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Use of Country Systems to Meet WB Safeguard Policies

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Title: Use of Country Systems to Meet WB Safeguard Policies


1
Use of Country Systems to Meet WB Safeguard
Policies
Agi Kiss Zagreb, May 7, 2009
2
Operational Policy/Bank Procedure 4.00
  • Piloting the Use of Borrower Systems to Address
    Environmental and Social Safeguard Issues in
    Bank-Supported Projects
  • Covers all fiduciary aspects Financial
    Management, Procurement, Safeguards

3
OP 4.00 key points
  • Definition use of the countrys national,
    sub-national, or sectoral implementing
    institutions and applicable laws, regulations,
    procedures for an activity being supported by the
    Bank
  • Can refer to central government, sub-national
    governments or specific agencies/entities or
    utilities (e.g., in infrastructure) 
  • To be used where, in the Banks judgment, the
    countrys system would materially satisfy the
    objectives and operational principles of the
    applicable Bank policies

4
Objectives of UCS
  • Greater efficiency move beyond
    project-by-project approach accelerate project
    preparation and appraisal facilitate
    harmonization, reducing transaction costs imposed
    by requirements of multiple donor systems
  • Greater development impact improve policies,
    procedures, practices for all investment, not
    just WB-financed encourage and buiod country
    capacity
  • Enhance country ownership Improve nature of
    relationship and strengthen community of interest
    between Bank and Borrower (particularly part of
    the MIC agenda)

5
UCS History
  • UCS already in place for years for financial
    management and for procurement through national
    competitive bidding
  • Sept 2004, Management proposal to Board for
    pilot program extending UCS to environmental and
    social safeguards and to international
    competitive bidding (ICB) procurement and
    international selection o f consultants where,
    in the Banks judgment they are equivalent to
    the Banks policy framework applicable to the
    operation, and where relevant country
    implementation practices, capacity, and track
    record are satisfactory.

6
UCS History (cont.)
  • October 2004 Issues Paper --focusing on UCS for
    ES SG-- posted on WB website
  • Followed by face-to-face consultations with
    governments, bi/multilateral development
    partners, NGOs, private sector in all 6 Region
  • Endorsed by borrowers and devt partners
  • NGOs more cautious emphasized need to ensure no
    dilution of SG policies or WBs responsibility
    for due diligence

Expanding the Use of Country Systems in
Bank-supported Operations Issues and Proposals
7
Following consultations, Issues Paper and OP 4.00
revised to clarify
  • No certification of country systems, just use
  • No commitment to using country systems for every
    operation in a given country. Only for specific
    aspects of operations where country systems
    (including implementation capacity) are judged
    acceptable
  • No dilution of Bank policy or performance
    standards
  • No ignoring risks. Instead, risks will be
    identified and the documentation will set out how
    they would be addressed/mitigated

8
UCS History (cont.)
  • February 2005 First UCS pilot program for SG
    mandated by WB Board (12 pilot projects)
  • 12 pilot projects identified, including
  • Romania Water, Sanitation and Flood Protection
    Project and Roads and Highways, Railways
    Project
  • Others in Bhutan, Ghana, Jamaica, Tunisia,
    India, South Africa, Uganda, Morroco
  • OP 4.01 piloted in all projects OP 4.11 in four,
    OP 4.04 and OP 4.12 in one country each

9
UCS History (cont.)
  • November 2007 Evaluation Report on first 2
    years based on 7 active pilots main findings
  • Limited uptake -- project-by-project approach
    very limited in impact (12 projects in portfolio
    of 1600)
  • High transaction costs upfront preparation
    costs are prohibitive (averaged 104,000 extra
    expenses)
  • Promising approach for OP 4.01 and OP 4.11 less
    so for OP 4.12 due to fundamental gaps between
    national laws and WB OP
  • Gap-filling measures have policy and practical
    benefits beyond the project
  • Too early to judge costs, effectiveness of
    implementation, supervision
  • To expand program, will need clear and
    consistent management signals

Evaluation of the initial phase of the pilot
program for use of country systems for
environmental and social safeguards lessons
learned and management proposal for an
incremental scale up of the program
10
Nov 2007 Evaluation Report - selected
recommendations
  • Scale up to sub-national or country level, as
    free-standing exercise not linked to a project.
    Focus SDR on overall systems, not specific
    implementing agencies. Apply results to selected
    projects with gap-filling, capacity building as
    needed
  • In large country with diverse systems and
    capacity, take sub-national approach (provincial,
    state, municipal, sectoral, level institutions)
  • Select further pilots based on county interest,
    lending opportunities in pipeline, high level of
    mutual trust between WB and Borrower
  • Use Country Environmental Assessments, Strategic
    Environmental Assessments, etc. to identify
    candidate countries, programs
  • Clarify benefits of UCS to Borrowers and staff
    and provide clear roadmap to accessing these
    benefits
  • For MICs with well-developed systems (e.g. new EU
    members) move from SDR to full application of UCS
    without intermediate pilot project step. For new
    EU members, collaborate with EC, EBRD, EIB on SDR
  • Distinguish between risk of harm and reputational
    risk to WB (latter is not Borrowers
    responsibility)

11
UCS History (cont.)
  • January 2008 Board approved extension of UCS
    pilot program for SG, with scaling up from
    project level to country level

12
UCS Approach 2 Part AnalysisSafeguard
Diagnostic Review (SDR)
  • Equivalence Borrowers env soc. SG system is
    considered equivalent to WBs if borrowers
    system is designed to achieve objectives and
    adhere to principles outlined in Annex A not
    necessarily 11 match in methodology
  • Acceptability Assessment of Borrower's
    implementation practices, track record, and
    capacity (assessment carried out only in areas
    where equivalence analysis was positive)

UCS may cover one or more of the OPs
Acceptability analysis limited to OPs selected
based on Equivalency analysis
13
Steps in UCS Analysis
  • Identify relevant national/sub-national or other
    implementing entities
  • Review national/sub-national/corporate policies,
    laws, and regulations applicable to the project
    and Bank policies triggered or applicable
  • Compare the objectives and operational principles
    that underpin Bank policies, with country systems
    (rules, regulations, practices, and capacity of
    relevant institutions) to determine
    acceptability. Identify any actions needed to
    fill gaps.
  • Assess country system and implementation agency
    experience and track record. Identify strengths
    and weaknesses, and agree with borrower on any
    actions needed to fill gaps.

14
UCS Approach Gap-filling
  • If SDR identifies significant gaps between
    borrower policies or capacities and SG
    policies/principles
  • Borrower indicates commitment to fill gaps
  • Borrower commitments are incorporated in Equ/Acc
    analysis
  • Legal documents indicate gap filling to be
    completed prior to initiating relevant activities

15
Illustrative Draft Framework for Assessing EA
Systems
16
CROATIA UCS Pilot
17
preliminary thoughts
  • Take a comprehensive view of Country Systems (not
    just EIA law)
  • e.g., OP 4.01 requirement for analysis of
    alternatives analysis might be addressed
    through national spatial planning process and
    Strategic Environmental Assessment law
  • e.g., OP 4.01 requirement for EMP might be
    addressed through legal permitting process
    (location, construction and operating permits)
  • For consultation process, emphasis on meaningful,
    informed consultation not specific steps
  • Attempts to harmonize large body of legislation
    with EU in short time frame may raise
    Acceptability issues

18
Bye Now
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