Document o f The World Bank Group Report No.: 503 15 THE WORLD BANK GROUP PROGRAM OF SUPPORT FOR THE CHAD- CAMEROON PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT AND PIPELINE CONSTRUCTION PROGRAM PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT REPORT CHAD (WE3 L O A N 4558-CD; IDA CREDITS 3373-CD and 3316-CD; IFC L O A N 4338) CAMEROON (WB L O A N 7020-CM; IDA CREDIT 3372-CM; IFC L O A N 4338) CHAD IFC ADVISORY SERVICES (537745,534603,533974) September 16,2009 Independent Evaluation Group Currency Equivalents (annual averages) Currency Unit = CFA Franc 2000 1.oo US$ 713 CFAF 2005 1.oo US$ 533 CFAF 2001 1.oo US$ 742 CFAF 2006 1.00 US$ 540 CFAF 2002 1.oo US$ 725 CFAF 2007 1.oo US$ 492 CFAF 2003 1.oo US$ 591 CFAF 2008 1.oo US$ 457 CFAF 2004 1.00 US$ 549 CFAF All dollar amounts in this document are U.S. dollars Abbreviations and Acronyms GENERAL: CAS Country Assistance Strategy cso Civil society organization DCA Development Credit Agreement EC Enterprise Center ECMG External Compliance Monitoring Group EEPCI Esso Exploration and Production Chad, Inc. EIA Environmental Impact Assessment EMIS Environmental Management Information System EMP Environmental Management Plan GDP Gross domestic product IAG Independent Advisory Group IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development ICR Implementation Completion Report IDA International Development Association IEG Independent Evaluation Group IEG-IFC Independent Evaluation Group (IFC) IEG-WB Independent Evaluation Group (World Bank) IFC International Finance Corporation IPP Indigenous People's Plan LUMAP Land Use Management Action Plan MTR Midterm review NGO Nongovernmental organization NORSP National Oil Spill Response Plan OFDA Oil Fields Development Area PAD Project Appraisal Document PDPP (Chad and Cameroon) Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project PPAR Program Performance Assessment Report SME Small and medium enterprise TA Technical assistance UNDP United Nations Development Program USAID United States Agency for International Development WBG World Bank Group CAMEROON: CAPECE Petroleum Environment Capacity Enhancement Project COTCO Cameroon Oil Transportation Company FEDEC Foundation for Environment and Development in Cameroon PSMC Pipeline Steering and Monitoring Committee-Comite' de Pilotage et Suivi du Pipeline (CPSP) SNH Socie'te'Nationale des Hydrocarbures (National Oil Company) CHAD: CCSRP CollBge de ContrBle et de Surveillance des Ressources Pe'troliBres (Oil Revenue Monitoring and Oversight College) CRCP Chad Resettlement Compensation Plan DPU Doba Project Unit FACIL Fonds d 'Actions Concerte'es d'lnitiative Locale FGF Future Generations Fund MMEP Ministry o f Mines, Energy, and Petroleum MEWR Ministry o f Environment and Water Resources PRML Petroleum Revenue Management Law TOTCO Tchad Oil TransportationCompany Fiscal Year: January 1- December 31 The World Bank Washington, D.C. 20433 U.S.A. VINOD THOMAS Director-General and Senior Vice-president Independent Evaluation Group MEMORANDUM TO THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS AND THE PRESIDENT Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Construction Program Iam pleased to submit to you the performance assessment report o f the Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Construction Program which IEG undertook in response to interest expressed by members o f the Board o f Directors. This evaluation embodies two novel features. First, it assesses the performance o f a program o f five IBRD and IDA financed projects, two I F C loans and three I F C advisory services in a cluster, thereby combining an evaluation o f the development effectiveness o f the program as a whole with an assessment o f the performance o f each individual operation. Second, this i s the first project based performance assessment which has been jointly undertaken by IEG-World Bank and IEG-IFC. The evaluation finds that the program's fundamental development objective o f reducing poverty and improving governance in Chad through the best possible use o f o i l revenues in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner was not achieved. I t therefore rates overall program outcome unsatisfactory despite the technical and financial success o f the main pipeline project. While the program suffered from some design flaws and supervision shortcomings, the principal reason for i t s overall disappointing outcome was the lack o f government ownership. The disappointing development outcome notwithstanding, the evaluation also finds that World Bank Group involvement resulted in stronger environmental and social protection and in higher expenditure allocations to priority sectors than would have been the case otherwise. It concludes that the Chad-Cameroon experience should not lead the World Bank Group to avoid appropriate involvement in extractive industries, but in designing such future involvement the World Bank Group should be mindful o f the important lessons o f this complex experience. In accordance with IEG's Disclosure Policy Statement Outline (R2003-0223) that was approved by the Executive Directors on January 8,2004, this evaluation will be made publicly available unless Executive Directors decide not to disclose. IEG plans on disclosing the report on October 8, 2009, unless Executive Directors request a postponement. 1 IEG Mission: Enhancing development effectiveness through excellence and independence in evaluation. This is a joint evaluation by IEG-WB and IEG-IFC. The structure and ratings generally follow IEG-WB practice, which is explained below. Nevertheless,the findings, conclusions and ratings were arrived at jointly and by consensus of the two institutions. The Independent Evaluation Group assesses the programs and activities of the World Bank for two purposes: first, to ensure the integrity of the Banks self-evaluation process and to verify that the Banks work is producingthe expected results, and second, to help develop improved directions, policies, and procedures through the dissemination of lessons drawn from experience. In selecting operations for assessment, preference is given to those that are innovative, large, or complex; those that are relevant to upcoming studies or country evaluations; those for which Executive Directors or WBG management have requested assessments; and those that are likely to generate important lessons. To prepare a Program Performance Assessment Report (PPAR), IEG staff examine project files and other documents, interview operational staff, visit the borrowing country to discuss the operation with the government, and other in-country stakeholders, and interview Bank staff and other donor agency staff both at headquarters and in local offices as appropriate. Each report is subject to internal IEG peer review, Panel review, and management approval. Once cleared internally, the report is commented on by the responsibleWBG departments, and comments are incorporated as relevant. The completed report then sent to the borrower for review; the borrowers' comments are attached to the document that is sent to the Board of Executive Directors, after which it is disclosed to the public. About the Rating System The IFC rating system for Advisory Service projects is substantively comparable to the IEG-WB system, which is mainly used in this evaluation. Use of multiple evaluation methods offers both rigor and a necessary level of flexibility to adapt to lending instrument, project design, or sectoral approach. IEG evaluators all apply the same basic method to arrive at their project ratings. Following is the definition and rating scale used for each evaluation criterion (additional information is available on the IEG-WB website: http://worldbank.org/ieg). Outcome: The extent to which the operation's major relevant objectives were achieved, or are expected to be achieved, efficiently. The rating has three dimensions: relevance, efficacy, and efficiency. Relevance includes relevance of objectives and relevance of design. Relevance of objectives is the extent to which the project's objectives are consistent with the country's current development priorities and with current Bank country and sectoral assistance strategies and corporate goals (expressed in Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers, Country Assistance Strategies, Sector Strategy Papers, Operational Policies). Relevance of design is the extent to which the project's design is consistent with the stated objectives. Efficacy is the extent to which the project's objectives were achieved, or are expected to be achieved, taking into account their relative importance. Efficiency is the extent to which the project achieved, or is expected to achieve, a return higher than the opportunity cost of capital and benefits at least cost compared to alternatives. The efficiency dimension generally is not applied to adjustment operations. Possible ratings for Outcome: Highly Satisfactory, Satisfactory, Moderately Satisfactory, Moderately Unsatisfactory, Unsatisfactory, Highly Unsatisfactory. Risk to Development Outcome: The risk, at the time of evaluation, that development outcomes (or expected outcomes) will not be maintained (or realized). Possible ratings for Risk to Development Outcome: High Significant, Moderate, Negligible to Low, Not Evaluable. Bank Performance: The extent to which services provided by the Bank ensured quality at entry of the operation and supported effective implementationthrough appropriate supervision (including ensuring adequate transition arrangements for regular operation of supported activities after loanlcredit closing, toward the achievement of development outcomes. The rating has two dimensions: quality at entry and quality of supervision. Possible ratings for Bank Performance: Highly Satisfactory, Satisfactory, Moderately Satisfactory, Moderately Unsatisfactory, Unsatisfactory, Highly Unsatisfactory. Borrower Performance: The extent to which the borrower (including the government and implementing agency or agencies) ensured quality of preparation and implementation, and complied with covenants and agreements, toward the achievement of development outcomes. The rating has two dimensions: government performance and implementing agency(ies) performance. Possible ratings for Borrower Performance: Highly Satisfactory, Satisfactory, Moderately Satisfactory, Moderately Unsatisfactory, Unsatisfactory, Highly Unsatisfactory. .. 11 Contents KEY STAFF RESPONSIBLE ............................................................................................................... vi1 PREFACE .............................................................................................................................................. IX EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ........................................................................................................................ X 1 . FROM ENTRY TO EXIT ............................................................................................................ 1 The Context at Entry ............................................................................................................... 1 Putting it Together................................................................................................................... 3 WBG Financial and Technical Support ............................................................................................. 3 Key Policy and InstitutionalArrangements........................................................................................ 3 Developments after Board Approval: The 2005-06 Confrontation and the 2006 Agreement ................................................................................................................................ 6 Closure in 2008 ........................................................................................................................ 8 2 . PROGRAM OBJECTIVES AND BROAD OUTCOMES ........................................................... 9 WBG Strategy and Development Objectives ........................................................................ 9 Escaping the "Resource Curse"? The WBG Strategy ....................................................................... 9 Program and Project Development Objectives ............................................................................... 10 Program and Project Risks ............................................................................................................. 12 Direct Results ......................................................................................................................... 12 Physical, Technical, and Financial Outcomes................................................................................. 12 Direct Benefits for Employment, the Local Economy, and the Private Sector ................................. 15 Macroeconomic, Fiscal, and Expenditure Developments ................................................. 15 Macroeconomic and Fiscal Outturn ................................................................................................ 15 Expenditure Composition and Efficiency......................................................................................... 17 The Provisional Committee for the Management of Petroleum Revenues Allocated to the Producing Region ............................................................................................................................................ 20 Poverty and Human Development ....................................................................................... 22 Governance and Institutional Development ....................................................................... 24 Governance .................................................................................................................................... 24 Institutional Development and Capacity Building ............................................................................ 25 The Environmental and Social Dimensions ........................................................................ 28 Main Findings ................................................................................................................................. 28 The Pre-construction Phase ....................................................................................... The Construction Phase: 2000-2004 .............................................................................................. 30 The Post-Construction Phase: 2004-2008...................................................................................... 32 . 3 EVALUATION DIMENSIONS AND CROSSCUTTING ISSUES ............................................ 35 Strategic Relevance and Timing .......................................................................................... 35 Approach and Design ........................................................................................................... 36 ... 111 Oil Revenue Earmarking .................................................................................................................. 36 Excessive Rigidity ............................................................................................................................ 37 Neglect of the Quality of Expenditure and of Budget Execution ...................................................... 37 WBG Implementation Performance ..................................................................................... 38 Supervision Effectiveness ................................................................................................................ 39 Senior Management Role ................................................................................................................ 39 External Partnerships and Relations ............................................................................................... 40 Exit ................................................................................................................................................... 41 IFClBank Cooperation ..................................................................................................................... 42 Government Ownership and Performance ......................................................................... 42 A summary Scorecard: Principal Projects and Program Ratings ................................... 43 4 . LESSONS AND FUTURE IMPLICATIONS ............................................................................ 44 Relevance. Risks. and Timing ............................................................................................. 45 Approach and Design ........................................................................................................... 45 WBG Performance ................................................................................................................ 46 Major Implications for the Future ........................................................................................ 47 PRINCIPAL RATINGS ......................................................................................................................... 49 . ANNEX A CHAD AND CAMEROON: PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT AND PIPELINE PROJECT (WB LOAN 4558-CD; WB LOAN 7020-CM; IFC PROJECT 4338) .................................................... 51 Summary: Project Outcome and Lessons.......................................................................... 51 Main Findings .................................................................................................................................. 51 Lessons ........................................................................................................................................... 51 The Project ............................................................................................................................. 53 Objectives. Components. and Costs ................................................................................................ 53 Implementation Experience ................................................................................................. 56 Relevance ....................................................................................................................................... 64 Efficiency ......................................................................................................................................... 65 Efficacy ............................................................................................................................................ 66 Development Outcome .................................................................................................................... 67 Risks to Development Outcome ............................................................. ................................ 70 World Bank Group Performance ......................................................................................... 71 Quality at Entry ................................................................................................................................ 71 Quality of Supervision ...................................................................................................................... 72 World Bank Group Role ................................................................................................................... 73 Borrower and Client Performance ....................................................................................... 74 . ANNEX B CAMEROON: PETROLEUM ENVIRONMENT CAPACITY ENHANCEMENT PROJECT (CREDIT 3372-CM) .............................................................................................................................. 76 Summary: Project Outcome and Lessons.......................................................................... 76 Main Findings .................................................................................................................................. 76 iv Lessons .......................................................................................................................................... 77 The Project ............................................................................................................................. 77 Objectives, Components, and Costs ............................................................................................... 77 Implementation Experience .................................................................................................. 80 Relevance....................................................................................................................................... 81 Efficiency ........................................................................................................................................ 82 Efficacy ........................................................................................................................................... 82 Outcome ......................................................................................................................................... 85 Risks to Development Outcome ..................................................................................................... 85 Bank Performance .......................................................................................................................... 85 Borrower Performance.................................................................................................................... 86 . ANNEX C CHAD: PETROLEUM SECTOR MANAGEMENT CAPACITY-BUILDING PROJECT (CREDIT 3373-CD) ............................................................................................................................... 88 Summary: Project Outcome and Lessons .......................................................................... 88 Main Findings ................................................................................................................................. 88 Lessons .......................................................................................................................................... 89 The Project ............................................................................................................................. 90 Objectives, Components, and Costs ................................................................. ...................... 90 Implementation Experience .................................................................................................. 92 Relevance....................................................................................................................................... 93 Efficiency ........................................................................................................................................ 94 Efficacy ........................................................................................................................................... 94 Outcome ......................................................................................................................................... 97 Risk to Development Outcome ....................................................................................................... 97 Bank Performance ............................................................................................ ......................... 98 Borrower Performance.................................................................................................................... 98 . ANNEX D CHAD: MANAGEMENT OF THE PETROLEUM ECONOMY PROJECT (CREDIT 3316- CD)...................................................................................................................................................... 100 Summary: Project Outcome and Lessons ........................................................................ 100 Main Findings .............................................................................................. .......................... 100 Lessons ....................................................................................................... The Project ........................................................................................................................... 101 Objectives ..................................................................................................................................... 101 Components and costs ................................................................................................................. 101 Implementation Experience ................................................................................................ 102 Monitoring and Evaluation ............................................................................................................ 102 Relevance..................................... ........................................................................................... 103 Efficiency ...................................................................................................................................... 104 Efficacy ......................................................................................................................................... 104 Outcome ....................................................................................................................................... 108 Risk to Development Outcome ..................................................................................................... 108 Bank Performance ........................................................................................................................ 109 Borrower Performance.................................................................................................................. 110 . ANNEX E IFC’S ADVISORY SERVICES IN CHAD ......................................................................... 111 Program Context.................................................................................................................. 111 V Program Description and Results ..................................................................................... 111 Linkages Project: Chad SME ....................... .................................. 111 Finadev Tchad TA ............................................................................................... ................ 114 Chad Capacity Building ................................................................................................................. 114 ................................................................................................................................ Lessons 115 Summary and Conclusions................................................................................................ 116 ...................................................................................................... ANNEX F. BASIC DATA SHEET 119 ANNEX GSELECTED REFERENCES.............................................................................. 129 ANNEX H. BORROWER COMMENTS.............................................................................. 132 Tables Table 1. WBG Support for the Chad-Cameroon Oil Development and Pipeline Construction Program..... Table 2. Cameroon and Chad: Oil Production and Revenue. Table 3: Broad Macroeconomic and Fiscal Aggregates, Cha .................................................................. 16 Table 4. Chad: Domestic Budget and Actual Expenditure, various sectors, 2004-06 and 2007 ....... Table 5. Commitments and Disbursements Under the Provisional Committee 5%, 2005-08 Table 6. Ten Largest Projects Financed Under the Provisional Committee 5%, 2005-08..................................................... 22 Table 7. Selected Human Development Indicators, Chad, 1997 a 23 Table 8. Governance Indicators Percentile Rankings, Cameroon 25 Figures Figure 1: Distribution of Oil Revenue in Chad According to the Petroleum Revenue Management Program .......................... 6 Figure 2: Actual and Estimated Oil Production and Revenue, Cameroon and Chad, 2003-08 (in millions of barrels and US$ millions) ................................................................................................................................................................................... 