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Document of The World Bank FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Report No: 65109-MZ PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT ON A PROPOSED CREDIT IN THE AMOUNT OF SDR 78.2 MILLION (US$120 MILLION EQUIVALENT) TO THE REPUBLIC OF MOZAMBIQUE FOR THE CITIES AND CLIMATE CHANGE PROJECT February 15, 2012 This document is being made publicly available prior to Board consideration. This does not imply a presumed outcome. This document may be updated following Board consideration and the updated document will be made publicly available in accordance with the Bank‟s policy on Access to Information. Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized

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Page 1: The World Bank FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY · 2016-07-14 · document of the world bank for official use only report no: 65109-mz project appraisal document on a proposed credit in the

Document of

The World Bank

FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

Report No: 65109-MZ

PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT

ON A

PROPOSED CREDIT

IN THE AMOUNT OF SDR 78.2 MILLION

(US$120 MILLION EQUIVALENT)

TO THE

REPUBLIC OF MOZAMBIQUE

FOR THE

CITIES AND CLIMATE CHANGE PROJECT

February 15, 2012

This document is being made publicly available prior to Board consideration. This does not imply

a presumed outcome. This document may be updated following Board consideration and the

updated document will be made publicly available in accordance with the Bank‟s policy on Access

to Information.

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CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS

(Exchange Rate Effective as of February 1, 2012)

Currency Unit = New Meticais (Mtn)

US$1.00 = 27.06 Mtn

US$1.53 = SDR 1.00

FISCAL YEAR

January 1 – December 31

ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS

AIAS Administration for Water and Sanitation Infrastructure (Administração de Infra-

estructuras de Água e Saneamento)

ANAMM National Association of Municipalities in Mozambique (Associação Nacional dos

Municípios em Moçambique)

BASS Beira Autonomous Sanitation Services

CPS Country Program Strategy

CRA Water Regulatory Council (Conselho de Regulação do Abastecimento de Água)

CUT Unique Account of Treasury (Conta Unica do Tesouro)

DAF Department of Management and Finance (Direcção de Administração e Finanças)

DINAPOT National Directorate for Territorial Organization

DNA National Water Directorate (Direcção Nacional de Águas)

DNDA Directorate for Local Governance Development

DUATS Rights of Use and Access to Land (Direito de Uso e Aproveitamento da Terra)

ESMF Environmental and Social Management Framework

EU European Union

FIIL Local Investment Funds (Fundo de Investimento para Inciativa Local)

FIPAG Water Supply Investment Fund (Fundo de Investimento e Patrimônio de

Abastecimento de Água)

FM Financial Management

GDP Gross Domestic Product

GFDRR Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery

GIS Geographic Information System

IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development

IDA International Development Association

IFR Interim Financial Report

INGC National Disaster Management Institute (Instituto Nacional de Gestão de Calamidades)

IGF General inspection of finance (Inspecção Geral das Finanças)

IPRA Property Tax (Imposto Predial Autárquico)

ISA International Standards on Auditing

M&E Monitoring and Evaluation

MAE Ministry of State Administration (Ministério da Administração Estatal)

MAF Financial Management Manual (Manual de Administração Financeira)

MCA Millennium Challenge Account

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MCC Millennium Challenge Corporation

MDG Millennium Development Goals

MDP Municipal Development Project

MICOA Ministry for Coordination of Environmental Affairs (Ministério para

Coordenação Ambiental)

MINAG Ministry of Agriculture (Ministério da Agricultura)

MINFIN Ministry of Finance

MMDP Maputo Municipal Development Program

MMO Municipal Monitoring Officer

MOPH Ministry of Public Works and House (Ministério de Obras Públicas e Habitação)

MTR Mid-Term Review

NAPA National Adaption Program of Action

NDF Nordic Development Fund

O&M Operation and Maintenance

P4R Project for Result

PARPA Poverty Reduction Action Plan

PDO Project Development Objectives

PEFA Public Expenditure and Financial Assessment

PGM Project Grant Manual

PIM Project Implementation Manual

PIU Project Implementation Unit

PROL Program for the Reform of Local Public Administration

RAP Resettlement Action Plan

RPF Resettlement Policy Framework

SASB Beira‟s Autonomous Sanitation Services (Serviços de saneamento autônomos da

Beira)

SDR Special Drawing Rights

SISTAFE Government Financial System (Sistema de Administração Financeira do Estado)

SPCR Strategic Program for Climate Resilience

TA Technical Assistance

UGEA Procurement Management Unit (Unidade Gestora e Executora das Aquisições)

WB World Bank

Regional Vice President: Obiageli Ezekwesili

Country Director: Laurence C. Clarke

Sector Director:

Acting Sector Manager:

Jamal Saghir

Alexander Bakalian

Task Team Leaders: Paula Pini and Uri Raich

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REPUBLIC OF MOZAMBIQUE

CITIES AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Table of Contents

I. Strategic Context .............................................................................................................................. 5

A. Country Context ............................................................................................................................ 5

B. Sectoral and Institutional Context ................................................................................................ 6

C. Higher Level Objectives to which the Project Contributes .......................................................... 8

II. Project Development Objectives ...................................................................................................... 9

A. Project Development Objectives (PDO) ....................................................................................... 9

B. Project Beneficiaries ..................................................................................................................... 9

C. PDO Level Results Indicators ....................................................................................................... 9

III. Project Description ......................................................................................................................... 10

A. Project components ..................................................................................................................... 10

B. Project Financing ....................................................................................................................... 12

C. Lessons Learned and Reflected in the Project Design ................................................................ 13

IV. Implementation ............................................................................................................................... 15

A. Institutional and Implementation Arrangements ........................................................................ 15

B. Results Monitoring and Evaluation ............................................................................................ 16

C. Sustainability ............................................................................................................................... 17

V. Key Risks and Mitigation Measures .............................................................................................. 18

VI. Appraisal Summary ........................................................................................................................ 18

A. Economic and Financial Analysis .............................................................................................. 18

B. Technical ..................................................................................................................................... 19

C. Financial Management ............................................................................................................... 21

D. Procurement ................................................................................................................................ 22

E. Social and Environment (including safeguards) ......................................................................... 23

Annex 1: Results Framework and Monitoring .......................................................................................... 26

Annex 2: Detailed Project Description ..................................................................................................... 30

Annex 3: Implementation Arrangements ................................................................................................. 49

Annex 4: Operational Risk Assessment Framework (ORAF) .................................................................. 67

Annex 5: Implementation Support Plan .................................................................................................... 70

Annex 6. Economic and Financial Analysis ............................................................................................ 73

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PAD DATA SHEET

Mozambique

Cities and Climate Change (P123201)

PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT .

AFRICA

AFTUW

.

Basic Information

Date: 02/15/2012 Sectors: Sub-national government administration (50%),

General water, sanitation and flood protection sector

(50%)

Country Director: Laurence C. Clarke Themes: Climate change (40%), Other urban development

(10%), Municipal finance (25%), Municipal

governance and institution building (25%) Acting Sector

Manager/Director: Alexander

Bakalian/Jamal Saghir

Project ID: P123201 EA Category: B - Partial Assessment

Lending

Instrument: Specific Investment

Loan

Team Leader(s): Paula Dias Pini/Uri

Raich

Does the Project include any CDD component? No

Joint IFC: No .

Recipient: Republic of Mozambique

Responsible Agency: Ministry of State Administration

Contact: Orlanda Rafael Title: National Director

Telephone No.: +258 21 426666 Email: [email protected]

Responsible Agency: Administration of Infrastructure for Water and Sanitation (Administração de Infra-Estructuras

de Água e Saneamento-AIAS)

Contact: Olinda de Sousa Title: Director

Telephone No.: 258823137450 Email: [email protected] .

Project Implementation

Period: Start Date: April 3, 2012 End Date: December 15, 2017

Expected Effectiveness Date: August 15, 2012

Expected Closing Date: December 15, 2017

.

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Project Financing Data(US$M)

[ ] Loan [ ] Grant [ ] Other Credit Term: standard IDA terms, with a maturity of 40 years

including a grace period of 10 years.

[ X ] Credit [ ] Guarantee

For Loans/Credits/Others

Total Project Cost (US$M): 120.00

Total Bank Financing (US$M): 120.00 .

Financing Source Amount(US$M)

BORROWER/RECIPIENT 0.00

International Development Association (IDA) 120.00

Total 120.00 .

Expected Disbursements (in USD Million)

Fiscal Year 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

Annual 1.20 10.20 30.70 30.80 28.10 19.00

Cumulative 1.20 11.40 42.10 72.90 101.00 120.00 .

Project Development Objective(s)

The PDO is to strengthen [the Recipient‟s] municipal capacity for sustainable urban infrastructure provision and

environmental management which enhance resiliency to climate related risks. .

Components

Component Name Cost (USD Millions)

Component 1 - Strengthening the municipal sector 35.00

Component 2 - Enhancing resilience of strategic coastal cities 85.00 .

Compliance

Policy

Does the Project depart from the CAS in content or in other significant respects? Yes [ ] No [ X ] .

Does the Project require any exceptions from Bank policies? Yes [ ] No [ X ]

Have these been approved by Bank management? Yes [ ] No [ ]

Is approval for any policy exception sought from the Board? Yes [ ] No [ X ]

Does the Project meet the Regional criteria for readiness for implementation? Yes [X] No [ ] .

Safeguard Policies Triggered by the Project Yes No

Environmental Assessment OP/BP 4.01 X

Natural Habitats OP/BP 4.04 X

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Forests OP/BP 4.36 X

Pest Management OP 4.09 X

Physical Cultural Resources OP/BP 4.11 X

Indigenous Peoples OP/BP 4.10 X

Involuntary Resettlement OP/BP 4.12 X

Safety of Dams OP/BP 4.37 X

Projects on International Waterways OP/BP 7.50 X

Projects in Disputed Areas OP/BP 7.60 X .

Legal Covenants

Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency

Effectiveness Condition August 15, 2012

Description of Covenant

The Project Implementation Manual has been adopted by the Recipient in a manner satisfactory to IDA.

Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency

Effectiveness condition August 15, 2012

Description of Covenant

The PIUs have been established and duly staffed in a manner satisfactory to IDA

Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency

Other Covenants

Description of Covenant

The Recipient shall continue to make FIIL transfers to Eligible Municipalities during each year of Project

implementation.

Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency

Other Covenants

Description of Covenant

The Recipient shall ensure that no contracts in respect of civil works shall be entered into until IDA shall have

approved the relevant RPA and ESMP for each such contract.

Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency

Other Covenants

Description of Covenant

The Recipient shall ensure that no SubProjects shall be eligible for financing under Component 1.A (Local level

support for improved municipal governance) of the Project if they are to be carried out in connection with an

International Waterway or one of its tributaries.

Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency

Withdrawal Conditions

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Description of Covenant

No withdrawal shall be made for payments under Category 3 (Municipal Performance Grants under Part A(i)(a) of

the Project) of the table in Section IV of Schedule 2 to the Financing Agreement until the Recipient has submitted to

IDA the Project Grants Manual (PGM) in a manner satisfactory to IDA.

.

Team Composition

Bank Staff

Name Title Specialization Unit

Luiz Claudio Martins

Tavares Lead Water and Sanitation

Specialist Lead Water and Sanitation

Specialist AFTUW

Harvey D. Van

Veldhuizen Lead Environmental

Specialist Lead Environmental

Specialist OPCQC

Jean-Christophe

Carret Senior Environmental

Economist Senior Environmental

Economist AFTEN

Kristine Schwebach Operations Analyst Operations Analyst AFTCS

Rildo Santos Language Program Assistant Language Program Assistant AFTUW

Paula Dias Pini Senior Urban Development

Specialist Senior Urban Development

Specialist AFTUW

Ivo G.P. Imparato Sector Leader Sector Leader AFTUW

Luz Meza-Bartrina Senior Counsel Senior Counsel LEGAF

Jose C. Janeiro Senior Finance Officer Senior Finance Officer CTRLA

Antonio L. Chamuco Senior Procurement Specialist Senior Procurement

Specialist AFTPC

Uri Raich Sr Urban Specialist Sr Urban Specialist AFTUW

Furqan Ahmad

Saleem Sr Financial Management

Specialist Sr Financial Management

Specialist AFTFM

Nilsa Ricardina Joao

Come Team Assistant Team Assistant AFCS2

Arlete Quiteria

Comissario Program Assistant Program Assistant AFCS2

Elvis Teodoro

Bernado Langa Financial Management

Analyst Financial Management

Analyst AFTFM

Non Bank Staff

Name Title Office Phone City

Louis Helling Consultant Consultant AFTUW

Luz Maria Gonzalez Consultant Consultant AFTUW .

.

Mozambique

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I. Strategic Context

A. Country Context

1. Mozambique‟s development is severely handicapped by natural disasters. It is one of the

world‟s most vulnerable countries and ranks third among African countries in exposure to risks

resulting from climate variability. Mozambique also continues to be one of the poorest countries

in the world. It ranks 172 out of 177 countries in the 2007/2008 Human Development Index (a

composite index combining indicators for income, education and life expectancy).1 A major

natural disaster has struck the country at least every five years, translating to an average loss in

GDP growth of over 1% per year. Multiple studies predict that climate change will have important

implications for the country by increasing coastal storms, droughts, saline intrusion, and flooding.

Mozambique‟s vulnerability to climate related impacts is aggravated by its large infrastructure

deficit, among the highest in the region according to the 2009 Africa Infrastructure Diagnostic.

2. Mozambique‟s cities, which are particularly vulnerable to flood and erosion risks, play a

critical role in the country‟s development by providing essential transport and supporting services

to the agriculture, tourism and extractive sectors which are the main sources of the country‟s

wealth. The proposed Project will reduce the risks and vulnerabilities associated with climate

related impacts in selected cities. This responds to one of the four priorities identified by the

Government of Mozambique‟s (GoM) 2007 climate-related National Adaptation Program of

Action (NAPA). Since 2003, GoM‟s Disaster Risk Reduction Strategy, partially funded by the

World Bank, which incorporates climate change concerns, has also guided GoM‟s risk adaptation

measures in urban areas. The proposed Project is also consistent with the World Bank‟s „Strategy

for Making Development Climate Resilient in Sub-Saharan.

3. In addition, the proposed Project is aligned with the Mozambique‟s Strategic Program for

Climate Resilience (SPCR), which was developed in the context of the Pilot Program for Climate

Resilience (PPCR) and endorsed in June 2011. It will also support the achievement of climate

resilience related objectives in the forthcoming World Bank Country Partnership Strategy for

2012-1-5. The PPCR is expected to finance pilot investments to reduce future weather induced

impacts on poor populations and on Mozambique‟s fragile economy. One of the pilots identified

in the SPCR will provide support for building climate resilience into investment design and

planning in coastal cities. And this is likely to focus on the highly vulnerable transnational port

city of Beira. It is anticipated that the PPCR will aimed at the enhancement of climate resilience of

urban infrastructure by financing investments that integrate resilience to climate risks into the

design and provision of infrastructure in the cities targeted by the Project. Investments in Nacala,

Maputo and other cities included in this Project will also seek to build on planning and piloting

experience from proposed PPCR investments in Beira. This process will contribute to a gradual

1 Watkins, K., 2007. Human Development Report 2007/2008: Fighting climate change: Human solidarity in a divided

world. New York: UNDP.

Mozambique

Cities and Climate Change

PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT

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scaling-up of climate resilient urban planning and investment across the urban sector. Also,

building on synergies with the proposed Project, the Nordic Development Fund (NDF) will

support institutional capacity strengthening on climate change issues, in particular in urban and

environmental planning in coastal cities.

B. Sectoral and Institutional Context

4. Mozambique‟s cities represent a significant developmental challenge for the Government.

Cities and towns are increasingly being seen as key for both economic growth and poverty

reduction, through a combination of improved urban living conditions, a more competitive

platform for investment by the private sector, and increased productivity of both people and assets.

However over half of Mozambique‟s urban population can be considered poor using consumption-

based indicators and core social indicators. Urban population is growing faster than the country as

a whole, and is expected to double by 2030. High urban population growth has been accompanied

by a notable lack of corresponding investments in basic infrastructure: as a result deficits in urban

services have been worsening. Environmental degradation has accelerated in many cities due to

unplanned development and poorly regulated land use, often including growth of low income

residential settlements in vulnerable areas without associated infrastructure investments. Flooding

and erosion are increasing threats in many cities and towns, both on the coast and along

economically important river basins and inland corridors.

5. Urban management in Mozambique has been decentralized to municipal Authorities since

approval of the 1998 Local Government Framework legislation which allocates political and

financial powers to elected Municipal Councils. The 33 initial municipalities, now 43, are

expected to gradually increase in number during the coming years. Newly created municipalities

often inherited the low functioning remnants of centralized colonial and socialist administration.

At the same time, with accelerating urbanization and economic growth, municipal responsibilities

are increasing and the country is undergoing an asymmetrical process of decentralization. In spite

of a broadly enabling legal and political framework (albeit with some remaining ambiguities and

constraints), few Municipal Councils have the institutional capacities needed to effectively

mobilize and manage resources and to sustainably provide adequate services to meet the social,

environmental, and economic challenges they face. From initially being providers of such local

facilities as local roads, markets, parks, cemeteries, public lighting, and solid waste services,

existing legislation is gradually increasing municipal responsibilities to provide more complex

services like health and education, as well as responding to climate related environmental

challenges.

6. Large, complex, and capital intensive urban investments in Mozambique typically remain

in the purview of national Government, while operation and maintenance for urban facilities and

public services are delegated either to municipalities or public utility companies. Surface drainage

to control urban flooding and erosion, including those exacerbated by climate impacts, often

require these sorts of investments. Where drainage infrastructure is inadequate, storm water

contamination is more severe and the health effects of floods are more dramatic. Urban flood

events are frequently associated with cholera outbreaks; this problem is most chronic and grave in

the city of Beira where large populous informal settlements are located in low lying flood prone

neighborhoods. Some neighborhoods in Maputo also face this chronic flooding and sanitation

challenge. In other cities such as Nacala where slopes are severe, rains are intense, and soils are

fragile, intense runoff from increasingly violent storms, including tropical cyclones, results in

erosion damage which threatens both public infrastructure and private assets. These are cities

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highly exposed to the impact of natural disasters and climate change. Coastal erosion, flooding

and sea water intrusion are already severely affecting them, and it will worsen, perhaps

dramatically, depending on eventual sea-level rise resulting from polar ice melt. Permanent

inundation of the coast and surrounding low-lying areas could affect up to 500 meters inland from

the coast line. The high vulnerability of these cities to climate change impacts has been flagged by

numerous studies. Increasing the resilience of these cities to climate impacts, such as flood and

erosion, is amongst the priorities raised by these studies.

7. Mozambique‟s urban drainage infrastructure, mostly constructed by Portuguese Authorities

during the 1950s and 60s to serve colonial elites in central cities, is degraded, under-capacity, and

much more limited in coverage than the extension of contemporary cities with their vast periurban

neighborhoods. The country is gradually gaining capacity to address major urban flooding and

erosion. A specialized central agency, the Administration for Water and Sanitation Infrastructure

(AIAS) was created in 2009, under the authority of the Ministry of Public Works and Housing‟s

National Water Directorate (DNA/MOPH), to manage urban water2 and sanitation investments,

including drainage. DNA and AIAS have commissioned, with support from several aid agencies,

the technical and institutional studies on which the proposed Project‟s drainage investments in

Beira and Nacala have been identified and appraised. AIAS will also manage the drainage and

sanitation master plan for greater Maputo to be financed by the proposed Project.

8. Mozambique‟s National Sanitation Sector Policy not only sets policy objectives and

technical standards, it also defines an institutional and financial model for sustainable operation

and maintenance of urban sanitation and drainage systems. This model is based on the creation by

each municipality of a legally autonomous sanitation entity which would be financed by a

combination of a sanitation fee linked to the water bill, a drainage fee linked to municipal property

taxes, and assorted service-related user fees. These ring-fenced dedicated revenues are to provide

the basis for sustainable Operation and Maintenance (O&M) by the autonomous municipal

sanitation entity, with central Government to provide bridging subsidies during the start-up phase

of each municipal investment and the associated managing entity. DNA and AIAS have begun

implementing this model in Beira.

9. While large-scale drainage infrastructure may be required as a basis for urban flood and

erosion control in some areas of Mozambique‟s largest cities, other approaches may be more

appropriate for smaller municipalities and those confronting less acute risks from climate related

impacts. Smaller scale surface drainage investments are typically planned, financed and managed

directly by municipal infrastructure departments and their operation and maintenance is undertaken

on the same basis as municipal road maintenance. In many cases, limited municipal financial

capacity and underfunded infrastructure maintenance budgets are critical constraints to improving

the performance of the small and simple surface drainage and erosion control structures typically

used by Mozambican municipalities. In order to improve urban drainage under the existing regime

of limited interGovernmental fiscal transfers, municipalities must generate increased own source

revenues, must allocate these resources more consistently to infrastructure maintenance, and must

manage small infrastructure investments and maintenance operations more efficiently. The

proposed Project will provide capacity building to address these institutional constraints to more

sustainable urban management.

2 Water infrastructure investments in the large cities are managed by another agency, FIPAG, also partially financed

by the World Bank.

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10. In many cities and towns, environmental and spatial planning complemented by improved

land use management are also critical elements of municipal adaptation to minimize the impacts of

climate related flooding and erosion. In some cities, areas of unregulated development and

informal settlements may cover as much as 90 percent of municipal territory. Many informal

settlements which developed during the almost two decade civil war and in the period of rapid

urbanization since the Peace Agreement of 1992 are located in low-lying or erosion prone areas.

Improved environmental planning and land use regulation, based on such instruments as

vulnerability maps and urban adaptation plans, will assist municipalities in reducing or minimizing

flooding and erosion risks. Drainage master plans will assist municipalities in targeting scarce

investment capital budgets to fund strategic investments which will reduce vulnerability of higher

risk neighborhoods. Land registration and regularization3 will support better land use regulation

and strengthen incentives for municipal-community partnerships to better maintain drainage flows

-- whether through fallow areas, roadside gutters, or dedicated drainage canals -- in the collective

interest of neighborhood risk reduction.

11. Mozambique‟s intergovernmental system has not kept pace with these evolving demands

for urban development and service provision, which are in many cases exacerbated by increased

risks resulting from climate change. Municipal financial capacities are extremely low in relation to

municipal responsibilities. Total municipal spending per capita in Mozambique is around US$12

(2006), which is significantly less than the average in Sub-Saharan Africa. Fiscal transfers are

highly constrained; legally capped at 1.5% of total national public revenues and currently

amounting to less than 1 percent. Municipalities remain dependent on the state budget for much of

their operating costs and on external funding managed by central institutions for urban

infrastructure investments. This dependency is compounded by weaknesses in municipal own-

source revenue collection, due both to policy constraints and low municipal capacity for resource

collection. Thus in order to increase the capacity of municipalities to ensure adequate operation

and management of climate-resilient infrastructure and to competently manage the urban

environment and effectively regulate use of urban land, the public sector systems for decentralized

planning, finance, infrastructure provision, infrastructure maintenance, and service delivery require

reform and strengthening at both central Government and municipal levels. This Project will

strategically invest in several elements of this intergovernmental system to address key municipal

constraints to climate resiliency and sustainable urban development.

C. Higher Level Objectives to which the Project Contributes

12. The proposed Project will contribute to the achievement of higher level objectives of the

World Bank, Government of Mozambique, and Millennium Development Goals (MDG). The

Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) of FY12-15 has two strategic pillars, (i) Vulnerability and

Resilience, and (ii) Governance and Public Sector Capacity, being directly supported by program

activities. These same pillars are being supported by the new Africa Strategy. Similarly,

numerous Project activities in the sanitation and municipal development sectors are aligned with 2

pillars of the Government‟s Poverty Reduction Action Plan (“PARPA III”): Fostering Human and

Social Development and Good Governance. Also, the Project will be instrumental to the

attainment some of the MDGs linked to Environmental Sustainability such as integrating the

principles of sustainable development into national policies and programs; reducing the number of

3 Land registration, while linked to environmental regulation, will also provide the information required to broaden

each municipality‟s land and property registry. This registry provides essential data for the Property Tax (IPRA)

Cadastre that is a major underexploited source of municipal revenues.

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people without access to sanitation; and improving the standard of living of slum dwellers.

Strongly aligned with pillars I and II of the CPS, the proposed Project also recognizes the key role

of municipalities to reduce vulnerabilities and manage climate related impacts.

13. The Government‟s last Five Year Plan referred to the ongoing decentralization in the

country as “one of the pillars of the process of modernization of the state”. The Plan also sets as

an objective the consolidation of the municipalities. It also aims to improve access to land and

housing by ensuring the approval of urban land use plans and to promote the effective coordination

of institutions involved in urbanization and the provision of infrastructure. Soon after the new

Government took office in early 2010, the official emphasis was on continuity in terms of the

priorities set out in the previous Government‟s Five Year Plan and the PARPA II, with an

additional emphasis by the new Government on job creation and urban poverty. This new and

increasing focus on reducing urban poverty relates directly to this Project‟s objectives and

activities.

14. Mozambique has developed a number of strategies to address climate risks. At the macro-

level, the Government of Mozambique (GoM) addressed disaster risk in the Action Plan for the

Reduction of Absolute Poverty 2006-20010 (PARPA II). GoM is currently preparing the next Five

Year Development Plan and the PARPA III approved in early 2011 that address climate risks. One

of the strategic objectives of PARPA 3 is to support the adoption of measures to „prevent and adapt

to climate change‟. This document assigns responsibility for leading progress on this objective to

the Ministry of Agriculture (MINAG). Meanwhile, the Ministry for Coordination of

Environmental Affairs (MICOA) has prepared a NAPA in 2007 that laid the foundations for a

multi-stakeholder adaptation agenda with four priorities: (i) strengthening early warning systems,

(ii) strengthening the capacity of farmers to deal with climate change; (iii) reduction of the impacts

of climate change along the coastal zone; (iv) water resources management. However, GoM

recognizes that improved coordination and strategic planning is still needed – in particular to

clarify institutional roles and responsibilities between line ministries (including those relating to

Disaster Risk Management) and to set-out effective priorities for adaptation investment. To this

end, the MICOA is coordinating the development of a National Strategy and Action Plan for

Climate Change and Disaster Risk Management, scheduled for completion in 2012.

II. Project Development Objectives

A. Project Development Objectives (PDO)

15. The PDO is to strengthen municipal capacity for sustainable urban infrastructure provision

and environmental management which enhance resiliency to climate related risks.

