognized as unsustainable. The validator concurs with this and notes further the relevance of the Project to some of today’s global concerns. The forests of the Lao PDR are decreasing at an alarming rate, with the irreplaceable loss of valuable forest resources and the detrimental impact on climate. There is worldwide concern for the control of illegal opium production, and the financial and practical involvement of the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime ([UNODC], formerly the United Nations Office of Drug Control) is evidence of the relevance of the Project in this respect. (ii) Project Outputs : (a) Component 1: Institutional strengthening and capacity building (1) Capacity strengthening for land use planning and allocation. The PCR makes no reference to the development of procedures and policies for land allocation in upland areas and, while a central database and facility for geographic information system training has been established in the renamed National Agriculture and Forestry Research Institute, this does not appear to be the integrated and consolidated facility with the broad policy and management functions envisaged in the RRP for the IMLNR. Of the proposed additional 10 land use planning and land allocation teams, only two were in place by mid-2002, although after this number increased to nine. However, less than a quarter of the targeted temporary land use certificates were issued. (2) Strengthening of agriculture and forestry services. The PCR records 250 training courses at provincial, district, and village level, and the establishment of a veterinary diagnostic laboratory. There is no record of the two proposed seed-multiplication nurseries or of the center for the multiplication of fingerlings. (b) Component 2: Diversified sedentary farming systems development (1) Consulting services. Recruitment of the implementation consultants ran 12 months behind schedule, leading to major delays in the whole Project; there was some small increase and 4 some reallocation of the inputs of the implementation consultants. The PCR makes reference to monitoring and evaluation consultants but gives no further detail about them. Although not specified in the RRP, UNODC also provided consultants, including a chief technical adviser together with a consulting team, which (it is assumed) was initially made up of the volunteers described in the RRP. However, the RRP refers to four international and eight local volunteers, while the PCR gives an input of 156 international and 258 national person-months of UNODCfunded inputs. Recruitment of the technical assistants and/or volunteers from the United Nations ran nearly 2 years behind schedule, and three of the four volunteers were reported to have left after 1 year. There is reference to their replacement by National Project Professional Personnel employees in the back-to-office report (BTOR) of May 2003, but no details are given. In order to get a clear picture of exactly what consultant, volunteer, and National Project Professional Personnel support was provided to the Project there needs to be a consolidated schedule of these. Without this it is impossible to get an accurate picture of the level of support. (2) On-farm trials and demonstrations. The PCR reports trials and demonstrations that very closely match the detailed targets given in the RRP. The final reports of the implementation consultants subject matter specialists, as noted in the BTOR of May 2003, do express concerns for the sustainability of new sedentary farming systems. Although actions were agreed to address these concerns, as late as December 2005, the review mission was still drawing attention to the need to expand production areas in order to achieve commercial scales in accordance with provincial development plans and to establish reliable and sustainable market links. (c) Component 3: Village-based development (1) Village and community development. The PCR records the establishment of two local development centers and assistance with the establishment and training of village development plans (VDPs). The activities ran substantially behind schedule largely because of problems in fielding and retaining volunteers. It is noted that VDCs were being hastily assembled, women’s issues were not being addressed, and village infrastructure was being installed prior to VDCs being developed. While this situation significantly improved in later stages of the Project, it would seem that a full participatory planning process in producing VDPs that formed the basis of subsequent actions was not always followed. (2) Irrigation. This appears to have exceeded targets, although it is not clear what is meant by semipermanent schemes, which constitute nearly half the total area. (3) Water supply and sanitation. The installation of gravity-fed water supply schemes and pit latrines met or slightly exceeded targets. (4) Rural tracks. Slightly exceeded targets (5) Village revolving funds for agriculture and income generation. The PCR again indicates that each village did set up savings and credit groups and the Project provided seed capital of around $200,000. However, the PCR shows an expenditure on this component of only $0.5 million against an estimated cost in the RRP of $2.3 million, and it is difficult to see how all these targets were met at such a reduced cost. Some