14 This report was prepared by a joint IFC/WB IEG team led by Salvatore Schiavo-Campo (consultant, IEG-WB) and comprising Fernando Manibog (consultant, IEG-WB), Gary Costello (consultant, IEG-IFC), and Cherian Samuel (IEG-IFC). The task manager was Peter Freeman. William Hurlbut edited the report and Romayne Pereira provided administrative support. Monika Huppi (IEG-WB) and Stoyan Tenev (IEG-IFC) were the respective unit managers. vii Key Staff Responsible PROJECT CHAD &CAMEROON: PETROLEUM PIPELINE AND DEVELOPMENT IBRD Loans 4558 and 7020 Project Task Managerneader Division Chief/ Country Director Sector Director Appraisal Philippe Benoit Mark Tomlinson Serge Michailof Completion Marc L. Heitner SubramaniamV. Iyer A l i Mahmoud Khadr IFC Investments 11124 and 11125 Project Task Manaaerneader Portfolio Manager Sector Director ~~ ~~ Appraisal Shahbaz Mavadat/E.Siew Graca Domingues Rashad Kaldany Completion Dennis Reyes Kalada Harry Rashad Kaldany CAMEROON: ENVIRONMENT PETROLEUM PROJECT CAPACITYENHANCEMENT (IDA CREDIT 3372) Project Task ManagedLeader Division Chief/ Country Director Sector Director Appraisal Jean-Roger Mercier Cynthia C. Cook Serge Michailof Completion Mohammed A. Bekhechi SubramaniamV. Iyer Mary A. Barton-Dock SECTOR MANAGEMENT CHAD:PETROLEUM (IDA CREDIT CAPACITY-BUILDING PROJECT 3373) Project Task Managerneader Division Chief/ Country Director Sector Director Appraisal Michel E. Layec Mark D. Tomlinson Serge Michailof Completion Silvana Tordo Peter A. van der Veen Marie Francoise Marie- Nelly CHAD:PETROLEUM ECONOMY MANAGEMENT (IDA CREDIT 3316) PROJECT Project Task ManagedLeader Division Chief/ Country Director Sector Director Appraisal Eugen Scanteie Luca Barbone Serge Michailof Completion Gradimir Radisic Helga W. Muller A l i Mahmoud Khadr CHAD:IFC ADVISORYSERVICES (AS)' 1. There were three AS operations: (i)Chad SME (537745); (ii) Finadev, Tchad (534603); and (iii) Chad Capacity Building (533974), with various task team leaders and managers involved. ix Preface This report evaluates the World Bank Group’s program o f support for o i l development and pipeline construction in Chad and Cameroon, comprising the Petroleum Development and Pipeline Development projects for Chad and Cameroon (substantially the same project, supported by separate loans from the IFC and the IBRD), and three capacity-building IDA- supported projects. One, to Cameroon, was for building the capacity to monitor the petroleum sector; a second, for Chad, aimed at strengthening the capacity to manage o i l development in an environmentally and socially sound manner; and the third, also for Chad, supported the arrangements for managing the o i l revenue and improving public expenditure. All were approved in 2000 and became effective in 2001. Moreover, IFC had a number o f advisory activities complementing these efforts. Together, these projects and activities were viewed as an integrated cluster (hereafter “the program”). The report combines an evaluation o f the program, in i t s main text, with an evaluation o f each individual project, in the annexes. The lessons identified in the text are those generally applicable to the program, with project-specific lessons included in the corresponding annex. The evaluation i s based on the documentation o f the projects, Implementation Completion Reports (ICRs), Inspection Panel Reports, other World Bank and I F C documents and various internal memoranda, reports by the pipeline operators and by Esso Exploration and Production Chad, Inc. (EEPCI), and the relevant external literature. (See the Selected References.) In addition, the evaluation benefited from extensive interviews with some 100 interlocutors in the Bank, IFC, IMF, all major development partners, the two governments, and civil society organizations, and a mission to Cameroon and Chad, including site visits, in February 2009. The cooperation o f all interlocutors, and particularly those o f the two governments in welcoming the IEG mission and sharing their views and time, was invaluable. IEG also gratefully acknowledges the cooperation o f the Bank’s country and sector teams and the assistance o f country office staff in Cameroon and Chad. Finally, the team benefited from information and exchange o f views with the two external advisory groups for the program, the External Compliance Monitoring Group and the International Advisory Group. Following standard IEG procedure, the report was sent to the two governments and comments received are attached in Annex H. X Executive Summary 1. The fundamental development objective o f WBG support for the Chad-Cameroon o i l development and pipeline construction program begun in 2000 was to reduce poverty in Chad and improve governance through the best possible use o f the o i l revenue, in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner. Despite the technical and financial success o f the pipeline project, linked largely to the high price o f oil, this fundamental objective has not been achieved. Indeed, the o i l revenue windfall was associated with a resurgence o f civil conflict and a worsening o f governance. The evaluation concludes that the principal reason for this disappointing outcome was the lack o f government ownership, with repeated violations o f the basic agreements. Actual outcomes might have been better with a more flexible program design, suited to the fluid circumstances and political economy o f Chad. However, no alternative program design or closer supervision would have allowed to achieve the program’s development objectives in the absence o f government commitment. 2. The overall development outcome was disappointing, but the evaluation also finds that WBG involvement resulted in stronger environmental and social protections, and in higher expenditure allocations to priority sectors, than would have been the case otherwise. The report concludes that the WBG was right to support the program in 2000 and did so in full cognizance o f the risks involved. Views among various stakeholders differ on the decision and manner o f World Bank exit in 2008. The Chad-Cameroon program experience should not lead the WBG to avoid appropriate involvement in extractive industries --however risky it may be-with a view to helping to bring about more sustainable outcomes, but in designing such involvement it should be keenly mindful o f the important lessons o f this complex and controversial experience. PROGRAM GENESISAND STRUCTURE 3. In 2000, after an intense internal debate dating back to 1994, under external pressures, and fully recognizing the risks, the World Bank Group (WBG) embarked on an ambitious program o f support for the development o f o i l in southern Chad and its export via a pipeline through Cameroon and an offshore o i l export terminal. Chad would gain royalties and dividends from the o i l export revenue (and eventually taxes) and Cameroon a transit fee from the pipeline (as well as income tax and dividends from the pipeline operator). WBG support comprised the main oil development and pipeline construction project, financed in part by I F C and IBRD loans and managed by a Consortium o f o i l companies led by ExxonMobil. It also included IDA projects in each o f the countries to build their capacity to manage the o i l sector, and an IDA project to help manage the o i l revenue and improve public expenditure and budgeting systems in Chad, where I F C also conducted advisory activities (Table ES-1). Over 90 percent o f the financing was provided by the Consortium and a group o f commercial banks. xi Table ES-1. WBG Support for the Chad-CameroonOil Development and Pipeline Construction Program Country Project Financing Abbreviatedproject development (US$ millions) ~~ objectives (*) Chad Petroleum Development 37.2 IBRD (to government) Increase Chad’s expenditures on and Pipeline (IBRD/IFC) 27.8 IFC (to Consortium) poverty alleviation activities. Cameroon Petroleum Development 53.4 IBRD (to government) Increase Cameroon’s fiscal revenues and Pipeline (IBRD/IFC) 172.2 IFC (to Consortium) available for priority expenditures. Cameroon Petroleum Environment 5.8 IDA Help Cameroon establish capacity for Capacity Enhancement environment and social management (IDA) and an o i l regulatory framework. Chad Petroleum Sector 23.7 I D A Strengthen capacity to manage o i l Management Capacity- development in environmentally and Building (IDA) socially sound manner. Chad Management o f the 17.5 IDA Build capacity to implement o i l Petroleum Economy revenue management strategy and (IDA) improve expenditure management. Chad Advisory Activities 4.8 IFC Support local private sector linkages to the project, including microfmance and advice to SME. WBG IFC: 204.8 Finance IBRD: 90.6 IDA: 47.0 Total: 342.4 Project 3,724 (original est.) cost (**) 6.500 (2000-08) (*) See Annexes A-E for the full statement of PDOs, on which the evaluation o f the individual projects i s based. (**) Consortium estimate. Total costs are expected to rise to $8 billion by 2011, owing in large part to the expansion of oil development beyond the original fields. OBJECTIVES 4. The objectives o f the individual projects were subsidiary to the main development objective o f the whole program, which related to Chad. Except for the important environmental and social aspects, the involvement o f Cameroon was ancillary, required to get the o i l from landlocked Chad to the market. 5. As stated in the Chad Country Assistance Strategies (CASs) and confirmed by internal documentation and stakeholder interviews, the main objective o f the program was to achieve progress in governance and poverty reduction by means o f the o i l revenue. Thus, the o i l revenue management arrangements were the core o f the entire program. As a senior manager put it at the time, the success o f the program would be measured not in dollars but in h o w many Chadians it would lift out o f poverty. In the 2001 CAS this objective was formulated as helping Chad use the petroleum resources to attempt to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. The 2003 CAS defined “the overarching objective” as making “the best possible” developmental use o f the new o i l revenues2 That CAS went 2. The 1996 CAS for Chad, before serious consideration o f WBG involvement in the o i l development and pipeline construction, lists the three strategic objectives as restoring public sector capacity, focusing public expenditure on poverty reduction, and creating an enabling environment for the private sector. xii further, and identified the two pillars as “strengthening governance, including institutional arrangements for public resource management and service delivery [and] the r u l e o f law.. .” and “enhancing non-oil economic opportunities while reducing sources o f vulnerability.” 6. Accordingly, while the outcomes o f the individual projects are assessed in this report against their stated project development objectives (PDOs), the outcomes o f the program are assessed against the main objective o f improving governance and reducing poverty in Chad, through the use o f the o i l revenue and in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner. The program encompasses the participation o f both the World Bank (IDA and IBRD) and the I F C as integral parts o f the World Bank Group, with the evaluative considerations o f development impact referring to the I F C as much as to the Bank. RISKS 7. The WBG was clear that the project should meet the highest standards o f environmental and social protection, and-after rounds o f review and comments by the WBG on earlier drafts-a thorough Environmental Action Plan and provisions for addressing the social implications o f the project were approved and an independent External Compliance Management Group (EMCG) was put in place. This answered some o f the concerns expressed by international and local nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). 8. For Chad, however, NGOs and others (including within the WBG) were particularly worried that the o i l revenue would not be allocated to pro-poor and pro-development expenditure, owing to the governance weaknesses in the country-indeed, that the o i l revenue itself could aggravate these weaknesses and possibly lead to renewed conflict after several years o f comparative stability. 9. The Bank recognized these risks and attempted to address them through an unusually detailed and complex set o f arrangements. The core o f the program was the 1999 Petroleum Revenue Management Law, which set aside 10 percent o f future o i l royalties and dividends for a Future Generations Fund, 5 percent o f royalties for expenditure in the oil-producing region, and about 85 percent o f the remainder for expenditure in agreed priority sectors. The arrangement was backed by an escrow account in London into which the Consortium would deposit the o i l export revenue-both in order to ensure repayment o f the IBRD loan (required in view o f Chad’s insufficient creditworthiness) and to underpin the pro-development allocation o f the o i l revenue and other key features o f the agreement. A novel institution with civil society participation-the CollBge de ContrGle et de Surveillance des Ressources Pe‘troliBres (Oil Revenue Monitoring and Oversight Committee)-was set up to review and advise the government on the programs to be financed with the o i l revenue. And, covering both countries, an International Advisory Group composed o f eminent persons was established to counsel the two governments and the WBG on implementation o f the program. 10. Other major risks were also recognized at an early stage, namely, a possible spillover from the crisis in Darfur; waning government commitment as soon as the o i l would begin to flow; and social unrest if the o i l revenue were not used for pro-poor, pro-development activities. To an extent, both a Darfur spillover and social resentment may in fact be associated with the internal violence experienced in Chad since 2003, and the CAS also proved correct in singling out the risk o f waning government commitment. ... Xlll EVENTS MAIN APPROVAL AFTER BOARD 1 1. With the o i l revenue coming on stream in late 2003-much earlier than anticipated and in the far greater amounts associated with the increase in world o i l price-the government o f Chad unsuccessfully pressed the Bank during 2005 to agree to modify the 1999 Law, and on December 29 amended it unilaterally in major ways, including by eliminating the Future Generations Fund. The Bank responded one week later by suspending disbursements on all Bank operations and freezing government withdrawals from the escrow account. After resumption o f the dialogue, a new agreement was reached in July 2006, by which the government promised to allocate to the priority sectors 70 percent o f all budgetary resources (a much greater amount than the earlier 85 percent o f direct o i l revenue only), and the Bank removed the hold on the escrow account and resumed disbursements. 12. The new agreed allocation target was missed by a significant margin. In August 2008 (after initial unsuccessful informal demarches), the Bank persuaded Chad to voluntarily repay not only the outstanding balance o n the IBRD loan but also the balances o n the two IDA credits (for the first time in Bank history). Chad repaid the total o f $65.7 million in September, and the World Bank’s involvement in Chad’s o i l sector came to a close. However, I F C has continued to monitor the environmental and social aspects o f the petroleum and pipeline project and to help Chadian companies secure contracts from EEPCI. OUTCOMES 13. The main petroleum and pipeline project was a physical, technical, and financial success, with the pipeline completed and o i l flowing ahead o f time. The distribution o f benefits differed greatly between the two countries, as a result o f their different situations and roles in the program. 14. Cameroon. Cameroon’s involvement was mainly as a means to help achieve the key . objective o f the program, i.e., to help Chad reduce poverty and improve governance through the best possible use o f the oil revenue. However, important issues were nevertheless at stake, and significant gains accrued to Cameroon. The major issues related to the handling o f the high risks to the environment associated with the construction o f an oil pipeline and, to a lesser extent because o f the comparatively small number o f people, addressing the social impact o f pipeline construction. In both respects, the arrangements put in place for compliance with environmental specifications at the project level (especially the Environmental Management Plan) and addressing the social implications, and their monitoring through an independent entity, may be regarded as among the best in extractive industries projects in Africa. 15. The program also aimed at strengthening Cameroon’s own capacity to manage and monitor the o i l sector, including environmental risks, through an IDA-supported project. In this respect, the outcome was unsatisfactory, owing to modest relevance and efficacy. 16. For Cameroon, the pipeline project objective was to augment the financial resources available for development and pro-poor expenditure. The project achieved this objective, although to a lesser degree than aimed for because o f lower production o f oil. The gains to the xiv country included the revenue to the government from the pipeline transit fees as well as the income taxes and dividends from the pipeline operator. Although the pipeline-related revenue added up to about 1.5 percent o f total government revenue, it was less than originally estimated owing to the lower amounts o f o i l passing through the pipeline. Since the pipeline maintenance and repair was ensured by the Consortium, and in light o f the small fraction o f total revenue accounted for by the pipeline-related resources, no provision was or could be made for the specific use o f those resources-which thus accrued to the general government budget. 17. There were other gains as well, in the form o f contributions to the local economy and stimulus to private sector activity through provision o f jobs, skill-formation, supplier development, and infrastructure improvements in connection with the building o f the pipeline, in addition to direct community donations by the Consortium. 18. Nevertheless, both the expectations and the outcomes o f the overall program were comparatively minor for Cameroon, and no macro-level development, governance, or poverty impact could be expected from the program, let alone tracked or measured. 19. Chad. By contrast, the program led to a remarkable increase in financial resources available to the Chad government, from an annual revenue o f about $1 12 million in 2000 to over $2 billion in 2008, almost 90 percent o f it from oil. The broad macro-level outcomes, therefore, can only be assessed with reference to Chad. 20. The revenue to Chad was much larger than had been envisaged owing to the much higher o i l price. As in Cameroon, the project also generated direct benefits in the form o f employment, training, and other contributions to the local economy, and IFC’s Linkage programs have supported small and medium enterprises through EEPCI’s purchase o f goods and services and the development o f long-term supplier relationships. 21. The handling o f the environmental and social impact at the project level before and during pipeline construction was satisfactory in Chad as well. However, problems have emerged on the social side after completion o f the pipeline and with the expansion beyond the original three o i l fields, and the outcome o f the capacity-building efforts was as unsatisfactory as in Cameroon, again due to modest relevance and efficacy. 22. The macroeconomic, development, poverty reduction, governance, and institutional development outcomes were disappointing and there i s as yet no evidence o f the hoped-for positive improvements. W h i l e major improvements in poverty reduction, human development or governance are unlikely to appear in a few years, it would not be unrealistic to expect some movement in a positive direction. O n the contrary, various indicators o f governance show a deterioration. 23. The broad outcomes in Chad during the period o f the program can be summarized as follows: The fiscal position has become weaker over the period, with the non-oil primary deficit worsening from a modest 4 percent o f GDP in 2004 to 28 percent in 2008-a level the IMF has termed unsustainable. (The concern is not an increase in non-oil xv primary deficit, per se, but its rapid acceleration, associated with much higher current expenditure and combined with issues o f expenditure composition and efficiency.) The economic composition o f expenditure has worsened, with current expenditure rising f i o m some 10 percent o f non-oil GDP in 2001-04 to 21 percent in 2005-08, and a wage bill rising to 9 percent o f non-oil GDP. The functional composition o f expenditure, the central focus o f the program, did improve toward sectors important for development and poverty reduction-ven ifby less than had been agreed. The largest increase was accounted for by investment in infrastructure, which, however, exhibited substantial inefficiencies. The efficiency o f expenditure has been very low, from violations o f fundamental procurement and financial management rules, much higher unit construction costs than international or regional norms, and, most damaging, neglect o f the balance between investment and recurrent cost, which resulted in new facilities unable to operate for lack o f the requisite current inputs. However, although comparatively small, the expenditures in the oil-producing region financed by the 5 percent o f o i l royalties were comparatively well allocated.) Data o n human development are few and the picture is mixed, with an increase in access to clean water and a reduction in incidence o f HIV/AIDS, but a rise in infant and child mortality; an increase in primary education enrollment but a deterioration o f educational quality. Poverty developments were not adequately monitored, a serious shortcoming for a program whose main objective was poverty reduction through the use o f o i l revenue. The developments in governance are not mixed. Between 2000 and 2007, while Africa as a whole showed a slight improvement, Chad experienced a marked deterioration against all major governance indicators-with the decline especially sharp in r u l e o f law, control o f corruption, and government effectiveness. In government effectiveness, the main problems are in public financial management and procurement. Although budget preparation improved somewhat, budget execution deteriorated, and government effectiveness in public expenditure management i s currently worse than in 2000-with financial controls frequently bypassed during budget execution; disregard o f procurement regulations and increasing recourse to sole- source contracts; virtually inoperative institutions o f financial accountability; and the rise o f a culture o f rule violation in public sector management. DIMENSIONS EVALUATION AND CROSSCUTTING ISSUES 24. The main oil development and pipeline construction project was a physical, technical, and financial success. The o i l revenue accruing much sooner and in higher amounts than anticipated was a major factor underlying the program’s failure to achieve i t s development objectives in Chad. The management arrangements devised for a comparatively limited amount o f o i l revenue cracked under the weight o f the much larger revenue that materialized. The larger revenue also generated temptations and competing claims that were in part associated with the re-emergence o f political instability and violent rebellion. The slow efforts at capacity building were undercut by the more rapid inflow o f oil money. And the o i l revenue much greater than the total o f foreign aid sharply altered the initial leverage calculus o f the program. Despite notable isolated achievements, mainly in road construction and access to water, the World Bank Group’s broad objective o f helping Chad reduce poverty and improve xvi governance was not met. Measured against this objective, the overall program outcome was unsatisfactory. 25. However, given the complexity o f this program and the diversity o f outcomes, the standard evaluation approach o f assessing outcomes against the stated objectives needs to be qualified by considering the possible counterfactuals. With the rapid increase in o i l price after 2000, it i s virtually certain that the o i l would have been developed and the pipeline constructed even without any WBG involvement, albeit perhaps one or two years later. If so, the environmental and social provisions and the external monitoring arrangements would not have been as thorough as those under the program. Also, it is probable that the revenue allocations to the priority sectors would have been lower than they have actually been, and it is certain that the support institutions such as the Collbge and the advisory groups would not have been put in place. In this sense, WBG involvement made a positive contribution. 26. Relevance. The relevance o f the program was adversely affected by weaknesses in the design o f the capacity-building interventions as well as the main o i l revenue management arrangements. Concerning the former, a major external criticism was that the program was premature, in that it would have been necessary to f i r s t build the country’s capacity to manage the petroleum sector and the o i l revenue, and to improve governance. However, a short delay could not have achieved those long-gestation objectives, and there were clear signs that the o i l would be developed and the pipeline built in the very near future with or without WBG involvement. The more pertinent timing issue i s instead retrospective. After its first foray in Chad’s o i l sector in 1994 the Bank did not succeed during the subsequent years in helping Chad to achieve a sustainable improvement in budgeting, financial controls and o i l sector management capacity, and the attempt to support capacity-building activities concurrently with the main project proved unsuccessful. 27. Concerning the o i l revenue management arrangement subtending the management o f the petroleum economy project--which was the core o f the program--the design was prescriptive, overly detailed, and rigid. The earmarking o f the o i l revenue, combined with the complex management arrangements, led to fragmentation o f the budget, neglect o f the quality o f expenditure, and insufficient attention to budget execution. The design was understandably motivated by the goal to assure the best possible use o f the o i l revenue for pro-poor and pro- development expenditure. In reality, no prescriptive legal provision could compensate for weak government commitment and thus the approach eventually showed the disadvantages o f rigidity without its advantages for clarity and enforcement o f agreements. The disappointing program outcomes have resulted from a complex o f economic and political circumstances, including particularly lack o f government ownership, severe security threats o n the government from the Dark crisis, and other factors. Even under these circumstances, alternative designs focused o n agreements o n expenditure and i t s quality rather than specifically oil revenue (based, for example, o n soft targets within a band triggering progressively stronger review and correction provisions) might have provided a middle ground between a negotiating straightjacket and the excessively discretionary criterion “satisfactory to the Bank.” In the end, a more flexible approach might also have facilitated the flow o f resources to priority activities and their more efficient use, without short-circuiting capacity building in public financial management. Overall, the relevance o f the program was modest. xvii 28. Concerning efficiency and efficacy, the pipeline project was very efficient in technical and financial terms, but the efficiency o f the overall program was affected by modest efficiency o f the capacity building projects and the overall less than efficient use o f o i l revenues. The program’s overall efficacy was modest at best, as seen in the outcomes described earlier. 29. Risk to development outcome is high. The external environment remains very challenging, with uncertain prospects for a resolution o f the crisis in D& and the spillover o f problems into Chad. Internal political tensions are high and likely to remain so. Institutional capacity i s s t i l l very weak at all levels. Fiscal sustainability is already injeopardy, and with the price o f o i l lower than had been anticipated for 2009 and 2010, fiduciary risk i s likely t o increase and development expenditure will be under pressure from the priority given by the government to regime maintenance and security spending. Public management systems and skills remain insufficient for minimal government effectiveness. And motivation and integrity have been weakened by the spreading disregard for the rules without ensuing consequences. 