B. Project Beneficiaries

16. The direct Project beneficiaries are persons living in the selected municipalities

participating in the Project. Because in Mozambique most urban areas susceptible to flooding and

erosion are occupied by informal settlements, the benefits from reduced environmental

vulnerability resulting from Project financed investments will accrue especially to low income

households.

C. PDO Level Results Indicators

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17. The results indicators at the PDO level are:

(i) Number of Project beneficiaries, of which female (%) [core indicator]

(ii) Percentage annual increases in aggregate municipal own-source revenues

(iii) Area of participating municipalities benefitting from reduced flooding or erosion

III. Project Description

A. Project components

18. The proposed Project will assist Mozambique in developing appropriate institutions, and

infrastructure improvements to strengthen the resilience of selected cities to climate related

impacts. Infrastructure investments will consist of the rehabilitation of drains, conduits,

embankments, levees and surface water storage facilities. Institutional investments will include

improved urban environmental planning and land use management; increased own-source revenue

capacity, more effective and transparent municipal financial management; and a sustainable

service delivery model for operation and maintenance of urban sanitation and drainage systems.

Component 1 – Strengthening the municipal sector (US$35 million)

19. The objective of this component is to increase municipal capacity to sustainably plan,

manage and finance climate resilient urban development, including through the strengthening the

Recipient‟s institutions underpinning its municipal system in order to improve sustainable

decentralized financing and management of the urban environment and infrastructure

20. Subcomponent 1A: Local level support for improved municipal governance (US$27.5

million) will provide support for 20 municipalities to enhance municipal resiliency to

environmental risks and municipal capacity for sustainable decentralized urban management. The

20 municipalities to be supported under Component 1 with capacity building, technical assistance

and performance grants include (with their respective 2007 populations):

in Maputo Province - Manhiça (56,165), Matola City (671,556), and Namaacha (12,725);

in Gaza Province - Chibuto (63,184), Chokwé (53,062), Macia/Bilene (27,795),

Mandlakazi (10,317), and Xai-Xai (115 752);

in Inhambane Province - Inhambane City (65,149), Massinga (20,930), Maxixe City

(108,824), and Vilankulo (37,176);

in Sofala Province - Gorongosa (18,761);

in Manica Province - Catandica (22,271), Chimoio City (237,497), Gondola (33,877), and

Vila Manica (36,124); and

in Tete Province - Moatize (38,924), Tete City (155,870), and Ulongue (13,620).

21. Subcomponent 1A activities include:

(a) Municipal Performance Grants: Support Municipalities: Support Eligible

Municipalities through the financing of Sub-Projects, by providing Municipal

Performance Grants;

(b) Improved Urban Planning and Land Use Management: Support including through the:

(A) the carrying out of climate vulnerability assessments, basic spatial planning

studies and development and implementation of urban land management instruments

in all Municipalities as well as urban environmental and surface water management

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instruments in those Municipalities vulnerable to climate related flooding and erosion;

(B) the development and dissemination of methodologies for urban planning and land

use and environmental management; and (C) carrying out of training sessions for

municipal staff and technicians;

(c) Enhancement of Municipal Financial Sustainability: Support to improve financial

management and enhanced municipal revenues, including through the: (A)

development and dissemination of methodologies for revenue administration; (B) the

carrying out of training sessions in revenue administration and financial management

for municipal staff; (C) provision of advisory services and equipment to strengthen the

institutional capacity of the municipalities; and (D) development and implementation

of financial and management systems

22. Subcomponent 1B: National Level Support for Improved Municipal Governance (US$

7.5 million) will strengthen key national institutions which regulate and support the municipal

system. It includes:

(a) Capacity strengthening of the Ministry of State Administration and the Ministry of

Finance to monitor the performance of the municipalities and develop improved

intergovernmental and municipal policies and systems including through the

development and implementation of the national policy and regulatory framework for

municipal governance.

(b) Strengthening of ANAMM to provide services to its member municipalities including

through capacity building support activities and policy and regulatory advocacy on

municipal and intergovernmental issues.

(c) Establishment and operation of a PIU in DNDA to support the coordination and

management of Component 1 of the Project including through the provision of

technical assistance, training, audits, goods and operating costs.

Component 2 – Enhancing resilience of strategic coastal cities (US$85 million):

23. This component will support the enhancement of selected municipalities, including those in

Beira, Nacala and Maputo metropolitan area for sustainable resilience to weather-related

environmental threats. The component will focus on:

(a) Identification of key investment priorities in selected cities to strengthen resilience to

climate related floods and erosion through the carrying out of: (a) an assessment of

current needs, including the selection of the cities to be targeted, and Projecting trends

and scenarios taking into account climate change considerations; and (b) training

sessions for the technical teams of AIAS on climate change impacts on sanitation.

(b) Strengthening Resilience of the City of Beira to Control Floods including through the:

(a) development of a comprehensive study on integrated urban water management; (b)

design and supervision of drainage rehabilitation works; (c) carrying out of drainage

rehabilitation works including the relining of the primary channel (central) of Beira‟s

drainage system; (d) carrying out of rehabilitation works affected by the works

referred to in (c) of this sub-paragraph including fences, latrines, verandas, side-walks

as well as provision of resettlement houses provided with basic infrastructure; and (e)

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provision of advisory services and equipment to strengthen the institutional capacity of

Beira‟s Autonomous Sanitation Service.

(c) Strengthening the resilience of the City of Nacala to control erosion including through

the: (a) design and supervision of erosion control and drainage rehabilitation works

including associated environmental and social support; (b) carrying out of erosion

control and drainage rehabilitation works including those related to the three primary

channels of Nacala‟s drainage system; and (c) provision of advisory services and

equipment to strengthen the institutional capacity of Nacala municipality for

managing drainage infrastructure and erosion control

(d) Strengthening the resilience of Maputo metropolitan area to control floods including

through the development of a master drainage and sanitation plan for the Great

Maputo area.

(e) Establishment and operation of the PIU in AIAS to support the coordination and

management of Component 2 of the Project including through the provision of

technical assistance, audits, goods and operating costs.

B. Project Financing

24. Lending instrument: The proposed lending instrument is a standard Specific Investment

Loan (SIL) comprising an International Development Association (IDA) Credit of US$120

million, Special Drawing Rights (SDR) equivalent to be implemented over six years. During

Project formulation the possibility of employing the Project for Result (P4R) lending instrument

was assessed, but due to ongoing definition of P4R policies and procedures and prior comments of

the Project‟s delivery date, this option was deemed not viable. Selection of the SIL was premised

on the flexibility and its suitability to incorporate financing for a broad range of activities including

a number of specific investments across the country, technical assistance and capacity

enhancement measures.

25. Project Cost and Financing

Project Components Project

cost

IDA

Financing

% Financing

1. Component 1 – Strengthening the municipal sector

1.1. Local level support for improved municipal governance

1.2. National level support for Improved Municipal Governance

2. Component 2 – Enhancing resilience of strategic coastal cities

2.1. Identification of key priorities in selected cities to strengthen

resilience to climate related floods and erosion

2.2. Strengthening resilience of the City of Beira to control floods

2.3. Strengthening resilience of the City of Nacala to control erosion

2.4. Strengthening resilience of Maputo metropolitan area to control

floods

2.5. Establishment of and operation of the PIU in AIAS to support the

coordination and management of Component 2 of the Project

Total Baseline Costs

Physical contingencies

Price contingencies

Total Project Costs

Interest During Implementation

35.0

27.5

7.5

85.0

0.6

61.9

6.4

12.3

3.8

35.0

85.0

100

100

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Front-End Fees

Total Financing Required

120.0

120.0

100

C. Lessons Learned and Reflected in the Project Design

26. There have been five urban Projects in Mozambique with World Bank financing: Urban

Rehabilitation Project (PRU, 1988-1996), Program for the Reform of Local Public Administration

(PROL, 1994-1999), the Municipal Development Project (MDP, 2003-2007) and the Maputo

Municipal Development Program I and II (MMDP, 2006-2010, 2011-2015). While PRU focused

mainly on physical rehabilitation of neglected urban infrastructure, PROL and MDP contributed

significantly to the establishment of the legal framework for local Government in Mozambique and

to the introduction of good municipal management practices such as fair, transparent procurement

procedures and regular municipal audits. MMDP I aimed at strengthening the institutional and

financial capacity of the country‟s capital to support service delivery and priority investments.

MMPD II aims at completing the reforms initiated during MMDP I with a focus on sustainability.

The World Bank‟s approach in Mozambique has balanced policy support to the municipal system

with capacity building support to specific municipalities, with a focus on the largest city, where

much of the economic base of the country is concentrated. In addition, the World Bank led two

multi-donor sponsored Economic and Sector Work Projects: one concerning the lessons learned

from 10 year of municipal development in Mozambique and the second on municipal revenue

potential. Based on this work and comparable experience in similar countries, key lessons learned

include:

27. Systemic bases of municipal development require improvement: Although the demands for

service delivery are frequently articulated on a sectoral basis (urban land management, water

supply, sanitation, transportation, solid waste management, etc.), municipalities' ability to deliver

in any sector is strongly influenced by a number of elements that work as a system. Only by

strengthening the institutional bases of municipalities can they become effective and sustainable

governing and service provision entities. However, institutional change is a slow and difficult

process that often meets significant resistance and therefore needs substantial commitment from

borrowing countries. Many World Bank and development partner financed Projects have shown

that sustainability of Project results is often limited because new roles and responsibilities have not

been institutionalized.

28. Urban planning and land use management should be priorities in municipal Projects:

Establishing proper spatial planning and land management systems is critical to aligning incentives

for public and private investment and to improving security of tenure, particularly in informal

settlements. These instruments also support sustainable urban environmental management. In

Maputo and in the municipalities supported by the P13/PDA, important steps to improve urban

planning are being taken, but in other municipalities more effective implementation of local

planning laws and investments in improved security of tenure are needed. This lesson has been

taken into account in the design of the Project‟s urban planning component which will increase the

coverage of spatial development planning and land titling.

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29. Municipal finance improvement requires significant political commitment and

organizational effort: In order to ensure sustainability of governance, environmental management,

and service provision in cities, municipal finances must be strengthened. Both intergovernmental

transfers and own source revenues must be increased in keeping with the demands for urban

infrastructure and services. To complement resource increases, major investments are needed to

strengthen financial management systems. To improve their overall performance, experience

shows that there is no substitute for complete, yet simple, financial management systems that allow

municipalities to perform financial transactions in a standardized and controlled manner. Moving

to integrated systems (that are by and large computerized) implies a drastic change in

municipalities‟ organization, culture, skills, and operational routines, so Authorities must be

committed to enable such profound changes. In addition, own-source revenue mobilization

requires significant political commitment, administrative effort, and public mobilization.

30. Performance incentives stimulate increased municipal demand for capacity building and

greater impacts on urban governance and service provision: The Bank has gathered substantial

experience in the use of performance grant programs in countries such as Ghana, Tanzania,

Ethiopia, Cambodia, Bangladesh, etc. These experiences indicate that supply-side capacity

building measures aimed at local Governments in the absence of demand-side incentives often

produce limited results. Conversely, there is growing evidence that capacity building initiatives,

such as systems development (in areas like financial management and planning), institutional

reform, and training, are considerably more effective when they are linked with a system which

strengthens demand on the part of targeted local Governments. Performance based

intergovernmental grants can provide appropriate incentives, to which local Governments are

likely to respond. As a result municipalities are supported to take advantage of capacity building

activities and commit themselves to inculcating them into their ongoing operations. This is the

logic that will be adopted in component 1 of this Project.

31. Regarding improving infrastructure to control floods and erosion, the Project also draws on

lessons from water and sanitation Projects implemented in Mozambique and from successful

operations in other regions focused on the strong integration of the urban and water sectors.

32. Strong ownership from municipalities provides the basis for infrastructure sustainability:

Although Project financed works are executed through a central Government agency,

municipalities should demonstrate strong ownership of infrastructure created through the Project as

a basis for assuming their role in ensuring appropriate operation and maintenance. This foundation

has already been established in the Municipality of Beira, where a sanitation Project employing

this institutional arrangement is under execution. Similar commitment has also been indicated by

the Municipality of Maputo during preliminary discussions related to the formulation and

implementation of the Metropolitan Drainage/Sanitation Master Plan.

33. Investment Projects also provide opportunities for hands-on training of municipal staff:

Participation of municipal staff in management of works contracts, including construction

supervision activities, allows them to increase their technical capacities and sense of ownership by

working jointly with the construction contractor and supervising engineers. As part of their

training, municipal staff should also review the reports on works execution submitted by the

constructor, as part of the works approval process. During contract execution, municipal staff

should also receive training to operate the equipment that will subsequently be transferred from the

contractor to the municipality, or more precisely, to the municipal autonomous sanitation agency.

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Accordingly to the technology used for the works and the equipments used, the municipal staff

may have access to training provided by manufacturers as well as to visit to similar interventions

in other cities within the country or in another country to learn from the practical experience of

their peers.

34. Packaging works in large contracts facilitates economies of scale and effort: Lessons from

similar Projects indicate that packaging infrastructure works in large contracts is realistic and

appropriate. Both the Government and the private market respond positively to this method, which

reduces the transactions costs, allow Project teams to focus on the quality of the results pursued,

and has contributed to timely Project implementation.

35. Lessons from INGC, World Bank and GFDRR supported analytical work is that

Mozambique‟s urban environments will face increasing climate variability and uncertainty, a

likelihood of more frequent and more intense rainfall event and greater risks from coastal storms

and cyclones.

IV. Implementation

A. Institutional and Implementation Arrangements

36. The Project will be implemented by two specialized agencies, each of which has the

governmental mandate to manage policies and programs which correspond to the Project‟s two

components. The Ministry of State Administration (MAE), and specifically its DNDA is

responsible for the regulation and strengthening of the municipal system; MAE/DNDA will be the

implementing agency for Component 1. The national AIAS, a specialized semiautonomous

agency under the supervision of the MOPH, is responsible for provision of urban water

infrastructure in all but the largest cities and urban sanitation infrastructure, including drainage, in

all cities and towns; AIAS will be the implementing agency for Component 2. Each of these

implementing agencies will be directly and fully responsible for resource management,

procurement, operational management, safeguard and fiduciary compliance and monitoring and

reporting related to the activities of their respective component.

37. Management of Component 1 will be centralized in the DNDA, including planning,

implementation management, monitoring, fiduciary controls, safeguard compliance, and reporting.

A Project Implementation Unit (PIU) will fulfill these responsibilities, led by a contracted Project

Coordinator supported by dedicated PIU technical and administrative personnel. With the

exception of Municipal Performance Grants, all component resources and contracts will be

managed directly by the PIU. Beneficiary institutions for Component 1 include: 20 municipalities,

the ANAMM, the Ministry of Finance, and the DNDA itself as the recipient of capacity building

support. Based on their approved annual workplans, goods and services will be procured and

purchased by the PIU and provided in-kind to these beneficiary institutions at central and local

levels. For Municipal Performance Grants, based on the conditions and procedures specified in the

Project Grants Manual, municipalities will each manage and report on use of their annual

allocation for capital investments based on approved grant investment plans and budgets.

Monitoring, and reporting will be the responsibility of the PIU.

38. Management of Component 2 will be centralized in the AIAS. A PIU will be established in

AIAS to create additional capacity to implement Project funded activities. Procurement and

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financial management will be carried out by AIAS in Maputo, with support from contracted

specialists. Implementation support to the AIAS will be funded by the ongoing Bank financed

WASIS Project and related Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Project, and will be in

place and functional when the Project becomes effective. Once the MCC and the WASIS Projects

conclude, the proposed Project will take over the cost of this implementation support team. In

addition, the Project will finance the services of an Executive Coordinator to support to the AIAS

Director and ensure the technical and operational coordination of component activities at central

and local levels. To ensure an appropriate capacity to manage the execution of the works in the

cities of Beira and Nacala, the Project will finance a small unit based in each of these cities,

including an engineer, a technical assistant, an administrator, and a secretary, who will work with

municipalities, consultant engineers, and construction contractors in each city. Monitoring and

reporting will be the responsibility of the Project‟s Coordinator under the authority of AIAS.

B. Results Monitoring and Evaluation

39. The Implementing Agency for each Component will be wholly and solely responsible for

monitoring and evaluation of that component: the DNDA for Component 1 and AIAS for

Component 2. Each Implementing Agency will include a Monitoring and Evaluation Officer who

will be responsible for collecting and presenting all monitoring data and reports as specified in the

Operations Manual.

40. Component 1 monitoring will be carried out in direct collaboration with beneficiary

institutions at central and local level for all capacity building activities. Additional monitoring

data regarding capacity building activities will be collected from technical assistance providers

contracted by the PIU, as part of consultants‟ reporting requirements. Component 1 monitoring of

Municipal Performance Grants will be carried out in close collaboration with beneficiary

municipalities through Municipal Monitoring Officers (MMOs) to be nominated by each

participating municipality. Training and oversight of MMOs will be provided by the PIU through

its Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) Officer. PIU contracted technical assistance providers

working with municipalities will assist the PIU to validate monitoring data provided by

municipalities. Supervision visits by PIU staff will also allow validation of municipal monitoring

data. These monitoring arrangements will also provide the data required for annual performance

assessments of municipalities, on the basis of which annual allocations of Municipal Performance

Grants will be established.

41. Component 2 monitoring data will be collected and presented by the local Project

management offices to be established and staffed by AIAS in each municipality where

infrastructure investments are to be carried out. These local Project management offices, under the

supervision of the PIU, will collaborate with municipalities, construction firms, and supervising

engineers to collect relevant information regarding progress implementing works. Data regarding

the institutional and financial sustainability of institutional arrangements for operation and

maintenance will be collected in collaboration with each municipality. Component 2 activities to

be undertaken at central level or in cities where local Project management offices will not be

established will be monitored directly by the PIU, through its M&E Officer.

42. An external evaluation of the Project will be undertaken as an input to the Mid-Term

Review (MTR). On the basis of the evaluation report and the MTR, GoM and the Task Team may

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consider adjustments in the Project design or implementation arrangements as well as possible

preparation of follow-up activities to those financed by the Project.

C. Sustainability

43. Institutional sustainability is a core objective of the Project which emphasizes the

strengthening of institutional capacity for planning, management and mobilization of municipal

revenues to sustain municipal administration and service delivery. The institutional dimension of

sustainability rests on improved organizational systems and greater human capacity. The technical

assistance (TA) that will be provided by the Project will finance a number of capacity building

activities (methodology manuals, training courses, peer to peer learning, etc.) that will strengthen

the municipalities‟ human resources. Institutional support in the area of operation and maintenance

will also be offered to either strengthen or help to establish the entities in charge of sanitation on

the three large coastal cities.

44. Environmental Sustainability will be a key outcome of the Project. Urban plans and land

use management will contribute to reduced risks to environmentally vulnerable lowland and

coastal areas within municipalities. Improved drainage systems will also protect valuable

infrastructure assets throughout municipalities and reduce runoff damage to soil and vegetation

along slopes and coastal areas.

45. Financial sustainability will also be strengthened by the Project. Enhancement of own

source revenues is key to improve accountability between citizens/tax payer and their elected

Governments. However, because some of the municipalities still have a very weak tax base, in

addition to own source revenue enhancement the Project will also continue a policy dialogue with

the Ministry of Finance on the intergovernmental fiscal structure as a whole. The piloting of

performance grants in the Project will illustrate how small capital allocations could be used to

leverage local-level reform efforts. Also, the Government‟s interest in the implementation of a

financial management system at the local level shows recognition of the need to improve the basic

financial management functions that are a necessary condition for decentralized governance.

46. Operation and Maintenance (O&M) sustainability of Project financed municipal

infrastructure to control floods and erosion will be ensured by the municipal autonomous sanitation

services, which will be strengthened by the Project. The first of such agencies has been created by

the Municipality of Beira. This institutional solution is one the main elements of Mozambique‟s

Water and Sanitation Policy. It responds principles including: (i) consistence with the municipal

mandate with respect to sanitation/drainage services provision, (ii) financial sustainability, which

is ensured through the collection of sanitation/drainage services fees, combined with the adoption

of legal mechanisms allowing to segregate the sanitation agency financial resources from general

municipal revenues, (iii) fiscal compliance through annual independent financial audits, (iv)

performance monitoring through the water, sanitation/drainage regulatory agency (CRA), and (v)

creation of medium/long term plans for investments and/or O&M assistance agreed between the

municipality and the central Government, financed through a mix of local revenues and transfers

from the central Government‟s annual budget.

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V. Key Risks and Mitigation Measures

A. Risk Ratings Summary Table

Stakeholder Risk Rating

Implementing Agency Risk

- Capacity Substantial

- Governance Moderate

Project Risk

- Design Substantial

- Social and Environmental Moderate

- Program and Donor Substantial

- Delivery Monitoring and Sustainability Moderate

- Technical Risk Substantial

Overall Implementation Risk Substantial

B. Overall Risk Rating Explanation

47. The principle risk is associated with implementation agency risks; given GoM

implementation agency for Component 1 has little Project management capacity and has lost past

personnel who understood Bank procedures through work on prior Bank Projects. The propose

mitigation measure to this risk is the creation of a PIU staffed by contracted personnel with Project

management and World Bank (WB) Project experience to compensate for low ministerial

capacities.

48. Another major implementation agency risk relates to the low municipal capacities for

planning, management, and technical functions related to focal areas in urban planning and

municipal finances. The proposed mitigation measure consists of providing strong support to local

Government management and reporting systems as well as staff training, in order to strengthen

municipalities‟ management and technical capacities.

49. Municipal capacities for operation and maintenance of urban infrastructure may not be

adequate to ensure sustainability of investments. The proposed measure to this risk is the Project

support to the municipal sanitation entities to ensure dedicated revenue stream, and equipment for

infrastructure O&M.

VI. Appraisal Summary

A. Economic and Financial Analysis

50. Project benefits consist of reduction of frequency and intensity of floods that will occur in

Beira and of reduction of erosion that will occur in Nacala. A cost benefit analysis was carried out

for Beira; and a cost effectiveness analysis was carried out for Nacala. Both analyses were based

on the results presented in the feasibility studies.

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51. Economic benefits for Beira were estimated based on the reveal preference approach,

which relies on data from observed transactions in the market, such as the costs associated with the

floods. The avoided cost method was used to estimate the economic benefits that different

stakeholders will have with the Project. This calculation corresponded to the difference between

damage costs under two scenarios: “with” and “without” the implementation of the investments.

The associated damage costs vary with the intensity and duration of the flood, which imply

different water levels, and extension of flooded areas.

52. These costs were calculated in probabilistic terms, based on collected data and a hydrologic

mathematical model for storm simulation. Several alternatives of investment were evaluated

according to different number of years of recurrence (2, 5, 10, and 20 years). The avoided damage

cost for Beira drainage investment, was estimated for (i) the industrial sector, (ii) the formal

housing; (iii) informal housing; (iv) agriculture; (v) roads infrastructure; (vi) electricity

infrastructure; (vii) loss of life; (viii) transport; and (ix) tourism. The results of the economic

analysis of the drainage investment show that the Beira Project is economically feasible with a

NPV of US$49.5 million and an economic rate of return of 18%.

53. The sensitivity analysis for the Project in Beira shows the soundness of the Project. The

switching value of the investment costs is 100%, which means that the investment cost could

increase up to 100% and the Project would still show positive economic returns. Regarding the

benefit variables, the sensitivity analysis shows that if the assumptions made for the benefits are

cut by half, the Project would still be economically viable. The cost effectiveness analysis for

Nacala shows that the chosen alternative of building gabions baskets is economically rationale.

54. Financial benefits were estimated based on the drainage fee applied since 2008, following

the approval of the Law no1/ 2008 of January 16, 2008. This charge consists of an additional 15%

on property tax. The financial analysis shows that current revenues from drainage fee are not

enough to cover the operating costs of the drainage investments to be financed by the Project.

Therefore to make the Project sustainable either the drainage revenues have to increase, or the

Government has to transfer subsidies for the operation. In both municipalities there is ample room

for improving the collection and billing of property tax, given that, they currently collect only 4%

in Beira and 0.1% in Nacala of what they could potentially charge. To cover operating expenses

when investments are completed at year five, Beira municipality would have to increase 22% per

year its revenues from property tax in order to be able to make available US$130,000 per year, the

estimated amount that will be needed to maintain the investments financed by the Project. Nacala

will need to increase its revenues in 82% per year, to make available US$7,000 per year for the

estimated maintenance activities.

B. Technical

55. Urban Planning: The Project will finance activities to strengthen the urban planning

capacities of participating municipalities. Support to municipalities will focus on three kinds of

instruments for urban spatial management: (i) Basic Spatial Planning Instruments (e.g. urban

structure plans and sub-municipal urbanization plans); (ii) Urban Environmental Management

Instruments (e.g. ecological zoning plans, drainage and erosion control plans); (iii) Urban Land

Management Instruments (issuing of documents formalizing effective land tenure (DUATs) and

establishment of land and property cadastres). Methodologies employed in these three domains

will be based on GoM regulations and developed in coordination with the MICOA and its National

Directorate for Territorial Organization (DINAPOT) which is the GoM agency responsible for

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normative aspects of urban environmental and land use management. Project promoted methods

will also be based on good practices developed by other relevant initiatives in other regions of

Mozambique, including the P13/PDA and the MCA urban land component. Support to all these

activities will require provision of higher level training and technical assistance by the Faculty of

Architecture and Urban Planning of Eduardo Mondlane University, who possess unique

knowledge and experience in implementing Mozambique‟s urban planning regulations in the local

social and institutional context.

56. Financial Management: In order to create human, technical and institutional capacity to

improve financial management at the municipal level, the program will finance the implementation

of an appropriate computer based financial management system adapted for municipal

management (IFMIS). The track record in Africa of IFMIS at the sub-national levels is mixed.

Thus, support to this activity will carefully review the technical and institutional aspects of the

activity to ensure technical viability and sustainability in the low-capacity environment of

Mozambique. In addition to affordability, importance will be given to the compliance with the

system with national legislation for public financial management (SISTAFE) and to the simplicity

for its operation and maintenance. Also, in addition of establishing an institutional “home” for the

system at the central Government level, the Project will ensure enough local capacity for system

implementation, operation, and maintenance. Significant technical capacity to provide technical

support to such systems, both the financial management and information technology aspects, exists

in Mozambique‟s private sector; part of the technical viability of any system will depend on

engaging these private sector capacities appropriately in support of public sector system

management, operation, and maintenance.