clarification of this is required, as the only reference to this aspect is in the review mission’s BTOR of December 2002, at which stage only 10 villages had savings and credit groups. (d) Component 4: Rural infrastructure development (1) Rural access roads. Construction of these was in accordance with the RRP; the PCR quotes a cost per kilometer of $24,700. (2) Rural markets. Three markets were established in accordance with the RRP. The PCR also makes note of the construction or rehabilitation of 15 schools, which was not envisaged in the RRP. However, the support to marketing and processing included in this component in the RRP does not appear to have been provided. There is reference in review mission BTORs of the possible provision of a consultant in these aspects, but there is no evidence that this ever happened. (e) Component 5: Project management The PCR simply noted that a project implementation office (PIO) was established, equipped, and staffed, and that the implementation consultant provided training. At validation, note was taken of 5 the considerable length of time required to develop a functional office and project management system; the PIO was not fully staffed until mid-2002, and even at the end of that year it was being reported that the PIO was having difficulty preparing annual budgets. The support of the provincial government is fully acknowledged but it is important from the point of view of lessons learned to be realistic in recognizing the difficulties and time scales in developing local management of projects in remote locations and in involving people with no experience of this type of management. (iii) Project Cost, Disbursements, Borrower Contribution, and Conformance to Schedule: The PCR reports a total project cost of $9.2 million against an appraisal estimate of $8.8 million. There is an error on the table of cost breakdown by project component in the PCR basic data (page iii, table 3). This appears to have arisen because the individual cost lines give only the foreign exchange costs. Putting in corrected estimated costs drawn directly from the RRP, there seem to be significant differences between the estimated costs of individual components and the actual costs, and the basis of these differences might warrant further elucidation. Component Capacity Strengthening Farming Systems Village Development Rural infrastructure Project Management Total Estimated Cost $’1000 1,140 1,655 2,266 1,853 853 7,751 Actual Cost $’1000 1,764 1,965 493 2,983 1,613 8,820 Disbursement was very slow in the early years of the Project. Taking figures given in the PCR, the major catching up did not take place until the fifth year; by year 4, total disbursement was still only 68% of the anticipated level, jumping to 92% of the anticipated level in year 5. These figures underline the very slow start made by the Project. The Borrower contribution decreased from an estimated $1.8 million at appraisal to an actual contribution of $1.4 million. This was more than compensated for by an increase in UNODC contribution from an estimated $1.3 million to $2.1 million; the ADB contribution remained as estimated at $5.4 million. The Project fell seriously behind schedule, which was to a large degree retrieved by a 12-month extension. The PCR validly attributes the slow implementation to (a) delay in recruiting implementation consultants, (b) delay in recruiting UNODC consultants (this is also compounded by the problems related to the original use of UN volunteers), and (c) problems relating to road design. To this list might perhaps be added the inexperience of the Executing Agency (EA), the Provincial Government of Houaphan, and an inadequate allowance in the project design for the establishment of a fully functional PIO. (iv) Implementation arrangements, conditions and covenants, related technical assistance, procurement, and consultant performance: The Project was something of a pioneer in its highly decentralized implementation arrangements. The PCR noted the benefit of these in that money could move quickly from the Ministry of Finance to the province, which was where all expenditure occurred. It does, however, point to the downside to this in the minimal involvement of central technical agencies, particularly MAF and its various departments. The PCR stated that “the communication linkages and technical support from national institutions were tenuous at best.” Given that this was a pilot project intended to have application more widely within the country, this was a weak point in the design and implementation of the Project. The PCR noted two failures by the Government and EA in meeting the loan conditions and covenants: 6 (a) lack of provision for the maintenance of the rural access roads; and (b) no benchmark survey was undertaken at the beginning of the Project and, as far as the validator is able to ascertain, the baseline data given for 2004 simply draws on district statistics. Noting observations made by the Project Completion Review Mission, the deteriorating state of the roads must be a matter of some concern. The validator additionally notes that not all VDPs were properly prepared through a participatory process, as reported by review missions. Also, although an office for IMLNR was indeed established (but subsequently renamed), it does not appear that this actually resulted in