30. World Bank Group performance was moderately unsatisfactory for the program as a whole. The WBG got involved for the right reasons and in full recognition o f the probable alternatives and the risks, including reputational risks. However, the flaws in the design o f the o i l revenue and expenditure management arrangements adversely affected the impact o f the whole program, and capacity building was unsuccessful owing to the weak design and supervision o f the three IDA-supported projects. For the pipeline project itself, WBG performance was moderately satisfactory. For the program, supervision was hampered by the excessive rotation o f task managers in the revenue management project and, in the Chad capacity-building project, from the reliance for many years o n external petroleum consultants without in-house specialists to supervise them. The tireless efforts, competence and personal commitments o f operational managers and staff engaged in program supervision were not able to overcome these shortcomings, nor those associated with design weaknesses. 3 1. Questions have been raised internally and externally by staff, government officials, NGOs, and development partners concerning the decision and manner o f Bank exit in 2008. A s noted, the WBG embarked o n the program in 2000 for the right reasons and with the strong support o f the international donor community. It exited in 2008 with weaker consensus than it had enjoyed at entry. Some stakeholders have viewed the decision as unnecessary and untimely, or lacking full consideration o f all the implications and adequate external consultation. The decision’s justification lay in the repeated government violations o f its commitments and was reached after extensive consideration at higher management levels. 32. Cooperation between IFC and the World Bank was a strong feature o f the program. Cooperation between WB-IFC, rested o n a division o f labor suitable to the different mandates and comparative advantages. Thus, the Bank focused primarily on implementation o f the revenue arrangements and expenditure understandings, and o n the three IDA-supported projects to help build capacity to monitor the o i l sector and manage the o i l revenue, while I F C dealt with the technical and contractual aspects and with the environmental and social dimensions o f the o i l development and pipeline project, with Bank contributions as warranted Also, the Bank handled relations with the governments and the I F C handled relations with the Consortium and the lenders. With the Bank exit from Chad’s o i l sector, I F C continued to monitor the environmental and social aspects o f the main project. xviii 33. All that said, it i s the borrower’~performancethat was the key factor for the unsuccessful outcomes o f the program. W h i l e some o f the implementing entities performed creditably, the strong assertions o f ownership and commitment o f the Government o f Chad at the start o f the program proved inoperative when the o i l revenue started flowing. Absent a firm commitment by the country’s authorities at the highest level, it i s unlikely that the outcomes would have been appreciably different under any alternative program design and performance o f the Bank during implementation. Conversely, steady government commitment to implementing the agreed program would probably have made it successful despite i t s design flaws. The Government, however, views the security problems as primarily responsible for the outcomes. 34. Thus, with substantial o i l revenue expected to continue in the foreseeable future even if at prices lower than in 2005-08, it is still possible for Chad to escape the resource curse. The Bank can cooperate with the IMF in monitoring fiscal and expenditure outcomes and make a useful contribution by providing advice in public sector management-focused on the basics, recognizing capacity realities, and buttressed by constructive and assertive cooperation o f certain major bilateral partners. But the most important factor would be a new and genuine determination by Chad’s government to use the o i l resources for development and poverty reduction, and do so responsively and efficiently. RATINGS 35. Based on all the evidence, as well as on the broad outcomes summarized earlier and other data, the relevance, efficiency, and efficacy o f the program as a whole, against the stated objectives, are all rated modest, and the program outcome is rated unsatisfactory. The ratings o f the program are not an average o f the ratings o f the component projects, nor are they weighted by loan amounts, but flow from a combined assessment o f the developmental importance o f each project-with the revenue management arrangements at the core o f the program. See Table ES-2. In this case and throughout this report, the term “borrower” i s used t o refer t o the borrowing governments unless specified otherwise. xix Table ES-2. Project and Program Ratings Chad and Cameroon: Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project Outcome Moderately satisfactory Risks to development outcome Significant Bank Group performance Moderately satisfactory Borrower performance Moderately satisfactory Cameroon: Petroleum Capacity Enhancement Project Outcome Unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome Significant Bank performance Moderately satisfactory Borrower performance Moderately unsatisfactory Chad: Petroleum Sector Management Capacity-Building Project Outcome Unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome High Bank performance Moderately unsatisfactory Borrower performance Unsatisfactory Chad: Petroleum Economy Management Project Outcome Unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome High Bank performance Unsatisfactory Borrower performance Highly unsatisfactory Chad: IFC Advisory Services (*) Development effectiveness Mostly unsuccessful IFCs role and contributions Satisfactory PROGRAM (**) Outcome Unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome High Bank performance Moderately unsatisfactory Borrower performance Unsatisfactory (*) The IFC rating system for advisory services, broadly similar to the WB, i s described in Annex E. (**) The ratings apply primarily to Chad. While similar conclusions can be drawn for Cameroon, they are mainly associated with the evaluation of the Capacity Enhancement project, since expectations and outcomes from the overall program were comparatively minor for Cameroon and no broad macro-level development, governance or poverty impact could be expected from the small addition to government revenue, let alone rated. 36. The evaluation was done jointly by IEG-IFC and IEG-WB. It highlights the coexistence ' o f a moderately satisfactory rating for the main infrastructure project and an unsatisfactory rating for the program o f which the project i s a part. Because the World Bank Group has a development mandate, one might argue that if the whole program i s unsatisfactory due to a development failure, a component project should not be considered satisfactory because o f its technical and financial success. This evaluation has concluded that there i s no inconsistency between viewing one set o f outcomes favorably even though the weight o f other unfavorable outcomes has led to a negative conclusion overall. At the same time, the evaluation illustrates the basic point that a part o f a program, however well carried out, cannot be separated from the overall program and the broader setting within which its impact i s being assessed: a project or a subproject cannot be ring-fenced in the assessment. xx LESSONS 37. The well-known lesson that government commitment i s the major influence on the effectiveness o f projects and programs is underlined by the experience o f the Chad- Cameroon program. Other key lessons from this rich and complex experience include: If the WBG decides to risk involvement in ambiguous and fluid situations, it pays not to do so in overly detailed and rigid ways. Clarity is needed on the objectives and principles, but the design and implementation modalities should be as fluid as the situation itself, rather than rely on binary choices and numerical rules. The temptation to put in place special mechanisms to protect specific resources and accomplish results i s understandable in a weak capacity and governance environment, but institutional enclaves are generally not successful beyond the short term and even when successful in the short term they tend to undermine the already weak local systems and thus long-term development. I t is imperative to design projects in light o f the institutional and administrative capacity realities. In countries with weak capacity, it is important to focus on addressing the basic problems rather than attempting to introduce sophisticated practices. Paradoxically, major components o f the program in effect assumed the existence o f the very capacity they aimed to build. An innovative design, even if unsuccessful in practice, may contain novel elements worth consideration and replication (in this case, the environmental and social safeguard arrangements, the CoZZJge, and the two independent advisory bodies). Whether the World Bank or the I F C is involved, the concern with development effectiveness goes beyond the gates o f individual projects, however well they may be technically done, to the results o f the overall program. In large, complex WBG projects with multiple stakeholders, good WB-IFC cooperation is important to improve the chances o f positive results, and I F C Advisory Activities can complement the projects by their impact o n local private sector development. 3 8. The Chad-Cameroon o i l development and pipeline construction program exemplifies the inherent tension between the limits o f the World Bank as an international organization and i t s mandate to foster development and poverty reduction. The WBG did not succeed in protecting Chad’s people from the o i l curse, but it did try. One should not draw as a lesson from this experience that the WBG should refrain from supporting extractive industries with a view to helping to bring about more sustainable outcomes because doing so carries reputational risks and success i s unlikely. Indeed, despite the disappointing overall outcomes o n the development and governance side, the WBG involvement contributed to a notable increase in expenditures in social sectors and to the assurance o f environmental and social protections within the confines o f the project better than they would have been otherwise. 1 1. From Entry to Exit 1.1 This section describes the key events in the preparation, implementation, and closure o f the World Bank Group’s support o f and involvement in the Chad-Cameroon o i l development and pipeline construction pr~gram.~ THECONTEXT AT ENTRY 1.2 Cameroon has had political stability since independence in 1960, despite governance weaknesses after the 1970s. Also, fertile land and abundant o i l led to good agricultural production and substantial government revenue, bringing the country up to middle-income level by the early 1980s. Subsequently, the country experienced macroeconomic difficulties, which were alleviated from the mid-1990s onward by implementation o f economic reforms with Bank and IMF support. 1.3 Chad has also had governance problems and, in addition, has experienced severe political instability and internal conflict at least since 1979. When the World Bank Group embarked on support for o i l development in Chad and the building o f the pipeline, Chad was one o f the poorest countries in the world, with a per capita GDP o f about $ l/day and a population o f around 8.5 million spread over a large landlocked territory o f half a million square miles (most o f it semidesertic). 1.4 After the worst years o f internal conflict in the late 1980s (aggravated by external intervention), Chad’s politics became less volatile with the rise to power o f President Idriss Deby in 1991. A period o f attempts at national reconciliation ensued, culminating in 1993 in a new constitution that legalized opposition political parties’ and set presidential term limits, which President Deby repeatedly asserted would be respected. The understanding lasted for about a decade and produced a modicum o f political stability, particularly from 1996, when the President was re-elected and multiparty elections were held. The political situation thus appeared o n the mend by the time o f the WBG decision to support the o i l development and pipeline construction. Moreover, by then the government had established a modestly satisfactory record o f economic reforms (supported by a series o f structural adjustment credits); although institutional and administrative capacity remained very weak. 1.5 Accordingly, the WBG decided in 2000 to help elaborate the program and support it with IFC, IBRD, and IDA resources, with the objective o f improving governance and reducing poverty through the best possible developmental use o f the o i l revenue. Major cofinancing was also granted by the European Investment Bank. Subsequently, political and security problems re-emerged. In 2003, the start o f the Darfur rebellion in Sudan and the 4. This account rests on the Country Strategy Papers for Cameroon and Chad, project documents, internal WBG memoranda, and interviews with about 100 WBG decision makers, government officials, and NGOs. 5. Until then, Chad was a one-party state under the ruling Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS). 2 ensuing influx o f refugees began to affect events in Chad. A second major event was President Deby’s endorsement o f a constitutional change removing the presidential t e r m limits and the holding o f a referendum to that effect in 2005. The referendum was criticized by human rights organizations and boycotted by opposition parties, which also boycotted the subsequent presidential elections in 2006 with which President Deby obtained a third term. Major rebel attacks on the capital Ndjamena took place in 2006 and again in February 2008. The third major contributor to post-2003 instability was the large flow o f money from petroleum development - “pouring o i l on smoldering fire” in the words o f one interlocutor. Government priorities have been heavily affected by the security problems, with increasing attention given to security expenditures and comparatively less to other national needs. 6 1.6 The existence o f petroleum in Chad has been known for almost 40 years, but i t s exploitation was prevented by political instability and l o w world o i l prices. In 1988, the government granted a 30-year lease to a consortium o f o i l companies (hereafter “the consortium”) to develop three o i l fields in the south. A feasibility study in 1994 demonstrated that the only viable option to export the o i l from landlocked Chad was to build a pipeline through Cameroon to an offshore platform in Kribi (south o f Douala), and the two countries signed a treaty to that effect in 1996. The pipeline treaty set out the framework for land acquisition, environmental and social safeguards, and the governments’ equity shares in the companies that were set up to build and operate the pipeline in the two countries: the Tchad O i l Transportation Company (TOTCO), in which the Chad government would have 15 percent equity, and the Cameroon O i l Transportation Company (COTCO), in which Cameroon and Chad would have respectively 10 and 5 percent. (The consortium did not agree to Chad government equity participation in the exploitation o f the oil fields themselves. The two parties agreed instead on a structure o f royalties and dividends, discussed later.) ’ 1.7 The legal framework, too, required major modernization. The inadequacy o f the o i l legislation adopted in 1962 had forced the Chad government into bilateral agreements and ad hoc contracts. For this among other reasons, as the centerpiece o f the preparations for oil development and WBG support, a new Petroleum Revenue Management Law was approved in 1999, as described later. 1.8 The consortium and the participating banks stated that their development o f the oil fields and construction o f the pipeline would be contingent on partnership with a multilateral development agency. The WBG was the obvious candidate and agreed as early as 1994 to begin working with the consortium and the two governments to help develop the project- beginning with preparation o f some capacity-building activities. Thus, while the main 6. A new electoral code was promulgated in August 2007 with the aim o f organizing free legislative elections by end-2009 (which will likely be delayed). A new ‘‘unity” government was appointed by the President i n August 2008; some observers are optimistic that this signals a hopeful change; others are not. 7. The consortium consisted originally o f Exxon (the operator, with a 40 percent stake), Shell, and Elf. In 1999, Shell and Elf withdrew-Elf reportedly because it had been purchasedby Total, and Shell because o f emerging issues with share prices-and were replaced by Petronas (Malaysia’s state oil company) and Chevron, with a 35 and 25 percent stake, respectively. 3 pipeline project and the other associated projects and activities were approved by the Board in 2000, some cautious WBG involvement had in actuality begun six years earlier.8 PUTTING I T TOGETHER WBG Financial and Technical Support 1.9 Initially, the WBG had envisaged limiting its involvement to I F C participation but, in light o f the policy aspects, and at the urging o f the consortium, it decided to include Bank direct involvement as well. I F C participation consisted o f loans to the consortium o f $27.8 million in Chad and $172.2 million in Cameroon (where most o f the 1,040 kilometers o f pipeline i s located). World Bank participation included two IBRD “enclave” loans to finance the governments’ acquisition o f their minority equity share in the pipeline, in the amounts o f $37.2 million and $53.4 to Chad and Cameroon respectively, as well as three IDA credits- one to each country for capacity building to manage the o i l sector and monitor the environmental and social impact, and the third to Chad to strengthen the management o f the petroleum economy. The total WBG financing o f $337.6 million amounted to around 9 percent o f the originally estimated project cost o f $3.7 billion (of which about two-thirds was for the pipeline and o i l terminal and one-third for the o i l fields development in Chad), and 5 percent o f the actual cost o f $6.5 billion through 2008. In addition, European Investment Bank cofinancing amounted to about $170 million equivalent (of which $62 million was lent to the two governments and $108 million to the consortium). The bulk o f the cost was financed by a number o f commercial banks and the consortium itself. 1.10 In addition, the Bank conducted a series o f Public Expenditure Reviews, and the I F C financed some advisory activities. Table 1 summarizes the various WBG interventions in the two countries, and Annexes (A-E) provide details on each project as well as the evaluations and the ratings. (The complex o f projects and activities hereafter will be referred to as “the program”; the pipeline project as “the project”; and the other interventions by their specific names.) Key Policy and Institutional Arrangements 1.1 1 With the major environmental risks known to attach to o i l development and pipeline projects, environmental assessments were conducted, on the basis o f which an extensive Environmental Management Plan (EMP) was produced. After review and comments by the WBG, the E M P was extensively revised based on broad public consultations and additional studies. (See Section 2 for a summary o f the environmental and social dimensions o f the program.) 1.12 Two independent external bodies were created to monitor the environmental and social aspects and the development objectives o f the program in both Cameroon and Chad. The I F C set up the External Compliance Monitoring Group (ECMG), to monitor compliance with the E M P and provide ongoing advice for improving environmental and social performance. The E C M G consulted widely with stakeholders including NGOs and communities affected by the project. Also, a five-member International Advisory Group 8. Moreover, WBG involvement in the sector should be viewed alongside other major Bank support, consisting o f a series o f structural adjustment credits, the last o f which was approved in 2003. 4 (IAG) chaired by a former Prime Minister o f Senegal was formed to advise the Bank and the two governments on the achievement o f the broader Program objectives during the first six years o f o i l revenue flows.’ 1.13 In Cameroon, following the 1996 treaty on construction o f the pipeline, a decree in 1997 established an interministerial Pipeline Steering and Monitoring Committee (PSMC), under the chairmanship o f the general manager o f the state hydrocarbon agency and with i t s technical.and administrative support, as well as a Pipeline Inspection Service in the Ministry o f Mines. 1.14 In Chad, a similar body was set up-the National Technical Committee for Monitoring and Control (CTNSC-hereafter, “the Technical Committee”)-to oversee the environmental and social monitoring activities, in cooperation with the Ministry o f Environment and Water. In view o f the substantial financial resources expected from the program, complex arrangements were designed to ensure revenue transparency and support o f expenditure for development and poverty reduction. On the revenue side, the 1999 Petroleum Revenue Management Law set up an escrow account in London into which the consortium would deposit the oil export revenues. The immediate purpose was to ensure priority repayment o f the IBRD and European Investment Bank debt service-as required by the country’s insufficient creditworthiness for IBRD borrowing. The broader purpose was to underpin the allocation o f the oil revenue for development and poverty reduction. Thus, o i l revenues deposited into the escrow account were earmarked as follows: 10 percent o f royalties and dividends set aside for a “Future Generations Fund”; o f the 90 percent, 5 percent o f royalties would go for expenditure in the oil-producing southern region, 80 percent o f royalties and 85 percent o f dividends for expenditure in identified “priority sectors,” and the remaining royalties and dividends (as well as all non-oil revenue) to the general government budget. “Priority” sectors in effect included the bulk o f economic and social activity: transport, housing, civil works, health, social affairs, education, rural development, mining and energy, justice, and post and telecommunications. To ensure additionality, this allocation o f the o i l revenues would be assessed by reference to a baseline budget-defined as the budget for the year preceding that o f the first o i l revenue. Figure 1 summarizes the operation o f the system. 1.15 On the expenditure side, expenditure from the o i l revenue account was to be authorized in accordance with integrated “sector expenditure programs” (presumably flowing fiom sector strategies consistent with the priorities set out in the government’s Poverty Reduction Strategy, as well as with a medium-termexpenditure framework to guide the annual budget), and would require endorsement by a special Committee on the Monitoring and Oversight o f Petroleum Resources (CoZZ2ge de ContrGZe et Surveillance des Ressources Pe‘troZi2res-hereafter “the CoZZ2ge”). The CoZZ2ge was supported by i t s own technical staff and consisted o f five statutory members (a supreme court judge as chair, the Director o f the Regional Central Bank, the Director o f Treasury, and two members o f the National 9. The IAG conducted regular missions for t h i s purpose except when prevented by security difficulties. Its mandate extended for six years after the first year’s o i l revenue. With oil revenue coming on stream earlier than expected in 2003, its final visit was in January 2009 and the fmal report was placed on the IAG’s Web site (www.gic-ian.orq) in April 2009. 5 Assembly) and four civil society representatives. Although the CoZlBge has no formal expenditure authority, nor enforcement powers, it has the mandate to approve expenditure proposals in line with the agreed allocations. Table 1. WBG Support for the Chad-Cameroon Oil Development and Pipeline Construction Program Country Project Amounts Abbreviated project development objectives (*) (US$ millions) Chad Petroleum 37.2 IBRD (to Govt) Increase Chad’s expenditures on poverty alleviation Development and 27.8 IFC (to activities. Pipeline Consortium) (IBRD/IFC) Cameroon Petroleum 53.4 IBRD (to Govt) Increase Cameroon’s fiscal revenues available for Development and 172.2 IFC (to financing priority development expenditures i n the Pipeline Consortium) context o f the government strategy for growth and (IBRD/IFC) poverty reduction Cameroon Petroleum 5.8 I D A 1. Assist Cameroon to develop and establish Environment national capacity for the environmental Capacity management and monitoring o f the Chad-Cameroon Enhancement (IDA) pipeline project 2. On a medium- to long-term basis, help ensure the environmental sustainability o f h t u r e projects, programs, and policies in Cameroon’s petroleum sector, including strengthening Cameroon’s capacity to (i) mitigate the negative social and environmental impacts o f the pipeline project and (ii) establish an environmental regulatory framework for the oil sector. Chad Petroleum Sector 23.7 IDA Strengthen capacity to: Management 1. better manage the development o f petroleum Capacity-Building resources in an environmentally and socially sound (IDA) manner, and 2. increase the use o f oil resources from Doba in southern Chad. Chad Management o f the 17.5 IDA 1. Build capacity to implement Chad’s petroleum Petroleum revenue management strategy Economy Project 2. Enable Chad to effectively absorb and allocate (IDA) expected oil revenue, and thus pursue poverty reduction objectives o f oil development. Chad Advisory activities 4.8 IFC Support local private sector linkages to the project, including microfinance and advice to small and medium enterurises. IFC: 200.0 WBG IBRD: 90.6 Finance IDA: 47.0 Total: 337.6 Project 3,724 (original est.) cost (**) 6,500 ( 2000-2008) (*) See para. 2.5ff for the full statement o f PDOs, on which the evaluation i s based. (**) Consortium estimate. Total costs will probably be over $8 billion by 201 1. The higher costs are related in large part to the expansion o f oil development beyond the original fields. The bulk o f the financing was provided by the Consortium and a group o f commercial banks. 6 Figure 1: Distribution o f Oil Revenue in Chad According to the Petroleum Revenue Management Program DEVELOPMENTS AFTER BOARD THE2005-06 CONFRONTATIONAND THE 2006 APPROVAL: AGREEMENT 1.16 Events during program implementation and through late 2008 led to a divergence between expectations and actual developments. As discussed in section 2, the technical and physical aspects o f the program proceeded better than expected, as did the financial outcomes, owing largely to the sharp rise in o i l price. But difficulties emerged. 1.17 A first harbinger o f misunderstandings and doubtful government commitment had come in August 2000, soon after Board approval, when a large part o f a $25 million initial bonus from the consortium to the Chad government was used for purchase o f military equipment. The government explained that not only was the bonus not included in the 2000 Program agreement but also that the military procurement had been concluded beforehand. This was the case, but the use o f the bonus was nevertheless seen by the Bank (and others) as 7 directly contradicting the spirit o f the agreement to devote the bulk o f the o i l revenues to the priority sectors. 10 1-18 In early 2005, shortly after the beginning o f significant o i l revenue flows, the government began to push for amending the 1999 Petroleum Revenue Management L a w (PRML) in order to expand the fiscal space for expenditure o n other than the agreed “priority” sectors and also use the funds for general budget financing. Whether triggered by the unexpectedly early inflow o f o i l revenue or the re-emerging security problem or both, the request was an unwelcome surprise for the Bank and other development partners (although not to those who had been critical o f Bank involvement from the start). The Bank urged the government to give the agreed arrangements some time to work as designed. An increasingly acrimonious exchange o f views followed, concluding in December 29 with a unilateral decision by the government to amend the PRML-eliminating the Future Generations Fund, using the $36 million in the fund to finance the deficit, and adding justice, territorial administration, and security to the priority sectors (leaving almost no “non-priority” sectors).” Already forewarned by the dialogue o f the previous months, the Bank responded one week later by suspending disbursements on all Bank operations and freezing government withdrawals from the revenue escrow account. 