57. Technical Solutions for the Flood and Erosion control works: Mozambique priority needs

with respect to flood and erosion control were identified through comprehensive Sanitation

Strategy Plans developed for seven selected cities in 2007. Based on the finding of these studies,

investment programs were initiated, which financed technical feasibility studies for improving the

sanitation and drainage infrastructure in these cities. These programs also financed initial

assessments on the institutional, legal, financial and technical aspects to ensure the sustainability of

the infrastructure services expected to be created by the Project. Although a large stock of

feasibility studies and some engineering designs were prepared, investment funds for the

construction of the works have only been made available for some of the cities. This creates an

opportunity for the Project to leverage existing investment plans, which are already GoM

priorities, as a basis for relatively rapid financing.

58. These technical studies were prepared by international consulting firms, whose solid

experience in flood control and sanitation is acknowledged by the public and private sectors. The

designs followed national technical norms, which were formally established in Mozambique only

in 2003. Existing feasibility studies included an analysis of technical alternatives, preliminary

environmental and social assessments, as well as economic and financial analyses. Based on the

results of a cost-benefit analysis, the preferred technical alternative was selected based on

definition of an appropriate return period for flood events. The infrastructure works proposed for

Project financing have benefited from the development process described above. As part of the

engineering design packages financed by the proposed Project, key technical inputs such as the

hydrological analyses will be updated, incorporating climate considerations as appropriate.

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59. Mozambique has developed experience in procuring large package of consulting services

and works, as well as capacity in managing the implementation of large contracts. Although the

Government still needs additional technical support to manage these contracts, this arrangement is

preferred given the opportunities it generates for economies of scale and for compliance with

planned timetables.

60. Drawing on the technical studies available and on additional technical support, AIAS has

already prepared preliminary Terms of Reference for a large consulting package (engineering

designs, environmental and social support, and works supervision) for the drainage rehabilitation

works in Beira. Also, they have prepared preliminary Terms of Reference for the Maputo

Drainage/Sanitation Master Plan. It is envisaged to launch the expression of interest for these two

consultancies as soon as the Decision Meeting confirms the Project content.

C. Financial Management

61. The Financial Management (FM) arrangements for the Project have been designed keeping

in view the need to support both fiduciary and developmental needs. The proposed FM

arrangements of the Project will satisfy the Bank‟s minimum requirements under OP/BP 10.02.

The FM assessment benefited from the experience of P13 in addition to the recently concluded

PEFA for Mozambique. This involves review of FM arrangements at both DNDA and AIAS as

well as 20 participating municipalities under component 1. Nevertheless, the expectations with

regards to the state of existing FM capacity of these 20 municipalities is kept low and therefore,

adequate FM capacity building will be provided under the Project in order to pass the audit

eligibility criterion as well as to ensure that Bank funds are used for intended purposes. Based on

the preliminary FM assessment, the overall financial management risk is rated Substantial.

62. Suitably qualified and experienced accountants will be contracted in order to make-up the

FM capacity gap in both DNDA and AIAS.

63. The Project will be budgeted as part of the GoM‟s budgetary processes and releases of

funds and accounting will follow established Government systems which are considered adequate

as far as DNDA and AIAS are concerned. Two separate on-CUT sub-accounts will be established

for the Project into which the proceeds of the Credit will be received. The account will be

denominated in US Dollars and will have subordinate local currency accounts to finance local

currency expenditures. The on-CUT sub-accounts form part of the Government treasury single

account of the GoM. Both DNDA and AIAS will maintain separate accounts to cater for the

implementation of all Project activities for their respective components under the Project.

64. The Project will use report-based disbursements through the use of quarterly Interim

Financial Reports (IFRs) on the sources and uses of Project funds for both Project components. A

forecast of the first 6 months expenditures will form the basis for the initial withdrawal of funds

from the Credit, and subsequent withdrawals will equally be based on the net cash requirements

for the subsequent 6 months. Specifically for the performance-based grants to municipalities

under component 1, annual forecasts will be based on the latest performance information available

on their meeting the performance indicators.

65. The Project will follow a cash basis of accounting and financial reporting. Separate annual

audited financial statements with respect to each component of the Project shall be submitted to

IDA within 6 months of the end of the GoM‟s fiscal year (i.e. by June 30 each year). Auditors

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satisfactory to IDA will conduct the audits on the Project financial statements on terms of

reference to be agreed within two months of Project effectiveness. The Project auditors in relation

to component 1 will make use of municipality audit reports in order to get assurance over the use

of funds under the performance grants allocated to the respective municipalities. Hence, each

municipality will be required to (a) submit to DNDA its annual budgets and procurement plans for

Project funded Municipal Performance Grants as well as in-year grant implementation reports in

form and substance as would have been agreed between DNDA and the respective municipality;

and (b) annual audited financial statements in form and substance as would be agreed between the

DNDA and respective municipality. These reports will form part of the due diligence reviews that

the Bank‟s fiduciary team will conduct during the year.

D. Procurement

66. Procurement for the proposed Project will be carried out in accordance with the World

Bank‟s “Guidelines: Procurement of Goods, Works and Non-consulting Services under

International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) Loans and IDA Credits and

Grants by World Bank Borrowers” published by the Bank in January 2011 and the World Bank‟s

“Guidelines: Selection and Employment of Consultants under IBRD Loans and IDA Credits and

Grants by World Bank Borrowers,” published by the Bank in January 2011. Anti-corruption

guidelines which applies to this Project: “Guidelines on Preventing and Combating Fraud and

Corruption in Projects Financed by IBRD Loans and IDA Credits and Grants, dated October 15,

2006 and revised in January 2011” per the FA appendix. The procurement risk associated with the

Project is rated as Substantial.

67. The procurement activities for the proposed Project will be managed by two separate

implementing agencies, the MAE/DNDA for component 1 and by the MOPH/AIAS for the

component 2. While DNDA will create a new implementation unit for the Project, activities

managed by AIAS will be through the use of their internal procurement unit, the Unidade Gestora

e Executora das Aquisições (UGEA), which is under the frameworks of the local procurement

legislation.

68. The UGEA under AIAS has been reviewed during preparation and found to possess limited

capacity, both in terms of available resources and knowledge of World Bank fiduciary

requirements. The MAE/DNDA and AIAS have agreed to enhance existing, MAE/DNDA through

the establishment of a unit with staff with experience and qualification satisfactory to IDA prior to

Effectiveness and the MOPH/AIAS unit through the hiring of a technical assistance, as the UGEA

members have not yet been exposed to Bank procurement procedures. AIAS is in the process of

recruiting a qualified procurement technical assistance consultant, through the on-going Bank

funded Water Sector Institutional Support Project, who should be proficient in Bank procurement

and will strengthen available capacity as well as providing training to AIAS‟s UGEA current and

future staff. MAE‟s PIU will have a procurement officer, experienced in Bank procurement, and

an additional seasonal consultant for complex procurement. Both staff should be hired prior to

Project effectiveness.

69. The key issues and risks concerning procurement for implementation of the Project have

been identified and these include: i) availability of qualified procurement staff to implement

procurement activities; ii) poor quality procurement and outcomes due to limited procurement and

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contract administration capacity; and iii) delays caused by Government‟s own review process prior

to contract signature.

70. Corrective measures were discussed and AIAS and MAE should: i) establishment of the

procurement functions at MAE/DNDA prior to Effectiveness and strengthening of available

capacity at AIAS, ii) ensure that the procurement decision making is fully covered in the

Procurement Manual, to be prepared, and is available/known to staff in charge of the Project, iii)

ensure that qualified staff is retained in the implementing agencies; and, iv) the procurement

planning process taking into account the steps and associated timeframe for Government‟s own

internal approval processes. Furthermore, MAE and MOPH management should ensure that these

implementing agencies are resourced with qualified personnel throughout the life of the Project.

71. The Project will also provide performance grants to municipalities, aimed at financing

strategic municipal investments linked to technical assistance in municipal planning and finance.

The associated procurement procedures applicable to these grants will be detailed in a separate

Grants Manual to be prepared by MAE/DNDA, prior to effectiveness of the Grant scheme.

72. The preliminary procurement plan for the Project was received by the Bank and found to be

acceptable. It will be updated at least annually (or as required) to reflect Project implementation

needs. A brief summary of the procurement capacity assessment and procurement arrangements

for the Project are provided in Annex 3. More details are available in the Project files.

E. Social and Environment (including safeguards)

73. The overall environmental and social impact is expected to be positive, especially in

periurban areas where flooding during heavy rains is a serious health and safety issue. Negative

impacts, however, may arise during cleaning and rehabilitation of existing drainage channels, or

improvements of natural drainage channels through targeted periurban areas.

74. In Beira the proposed drainage works will be along existing canals or natural drainage

channels that eventually drain directly to the sea. In Nacala, the physical works will include the

implementation of key components of a drainage master plan by installing erosion control

structures (gabions) on three of the steep-sloped primary drainage channels in the city that drain

directly to the sea. Most of these works can be managed through good engineering practice for

design and construction, and disposal of sludges and solid wastes removed during cleaning

operations, especially in Beira. The most sensitive environmental issue will be the disposal of

polluted sludges dredged from the existing drainage channels in Beira.

75. The most sensitive social issue will be compensation for impacts on fences, latrines, fruit

trees, and similar structures or assets that may need to be temporarily removed or relocated in

order to improve drainage in periurban areas. In Beira, preliminary census work identified from 50

to 80 structures that might be impacted, depending on the final width of the drainage right-of-way

in the periurban area and whether a retention basin will be built. The majority of these structures

are fences and latrines around household lots. Preparation of a draft RPF occurred subsequent to

this preliminary census, and notes up to 50 residences in the Beira periurban area may have

potentially impacted structures. Efforts will be made to further minimize the number of potentially

impacted structures and impacted households during final engineering design, and before

production of a RAP. In Nacala, approximately 10 households are located near the three gullies

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that need stabilization against erosion, but preliminary design indicates no resettlement or

compensation is expected because all investments will be stabilization of existing gully walls on

steep slopes with sandy soils, to prevent further erosion. Therefore, the works will occur within

the existing gullies, and are expected to be done with primarily manual labor. In the unlikely event

that compensation for disturbance of a structure near a gully is required; the RPF is designed to

cover all Component 2 investments. Component 1 will not be covered by the RPF because works

investments that triggers OP 4.12 Involuntary Resettlement are not eligible for the grant financing.

76. Feasibility and preliminary design engineering studies are being financed by the European

Union in Beira and by MCC in Nacala. Until the final engineering designs for the rehabilitation

and improvements are completed during the Bank Project, the site-specific environmental and

social impacts are uncertain, especially at Beira. Therefore, an Environmental and Social

Management Framework (ESMF) and a Resettlement Policy Framework (RPF) have been

prepared for the civil works at Beira, and these will be the basis for producing an Environmental

Assessment and an Environmental Management Plan, once engineering designs are completed, and

a Resettlement Action Plan. These Safeguards documents would need to be reviewed, approved,

and disclosed by the Bank before those works could proceed. The ESMF and RPF for Beira will

also be useful in guiding the Master Plan and to scope the appropriate Safeguards documents for

any works that may be carried out in the Greater Maputo area once the Master Plan is completed.

These Safeguards documents also would need to be reviewed, approved, and disclosed by the

Bank before those works could proceed.

77. Based on the technical pre-feasibility studies (which include preliminary environmental

and social screening), it has been confirmed that no physical cultural resources have been

identified to be at risk for impacts by the pre-feasibility studies in Beira and Nacala. In addition,

the ESMF for Component 2 includes chance finds procedures. The Master Plan in Greater Maputo

will take into consideration this potential issue as well and identify known cultural resources near

the existing drainage system as well as establish chance finds procedures, but it is unlikely that any

significant cultural resources would be located within existing drainage systems in Greater

Maputo. It is possible that physical cultural resources such as worship sites are located adjacent to

the drainage system, especially in periurban areas. The Project is unlikely to adversely affect such

nearby sites; rather, the installation of improved drainage reduces risk of adverse impacts on them

caused by flooding during heavy rains. In determining which components of the Greater Maputo

Master Plan can be funded by the current Project, once the Master Plan is prepared and adopted,

criteria for selection of priority works can include deferment of any components that might have

potentially significant adverse impacts on sensitive resources.

78. Any proposed Municipal Performance Grant under Component 1 will not be eligible for

Bank financing if it involves displacement of peoples, loss of access to assets, adverse impacts on

significant cultural resources, or civil works within a river that is classified as an International

Waterway (under OP7.50, International Waterways) or a tributary to such a river. The Municipal

Performance Grants are expected to be small-scale in nature, involve repair or rehabilitation of

existing city infrastructure (offices, sidewalks, streets, etc.) because of their small size, and most of

them may be considered Category C sub-Projects. The most appropriate Safeguards instrument, if

any, for these works would be Environmental Management Plans (EMPs) for construction, which

will be part of a Grants Manual prepared by the PIU. Therefore, a separate ESMF has been

prepared for Component 1 activities that describes the institutional arrangements, training, and

capacity building that will be provided by the PIU, a description of environmental issues of

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concern during small-scale construction activities and appropriate mitigation measures, and

checklists and reporting forms for each Municipality to use in developing its respective EMP. As

noted above, the civil works anticipated in Nacala are also expected to have minimal adverse

environmental and social impacts related to construction. Therefore, the ESMF for Component 1

activities, some of which may require EMPs, is also the guiding document for preparing an EMP

for construction of the Nacala Project, once final engineering designs are completed.

79. The Project is defined as Category B. The Bank Safeguard Policies OP 4.01

(Environmental Assessment) and OP 4.12 (Involuntary Resettlement) are triggered.

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Annex 1: Results Framework and Monitoring Results Framework

Project Development Objective (PDO):

To strengthen municipal capacity for sustainable urban infrastructure provision and environmental management which enhance resiliency to climate related risks.

PDO Level

Results

Indicators*

Co

re

Unit of

Measure

Baseline

2011

Cumulative Target Values** Frequ

ency

Data

Source/

Methodolo

gy

Responsibilit

y for Data

Collection

Description

(indicator

definition etc.) 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

(i) Number of

Project

beneficiaries, of

which female

(%) [core

indicator]

Number

of

persons

% female

0 100,000

51

1,000, 000 1,500, 000

51

2,000, 000

51

annual Survey DNDA/AIAS People in the 20

Municipalities

targeted by

Component 1 and

people directly

benefiting from

the direct

investments under

Component 2.

Percentage of

females based on

national

demographic data.

(ii) Percentage

annual

increases in

aggregate

municipal own-

source

revenues4

% 257 million 2 5 20 50 75 100 annual Annual

Municipal

Financial

Statements

MAE/DNDA

PMU

Real increases

aggregated across

all participating

municipalities.

(iii) Area of

participating

municipalities

benefitting from

reduced

flooding or

erosion

Ha 0 0 0 0 100 600 1100 annual Reports

from

supervising

consultants

AIAS Measures

catchment of

improved

drainage

INTERMEDIATE RESULTS

4 Disaggregated data will be available at the Project level by municipality for this and for other indicators where data is being aggregated; this will allow a

detailed monitoring to assess which municipalities are meeting their targets and making progress and which ones will require further support to improve their

performance.

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Intermediate Result (Component One): Increased municipal capacity to sustainably plan, finance and manage climate resilient urban development.

Intermediate Result

Indicator One:

Disaggregated list

of investments by

type and/or sector:

Physical

count

NA since

grants is

demand

driven.

__km __km Km annual Annual

Municipal

Grant

Execution

Reports

Municipalitie

s via

DNDA/PMU

Aggregate across

20 munis of

physical results

from Municipal

Performance

Grants. Annual

targets not

predefined

because demand

driven.

Investments may

include roads,

trucks, buildings

etc.

If reported

investments relate

to core indicators,

these will be

captured in the

ISR as part of

Project

monitoring

Intermediate Result

Indicator Two:

Number of

municipalities

which have

achieved at least

70% financial

execution of their

annual Municipal

Performance Grant

by 31 Dec.

Number

(of 20

munis)

0 0 0 5 8 11 15 annual Annual

Reports

from

municipalit

ies verified

by auditor

MAE/DNDA

PMU

Grant funds

available for

approved muni-

cipal investment

plans. Financial

execution is funds

disbursed to pay

valid contracts.

Intermediate Result

Indicator Three:

Percentage annual

increases in

aggregate number

of land plots titled

(DUATs)

% To be

available

at

Effective

ness 2

0 0 10 20 30 40 annual Annual

Reports

from

municipalit

ies and TA,

verified by

auditor

MAE/DNDA

PMU

Increases

aggregated across

all participating

municipalities.

Assessments

during yr 1 will

provide baseline

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data

Intermediate Result

Indicator Four:

Percentage annual

increases in

aggregate number

of properties in

municipal cadastre

% To be

available

at

Effective

ness 2

0 0 10 20 30 40 annual Annual

Reports

from

municipalit

ies and TA,

verified by

auditor

MAE/DNDA

PMU

idem

“Properties in

municipal

cadastre” defined

as properties

which have

sufficient

information for

IPRA billing.

Intermediate Result

Indicator Five:

Number of

municipalities

which have

implemented a

municipal financial

management

system

(cumulative)

Number

(of 20

munis)

0 0 0 1 2 6 12 annual Progress

Reports

from

municipalit

ies and TA,

verified by

auditor

MAE/DNDA

PMU

“Implemented”

defined as

employing a

computer based

system to execute

the municipal

budget and

produce

accounting

statements.

Intermediate Result

indicator Six:

Number of

municipalities with

approved

environmental and

drainage plans

(cumulative)

Number

(of 20

munis)

0 0 0 0 1 2 4 annual Progress

Reports

from

municipalit

ies, verified

by auditor

MAE/DNDA

PMU

Urban Risk

Assessments will

identify priority

municipalities

where drainage

and environmental

mgmt plans are

required to

improve climate

resiliency

Intermediate Result (Component Two): Increased municipal capacity to sustainably provide drainage services to at risk urban neighborhoods.

Intermediate Result

Indicator One:

Beira - drainage

channels

rehabilitated to

control flood

Kms 0 0 0 0 2 7 9.5 annual Progress

Report

from

AIAS

AIAS Extension of civil

works to

rehabilitate

drainage channels

Intermediate Result

Indicator Two:

Nacala – drainage

Kms 0 0 0 0 1 3 4 annual Progress

Report

from

AIAS Extension of civil

works to

rehabilitate

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ditches

rehabilitated to

control erosion

AIAS drainage ditches

converted in

major erosion

gullies

Intermediate Result

Indicator Three:

Population

benefiting from

reduced flood and

erosion in Beira

and Nacala

Numbe

r

0 0 0 0 50,000 250,000 300,000 annual Progress

Report

from

AIAS

AIAS Population in risk

of flooding and

erosion

Intermediate Result

Indicator Four :

Increase in the

drainage fee

amount transferred

to Beira - SASB

% US$

70,0000

0 0 10 20 30 40 annual Progress

Reports

from TA

and

municipa

lities

AIAS Increase in the

amount

transferred by the

Municipality

Intermediate Result

Indicator five:

Nacala

Autonomous

Sanitation Agency

created

Yes/no no no No no no -Yes annual Progress

Reports

from TA

and

municipa

lities

AIAS Define who needs

to approve or

create it.

Approved by the

Municipal

Council.

Intermediate Result

Indicator Six:

Maputo

metropolitan area

drainage and

sanitation master

plan approved by

the Municipal

Councils

Yes/N

o

no no No no no Yes Annual Progress

reports

from

AIAS

AIAS Drainage and

Sanitation Master

Plan formally

accepted by

Maputo

Municipal

Council

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Annex 2: Detailed Project Description

1. The proposed Project will assist Mozambique in developing appropriate institutions, and

infrastructure improvements to strengthen the resilience of selected cities to climate related

impacts. The proposed combination of both institutional and physical investments will enhance

the sustainability of municipal adaptation to minimize the adverse impacts of flooding and

erosion, and will provide a model for adaptation in other vulnerable cities. Infrastructure

investments will consist of the rehabilitation of drains, conduits, embankments, levees and

surface water storage facilities. Institutional investments will include improved urban

environmental planning and land use management; increased own-source revenue capacity, more

effective and transparent municipal financial management; and a sustainable service delivery

model for operation and maintenance of urban sanitation and drainage systems.

COMPONENT 1 – STRENGTHENING THE MUNICIPAL SECTOR (US$35 MILLION)

2. This component will increase municipal capacity to sustainably plan, manage and finance

climate resilient urban development, including through the strengthening the Borrower‟s

institutions underpinning its municipal system in order to improve sustainable decentralized

financing and management of the urban environment and infrastructure. To this end, the

component supports a number of activities under two subcomponents: (A) local level support to

improved municipal governance in 20 municipalities, and (B) national level support for

improved municipal governance.

Subcomponent 1A: Local level support for improved municipal governance (US$27.5 million)

3. This subcomponent will provide support for 20 municipalities to enhance municipal

capacity for sustainable decentralized management of the urban environment and urban services.

Participating municipalities have been selected to complement existing bilateral funded PDA

(Municipal Development Project) which is concentrated in Mozambique‟s northern and central

provinces; thus the IDA-financed Project will provide assistance to all municipalities in the

central and southern provinces which do not benefit from PDA or similar support.5

4. This subcomponent will promote increased municipal capacity through performance

grants to finance strategic municipal investments. Performance criteria for the grant system will

reinforce incentives for municipalities to enhance their financial sustainability and land use

management. Institutional development will be linked to the Project‟s supply of technical

assistance while municipal demand for specific public investment subProjects will determine the

use of grant funds. Because the grant amount for each municipality will be determined by that

municipality‟s demonstrated commitment to improvement in municipal finances and urban

planning, the Project will establish clear synergies between its supply-driven and demand-driven

elements. Following this logic, this subcomponent will finance three main initiatives: Municipal

Performance Grants to Finance Strategic Urban Investment Sub-Projects, Improvement of Urban

Planning and Land Use Management and Enhancement of Municipal Financial Sustainability

through improved financial management and enhanced municipal revenues.

5 Maputo is excluded from 3CP support since similar activities are already financed as part of the ongoing, more

comprehensive assistance under MMDP Phase II.

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(i) 1A.1 Municipal Performance Grants (US$13.5 million)

5. This activity will support Eligible Municipalities through the financing of Sub-Projects,

by providing Municipal Performance Grants.

6. The objective of this activity is to provide to municipalities supplementary capital grants

which incentivize improved performance in core municipal land use planning and financial

management functions. These grants will not only provide additional resources for

municipalities to address their capital deficits, they will also encourage municipalities to engage

with the capacity-building support provided by the Project in priority sectors. The grants will

enable municipal Authorities to demonstrate the benefits of improved institutional performance

through expanding their portfolio of investments. Use of the grants will assist in triggering a

virtuous circle of citizen–municipal interaction that ultimately contributes to improved local

governance and urban service delivery.

7. Grants provided in this sub-component are designed to complement the basic design of

the GoM‟s system of intergovernmental transfers to municipalities (general purpose grants

(FCA) and capital grants (FIIL)). Although the current transfer system is well-structured, the

overall quantum of resources remains small and does not provide incentives for improved

performance by municipalities. The Project-financed performance grant system will be managed

directly by the PIU, under the authority of MAE. Since this performance grant will not go to all

43 municipalities and will not employ the same allocation formula of existing GoM grants, it will

be treated as a Project grant with the expectation that its performance focus will produce a

demonstration effect that could latter on be scaled up at national level. Core design features of

the grant, which will be detailed in an operational manual for the grant, are:

a. Universe and eligibility

8. The grant will be available only to the 20 municipalities selected for participation in the

Project. This avoids duplication with municipalities supported by other initiatives (notably the

PDA and ProMaputo). In order to be eligible to receive the grant in any year a municipality

must comply, amongst others, with the following conditions, which are minimum requirements

for receiving IDA-financed grant funding:

a. A signed Grant Participation Agreement for the Project period, in form and

substance acceptable to the Bank, being in place at the outset of the Project6,

b. Submitted its audited financial statement related to its most recent Financial Year

supported by an “acceptable auditor‟s opinion, defined as an opinion that has not

been disclaimed and is not adverse,

c. Submitted its Annual Grant Investment Plan and Budget, and

6 This will confirm their willingness to participate, and set out the grant objectives, terms and conditions, including

all eligibility and disbursement conditions, performance incentives, grant calculation methods, sanctions for non-

performance and implementation responsibilities. It will bind each municipality to general compliance with the

Grant Operational Manual as well as to specific compliance with the ESMF, financial management and procurement

rules of the Project and the anti-corruption guidelines of the World Bank.

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d. Submitted quarterly progress reports including information on implementation of

SubProjects, as well as compliance with the ESMF and RPF and procurement

plans (expect for the first year of the grant allocation)

b. Performance criteria

9. The allocation of the grant in each year will be adjusted based on the annual performance

of each participating municipality in the prior year with respect to a set of pre-determined

performance indicators. Performance criteria focus on the core areas of capacity support that are

targeted by the Project, i.e. urban land use management and municipal finances, thus providing a

complementary incentive for absorption of this support. Each municipality shall be required to

obtain a passing score. Process indicators will be used in the early stages of implementation,

followed by results indicators in those municipalities where improved systems have been

implemented. Independent auditors will verify the accuracy of the data provided by each

municipality to evaluate the achievement of targets and indicators. The performance of each

municipality will be jointly reviewed by the Recipient and the Association who will determine

the continued eligibility of each Eligible Municipality in the next year. Other detailed criteria,

weightings and scoring systems will be presented in a grant manual for municipalities and be

widely disseminated. Performance criteria will be reviewed at mid-term.

c. Grant financing

10. The total funding of the Municipal Performance Grant will be US$13.5 million, or about

US$3 million per year for all the 20 participating municipalities The total size of the grant pool

available for distribution in each year takes into account two key factors, namely: (i) the need to

introduce real increases in grants to municipalities to account for inflation and the Projected

increases in their absorption capacity; and (ii) the need to ensure that a sufficient incentive is

provided to municipalities to strive for ongoing performance improvement, which requires

sufficient funding both in absolute terms and relative to other sources of finance.

d. The distribution of grants across municipalities

11. The grant will be distributed based on a formula that is biased towards rewarding

performance, but that accounts for the need to protect the incentives of both very small and

larger municipalities to participate in the program. Factors to be included in the formula for

calculation of the annual grant allocation7 will include: the performance score obtained by each

municipality in the annual assessment, the population of the municipality, and the total grant

funds available for that year. Data regarding the indicators on which annual municipal

performance assessments will be reported by municipalities and technical assistance providers.