the integration of activities amongst the component agencies as was intended. The PCR recorded three sets of consultants: implementation, monitoring and evaluation, and UNODC. Recruitment of all consultants ran late. The situation with UNODC is particularly complicated and not particularly clarified in the PCR or the review mission BTORs. Overall it would appear that the performance of the implementation consultants was satisfactory, although the PCR states that the team leader had to be replaced, and it is noted elsewhere that the timing of some of the inputs did not necessarily accord with the Project’s needs. There is little reference anywhere to what input was provided and exactly what was achieved by the monitoring and evaluation consultants. UNODC was not originally a supplier of consultants but had a role in the deployment of volunteers. At an early stage it is reported that three of four volunteers resigned after serving only 1 year. The blame for this is reportedly the attitude of the UNODC chief technical adviser who, in the BTOR of the December review mission, is described as "creating a poisonous atmosphere in the PIO" as well as being a major cause of the failure to undertake proper participatory village planning. UNODC eventually agreed to replace him. It then appears that volunteers were replaced by local professional staff, but under the supervision of UNODC. The performance of the contractors is given as satisfactory, although it does appear that there was a lengthy wrangle over the design, costs, and construction methods, such that it was eventually agreed that the International Labour Organization should be brought in to support the road engineers (BTOR, November 2001). The cost of road construction was still higher than original estimates, although savings on bridge construction are said to have balanced this. (v) Performance of the Borrower and Executing Agency: The PCR reported on difficulties in the provision of counterpart funding, particularly where this involved actual cash as opposed to book transactions related to duties and taxes. The PCR notes serious shortcomings in the EA’s ability to fulfill its functions due to lack of familiarity with procedures, communication limitations caused by the language barrier, and a general failure of the EA to comprehend some of the project components. The validator also draws attention to the EA’s inability to field the required number of land use planning and land allocation teams until an advanced stage of the Project. The PCR does state that performance of the EA did improve and was satisfactory by the end, particularly after the greater involvement of the resident mission. All of this would seem to have been entirely predictable and fault for any failures must lie more with the design of the Project than with the EA. The validator concurs with the satisfactory rating. (vi) Performance of the Asian Development Bank: The PCR rated the performance of ADB partially satisfactory, citing the frequent changes of project officer (seven changes in 6 years); poor communication between ADB, the PIO, and the implementation consultants; and the erratic timing of review missions. The validator concurs with this and notes the improvement in project performance after the greater involvement of the resident mission. This should provide pointers for future similar projects. D. Evaluation of Performance (PCR Assessment and Validation) (i) Relevance: The PCR rated the Project relevant, citing a large number of considerations in support of this conclusion—focus on livelihoods, conformity with Government and ADB policies, sustainable 7 management of resources, poverty reduction in the project area, and improved land allocation procedures. The validator fully concurs with these assessments, although some points may more appropriately refer to effectiveness rather than relevance of the Project. In 2005, a review of the Project as part of a sector assistance program evaluation on agriculture and natural resources (SAPE–ANR) for Lao PDR also rated it highly relevant to the country contexts, government policies, and the need to develop suitable and balanced approaches in order to stabilize shifting cultivation and reduce cultivation and consumption of opium poppy. However, it pointed out that the different elements of the Project can at times be conflicting in the short to medium term, noting in particular that too rapid a reduction in opium poppy without immediate diversification into readily marketable crops can cause serious hardship to farmers, who have relied on opium for cash incomes, and it therefore has a detrimental effect on poverty. There was also a design problem in one of the major component of the project (road). It was entirely relevant in the context of this type of project that it should be highly decentralized, but in so doing the Project lost some of the interaction with, and support from, the line agencies that were critical to the activities of the Project; there was little evidence of any real ownership of the Project by these line agencies. (ii) Effectiveness in achieving outcome: The PCR rated the Project effective. Despite its slow start and considerable early problems, the Project has been effective in reducing poverty in the project area, increasing food production, reducing opium production, and protecting natural