1.19 After a two-month hiatus, the dialogue resumed and an interim agreement was reached, whereby the government agreed to revise the 2006 budget to allocate to “priority sectors” (not including security) 70 percent o f all budgetary resources regardless o f source (a much greater amount that the earlier 85 percent o f o i l royalties and dividends only), and the Bank accepted the abolition o f the Future Generations Fund (FGF), lifted the suspension o f disbursements, and effected a partial release o f funds from the escrow account. l2 1.20 The interim agreement was followed by a Memorandum o f Understanding in July 2006, negotiated with the direct involvement o f the WBG President’s office and intended to reshape a permanent arrangement. The M O U called for preparing the 2007 budget within a medium-term expenditure framework to be agreed; set at 70 percent the minimum expenditure to be allocated to the priority sectors; and reaffirmed the essential role o f the CoZZbge and the need for strengthening its capacity. However the 70 percent figure may have 10. Tension with the Bank next started in late 2003, partly in connection with the capacity-building project. As discussed in Annex C the government complained that expatriate consultants were not transferring knowledge, and local counterparts resented them. With the project almost fully disbursed, when a new task team leader was appointed a proposal was made for a follow-up project. Because the government had stated i t s opposition to borrowing for technical assistance, the follow-up project was proposed as a grant. The government rejected it. Some interlocutors believe that by that time the president was unhappy with the Bank and increasingly resentful o f external scrutiny o f government dealings with the petroleum sector. 11. The government position i s that this action was not “unilateral,” as it was taken at the behest o f civil society organizations opposed to the Fund and by the Assembly rather than by the executive branch. This position i s not supported by the timing and tone o f the letters sent to the Bank (and the IMF) in 2005. 12.The effectiveness o f the escrow account mechanism was weakened when the-Consortium suspended for a period o f time payment into the escrow account at the request o f the Government o f Chad. The Consortium requested and obtained a waiver from IBRD and EIB. There are unconfirmed reports o f a government nationalization threat. From that point on, in the words o f one interlocutor, “the revenue lockbox turned out to be made o f tissue paper.” 8 been derived, l3 it was a much more ambitious expenditure target than the original ones, since it applied to revenue from all sources rather than only direct oil revenue. 1.21 In the meantime, in a critical development not recognized in the MOU, the government had also attached to the Ministry o f Infrastructure the General Directorate of Major Works and Presidential Projects (in December 2005), and in May 2006 entrusted to that ministry all responsibility for roads and other surface transport, construction, water works, and energy.14 The dominant position o f the Minister o f Infrastructure was further signaled in the January 2007 decree restructuring the government, in which he i s listed immediately after the Prime Minister and i s given the authority to “conceive, coordinate, implement and monitor government policy in infrastructure and transport” [italics added], including, among other things, “centralization o f the execution o f all public infrastructures financed by the state’s own resources.” l5 CLOSURE IN 2008 1.22 The 2006 M O U also called for Bank-government consultations on the implementation o f the agreed measures. For this purpose, a multidonor mission in July 2007 concluded that, although the 2007 budget had initially allocated the agreed 70 percent of revenues to the priority sectors, deviations in budget execution in the first few months indicated that less than 60 percent was likely to be achieved for the year. Moreover, the financial management regulations were regularly flouted, and large procurements were increasingly awarded on a sole-source basis. As foreseen by the July 2007 mission, actual expenditures in 2007 did not meet the allocations agreed in the 2006 M O U and incorporated in the budget, due primarily to sharp increases in military spending, and about 58 percent was spent on the priority sectors instead o f the agreed 70 percent. (Recall that the “priority sectors” include the bulk o f government economic and social activity.) 1.23 Wishing to bring i t s involvement to a close, the Bank first inquired indirectly and informally in March 2008 whether Chad would voluntarily repay the outstanding IBRD loan balance for the pipeline project as well as the balances on the two IDA projects, and then more directly asked in August.16 These loan balances, totaling $65.7 million, were repaid in full by Chad on September 5, and the event was publicly announced on September 12. World Bank Group involvement did not cease, however, with IFC continuing to monitor the environmental and social aspects o f the pipeline project. 1.24 Meanwhile, the Bank had closed the N’djamena office at end-January, as did other donors, owing to an impending rebel attack. After the attack was repulsed, the other donors reopened their offices. The Bank did not and reassigned the resident country manager. In 13. Attempts at fmding the reasons and basis for that specific percentage target were fruitless. 14. Decree No.264/PR/PM/MI/2006. 15. Decree no.O39/PR/PM/2007 16. The option was among those the AFR vice-presidency listed earlier in 2005 for the president’s consideration as part o f the possible response to a decision by the government o f Chad to amend the petroleum revenue management law. Then AFRVP considered the action unnecessary and unprecedented and recommended against it. The action was not taken on that occasion. 9 October-November, after an eight-month hiatus, a multisector mission to review the status of Bank activities outside the petroleum sector visited Chad; on December 12,2008, the Bank President authorized the reopening o f the Bank office in N’djamena; and the office reopened in January 2009. 2. Program Objectives and Broad Outcomes 2.1 Other than the important environmental and social aspects, the focus o f the program was o n Chad, and the involvement o f Cameroon was a corollary, required to get the o i l from land-locked Chad to the market. In Cameroon, the program provided a small but significant economic stimulus-both through the temporary employment and income generated by the pipeline construction itself, and permanently through the pipeline revenue-both the transit fees and the tax revenue-which has amounted to around 1.3 percent o f the government’s total revenue. The capacity-building outcomes were less favorable, as discussed in Annex B. However, the WBG involvement was critical for the satisfactory handling o f the direct environmental and social impact o f the o i l development and pipeline construction. 2.2 The broad impacts o f the program were almost entirely o n Chad-to which most o f this section i s dedicated. The influence o f o i l production, export, and revenue proved dominant on the country’s economic performance and public finances during 2003-08. For this reason, it would be quite inadequate to limit the assessment to the direct impact on fiscal revenue and expenditure on the priority sectors, and this section discusses also the broad macroeconomic, fiscal, poverty, governance, and institutional outcomes. Nevertheless, it would not be methodologically justified to associate these broad outcomes directly and solely with the o i l development and pipeline program-let alone to claim causation by association. The data presented in this section are guideposts for informed inferences to be made by the reader, based also on a variety o f other information (including the severe security difficulties the government encountered after 2005, and the problems o f the cotton sector). WBG STRATEGY AND DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES Escaping the “Resource Curse”? The WBG Strategy 2.3 The Bank was keenly aware o f the “paradox o f plenty” and the risks o f the “resource curse.” l7A major workshop was organized in 1998 to review the experience o f the major 17. The “paradox o f plenty” refers to the coexistence o f mass poverty and valuable mineral resources. T h e notion that abundant natural resources might be a curse rather than a blessing f i r s t emerged in the 1980s. Although such abundance should help development by providing the government and the private sector with capacity to finance productive investments and poverty reduction, most mineral-rich countries seemed to show lower economic growth and weaker governance. T h i s “resource curse” has been attributed to the misappropriation o f the revenue by an unaccountable ruling elite and to the exclusion o f most citizens from political participation-through the use of the revenue to finance bribery and mechanisms o f repression. The second major explanation is “Dutch disease,” that is, the discouragement o f domestic production o f other exportables and import-competing goods by the exchange rate appreciation caused by the abundant proceeds from exports o f minerals. Finally, it i s also thought that abundant mineral resources are linked to civil conflict through the violent competition for control over the resources. See Karl (1997) for an early statement o f the 10 extractive resource exporters and prepare the ground for recommendations on how to help Chad escape the resource curse. The workshop showed that among developing countries only a handful o f the major extractive resource exporters had managed to use the bulk of the export revenue for productive purposes and avoid governance and corruption problems- Botswana in Africa, Chile in Latin America, and to some extent Malaysia and Indonesia in Asia.18 Although these exceptions were unrelated to external aid, the WBG concluded after intense debate that its direct involvement could help increase the otherwise very l o w probability that Chad’s people would escape the o i l curse, and thus decided to support the program and to do so beyond I F C participation-to include capacity-building activities as well as devising the novel revenue management and institutional arrangements summarized earlier. 2.4 The contrast between Chad’s extreme poverty and the riches lying under its soil was at the core o f the WBG motive to help tap those riches and find new ways to channel a large part o f them to Chad’s development and to the well-being o f poor Chadians. This strategic rationale was strong and clear; i t s articulation into the specific project development objectives was neither. Program and Project Development Objectives 2.5 The specific objectives o f the individual projects, evaluated in the Annexes, were subsidiary to the main development objective o f the program as a whole, which related to Chad. As stated in the Chad Country Assistance Strategies (CASs) and confirmed by the internal documentation and stakeholder interviews, this main objective was to achieve progress in governance and poverty reduction by means o f the o i l revenue, and in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner. As a senior manager put it at the time, the success o f the program would be measured not in dollars but in how many Chadians it would lift out o f poverty. In the 2001 CAS this objective was formulated as helping Chad use the petroleum resources to attempt to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, and the 2003 CAS stated “the overarching objective” as making the best possible developmental use o f the ’ ~ CAS went further, and identified the two “pillars” as “strengthening new o i l r e v e n ~ e . That governance, including institutional arrangements for public resource management and service “paradox o f plenty,” and Sachs and Warner (1999) for the negative correlation between natural resources and economic growth. For more recent treatments o f the resource curse, see Ghazvinian 2007, McFerson 2008 and Shaxson 2007. On the hypothesis o f resource-driven conflict, see Bannon and Collier 2003. For an opposing view, see Di John (2007), who argues that the premice o f the oil-conflict link (rent-seeking and the rentier state model) do not explain why o i l economies are more vulnerable to civil war-nor indeed that there i s strong empirical evidence that an oil-conflict link exists. The “resource curse” i s neither exclusively not inevitably African, as demonstrated by the record o f Botswana with both good governance and abundant minerals (in this case, diamonds). 18. W h i l e acknowledging that there i s no theoretical presumption on whether malgovernance produces mineral resource misappropriation and conflict, or social peace and the quality o f governance are damaged by large mineral resource revenues, McFerson (2008) argues that malgovernance comes f i r s t and resource revenue misappropriation follows and further weakens governance. 19. The 1996 CAS for Chad, before serious consideration o f WBG involvement in the o i l development and pipeline construction, lists the three strategic objectives as restoring public sector capacity, focusing public expenditure on poverty reduction, and creating an enabling environment for the private sector. 11 delivery [and] the r u l e o f law.. .”; and “enhancing non-oil economic opportunities while reducing sources o f vulnerability.” 2.6 Accordingly, while the outcomes o f each project are assessed against its stated PDOs, the outcomes o f the program as a whole are assessed against the main objective o f improving governance and reducing poverty in Chad through the use o f the o i l revenue-“to turn the o i l curse into an o i l blessing” (in the motto o f Chad’s own CollBge de ContrGle) in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner. 2.7 The PDOs o f the five projects, summarized in Table 1, are examined in the Annexes. However, the PDOs o f the main o i l development and pipeline construction project should be quoted here, owing to their influence on program design. As per the respective loan agreements: For Cameroon, the objective is to “assist in the development and export through the Borrower’s territory o f the petroleum reserves o f the Doba Basin Oil Fields [in Chad] in an environmentally and socially sound manner, and thereby, inter alia, increase the Borrower’s fiscal revenues available for financing priority development expenditures in the context o f the Borrower’s strategy for economic growth and poverty reduction.” For Chad, the objective i s to “assist in the development and export through Cameroon o f the petroleum reserves o f the Doba Basin O i l Fields in an environmentally and socially sound manner and thereby, inter alia, increase the Borrower’s resources and expenditures for poverty alleviation.” 2.8 Clearly, production and export o f o i l are not, i n themselves, development objectives. Indeed, the term “thereby” implies that the objective was to increase fiscal revenues (for Cameroon) and expenditures for poverty reduction (for Chad). But even that objective was inappropriately phrased for Chad, on two counts. First, the objective i s defined in terms o f inputs, and it cannot be a development objective to spend more o n one activity or another. Worse, defining the objective as “increasing expenditures” can be misinterpreted as an open invitation to loosen expenditure controls and/or engage in wasteful expenditure-as demonstrated by the experience with the typical recommendations o f the Public Expenditure Reviews o f the 1980s. It is surprising to still find that approach at work in 1999, when the need for some orientation toward the results o f public spending was already well understood at the Bank. 2.9 The emphasis o n inputs affected project design in ways that proved ineffective. Also, it risked putting the Bank in a decisional bind-if the aggregate expenditure targets were met but in wasteful or corrupt ways, or they were not met but the quality o f expenditure and provision o f services actually improved nonetheless. A s it happened, the expenditure targets were not met and the efficiency o f expenditure was wanting-partly from waste and abuse and partly from a failure to integrate current and capital spending decisions. The PDOs should have been defined in a way to foster positive rather than negative incentives to spend the o i l money efficiently and effectively. 2.10 In the case o f Cameroon, while the objective “increasing fiscal revenue available for financing priority development expenditures,. .” was also input-defined, it provided latitude 12 and i s less o f a simple urging to “spend more”-as it permitted an increase in development expenditure but without mandating amounts and thus not embedding a disincentive to efficiency. (Naturally, this was associated with the relatively minor proportion o f government revenue accounted for by the pipeline transit fees and other revenues in Cameroon.) Program and Project Risks 2.1 1 The WBG was fully cognizant o f the environmental and social impact risks o f o i l development and pipeline construction, and assured that the project would meet the highest standards o f environmental and social protection through a detailed and comprehensive Environmental Management Plan and provisions for addressing the social implications o f the project. 2.12 Foremost was the risk that Chad’s o i l revenue would not be allocated to pro-poor and pro-development expenditure, owing to the governance weaknesses in the country-indeed, that the o i l revenue i t s e l f would aggravate these weaknesses and possibly lead to renewed conflict after several years o f comparative stability. The mitigation strategy was to set up the unusually detailed and prescriptive set o f revenue earmarking and institutional arrangements embodied in the 1999 Petroleum Revenue Management Law. 2.13 Other major risks were also identified at an early stage, even though strong mitigation measures were not possible. These were a spillover from the crisis in Darfur; waning government commitment after the o i l would begin to flow; and social unrest if the o i l revenue was not used for pro-poor, pro-development activities. To an extent, all three occurred: a Darfur spillover and social resentment may be reflected in the internal violence experienced in Chad since 2003, and government commitment indeed declined. RESULTS DIRECT Physical, Technical, and Financial Outcomes 2.14 The total project cost through end-2008 was $6.5 billion, compared to the original estimate o f $3.7 billion, with the difference funded by the consortium. Also, owing to unexpected geological reasons and poor well productivity, actual o i l production was below the expected levels. However, the physical and technical aspects o f the program proceeded better than expected, with strong environmental and social impact safeguards; the pipeline constructed ahead o f schedule; and the o i l flowing earlier than anticipatedS2’Financially, too, the outcomes for Chad were much better than expected. The original projections were that o i l exports would begin at end-2004; direct revenue would total about $250 million in 2005-08; and indirect revenues in the form o f taxes would start in 2014. In fact, as Table 2 shows, o i l exports started in October 2003; direct revenues to Chad totaled $2.5 billion in the five years 20. Production levels were disappointing leading to an expansion from the initial three to six oil fields, earlier than anticipated. EEPCI has started an infill drilling program, which could lead to the possibility that about 700-800 wells will be drilled in the OFDA, against the 300 planned originally (ECMG, April-May 2009). There i s a difference in views between IFC and EEPCI on the timing o f the infill drilling program. Based on information from the ECMG reports from 2005, among other sources, IFC considers that the infill drilling began in 2005; EEPCI states that the infill drilling began in mid-2008, and the additional wells drilled between 2003 and 2008 were development wells within the original 40-acre well-spacing pattern. 13 2003-07 (and $1.9 billion in 2008 alone); and tax revenues began to accrue eight years earlier than foreseen, in 2006. This large discrepancy was due mainly to the difference between the projected o i l price o f $15.25/b1 and the actual average price o f $65/bl. in 2004-07. 21 In total, during 2003-08, Chad’s government revenue from o i l was almost $4.4 billion-1 7 times what had been projected and almost twice as much as non-oil revenue from all sources. 22 Cameroon’s revenue from the pipeline transit fees as well as dividends and taxes on COTCO was also significant, totaling over $200 million in 2003-08 (about 1.5 percent o f total government revenue), although lower than expected owing to the smaller level o f production and thus o f direct and indirect pipeline revenue. 2.15 This record o f technical and financial success i s in stark contrast with the implementation o f the poverty reduction, governance, expenditure management, and institutional aspects o f the program, as explained next. Indeed, because the oil revenues dwarfed total foreign aid, the basic “leverage calculus” o f the program was sharply altered. 2.16 On the other hand, the rapid rise in oil price makes it virtually certain, in hindsight, that the consortium companies (or a competitor) would have proceeded with developing the oil fields and building the pipeline with or without WBG involvement-albeit perhaps a couple o f years later-and thus without the value added o f this involvement in terms o f environmental and social protection as well as probably a greater amount o f resources effectively allocated to development and poverty reduction than would otherwise have been the case. If the WBG involvement were to be assessed against this counterfactual scenario, it could be viewed as relatively successful. Table 2. Cameroon and Chad: Oil Production and Revenue (*) (In millions o f barrels and millions o f US$) 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Prod Rev Prod Rev Prod Rev Prod Rev Prod Rev Prod Rev Cameroon Chad ~ 8.6 8.6 45 4 I 4:: 25 167 63.3 63.3 300 26 Source: Proiect Updates, various issues, Esso-Chad (www.essochad.com) 55.9 55.9 23 I77 52.1 52.7 22 1,220 46.5 46.5 19 1,814 (*) Revenue shown for Cameroon i s from the pipeline transit fees only. Cameroon also received, an additional $84 million from taxes on COTCO and dividends, for total revenue in 2003-08 o f $203 million, or about 1.5 percent of total government revenue. In Chad, revenue was limited to royalties and dividends until 2005 but includes also indirect oil revenue from income taxes from 2006. 21. Chad’s oil i s not o f the highest quality and sells at a discount o f 10-20 percent. 22. Cameroon revenue, instead, was less than projected, as a consequence o f the lower volume o f oil going through the pipeline-currently 120,000 bls/day instead o f the 250,000 projected in the PAD. 14 Figure 2: Actual and Estimated Oil Production and Revenue, Cameroon and Chad, 2003-08 (in millions o f barrels and US$millions) a. Production - -Actual 100 - -Estimated 80 60 40 20 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Years b. Revenue Cameroon - 35 - - ---------- ---- - - --Estimated I 30 - / / I 25- .- B 0 20- E 2 15- 3 10 - 5- 0 I I I I I 1 c. Revenue - Chad 2,000 2 1,500 Estimate - .- 0 *E 1,000 E 500 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Years 15 Direct Benefitsfor Employment, the Local Economy, and the Private Sector 2.17 In addition to the revenue to the governments, the project generated direct benefits to both Chad and Cameroon in the form o f employment, training, supplier development, infrastructure improvements, and community donations by the consortium. 2.18 Employment o f nationals peaked during the pipeline construction phase. Currently, project-related employment in Chad i s for the construction o f new wells and the production operations and maintenance activities and, in Cameroon, for the maintenance or improvement o f facilities. Through end-2008, a total o f over $19.7 million in individual compensation (cash and in-kind) has been provided. The project has also undertaken community compensation programs with in-kind micro-development programs and a number o f community donations (such as classrooms and health clinics) in the two countries, totaling $12.25 million so far. 2.19 The project has strengthened private sector activity in the two countries. As explained in Annex E, IFC launched the Chad Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) Initiative in June 2000 as a linkage project to support the pipeline project. The SME program received traction from EEPCI during the operation phase o f the project, when there was a realignment o f interests between EEPCI’s need for local content and the revamped SME program. The SME program currently focuses on four areas: entrepreneurshipcapacity building, business linkages, access to finance, and business enabling environment. As part o f the linkages component, IFC founded the Enterprise Center (EC) in partnershipwith the Chamber o f Commerce in November 2005, to help Chadian companies access EEPCI’s e-procurement system and compete for contracts. The purchase o f goods and services in-country and development o f long-term supplier relationships have supported the development o f the local private sector. The project’s local purchases o f goods and services totaled almost $1.9 billion so far, o f which about $1.2 billion in Chad.23 MACROECONOMIC, FISCAL, DEVELOPMENTS AND EXPENDITURE Macroeconomic and Fiscal Outturn 2.20 As noted, the expectation at entry was that Chad would make the best possible use o f the o i l revenue to reduce poverty and improve governance. Moreover, the second pillar o f the 2003 CAS for Chad called for enhancing non-oil economic opportunities while reducing sources o f vulnerability. So far, the objective o f strengthening the non-oil economy has not been met, with a 2.2 percent average GDP growth rate in 2004-08 compared to 3.8 percent in 1994-2000. (The post-oil performance would compare even more unfavorably to the 6.8 percent pre-oil average growth in 2001-03, but that high growth was affected by the 23. Figures for local spending by the consortium include purchases from three types o f businesses: purely local, purely foreign, and joint ventures. In 2008, total expenditure by EEPCI in Chad was $400 million for foreign supplies and $200 million for local purchases (of which half purely local and halfjoint ventures). However, available evidence suggests that purchases from local suppliers account for a small portion o f EEPCI’s annual procurement in Chad. For example, the Enterprise Center which was created in December 2004 as a partnership between IFC, the Chamber o f Commerce o f Chad, and EEPCI has so far helped 19 local and joint venture companies get contracts worth $33.2 million. Given that EEPCIxxon’s annual procurement in Chad i s currently about $300 million, there i s significant untapped potential for Chadian SMEs. See Annex E for more information. 16 temporary expenditures to develop the o i l fields and build the pipeline.) Also, fiscal vulnerability has increased. Table 3 shows the major macroeconomic and fiscal outturns in Chad, from 2000 through 2008. The data show how oil production in Chad has dominated economic developments so far in this century, with ensuing fluctuations in GDP.24The performance o f the non-oil economy has been somewhat less volatile but generally disappointing, and overall GDP has stagnated after 2005. Table 3. Broad Macroeconomic and Fiscal Aggregates, Chad, 2000-2008 (*) (CFAF billion) Indicator 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 /PreL) I n percent: GDP real growth 0.6 9.5 8.5 14.7 31.3 '12.2 0.2 0.2 -0.4 olw: non-oil 0.6 9.5 6.9 6.0 -0.5 0.4 4.7 3.1 3.2 Inflation (CPI) 3.8 12.4 5.2 -1.8 -5.4 7.8 7.9 -8.8 8.1 I n percent of non-oil GDP: Govt revenue 8.0 7.6 8.4 9.1 14.4 17.3 31.8 41.6 51.2 olw oil revenue - - - - 4.2 . 7.8 23.0 30.6 41.5 Govt expenditure 20.3 18.3 20.9 25.5 24.5 24.2 30.9 38.6 42.1 Current 10.0 9.1 10.4 11.0 11.3 11.2 19.6 25.2 29.6 olw wages and salaries 4.4 4.1 4.6 5.4 5.8 6.0 6.7 8.3 9.1 Investment 10.3 9.2 10.5 14.6 13.2 13.0 11.3 13.3 12.5 Non-oil primary balance -0.9 -0.8 -2.4 -3.2 -3.9 -5.1 -15.0 -22.0 -28.1 Overall fiscal balance -12.4 -10.7 -12.9 -16.1 -8.8 -8.0 -1.6 2.3 8.1 Sources: Ministry of Finance, IMF Staff Reports for the Art I V Consultations, 2001,2003,2006 and 2008. World Bank 2002 and 2006. (*) Annual average for inflation; the wage bill includes both civilian and military wages; the fiscal balance excludes grants. 2.21 The structural fiscal position has become weaker over the oil period, with the non-oil primary deficit worsening from a modest 4 percent o f non-oil GDP in 2004 to about 28 percent in 2 0 0 8 4 u e to higher spending in all areas, but especially in security. With the wage bill alone absorbing the entirety o f non-oil tax revenue, the IMF estimates that Chad's fiscal sustainability i s injeopardy in both the medium and the long term, absent major adjustments by the government. 