Annual municipal performance assessments will employ data verified by independent auditors

contracted by DNDA to ensure an objective and accurate basis for measurement of each

Municipality‟s achievement of targets related to (i) timely disbursement of grant funds and (ii)

improvements to municipal finances and urban planning and land use management. Specifics of

the grant allocation formula, including the calculation of base allocations and for performance

adjustments, will be detailed in the Project‟s Grants Manual, to be approved by GoM and IDA

before the first grant disbursement. Although the specific allocations may vary depending on the

7 Consideration was given to including area and other variables, but rejected due to data weaknesses, the

comparative efficacy of a population weighting as a proxy for expenditure need and the additional complexity this

would introduce relative to benefits. In addition, it should be noted that all municipalities already receive

government grant allocations from the FCA and FIIL.

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performance scoring, the following table presents a preliminary allocation of the Grant by

municipality. As can be seen, the average per capita allocation would be of US$2.3 per capita

and only three municipalities may receive more than US$150,000 per year.

e. Grant allocation and disbursement arrangements

12. Indicative grant allocations, exclusive of the effect of performance scores, will be made

know to each municipality at the outset of the Project for a four year period. An approved

allocation for each year, incorporating performance-related adjustments, will be defined by

October of the preceding year for incorporation in the municipal budget process. This approach

balances the need to provide longer term predictability in allocations with the uncertainty

implicit in a performance-based grant mechanism. Grant allocations will be advanced in

tranches to municipalities, with subsequent disbursements based on demonstration by

municipalities of expenditures against the approved Grant Investment Plan and Budget, as

discussed in the Financial Management section below. Detailed procedures for the release of

installments to municipalities will be provided in the Grants Manual and governed by Project

covenants. Municipalities must maintain eligibility for each annual grant disbursement and

compliance with all grant requirements during each year.

13. Initial disbursement of the first cycle of Grants will require the following: (i)the Eligible

Municipality has entered into a Grant Participation Agreement (GPA), (ii) the Eligible

Municipality has complied with the mandatory entry criteria set forth in the PGM; (iii) the

Eligible Municipality has submitted its Annual Grant Investment Plan and Budget; and (iv) the

Eligible Municipality has submitted its audited financial statement related to its most recent

Fiscal Year supported by an acceptable auditor's opinion.

Municipality Pop

(2007)

Indicative Allocations based on

Total of $12 million 4 years

Total

allocation

($)

Alloc

/ cap

($)

% of

alloc

% of

FIIL

(2011)

Catandica 22 271 45,504 2.04 1.90 54.2

Chibuto 63 184 90,519 1.43 3.77 37.5

Chimoio City 237 497 282,308 1.19 11.76 50.0

Chokwé 53 062 79,382 1.50 3.31 33.2

Gondola 33 877 58,273 1.72 2.43 34.7

Gorongosa 18 761 41,642 2.22 1.74 21.5

Inhambane City 65 149 92,681 1.42 3.86 15.5

Macia (Bilene) 27 795 51,582 1.86 2.15 31.1

Mandlakazi 10 317 32,351 3.14 1.35 28.7

Manhiça 56 165 82,796 1.47 3.45 24.2

Manica 36 124 60,746 1.68 2.53 30.9

Massingaa 20 930 44,028 2.10 1.83 31.1

Matola City 671 556 759,884 1.13 31.66 53.0

Maxixe City 108 824 140,734 1.29 5.86 30.7

Moatize 38 924 63,826 1.64 2.66 28.8

Namaachaa 12 725 35,001 2.75 1.46 19.1

Tete City 155 870 192,497 1.23 8.02 37.0

Ulonguea 13 620 35,986 2.64 1.50 35.3

Vilankulo 37 176 61,903 1.67 2.58 34.2

Xai-Xai City 115 752 148,357 1.28 6.18 33.5

Project Total 1 780 818 2,400,000 1.33 100.00 36.4

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14. An overview of the process for planning, approval, disbursement and reporting of the

annual cycle of the Municipal Performance Grant follows. Further details will be included in the

Grants Manual:

Indicative Summary of Municipal Performance Grant Cycle8

Month Grant Planning and Approval Cycle Grant Reporting and Audit Cycle

Jan Municipalities begin local planning process-

Project identification with cost estimates for

next year Grants

DNDA makes initial annual disbursements of

grant funds to municipalities

Municipalities begin to sign contracts for

Grant financed investments

Mar Municipalities present to DNDA complete

Annual Report of use of Grants (financial

and physical execution) for prior year

April DNDA auditors begin visits to municipalities

re: use of Grant funds from prior year and

verification of indicators and performance

scores

Municipalities submit to DNDA Q1 Grant

Implementation Report

June Municipalities complete local planning process

– define shortlist for Grant Project selection

with safeguard prescreening

July DNDA defines and communicates preliminary

grant allocations to municipalities

Municipalities submit to DNDA Q2 Grant

Implementation Report

Aug Municipalities begin technical design and

procurement process of short-listed Projects for

next annual Grant cycle

DNDA auditors submit report on use by

municipalities of grant funds in prior year

Sept DNDA validates eligibility of municipalities

based on received audit reports

DNDA provides safeguard screening and

impact mitigation planning support to

municipalities as needed

Municipalities and TA consultants submit

preliminary Annual Progress Reports for

Project activities

Oct DNDA prepares proposed Annual Performance

Assessment for each municipality based on

Progress Reports

Municipalities submit proposed Annual Grant

Investment Plan to DNDA

Municipalities submit to DNDA Q3 Grant

Implementation Report

Nov DNDA submits to IDA validation of municipal

eligibility and proposed annual Grant

allocations per municipality

DNDA clears Municipal Annual Grant

Investment Plans

Dec IDA clears proposed annual Grant allocations

per municipality

Municipal Assemblies approve Municipal

Budgets including Annual Grant Investment

Plans

Municipalities submit to DNDA Q4 Grant

Implementation Report/ Preliminary Annual

Report for use of Grant funds and physical

execution

8 Details of documentation requirements, decision criteria, and procedures will be fully presented in the Municipal

Performance Grants Manual, to be prepared by DNDA and cleared by IDA as a condition for disbursement of the

Grants.

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f. Conditions for use of grant funds

15. The proceeds of grant funds may only be utilized to fund capital investments by

municipalities subject to: a short negative list of excluded items, being within their legal

competencies, not being connected with an International Waterway or one of its tributaries, and

subject to approval of planned investments by the Municipal Assembly (normally as part of

annual budget approval). Capital investments should be limited to those with a public benefit

within the functional mandate of the municipalities. Typical capital investments to be financed

my MPGs include: improvement to existing roads, bridges, drainage strictures, public buildings,

markets structures, etc; construction and/or urban service provision equipment such as refuse

trucks, tractors, and associated trailers; and rehabilitation, furnishing and working equipment for

offices. Consulting services related to the design or supervision of eligible Grant finance capital

investments may also be financed.

16. Grant funded investments must remain compliant with IDA social and environmental

safeguards (using a screening checklist detailed in the Environmental and Social Management

Framework-ESMF for Component 1), and procurement procedures as specified in Project

agreements and municipal grant participation agreements with detailed procedures defined in the

Grants Manual. The negative list will stipulate that no grant funds may be used for any of the

following: payment of salaries, wages, allowances, per diems or any other benefits to municipal

staff, councilors, or assembly members; recurrent costs for the purchase of non-durable goods or

services; expenditures on vehicles (excluding equipment for service delivery – e.g. tractors and

trucks); the construction of new administrative buildings; any construction or maintenance of

residential buildings; investments in loans, other micro Credit schemes and other securities; and

the acquisition of land or any compensation to private parties related to property damage,

takings, or resettlement costs. Also, no grant may be used to finance civil works that occur

within the waters of a transboundary river or a tributary to such river.

g. Reporting, assessment and oversight procedures

17. Municipalities will be required to submit a quarterly progress report to the PIU using a

reporting format will be provided in the Grants Manual, and will include information of progress

with sub-Projects relative to procurement plans and compliance with the ESMF. Compliance

with this requirement will be a trigger for the release of subsequent grant installments. All 20

municipalities will be subject to an on-site annual audit. In addition to performing a standard

financial audit this activity will: (i) verify annual eligibility for the grant; (ii) review performance

against defined indicators and propose performance scores; (iii) verify compliance with grant

conditions. Should any municipality spend grant funds on an ineligible expenditure, it shall lose

eligibility for additional access to Project financed grants until all funds for ineligible

investments are reimbursed to the DNDA‟s Project account. Once such reimbursements have

been received and certified by DNDA, municipal eligibility will require clearance by IDA of

DNDA‟s proposal for reinstatement of eligibility.

(ii) 1A.2 Improved Urban Planning and Land Use Management (US$7 million)

18. This activity will improve Urban Planning and Land Use Management, through support

in the: (A) the carrying out of climate vulnerability assessments, basic spatial planning studies

and development of urban land management Instruments in all Municipalities as well as urban

environmental and surface water management Instruments in those Municipalities vulnerable to

climate related flooding and erosion; (B) the development and dissemination of methodologies

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for urban planning and land use and environmental management and (C) carrying out of training

sessions for municipal staff and technicians.

19. This activity will improve the quality of urban planning and land use management in

participating municipalities. Technical assistance will be provided to develop of municipal

capacity to effectively manage the urban space; to improve urban environmental management,

including appropriate adaptation measures in light of possible climate-related risks; and to

transparently regularize land occupation, regulate land use, and administer land registration.

20. Support to municipalities will focus on several kinds of instruments for urban spatial

management:

(a). In all participating municipalities

(i.) Basic Spatial Planning Instruments, including urban structure plans (“master

plans”), urbanization plans, and strategic development plans9;

(ii.) Urban Land Management Instruments, including: procedures for plot demarcation

and land registration, issuing of documents formalizing effective land tenure

(DUATs), and establishment of land and property cadastres.

(b). In municipalities vulnerable to climate related or similar environmental risks

(i.) Urban Environmental Management Instruments, including: climate risk

assessments, land use plans, ecological zoning plans and regulations, adaptation

plans in response to potential adverse climate impacts, etc,

(ii.) Surface Water Management Instruments, including: drainage and erosion control

plans, developed in coordination with AIAS.

21. In order to promote the use of these instruments across participating municipalities, a

consulting contract for technical assistance will finance the development and dissemination of

three standard “packages” for municipal physical planning and land use management: one for

larger cities, one for medium sized cities, and one for municipal towns. Each package will

provide instruments which meet the requirements of Mozambican law and regulations and are

adapted to the needs and capacities which characterize each city or town.10

Consultant TA teams

will employ these packages as a basis for capacity building adapted to the specific conditions of

each participating municipality.

22. Project-financed technical assistance will develop practical manuals for each “package”

supporting the formulation and implementation of each of these planning and management

instruments. A cycle of periodic training courses will be organized by the consultant TA

provider for municipal officials and technical staff. Training courses will be complemented by

9 Urban plans developed and approved by participating municipalities with the financial and

technical support of the Project do not imply IDA responsibility for the impacts of subsequent

municipal discussions which may be taken on the basis of such plans. 10

Technical aspects will be coordinated with the Ministry of Environmental Coordination (MICOA) through its

Directorate for Territorial Organization and Planning (DINAPOT) which is responsible for normative urban

planning instruments. With relation to drainage plans for flood and erosion control, the Project will coordinate its

technical assistance with AIAS and employ the technical standards and methodologies to be strengthened under

Component 2.

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periodic field visits to each municipality by travelling TA consultants who will provide on-the-

job training and advice to urban planning personnel. To complement municipalities‟ own

technical capacities and the capacity building assistance provided by the consultant TA provider,

additional Project-funded consultancies may provide for the preparation specific urban plans or

management instruments which require higher level technical capacity.

23. The Project will fund vocational training for mid-level municipal technicians who

undertake the day-today tasks of urban planning, land use management, and land administration

through the two public sector technical institutes11

offering courses with content specifically

developed for the national regulations and context. The Project will also finance, based on

specific service delivery agreements to be formulated after initial needs assessments at municipal

level, the provision of higher level training and technical assistance by the Faculty of

Architecture and Urban Planning of Eduardo Mondlane University, whose staff possess unique

knowledge and experience in implementing Mozambique‟s urban planning regulations in the

local social and institutional context.

(iii) 1A.3 Improved Municipal Financial Sustainability (US$7 million)

24. This activity will improve financial management and enhance municipal revenues,

through support in: (A) development and dissemination of methodologies for revenue

administration; (B) carrying out of training sessions in revenue administration and financial

management for municipal staff; (C) provision of advisory services and equipment to strengthen

the institutional capacity of the municipalities; and (D) development and implementation of

financial and management systems.

25. The objective of this activity will be to improve the financial sustainability of

municipalities by enhancing their capacities to exploit its own revenue sources and improving

expenditure management.

1. Enhanced Municipal Revenues:

26. The objective of this activity will be to increase the collection of municipal own-source

revenues. Municipal budgets in Mozambique are very small (US$12 per capita), and less than

60% come from own sources of revenue. A recent study on municipal revenue potential in

Mozambique shows that own sources of revenue still have great potential. Thus the component

will support consultant TA for enhancing municipal collection of own-sources of revenue such

as property taxes, fees for economic activity, and the vehicle tax, amongst others.

27. Out of all own sources of revenue, the property tax (IPRA) is the one that shows the

greatest potential. Property tax rates are capped by national legislation so the potential comes

from expansion in the tax base (both by expansion in the tax net and by property reassessment).

A recent Decree from December 2010 unlocks the potential for IPRA by simplifying the

assessment of property values. In order to increase tax collection, support must also be given to

improving property tax administration. Thus, though the focus of this activity will be on IPRA,

it will not be limited to only that source.

28. The Project‟s provision of Technical Assistance in the area of revenue enhancement will

entail a number of specific activities, starting with and based upon a rapid appraisal of the

11

Instituto Médio de Planeamento Físico and Instituto de Formação em Cadastro e Administração de Terra.

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revenue and expenditure structure of each municipality. The TA consultant will have an

extensive inception phase where it will profile each municipality via a revenue needs and

capacity assessment; on the basis of these assessments the consultants will propose a capacity

building strategy and packages for municipalities of various scales. Focus will be given to areas

such as fee schedules, data collection, revenue calculations, billing, collection and enforcement

for both municipal taxes and fees. Training by the consultant TA provider will also include areas

such as tax legislation, tax administration, and related accounting. It is envisioned that a cycle of

periodic training courses will be organized; complemented by field visits of TA staff to each

municipality to provide on-the-job support to municipal finance staff.

29. Because the Ministry of Finance‟s National Tax Authority possesses unique knowledge

of Mozambican tax law and systems, technical input from this unit may be financed by the

Project to support specialized capacity building activities. Finally, acquisition and installation of

IT equipment for municipal revenue administration is also envisioned. This activity will be

closely articulated with support provided by the Financial Management and Urban Planning

activities since they will provide inputs to the consolidation of cadastres and establishment of

databases to be used for fiscal purposes.

2. Improved municipal financial management:

30. The objective of this activity is to create human, technical and institutional capacity to

improve financial management at the municipal level. It will do so by providing technical

assistance to streamline business processes in municipal finance departments and to implement

an appropriate computer based financial management system adapted for municipal

management. Given the endemic weakness of financial management and controls in many

municipalities, improvement in human capacity and provision of an adequate technological

solution will be critical not only for municipal management but also as a key input to other

Project supported activities related to revenue administration, urban land registration, and capital

investment management.

31. Technical assistance will be provided to improve municipal financial management

processes including rationalizing procedures and documentation within municipal finance

departments in keeping with regulations for public sector financial management (SISTAFE) in

order to increase administrative efficiency, improve transaction controls, and enhance

transparency of accounting and reporting. All process improvements will be supported by

provision of training courses for municipal finance staff. These improvements will also lay the

foundation for subsequent introduction of computer-based financial management systems.

32. Several options are currently being considered by the GoM as the foundation for

computer based financial management in municipalities. Long-term plans of the Ministry of

Finance‟s Center for Development of Systems for Financial and Information Management

(CEDSIF) indicate that a municipal version of the national FM system e-SISTAFE will only take

place after 2020. Because this governmental solution is not expected for at least ten years, the

donor funded P13/PDA Project has developed a “Municipal Management System” (SGM) that

brings together three interlinked functionalities: (i) an accounting system with modules for

budgeting, transaction processing/registration, asset management, etc. in accordance with

SISTAFE ii) specific modules on municipal management (e.g. land, markets, municipal taxes

and fees and (iii) production of a series of monthly, quarterly and annual reports required for

internal and external control of municipal resource management, including provision of

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information to both Government auditors (Tribunal Administrativo) and to the Municipal

Assembly.

33. Although PDA plans to continue implementation of SGM beyond the two municipalities

where it is currently installed, the Government of Mozambique, including both MAE and

MF/CEDSIF, have not yet clarified their level of support for the adoption of SGM as a de facto

interim solution for municipal financial management until the planned municipal e-SISTAFE is

implemented. Legal, technical and institutional issues have been identified by Government, with

significant concern expressed regarding sustainable support for system operation and

maintenance across a large number of widely distributed municipalities. At present, these issues

remain unresolved. Depending upon their resolution, SGM may become a potentially viable

option as an interim, locally sustainable solution for municipal financial management.

34. MAE/DNDA in its role as the GoM‟s lead municipal policy counterpart of this

component will be in charge of institutional coordination with the Ministry of Finance and other

donors around support for municipal IFMIS/e-SISTAFE/SGM. Predicated on the definition a

viable clarified strategy and a rigorous assessment of technical and institutions requirements for

its implementation, the Project has allocated resources to finance specialized consultant inputs to

the development/further development and implementation of the GoM‟s preferred municipal FM

system. This support may include the possible provision of consultants and other inputs to

CEDSIF in order to enable system development or support. Based on assessment of needs to

support system implementation, Project financed consultants may also advise municipalities in

preparation of financial data for system entry, population of data bases, and follow-up training

and support in system operation and use. Once a secure option for system implementation is

verified, the needs for system development and field implementation will be reviewed annually,

and workplans and budgets adjusted accordingly to provide required inputs.

35. Inputs to be funded under Subcomponent 1A include:

a) Consultant services, including individual, firms and institutional12

consultancies to

support capacity building of municipal finance and urban planning departments;

b) Goods, including purchase of office furniture, technical instruments, and IT

equipment for municipal finance and urban planning departments;

c) Works, including minor improvements to existing municipal facilities housing

municipal finance and urban planning departments;

d) Training, including technical short courses and mid-level vocational training for

municipal staff in fields related to municipal finance and urban planning;

e) Grants to municipalities to finance goods and works for urban infrastructure

improvement and urban service delivery equipment purchases;

f) Operating costs, mainly recurrent costs and consumables related to improving the

performance of municipal finance and urban planning departments.

12

As discussed above, these may include financing for technical assistance and capacity building services from

specialized public sector entities such as Mid-level Institutes for Physical Planning and Land Administration, the

Architecture and Urban Planning Faculty of UEM, CEDSIF, the Administrative Court, and/or the National Revenue

Authority.

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Subcomponent 1B: National Level Support for Improved Municipal Governance (US$7.5

million)

36. This subcomponent will strengthen key national institutions which regulate and support

the municipal system, including central Government agencies and the ANAMM. Beneficiary

institutions of this subcomponent include: DNDA/MAE, Ministry of Finance (MINFIN), and

ANAMM. This activity will be designed and implemented in close coordination with the PDA,

with which it shares objectives and target institutions.

37. Subcomponent 1B. will be administered directly by the PIU, under the authority of the

MAE/DNDA. All contracts for goods, services, and works will be procured by the PIU in

coordination with beneficiary institutions. Beneficiary institutions will prepare annual work

plans and budgets for inclusion by the PIU in the overall Project work plan, budget and

procurement plan. Additional activities not included in the work plan or adjusted work plans

may be granted specific no objections during the annual implementation cycle. Beneficiary

institution will prepare quarterly progress reports and annual results reports and present them to

the PIU.

(i) 1B.1 Improved National Policy and Regulatory Framework for Municipal

Governance (US$1 million)

38. This activity will strengthen the capacity of MAE and MINFIN to monitor the

performance of the municipalities and develop improved intergovernmental and municipal

policies and systems, including through the development and implementation of the national

policy and regulatory framework for municipal governance.

39. Support will be provided to strengthen the capacity of the DNDA and of relevant units

within MINFIN to fulfill their statutory mission as tutelary institutions of the municipal system.

Continuing development and implementation oversight of decentralization and

intergovernmental policies will be a focus of this support, through monitoring the performance of

the municipal system. In addition, the Project will support analysis contributing to the updating

of municipal policies and regulations; and when necessary the formulation of additional

legislation, regulatory instruments, and methodological guidance; to ensure that the

intergovernmental framework continues to address evolving demands for improved urban

governance, service provision and environmental management.

40. Key activities to be supported include:

1) Support to the municipal framework: Policy analysis, policy development, policy

implementation planning and monitoring including related consultation workshops

w relevant municipal stakeholders. Specific policy domains to be addressed include:

a. Functional decentralization of regulatory and service delivery domains from

central to municipal Governments

b. Intergovernmental finance policy and resource utilization, including both

transfers and own source municipal revenues

c. Governance improvement including strengthened downward and upward

accountability of municipalities to civil society and legal institutions

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2) Capacity building of MAE and MINFIN: training (short courses and local

scholarships) and provision of necessary equipment for ministerial technical staff

who monitors and regulate municipalities and the local Government system.

(ii) 1B.2 Increased Capacity of the National Municipal Association (US$1.5 million)

41. This activity will strengthen the capacity of ANAMM to provide services to its member

municipalities, including through capacity building support activities and policy and regulatory

advocacy on municipal and intergovernmental issues.

42. Specific activities to be supported by the Project include:

1) Development and implementation of a strategic business plan for ANAMM

emphasizing its comparative advantages as a service provider to member

municipalities;

2) Development of a peer learning network among municipal and urban management

professionals based on exchange of experience and sharing of good practices;

3) Development of a long-term twinning relationships with a well-performing

municipal association in another country which has similar characteristics and

challenges to ANAMM, including exchange visits and sharing of experience among

association staff and members;

4) Drafting, publication and dissemination of a “Guide for Municipal Governance”

which will serve as a practical reference for municipal political officials, municipal

professional staff, central Government officials, and civil society members;

5) Organization of seminars, workshops and conferences among municipal officials to

increase their level of knowledge regarding municipal laws, policies and systems.

(iii) Support for Project Management (US$5 million)

43. This activity will support the establishment and operation of a PIU in DNDA to support

the coordination and management of the component 1 of the Project, including through the

provision of technical assistance, training, audits, goods and operating costs.

44. The Project Management activity will provide the technical and administrative resources

required to effectively manage and monitor Project-financed activities and to ensure compliance

with IDA fiduciary and safeguard standards.

45. The Ministry of State Administration‟s National Directorate for Local Government

Development (MAE/DNDA) is the implementing agency for Component 1. The Project will

provide MAE/DNDA with the human and financial resources to staff and operate a PIU. The

PIU will ensure adequate technical and administrative capacity to implement the procedures

defined in the Project Operations Manual, including resource management and reporting, activity

and output monitoring and reporting, and compliance with environmental and social safeguards.

The PIU will procure the services and manage the contracts of technical assistance providers

who will strengthen the capacities of municipalities under Subcomponent 1A and central level

institutions under Subcomponent 1B.

46. The PIU will also serve as the Grants Administrator for the Municipal Performance

Grants to be funded under the program. The PIU will disburse these grants directly to municipal

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grant accounts according to defined policies and procedures as defined in the Grants Manual,

will collect required reports and supporting documents provided by beneficiary municipalities,

will monitor grants usage as required, and ensure municipal level audits and other forms of field

inspection related to the use of grant resources.

47. The PIU will provide guidance, oversight and training to MAE and to participating

municipalities in fiduciary and safeguard requirements as detailed in the Project Operations

Manual. Annual training courses in social and environmental safeguard standards and

procedures will be managed by the PIU. Additional resources will be allocated for the PIU to

provide specialized safeguard assistance as required, depending upon the nature of activities to

be undertaken by municipalities with Project funding.

48. The PIU will be responsible for all Project monitoring and reporting to meet IDA

requirements, including the collection and presentation of relevant information from all

beneficiaries of Project resources whether at central Government or municipal level. The PIU

will provide training to participating municipalities in monitoring and reporting for Project

activities.

49. Inputs to be funded under Subcomponent 1B to support beneficiary institutions MAE,

MINFIN, and ANAMM include:

a) Consultant services, including individual and institutional consultancies to support

analytical work and capacity building of beneficiary institutions;

b) Goods, including purchase of office furniture, IT equipment, and vehicles to be used by

beneficiary institutions for support and monitoring of municipalities;

c) Training, including technical short courses, local degree scholarships, international

exchange visits, and conference participation by staff and members of beneficiary

institutions;

d) Operating costs, including purchase of goods and services and travel expenses for field

visits related to support and monitoring of municipalities by staff of beneficiary

institutions.

COMPONENT 2 – ENHANCING RESILIENCE OF STRATEGIC COASTAL CITIES: (US$85 MILLION)

50. This component will enhance municipal capacities in selected cities, including those in

Beira, Nacala and Maputo metropolitan area, for sustainable resilience to weather-related

environmental threats. Beneficiary cities are selected on the basis of their strategic economic

importance and their vulnerability to climate related environmental risks.

51. The component will focus on: (i) strategic analytical work in selected urban areas related

to climate related risks of greater flooding and erosion, to support the outlining of investment

programs addressing the increased vulnerability of these cities; (ii) investments on essential

urban infrastructure which address adaptation deficits to reduce urban floods and erosion in

selected cities; (iii) ensuring the sustainability of Project financed investments and associated

drainage systems by supporting the implementation of municipal autonomous sanitation agencies

in Project-supported cities. This institutional model for sustainable O&M of urban drainage

systems will also contribute to the further development of sanitation/drainage services in

Mozambique. By focusing in selected municipalities of high economic importance, the

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component addresses the Government request to maximize its impact through the concentration

of large investments in few cities.

52. Other important issues related to climate change both at the national level as well as in

the cities participating on this component are being financed by a number of development

partners supporting Mozambique. There are numerous ongoing and planned activities

supporting the development of strategies and plans for climate change adaptation, disaster risk

management, and early warning systems both at the national and local levels. A broad range of

approaches has been adopted, a large number of stakeholders are involved, and the achieved and

expected results are some time not clear. In particular in Beira, Maputo and Nacala, which are

climate change hot spots, many development partners have offered support to the development of

planning tools to improve their resilience to climate impacts. As a result, many studies,

workshops, Geographic Information System (GIS), community awareness campaigns, private

sector participation assessments, small scale community Project on disaster management, etc,

have been produced, other are ongoing or planned. The municipal governments, which are

deeply involved in these activities, have indicated to the Bank the importance of financing

investments to reduce the municipal infrastructure adaptation deficit. This will complement the

support to improve the municipal capacity to develop plans related to climate impacts that the

most of the donor are already supporting. The only ongoing investments related to climate

impacts are the rehabilitation of the coastal protection infrastructure in Beira (by the Swiss

Cooperation) and Maputo (by the Arab Development Bank). In parallel to this Project, the

Nordic Development Fund (NDF) is financing a broad range of studies and plans to support the

Municipalities of Beira and Nacala to develop adaptation and disaster risk management plans.