resources. The PCR addressed each project component and confirms that each has been effective in achieving what it was intended to achieve, as summarized below. (a) Capacity building of government staff was constrained by late deployment of counterpart staff and the lack of appropriate technical skills. However, at the community level, it enabled all villages to form VDCs and to formulate their land use plans. (However, it is noted at validation that only 495 households of the target number of 2,259 received temporary land use certificates.) (b) The introduction of diversified farming systems has significantly enhanced incomes and reduced the area of land under shifting cultivation. (c) Village infrastructure development, particularly irrigation, has been effective in stabilizing the farming systems and giving farmers the confidence to adopt new approaches. (d) The construction of roads and markets has made it possible to move into a market-orientated economy by allowing physical access and reducing marketing costs. (e) Finally, the Project was considered effective in introducing new approaches to land allocation, land use planning, and long-term user rights. Furthermore, the Government has a greater appreciation of the need to involve communities in the management of natural resources. Taking the package of interventions as a whole, the validator concurs that within the project area, an effective outcome has been achieved. Capacity building has provided the ability to plan and implement changed farming systems and village infrastructure development, the introduction of alternative crops and farming systems has provided alternative livelihood options, and the exploitation of these has been made feasible by the improved access. (iii) Efficiency in achieving outcome and outputs: The PCR rated the Project less efficient, the major reasons for this low rating being the high cost of the access road and the high cost and sometimes inefficient timing of consultant inputs. On the positive side, the PCR pointed to efficient capacity building, efficiently implemented village development based on a highly participatory process, and a more efficient approach to land certification. A meaningful assessment of efficiency is difficult in a project which is developing methodologies and farming systems and is in a remote area with harsh terrain. Despite the circumstances of the Project, an economic analysis gives an economic internal rate of return for the project at 13.8%, which exceeds the opportunity cost of capital and is slightly better than the projected rate at appraisal. Without the access road the benefits of the Project could not be realized and so, despite its high cost per kilometer and per head of population served, it was an essential component of the Project, but it could be argued that it should not be attributed as a specific project cost but a cost that would have to be incurred anyway, serving purposes far beyond those of the Project. 8 (iv) Preliminary assessment of sustainability: The PCR assessed the Project likely sustainable, however this rating needs to be qualified on the basis of the following considerations. The PCR pointed to the high cost of maintenance of the roads and, although it has been agreed that beneficiaries would contribute around 20% of the costs, it will still be difficult for the province to meet its obligations. Subsequent to the PCR, it has been reported that the Government has provided maintenance funds to support routine maintenance of major infrastructure such as the two access roads, and provides emergency support in case of landslide. While a more positive view is taken of the ability to maintain the smaller structures, the PCR casts doubt on the viability of the Project’s solution to technical support of training villagers as subject matter specialists, given the inability of government extension services to support them. The November 2006 review mission BTORs comment on the post-project sustainability plan that had been requested by ADB. This provided for a further 2 years of scaled-down project support, but no commitment was received for the Government to meet the costs of this. While a lack of commitment to this sustainability plan continues, the Government has apparently provided some technical support by delegating its technical staff to be based in each of the local development centers in order to support farmers to continue their income-generation activities. The continuation of such support will be essential to the sustainability of project activities. Alongside its local activities, Project sustainability must also be viewed in the context of the uptake and scaling-up of piloted processes and technologies, and in this respect the validator notes significant concern. There is no reference in the PCR to adoption of either the specific farming systems or to the methodology of land use planning and allocation outside of the project villages. A pair of interlinked projects was proposed in late 2004. In the preparation documents for these projects there is no mention of the Project as a source of knowledge contributing to the design of these new projects, and yet their aims are broadly in line with those of the Project. Quoting these and other ongoing projects, the SAPE–ANR sector review of 2005 states that there is a need for clear interface and links