25 The concern i s not with an increase in the non-oil primary deficit, per se, but with the rapid increase in current expenditure in the past three years and the composition o f expenditure, discussed next. n Chad GNP i s a better measure of economic activity, as GDP includes the 24. Indeed, it can be argued that i substantial contribution from the Consortium. Focusing on non-oil GDP, of course, obviates this difficulty. 25. See I M F 2009. With the sharp fall in the price of o i l and thus much lower-than-expected government revenues, 2009 will require particularly difficult adjustments with an impact on the real economy and social development, the magnitude of which will depend on those choices and on the manner in which they are implemented. 17 2.22 It i s conceivable that the additional government spending o f 2005-08 may have served to expand the economic base and thus improve both the fiscal and the macroeconomic picture in the long term. For this to be credible, one would expect to see an improved economic and functional composition o f expenditure, as well as evidence o f greater efficiency-particularly in investment. The evidence does not support this hypothesis, rather the reverse. Expenditure Composition and Efficiency 2.23 Economic composition o f expenditure. The economic composition has worsened, with current expenditure averaging 10 percent o f non-oil GDP in 2001-04 and 2 1 percent in 2005-08, compared with a constant investment ratio (around 12 percent o f non-oil GDP during the period). And with a wage bill (civilian and military, with 85,000 soldiers o n the payroll) rising to 9 percent o f non-oil GDP and over 90 percent o f the operational budget, operational efficiency too i s likely to have diminished. 2.24 Despite the aggregate increase in current spending, the critical balance between investment and recurrent costs was not achieved in many investment projects. The program called for expenditure to be driven by “program budgets” formulated by the “priority” ministries to implement the respective sector objectives, which in turn were expected to be consistent with the thrust o f the overall poverty reduction strategy. However, as o f mid-2005, several “priority” ministries (including education and social protection, among others) lacked any coherent strategy (World Bank 2006b). Also, progress in implementation o f the I-PRSP and the first PRSP was “rather limited,” with “significant delays” and without stakeholder consultation; procedural steps in economic governance had not translated into improvements; and there was no evidence o f a fit between the activities in the priority sectors and either the poverty or the sector strategies.26(With the new PRSP delayed until 2008, such consistency could not have improved after 2005.) 2.25 An especially important obstacle to better current-investment integration was the 2005 decision to centralize authority for physical investments and their execution in the Ministry o f Infrastructure, reporting to the President. The stated rationale was to achieve quick and visible results. Without commenting on the rationale, this precluded programming of expenditure by the competent line ministries; confirmed the “program budgets” as a time- consuming irrelevancy; made it difficult to ensure adequate provision o f recurrent costs; and diluted both the authority and the accountability o f the line ministries for accomplishing results in their sector^.^' 2.26 Functional composition o f expenditure. The functional composition o f expenditure was the central focus o f the program and o f the o i l revenue management arrangements. As noted earlier, the revenue percentages to be devoted to expenditure in the “priority sectors” originally applied only to the direct o i l revenue (royalties and dividends), allowing the government full latitude for the allocation o f other domestic revenue. In the initial years, the budgetary allocations were reasonably close to the agreed percentages, and despite the 26. See the PRSP progress assessment in World Bank 2005; see also the 2000 and 2003 PRSPs. 27. In some cases, physical infrastructure was built against the express wishes o f the concerned line ministry. 18 divergence between budgets and outturns, actual expenditure on the priority sectors did increase. Table 4 shows budgeted and actual expenditures from domestic revenue (including oil) on priority and non-priority sectors, for 2004-06 and separately for 2007 (which was the reference year for the 2006 MOU). During 2004-06, actual expenditure from domestic revenue was about 86 percent o f the budgeted amount. In itself, this would not indicate unmanageable budget execution problems, except for the substantial intersector variance in execution rates, with total actual expenditure in the “priority sectors” about 77 percent o f the budgeted amount, compared to over 96 percent for the “non-priority” sectors. Moreover, the execution rate in 2004-06 was at 92 percent for expenditure on infrastructure and only 71 percent o f expenditure on the other priority sectors. Table 4. Chad: Domestic Budget and Actual Expenditure, various sectors, 2004-06 and 2007 (*) (in billions o f CFAF and percent) 2004-2006 2007 Expenditure Budget Outturn Outturd Budget Outturn Outturd Category (CFAF bn) (CFAF bn) Budget (CFAF bn) (CFAF bn) Budget (perceni) (percent) TOTAL 951.0 817.9 86 762.5 696.5 91 “Non-priority” sectors 432.8 417.3 96 301.2 294.1 98 “Priority sectors” 518.2 400.6 77 461.3 402.4 87 Of which: Infrastructure 138.0 126.9 92 138.6 125.4 90 Health+educ.+rural devt 294.0 227.3 77 240.0 206.6 86 Other “priority” sectors 86.2 46.4 54 82.7 70.4 85 Memorandum; Health+educ.+rural devt 31 28 31 30 as % o f total expenditure Source: Based on Ministry o f Finance data and Bank staff estimates. At the time o f the evaluation, no data were available on the intersectoral execution o f the 2008 budget. (*) Includes expenditure financed from oil revenue but excludes foreign-financed expenditure 2.27 In 2007, some changes for the better took place. The budget allocation to priority sectors rose to 60 percent, and actual expenditure to 58 percent (compared to the 70 percent agreed in the 2006 MOU). The overall budget execution rate increased to 91 percent and, although s t i l l significantly lower in priority sectors, the expenditure outturn in priority sectors increased to 87 percent o f the budgeted amount. Overall, during 2004-07 the share o f actual expenditure going to the priority sectors increased significantly, from 49 to 58 percent, and over one-quarter o f government expenditure from own resources (CFAF 434 billion, almost $1 billion) went to health, education and rural development. While this i s a shortfall from the 19 agreed expectations, it does represent a substantial allocation o f public funds.28 The issue i s h o w well the money was spent. 2.28 Efficiency o f expenditure. In the aggregate, the efficiency o f public spending has been harmed by lengthy delays in putting in place the budget, and by violations o f the basic procurement and financial management rules. In addition to the growing reliance on sole- source contracts (one-third o f total contracts in 2005 and almost half in 2008), the signing o f contracts without budgetary cover has become widespread. This practice disables financial control o n budget execution (and thus accounting and payment controls as well) and generates anomalies such as large advance payments followed by some initial work, but without completion-either because the balance o f the contract cost i s not budgeted or from simple lack o f oversight (or for other reasons). 29 2.29 Moreover, although for some government entities the expenditure cycle is extremely short and simple because they are allowed to short-circuit all established procedures, most ministries are subject to the official expenditure cycle-highly centralized even for a francophone system, complex and inefficient, and with multiple redundant controls. 30 2.30 These and other problems were already apparent in 2005, and the 2006 PER Update forthrightly concluded that “Chad is at a crossroads.” While budget preparation has improved somewhat since then, budget execution has remained disorderly and unpredictable-with the resulting discrepancy between the efforts to meet the agreed targets in the budget and the actual outturn. 2.3 1 Aside from the inefficiencies flowing from systemic budgeting weaknesses, there were efficiency issues in specific public services. The investments in roads (paved roads increased from just 300 kilometers in 2001 to 1,200 kilometers in 2008) and in water supply carry the potential to strengthen economic connectivity and improve sanitation in the long run.31 The same cannot be said for the investments in health and primary education, where neither o f the two fundamental investment criteria--conformity with identified needs and provision o f current inputs-has been observed. In primary education, school construction 28. In addition, substantial expenditures for school, clinic, and hospital construction were included in the infrastructure budget-increasing the total expenditure for the social sectors. However, it i s questionable whether such expenditure resulted in actual service improvements, as explained later. 29. The fundamental need for budgetary rule compliance was stressed as early as the 2002 PER (World Bank n the 2004 PER 2002), and the mounting problems o f budget execution were candidly and forcefully identifiedi and the 2006 PER Update (World Bank 2004b and 2006b). 30. T h i s issue was f i r s t identified in the 2004 CFAA (World Bank 2004). The simplification of procedures i s an urgent priority o f future budget reform through the multidonor PAMFIP program (Program d’Appui a la Modernisation de l a Gestion des Finances Publiquestfor both efficiency and anti-corruption reasons. 3 1. However, little attention was paid to rural roads-which are critical for connectivity. In particular, roads in cotton-growing areas remain in poor condition, and Coton Tchad reports that nothing was done to improve them in 2008, even though the funds were included in the Ministry of Infrastructure budget. In 2008, infrastructure spending turned to construction i n the capital, with priority given to repairing the buildings damaged in the February rebel attacks. Substantial “urban renewal” i s also underway, but by evicting people from their premises (IAG 2009). The inevitable resentment has been compounded by the sudden government prohibition on the use of charcoal and firewood, without providing alternatives. 20 has been inconsistent with local needs (for example, standard six-classroom schools were built regardless o f local school-age population in the district) and with the availability of teachers and supplies. As a result, some communities have empty classrooms while others lack school capacity and have been forced to build straw shelters. The situation has been worse in health, where more than half o f the facilities to be constructed did not appear in the l i s t o f priorities defined by the Ministry o f Health, and most were not provided with the personnel, equipment, and medicines needed for their functioning. As a result, several o f the sites had to be replaced with others after contracts were signed or construction completed, and the 14 hospitals and 85 health centers that were built will be unable to render any service for years. (See Dupety 2007. On the issue o f “leakages” o f resources in Chad’s public health sector, see Gauthier and Wane 2007.) 2.32 . To these violations o f fundamental investment criteria must be added the excessive . ~ ~example, the average cost o f a primary classroom block has been cost o f c o n ~ t r u c t i o nFor CFAF 30 million (about $64,000), extremely high by comparison to either international or regional norms and double the cost o f construction financed through the state budget rather than through oil revenue. Construction o f health facilities has not shown the same degree o f excessive cost; however, if the facilities cannot be operational for lack o f complementary inputs, the entirety o f the construction cost can be said to be wasted and the cost- effectiveness o f the investment i s zero. The Provisional Committeefor the Management of Petroleum Revenues Allocated to the Producing Region 2.33 By contrast, some positive outcomes can be attributed to the program component that was designed to address the needs o f the oil-producing region in the south-both to compensate for adverse impacts o f o i l exploration and to foster regional participation and development. The allocation in the 1999 Petroleum Revenue Management L a w (PRML) o f 5 percent o f royalties was retained by the government even after the 2005 amendments o f the PRML, Pending the formation o f the local government entities, a Provisional Committee was formed to receive funding proposals and administer the activities (hereafter the Committee 5%). The resources have been regularly deposited in the Committee’s account at the Regional Central Bank and distributed among the districts o f the beneficiary region. I t i s true that the share o f o i l revenue devoted to the oil-producing region i s not commensurate with the region’s population or i t s needs, but the targeted effort i s nevertheless noteworthy. 2.34 Although detailed data on each project could not be collected, interviews and anecdotal evidence suggest that implementation has been comparatively satisfactory so far-especially after 2007, when the delegation given to the Ministry o f Infrastructure in 32. This has been due in part to unnecessary features (for example, a separate “administrative building” for each block o f primary classrooms), and in part to the use o f unusually expensive materials (for example, for roofing, which in addition to the higher cost created problems of darkness, lack o f ventilation and heat buildup); and other elementary design faults (for example, lack of access ramps in district hospitals). 21 this respect was ended and the Committee i t s e l f became responsible for contracting and implementati~n.~~ 2.35 Table 5 shows annual commitments and disbursementsunder the 5 percent provision during 2005-08. O f the cumulative total o f CFAF 56 billion (about $110 million equivalent), over 90 percent were committed and almost 80 percent disbursed. The number o f projects (66, not including microcredit) i s significant, with an average allocation o f CFAF 828 million (around $1.6 million) and the majority receiving less than CFAF 500 million. There i s no evidence o f white elephants. As Table 6 shows, the 10 largest projects received an average o f CFAF 1.6 billion (about $3.1 million) each and, with the possible exception of Doba Stadium, all appear to fill obvious development needs. Moreover, many were focused on provision o f potable water, with significant improvements in access to clean water, as shown in the next section. 2.36 Important criticisms have been raised. (See IAG 2009.) In general, the functioning o f the Committee suffered from political interference (as did the FACIL project and the College) and genuine consultation with the affected communities was insufficient. The allocation heavily favored urban areas rather than the villages; however, with most o f the population in the towns, access to basic services was expanded for a large number o f people. Also, a promising microcredit program addressed to the rural areas was begun in'2007, with initial results and currently 12,000 members in the voluntary groups. However, investment decisions have been insufficiently responsive to genuine community-driven demands, and improving such responsiveness should be a major objective in the future. Table 5. Commitments and Disbursements Under the Committee 5%, 2005-08 (in millions o f CFA) Year Allocated Committed Disbursed Remaining 2005 3,536 3,535 3,499 37 2006 5,139 5,139 4,406 733 2007 13,520 13,330 11,365 1,965 2008 33,200 29,204 24,402 4,802 Total 55,695 51,208 43,672 7,536 Average o f 66 projects 828 725 646 79 (excluding microcredit) Source: Committee 5%, Investments. 33. The organizational structure includes a Management Committee (composed o f one central government representative, two representatives o f civil society, two representatives o f traditional chiefs, and two Parliament members from the region), supported by a Technical Committee to review specific proposals for finding. Note that the activities under this rubric were different from those under the F A C I L program designed to address the social impact o f the o i l development and pipeline construction itself. 22 Table 6. Ten Largest Projects Financed Under the Committee 5%, 2005-08 (in millions o f CFA) Project name Enterprise Amount 1. Doba Public Market Almana 2,500 2. Doba Stadium SOGECT 2,200 3. Baibokum Potable Water STH 1,935 4. Bebedjia Public Market SACOGEN 1,787 5. Bebedjia Electrification Tropic-Methel 1,771 6. Baibokum Electrification MED 1,336 7. Gore Electrification Tropic-Methel 1,335 8. Bobo Lycee Construction SETUBA 1,155 9. Baibokum Lycee Constr. SETUBA 1,147 10. Beboto District Hospital OCG 873 Average amount 1,594 Percent o f total investments 28 Source: Committee 5%, Investments. POVERTY AND DEVELOPMENT HUMAN 2.37 Data on poverty and human development are few, many out o f date and some unreliable. It i s nevertheless useful to provide the available data and look at some intermediate outcomes. (Table 7.) The picture i s mixed, and there i s no clear evidence that, overall, human development in Chad has either improved or worsened since 2000. K e y health indicators show stagnation or deterioration since the early 2000s. A bright spot i s the large increase in access to clean water between 2000 and 2007, from 34 percent to 48 percent o f the population. (This i s consistent with the pattern o f investments in water supply, including by the Committee 5%.) (Table 7.) 23 Table 7. Selected Human Development Indicators, Chad, 2000 and 2007 Indicator 2000 2007 Infant mortality, per 1,000 (2000,2007) 122 124 Child mortality, per 1,000 (2000,2007) 205 209 Improved water source, percent (2000,2007) 34 48 Incidence o f TB, per 10,000 (2000,2007) 26 30 ~~ ~ ~ Human Development (1997-2006) Index 0.393 0.389 World ranking 1621174 1701179 Human Poverty (1997-2006) Poverty index (percent) 52 56 World ranking 86190 133/135 L i f e expectancy at birth (1997-2006) Number o f years 47.2 50.4 World ranking 1621174 161/179 Sources: UNDP 1999 and 2008 for the first three indicators. World Bank, World Development Indicators, and USAID 2008 for the last four indicators. Other sources give lower l i f e expectancy-below 50 in 2004 (e.g., IMF 2006, p. 113Fand the 2008 PRSP gives a 55% poverty headcount for 2003/2004, consistent with the figures for 1997 and 2006. 2.38 Also noteworthy, according to the 2008 PRSP, i s a substantial increase in school enrollment, for both boys and girls, to a gross enrollment rate o f 88 percent, among the highest in Africa. However, the PRSP acknowledges that the quality o f teaching has deteriorated: 42 percent o f classrooms are in poor condition, curricular materials do not meet educational standards, and most importantly, three out of: four primary school teachers are non-credentialed, community parateachers. (Although parateachers can have a very valuable role in primary education, they must receive adequate basic training. Also, for a time the government failed to pay them, although salary arrears have recently been reduced to eight months.) 2.39 As noted, data on poverty are insufficient to permit any analysis o f developments since 2000. With the emphasis given to poverty reduction in the program objective and in all other WBG interventions, it i s regrettable that the actual efforts at collecting reliable data on a timely basis and monitoring poverty and human developments have fallen short. However, by relying on civil society organizations and in other ways, systematic monitoring efforts by the Bank could have provided some reliable evidence in real time, even if partial, on human and poverty developments on the ground. (This failure i s in part linked to the program’s overemphasis on percentages and amounts o f expenditure rather than on i t s results.) 24 AND INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT GOVERNANCE Governance 2.40 Sudden revenue windfalls from extractive industries have led in most developing countries to a worsening o f the overall governance climate.34It is therefore critical that this evaluation review actual developments in this area. The 1996 CAS for Chad listed the restoration o f public sector capacity as the first strategic priority, and the first “pillar” o f the 2003 CAS was “strengthening governance, including institutional arrangements for public resource management and service delivery [and] the rule o f law.” N o progress has been registered either in economic governance in general or in public financial governance. Concerning public financial governance, Annex D shows h o w public financial management in 2008 in Chad was o n balance no better than in 2000 and in many respects worse. Concerning governance in general, whether measured by the Transparency International index, the M o Ibrahim Index o f African Governance, or the World Governance Indicators, there i s no evidence o f any improvement. The TI surveys show the same index o f perception o f corruption in 2008 as in 2004-1.7, second highest in Africa next to Nigeria and fourth highest in the world (www.transparency.org). The M o Ibrahim index o f rule o f law, transparency, and corruption has a score o f 40 for Chad in 2006-lower than any African country except for Angola, Sudan, and the Democratic Republic o f Congo (www.moibrahim.org). And the World Governance Indicators show deterioration on every dimension o f governance between 2000 and 2007 (Table 8). 35 2.41 The adverse governance developments are o f particular significance when compared to the Africa-wide picture, which shows progress in voice and accountability and in political stability. (In other governance areas, the continent’s relative position remained about the same between 2000 and 2007 although, given the substantial improvements in governance worldwide in recent years, this indicates a slight degree o f absolute improvement in Africa as well.) Although all governance measures are subject to some debate,36 the convergence o f all available indicators i s dispositive in this case. While it would not be appropriate to associate the sharp deterioration in governance directly with the program, it may not be a coincidence that the large increase in government revenue took place during the same period. Clearly, the WBG’s strong emphasis on improving accountability, the rule o f law, transparency, and participation had no discernible positive effects o n governance developments in Chad. In hindsight, the oft-stated government commitment to achieve those improvements i s highly questionable. I t must be underlined that protection o f human rights, control o f corruption, enforcement o f the rule o f law, and the management o f the economy for the benefit o f economic and human development are the fundamental responsibility o f a country’s 34. This was also a major criticism by some NGOs o f the Bank support for the program. (See, for example, EDF 2006 and Amnesty International 2005.) 35. Although not shown in the table, the decline has been especially pronounced after 2004. In the Chad government’s view, the governance weaknesses have been caused by the adverse security situation and frequent episodes o f rebellion. Other observers argue for the reverse causation, with insecurity and rebellion the result o f malgovernance, which i s i n keeping with the literature and empirical evidence on the “resource curse.” (See, among others, Amnesty International 2005 and EDF 2006.) 36. See Devarajan 2008. 25 government, and not o f the international institutions that may support i t s stated objectives and intentions. Table 8. Governance Indicators Percentile Rankings, Cameroon, Chad, and Africa, 2000-07 (*) ~~ Voice and Political Government Regulatory Rule of law Control of accountability stability effectiveness quality corruption Country 2000 2007 2000 2007 2000 2007 2000 2007 2000 2007 2000 2007 Cameroon 16 21 28 31 24 17 31 24 11 13 9 16 Chad 20 9 11 6 29 4 19 12 20 6 22 5 Rest o f 30.4 33.7 32.6 34.9 27.7 27.3 29.9 28.1 29.7 29.4 32.5 31.8 Africa (**) Institutional Development and Capacity Building 2.42 Because “capacity building” encompasses more than training, this section summarizes the program’s outcomes in capacity building in the broad sense, as including institutional development, that is, sustainable improvement in the basic rules, decision- making processes, and structure o f incentives. (As noted earlier, the risk to the program that the capacity-building efforts might not be successful was not recognized.) 2.43 Revenue transparency. A positive aspect o f the o i l revenue management arrangements enacted by the government o f Chad in 1999 was achieving a level o f revenue transparency nearly unique in Africa and nearing best international practice. 37 Equally important, during the past several ye.ars habits have been built in the direction o f openness rather than secrecy. Other resource exporters and the international community should look to the Chad-Cameroon program as an example o f how to achieve initial transparency in production and revenue from extractive industries. The issues are two. First, the continuation o f oil revenue transparency may be at risk: a state o i l company has been established; new external partners and other o i l companies are active; a new refinery i s being built with external assistance; the country has no independent capacity to monitor the o i l sector; and the Bank i s no longer involved. None o f these factors i s o f concern in itself, but together they add complexity and thus potential risks to transparency and resource integrity. 2.44 Given the controversial history o f the program, it i s unlikely that the government would wish to lose international credibility by weakening this success aspect o f the program. 37. Key factors include the legal obligation o f EEPCI to make public the oil liftings and corresponding f.0.b. export prices; the verification o f the amounts getting to the offshore terminal in Cameroon and publication o f the pipeline transit fees; consistency checks with the Citibank-managed account in London; and, on non-oil revenue, the improvements in the Ministry o f Finance capacity to project tax and non-tax revenues. 26 I t does appear critical, however, to take the steps needed to complete the process o f eligibility to the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI)38 and implement fully the obligations under the initiative. All such considerations affect the future and are thus beyond the scope o f this report. What is within the report’s scope is the second issue: even the fullest transparency in revenue has limited meaning without transparency in expenditure. In Chad, the expenditure side has been as opaque as the revenue side has been transparent. 2.45 Expenditure management. With the program’s earmarking o f direct o i l revenue for expenditure on “priority sectors,” budgeting in Chad-already segmented between domestically financed and aid-financed expenditure-became more fragmented still. In effect, the program caused Chad to operate four different budgets: the oil-financed budget, the aid-financed budget, the HIPC budget, and the domestic revenue-financed budget-with limited fungibility among them.39This was not a prescription for improving the institutional capacity o f the budgeting system in the long run. 2.46 In a context o f very weak budgeting and financial management capacity, the temptation to earmark certain revenues for categories o f expenditure important for development and poverty reduction i s understandable. However, institutional enclaves generally only work in the short term and, over time, tend to lead to systemic institutional damage and diminished capacity. The Bank understood this, but owing to the special risks o f this program chose to aim for the short-term achievements. Unfortunately, the ring-fencing did not even succeed in achieving either a reasonable intersectoral balance in the allocation o f expenditure (because the agreed target applied to total expenditure on all priority sectors combined), or a balance between investment and recurrent expenditure. 