53. The strategic analytical work to be financed by the proposed Project includes: (i) an

assessment of future needs for flood control within the context of the likely impacts of climate

change, aiming at to outline a national investment strategy constituted of integrated key priority

actions consistent with the national sectoral policies but also reflecting the variety of specific

local conditions; (ii) a focused review of the extensive stock of studies and information on water

management in Beira (ground water table, storm water, sea water intrusion) incorporating

climate changes considerations to develop un updated assessment of possible long term impacts

on the city and its key economic assets such as the port and railway, leading to the identification

of key information that stakeholders in the city‟s development should take into account in order

to manage the climate related risks that appear to be increasing in intensity and frequency.

54. The investments on critical urban infrastructure which address adaptation deficits to

reduce urban floods and erosion in Beira. The feasibility studies carried out for the drainage

works in Beira has assessed three technical designs alternatives. The alternative 1:5 year return

period is the option recommended by the national technical norms for urban infrastructure works.

However, given Beira‟s high vulnerability to climate related impacts, the Government, following

the recommendations from a number of studies on the impacts of climate change in

Mozambique, has opted for the 1:20 years return period alternative. This increases in 18% the

costs of the drainage rehabilitation works in Beira. These analyses were carried out based on the

feasibility studies available for the rehabilitation of the drainage infrastructure in Beira. As

expected from a feasibility studies, these provide guidance to the selection of technical solutions

at a concept stage, not the specific technical information that allow to know details of works the

future works, such as the different width and depth of channel along its whole extension, or the

quality of the sludge along the channel extension. Following the conceptual guidance of these

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feasibilities studies, detailed engineering designs will be prepared. These will provide the

information with the appropriate level of details needed for preparing the associated

environmental impact assessment and the resettlement action plan for these civil works.

55. The investments in Beira and Nacala will also build on technical studies and institutional

capacity building being supported by national sanitation investments programs, some of which

were initiated over five years ago. These programs reflect the Government decision, supported

by major development partners, to raise sanitation/drainage to the national priority agenda.

Today, these programs have begun to show concrete results both in terms of national and local

institutional capacity, as well as on improved infrastructure. They have also generated a stock of

technical and institutional studies to leverage new investments programs. The starting point was

the preparation of Sanitation Strategies for seven cities in 2005.

56. The sanitation Project in Beira, a US$100 million operation financed by the European

Union (EU) concluding in December 2011, has rehabilitated the central city‟s separate sewerage

and drainage networks, built a waste water treatment plant, and supported the establishment of

the Municipal Autonomous Sanitation Agency. The EU Project has also funded feasibility

studies for the rehabilitation of the open air drainage system to control floods, which will be the

basis for investments to be financed by the proposed Project. Surface drainage in Beira was also

supported by the EU Project due to its direct impact on the functioning of the sanitation system.

The Nacala feasibility studies for the rehabilitation of the drainage system to control erosion,

which will inform investments by the proposed Project, were financed by the MCC. The

existing Sanitation Strategy for Maputo will provide the basis for the development by the

proposed Project of a Metropolitan Drainage/Sanitation Master Plan, which in addition to

providing a macro-diagnostic and strategic system design technical assessment will also prepare

technical designs for priority investments.

57. Project support will consolidate the institutional model adopted by Mozambique to

ensure sustainable sanitation/drainage services in four cities: Beira, Nacala, Maputo and Matola.

The model aims to create municipal sanitation entities with dedicated revenues and financial

management segregated from general municipal accounts. So far, this institutional model has

been implemented only in Beira. The Beira Autonomous Sanitation Service (BASS) established

by the municipality in 2008 currently has its own management and technical staffs that have

been trained on the job and its sources of financial revenue are gradually becoming more reliable

based on transfers of the sanitation fee by Water Supply Investment Fund (FIPAG), the water

authority. CRA, the national water and sanitation regulatory agency has begun to work with the

BASS. Maputo municipality‟s dialogue with central Government regarding creation and funding

of its autonomous sanitation entity has not yet resulted in any approved plan, but the issue is now

linked to the elaboration of the Drainage/Sanitation Master Plan to be funded by the proposed

Project. In Nacala and in Matola the institutional and financial arrangements for sustainable

O&M of sanitation and drainage systems will also be addressed by the Project.

58. This institutional model at the local level has been complemented by the creation in 2009

of the national urban water and sanitation agency AIAS. AIAS, although its capacity is still

being built, has already assumed a leading role in promoting the Mozambique‟s institutional

model for developing the sustainability of urban drainage/sanitation services.

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2. Component 2: Enhancing Resilience of Strategic Coastal Cities (US$85million)

(i) Identification of key investment priorities in selected cities to strengthen resilience to

climate related floods and erosion. (US$0.6 million)

59. Assessment of the future needs, including the selection of the municipalities to be

targeted, of urban areas on flood control, sanitation and water supply linked to the likelihood of

increasing impacts associated with climate changes. This will include carrying out an

assessment of current needs and Projecting trends and scenarios taking into account several

variables including: rainfall Projections, urbanization patterns, population growth, infrastructure

deficits and planned investment programs, the natural environment including manmade

environmental changes, and institutional capacities. A scaling of Projected regional climate

impacts will be simulated to model likely future climate impacts at the local level. This will also

allow for identifying deficiencies in information that constraint local level modeling and

planning. A main result pursued will be the identification of no-regret actions to be integrated as

proposed priority investments to increase cities‟ resilience. Estimated costs of this consultancy:

US$0.3 million.

60. Strengthening the technical capacity of AIAS on urban water issues, in particular flood

and erosion control linked to the likelihood of increased rain storms or droughts associated with

climate change. This activity will support well targeted training opportunities allowing the

technical team of AIAS to have access to knowledge developed in other regions. Knowledge

transfer will focus on supporting infrastructure improvements and capacity building related to

flood control, erosion and sanitation, in particular based on programs that have incorporated

climate change considerations. Estimated operational costs to support these training activities:

US$0.3 million.

(ii) Strengthening resilience of the City of Beira to control floods (US$61.9 million)

61. Development of a comprehensive study on integrated urban water management (coastal,

underground, superficial and storm water) incorporating the impact in Beira of: ongoing urban

growth, increases in sizeable economic investments, generalized environmental degradation, and

climate change considerations. This consultancy will carry out an updated assessment, building

on existing studies, of the complex hydrological and hydraulic setting in Beira, incorporating

climate change considerations along with the impacts of urban sprawl as well as important public

and private infrastructure investments in national economic assets such as the port, the railway

and oil pipeline, which have significantly increased over recent years. The study will focus on

the integrated dynamics of coastal and meteomarine conditions, the ground water table, rainfall,

and surface water in the current urban development and climate change contexts. Also, the study

will include consultation with key stakeholders, which include the port, the railway and

municipal Authorities as well as the private sector. The main expected result will be the

availability of a strategic master plan for costal protection and floods control to provide a

comprehensive technical support for the numerous stakeholders that are introducing significant

changes in the city‟s development patterns. Estimated costs of this consultancy: US$0.2 million.

62. Drainage rehabilitation design and supervision: This consultancy will (i) update the

feasibility study for the rehabilitation of the city-wide drainage system, (ii) develop the

engineering designs of the city-wide drainage system, (iii) carry out the works supervision

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according to the Project investment plans, (iv) develop the bill of quantities and bidding

documents, (v) prepare the environmental impact assessment, and (vi) provide social support

during the design and construction phases. The feasibility study update will confirm the

appropriate technical solutions and refine the proposed investments seeking optimized solutions.

The update will entail revising technical parameters and variables considered in the hydrological

studies, taking into account climate change considerations. It will also include revising hydraulic

studies to incorporate more detailed analysis of alternatives as well as revised structural designs

of the works. Following the recommendations from the updated feasibility study, this

consultancy will prepare the engineering designs for the city-wide drainage system. Supervision

tasks will focus on controlling time, costs and quality of the works in compliance with the

designs and the works contract. It will contribute to the proper and timely execution of the

works, verifying materials used, checks during the course of works, measuring and accounting

for completed sections of the works. The social support will ensure the appropriate undertaking

of activities including: communication campaigns, community information, and all social

activities related to the undertaken of activities associated with the resettlement policy. This

consultancy also includes the activities for complying with the national environmental

regulation. Estimated costs of this consultancy: US$6.3 million.

63. Drainage rehabilitation works: The Project will finance the rehabilitation of part of the

Beira drainage system, consisting of the primary channel known as „central‟. Built on the 50 and

60‟s, the „central‟ channel is constituted by the channels A, AII and AIV of Beira‟s drainage

network, totaling a continuous channel of about 9.3kms, which drains approximately 2,600

hectares. It protects about 60% of city territory from floods, including high density informal

neighborhoods in which most of Beira‟s poor are located. The territory protected by this channel

is also where most of the city public and private assets are located, and constitutes the core area

of the city. Directly, about 60% of the city inhabitants will benefit from these works and,

indirectly, it will benefit 100% of the city inhabitants. This channel, together with the beaches

along the coast, constitutes the city‟s most relevant hydraulic features. Its rehabilitation will

make an extraordinary difference for the city‟s economic viability as well as for the living

standards in Beira. Project financed works will involve rehabilitation and relining of the existing

canal. Costs have been estimated by detailed technical feasibility studies, and a 10% price

contingency has been budgeted. The estimated costs have also been compared to the costs

incurred by the large sanitation Project that is coming to closure, and findings indicate that the

cost estimates are realistic. These works will generate a significant number of jobs for unskilled

labor during the construction phase. Estimated costs of these works: US$52.3 million.

64. Reconstruction of structures affected by the infrastructure works. This works contract

will reconstruct any structure affected by the drainage rehabilitation works. This includes

rebuilding small structures such as fences, latrines, verandas, side-walks, etc., as well as

provision of resettlement houses provided with basic infrastructure as appropriate. It is estimated

that between 50 and 80 existing structures might be affected by Project financed works.

Estimated costs of these works: US$2.0 million.

65. Strengthening technical and operational capacity of Beira‟s Autonomous Sanitation

Services (SASB) for drainage operation and maintenance. This will involve specialized capacity

building consultancies and providing targeted equipment. The consultancies will carry out

updated institutional assessments to tailor the assistance needed. Because the operation phase of

EU financed sanitation system will begin soon, demand for O&M services by the SASB will

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become more significant. SABS also operates the surface drainage outlets (also rehabilitated by

the EU sanitation Project) which are fundamental elements of the drainage system, designed to

impede sea water intrusion at high tide which causes the rise of the ground water table and

subsequent floods, even in the absence of rains. Thus the SASB already has significant

operational responsibilities, which will increase with the implementation if the proposed Project,

that require increased technical and management capacities. Estimated costs of the

consultancies, operational costs, and equipments to carry out these activities: US$0.9 million.

(iii) Strengthening the resilience of the City of Nacala to control erosion (US$6.4 million)

66. Design of erosion control, drainage works as well as environmental and social support

and works supervision. This consultancy will (i) develop the engineering designs, (ii) carry out

the works supervision accordingly to the Project investment strategy, (iii) develop the bill of

quantities and bidding documents, (iv) prepare the environmental impact assessment, and (v)

provide the social support for the design and construction phases. The feasibility study update

will confirm the appropriate technical solutions and refine the proposed investments seeking

optimized solutions. The update will entail revising technical parameters and variables

considered in the hydrological studies, taking into account the current urban trends as well as

climate change considerations, and the development of the engineering designs for, in principal,

three primary channels severely affected by erosion. The supervision will focus on controlling

time, costs and quality of the works in compliance with the designs and the works contract. The

social support will ensure the appropriate undertaking of activities including: communication

campaigns, community information, and all social activities related to the undertaken of

activities associated with the resettlement policy. This also includes the activities for compliance

with the national environmental legislation. Estimated costs of this consultancy: US$0.9 million

67. Erosion control and drainage works. The proposed Project will finance the rehabilitation

of main erosion and drainage problems; priority has been assigned to three primary open air

channels (6kms). The city of Nacala experiences significant erosion caused by drainage

problems resulting from severe topographic relief (drop of more than 140 meters from the city‟s

highest areas to the coast), vulnerable sandy soils, and the lack of adequately designed drainage

channels. Erosion is aggravated by unplanned urbanization which has denuded slopes of

stabilizing vegetation. The preferred technology alternative for reducing erosion along drainage

channels is the use of such structures as gabions baskets, which have been widely employed by

the municipality due to the availability of materials and the relatively low cost of installation.

This might be combined with grading and planting on the upper portion of the cross sections, for

establishing vegetation to increase stability and reduce sediment deposition within the channel.

Widening of the channels will not be considered to avoid conflict with existing buildings,

gardens, utilities and infrastructure. The preferred construction technology alternative is labor

intensive, and will generate substantial number of jobs for unskilled labor during the construction

phase. Estimated costs of these works: US$6.2 million.

68. Strengthening capacity for operation and maintenance. This will entail providing support

of capacity building consultancies and targeted equipment for the Nacala municipality‟s entity

for managing drainage infrastructure and erosion control. The consultancies will carry out

updated institutional assessments to tailor the assistance needed. The institutional solution for

ensuring the maintenance of the investments financed by the Project will have to be carefully

assessed taking into consideration the organizational characteristics of the municipality, as well

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as the maintenance requirements associated with the investments, since the preferred

construction technology alternative requires very limited technology. Estimated costs of

consultancies, operational costs, and equipments: US$0.2 million.

(iv) Strengthening the resilience of Maputo metropolitan area to control floods (US$12.3

million)

69. Development of a Master Drainage and Sanitation Plan for the Great Maputo area. The

objective of this consultancy is to review, update and broaden the scope and content of the

existing Maputo Strategic Sanitation Plan (2004). It will provide and make available a Drainage

and Sanitation Master Plan that describes the content and priorities of interventions to be

undertaken in drainage and sanitation systems within the next 15 years in the metropolitan region

comprised by Maputo and Matola municipalities and neighboring districts in Maputo Province

(approximately two million inhabitants). Identified interventions will be prioritized as short,

medium and long term interventions. This consultancy will include the detailed design of

emergency works and engineering specifications for works to be implemented in the short and

medium terms. This will also include the elaboration of Terms of Reference for the detail design

of larger scale and more complex works to be implemented in longer term, and will carry out the

supporting studies to implement the legal and institutional components identified in the Strategic

Sanitation Plan as well. Estimated costs of this consultancy: US$4.5 million.

70. Priority drainage works identified in the Greater Maputo Drainage Master Plan might be

financed by the Project depending on the availability of financial resources. Estimated costs of

this works: US$7.8 million.

(v) Technical support to the coordination and management of the component implementation

(US$3,8 million)

71. Support to the Coordination and Management of the Component Implementation:

Establishment and operation of the PIU in AIAS to support the coordination and management of

Part B of the Project including through the provision of technical assistance, audits, goods and

operating costs.

72. Independent financial audit of the component. The Project will finance all required

audits of the use of Project funds by AIAS and its contractors.

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Annex 3: Implementation Arrangements

A. Project Administration Mechanisms

1. The Project will be implemented by two specialized agencies, each of which has the

governmental mandate to manage policies and programs which correspond to the Project‟s two

components. The MAE, and specifically its DNDA is responsible for the regulation and

strengthening of municipalities and the municipal system; MAE/DNDA will be the

implementing agency for Component 1. The national AIAS which is under the supervision of

the MOPH is responsible for provision of urban water infrastructure in all but the largest cities

and urban sanitation infrastructure, including drainage, in all cities and towns; AIAS will be the

implementing agency for Component 2. Each of these implementing agencies will be directly

and fully responsible for resource management, procurement, operational management,

safeguard and fiduciary compliance and monitoring and reporting related to the respective

component.

2. Given the different nature of the activities to be implemented through the Project‟s two

components, specific implementation arrangements for each are presented in the figure below.

Implementation arrangements for Component 1: Support for the Municipal Sector

3. Management of Component 1 will be centralized in the PIU to be established by DNDA.

The National Director of the DNDA will be responsible for Component 1 implementation,

monitoring, and reporting. Operational and administrative management will be the responsibility

of the Project Coordinator contracted by the DNDA as head of the PIU. The Coordinator will

oversee all procurement, financial management, and operational oversight of PIU personnel and

of all consultants contracted by the PIU, both firms and individuals. The DNDA through the PIU

Credit Agreement

Project Implementation Arrangent

Project Agreement

Subsidiary Agreement

World

Bank

MAE / DNDA

(Component 1 -Executing

MOPH / AIAS

(Component 2 :

MPD

PIU

Component1 (coordination, technical, procurment , FM,

environment, social)

PIU

Component 2 (coordination, technical,

procurement, FM, environment, social )

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will also be responsible for ensuring compliance with all procurement, environmental, and social

safeguard requirements.

4. With the exception of Municipal Performance Grants and the inputs purchased by

municipalities from Grant proceeds, all Credit resources allocated to Component 1 of the Project

and contracts will be managed directly by the PIU. Based on approved plans and budgets, goods

and services will be procured and purchased by the PIU and provided in-kind to Project

beneficiary institutions at central and local levels. Beneficiary institutions for Component 1

include: 20 municipalities, the ANAMM, the Ministry of Finance, and the DNDA itself as the

recipient of capacity building support. Beneficiary institutions will provide the PIU with the

specifications of the inputs they require, and may participate in the selection of suppliers as

appropriate based on procurement procedures; however all contracts will be signed and

administered by the PIU under DNDA. In the case of operating costs, beneficiary institutions

may receive funds from the PIU to cover authorized expenses, however beneficiary institutions

may also advance their own funds for the payment of planned and authorized operating cost

expenditures and be reimbursed by the PIU upon the presentation of adequate documentation.

Specific procedures for the administration of operating costs will be detailed in the Operations

Manual and provided to beneficiary institutions.

5. Municipal Performance Grants will employ a different procedure. Based on the

conditions and procedures specified in the Grants Manual, municipalities will receive an annual

allocation for capital investments to be made based on an approved grant investment plan and

budget. These funds will be additional to the existing intergovernmental capital grant (FIIL) to

municipalities, and will be managed through separate bank accounts and using specific

procedures stipulated in the Project Grants Manual. Grant procedures have been harmonized to

the maximum extent possible with existing GoM and municipal systems to minimize

administrative burdens on the municipal staff who will manage grants. In nearly all cases, the

scale of grant-financed purchases or works will be relatively small (i.e. less than US$100,000),

therefore procurement and safeguard demands will be minimal. Municipal staff will be trained

by the PIU to apply approved procurement methods and to employ approved screening

procedures for identifying potential environmental and social safeguard concerns. In cases

where the scale, complexity, and/or potential impacts of grant funded investments are beyond

existing municipal capacities, the PIU will provide technical support as needed to ensure

compliance with the fiduciary and safeguard standards and procedures detailed in the Grants

Manual.

6. Implementation planning, monitoring, and reporting will be the responsibility of the PIU

under the authority of MAE. Draft annual workplans for the following calendar year will be

prepared based on guidelines provided by the PIU and presented by participating municipalities

and other beneficiary institutions during October of each year. These will be analyzed by the

PIU and DNDA, and after revision as needed will be compiled as a draft annual workplan and

budget for review and approval by MAE and IDA before 31 December. On the basis of these

approved plans, municipalities and beneficiary institutions will have access to required resources

during the following year. Implementation reports from beneficiary institutions at central level,

municipalities receiving Performance Grants, and technical assistance providers contracted by

the Project will be submitted to the PIU on a quarterly basis, on the basis of which quarterly

progress reports will be prepared. This information will also serve as the basis for preparation by

the PIU of the quarterly FMR/IDR to be submitted to the Bank by DNDA.

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Implementation arrangement for Component 2: Enhancing Resilience of Strategic Coastal

Cities

7. A Project Implementation Unit will be established in AIAS to create additional capacity

to implement Project funded activities. Although AIAS‟ limited organizational capacity has

significantly improved since its creation two years ago, additional expertise remains necessary

due to the scale and complexity of Project financed investments compared to other activities

being implemented. To face increasing demands on the agency, AIAS institutional capacities are

currently being strengthened with the support of the MCC funded Project and the ongoing Bank

financed WASIS Project. Implementation support funded by these other AIAS managed

Projects will be in place and functional when the proposed Project becomes effective, including

the following specialists: engineering, financial management, procurement, and environmental

and social safeguards. Once the MCC and the WASIS Projects conclude, the proposed Project

will take over the cost of this implementation support team.

8. In addition, the proposed Project will finance the services of a Coordinator to support to

the AIAS Director and ensure the technical and operational coordination of component activities.

Also, this Coordinator will assist particularly with the institutional dialogue between AIAS and

the municipal councils with respect to the integrated management of works execution, and the

development of municipal capacity to operate and maintain the infrastructure financed by the

Project.

9. To ensure an appropriate capacity to manage the execution of the works in the cities of

Beira and Nacala, the Project will finance a small unit based in each of these cities. The creation

of these units will be undertaken in accordance with the timetable for executing the works in

these cities. These units will be staffed by specialists with proven experience in the management

of sizeable infrastructure works contracts, particularly important in the case of Project activities

planned for Beira. The constitution of these units will build on the experience of the EU

financed sanitation Project in Beira, which has successfully executed an US$100 million Project

financing infrastructure works and institutional capacity building. The decentralized

management units will each include an engineer, a technical assistant, an administrator, and a

secretary and will be part of the PIU for Component 2 coordination and management.

Project Implementation Unit - Component 2

MOPH / AIAS

PIU - Executive

Coordinator

FinancialTecnical

Special

Procurement

Committee

Procurement

Technical team from suppliers carring out the component activities

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10. Procurement and financial management will be carried out by AIAS in Maputo, with

support from contracted specialists. The decentralized units in Beira and Nacala will carry out

the management of the infrastructure works contract.

B. Financial Management

11. Overall, the residual financial management risk for the Project is assessed as Substantial.

MAE, through the DNDA will take the lead responsibility for overseeing FM arrangements of

component 1 of the Project, while component 2 will be under the responsibility of the recently

created AIAS. MAE has received financial assistance from several donors, including the Bank,

on the closed Municipal Development Project and the active Market-led Smallholder

Development Project and is also currently responsible for handling the Project Preparation

Advance. Its FM performance on past Projects is considered adequate. Although AIAS has not

managed the funds for implemented a Bank-financed operation, it has the minimal requirements

to ensure that funds will be used for the intended purposes, in an efficient and economical

manner as well as guarantee the safeguard of the assets.

12. A key FM issue experienced under the closed Municipal Development Project was late

submission of the final audit report due to winding-up of the PIU. This risk will be mitigated for

the proposed Project by ensuring the closer involvement of the Ministry‟s Permanent Secretary

and Department of Administration and Finance (DAF) in overseeing and supporting the PIU.

13. Additional measures to strengthen the FM arrangements of the Project also include the

hiring of (currently underway) an individual Financial Management Specialist (consultant) for

each of the key implementing agencies (DNDA and AIAS). These consultants will assist the

Implementing Agencies‟ PIUs to manage component resources and coordinate finance related

reporting of component activities. These consultants will also be responsible to, help monitor

and prepare consolidated reports for the municipal grants, and help evaluate the performance of

the participating municipalities. To ensure that disbursements and Project activities can begin as

soon as possible, appropriate actions will be taken to ensure that these consultants will have

access to e-SISTAFE, and client connection prior to effectiveness of the Project.

Country and Sub-national issues: Summary of Municipality FM Assessment

14. An assessment of the municipalities FM arrangements also took place to evaluate the

arrangements of their financial reporting, adequacy for their safeguarding of assets, compliance

with laws and regulations. The assessment took into consideration the current municipal law,

their relationship with the MAE, the Tribunal Administrativo (TrAdm), local inspectorates such

as IGAE and the Ministry of Finance.

15. The municipal assemblies play a role in the approval of their annual municipal budgets.

The budgets have to be approved by December 15 of year N-1. As such, planned activities to be

financed from the Grants will also be incorporated into each municipalities budget and the

Grants budgets will be shared with the PIU.

16. The accounting transactions of municipalities are largely through manual processes and

through spreadsheets and the mix of competencies and skills at municipal level are weak.

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However, each municipality will be responsible for the maintenance of appropriate internal

controls, including compliance with policies of Law 9/2002.

17. The municipalities still mainly rely on the transfers from the central Government, which

are transferred from the CUT to the municipalities main revenue/bank account and subsequently

sent to other municipality accounts and suppliers of goods and services. Such bank accounts are

to be monthly reconciled and reviewed. However, a separate bank account will be opened to

receive and expend Project provided grant funds and will be subject to the internal control

policies and procedures used by the municipalities and subject to audits.

18. All municipalities have to report on a quarterly basis the use of their funds to the Ministry

of Finance; however, not all municipalities fully comply with this legal requirement.

Participating municipalities will be required to report on the use of Grants‟ funds to MAE on a

quarterly basis for MAE‟s consolidation and reporting to the Bank.

19. As per law 1/2008, municipalities have to prepare the Contas de Gerências by March 31

of each year, and submit for their municipal assemblies approvals by April 30 of each year. They

must then submit the approved Contas de Gerências to the TA and IGF by May 30 of each year.

The IGF then needs to provide an opinion on these by July 31 of each year. Therefore, in

addition to the external auditors of the Project, IGF will play a key role in helping in follow up

with audit recommendations and ensuring compliance with policies, procedures and other legal

requirements.

20. Budgeting and Flow of Funds. As soon as the Financing Agreement will be signed, the

Project will need to be registered through the National Directorate of Budget (DNO), as without

this taking place, no funds may be channeled through the Government IFMIS (e-SISTAFE).

Upon completion of preparation of the Project budget and on a yearly basis, both Project

implementing units will need to ensure that yearly budgets are inserted into MEO following the

Government of Mozambique procedures, including the calendar for such. This will ensure

celerity in the implementation of Project activities at the beginning of every fiscal year. Both

components will have an initial budget, which will be used to prepare a procurement plan, and

the basis for the initial advance request from the Bank.

21. The funds will flow through the Government‟s single treasury account (CUT). Both

MAE and AIAS will open a Designated Account in the Banco de Moçambique and through

which the funds will flow to a FOREX account and transferred to the CUT on demand by the

implementing entities. Under Component 1, MAE will transfer the Municipal Performance

Grant funds from the CUT directly to a separate bank account held by the participating

municipalities, which will solely receive funds from the Project. For simplification of FM

arrangements and robust internal control environment, payments for Works conducted in Beira,

and Nacala under component 2 will be paid directly by AIAS in Maputo.