among these efforts, in order to assist them to benefit from each other’s experience and to meet their objectives as pilot projects. The BTOR of the review mission of December 2005 suggested that a workshop to exchange ideas amongst ADB and non-ADB projects include these projects, but this appears to have amounted to no more than attendance by some of these projects at the final workshop. A Project jointly funded by ADB and the International Fund for Agricultural Development is scheduled for approval in 2009 The documentation available on this project at validation is not enough to determine whether this may draw on the Project. It is understood that it has adopted some of the approaches of the Project though the extent of this adoption is not specified. The long-term sustainability of this pilot project depended on it being part of a planned continuing process. This did not seem to be the case, and proposals for a second phase, although initially entertained by ADB, were ultimately rejected. The PCR has stated its concerns over sustainability of the locally implemented project, and the validator concurs with these. However, some steps seem to have been taken to address these concerns in terms of the Government making financial commitment to road maintenance and providing some technical support to income-generation activities. It is clear that significant opportunities for wider adoption of project technologies and processes within ADB and other projects have been missed. The frequent changes of project officer have no doubt not helped in this regard. However, this is being rectified at least on some new ADB projects and wider adoption may follow. The validator has maintained the likely sustainable rating but qualifies this with the absolute necessity for the Government to continue its funding of road maintenance and its provision of technical support to the local development centers, and to concerted effort by ADB to adopt in its own projects the positive processes and activities developed by the Project and to make every effort to ensure that the Project findings are widely disseminated to other funding agencies and nongovernment organizations working with people involved in shifting cultivation. (v) Impact (both intended and unintended): The Project has had a high impact on the targeted beneficiaries. Improved village infrastructure has freed up labor to be applied in more productive activities, and has improved health with the incidence of malaria reducing from 13 per 1,000 to 9 per 1,000, and infant mortality decreasing from 34 per 1,000 to 26 per 1,000. Better access has opened up markets and reduced the cost of transport of goods in and out of the project area. Irrigation has had a 9 major impact on food security and facilitated farmers to engage in cash cropping on settled areas. The PCR recorded a 140% increase in household gross domestic product, a 58% reduction in poor households, a 55% reduction in households with rice shortages, and a decrease in the area of swidden cultivation from 1,200 ha shifting cultivation to 507 ha permanent cultivation (irrigated paddy areas have increased from 54 ha to 319 ha). Income from weaving and handicrafts increased by 400%, and the number of large ruminant livestock increased by 100%, poultry increased by 88%, pigs by 66%, and goats by 188%. In addition, the area of opium cultivation has been reduced from 724 ha to zero, and the number of addicts reduced from 230 to 36. The only significant negative impact was the occurrence of landslides in some areas of steep terrain where roads have been built or realigned. Note may also be made to references to logging in village lands opened up by the roads. E. Overall Assessment, Lessons, and Recommendations (Validation of PCR Assessment) (i) Overall assessment: The PCR rated the Project successful noting that the approach to diversification of incomes was successful, and that local communities took on a more involved and responsible role. It accepts that circumstances inevitably mean that costs per beneficiary are high, which might have been mitigated to an extent by a modified approach to the distribution of roads. The validator concurs with this assessment but adds that, while the Project has succeeded in most of its immediate objectives, the pilot interventions have only recently found application outside of the project area and this would need to be maintained and extended. A continuing commitment by the Government to maintain roads and provide technical support is also essential if the proposed rating of the sustainability of the Project as likely sustainable is to hold. (ii) Lessons: The PCR drew three lessons from the Project: (a) the need for more realistic implementation schedules and recognition of constrained local capacity, (b) greater flexibility in project design, and (c) more emphasis on training project implementation staff in project procedures. To these lessons, the validator would add the recognition of problems caused by frequent changes of project officer and the need to have systems in place that result in better transfer of knowledge amongst projects at formulation and during implementation. (iii) Recommendations: The PCR made four project-related recommendations: (a) the wider application and adoption of piloted land allocation procedures, (b) greater emphasis on infrastructure