2.47 The original assumptions were that both balances could be achieved by: (i) the formulation o f “program budgets” in each priority ministry (in line with the PRSP and consistent with a rolling MTEF), with the corresponding integrated expenditure proposals vetted and cleared by the CoZZBge, and ( ii) systemic improvements in expenditure management would result from the periodic public expenditure reviews by the Bank. The logic was sound, but reality interfered. Progress in implementing the 2003 PRSP was extremely limited and the formulation o f the second PRSP was delayed; no MTEF was in fact produced before 2007; ministries’ “program budgets” were disconnected from fiscal realities; the budget was assembled by the Ministry o f Finance with little meaningful participation by the line ministries; neither the capacity nor the authority o f the CoZZBge came up to the original expectations; and the recommendations o f the PERs, presented with an increasing sense o f urgency, were mostly ignored. 38. The EITI i s intended to foster transparency o f revenue from extractive industries, and i s currently implemented in 25 countries. (See www.eitransparencv.org.) For eligibility, a country must meet reporting guidelines and fulfill a number of criteria. Chad’s intent was announced in 2007, but the government has failed to take necessary steps and i s not yet a formal candidate. (EITI++ refers to a World Bank concept to consider transparency throughout the value chain o f the extractive industry, rather than just the final stage. 39. The 2006 MOU attempted to partly redress this problem by extending the agreement to all revenue regardless of source. 27 2.48 Some improvements in budget preparation did take place in 2007, with a rudimentary three-year MTEF loosely based o n the PRSP that was being drafted, and for the first time there were meaningful discussions involving each line ministry and the ministry o f finance on options for expenditure programs. It is not clear whether this initial progress will be built upon. 40 2.49 Overall, while budget preparation has improved somewhat compared to 1999, budget execution has worsened. Despite positive steps, including the closing o f a large number of government accounts, a treasury single account system remains far from being achieved and-more importantly-the improved rules and financial management provisions put in place de jure have been violated de facto, routinely and with impunity. O n balance, available analyses and reports indicate that public financial management was no better in 2008 that in 1999, and the extensive technical assistance complementing the support for the program was largely wasted-in part due to inappropriate design and in part due to lack o f implementation by the government. (See Annex D.) 2.50 Accountability and participation. The External Compliance Monitoring Group (ECMG) and the International Advisory Group (IAG) were the two external bodies set up by the program to monitor, respectively, the environmental and social dimensions and the broader development and governance dimensions, and the CollBge de ContrGle was established in Chad to provide a measure o f social accountability and civil society participation in decision-making on the allocation o f o i l revenue. 2.5 1 The ECMG worked well, and its operation i s described in Annex A. The IAG performed its independent role through intensive missions in every year except 2008 (for security reasons), with the final one in January 2009. 41 The IAG advice has been viewed by WBG senior management as well as both governments as candid, competent, and constructive. This was a positive feature o f the program, and one worthy o f replication for large and complex Bank interventions in the future. 42 2.52 Also a positive feature, albeit much less successful in practice, has been the establishment o f the CollBge to monitor the uses o f the o i l revenue. The scorecard i s mixed. The entity attempted faithfully to fulfill its mandate, and had status and credibility, but was hampered by weak capacity and government support that was lukewarm at best. The technical staff, although both diligent and competent, was insufficient and financial resources were not commensurate with the envisaged role. However, with adequate government 40. A bright spot i s a proven anticorruption measure taken in a December 26,2008 circular to effect all salary payments for government employees by bank check or postal order and requiring all employees who do not have a bank or postal account to open one. 4 1. The I A G and IEG teams have exchanged views and logistic information during their work since January 2009, to the extent that it was proper given their different mandates. T h e final IAG report was published in September 2009. 42. The Bank has set up a similar international advisory group for the Nam Theun 2 hydroelectric project in Laos, with the government engaging a panel o f experts to monitor the environmental and social aspects o f the project; and the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline project financed by the IFC i n cooperation with the EBRD featured similar mechanisms. 28 support or at least facilitation, the capacity constraint could have easily been relieved. For example, the government resisted the appointment o f the civil society representatives, a defect that was supposed to be corrected after agreement on the 2006 MOU. However, except for the chairman, all members were replaced in 2008 by direct government appointment without consultation with the organizations they are supposed to represent. 2.53 On the positive side, the concern that the activities o f the CollBge (despite i t s lack o f formal executive authority) might overlap with those o f the ministry o f finance and planning, did not materialize. On the negative side, despite i t s good efforts, the CollBge was not in a position to fulfill the original expectations: its requests to the ministries for information were infrequently responded to and follow-up o f i t s recommendations has been increasingly weak. Yet, although currently in limbo, the CollBge i s the only remaining component o f the institutional structure originally put in place by the program, and may s t i l l have at least a modest influence for more effective investment and as a channel for voice. The concept was innovative as well as sound, and it, too, is worth considering for future major Bank-supported projects in other countries. AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS THEENVIRONMENTAL 2.54 Whereas environmental and social aspects could have been addressed through the standard safeguard screening procedures pertinent to a “Category A” project, the Bank went significantly beyond the requirements and processed two free-standing capacity-building IDA credits, to strengthen the capacity to manage the o i l sector, with special attention to social and environmental management in Chad and Cameroon. In addition to the main project, this section also assesses these two capacity-building projects. (For details, see Annexes A, Byand C.) Main Findings 2.55 For a full picture, it i s important to distinguish three time periods: pre-construction, during construction, and post-construction. The corresponding ratings are shown in Table 9, and developments in each period are summarized subsequently. In the table, the environmental and social aspects ratings relate to the o i l development and pipeline project and the ratings under institutional development relate to the two capacity-building projects. Although the last o f the projects was completed in November 2007, the ratings give some consideration to the issues that s t i l l need to be addressed, as well as the continuing weaknesses o f the institutions responsible for environmental management in both countries. O n the whole, and certainly during the pre-construction and construction periods, the project was in compliance with the EMP. 2.56 The handling o f environmental and social issues was satisfactory in both countries for the first two periods. One major benefit from WBG involvement was the insistence on establishing the multi-tiered monitoring structure. Although the national government agencies ran into difficulties and failed to perform as expected, the monitoring by E C M G and by IFC’s Environment and Social Department was important in dealing with complex issues for which no easy solution was available. Two important examples were: (i) the resettlement and compensation challenges in Chad resulting from the more extensive land acquisition associated with the in-fill drilling program; and (ii)the institutional and financial problems 29 experienced by the Foundation for Investment and Development (FEDEC), which required actions by both IFC and COTCO. IFC’s contribution remains important in ensuring that required mitigation actions are implementedso as to continue to meet the objectives described in the EMP. 2.57 In Chad, however, issues emerged on the social side in the third period. Also, the institutional development dimension has been consistently ‘unsatisfactory. There are s t i l l no o i l spill response plans in either country, and government monitoring o f project activities in both countries i s weak to non-existent. EEPCI, COTCO, and TOTCO have performed well in meeting EMP requirements and Bank safeguards, particularly in the areas o f health and safety, emissions, water management, solid waste management, o i l spill response planning and implementation, and health and safety. (See Annex A.) At the same time, in Chad, there are risks to the livelihoods o f communities and individuals from the in-fill drilling program (with total wells eventually reaching about 700, compared to the estimated 287 at appraisal). Environmental Social Institutional aspects aspects development Cameroon Chad Cameroon Chad Cameroon Chad O i l fields pre-development and pipeline pre- Sat Sat Sat Sat Unsat Unsat construction period (1990-99) Drilling, pipeline construction, and Sat Sat Mod Mod Unsat Mod institution-building period (2000-03) Sat Sat Unsat Post-construction: oil production & Sat Mod Mod Mod Mod Unsat transport operations (2004-present) Sat Sat Unsat Unsat The Pre-construction Phase 2.58 The main project was appropriately screened to Category A, followed by a thorough Environmental Impact Assessment to address alternatives for the pipeline corridor, selection o f the right-of-way, land use and habitat modification, socioeconomic impacts, effects o f construction on indigenous peoples, as well as emergency response and o i l spill contingency plans for the entire pipeline and drilling project, and an Environmental Management Plan to be followed during the implementation. The EMP was the guiding instrument for project compliance during both the construction and operations phases and was subject to repeated international scrutiny and revision until stakeholders found it s a t i ~ f a c t o r y(However, .~~ neither the project Environmental Impact Assessment nor the EMP foresaw the need for in- fill drilling to enhance well productivity.) 2.59 The Environmental and Social Clearance Memorandum (ESCM) o f September 15, 1999, identified environmental and social safeguard policies and guidelines to be referenced 43. During preparation ExxonMobil indicated that it would not only apply Bank safeguards but would use the EMP to deal with the environmental and social impacts. Thus, the arrangements went beyond the criterion o f “doing no harm” to the additional objective three o f ‘‘doipg some good” (Annex A). 30 in the investment agreement. The WBG exercised a high degree o f diligence with respect to the safeguard policies that this project triggered. 2.60 The pipeline project put in place a multilayered environmental and social impact monitoring structure. This structure included both internal and external monitoring bodies along with IFC’s own supervision by i t s environmental and social specialists. EEPCI, COTCO, and TOTCO hired expatriate and national staff from both countries to implement the EMP and i t s associated environmental and social monitoring. External monitoring was provided by the ECMG through a consulting firm and by the IAG. These arrangements worked in satisfactory manner. 44 The Construction Phase: 2000-2004 2.61 The EMP served as an effective tool during the construction phase. In addition to providing specific technical limits in such areas as water and air quality, it also detailed principles and processes for implementing compensation programs in both countries. Villages received community compensation, such as water wells and water points, electrification, community centers, schools, etc. Individuals were compensated for lost land, trees, and other types o f property. In Cameroon, the COTCO-PSMC-NGO platform for cooperation and grievance resolution began operations to ensure that compensation programs were delivered as intended. During the construction phase, COTCO implemented a compensation program for individuals and villages affected by the pipeline construction, with 650 micro-development projects. At the completion o f the construction phase, the project allocated over 1.84 billion CFAF ($2.8 million) for community and regional compensation in Cameroon. 2.62 In Cameroon, the project properly addressed effects o f construction on indigenous peoples, since the Atlantic Littoral Forest corridor for the pipeline was located to avoid Pygmy settlements in Bakola/Bageli. As required under the EMP, the project established the FEDEC with an initial capitalization o f $3.5 million provided by COTCO, which was to be used to support the long-term development and management o f two new national parks (Campo Ma’an Park and Mbam-Djerem Park) and the implementation o f the Indigenous Peoples Development Plan for BagyeWBakola (Pygmies) communities. Implementation o f these programs was delayed due to organizational problems in FEDEC. (See paras. 2.69- 2.70.) 2.63 In 2003, the World Bank declared two Level I11non-compliances in Cameroon related to the Cultural Property safeguard. These non-compliances were related to project activities at sites that had been previously identified as “high priority” archaeological sites (ECA-68, ECA-15, and ECA-163). A special archeological mission conducted by the ECMG determined that these areas could have been avoided and COTCO was asked to develop and implement a mitigation program. The program consisted of: (i) preparation o f a report on opportunities for future archeological research in the affected area; (ii) funding post-graduate studies for two Cameroonian archeology students; ( i ii) the establishment o f two curation 44 Although in this case the external compliance monitoring worked well, and IFC has also used it i n other complicated and risky projects, such multi-layer arrangements are costly, can overlap and provide inconsistent messages, and do l i t t l e to foster national capacity.” 31 facilities, one in Ndjamena and one in Yaounde, to house recovered artifacts and support further archeological work; and (iv) preparation in book form o f the project's archeology program in Chad and Cameroon. Project supervision and monitoring reports indicate that these mitigation measures were implemented in a satisfactory manner. 2.64 In Chad's O i l Fields Development Area (OFDA), the construction phase presented many environmental and social challenges. Among the most important were establishing systems for solid and hazardous waste management, health and safety for workers and area residents, and managing the spontaneous in-migration o f people interested in gaining employment with the project. The EMP provided the guidelines and processes for addressing these challenges while the monitoring by E C M G provided analysis and recommendations on measures necessary to comply with environmental and social objectives o f the project. 2.65 Also, in the early years o f the project hundreds o f unskilled workers from other regions o f Chad migrated to the project area. Spontaneous settlements sprung up around the key project locations in Kome and Miandoum. The EMP provided guidance on the potential impact o f these migrations and proposed mitigation measures. In addition, surveys were undertaken, and based on the findings the Consortium and CTNSC initiated actions to address living conditions and sanitation concerns. Water wells were constructed and garbage collection initiated. ECMG during its monitoring visits paid close attention to these issues and made recommendations aimed at mitigating the negative environmental, heath, and social impacts associated with the spontaneous settlements. Since completion o f construction, some o f the settlements have disappeared while others have become permanent. As with villages in the area around the OFDA, permanent settlements receive a variety o f goodwill support from EEPCI. 2.66 Some assistance was given to government entities, mainly training and provision o f equipment. However, the government bodies (PSMC45in Cameroon and CTNSC46in Chad) created for the independent monitoring o f the o i l fields and the pipeline were located within the national o i l ministries o f both countries, putting them in situations o f potential conflict o f interest. L i t t l e if any sustainable institutional development was achieved. The situation was aggravated further in Chad when the Ministry o f Petroleum was destroyed, along with all o f i t s records, during rebel attacks in February 2008. Moreover, the CTNSC had ceased to function after 2007, thereby leaving no governmental monitoring presence in the oil- producing area. 2.67 Although the two capacity-building projects were approved at the same time as the Bank and IFC loans for the pipeline project, judging from the disbursement profiles implementation only started when the pipeline was already built and operating. Thus, the projects did not contribute to government monitoring during o i l fields development and pipeline construction, as originally intended. 45. Pipeline Steering and Monitoring Committee (Comite' de Pilotage et Suivi du Pipeline) 46. National Technical Committee for Monitoring and Control (Comite' Technique Nutionale de Suivi et ContrGZe, CTNSC). 32 The Post-Construction Phase: 2004-2008 2.68 Cameroon. Overall, the pipeline project’s environmental and social performance in Cameroon during the post-construction phase has been satisfactory and i s in compliance with WBG safeguards. It has performed particularly well in meeting desired standards for most World Bank and IFC General Environmental, Health and Safety Guidelines. The client has been quite diligent in i t s efforts to implement the processes and mitigation plans detailed in the EMP. A solid EMP management structure i s in place that includes both technical specialists and Community Relations Officers who work closely with villages and towns impacted by the pipeline. 2.69 During the operations phase, compensation activities generally relate to the ongoing “Social Statement Process” to resolve a l i s t o f concerns and grievances developed in collaboration with local NGOs, representatives o f the government o f Cameroon, and villagers. There are also periodic requirementsto compensate for land use required for maintenance or facilities improvements. COTCO admits that managing expectations related to project benefits at the village level has been very difficult. The Consultative Platform, which includes the PSMC, COTCO, government ministries, and NGOs, meets too infrequently (once or twice a year), and has not proven to be effective in resolving grievances. Local NGOs, while supportive o f the EMP and its processes, believe that a project o f such scale should have longer-term economic development impacts at the village level. While the “social closure” has not been achieved, the external monitoring concludes that compensation programs are being implemented effectively, and in keeping with EMP guidelines. 2.70 Since i t s creation, Cameroon’s FEDEC has faced a number o f financial and management challenges. In 2005, the ECMG described some o f the more important problems faced by FEDEC, including the beginnings o f financial difficulties associated with the falling value o f the U.S. dollar against the CFAF and lack o f success in raising funding from donors. ECMG reports, along with observations provided by the IAG and the Project Inspection Panel, have highlighted ongoing financial difficulties, i t s inability to fund raise, and its need to draw down capital to support i t s operations. 2.71 Over the past few years, IFC, COTCO, and the government o f Cameroon have attempted to address the deteriorating financial situation o f FEDEC. Proposals were made to increase the endowment through additional capital from both COTCO and the IFC. As o f early 2009, a draft action plan had been prepared. The recent decline in world stock markets has further eroded FEDEC’s endowment. COTCO has provided some interim funding, but a long-term solution has not been agreed upon. One must question the commitment o f all the parties to finding a solution considering the financial situation has worsened over the last four years. L e f t unresolved, the financial and management problems faced by FEDEC will likely have a serious negative impact on continued implementation o f the Indigenous People’s Plan (IPP) activities and could also adversely affect management o f the two parks. 2.72 The implementation o f the IPP continues to present challenges. Participation o f some Pygmy communities in FEDEC-supported programs i s considerably lower than expected, and there i s tension between Pygmy leaders and the implementing organization RAPID concerning program implementation. 33 2.73 At present, there i s no effective government monitoring o f the pipeline. Proxy monitoring i s being carried out by the ECMG, but it will end once IFC’s involvement i s concluded. COTCO i s mainly self-regulating. N o effective environmental and social mainstreaming into transport, health, and other ministries has occurred, as envisaged under the technical assistance project. 2.74 Chad, Overall, the oil development and pipeline construction project’s environmental and social performance in Chad has been moderately satisfactory and i s in compliance with World Bank safeguards and IFC Performance Standards. The client, EEPCI and TOTCO, have implemented the processes and mitigation plans detailed in the EMP and have been cooperative in providing access to information required by the various monitoring and supervision entities: ECMG, IAG, and IFC. Reporting to third parties and IFC has been comprehensive, descriptive, and transparent, but despite a massive information dissemination program, some local stakeholders s t i l l feel that more communication i s needed. 2.75 There has been reasonable success in addressing the environmental and social impacts o f i t s activities, considering the size and complexity o f the Pipeline Project. The most important examples include: (i) the oil spill response management system, which includes automatic shut o f f to reduce the quantity o f spills and quick response by specialized spill cleanup specialists; 47 (ii) efforts to reduce well pad size and return land to farmers; (iii) efforts to put in place technology required to reduce flaring volumes after a Level 1 non- compliance for excessive flaring was raised by the EMP team in August 2006; (iv) meeting the ongoing challenges o f solid and hazardous waste management; and (v) developing and implementing health and safety programs that affect employees, contractors, and the communities at large. In 2007 and 2008, project workers kept their historically low Recordable Incident Rate well below the average rate o f the petroleum industry as a whole. 2.76 Probably the most challenging part has been the work to meet the requirements o f the EMP and take the required action based on the conclusions and recommendations o f the Barclay-Koppert report.48The report assessed the adequacy o f the Chad Resettlement and Compensation Plan (CRCP) for addressing changes in project scope and land requirements arising from more extensive drilling and production well development in the O i l Fields Development Area (OFDA) than was envisaged in the original CRCP. 2.77 EEPCI and the EMP team have introduced a new, revised land compensation process that gives more time to the affected people, and an enhanced land use Geographic Information System (GIS) database that allows more effective management o f impacts and o f compensation information. The GIS i s used to demarcate village land area according to use 47. The one spill that occurred totaled 34 barrels o f o i l and was contained within a few hours. 48. T h e main conclusions and recommendations were: (i) the project has failed to achieve its objective o f minimizing its impact on land and had only partially achieved i t s objective o f reclaiming land after construction, and making as much land as possible available again to customary users; (ii) The evaluation found that the CRCP’s emphasis on agricultural training and off-farm training as the principal livelihood restoration measures was inadequate to restore the livelihood losses o f those 900 or so households experiencing loss o f access to more than 20 percent o f their land. 34 and who has traditional rights to specific plots. For agricultural land it specifies which plots are under cultivation and which ones are in fallow. 2.78 In November 2008, EEPCI & I F C engaged the services o f Environ to undertake an Environmental & Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) o f the in-fill drilling program that began in 2005.49 This program will increase the number o f wells by up to 400, thereby increasing the overall size o f the project’s footprint, which was not foreseen in the original Environmental Impact Assessment. While the E M P will continue to be used as guidance, the E S I A will be used to determine whether or not the current mitigation measures (implementation and execution procedures) need to be improved. I F C and E C M G consider that the in-fill program does not pay adequate attention to the conclusions o f the Barclay- Koppert report. In an effort to resolve their differences, I F C and EEPCI management met in Washington D.C in April 2009 and agreed that: documents related to the L U M A P , the ESIA and the Infill Drilling Program would be disclosed; Environ would complete a re-assessment o f the ESIA (first report mid-year and final report YE 2009); and additional resources would be allocated for either a social development specialist (as suggested by IFC) or GIS specialists. 2.79 In terms o f land return, satisfactory results are n o w achieved and the footprint o f the temporary facilities i s being significantly reduced. O f the 549 well pads 509 have been restored to the dimensions committed to in the EMP. While not all o f them are yet effectively returned for community use, this i s s t i l l a remarkable achievement. 2.80 From the government side the story i s very different. With the closing o f the IDA capacity-building project in Chad, the promising F A C I L (Fonds d ’Actions Concerte‘es d ’Initiative Locale)” program for micro-credit, small infrastructure financing, and small and medium enterprise development collapsed. (Annex C.) 2.8 1 Although drafted with support from the two IDA credits, environmental regulations governing o i l fields, pipeline, and petroleum sector operations have not been approved by either national government. The O i l Spill Response Plans in both countries have also not been approved. The incipient and promising monitoring capacity that was being built up in the N C T M C collapsed when the IDA technical assistance Credit was closed. Currently, there i s no government presence in the o i l fields for monitoring or reporting purposes, TOTCO is self-regulating and no effective environmental and social mainstreaming across transport, health, and various sector ministries has occurred, as envisaged under the capacity-building projects. 49 Based on information from the ECMG reports from 2005, among other sources, IFC considers that the infill n 2005, whereas EEPCI states that the infill drilling began i drilling began i n mid-2008, and the additional wells drilled between 2003 and 2008 were development wells within the original 40-acre well-spacing pattern. 50. Fonds di2ctions Concerte‘es d’lnitiative Locale 35 3. Evaluation Dimensions and Crosscutting Issues 3.1 As explained in chapter 2, despite the technical and financial success o f the main project, linked largely to the high price o f oil, the fundamental objective o f the program has not been achieved. Indeed, the o i l revenue windfall was associated with a resurgence of civil conflict and a worsening o f governance. The evaluation concludes that the principal reason for this disappointing outcome was lack o f government ownership. Actual outcomes might have been better with a more flexible program design, suited to the fluid circumstances and political economy o f Chad. However, no alternative program design or closer supervision would have allowed to achieve the program’s development objectives in the absence o f government commitment. This section groups the major crosscutting issues loosely around the major evaluation dimensions and, owing to the extensive preceding analysis, addresses them briefly. STRATEGIC RELEVANCE AND TIMING D i d the WBG get involved for the right reasons and at the right time, and did i t do so in full recognition of the probable alternatives and the risks, including reputational risks? 