22. Accounting and Reporting. Project transactions at MAE/DNDA and AIAS will be

recorded directly on e-SISTAFE and reports extracted from the IFMIS and through excel

spreadsheets. Activities from the municipalities will be recorded through their existing

mechanisms such as excel spreadsheets, until improved accounting/management system(s)

(municpal IFMIS such as SGM) is rolled out to each. The civil servants at both MAE/DNDA

and AIAS already have access to e-SISTAFE as Agentes de Execução Orçamental, Agentes de

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Controle Interno, Agentes de Execução Financeira and other key access codes required to ensure

that they can execute funds through the IFMIS and CUT.

23. MAE/DNDA and AIAS will report separately on Project transactions to the Bank on a

quarterly basis through IFRs, which will be submitted to the Bank no later than 45 days after the

end of each calendar quarter. The reports will include a (i) Designated Account Activity

Statements, (ii) Summary Statements of DA expenditures subject to Prior Review, as well as (iii)

DA expenditure not subject to prior Review; (iv) Sources and Uses of Funds by disbursement

categories; (v) Detailed Use of Funds by Project Component/Activity with comparison of

budgets and actual and explanation of variances; and short-term forecasts of expenditure. A

narrative summary of implementation highlights for the quarter will also be the key to help the

readers understand the financial statements better. Based on a simplified report to be submitted

by the participating municipalities, MAE will include a separate report on the uses/transfers of

funds by/to the municipalities, for which the format is yet to be agreed upon.

24. The IFRs will be reported in USD. As the funds are transferred in tranches into the CUT,

the exchange rate to be used will be based on the date of the transfer into the CUT using a

„FIFO‟ concept in that. That is until all funds of a certain advance have been fully

used/documented; the subsequent reporting‟s exchange rates will be based on the exchange rates

of the days in which the funds are transferred from the DA to the Government‟s CUT, and so on.

This will facilitate the reporting for the PIUs.

25. Internal Control. Both, MAE/DNDA and AIAS have adequate internal controls in

place for preparation and approval of transactions and segregation of duties, which is enhanced

by the use of the Government IFMIS. The Project will use internal control policies and

procedures laid out on the Manual de Administração Financeira (MAF), which are based on the

Law 9/2002. In addition to the MAF, reporting and disbursement procedures and other relations

with the Bank will be documented and used as an annex in conjunction with the MAF.

26. Internal control procedures all participating municipalities are also based on Law 9/2002

and on-going monitoring of their controls will take place to ensure compliance with other laws

and regulations. The Inspeção Geral das Finanças (IGF) and other OCIs will play a role in

following up on the implementation of recommendations by audits of either Tribunal

Administrativo (TrAdm) and/or other OCIs. In addition, there will be a Grants Manual laying

out all procedures to be followed with regards to use and reporting of the municipal grants. The

Grant Manual should be presented by MAE for review and cleared by IDA as a condition for

Category 2 disbursement for Grant Disbursement.

27. Staffing. As the Project will use the country FM systems, it will also rely on personnel

from the Direção de Administração e Finanças (DAF) of both implementing entities. While

some of the staff is not experienced in handling Bank financed operations, this will be mitigated

through the on-going recruitment of FM and procurement Specialists and Project accountants–

one each for the PIU in DNDA and for AIAS – who will provide assistance to the civil servants,

particularly in the issues regarding Bank procedures. AIAS is currently in the process of

recruiting additional personnel (including an FM Specialist) in its FM department to enhance its

capacity. Training in Financial Management and Disbursement for World Bank financed

Projects is recommended for staff of both implementing entities by May 2012.

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28. Audit. All Project accounts, including those referring to the Municipal Performance

Grants accounts, will be audited by an independent auditor in accordance to International

Standards on Auditing (ISA). There has been coordination between the Bank and the

Recipient‟s Tribunal Administrativo to improve the quality of the audits and ensure compliance

with ISAs with respect to other Projects, but involvement of 20 municipalities in this Project

introduces added complexity which Tribunal Administrativo may not be able to cater on a timely

basis given the limited availability of staff and logistical constraints.

29. A copy of the audited Project financial statements, along with the auditor‟s opinion will

be submitted to the Bank not later than six months after the end of each financial year. The audit

report will also contain a management letter, indicating any weaknesses, deficiencies or

reportable conditions on the Project‟s systems of internal controls and accountability, as well as

management‟s response.

30. The Project auditors in relation to Municipal Grant funds provided under Component 1

will make use of municipality audit reports to be undertaken by auditors acceptable to IDA in

order to get assurance over the use of funds under the performance grants allocated to the

respective municipalities. Hence, each municipality will be required to (a) submit to DNDA its

annual budgets, procurement plans and in-year financial statements showing all sources and uses

of funds consistent with their respective approved budgets and in form and substance as would

have been agreed between DNDA and the respective municipality; and (b) annual audited

financial statements in form and substance as would be agreed between the DNDA and

respective municipality. These reporting and oversight requirements will be detailed in the

Grants Manual and will compliance with them will form part of the due diligence reviews that

the Bank‟s fiduciary team will conduct during the year.

31. Both DNDA and AIAS will provide the auditors with full access to the related documents

and records. The Bank will monitor compliance with the audit requirements as per the table

given below:

Audit Report Due Date

1. Project Annual Financial Statements for the year

ending December 31 for Component 1

June 30 each

year

2. Project Annual Financial Statements for the year

ending December 31 for Component 2

June 30 each

year

32. The following action plan was agreed with the implementing entities: FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT ACTION PLAN

Action

1. Recruitment of two FM Consultants by effectiveness

2. Preparation of a Grants Manual before beginning grant disbursements 3. Agreed on formats of quarterly reports during negotiations

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Disbursement Arrangements

33. Both implementing entities will access the Bank funds at least quarterly based on Interim

Financial Reports. Upon effectiveness of the Financing Agreement, an initial advance will be

disbursed into the DA to cover eligible expenditures based on an estimate of six months forecast

financing requirements. Subsequent withdrawals will equally be based on the net cash

requirements for the subsequent 6 months. Specifically for the performance-based grants to

municipalities under component 1, annual forecasts will be based on the latest performance

information available on their meeting the performance indicators.

34. The Project may also use the (i) Reimbursement disbursement method whereby eligible

expenditures paid for by GoM will be reimbursed by the Bank from the Credit account; (ii)

Direct Payment method by making direct payments to suppliers and contractors from the Credit

account at the request of the Project; this method is particularly encouraged to be used by AIAS

for the payment of their relatively large Works contracts; (iii) the Special Commitment method,

whereby the Bank will issue special commitment to commercial banks for payment of eligible

expenditures.

World Bank

Component 1

Designated Account in

Banco de Mozambique

DA (USD)

Participating

Municipalities

separate Bank

Account

CUT -

Subaccount

(MAE)

Suppliers/Service Providers

Component 2

Designated Account in

Banco de Mozambique

DA (USD)

CUT -

Subaccount

(AIAS)

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35. Financing plan/Disbursement Table:

Category

Amount of Credit

Allocated

[SDR million]

Percentages of

Expenditures to be

Financed

(Including taxes)

(1) Goods, works, non-

consulting services,

consultants‟ services,

Training and Operating

Costs under Parts A(i) (b)

and (c) and (ii) of the

Project

13,879,000

100%

(2) Goods, works, non-

consulting services,

consultants‟ services,

Training and Operating

Costs under Part B of the

Project

55,400,000 100%

(3) Goods, works and

consultants‟ services

financed through

Municipal Performance

Grants under Part A(i)(a)

of the Project

8,490,000

100%

(4) Refund of Preparation

Advance

431,000

Amount payable

pursuant to Section 2.07

of the General

Conditions

TOTAL 78,200,000

36. After receipt of disbursement with respect to the performance grants allocation for

municipalities, DNDA will subsequently disburse these amounts to the eligible municipalities in

the dedicated Project accounts opened by each participating municipality for this Project. These

performance based grants allocation will be used by the municipalities in accordance with the

Grants Manual and other procedures consistent with the use of country systems. Expenditures

made by the municipalities will be captured by their respective accounts personnel and reported

to the DNDA on a quarterly basis. DNDA will compile a consolidated report on quarterly

sources and uses of funds under this sub-component of the Project. Any unspent balances by

municipalities from the Performance Grants allocation disbursed to them will be carried forward

to subsequent periods; but systems already exist and are being implemented to monitor that such

balances are kept to the barest minimum. In addition, performance grants allocation not utilized

by the municipalities at Project closure will be refunded to the Bank as part of the lapsed

loan/Credit refund arrangements.

37. Additional instructions are laid out on the „Disbursement Letter‟.

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D. Procurement

38. Procurement provisions and review thresholds. Procurement for the proposed Project

will be carried out in accordance with the World Bank‟s “Guidelines: Procurement of Goods,

Works and Non-consulting Services under IBRD Loans and IDA Credits and Grants by World

Bank Borrowers” published by the Bank in January 2011 and the World Bank‟s “Guidelines:

Selection and Employment of Consultants under IBRD Loans and IDA Credits and Grants by

World Bank Borrowers,” published by the Bank in January 2011.

39. For National Competitive Bidding, the locally issued bidding document may apply.

However, these bidding documents will need to be satisfactory to the Bank and subject to the

additional procedures and modifications stipulated below and as reflected in the Financing

Agreement.

(a) General. The procedures to be followed for NCB shall be those set forth in the

Regulation, with the modifications described in the following paragraphs:

(b) Eligibility. No restriction based on nationality of bidders and/or origin of goods shall

apply. Foreign bidders shall be allowed to participate in NCB without restriction and shall not

be subject to any unjustified requirement which will affect their ability to participate in the

bidding process such as, but not limited to, the proof that they are not under bankruptcy

proceedings in the Recipient‟s territory; have a local representative; have an attorney resident

and domiciled in the Recipient‟s territory; form a joint venture with a local firm. In cases of

joint ventures, they shall confirm joint and several liabilities. Prior registration, obtaining a

license or agreement shall not be a requirement for any bidder to participate in the bidding

process. Recipient‟s Government-owned enterprises or institutions shall be eligible to

participate in the bidding process only if they can establish that they are legally and

financially autonomous, operate under commercial law, and are not dependent agencies of the

Recipient.

(c) Bidding Documents. Standard bidding documents acceptable to the Association shall be

used for any procurement process under NCB.

(d) Preferences. No domestic preference shall be given for domestic bidders and/or for

domestically manufactured goods.

(e) Applicable Procurement Method Under the Regulation. Subject to these NCB

exceptions, procurement under NCB shall be carried out in accordance with the Regulation‟s

public competition (Concurso Público) method.

(f) Bid Preparation Time. Bidders shall be given at least twenty eight (28) days from the

date of the invitation to bid or the date of availability of bidding documents, whichever is

later, to prepare and submit bids.

(g) Bid Opening. Bids shall be opened in public, immediately after the deadline for their

submission in accordance with the procedures stated in the bidding documents.

(h) Bid Evaluation. Qualification criteria shall be clearly specified in the bidding documents,

and all criteria so specified, and only such criteria so specified shall be used to determine

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whether a bidder is qualified; the evaluation of the bidder‟s qualifications should be

conducted separately from the technical and commercial evaluation of the bid. Qualification

criteria shall be applied on a pass or fail basis.

(i) Evaluation of bids shall be made in strict adherence to the criteria declared in the

bidding documents; criteria other than price shall be quantified in monetary terms.

(ii) A contract shall be awarded to the qualified bidder offering the lowest-evaluated and

substantially responsive bid.

(iii) Bidders shall not be eliminated on the basis of minor, non-substantial deviations.

(h) Rejection of All Bids and Re-bidding. All bids shall not be rejected and new bids

solicited without the Association‟s prior concurrence.

(i) Complaints by Bidders and Handling of Complaints. The Recipient shall

establish an effective and independent complaint mechanism allowing bidders to

complain and to have their complaint handled in a timely manner.

(j) Right to Inspect/Audit. In accordance with paragraph 1.16(e) of the Procurement

Guidelines, each bidding document and contract financed from the proceeds of the Financing

shall provide that: (i) the bidders, suppliers, and contractors and their subcontractors, agents,

personnel, consultants, service providers or suppliers, shall permit the Association, at its

request, to inspect their accounts, records and other documents relating to the submission of

bids and contract performance, and to have them audited by auditors appointed by the

Association; and (ii) the deliberate and material violation by the bidder, supplier, contractor or

subcontractor of such provision may amount to obstructive practice as defined in paragraph

1.16(a)(v) of the Procurement Guidelines.

(k) Fraud and Corruption. Each bidding document and contract financed from the proceeds

of the Financing shall include provisions on matters pertaining to fraud and corruption as

defined in paragraph 1.16(a) of the Procurement Guidelines. The Association may sanction a

firm or individual, at any time, in accordance with prevailing Association sanctions

procedures, including by publicly declaring such firm or individual ineligible, either

indefinitely or for a stated period of time: (i) to be awarded an Association-financed contract;

and (ii) to be a nominated sub-contractor, consultant, supplier or service provider of an

otherwise eligible firm being awarded an Association-financed contract.

(l) Debarment Under National System. The Association may recognize, if requested by

the Recipient, exclusion from participation as a result of debarment under the national system,

provided that the debarment is for offenses involving fraud, corruption or similar misconduct,

and further provided that the Association confirms that the particular debarment procedure

afforded due process and the debarment decision is final.

40. The overall implementation of the envisaged procurement activities for the proposed

Project will be managed by two separate implementing agencies, the MAE/DNDA for

component 1 and by the MOPH/AIAS for the component 2. While the MAE has previously

implemented Bank funded operations, the Municipal Development Project, there has been no

capacity created within MAE as the previous operation was fully implemented by consultants

who are no longer with MAE. AIAS is a recently created institution that has some experience

with Bilateral financing, but no experience with the World Bank.

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41. The capacity of the two implementing agencies has been reviewed during the preparation

phase. It is found to be limited for the case of AIAS and to be established, for the case of

DNDA. Both units will be resourced with experienced and qualified procurement consultants,

who will provide technical assistance and training to permanent staff of MAE and AIAS

UGEAs. The key issues and risks concerning procurement for implementation of the Project

have been identified and these include: (i) availability of qualified procurement staff to

implement procurement activities; (ii) poor quality procurement and outcomes due to limited

procurement and contract administration capacity, and (iii) delays caused by Government‟s own

review process prior to contract signature.

42. Corrective measures were discussed and AIAS and MAE should: (i) establishment of the

procurement functions at MAE/DNDA prior to Effectiveness and strengthening of available

capacity at AIAS, (ii) ensure that the procurement decision making is fully covered in the

Procurement Manual, to be prepared, and is available/known to staff in charge of the Project, (iii)

ensure that qualified staff is retained in the implementing agencies; and, (iv) the procurement

planning process taking into account the steps and associated timeframe for Government‟s own

internal approval processes (the Tribunal Administrativo, the Comissão das Relações

Económicas Exteriores (CREE), and Ministry of Finance “Departamento de Divisas”). MAE

and MOPH management should ensure that these implementing agencies are resourced with

qualified personnel throughout the life of the Project.

43. In view of the overall experience and current capacity of MAE and AIAS to carry out

procurement activities related to the proposed Project, the procurement risk associated with the

Project is rated as Substantial. The risk will be closely monitored by Bank team during the

regular implementation support missions.

44. Prior-Review Thresholds. Prior-review and procurement method thresholds for the

Project are indicated in Table below.

Procurement Thresholds Procurement Method Thresholds Proposed (USD million)

ICB NCB Shopping QCBS CQS Least Cost DC / SSS ICS

Works ≥5.0 <5.0 <0.10 All

Goods ≥0.50 <0.50 <0.10 All

Consulting

Services

Firms ≥0.20 <0.20 <0.20 All

Individuals All ≥0.10

45. The Project is expected to finance large value Works contracts that will be subject to pre-

qualification procedures, such as the Drainage rehabilitation works for the city of Beira. Other

large value works, not requiring pre-qualification, include the Erosion control and drainage

works in Nacala. Furthermore, large value consultants services are expected for the

Development of a Master Drainage and Sanitation Plan for the Great Maputo area; the Design of

erosion control, drainage works in Nacala; Strengthening technical and operational capacity of

Beira‟s Autonomous Sanitation Services and the design of the Beira Drainage rehabilitation

measures. Small value goods such as office and information technology equipment are also

expected.

46. Procurement Plan and Procurement Arrangements. The Procurement Plan for the

first 18 months of Project implementation was prepared by MAE/DNDA and MOPH/AIAS,

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reviewed and approved during negotiations. This plan will be updated annually or as required to

reflect the Project implementation. Works contracts expected to be procured through ICB under

the Project will include the drainage works for the cities of Beira and Nacala. The drainage

works for the city of Beira shall be subject to Prequalification in accordance to Bank Procedures.

Goods to be procured will include vehicles, information technology and office equipment,

among others. Consulting services to be financed will include studies associated with the design

of the rehabilitation measures in both cities and the Development of a Master Drainage and

Sanitation Plan for the Great Maputo area, the integrated urban water management for Beira,

Analysis of the future needs of urban areas on the likelihood of increasing impacts associated

with climate changes, among others. Furthermore, the Bank will conduct semi-annual

procurement supervision mission and carry out Post Procurement Review at least once per year.

47. The World Bank Standard Bidding Document for Works and Goods and the Standard

Request for Proposals as well as NCB documents satisfactory to the Bank will be used for the

contracts to be procured. These documents will be prepared jointly by MAE and AIAS and

included in the procurement section of the Project‟ Implementation Manual. The Manual is

expected to be made available prior to Effectiveness.

48. A separate Manual, the Project Grants Manual, will be prepared by MAE/DNDA on the

Municipal Performance Grants that will support sub-Projects intended to enhance municipal

capacity for sustainable decentralized management of the urban environment and urban services.

The manual will contain the applicable procurement procedures for the participating

municipalities as well as the reporting mechanisms to the unit to be created under DNDA to

manage the Project. The procurement officers from the DNDA PIU will provide support and

guidance to the procurement activities within the municipalities. The Grants Manual will be

prepared and approved by the Bank prior to commencement of the Grant scheme.

Environmental and Social Safeguards

49. The overall environmental and social impact is expected to be positive, especially in

periurban areas where flooding during heavy rains is a serious health and safety issue. Negative

impacts, however, may arise during cleaning and rehabilitation of existing drainage channels, or

improvements of natural drainage channels through targeted periurban areas.

50. In Beira the proposed drainage works will be along existing canals or natural drainage

channels that eventually drain directly to the sea. In Nacala, the physical works will include the

implementation of key components of a drainage master plan by installing erosion control

structures (gabions) on three of the steep-sloped primary drainage channels in the city that drain

directly to the sea. Most of these works can be managed through good engineering practice for

design and construction, and disposal of sludges and solid wastes removed during cleaning

operations, especially in Beira. The most sensitive environmental issue will be the disposal of

polluted sludges dredged from the existing drainage channels in Beira.

51. The most sensitive social issue will be compensation for impacts on fences, latrines, fruit

trees, and similar structures or assets that may need to be temporarily removed or relocated in

order to improve drainage in periurban areas. In Beira, preliminary census work identified

between 50 to 80 structures that might be impacted, depending on the final width of the drainage

right-of-way in the periurban area and whether a retention basin will be built. The majority of

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these structures are fences and latrines around household lots. Preparation of a draft RPF

occurred subsequent to this preliminary census, and notes up to 50 residences in the Beira

periurban area may have potentially impacted structures. Efforts will be made to further

minimize the number of potentially impacted structures and impacted households during final

engineering design, and before production of a RAP. In Nacala, approximately 10 households

are located near the three gullies that need stabilization against erosion, but preliminary design

indicates no resettlement or compensation is expected because all investments will be

stabilization of existing gully walls on steep slopes with sandy soils, to prevent further erosion.

Therefore, the works will occur within the existing gullies, and are expected to be done with

primarily manual labor. In the unlikely event that compensation for disturbance of a structure

near a gully is required. The RPF is designed to cover all Component 2 investments. Component

1 will not be covered by the RPF because works investments that triggers OP 4.12 Involuntary

Resettlement are not eligible for the grant financing.

52. Feasibility and preliminary design engineering studies are being financed by the

European Union in Beira and by Millennium Challenge Corporation in Nacala. Until the final

engineering designs for the rehabilitation and improvements are completed during the Bank

Project, the site-specific environmental and social impacts are uncertain, especially at Beira.

Therefore, an Environmental and Social Management Framework (ESMF) and a Resettlement

Policy Framework (RPF) have been prepared for the civil works at Beira, and these will be the

basis for producing an Environmental Assessment and an Environmental Management Plan,

once engineering designs are completed, and a Resettlement Action Plan. These Safeguards

documents would need to be reviewed, approved, and disclosed by the Bank before those works

could proceed. The ESMF and RPF for Beira will also be useful in guiding the Master Plan and

to scope the appropriate Safeguards documents for any works that may be carried out in the

Greater Maputo area once the Master Plan is completed. These Safeguards documents also

would need to be reviewed, approved, and disclosed by the Bank before those works could

proceed.

53. No physical cultural resources have been identified to be at risk for impacts by the pre-

feasibility studies in Beira and Nacala. The Master Plan in Greater Maputo will take into

consideration this potential issue as well and identify known cultural resources near the existing

drainage system as well as establish chance finds procedures, but it is unlikely that any

significant cultural resources would be located within existing drainage systems in Greater

Maputo. It is possible that physical cultural resources such as worship sites are located adjacent

to the drainage system, especially in periurban areas. The Project is unlikely to adversely affect

such nearby sites; rather, the installation of improved drainage reduces risk of adverse impacts

on them caused by flooding during heavy rains. In determining which components of the

Greater Maputo Master Plan can be funded by the current Project, once the Master Plan is

prepared and adopted, criteria for selection of priority works can include deferment of any

components that might have potentially significant adverse impacts on sensitive resources.

54. Any proposed Municipal Performance Grant under Component 1 will not be eligible for

Bank financing if it involves displacement of peoples, loss of access to assets, adverse impacts

on significant cultural resources, or civil works within a river that is classified as transboundary

or a tributary to such a river. The Municipal Performance Grants are expected to be small-scale

in nature, involve repair or rehabilitation of existing city infrastructure (offices, sidewalks,

streets, etc.) because of their small size, and most of them may be considered Category C sub-

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Projects. The most appropriate Safeguards instrument, if any, for these works would be

Environmental Management Plans (EMPs) for construction, which will be part of a Grants

Manual prepared by the PIU. Therefore, a separate ESMF has been prepared for Component 1

activities that describes the institutional arrangements, training, and capacity building that will be

provided by the PIU, a description of environmental issues of concern during small-scale

construction activities and appropriate mitigation measures, and checklists and reporting forms

for each Municipality to use in developing its respective EMP. As noted above, the civil works

anticipated in Nacala are also expected to have minimal adverse environmental and social

impacts related to construction. Therefore, the ESMF for Component 1 activities, some of which

may require EMPs, is also the guiding document for preparing an EMP for construction of the

Nacala Project, once final engineering designs are completed.

55. The Borrower has implemented several Bank financed Projects and the Bank's safeguard

policies. The institution responsible for urban interventions has demonstrated an adequate

capacity to apply the safeguard policies through their Projects. The cities that will be financed

through this Project will need additional capacity on safeguards. AIAS, which will be the

implementing agency for component 2, will benefit from the assistance of environmental and

social specialists from FIPAG, a sister agency that has extensive capacity and experience with

Safeguards procedures and requirements as an implementing agency for WB financed Projects in

the water supply and delivery sector, as well as MCC-financed Projects, which follow WB

Safeguard Policies as well.

56. Mozambique has a well established culture of consultation as set forth in the Directive

for the General Case on Public Participation in the EIA Process (Ministerial Directive no. 130/

2006 of July 19) and the Regulation on the Process of Environmental Impact Assessment

(Decree 45/2004). Mozambique requires that public consultation includes all interested and

affected parties. During consultation people are provided with Project information and provided

an opportunity to comment, ask questions, and express concerns. The Directive established a

general methodology that should govern the public participation process to ensure effective

consultation. The five steps for participation include: (1) identification of stakeholders and

affected persons, (2) dissemination of information, (3) dialogue with stakeholders and affected

persons, (4) incorporate comments raised during consultations, and (5) provide feedback.

57. The EIA Regulation also requires that public consultations are advertized 15 days prior to

the meeting. In addition presentation of studies published announcements on the eve of the

consultation meeting date and made copies available to impacted and interested parties of

relevant documents to be discussed at these meetings. Although meetings must be announced at

least 15 days in advance, it is recommended that the announcement, especially radio

announcements, include information on where people can access documents that have been

prepared and will be discussed during consultation meetings.

58. Extensive consultations with stakeholders and directly affected people have already

occurred as part of the prefeasibility and feasibility studies financed by the European Union

and the MCC. Although these consultations included a broader range of investments in the

water, sanitation, and drainage sector, they included consultations on alternative drainage

schemes. These consultations were held to present Project objectives, explain main Project

activities, and describe potential impacts identified based on biological and socio-economic

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environment. The presenters then noted main issues rose by stakeholders so that their concerns

could be addressed in final documents.

59. In Nacala two focus groups of special interest were identified - women and community

leaders. Focus group meetings were held in Nahua, Nachicuva, and Muconia neighborhoods.

Open public meetings were also held in these same neighborhoods. Two different consultation

topics were held involving the focus groups and public meetings for presentation of the Pre-

Feasibility Study and Scoping Phase, and presentation of the Preliminary Report of the

Environmental Impact Study. These meetings presented the main findings arising from visits to

the Project area; potential impacts identified, and study findings. These consultations continue

during preparation of the ESMF and RPF, and subsequent EMPs and RAPS.

60. Based on site visits, where adverse environmental and social impacts are most likely to

occur, the scale and significance of the risks and likely impacts are localized and readily

managed with appropriate mitigation measures, and therefore the Project is appropriately

defined as Category B. Of the World Bank Safeguard Policies, OP 4.01 (Environmental

Assessment) and OP 4.12 (Involuntary Resettlement) are triggered.

F. Project Monitoring and Evaluation

61. Monitoring and evaluation will be carried out by each of the implementing agencies for

Components 1 and 2. The PIUs will collect and organize the information necessary for activity

monitoring and results monitoring. Each PIU will prepare quarterly FMRs/IFRs, Annual

Progress Reports including presentation of KPIs from the Project Results Framework,

comprehensive Project assessments as inputs for Mid-term Review and Project Implementation

Completion Review, and other supporting documentation that may be required for supervision

missions and other program review activities as agreed between the Bank Task Team and the

GoM implementing agencies. MAE and AIAS, the implementing agencies, will each review and

approve this documentation and will provide to the Bank the consolidated data for the

monitoring and evaluation of each respective component. Each component will follow a specific

methodology to producing the data for the monitoring and evaluation.