maintenance rather than on its extension, (c) more cost-effective approach to access roads, and (d) funding of the sustainability plan. The PCR also made four general recommendations: (a) realistic assessment of counterpart contributions, (b) realistic scheduling of project activities, (c) greater involvement of national agency staff in provincially implemented projects, and (d) the need to grant finance capacity-building projects. The validator has drawn particular attention to the broader issue of the greater involvement of the resident mission in a project designed as a pilot project, and recommends that pilot projects should be set within the context of a longer-term plan which includes specific proposals as to how the piloted interventions might feed into the broader needs of the country. In particular, it is essential that knowledge accumulated during implementation of the pilot project is fully reflected in the preparation of potentially similar projects. A final recommendation stems from the apparent improvement in the implementation of the Project once it was managed from the resident mission. For small projects in remote locations and being locally implemented by staff with little experience of project procedures, the support needed is far greater than in other projects, and in terms of providing greater management support the resident mission is better placed in terms of both proximity and language skills. 10 F. Monitoring and Evaluation Design, Implementation, and Utilization (PCR Assessment and Validation) It is very difficult to comment on the monitoring and evaluation of the Project. The loan covenants state that “The Project Implementation Office (PIO) shall recruit an independent monitoring team to carry out benefit monitoring and evaluation (BME) activities in coordination with the SUNV (a joint program of the Government of the Netherlands and United Nations Volunteers) and the village development committees in accordance with procedures and indicators agreed with ADB. Socioeconomic monitoring surveys shall be carried out at the end of the second, fourth, and sixth year of project implementation. The Borrower shall ensure that an initial benchmark survey shall be carried out by SUNV in collaboration with the PIO and VDCs in the first year of the Project.” The PCR reports that monitoring activities started in 2003 and that the baseline data as such was not captured, and says that alternative sources of baseline data were used, making reference to Appendix 1. This appendix lists socioeconomic indicators and gives the source as “project benefit monitoring and evaluation report and ADB PCR Mission, February 2007.” However, there is no detail of the system of monitoring and evaluation and, although reference is made to monitoring and evaluation consultants, there is no information on what this comprised nor any comment on the methodology employed. Some clarification on this would be warranted. The report of the SAPE–ANR sector review of 2005 is highly critical of the monitoring and evaluation of the Project and states "As a pilot project, the relevance of the Shifting Cultivation Stabilization Pilot Project has been compromised by the absence of a functioning monitoring and evaluation system that can define the extent to which its pilot initiatives have yielded results." G. Other (e.g., Safeguards, including Governance and Anticorruption; Fiduciary Aspects; Government Assessment of the Project, as Applicable) (PCR Assessment and Validation): It is noted that the EA lacked familiarity with, and acceptance of, proper ADB bidding procedures. Review missions reported this as a particular problem in the contract for the veterinary diagnostic laboratory for which procedures were not followed. However, ADB ultimately agreed that the contract could go ahead and noted that had proper bidding procedures been followed the same contractor would have been selected. H. Ratings Relevance: PCR Relevant Effectiveness in Achieving Outcome: Effective Efficiency in Achieving Outcome and Outputs: Less Efficient Preliminary Assessment of Sustainability: Likely Sustainable OED Review Reason for Disagreement/Comments Relevant In respect of the immediate beneficiaries, and contextually in terms of Government and ADB policy and strategy, the Project was relevant. Effective The project interventions provide a complementary set of actions which taken together have had a significant impact on the beneficiaries and in that respect the Project has been effective. Efficient Although the PCR regards the Project as having been less efficient, it may not be giving sufficient weight to the fact that it was a pilot that the roads served purposes other than the specific objectives of the Project, and despite these considerations it gave an economic internal rate of return of 13.8% which exceeded the opportunity cost of capital. The validator would see some justification in according an "efficient" rating. Likely While the OED review has concurred with this Sustainable rating, it has done so with the absolute qualification that recent Government commitment to funding road maintenance and providing technical support is continued, and that ADB applies the successful activities and processes of the Project in its future program and disseminates these more widely. Ideally there would also be 11 H. Ratings PCR