3.2 The WBG got involved for the right reasons and in full recognition o f previous experiences as well as the risks. The sound strategic rationale o f the WBG involvement was noted earlier. At the time, it was reasonable to view the risks as somewhat mitigated by Chad’s comparatively good record o f reform implementation-staying on track with IMF and Bank programs, liquidating wasteful parastatals, etc.; by the relative political stability o f the previous four years; and by the government’s public assertions o f strong ownership and commitment. 3.3 O n timing, a major criticism (especially by the NGOs) was and remains that the WBG should have waited longer, in order to help build the country’s capacity to manage the petroleum sector and the o i l revenue and to improve governance. I t is difficult to imagine, however, h o w an additional two or three years could have achieved those long-gestation objectives. Moreover, clear signs were already emerging in 1999 that the o i l would be developed and the pipeline built in the near future with or without WBG involvement. The easy decision in 2000 would have been to avoid both the involvement and the criticism-and let the responsibility for likely unfavorable impacts rest entirely o n the government and the o i l companies. Instead, the WBG rightly decided on the more difficult course o f reducing the likelihood o f unfavorable impacts and improving the chances o f success-with hope but without illusion. 51 3.4 The more appropriate criticism i s instead retrospective. After i t s involvement in Chad’s o i l sector in 1994 the Bank’s efforts during the subsequent six years to help the 5 1. The notion that the WBG got involved because o f pressure by the WBG president i s not supported by the evidenc-n the contrary, there was substantial skepticism, and before Board presentation the Managing Director was dispatched to Chad for almost two weeks to personally ascertain the situation from a variety o f stakeholders. The internal debate was certainly intense, but the conclusion was that this was a risk worth taking for Chad’s development. 36 country improve budgeting capacity, budget execution mechanisms and financial management controls were insufficient and unsuccessful, thus making it necessary to support capacity-building activities concurrently with the program. Still, the eventual problems in program implementation were caused much less by limited technical capacity than by governance weaknesses and lack o f government ownership. This risk was recognized from the beginning. Indeed, it i s possible that the widespread skepticism and the external criticism led the Bank into an excessively rigid program design, as discussed next. AND DESIGN APPROACH Did the WBG have the right program design? 3.5 As explained earlier, the environmental and social safeguards were well designed, better than in many projects o f a similar nature in developing countries, and so were the mechanisms for transparency in o i l revenue. Technically, too, the o i l development and pipeline construction were well designed, although the larger-than-projected o i l revenue was due to the o i l price increase, which few could have predicted. However, the all-important revenue and expenditure management arrangements proved inadequate and, in some respects, counterproductive. The main issues concern the earmarking o f the revenue and ensuing fragmentation o f the budget; excessive rigidity o f the arrangements combined with arbitrary expenditure floors; neglect o f the quality o f expenditure and insufficient attention to budget execution.52Similarly, the capacity-building projects for petroleum sector management were overly ambitious, resulting in disappointing outcomes. Oil Revenue Earmarking 3.6 The earmarking o f the o i l revenue-until 2006-caused an additional fissure in an already fragmented budget process and weakened further public expenditure management without clear benefits for resource allocation or efficiency. The logic was simple and direct. In keeping with the classic definition o f conditionality as “a means for the appropriate use o f since Bank support was provided to generate the o i l revenue, the Bank resources,yy53 conditions were limited t o the use o f that revenue. Even if the logic i s accepted, however, it became inoperative when the o i l revenue turned out to be several times higher than domestic revenue and the total o f foreign aid. 3.7 Moreover, as with other institutional enclaves, budgetary enclaves in a malfunctioning budgeting system may generate a positive short-term impact but at the cost o f dilution o f accountability and a weakening o f institutional capacity in the long term. In this case, the earmarking did not even have i t s desired short-term impact, as the arrangements were discarded by the government barely one year after the o i l revenue began accruing, and the revenue escrow mechanism proved too fragile to survive its first real test. 52. The program did not contain a formal oil stabilization fund. However, while a stabilization fund can be an important tool o f fiscal management, like any other “fund” it can only be effective if it i s used for the purposes for which it i s designed. I t appears most unlikely that the government would not have drawn the resources in such a fund to meet i t s immediate needs-whether or not the fund’s rules or the fiscal stance justified it. 53. Joseph Gold, 198 1, Conditionulity, Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund. 37 3.8 Since the Bank was well aware o f these realities, the question arises o f why it chose to design such a complex and rigid mechanism. The answer i s a combination o f the intent to maximize the protection against the high reputational risks o f the program and the need to respond to the severe external pressure and vocal criticism o f WBG involvement. Excessive Rigidity 3.9 Whether the chances o f improved allocation and efficiency o f resources would have been better with more flexible arrangements rather than with fixed expenditure floors i s very difficult to adjudicate, even in hindsight. Certainly, the lack o f government commitment make it unlikely,that alternative designs would have yielded substantially better outcomes. The issue i s not the six layers o f supervision (the Consortium, the government, the WBG, civil society, the ECMG, and IAG); although costly, they worked well on the environmental and social side and as advisory mechanisms. Neither i s the core issue the arbitrariness o f the percentages o f revenue to be allocated to the various uses: since it is impossible to define those percentages o n an analytical basis, negotiated targets are inevitable. The core issue of excessive rigidity is the enshrinement o f quantitative spending targets into formal law, and the ensuing lack o f subsidiary arrangements to give the Bank “judgment space” within agreed targetss4. Alternatives could have included a soft target within a band triggering progressively stronger review and correction provisions-providing a middle ground between the excessively discretionary criterion “satisfactory to the Bank” and a negotiating straightjacket. Also, instead o f a floor on the percentage o f o i l revenue allocated to the priority sectors, the agreement could have focused on a ceiling on expenditure on non- priority sectors (mainly security and regime maintenance), agreeing on the size o f the “black box” but otherwise not discussing its contents or i t s execution, and thus focusing supervision and dialogue on the functioning o f the overall budget process and the allocative and use efficiency o f e ~ p e n d i t u r e . ~ ~ 3.10 Because, in the final analysis, the issue is government commitment, more flexible design or a focus o n expenditure rather than o n o i l revenue may well have led to the same disappointing development outcomes. However, such an approach would at least have avoided the budgetary fragmentation caused by earmarking the o i l revenue, with fiscal and expenditure management capacity somewhat better than i s the case today. Neglect of the Quality of Expenditure and of Budget Execution 3.1 1 The unsatisfactory outcomes in expenditure efficiency and budget management were documented earlier. Insistence on a numerical quantum o f budgeted expenditure invited 54 Key operational staff understood quite well that the quality o f expenditure was at least as important as i t s amount, and thus intended to interpret the implementation o f the MOU in a flexible manner and taking into account considerations o f efficiency and service provision. In the event, the Bank focus remained where it had been from the start - on minimum percentages o f expenditure - and the Bank decision to exit rested primarily on the deviation between the actual 2007 outturn o f 58 percent o f total expenditure on priority sectors as compared with the 70 percent agreed in the MOU 55. The attractive alternative o f distributing a part o f o i l revenues directly to individual citizens and/or households in Chad was briefly considered but rejected, as both impractical and too great an intrusion into national sovereignty. I t i s possible that such an alternative might be conceivable in other situations-with government consent. 38 disregard for quality and cost-effectiveness, and led to surprises ex post when budget execution deviates from the approved budget. The Bank was aware o f this risk and for this reason set up a process o f annual Public Expenditure Reviews to assure a regular dialogue on expenditure management. The program design was coherent: the PRSP would underpin an MTEF framing an annual budget consistent with an agreed sectoral allocation and financing integrated capital-current expenditure programs endorsed by the Colkge, with the PERs serving to monitor fiscal sustainability and to improve both budget preparation and execution. The logic was textbook perfect-xcept for the revealed weakness o f every link in the chain. 3.12 While capacity-building efforts in budgeting system and practices were largely unsuccessfbl, new capacity was created in other areas-primarily in the understanding o f petroleum marketing and in the management o f infrastructural projects and construction. This new capacity was instrumental for the large expansion o f the paved road network, but at the same time serious problems emerged in procurement, cost control and observance o f basic financial rules. The underlying cause o f both developments was the combination o f the program’s focus on percentage spending floors with the unexpectedly high revenue. N o t only did this combination put pressure o n the government to spend more and faster in order to meet the targets agreed with the Bank, regardless o f cost-effectiveness or integrity considerations, but it also gave a convenient excuse to those elements who wished to exploit the situation for personal or political advantage. 3.13 The counterfactual i s whether better results would have been achieved by focusing agreements and supervision on good preparation o f major investment projects (including appropriate provision o f recurrent costs) and supervision o f their implementation (including attention to procurement and financial management)-plus much more attention to the execution o f the overall budget (including targeted expenditure tracking surveys). N o definitive answer can be given, but good practice in public expenditure management points in the direction o f focusing on the basics and it i s likely that explicit attention to project preparation and implementation would have 1e.dto higher efficiency o f investment expenditure than has been the case. WBG IMPLEMENTATION PERFORMANCE Has the WBG succeeded in effectively supervising the program, adapting to changes, and managing decisions internally and vis-&vis the government, international partners, and NGOs? 3.14 The high risks to the WBG and the worldwide interest generated by the project led to unusual attention to implementation and supervision-with enormous efforts and personal commitment o f almost every operational manager and staff member involved in the program. In hindsight, however, these efforts could not be effective-due partly to the flawed program design but mainly to lack o f government commitment and follow-through. But there were other problems. 39 Supervision Effectiveness 3.15 Owing to the importance o f the program, the Bank assigned in the early years two highly respected former senior staff, with a great deal o f experience in difficult African challenges, as consultants to supervise it in cooperation with country management-one resident in N’djamena and the other in Washington. The expensive arrangement absorbed most o f the otherwise generous supervision budget and ended before the critical period when o i l revenue began to f l o w in large amounts. After the end o f the consultant arrangement from mid-2004 until November 2007, a regular senior staff was assigned to N’djamena with central operational responsibility for the program. 3.16 There were also problems with the supervision o f the capacity building projects The Chad revenue management project suffered from the excessive rotation o f task managers (six in seven years), with ensuing lack o f attention and continuity; the Cameroon capacity- building project was afflicted by the conflict o f interest inherent in placing the monitoring mechanism inside the national o i l company; and the Chad capacity-building project suffered for several years from the lack o f in-house technical expertise needed to supervise the experienced consultants. 3.17 IFC’s supervision responsibilities in the main project related to environmental and social issues were performed satisfactorily, in consultation with E C M G and with the Bank. Senior Management Role 3.18 When full involvement in the program was decided in principle in 1998, the WBG president was determined to use the opportunity to try and create a new model o f petroleum use for development and the best possible environmental and social safeguards, as well as international cooperation between the WBG and large multinationals. 3.19 After the intense internal debate prior to the decision, those staff who were initially skeptical fully accepted the decision and proceeded to do all they could to maximize the chances o f its success. For the first few years o f the program, too, senior management created an enabling environment for operational managers and staff, and its decisions were informed by and integrated with the efforts o f operational staff, who implemented the higher-level guidance effectively. 3.20 The 2005 debate on h o w to handle the increasingly likely government decision to break the agreement was thoughtful and deliberate, and the Bank’s sharp and immediate response in January 2006 to the government’s unilateral action was understood and widely agreed. However, the direct intervention o f the president’s office in the subsequent negotiations to engineer a new agreement was questionable. Although country and regional management were fully involved and correctly sought to address the allocation o f all expenditure regardless o f source o f financing rather thanjust the earlier blinkered focus on direct o i l revenue, the weakened enforcement mechanism made the agreement in effect paper conditionality with little chance o f actual success. 3.21 Based o n staff interviews, some operational staff and managers eventually came to feel that their views, information, and arguments were not receiving consideration in senior 40 management decisions. This sentiment became especially strong in 2008. The contrary view has also been expressed, however, that staff disappointment was due to their disagreement with the decision to exit and the manner o f doing so, and not to the failure o f consultation or consideration o f the arguments and the facts. External Partnerships and Relations 56 Relations with the consortium were very good until the events o f early 2006. Subsequently, although relations with IFC continued, the Bank’s degree o f trust was no longer the same.57 3.22 Relations with donors were excellent at the beginning and remained good through the July 2007 multidonor mission. Until then, consultation o f all development partners was close and all major donors were in agreement with the program and with the Bank decisions ’* reached after such consultation. After mid-2007, the interaction with donors became dominated by broader political and security considerations-underlined by the major rebel attack on N’djamena in February 2008. 3.23 Several representatives o f external partners in Ndjamena felt that not only had they not been consulted on the Bank decision to exit in 2008, but they had not even been informed before the decision was made public. However, some Executive Directors had been aware o f the Bank intentions since the 2008 Spring Meetings, and it i s possible that some local heads of missions had not been informed by their headquarters on a timely basis. However, at least one major program partner reported finding out only from the September press communique o f the Bank’s final decision to exit the program and o f i t s request that Chad voluntarily repay in advance the balance on the IBRD loan and the IDA credits. 3.24 Relations with NGOs have been complex, and a distinction i s clear between the position (and roles) o f the major international NGOs and those o f local NGOs in Cameroon and Chad. As a broad simplification, while the international NGOs were against the project, the local NGOs were pressuring to make it as environmentally and socially responsible as possible, and, in Chad, to delay the project in order to build better governance and accountability. Documentary evidence and interviews suggest that the criticism o f the Bank’s involvement advanced by some NGOs was not well grounded in factual evidence and thus speculative and exaggerated. Conversely, the N G O pressure did contribute to strengthening further an already strong set o f environmental and social protection safeguards. However, the same outcome could have been achieved without the excessive criticism and undocumented claims. 56. WBG relations with the governments are discussed throughout this report and are not mentioned here. 57. Recall that EEPCI chose to withhold the royalty and dividend payments instead o f depositing them in the London escrow account, as per the agreement. 58. A t least one major donor, after adhering to a joint donor consensus, privately took different positions vis-& vis the government. The IMF was consistently supportive, and even extended the Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility although not even one review had been completed. However, the Fund’s long-standing views on revenue management and unity o f the budget are a matter o f record, and contrasted sharply with the program’s oil revenue earmarking-a contrast that the government attempted to underline in i t s efforts in 2005 to obtain Bank agreement to amend the revenue management law. 41 Exit 3.25 In the view o f the government o f Chad, the Bank’s actions in 2008 were gratuitous and unwarranted. In that view, good faith attempts had been made to meet the agreed M O U targets for the 2007 budget, even though the expenditure outturn fell somewhat short, and the rebel attacks o f early 2008 then upset all the fiscal plans for that year. Also, the Bank took i t s decision unilaterally rather than after the joint review implied by the “consultations” provision o f section 1V.d o f the MOU.59 Finally, the government points out that the Bank effectively took its decision to exit before the final figures on the expenditure outturn for 2007, as the reference year, became available. 3.26 In the Bank’s view, there had been staff meetings and exchanges on the execution of the 2007 budget, which constituted consultations and also provided evidence that the agreed targets would not be met. (This outcome was already clear at the time o f the July 2007 multidonor mission and in fact the targets were not met, by a significant margin. The Bank concluded that, after going the extra mile in 2006 to come to an agreement on a reformulated program following the government’s unilateral changes, the government’s failure to, implement the new agreement made clear the futility o f further Bank involvement in Chad’s o i l sector and Bank inaction in the face o f repeated violations o f agreements would create a reputational risk and send the wrong message. As for the advance repayment o f the balance on the IDA credits by Chad(the first in Bank history) the reason stated was that, in i t s absence, Bank involvement in Chad’s o i l sector would not come to full closure. In reality, relations had been tense since at least July 2007, and little development work was being accomplished. In this perspective, the decision by the Bank’s senior management to withdraw might be seen simply as the final recognition o f a longstanding state o f affairs. Moreover, the decision’s justification lay in the repeated government violations o f the agreements and the reputation risk o f continued involvement compared with the l o w probability o f constructive influence. 3.27 Some internal and external observers have expressed concerns about the Bank’s decision-making process and the implications o f i t s withdrawal. Some stakeholders have considered that the Bank gave away its “seat at the table” just when the government was reaping an unprecedented o i l revenue windfall. Some have viewed the timin o f the decision as especially unfavorable as it may have undercut the new unity governmen$’, weakened the “reformers” and strengthened the “hawks” in Chad. At least one major partner resented what was perceived as insufficient consultation; and some local NGOs f e l t that without the Bank 59. The complaint of unilateralism i s curious in light o f the government’s own unilateral decision in late December 2005 to amend the 1999 PRML. The government argues, however, that the decision on amending the law was taken by the Parliament in the exercise o f i t s sovereign functions and was thus outside the control o f the executive branch. 60. In August 2008, a new government was formed, headed by a new Prime Minister. Views vary on whether this action signals meaningful and durable change. One significant event, however, was the Cabinet decision to assert the authority o f the line ministries to initiate physical investment proposals in their sector-consistent with national development priorities and sector strategies-and limit the responsibility o f the Ministry o f Infrastructure to implementing those investments. T h i s decision could remedy the disconnect between development needs and investment spending caused by the 2005 assignment to the Minister o f Infrastructure o f all authority concerning investment in physical infrastructure and construction. 42 they had lost their only voice channel. To what extent these views are due to insufficient knowledge o f the totality o f facts and o f the bases o f the Bank’s decision making process i s not clear. IFCBank Cooperation Was the joint Bank-IFC modality more cost-effective than parallel operations, and did it yield better development outcomes? 3.28 The program featured significant WB-IFC collaboration at all stages, with a division o f labor suited to their different mandates and comparative advantage. Thus, the Bank focused on implementation o f the revenue arrangements and expenditure understandings, and on the three IDA-supported projects to help build capacity to monitor the o i l sector and manage the o i l revenue, while IFC dealt with the environmental and social aspects o f the pipeline project. Also, the Bank handled relations with the governments and IFC relations with the Consortium and the lenders. With the Bank exit from Chad’s o i l sector, IFC continued to monitor the environmental and social aspects o f the main project. GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP AND PERFORMANCE Was the government performance satisfactory? Was government ownership genuine? 3.29 The performance o f the implementing entities, given their constraints, was moderately satisfactory in both Chad and Cameroon. Cameroon government performance, limited to the capacity-development project was moderately unsatisfactory. Chad’s government performance, as shown by the broad macroeconomic, fiscal, governance and institutional outcomes, was described earlier. Whatever the variety o f influences on the outcomes, this performance cannot be considered satisfactory. On the specific issue o f ownership, two contrary views have been expressed: (i) Chad was on board with the agreement, until security and regime maintenance urgencies forced the government to abandon it; (ii) there was never genuine ownership from the top, despite protestations to the contrary. I t i s not possible to judge intentions, but there i s little doubt that whatever ownership was present at the beginning, if any, decreased through the years o f program implementation. 61 3.30 The question arises whether the WBG could have demanded at the beginning a sufficiently robust test o f government’s ownership to use the o i l resources as agreed. I t i s true that the Bank could perhaps have been more insistent on greater government participation in the formulation o f the 1999 revenue management law and associated institutional structures. (These were in effect designed largely by Bank staff and consultants-albeit in consultation with Chadian officials, with serious review by them, and with approval by the legislature.) But several high government officials were genuinely supportive o f the program; Chad had a comparatively good record o f implementation o f Bank- and Fund- supported reform programs, as noted; and Chad’s president took all possible occasions to affirm publicly that 61. In the words o f a non-Bank, nongovernment interlocutor “ownership was a ventriloquist act.” Still, it i s interesting to note that the provision to allocate 5 percent o f the revenue to the producing region was fully implemented-as explained earlier-in contrast with the abandonment o f the Future Generations Fund, which the government reportedly opposed from the beginning. 43 the 1999 l a w was fully owned by Chad and to proclaim his support for the program and all i t s features, including during a personal meeting with the WBG president. I t i s hard to see what else the Bank could have done to increase its degree o f ex ante comfort with government ownership. The only real test would come, as it did, when the o i l revenue began to flow. A SUMMARY SCORECARD: PRINCIPALPROJECTS RATINGS AND PROGRAM 3.3 1 The ratings for the individual projects and the program as a whole are shown in Table 10. The program-level ratings are related to the project ratings, but also stand on their own as a judgment o f the overall cluster o f projects and activities against the program objective. The ratings o f the program are not an average o f the ratings o f the component projects, nor are they weighted by loan amounts, but flow from a combined assessment o f the developmental importance o f each project-with the revenue management arrangements at the core o f the program. A s explained in the above analysis, the program relevance was modest, from a combination o f appropriate strategic objective and weak design; the high efficiency o f the pipeline investments in narrow financial and technical terms was tempered by the modest efficiency o f the capacity development investments and the overall less than efficient use o f o i l revenues, efficacy in terms o f overall program objectives was modest at best. Hence, the overall program outcome must be considered unsatisfactory, when assessed against the stated core objective o f reducing poverty and improving governance by the best possible use o f the o i l revenue in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner 3.32 However, in light o f the complexity o f this program and the diversity o f outcomes, the standard evaluation approach o f assessing outcomes against stated objectives needs to be qualified by consideration o f the possible counterfactual. With the rapid increase in o i l price after 2000, it i s almost certain that the o i l would have been developed and the pipeline constructed even without WBG involvement, albeit one or two years later. If so, the environmental and social provisions and the external monitoring arrangements would not have been as thorough as those under the program. Also, it i s probable that the revenue allocations to the “priority sectors’ would have been lower, and virtually certain that the support institutions such as the Collige and the advisory group would not have been put in place. In this sense, it could be concluded that the WBG involvement had a positive effect- although it’s not possible to speculate on whether these results would have been commensurate with the scale o f the WBG effort. That said, the evaluation has rested o n the standard approach. 