Component 1 – Monitoring and evaluation procedures

62. Component 1 M&E will be managed by the DNDA with the support of its PIU. A

Monitoring and Evaluation Officer will be part of the DNDA PIU team, to assist the Project

Coordinator in collecting and managing the information required for the Projects M&E system,

as well as in the preparation of the technical (i.e. non-financial). The PIU will develop reporting

formats and provide them to beneficiary institutions. Each beneficiary institution will submit

quarterly progress reports detailing activities undertaken in relation to their annual workplan,

outputs produced, difficulties encountered, and recommendations to improve implementation.

Additional data will be provided quarterly by municipalities receiving Municipal Performance

Grants regarding procurement, contract execution, and financial disbursement in order to allow

the PIU to monitor Grant implementation. Each October all beneficiary institutions will present

provisional annual reports along with their proposed workplan for the following year. These

annual reports will then be finalized in January following the close of the prior year.

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63. Special attention in monitoring will be dedicated by the DNDA and PIU to the collection

of data related to the performance indicators used to calculate the allocation of the Municipal

Performance Grant. Because each of these Grant performance indicators is aligned with the

“supply driven” capacity building provided under Component 1 in the areas of urban planning,

municipal finance management, and municipal revenue enhancement, the technical assistance

providers associated with these activities will assist the PIU and the collection and/or validation

of performance data for each of the 20 participating municipalities. Details of requirements and

timing for monitoring data required for the annual municipal performance assessments

associated with the performance grants will be provided in the Grants manual. On this basis, the

PIU‟s M&E Officer will assist the Coordinator in preparing the annual performance assessment

report document according to these specifications and calendar.

Component 2 – Monitoring and evaluation procedures:

64. Component 2 M&E will be managed by the AIAS. The capacity in AIAS to collect data

on the Project outcome and results indicators will be strengthened through the creation of a PIU

to address the Project implementation specific needs, and through consultant contracts to carry

out works supervision. No additional costs will be required related to support M&E. Data

produced for M&E will be used to stirs the component execution accordingly with the

implementation timetables agreed with the Bank.

65. Progress reports will be prepared on a quarterly basis by the teams responsible for all

major component activities. The PIU will prepare and disseminate data collection forms and

consolidate the information directly managed by its staff as well as the information obtained

through the reports produced by the consulting firms supervising the works execution. Also, the

PIU will interact with participating municipalities in order to obtain the information associated

with the implementation of the technical assistance and institutional development activities.

These will be used to prepare the activity monitoring section of quarterly IFR/FMRs. Results

monitoring will be carried out on an annual basis, collecting and reporting information relevant

to the status of all Component 2 KPIs.

G. Role of Partners

66. Component 1 and Component 2 each have different collaborating arrangements with

other development partners. In relation to Component 1, at the moment there are two municipal

Projects with which the proposed Project will have a substantive engagement. German

Cooperation KfW/GIZ is preparing a new 4 year Project (2012-2015) for the financing of

economic infrastructure investments in six municipalities in the central region, four of which are

among the 20 Project supported municipalities. The KfW/GIZ Project seeks to provide

sustainable infrastructure and services to the urban, peri-urban and rural population in the six

municipalities, with a total budget of EUR 15 million. The IDA funded Project will work in

complementary sectors, urban planning and municipal finance, and so will coordinate to

maximize synergies with the KfW/GIZ Project in those municipalities where they are both

working.

67. Both Components have a significant relationship to the Municipal Development Project

(PDA) financed by a consortium of Danish (DANIDA), Swiss (SDC) and Austrian (ADC)

Cooperation and being implemented in 13 cities of the central and northern regions of the

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country. Component 1 is seen by Government as a “sister” Project to the PDA, bringing many of

the same elements of assistance to 20 municipalities which are beyond the PDA‟s geographical

scope. Since both Component 1 and the PDA are supervised by the DNDA, coordination

mechanisms between the two Projects will be secured through their shared GoM institutional

base. Component 1 will have a significant technical relationship with the PDA; each will provide

its methodological tools and share its implementation experience with the other regarding

capacity building for municipalities. An even closer relationship is seen in the area of financial

management: the PDA-funded Municipal Management System (SGM) remains a promising basis

for a municipal IFMIS to be supported by Component 1. Finally, both Component 1 and PDA

will both provide capacity-building assistance at central level to the DNDA and ANAMM: these

complementary elements of support will each contribute to a single work program for each

institution, ensuring that their respective efforts contribute coherently to a clear set of

institutional development objectives.

68. Component 2 also has a significant relation to the PDA, as well as to several other

partner-funded initiatives in Beira and Nacala. Because Beira and Nacala are key participants in

the PDA (as they were in its predecessor Project P13 between 2007 and 2011), both

municipalities are engaged in significant initiatives to improve their capacities in financial

management, urban planning, environmental management, and solid waste management. All of

these initiatives complement the investments to be made under Component 2 in sustainable

provision of drainage infrastructure. Together the two initiatives will enhance the capacities of

these municipalities manage climate related environmental risks. Coordination of Component 2

activities with the PDA will largely take place at the municipal level, led by the respective

municipal Authorities of Beira and Nacala to ensure strategic and operational synergies with

PDA activities in order that the two Projects jointly contribute to sustainable municipal resilience

in response to potential climate impacts.

69. In addition to this coordinating relationship, the NDF is developing an approximately 4.5-

5 million USD proposal to finance activities contributing to further extend the impact of the

Project, in particular with respect to the activities proposed under Component 2. The NDF grant

will be in the form of parallel cofinancing through a grant agreement with the Ministry of

Finance based on NDF‟s existing country agreement with the GoM. This agreement will be

linked to the IDA Project and one of the preconditions for disbursement will be that the IDA

Project is effective. AIAS will be the implementing agency for the NDF Project and will be

provided with consultant support to improve methods employed for drainage planning and

management with a focus on adjusting technical standards and procedures to accommodate the

expected impacts of climate change on urban flooding and erosion.

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Annex 4: Operational Risk Assessment Framework (ORAF)

1. Project Stakeholder Risks Rating: Moderate

Description :

a. Possible coordination issues among donors funding municipal

Projects could lead to multiple standards for municipal systems

Risk Management :

a1. Devt Partner (DP) Decentralization Working Group has been in place and will continue to

exist through the life of the Project aiming to facilitate coordination and support to local

Authorities.

a2. Bank and DPs provide support to relevant GoM agencies to take the lead in establishing

technical standards and common systems for application at municipal level.

Resp: Bank, Partners

and GoM Stage: Prep and Impl

Due Date : Project

Closing Date Status: Ongoing

b. Central Government institutions responsible for

decentralization programs often face conflicting incentives;

this may lead to weakened or inconsistent support for

strengthening municipal governance.

b1. Policy dialogue with central government will strengthen the regulatory and institutional bases

which enable dynamic municipal governance.

b2. Capacity building for municipalities to improve performance and sustainability will increase

their legitimacy as institutions for local governance and urban management.

Resp: Municipalities Stage: Implementation Due Date : Project

Closing Date Status: Ongoing

2. Implementing Agency Risks (including fiduciary)

3.1. Capacity Rating: Substantial

Description :

a. GoM implementing agency for Comp 1 has little Project

management capacity and has lost past personnel who

understood Bank procedures through work on prior Bank

Projects.

b. Low municipal capacities for planning, management, and

technical functions related to focal areas in urban planning ns

municipal finances

c. Municipal capacities for operation and maintenance of

urban infrastructure are not adequate to ensure sustainability

of investments

Risk Management :

a1. PIU staffed by contracted personnel with Project management and WB Project experience

will compensate for low ministerial capacities.

b. Strong emphasis on local govt management and reporting systems and staff training will

strengthen municipalities‟ management and technical capacities.

c. Project will support establishment and strengthening of municipal sanitation agency with

dedicated revenue stream, staff, and equipment for infrastructure O&M.

Resp: GoM Stage: Prep/Implem Due Date: N/A Status: Ongoing

3.2. Governance Rating: Moderate

Description :

a. Municipal sector is characterized by limited technical

Risk Management :

a. Project will support not only strengthening of municipal management capacities but also external

controls through transparency of reporting and municipal audits as well as the establishment of

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capacity, lack of systematic monitoring data and analysis,

weak systems for ensuring fiduciary compliance, and absence

of performance incentives.

performance based incentives for improved management.

Resp: MAE and AIAS Stage: Implementation Due Date: N/A Status: Ongoing

4. Project Risks

4.1. Design Rating: Substantial

Description :

a. Strong focus on drainage investments managed by central

govt may reduce incentives for sustainable O&M by

municipalities.

b. Complexity of implementing municipal capacity building in

19 diverse municipalities may lead to dilution of effort and

limited impact.

c. Lack of clarity regarding technical standards for municipal

financial management systems (IFMIS) may lead to multiple

systems and duplication or wasted effort.

d. Municipal officials frequently focus on maximizing inputs

rather than on service provision often limits Project results and

public benefits

Risk Management :

a. GoM policy for autonomous municipal agencies for O&M w specific revenue base defines

foundation for sustainability of drainage infrastructure, following the example of Beira.

b. Use by Project TA of standard technical packages for multiple municipalities will facilitate

economies of effort and horizontal learning among municipal staff , officials and communities.

c. Policy dialogue with Ministry of Finance and support for MoF leadership will provide basis for

a clear technical standard for municipal IFMIS; if adequate framework for municipal IFMIS is

not established, funds may be reallocated for other activities.

d. Performance element in municipal grants will strengthen incentives for producing measurable

results and visible benefits to the public

Resp: GoM and

municipalities Stage: Implementation Due Date: N/A Status: Ongoing

4.2. Social & Environmental Rating: Moderate

Description :

a. Rights of way for drainage channels may involve

compensation for private structures and property affected

(latrines, fences, part of a veranda), or the loss of an entire

construction used for residential or commercial purposes.

b. Low municipal capacities for identifying and mitigating

environmental and social risks and impacts.

c. Possible conflicts among private parties or between private

parties and municipalities over land may result from

municipal efforts to increase municipal land registration and

titling.

Risk Management :

a. The few large infrastructure investments will include funding and TA for safeguard

compliance. ESMF and RPF provide adequate procedures for impact mitigation and

compensation. Adequate Project support to the resettlement process (as outlined in the RPF and

to be followed up by a RAP) to ensure its satisfactory implementation and compliance with Bank

policies.

b1. Investments funded by Municipal Performance Grants will be small and technically not

complex. Simple safeguard screening procedures will identify any investments which present

significant risks.

b2. Training for municipal staff in safeguard compliance will be provided by PIU; PIU staff will

also monitor safeguard compliance by municipalities in use of Project financed grants.

c. Land registration and titling methodologies to be employed will include extra-judicial conflict

resolution mechanisms, including informal mediation and potentially arbitration mechanisms.

Resp: IAs, PIUs,

Municipalities Stage: Prep/Implem Due Date: N/A Status: Ongoing

4.3. Program & Donor Rating: Substantial

Description :

a. Sustainable impact of drainage investments in Beira and

Nacala requires broader municipal capacity building than

sectoral issues supported by AIAS, especially for urban

environmental management and general municipal finances.

b. Potential proliferation of multiple municipal IFMIS systems

through various aid-supported Projects leading to

Risk Management : a. Coordination with PDA Project, as well as with several other donors assisting on climate

change related issues, to ensure that Project‟s TA to Beira and Nacala municipalities in

environmental management and municipal finances do ensure broader institutional performance

improvements which enhance local capacity for resilience to climate related risks.

b. Support for leadership by Ministry of Finance to define policy and national standard for

municipal IFMIS, linked to potential Project financed TA for system devt and/or implementation.

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inefficiencies and threats to system sustainability.

c. Aid-financed assistance for municipal capacity building

through multiple aid-supported Projects risks coverage gaps

and inconsistent technical approaches across various

municipalities.

c1. Participation in GoM Decentralization Working Group to coordinate support for

municipalities and harmonize technical methodologies

c2. Technical coordination between Bank-funded Project and donor funded PDA Project

facilitates harmonization of technical approaches and sharing of technical instruments for

municipal capacity building.

Resp: GoM Stage: Prep/Implem Due Date: N/A Status: Ongoing

4.4. Delivery Monitoring & Sustainability Rating: Moderate

Description :

a. Slow pace of municipal reform and capacity development

may constrain the capacity of municipalities to achieve

sustainability targets during Project period

b. Weak local private sector market for TA in municipal

financial management and urban planning

Risk Management :

a. Modest and gradually increasing performance targets tied to incremental implementation of

technical assistance activities allow adjustment of the ambition of Project targets to low level of

institutional capacity among many beneficiary municipalities and enhance sustainability of

performance gains

b1. Major Project-funded TA will be bundled in larger contacts to make them more attractive for

international providers who offer greater expertise in urban planning and municipal finances.

b2. Project design foresees engagement of university faculty members from the well-respected

Architecture and Urban Planning Faculty who have extensive professional experience with urban

planning and environmental management in the legal, institutional, physical and social contexts

of Mozambican municipalities.

b3. Project will also support the contributions of public sector specialists from the GoM Revenue

Authority (under MF) and Administrative Court to enhance the quality of municipal finances.

Resp: MAE Stage: Implementation Due Date: N/A Status: Under

preparation

4.5. Other: Technical Risk Rating: Substantial

Description :

a. Municipal IT systems, including IFMIS, require complex

technical solutions for system design, implementation,

operation, and maintenance/support. There may be significant

risks of unsustainable IT based systems at municipal level.

Risk Management :

a1. Bank financed consultancy during preparation provided independent technical assessment of

PDA-supported IFMIS “SGM”

a2. Dialogue with GoM (MAE and MF) and PDA regarding establishing technical and

institutions preconditions for SGM rollout will reduce risks of further investments. If necessary,

Project support will be delayed until these issues are clarified and adequately addressed

a3. Close collaboration with MF technical unit (CEDSIF) will ensure technical adequacy and

regulatory compliance of any Project-supported IFMIS (SGM or other), supplemented as needed

by independent Project financed consultants.

Resp: MAE Stage: Implementation Due Date: N/A Status: Under

preparation

5. Overall Risk Following Review

5.2 Implementation Risk Rating: Substantial

Comments: A substantial risk rating was selected for both preparation and implementation due to the various challenges at the state level that affect preparation

efforts, and due to implementation difficulties experienced by other on-going IDA Projects in the urban sector in Mozambique.

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Annex 5: Implementation Support Plan

1. The objective of the Implementation Support Plan (ISP)17 is to outline the Bank‟s key

operational support for successful realization of the Project Development Objectives (PDO).

The approach involves strong and close monitoring of technical, safeguard, procurement and

financial management aspects. Thereby, identified risks can be managed through provision of

support in key areas such as: urban planning, local revenues raising, grant transfer management,

municipal financial management system, hydraulic engineering, fiduciary due diligence,

environmental and social management, and monitoring and evaluation. The team also includes

expertise in Bank operations backed up with the essential administrative support.

2. IS approach. The ISP will build upon regular mission to Mozambique, starting with

twice per year and include staff located at both headquarters, in the region and in the Bank‟s

country office in Maputo. The ISP will be revised annually during Project implementation

thereby adaptation to any changing circumstances. On a need basis, additional input will be

provided. M&E performed by the client, in accordance with the Project Implementation Manual

(PIM), will be concurrent to the oversight through the Project‟s Results Framework and provide

guidance for the implementation of the ISP.

3. Providing adequate technical support will be important to ensuring timely

implementation of key activities. A large part of the financial resources under the Project is

allocated for the rehabilitation of the drainage system in Beira. To ensure efficient management

of the funds, the preparation of the Term of Reference and Selection Documents for this activity

has already initiated. A draft Term of References for this activity has been prepared, as well as

for the preparation of the Drainage Master Plan for Maputo. AIAS informed that the initiation of

the consultant selection process for these two activities will be lunched after the Decision

Meeting, which will confirm the proposed Project activities and funds. Strengthening contract

oversight and day-to-day management to address issues identified during the preparatory

assignments will be supported by the Project Implementation Units in MAE and in AIAS.

4. The Project will require intensive supervision support in the initial year of

implementation given the challenges and the capacity of the sector‟s financial management

staffing. During Project implementation, the Bank will review: (a) the Project IFRs and audited

financial statements, including the budget execution report, together with the management

letters; and (b) the Project‟s financial management and disbursement arrangements to ensure

compliance with the agreed requirements. With the implementation of the sound financial

management and monitoring system by the professional staff proposed for the DNDA and AIAS,

the Bank‟s normal implementation review procedures will suffice.

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What will be the main focus in terms of support to implementation during:

Time Focus Skills Needed Resource

Estimate

(US$)

Partner Role

Before

effectiveness

Finalize PIM

Launch procurements

Verify if the risk mitigating

measures implemented by

Project effectiveness

functioning as intended.

Identification of any potential

problems early in the life of

the Project

Team Leader

Municipal

development specialist

Engineering

Safeguards

Procurement

Financial Mgmt

Legal

Operations

60,000 N/A

First twelve

months Procurements/Contract

Mgmt;

Appointment of Technical

Assistance; Design & Spvn

Consultants; Grant

management ; Env & Soc

Mgmt

Team/Program.

Conclude procurements;

Initiate additional

procurements

Review the continuing

adequacy of the financial

management arrangements

Team Leader

Municipal

development specialist

Engineering

Safeguards

Procurement

Financial Mgmt

Legal

Operations

200,000

12-48

months

(Yr 2, 3 &

4)

Supervision; refine

monitoring Component 1;

performance grant evaluation;

Beira and Nacala works

supervision; launch

procurement for works in

Maputo metropolitan area;

Carrying out activities

supporting O&M

Team Leader

Municipal

development specialist

Engineering

Safeguards

Procurement

Financial Mgmt

Legal

Operations

600,000

48-72

months

(Yr 5 & 6)

Supervision; Contract

Mgmt;

Monitoring component 1

results;

Env & Soc Mgmt

Team/Program;

Concluding support to

O&M

Team Leader

Municipal

development specialist

Engineering

Safeguards

Procurement

Financial Mgmt

Legal

Operations

400,000

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5. Resource Requirements. The team estimates that the overall resources requirement for

the Implementation Support Plan is in the order of US$200,000.00 annually for the six-year

implementation period.

6. Skills Mix Required

Skills Needed Number of Staff

Weeks

Number of

Trips

Comments

TTL 12 2

Co TTL 12 - CO Based

Hydraulic engineer (consultant) 7 2

Institutional development specialist (consultant) 7 2

Environmental specialist 5 2

Financial Management Specialist 8 Field trips as

required

CO Based

Social specialist 5 2

Performance grant specialist 5 As required

Municipal finance system specialist 5 As required

Procurement specialist 10 - CO Based

Team assistant 7 - CO Based

Lawyer 1 As required

Disbursement officer 1 As required

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Annex 6. Economic and Financial Analysis

1. The results of the economic analysis of the drainage investments show that the Nacala

Project is economically rational. The Project in Beira is also economically feasible with NPV of

US$49.5 million and economic rate of return of 18%. The investment cost could increase as

much as 100% and the Project would still show economic benefits. The same occurs when the

values assumed to estimate the benefits are reduced by half.

2. The economic analysis was based on the results presented in the feasibility studies carried

out for prioritizing needs with respect to flood and erosion control13

. The discount rate used for

the analysis was 8%.

3. The results of the financial analysis show that current revenues from drainage fee are not

enough to cover the operating costs of the drainage investments. Therefore to make the Project

sustainable either the drainage revenues have to increase or the Government has to transfer

subsidies for the operation. In both municipalities there is ample room for improving the

collection and billing of property tax, given that they currently collect only 4% in Beira and 0.1%

in Nacala of what they could potentially charge. To cover operating expenses when investments

are completed at year five, Beira municipality would have to increase 22% per year its revenues

from property tax, and Nacala 82% per year.

Economic and Financial Analysis of the Project

A. Methodology

4. Objective. The proposed Project will assist Mozambique in developing appropriate

policies, procedures, institutions, and infrastructure improvements to enhance the municipal

systems and strengthen resilience of selected cities to climate related impacts. It includes two

components. Component 1 – Strengthening the municipal sector: this component will

strengthen systems and capacities at national and local levels to improve the sustainability of

municipal service provision in context of building resilience to tackle debilitating effects of

climate-related impacts. Component 2 – Enhancing resilience of strategic coastal cities: This

component will enhance municipal capacities in selected cities for sustainable resilience to

weather-related environmental threats. To achieve this objective, the Project will finance

investments in drainage in Beira and Nacala. The drainage investments in Beira are meant to

control flooding, while in Nacala they are meant to control erosion. On the basis of these

objectives a cost benefit analysis was carried out to determine the financial and economic

feasibility of the drainage works to be implemented in each of the cities.

5. Methodology. Two methodologies were used in the evaluation: (i) Cost benefit analysis

for Beira; and (2) Cost effectiveness method for Nacala, as there was no information to quantify

13

Direccao Nacional de Aguas-DEPARTAMENTO DE SANEAMENTO DE MOZAMBIQUE. City of Beira “Storm Water

Drainage System Rehabilitation and Extension in Central and North parts in the Beira Area. Economic Impact of Mitigation

against various levels of Storm Damage in the Beira Area. And R.J. Burnside International Limited and Austral-COWI and

Consultec. Feasibility Study, Environmental & Social Impact Assessment, Design and Supervision of Water Supply, Sanitation

and Drainage Improvements in Nacala, Mocuba and Gurue and Water Supply Improvements in Monapo and Montepuez. Final

Feasibility Study Report-Nacala QCBS MCA-MOZ-WS 03-08-46. Volume II-Drainage and Erosion Control. December 2010.

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the benefits. In Beira, the cost benefit analysis was carried out from two perspectives: financial,

and economic. From a financial perspective the flow of costs and benefits were appraised in

market prices in the same way the entities in charge of implementing and operating the Project

will pay and get from it. From an economic perspective the flow of costs were appraised taking

out taxes and including subsidies, as they are Government transfers. The economic benefits were

measured as the total welfare to be obtained within the influence area of the Project. Finally, the

economic analysis was tested against real world uncertainties by conducting a sensitivity

analysis.

6. The net benefit of the Project equals the difference between the incremental benefits and

incremental costs of two scenarios: “with” and “without” Project. The “with” Project scenario

reflects the proposed investment program and so the benefits of flooding reduction in the Project

areas. The “without” Project scenario assumes that current poor flooding protection remains and

so the damages that come along. The Project was appraised measuring the flow of costs and

benefits for the lifetime of the Project estimated at 30 years. Costs and benefits were expressed in

constant prices of June 201014

. The opportunity rate used was 8%.

7. Project. Both cities, Beira and Nacala, have a very incipient drainage system with

insufficient capacity, lack of maintenance, and low coverage. Additional problems make more

difficult the operation of the systems as they are now: the city of Beira is low-lying, most of the

city is located less than 10 meters above sea level and is flat. The nature of the terrain means

that large parts of the city are flooded during periods of heavy rainfall. In addition, the water

table is very close to surface, and the seawater intrusion directly causes the rise of the water

table, which may produce flooding even in the absence of intense rainfall. The drainage system

in Beira consists of approximately 81 kms of pipes and 33 kms of open air channels built on the

50‟s and 60‟s. This Project proposes to rehabilitate an approximately 10 kms primary open air

channel. The city of Nacala experiences drainage and significant erosion problems due to severe

topographic relief and a lack of adequately designed and maintained collection systems;

moreover the drainage channels reached their lifetime as they were built on the 60‟s. Examples

of the system failure range from plugged storm sewer inlets to washed-out streets and exposed

services, to evidence of localized flooding in some neighborhoods, to eroded ditches and gullies

and finally, buildings and infrastructure on the verge of collapse in the major erosions.

8. The proposed drainage investments consist of (i) the rehabilitation and relining of an

approximately 10 kms primary open-air drainage channel in Beira, and (ii) the rehabilitation of

three primary open air drainage channels combined with erosion control technology in Nacala.

9. The cost of the drainage investments in Beira is estimated as US$62 million and the

annual operation and maintenance at US$150,000 (assumed to be 0.25% of the investment cost

plus 2% of investment in institutional strengthening). In Nacala the cost of the Project is US$7

million; and the operating cost is estimated as US$7,000 per year (it is assumed 0.06% of

investment cost and 1% of institutional strengthening. The operating costs are lower in Nacala

than in Beira because the works require less maintenance and no operation).

14

Exchange rate of Mozambique Metical MT 26.80:1 USD

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10. Benefits. Project benefits consist of reduction of frequency and intensity of floods that

occur in Beira and of reduction of erosion in Nacala. Economic benefits in Beira were estimated

based on the reveal preference approach, which relies on data from observed transactions in the

market, such as the costs associated with the floods. The avoided cost method was used in Beira

to estimate the economic benefits that different stakeholders will have with the Project. In

Nacala the cost effectiveness analysis. Financial benefits were estimated based on the drainage

fee applied since 2008, following the approval of the Law no1/ 2008 of January 16, 2008. This

charge consists of an additional 15% on property tax.

B. Financial Analysis

11. From a financial perspective the flow of costs and benefits were appraised in market

prices in the same way the entities in charge of implementing and operating the Project will pay

and get from it. Hence, the costs include the taxes and exclude subsidies given by the

Government or other donors; while the benefits include all the fees the entity in charge of the

Project is going to apply once the Project is implemented.

12. During preparation, the Authorities of the GoM explained that the investment will be

fully financed by transfers made by the Government; while the operation will be financed

through the drainage fee. In the case of Beira the operation will be responsibility of the entity in

charge of the sanitation services (which includes storm water drainage), that is the Serviço

Autonómo de Saneamento da Cidade da Beira (SASB), which has administrative and financial

autonomy and is linked to the Municipality of Beira. In Nacala the municipality will be in

charge of the operation.