OED Review Borrower and EA: Satisfactory Satisfactory Performance of ADB: Partially Satisfactory Partially Satisfactory Impact: Overall Assessment: Positive Satisfactory Positive Satisfactory Quality of PCR: Reason for Disagreement/Comments financial commitment to the Government’s postproject sustainability plan. Despite early problems, performance was ultimately satisfactory and it would probably be more relevant to attribute those early problems to a project design that did not give sufficient cognizance to the circumstances of the Project. Seven changes of project officer in 6 years had a deleterious effect on the Project and it may be noted that the Government did request more stability in this, which was not forthcoming. The Project faced substantial difficulties and implementation fell well behind schedule. Given the challenges of a project tackling complex issues in a remote location, however, this is not surprising. Following the midterm review, the project proceeded with renewed impetus and by the end of the extended implementation period it had completed most of its planned outputs. Satisfactory ADB = Asian Development Bank, EA = executing agency, OED = Operations Evaluation Department, PCR = project completion report. I. Comments on PCR Quality The validator considers the PCR to be largely satisfactory. It comprehensively covers all salient points and presents cogent arguments for its conclusions. A number of points, however, are noted below. (i) The approach taken to the Project is essentially in the context of a stand-alone project and there is little comment on the apparent lack of wider application of processes, technologies, and systems that the Project was intended to be piloting. (ii) In the case of the sustainability of the Project, the weaknesses recognized in this by the PCR essentially concur with the validator's view. The PCR does not carry these through to a more negative overall assessment of the project's sustainability. There is some support for this view in terms of recent Government commitments, and these would need to be maintained if the sustainability rating is to be justified. (iii) More attention might have been given to the way in which project monitoring and evaluation was carried out and the related issues of the source and quality of the baseline data. Although there is reference to monitoring and evaluation consultants, there is no comment on the methodology employed or on the quality of the product. This makes any final conclusion on the reported impact of the Project difficult to draw. (iv) The PCR might have done more to clarify the quantity and nature of external support. The inputs of the implementation consultants are spelled out but no details are given on the monitoring and evaluation consultants. Even more importantly, there is a need to spell out exactly what support came from UNODC; while the summary cost table (Appendix 5) gives a figure for consultants, there is a need for some clarification of the mix of international consultants, national consultants, and volunteers (international and national). A tabulation of all these support inputs would have been useful. (v) There is an error in the basic data section of the PCR, (page iii, table 3), in which the costs given for the appraisal estimates are only the foreign exchange costs (except for the total). (vi) There are some large and surprising discrepancies between component costs at appraisal and at completion, which would have merited comment. (vii) The PCR would benefit from a revised project framework relating accomplishments to targets. 12 J. Recommendations for OED Follow-Up A project performance evaluation may be undertaken in 3 years time, with particular focus on project impact and sustainability. K. Data Sources for Validation (i) Project processing: RRP for Loan to Lao PDR for the Shifting Cultivation Stabilization Pilot project Minutes of the Management Review Meeting Minutes of the Staff Review Committee Meeting Draft Minutes of the Loan's Board Meeting Approval April 1999 June 1998 March 1999 May 1999 (ii) Project administration: The following BTORs: Inception Mission Review Mission No. 1 Review Mission No. 2 Review Mission No. 3 Review Mission No. 4 Review Mission No. 5 Review Mission No. 6 Midterm Review Mission Review Mission No. 7 Review Mission No. 8 Review No. 9 - Handover Review Mission No. 10 Review Mission No. 11 Project Completion Review September 1999 February 2001 May 2001 October 2001 November 2001 February 2002 June 2002 December 2002 March 2003 April 2004 October 2005 March 2006 November 2006 March 2007 (iii) Project completion: ADB's PCR Sector Assistance Program Evaluation November 2007 Agriculture and Natural Resources in Lao PDR 13 REGIONAL DEPARTMENT’S RESPONSE TO THE PROJECT COMPLETION REPORT VALIDATION REPORT On 7 November 2008, the Operations Evaluation Department (OED) received the following comments from the Lao Resident Mission, Southeast Asia Department: “We thank you for considering our comments of 16 October 2008. Further, apart from applying in other projects the successful processes, technologies and systems piloted under the Project (referred to in Section J, para. 1 of the Validation Report), we would like to emphasize that they have been fully adopted in a JFPR funded: Alternative Livelihood for Upland Ethnic Groups of Houaphanh province.”