Table 1. Investment and Operating Costs (000 US$)

Investment O&M

A. City of Beira (Drainage) 61,919 150

A.1 Flood Control 58,969

A.1.1 Study of urban water management in Beira (coastal,

underground, surface) in the context of climate change 250

A.1.2 Revision and updating of design studies for the rehabilitation

and improvement of the proposed drainage system; Detailed engineering

designs; Construction Supervision; and Environmental & Social Support

(Beira)

6,361

A.1.3. Implementation of drainage works, in Beira (Channels A,

AII and AIV) 52,357 131

A.2.Beira Autonomous Sanitation Entity - Capacity building (training

and equipment for O&M) 950 19

A.3.Support for the resettlement of the population (Housing units

Beira) 2,000

B. City of Nacala (Drainage) 7,430 7

B.1. Erosion Control and Drainage channels 7,163

B.1.1. Detailed engineering designs; Works Supervision and

Environmental & Social Support (Nacala) 934

B.1.2 Civil Works of the primary drainage channels in Nacala

(PC1, PC3 e PC5) 6,228 4

B.2 Institutional Strengthening 267 3

B.2.1. Nacala Autonomous Sanitation Entity - Capacity building 150

B.2.2. Equipment for operation and maintenance (Nacala) 117

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13. The financial analysis was done comparing annual costs and revenues. The costs consist

only of operating costs, as the Government will pay for investments. The revenues were

Projected based on the drainage fee to be charged once the Project is implemented in each of the

cities.

14. Revenues at the Municipality of Beira. During the period 2005-2009, the Municipality of

Beira has doubled its own tax revenues. Property taxes, which account for 9% of revenues

generated by the Municipality increased from MT 3.8 million in 2005 to MT 8 million in 2009

(Table 2).

15. Drainage fees. At present, Beira is the only city that has established a payment for

operation and maintenance of the drainage system. Nacala will start charging it when the Project

starts implementation. Drainage fee is a separate charge imposed on properties throughout the

entire Project area at a uniform rate. This charge shall be used for the operation, maintenance

and general administration of the storm water drainage system. Based on the provision of Law

N°1/2008 of January 16, 2008, the drainage fee is an additional charge of 15% on top of property

taxes.

16. For 2010, revenues from property tax are Projected in Beira at about MT 10 million,

which represents a drainage fee of approximately MT 1.5 million per year or US$55,000. This

charge is far below (37%) of the operating cost of the Project estimated at US$150,000 per year

(Table 3). The situation in Nacala is worse as the drainage charge is only 5% of the operating

expenses estimated for the Project at US$7,000 (Table 4).

Table 2. Revenues Beira (MT 000)

2,005 2,006 2,007 2,008 2,009

Operating Revenues

Property Tax 3,807 4,914 5,816 5,850 8,158

Other Taxes 44,573 48,261 64,055 81,619 82,833

Total Operating revenues 48,379 53,174 69,870 87,468 90,991

Transfers 41,830 47,552 53,688 77,232 77,730

Donations 2,214 21,474 4,754 9,229 10,152

Total Revenues 92,423 122,200 128,312 173,930 178,874

% 2,005 2,006 2,007 2,008 2,009

Operating Revenues

Property Tax 8% 9% 8% 7% 9%

Other Taxes 92% 91% 92% 93% 91%

Total Operating revenues 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%

Transfers 45% 39% 42% 44% 43%

Donations 2% 18% 4% 5% 6%

Total Revenues 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%

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17. The municipalities of Beira and Nacala have to increase the drainage revenues in order to

pay for the operating costs of the drainage investments. To achieve this, some efficiency gains

have to be attained, as it is expected with component 1 of the Project. There is an ample room

for improvement in the municipalities‟ revenues as shown by the study carried out by the

MICOA with cooperation of the World Bank15

. Specifically for the property tax, the study found

that current revenues are, in Beira, just 4% and, in Nacala, 0.1% of what they could be if

15

Ministerio para a Coordenacao da Accao Ambiental (MICOA). Republica de Mocambique. Programa Conjunto de Apoio a 13

Muniicpios do Centro e Norte de Macambique. Componente C: Financas Municiapies. Estudio sobre o Potencial Tributario no

Municipio da Beira. Outubro de 2010. And Ministerio para a Coordenacao da Accao Ambiental (MICOA). Republica

de Macambique. Programa Conjunto de Apoio a 13 Muniicpios do Centro e Norte de Macambique. Componente C:

Financas Municiapies. Estudio sobre o Potencial Tributario no Municipio da Nacala. Outubro de 2010

Table 3. Beira. Property Tax and Drainage Charges (15% of property tax)

2,005 2,006 2,007 2,008 2,009

2,010

(estimated)

(MT 000 )

Property Tax (MT 000) 3,807 4,914 5,816 5,850 8,158 9,871

Drainage Fees (15% of property tax) 1,224 1,481

USD 000

Property Tax (USD 000) 152 197 233 234 304 366

Drainage Fees (15% of property tax) 46 55

Operating costs of drainage investments 150

% Drainage fees/operating costs 37%

Source:

Property Tax: Ministerio para a Coordenacao da Accao Ambiental (MICOA). Republica de

Macombique. Programa Conjunto de Apoio a 13 Municpios do Centro e Norte de Mocambique.

Componente C: Financas Municiapies. Estudio sobre o Potencial Tributario no Municipio da Beira.

Outubro de 2010.

Drainage fees: Own calculation.

Table 4. Nacala. Property Tax and Drainage Charges (15% of property tax)

2,005 2,006 2,007 2,008 2,009

2,010

(estimated)

(MT 000 )

Property Tax (MT 000) 28 14 44 - 51 59

Drainage Charges (15% of property tax) 8 9

USD 000

Property Tax (USD 000) 1.13 0.55 1.76 - 1.89 2.18

Drainage Charges (15% of property tax) 0.28 0.33

Operating costs of drainage investments 7

% Drainage charges/operating costs 5%

Source:

Property Tax: Ministerio para a Coordenacao da Accao Ambiental (MICOA). Republica de

Mocambique. Programa Conjunto de Apoio a 13 Muniicpios do Centro e Norte de Mocambique.

Componente C: Financas Municiapies. Estudio sobre o Potencial Tributario no Municipio da

Nacala. Outubro de 2010.

Drainage fees: Own calculation.

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properties‟ database were updated, appraisal values were at correct market prices, and the

collection efficiency were 100% (Table 5).

18. The calculations for potential revenues from property taxes are based on the following

assumptions (Tables 6 and 7).

Table 5. Current and Potential Revenues from Property Tax and Drainage Fees (2010 Est)

(000 MT) Beira Nacala

Revenues from Property taxes

Current revenues collected (estimated 2010) 9,871 59

Potential revenues 251,522 114,120

Current/Potential 4% 0.1%

Drainage fees

Current revenues collected (estimated 2010) 1,481 9

Potential revenues 37,728 17,118

Source: ibid.

Table 6. Potential Values from Property Taxes in Beira

# dwellings Appraisal value Property tax Property tax Total

Residential hh (MT) % MT (000 MT)

Low Income 65,550 400,000 0.40% 1,600 104,880

Medium income\ 17,480 800,000 0.40% 3,200 55,936

High Income 4,370 3,500,000 0.40% 14,000 61,180

Total 87,400 221,996

Non residential dwellings

Low income 2,713 1,000,000 0.70% 7,000 18,991

High Income 301 5,000,000 0.70% 35,000 10,535

Total 3,014 29,526

Total Residential and non residential 251,522

Source: Property Tax: Ministerio para a Coordenacao da Accao Ambiental (MICOA). Republica de

Mocambique. Programa Conjunto de Apoio a 13 Muniicpios do Centro e Norte de Mocambique.

Componente C: Financas Municiapies. Estudio sobre o Potencial Tributario no Municipio da Beira.

Outubro de 2010..

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19. When drainage fee is estimated as 15% of potential revenue from property taxes, the

result would be US$1.4 million for Beira and US$634,000 for Nacala. In this ideal situation, the

drainage fee would be enough not only for covering operating expenses but also for partially

funding investment. To cover operating expenses it would be required just 11% of the maximum

attainable in Beira and 1% in Nacala (Table 8).

20. Given that the maximum attainable is an ideal situation and that the GoM is paying for

investment, the municipalities have to set realistic goals of collecting rates for property taxes and

of updating the database in order to cover at least the operating costs of the drainage investments.

The efforts have to start now until the Project is fully implemented, which is expected by year

five. By setting full recovery of operating costs as a goal by year five, Beira would have to

increase its property tax revenues and so its drainage fee revenues by 22% per year, while Nacala

by 82% per year (Table 9).

Table 7. Difference between Current and Actual Data for Property taxes in Nacala

Number of Dwellings

Actual number of dwellings 63,400

Municipality‟s Data base of properties 3,080

Actual # property/Current database 5%

Real Estate Appraisal

Current Value Residential Property on file at Municipality (MT) 280,000

Market Value of Residential Dwellings (MT) 450,000

Current value/Actual Vale of Residential Properties 62%

Current Value Non-Residential Property Value on file at Municipality (MT) 280,000

Market Value of Residential Dwellings (MT) 1,500,000

Current value/Actual Vale of Non-Residential Properties 19%

Table 8. Current and Potential Revenues from Drainage Fees and Operating costs

(000 USD) Beira Nacala

Revenues from Drainage Fee (USD 000)

Current revenues from drainage fees collected 55 0.3

Potential revenues from drainage fees 1,408 634

Current/Potential 4% 0.1%

Operating expenses of Drainage Investments 150 7

Operating expenses /potential drainage revenues 11% 1%

Table 9. Required Growth of Drainage Fee to cover operating expenses of Drainage Inv by year Five

USD 000

Estimated

2010 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5

Beira

Property Taxes 366 447 547 668 817 999

Drainage fee (15%) 55 67 82 100 123 150

Required growth 22% 22% 22% 22% 22%

Nacala

Property Taxes 2.2 4.0 7.2 13.2 24.0 43.8

Drainage fee (15%) 0.3 0.6 1.1 2.0 3.6 6.6

Required growth 82% 82% 82% 82% 82%

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21. This increase will also be facilitated by the intense ongoing economic growth in Beira

associated with the significant ongoing and planned investments in the port expansion and the

railway rehabilitation. These are also attracting significant private investments in the city in the

form of new industries, housing units and services such as hotels, restaurants, supermarkets,

schools, health clinics, etc. These new investments generate high property tax revenues given

that they are appraised based on the market value, while the official appraisal of the residential

and industrial buildings built on the 50‟s and 60‟s have a distorted value artificially imposed by

the national laws regulating the nationalized assets. In Nacala an economic growth is expected

as well, given all the activities the Government is planning to attract investment, such as the free

trade zone, the new international airport, and new economic activities that have being developed

along the port.

C. Cost Benefit Analysis for Beira

22. Economic Analysis. For the drainage investments in Beira, the economic benefit stream

was calculated in the feasibility study carried out by the Department of Sanitation in

Mozambique for various levels of storm16

. This study estimated the benefits through the avoided

damage cost method, measured as the cost of direct flood damage that the drainage investments

will avoid. This calculation corresponded to the difference between damage costs under two

scenarios: “with” and “without” the implementation of the investments. The associated damage

costs vary with the intensity and duration of the flood, which imply different water levels, and

extension of flooded areas. These costs were calculated in probabilistic terms, based on

historical data and a hydrologic mathematical model for storm simulation. Several alternatives of

investment were evaluated according to different number of years of recurrence (2, 5, 10, and 20

years). The avoided damage cost was estimated for (i) the industrial sector, (ii) the formal

housing; (iii) informal housing; (iv) agriculture; (v) roads infrastructure; (vi) electricity

infrastructure; (vii) loss of life; (viii) transport; and (ix) tourism17

.

23. From the hydrologic mathematic model it was possible to draw the flood map, and

calculate the percentage of properties damaged in the affected areas with and without drainage

investments, according to frequency of storm events. As table 10 shows, the percentage of

properties to be affected in a 100 year flood will be 100% in all the Project areas, while in a 10

year flood 4% of properties in area A, 90% in area AII, and 17% in area A IV will be affected.

16

Direccao Nacional de Aguas-DEPARTAMENTO DE SANEAMENTO DE MOZAMBIQUE. City of Beira “Storm Water

Drainage System Rehabilitation and Extension in Central and North parts in the Beira Area. Economic Impact of Mitigation

against various levels of Storm Damage in the Beira Area” 17

More detail in the Feasibility Study. Direccao Nacional de Aguas-DEPARTAMENTO DE SANEAMENTO DE

MOZAMBIQUE. City of Beira “Storm Water Drainage System Rehabilitation and Extension in Central and North parts in the

Beira Area. Economic Impact of Mitigation against various levels of Storm Damage in the Beira Area

Table 10. Beira. Impact of Floods according to Storm Recurrence Period

Occurrence 2nd Year 5th Year 10th Year 20th Year 100th year

Probability 50% 20% 10% 5% 1%

Impact of Floods (% area)

Area A 1% 3% 4% 30% 100%

Area AII 78% 82% 90% 90% 100%

Area IV 5% 11% 17% 18% 100% Source. Feasibility Study. Economic Impact of Mitigation against various levels of Storm Drainage in the

Beira Area

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24. The direct beneficiaries per economic sector and area are presented in Table 11. The

number of houses is about 12,000 or 73,000 people, of which 78% corresponds to informal

sector, and the remaining 22% to the formal sector. The houses (and people) beneficiaries

correspond to 14% of total houses in Beira, estimated at 87,400 (Table 6). The number of

indirect beneficiaries includes the entire population of Beira.

25. The damage costs consisted of capital costs and surplus value. The capital cost measured

the impact of flooding on capital infrastructure; and the surplus value referred to loss of profits or

earnings due to cessation of business during flooding. The economic analysis of the drainage

investments in Beira was carried out estimating the costs and benefits of the selected alternative,

which corresponded to works that will prevent floods caused by storms with intensity and

duration occurring every 10 years (10% probability of occurrence). The actual damage caused to

physical infrastructure was estimated based on; (i) values of property of affected areas (damages

to commercial properties, industry property, housing18

, roads and utility delivery systems)19

; (ii)

impact on economic activity (affectation on informal sector as well as formal sector, trade can be

affected due to transport difficulties); and (iii) welfare impacts such as increased illness and

diseases such as malaria, cholera, tuberculosis, etc.

26. The impact caused by flood in each of the sectors and areas affected with the storms was

estimated as follows and results are shown in table 12.

For housing, the capital value was based on number of dwellings and property damage

cost; the surplus value was based on the contribution to GDP;

In the case of agriculture, capital values were not calculated, as the damage to capital

caused by inundation is minimal, given that most of the farming is subsistence and not

capital intensive, it is assumed, additionally that land is not damaged by storm. The main

damage is the loss of products and so a surplus value was calculated estimating yield per

hectare, multiplying by market price of a generic product

18

The average value per house included in this evaluation was: (i) for the formal housings, US$ 84,000/house, which

corresponded to the value presented in the feasibility study; (ii) for the informal housing, US$ 14,815/house (MT400,000),

which corresponded to the market value for low income housing presented in the study of potential revenues for the municipality

of Beira (Table 6). In the economic section of the feasibility study the Consultant worked with US$ 2,400/house. 19

Direccao Nacional de Aguas-DEPARTAMENTO DE SANEAMENTO DE MOZAMBIQUE. City of Beira “Storm Water

Drainage System Rehabilitation and Extension in Central and North parts in the Beira Area. Economic Impact of Mitigation

against various levels of Storm Damage in the Beira Area”

Table 11. Beneficiaries in the Flooding Areas

AREA A AREA AII AREA IV TOTAL

RESIDENTIAL

Number of Formal Houses 17 2,687 - 2,704

Number of Informal houses 948 8,159 360 9,467

Total number of houses 965 10,846 360 12,171

EQUIVALENT POPULATION 5,790 65,076 2,160 73,026

INDUSTRIES (Number of industries) - 35 1 36

AGRICULTURE (Number of Hectares) 11 31 - 42

ROADS (km) 14 72 24 110

Lives that can be lost 1 13 0 15

Tourists per day 1,400 1,400 - 2,800

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In the case of road infrastructure, only the damage of capital value was estimated as well

as the replacement costs. The surplus charge was not included in this sector since it was

included in housing.

Electricity. Not much damage to infrastructure is expected but on surplus value based on

the opportunity cost;

Water and Sanitation, the damage was calculated based on the impact on human activity,

by counting the population of the affected areas and the impact on diseases due to

sanitation overspill, and the loss of work hours.

Loss of life, Transport and Tourism. The impact of loss of life as a result of floods was

based on estimates of lives lost multiplied by the value of human lives20

. In transport was

taken the estimation of stoppages of commercial traffic due to storms, and in tourism the

impact on lose of tourism days.

20

In the economic section of the feasibility study it is assumed that 15 lives can be lost by flooding and the cost of life was based

on the income level.

Table 12. Flood Impact according to Economic Activity and Area (000 USD)

Flood Impact (USD 000)

Area A Area AII Area IV

Industry

Capital value - 339 22,575

Surplus Value - 527 1,003

Formal Housing

Capital value 71 11,285 -

Surplus Value 9 1,354 -

Informal Housing

Capital value 228 1,958 86

Surplus Value 15 125 6

Agriculture

Capital value - - -

Surplus Value 5 15 -

Road Infrastructure

Capital value 6 378 60

Surplus Value - - -

Electricity

Capital value - - -

Surplus Value 0 75 -

Water & Sanitation infrastructure

Capital value - - -

Surplus Value 55 618 21

Loss of Life

Capital value - - -

Surplus Value 20 225 7

Transport

Capital value - - -

Surplus Value 4 23 8

Tourism

Capital value 1 1 -

Surplus Value 5 5 -

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27. After the impact cost is estimated, the expected damage cost per year is calculated using

the probability of occurrence of the storms. The total damage cost corresponds to the present

value of annual flows of expected damage cost during a 30-year period. The difference between

the expected damage cost with Project scenario, and the expected damage cost without Project

scenario corresponds to the expected avoided damage costs, or expected benefits of the drainage

investment (Table 13). If nothing is done, a damage cost of about US$ 331 million is expected.

With the implementation of the Project, the cost is reduced to US$207 million, which equals to

an expected benefit of about US$124 million.

Table 13. Total Damage Costs without investments and with investment

Present Value of Expected Damage Costs (US$ 000)

With Drainage

Investment

Without Drainage

Investment Difference

1 Industry 7,101 20,041 12,940

Surplus Value 2,419 4,993 2,575

Capital Value 4,682 15,047 10,365

2 Formal Housing 114,924 167,156 52,232

Surplus Value 12,313 17,910 5,596

Capital Value 102,611 149,247 46,636

3 Informal Housing 70,297 123,824 53,527

Surplus Value 4,228 7,448 3,220

Capital Value 66,069 116,376 50,307

4 Agriculture 2,177 2,240 63

Surplus Value 2,177 2,240 63

5 Roads Infrastructure 5,502 7,086 1,584

Surplus Value - - -

Capital Value 5,502 7,086 1,584

6 Electricity Infrastructure 686 998 312

Surplus Value 686 998 312

Capital Value - - -

7 Water & Sanitation 3,935 6,503 2,568

Surplus Value 3,935 6,503 2,568

Capital Value - - -

8 Loss of Life 1,448 2,369 920

Surplus Value 1,448 2,369 920

9 Transport 336 433 97

Surplus Value 336 433 97

Capital Value - - -

10 Tourism 246 270 23

Surplus Value 224 245 21

Capital Value 22 24 2

Total 206,652 330,919 124,267

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28. Results of the Economic Analysis. The net benefit of drainage investment was obtained

as the difference between benefits and costs. Costs consist of Projected investment and

operating expenses. The investment will be implemented during 5-year period. The benefits

will be obtained along with works implementation: for areas A and AIV, the benefits are

expected on year 4, while the benefits in area AII and therefore the benefits start on year 6. The

results show a net benefit is US$49.5 million, and returns of 18%.

29. Sensitivity Analysis. A sensitivity analysis was carried out to measure the impact on the

economic results when a variable change while the others remain constant. The sensitivity

analysis shows the soundness of the Project as the investment could twofold and benefits cut by

half and the Project would still be economically viable.

D. Cost Effectiveness Analysis for Nacala

30. The proposed Project in Nacala consists of rehabilitating part of the primary drainage

channels in the city. They are seven open channels, which drainage runoff from the city‟s

interior and higher areas and deliver it to the Fernao Veloso Bay. Priority has been assigned to

three primary open air channels (Channels 1, 3, and 5, which account for 6 kms). The city of

Nacala experiences significant erosion caused by drainage problems resulting from severe

topographic relief (drop of more than 140 meters from the city‟s highest areas to the coast),

vulnerable sandy soils, and the lack of adequately designed drainage channels. Erosion is

aggravated by unplanned urbanization, which has denuded slopes of stabilizing vegetation.

31. Five suitable options for reducing erosion along drainage channels were studied21

. All

the alternatives corresponded to a 1:10 year design storm, and they were calculated for channel

types with sufficient capacity to convey the flow. Table 14 shows the costs for the five

alternatives studied: (i) option A. gabion baskets, rip rap on bottom; (ii) option B. loose rip rap;

(iii) option C. cable-concrete; (iv) option D. storm sewer; and (v) option E. hand-placed stone

and mortar.

21

R.J. Burnside International Limited and Austral-COWI and Consultec. Feasibility Study, Environmental & Social Impact

Assessment, Design and Supervision of Water Supply, Sanitation and Drainage Improvements in Nacala, Mocuba and Gurue and

Water Supply Improvements in Monapo and Montepuez. Final Feasibility Study Report-Nacala QCBS MCA-MOZ-WS 03-08-46.

Volume II-Drainage and Erosion Control. December 2010.

Table 14. Economic Results for Beira’s Drainage Investments (Present Value of Flows)

(US$ 000)

Costs

Investment 45,612

O&M 1,290

Total 46,902

Avoided Damage Cost 96,481

Net Benefit 49,579

IRR 18.1%

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32. The following conclusions are drawn from the costs:

Option B, the loose rip rap is the most cost-effective solution.

Option C cable-concrete and Option E. hand placed stone and mortar are the least

cost-effective. Cable-concrete has a high unit cost as materials are not produced

locally. Hand placed stone and mortar is also expensive because of the labor factor

needed.

Option D. the storm sewer is more expensive than both Option A and Option B. It is

almost maintenance free if constructed properly however it has a high unit costs due

to manufacturing, delivery and equipment costs.

33. Option A. gabion baskets are about 7% more costly than loose rip; however it is

preferred. It will provide superior stability under high flow conditions due to the fact that they

are interlocked with one another. This makes this system the preferred choice to be implemented

for erosion protection in Nacala. Additionally, the gabion baskets have been widely employed

by the municipality due to the availability of materials and the relatively low cost of installation.

This solution combines grading and planting on the upper portion of the cross sections, for

establishing vegetation that increase stability and reduce sediment deposition within the channel.

The preferred construction technology alternative is labor intensive, and will generate substantial

number of jobs for unskilled labor during the construction phase.

34. The cost effectiveness analysis for Nacala indicates that, the chosen alternative of

building gabions baskets is economically rationale.

Table 14. Investment Costs of Alternatives for Drainage Investments. Nacala

(US$ 000) Option A Option B Option C Option D Option E

Gabion

Baskets

Loose Rip

Rap Cable-Concrete Storm-sewer

Hand placed

stone and mortar

Channel 1 1,298 1,200 2,558 2,002 2,558

Channel 3 1,838 1,725 3,928 2,623 3,928

Channel 5 3,092 2,911 6,101 4,028 6,101

Total 6,228 5,836 12,588 8,653 12,588

Comparison 1.07 1.00 2.16 1.48 2.16 Source: Feasibility Study. City of Nacala

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Montes NamuleMontes Namule(2,419 m)(2,419 m)

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NamacurraNamacurra

MocubaMocuba

MoatizeMoatize

SongoSongoZumboZumbo

FíngoFíngoè

FurancungoFurancungo

MualadziMualadzi

MilangeMilange

LichingaLichinga

ChimoioChimoio

TeteTete

NampulaNampula

ChibitoChibito

MatelaMatela

Monte BingaMonte Binga(2,438 m) (2,438 m)

To To LusakaLusaka

To To PetaukePetauke

To To LilongweLilongwe

To To MangocheMangoche

To To MtwaraMtwara

To To ZombaZomba

To To BlantyreBlantyre

To To ChipataChipata

To To MutokoMutoko

To To HarareHarare

To To MasvingoMasvingo

To To MasvingoMasvingo

To To RutengaRutenga

To To MessinaMessina

To To NelspruitNelspruit

To To MbabaneMbabane

S O U T HS O U T HA F R I C AA F R I C A

SWAZILANDSWAZILAND

Z I M B A B W EZ I M B A B W E

Z A M B I AZ A M B I A

T A N Z A N I AT A N Z A N I A

MALAWIMALAWI

LakeLakeMalawiMalawi

Zitundo

Manhica

Guija

Massingir

Chicualacuala

Mapai

Moamba

Nova Mambone

Espungabera

Inhassôro

Vilanculos

Chigubo

Machaíla

Inharrime

Panda

Chibito

Gorogosa

Sena

Changara

Catandica

Inhaminga

Pebane

Angoche

Nacala

Montepuez

MuedaMocimboada Praia

Marrupa

Catur

Metangula

Alto Molócue

Ribáuè

Gurué

Cuamba

Namacurra

Mocuba

Moatize

SongoZumbo

Fíngoè

Furancungo

Mualadzi

Milange

Moçambique

Xai-Xai

Matela

Beira

Chimoio

Quelimane

Tete

Nampula

Inhambane

Pemba

Lichinga

MAPUTO

S O U T HA F R I C A

SWAZILAND

Z I M B A B W E

Z A M B I A

T A N Z A N I A

MALAWI

MAPUTO

G A Z A

S O F A L A

T E T E

Z A M B É Z I A

N A M P U L A

C A B OD E L G A D O

N I A S S A

INHAMBANE

MANICAINDIAN OCEAN

Lago deCahora Bassa

LakeMalawi

Lugenda

Messalo

Lúrio

Ligonha

Licungo

Zambeze

Buzi

Save

Changane

Zambeze

Limpopo

To Lusaka

To Petauke

To Lilongwe

To Mangoche

To Mtwara

To Zomba

To Blantyre

To Chipata

To Mutoko

To Harare

To Masvingo

To Masvingo

To Rutenga

To Messina

To Nelspruit

To Mbabane

Mo

za

mb

iq

ue

Pl a

i n

M o z a m b i q u e

P l a t e a u

Monte Binga(2,436 m)

Montes Namule(2,419 m)

30° E 35° E

30° E 35° E 40° E

25° S

20° S

15° S

10° S

25S

20° S

15° S

10° S

MOZAMBIQUE

0 50 100 150

0 50 100 150 Miles

200 Kilometers

IBRD 33451R1

JANUARY 2007

MOZAMBIQUESELECTED CITIES AND TOWNS

PROVINCE CAPITALS

NATIONAL CAPITAL

RIVERS

MAIN ROADS

RAILROADS

PROVINCE BOUNDARIES

INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARIES

This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, o r any endo r s emen t o r a c c e p t a n c e o f s u c h boundaries.