44 Table 10. Projects and Program Ratings Chad and Cameroon: Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project Outcome Moderately satisfactory Risks to development outcome Significant Bank Group performance Moderately satisfactory Borrower performance Moderately satisfactory Cameroon: Petroleum Capacity Enhancement (CAPECE) Project Outcome Unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome Significant Bank performance Moderately satisfactory Borrower performance Moderately unsatisfactory Chad: Petroleum Sector Management Capacity-Building Project Outcome Unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome High Bank performance Moderately unsatisfactory Borrower uerformance Unsatisfactory ~ Chad: Petroleum Economy Management Project Outcome Unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome High Bank performance Unsatisfactory Borrower performance Highly unsatisfactory Chad: IFC Advisory Services (*) Development effectiveness Mostly unsuccessful IFCs role and contributions Satisfactory CHAD-CAMEROON: PROGRAM (**) Outcome Unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome High Bank performance Moderately unsatisfactory Borrower performance (*) Unsatisfactory (*) These are the summary ratings. The detailed ratings and the IFC rating system, broadly similar to the WB, are described in Annex E. (**) The program ratings apply primarily to Chad. While similar conclusions can be drawn for Cameroon, they are mainly associated with the evaluationof the capacity-building project, since, as noted, both the expectations and the outcomes from the overall program were comparatively minor for Cameroon and no macro-level development, governance, or poverty impact could be expected, let alone measured, from an additional small amount of government revenue. 4. Lessons and Future Implications 4.1 The well-known lesson that government ownership and commitment are the major influence o n the effectiveness of projects and programs i s underlined by the experience o f the 45 Chad-Cameroon program. Other lessons learned from the program are identified below- many o f them also well known but brought in sharp relief by this experience. Because the findings and conclusions are discussed in the earlier sections, the lessons and implications are listed below with a minimum o f elaboration. (Project-specific lessons are included in the corresponding annex.) RELEVANCE, R I S K S , AND TIMING 4.2 International experience has shown that adequate expenditure management mechanisms should be in place, and tested, before a large revenue increase i s likely to accrue. In this case, the time available for capacity-building after Board approval and before the flow o f o i l revenue was much shorter than expected and the revenue much larger-adding to the difficulty o f building capacity contemporaneously with program implementation. A secondary lesson is therefore to build expenditure management capacity as robust as necessary to fit a high scenario o f revenue increase. (The capacity created will be useful to the country even if the high scenario does not materialize.) 4.3 Setting up institutional enclaves and special mechanisms to protect resources and accomplish quick results can damage local capacity in the long term. Such enclaves are generally not successful beyond the short term and, even when successful in the short term, they tend to undermine the already weak local systems and thus long-term development. In this case, although the rationale for the establishment o f the revenue escrow account and the earmarking arrangements was strong in the specific country context in 2000, when tested by reality these mechanisms failed to achieve their objectives and meanwhile stood in the way o f sustainable improvements in fiscal and expenditure management capacity. 4.4 While protecting inputs must remain a paramount consideration, development objectives should be formulated in terms o f outcomes (ifpossible), meaningful outputs, or concrete process improvements-rather than in terms o f inputs-and performance indicators should be limited to thefew key indicators that are critical to achieving the PDOs and are monitorable. Even when the immediate aim o f the project i s to increase resource availability, reduce the cost o f input acquisition, or channel resources toward priority uses, a failure to define clearly the expected results in terms o f key outputs, outcomes, or major process improvements risks distorting the actual design o f the project away from those results. In this case, defining the main project objective for Chad in terms o f budgeted expenditure to be achieved diverted attention away from the efficiency o f expenditure and budget execution. And to l i s t dozens o f “key” performance indicators o f diverse importance and questionable monitorability makes monitoring impossible. AND DESIGN APPROACH 4.5 If the WBG decides to risk involvement in ambiguous and fluid situations, it pays not to do so in overly detailed and rigid ways. Utmost clarity is needed o n the objectives, principles, and parameters, but the design and implementation modalities should be as fluid as the situation itself, rather than rely on binary choices and numerical rules. This approach, however, may in practice foster a propensity to make successive small compromises, cumulating in the risk that continued Bank engagement may result in acquiescence to inefficient use o f resources. Thus, in addition to clarity o f purpose, an adaptable engagement 46 grounded on flexible but robust dialogue requires a strong fabric o f reciprocal trust between staff and management and continuity o f both. 4.6 Revenue transparency i s necessary-specially for revenues from extractive industries-but i s not sufficient. Transparency on the expenditure side i s critical as well. In this case, setting as the main target a global minimum percentage spending on several sectors implied that the global target could be met even if the intersectoral allocation o f the resources was very different from what had been agreed, and without regard to the efficiency o f their use. 4.7 Project design must be based on recognition o f institutional and administrative capacity. I t i s important in countries with weak capacity to focus on addressing the basic problems rather than attempting to introduce sophisticated practices. In this case, paradoxically, major components o f the program in effect assumed the prior existence o f the very capacity they aimed to build. 4.8 An innovative design, even if it proves unsuccessful, may contain novel elements worthy o f consideration and possible replication. In this case, there are three such elements: The formation o f the Collige de ContrGle was an excellent and exciting idea, even if it did not enjoy the necessary government support-and such joint publidprivate/ NGO entities have the potential to foster expenditure efficiency as well as social accountability in countries with a government reasonably interested in a pro- development, pro-poor expenditure policy. The Provisional Committee to allocate the 5 percent o f the direct o i l revenue to the oil-producing region can be an illustration for similar arrangements in other countries with valuable mineral resources, despite flaws in i t s operation in this case. Finally, the cover and voice given to local NGOs through the dialogue on the preparation o f the program and during i t s implementation should be a regular feature o f all such WBG interventions. WBG PERFORMANCE 4.9 Although in complex and high-profile cases strategic guidance and major decisions must come from the top leadership o f the WBG, it i s not clear in this case that the top-down direct intervention by the Bank President’s Office in 2006 was helpful to formulate a new agreement with a better chance o f enforcement. 4.10 In large, complex WBG projects with multiple stakeholders, good WB-IFC cooperation i s important to improve the chances for positive results. In this case there was good WB-IFC cooperation on the main pipeline project, but it also extended to Advisory Services operations. In late-2004, when the IDA-funded capacity-building projects were found to be progressing slower than expected, IFC was able to provide new funding for sustaining the capacity-building initiatives. 4.1 1 IFC’s Advisory Services have a signijkantpotential role to help the local private sector. They can enable local companies to participate in the economic activity created by the project; help the sponsors-typically large multinational corporations-meet national content 47 requirements; and promote local economic development. In this case, the Enterprise Center-the focal point o f IFC’s Chad SME program-became the cornerstone o f Exxon’s procurement platform that was the sole source for all o f i t s purchases in Chad, starting in 2005. 4.12 Whether the World Bank or the I F C i s involved, the concern with development effectiveness goes beyond the gates o f individual projects-however well they may be technically done-to the results o f the overall program. There i s no contradiction between viewing favorably the technical and financial success o f the pipeline project even though the weight o f other unfavorable outcomes leads to a negative conclusion o n the development outcome o f the program o f which it was a component, as in this evaluation. However, the evaluation illustrates the basic point that a part o f a program, however well carried out, cannot be separated from the overall program and the broader setting within which its impact i s being assessed: a project or a subproject cannot be ring-fenced in the assessment. 4.13 Continuity is critical to manage a project that i s central to a program, and a minimum o f in-house technical competence is necessary to supervise consultants. In this case, the revenue management project had six task team leaders in its seven years, and the Chad capacity-building project relied almost entirely on consultants for the first years, without any in-house expertise in the technical dimensions o f o i l exploration and production. 4.14 Good communications and transparency are particularly important in the context o f a difficult decision. Senior management would want to appropriately consider the views o f key operational managers and staff and ensure the fullest possible measure o f advance consultation with key development partners. IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FUTURE MAJOR 4.15 With substantial o i l revenue expected to continue for many years, it i s s t i l l possible for Chad to escape the resource curse. The difficulties are known. Institutional and organizational capacity remain weak. Macroeconomic sustainability i s injeopardy. Fiduciary risk i s likely to increase in the short t e r m with the unexpected fall in o i l price and revenue in 2009 and 2010-producing pressures to preserve security and regime maintenance expenditures, and hence a downward pressure on pro-development, pro-poor expenditure. Budgeting systems and skills remain quite insufficient for efficient resource allocation, and motivation and integrity have been weakened by the lack o f consequences for the spreading non-compliance with fundamental rules. However, there are scenarios under which a good development outcome in the long run is s t i l l conceivable. The Bank could cooperate with the IMF in monitoring overall fiscal and expenditure outcomes and make a useful contribution by providing good and flexible advice in public sector management-focused o n the basics, recognizing capacity realities, and supported by assertive cooperation o f certain major bilateral partners. But the most important factor would be a new and genuine determination by Chad’s government to use the o i l resources for development and poverty reduction, and do so responsively and efficiently. 4.16 The Chad-Cameroon o i l development and pipeline construction program exemplifies the inherent tension between the limits o f the WBG as an international organization and i t s mandate to foster development and poverty reduction. The WBG went very far in 1999 48 toward the development side, by setting up complicated and prescriptive arrangements to maximize the probability that the Chad government would use the o i l revenue windfall mainly for development and poverty reduction. For various reasons, the revenue windfall turned out to be used in large part for military expenditure and other regime maintenance and for wasteful construction. The governance climate in Chad did not improve-rather the reverse. 4.17 However, it should not be concluded from this experience that the WBG should not intervene in supporting extractive industries because doing so carries reputational risks and success i s unlikely. Indeed, despite the disappointing overall outcomes o n the development and governance side, WBG involvement contributed to a notable increase in expenditures in social sectors and environmental and social protection within the confines o f the project better than they would have been otherwise. The analysis o f this report suggests that realistic and constructive WBG involvement in extractive industries could rest o n combining an insistence on high standards o f environmental and social protection with flexible conditionality o n the composition o f all expenditure and its efficiency-complemented by assistance to strengthen a unified budget system, ensure transparency in both revenue and expenditure, and build capacity in accountability institutions. T o be effective, WBG involvement must be buttressed by an agreement with all other major donors that violation o f the environmental and social standards or backsliding o n fiscal transparency or accountability would trigger consequences for the overall f l o w o f aid t o the government concerned. 49 Principal Ratings ICR ICR Review PPAR Chad and Cameroon: Petroleum Pipeline and Development Project Outcome Satisfactory Satisfactory Moderately satisfactory Institutional Modest Modest development Sustainability Unlikely Unlikely R i s k s to development - - Significant outcome Bank performance Satisfactory Satisfactory Moderately satisfactory Borrower performance Satisfactory Satisfactory Moderately satisfactory Cameroon: Petroleum Capacity Enhancement Project Outcome Satisfactory Moderately Unsatisfactory unsatisfactory Risks to development Moderate Significant Significant outcome Bank performance Satisfactory Moderately Moderately satisfactory satisfactory Borrower performance Satisfactory Moderately Moderately unsatisfactory unsatisfactory Chad: Petroleum Sector Management Capacity-Building Project Outcome Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Unsatisfactory unsatisfactory R i s k s to development Significant High High outcome Bank performance Moderately Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Moderately unsatisfactory Borrower performance Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Chad: Petroleum Economy Management Project Outcome Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Institutional Modest Modest development Sustainability Unlikely Unlikely Risks to development - - High outcome Bank performance Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Borrower performance Unsatisfactory Highly unsatisfactory Highly unsatisfactory PROGRAM 0utcome Unsatisfactory Risk to development High outcome Bank performance Moderately unsatisfactory Borrower performance Unsatisfactory 51 Annex A. Chad and Cameroon: Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project (WB Loan 4558-CD; WB Loan 7020-CM; IFC Project 4338) Summary: Project Outcome and Lessons MAINFINDINGS 1. The Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project (PDPP) i s the main lending operation in the program o f World Bank Group (WBG) support for developing the petroleum sector in the two countries, accounting for about 86 percent o f the total financing. The program included two IBRD loans to Chad and Cameroon, two IFC loans to both countries, and three IDA credits, one for revenue management in Chad, and one for environmental and social capacity building in each o f Cameroon and Chad. These IDA Credits have been evaluated separately (Annexes ByC, D). 2. The outcome o f the PDPP i s rated moderately satisfactory. (See the main text for a discussion o f the poverty and other broader outcomes o f the project.) The project was executed efficiently by the private sector Consortium and completed ahead o f schedule. Given the shortfall in oil production due to unexpected reservoir and well-productivity problems, revenues to the government o f Cameroon were below expectations. On the other hand, with the high level o f o i l prices, Chad government revenues exceeded expectations. Though the investment climate in both Chad and Cameroon continue to be challenging (more so in Chad than Cameroon), the project has supported private sector development in the two countries and provided procurement opportunities to local suppliers o f goods and services- especially SMEs-from Esso-Chad (EEPCI, ExxonMobil’s Chadian subsidiary). 3. As implementing agency, EEPCI effectively addressed issues encountered during and after construction and performed satisfactorily overall. Private sector ownership and control o f Doba oilfields and pipeline companies were fully achieved, while s t i l l giving minority shares o f the latter to governments. Implementation o f the Environmental Management Plan (EMP) was undertaken broadly in accord with what was reviewed and approved at appraisal. When problems have arisen, the client companies-EEPCI, Cameroon O i l Transport Company (COTCO), and Tchad O i l Transport Company (TOTC0)-have taken the necessary mitigation actions consistent with both the EMP and Bank Group safeguard policies. Some EMP issues remain a challenge, notably the increased project “footprint” in the O i l Fields Development Area (OFDA), which i s associated with the in-fill drilling program and the financial and organizational issues in the Foundation for Environment and Development in Cameroon (FEDEC) that affect the long-term implementation o f the agreed offsets. LESSONS 4. I n large multicountry programs or projects where local capacity for environmental and social safeguard monitoring is limited, supervision of environmental and social issues.can usefully include high-level independent bodies capable o f ensuring compliance with safeguards 52 and environmental management plans. The model used for supervision o f the environmental and social aspects o f the project included a multilayered monitoring system consisting o f both national and international actors. The international inputs, which included the work o f ECMG, IAG, and IFC’s environmental and social specialists, provided solid technical support to the client in i t s efforts to comply with the EMP. ECMG monitoring visits also provided guidance and recommendations on mitigation measures as well as training for local monitoring entities such as CTNSC. These supervision processes also inspired trust and respect in a diverse group o f stakeholders. Both IAG and ECMG have disseminated monitoring reports on their Web sites, ensuring public access. At the same time, national-level capacity building and commitment to mitigating environmental and social impacts i s necessary over the longer term. 5. I n large, complex projects that require the restoration of livelihoods, international financial institutions may need to proactively work with the private sector sponsors to go beyond the usual compensation measures and corporate social responsibility initiatives and move toward regional economic developmentplansd2,in partnership with all stakeholders. The Chad-Cameroonpipeline project affected 375 villages (241 in Cameroon, 134 in Chad) along the pipeline in the two countries. Individual and community compensation paid to those affected along the pipeline was expected to restore livelihoods and sustain them for the long term. The project also earmarked 5 percent o f project revenues for the oil-producing Doba region in Southern Chad. While the villagers were compensatedwell above the national norms, full restoration o f livelihoods has not been achieved. It would have served the project well to have put in place longer-term development objectives and supplemental activities that addressed rural development and poverty alleviation. This also would have been useful for managing expectations, since projects like PDPP that provide short-term benefits, such as employment and compensation, also raise individual and community expectations for longer- term benefits. 6. I n a capacity-constrained environment, IFC may need to look beyond the project to ensure development impacts in the local economy. In projects with significant linkage prospects, such as the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline, IFC may need to undertake early identification o f SME opportunities that the project would generate and develop appropriate programs. When the project was approved in June 2000, IFC identified expansion and diversification o f the non-oil sectors o f the two economies as a key challenge, especially in Chad. IFC expected that local spending by the project would create demand for secondary services and supplies that would boost the local economy. However, the local private sector did not have the capacity to take advantage o f this demand, which limited the extent o f the project’s linkage effects. IFC responded by offering a range o f Advisory Services projects under the Chad SME program, though it took time to get traction with EEPCI. The focal point o f the program currently i s the Enterprise Center that IFC set up in February 2005 in partnership with the Chadian Chamber o f Commerce, which has helped local Chadian f i r m s gain procurement contracts from EEPCI. 7. I n projects with wide-ranging impacts and a diverse mix of stakeholders, it is critical to have a communications strategy aimed at achieving wide participation and building The FACIL program for the OFDA was supposed to be an intermediate step to the Regional Development Plan (RDP) funded by the World Bank. RDP was never implemented. 53 stakeholder confidence. IFC expected the extensive disclosure and consultation measures developed by the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline Project to provide the platform for smooth interactions with stakeholders. Despite the measures taken, groups o f stakeholders, particularly local ones, s t i l l felt that communication was lacking. Although massive amounts o f information about the project’s activities were produced and various channels were employed to disseminate this information, the lack o f direct and frequent contact alienated some stakeholders. 8. Given the inherent methodological limitations, standard project financial and economic analysis needs to be supplemented by qualitative information. The standard methodology for project financial and economic analysis i s inadequate for measuring all the economic costs and benefits and i t s distribution among stakeholders. IFC uses the Financial Rate o f Return (FRR) as the indicator for returns to all financiers and the Economic Rate o f Return (ERR) as a measure o f the returns to the overall economy. Given the difficulties in quantifying other benefits, such as long-term productivity improvements from training, accounting for positive and negative externalities, and taking into account the distribution o f costs and benefits among stakeholders, these measures cannot in themselves provide a full picture of the relevant (development) outcomes o f projects. I t i s imperative to supplement this quantitative assessment with qualitative assessments o f the direct effects on beneficiaries that contribute significantly to local economic development. The Project COMPONENTS, OBJECTIVES, AND COSTS 9. Objectives. The PDPP consisted o f two Bank loans. The loan for Chad was to finance the government’s equity share in the Tchad O i l Transportation Company. TOTCO i s a special-purpose company incorporated in Chad as a joint venture between the private sponsors and the government to own the Chad portion o f the Export System (about 170 kilometers o f the pipeline) and the first pumping station. The loan for Cameroon was to finance the government’s equity share in the Cameroon O i l Transportation Company. COTCO i s a special-purpose company incorporated in Cameroon as a joint-venture between the private sponsors and the two governments to own the Cameroon portion o f the Export System (about 880 kilometers o f onshore pipeline, 11 kilometers o f offshore pipeline, two pumping stations, a pressure reduction station, and the floating storage and offloading vessel). IFC also provided loan financing to COTCO and TOTCO. The project development objectives (PDOs) from the Loan Agreements are as follows: Cameroon: “The objective o f the Project i s to assist in the development and export through the Borrower’s territory o f the petroleum reserves o f the Doba Basin O i l Fields in an environmentally and socially sound manner, and thereby, inter alia, increase the Borrower’s fiscal revenues available for financing priority development expenditures in the context o f the Borrower’s strategy for economic growth and poverty reduction.” Chad: “The objective o f the Project i s to assist in the development and export through Cameroon o f the petroleum reserves o f the Doba Basin O i l Fields in an environmentally and socially sound manner and thereby, inter alia, increase the Borrower’s resources and expenditures for poverty alleviation.’’ The Loan Agreement 54 for Chad also incorporated provisions to earmark 76.5 percent o f petroleum royalties and 72 percent o f dividends to poverty reduction plus 4.5 percent o f royalties for priority projects in the production zone. 10. According to the joint WB-IFC Project Appraisal Document (PAD, #19343, April 13, 2000), the development objectives o f the project were, through environmentally and socially sound private investment in the petroleum sector: (i) to increase Chad government expenditures on poverty alleviation activities; and (ii) to increase Cameroonian fiscal revenues available for financing priority development expenditures in the context o f the government’s strategy for economic growth and poverty reduction. The PAD also listed two key performance indicators (KPIs) for the PDOs: (i) an increase in Chad o f at least $40 million63per year (2005-09) in petroleum-financed budgetary expenditures o n priority sectors;64 and (ii) an increase in Cameroon o f at least $40 million6’ per year (2005-07) in petroleum-generated revenues available to finance priority development expenditures.66 11. The discussion in the PAD focuses on the project’s potential to reduce poverty in the two countries. In Chad, the Petroleum Revenue Management program was expected to transform petroleum revenues into poverty alleviation and sustainable economic growth. The project was expected to benefit Cameroon by generating additional fiscal revenues for priority public expenditures and create an atmosphere conducive to foreign direct investment. 63. In the case o f Chad, the pipeline project was expected to generate total government revenues o f about $1.677 billion over the life o f the project (28 years). The average annual revenue was estimated to be about $60 million ($1.677 billiod28) and based on the allocation framework under Chad’s revenue management program, this was expected to result in at least $40 million in additional annual expenditures in the priority poverty sectors over the f i r s t 10 years o f production. See PAD, p.25 for details. 64. For Chad, the PAD listed the following outputs and associated KPIs: Output: substantial fiscal revenues from export o f Doba petroleum =Is: export o f first oil flow through the pipeline by end-2004 and 81 million barrels per year in 2005-2007; government petroleum revenues o f at least $70 million per annum 2005-2008 Output: Petroleum Revenue Management Program (PRMP) in operation WI: petroleum revenues allocated and disbursed in accordance with PRMP Output: private sector owned and operated oil field and export systems KPI: private sector ownership and control o f Doba oilfield and pipeline companies (excluding minority government share) Output: development o f oilfields and construction and operation o f pipeline in environmentally and socially sound manner KPI: achievement o f targets and norms prescribed in the EMP, including under the Resettlement and Compensation Plan. 65. In the case o f Cameroon, the pipeline project was expected to generate total government revenues o f about $505 million over the l i f e o f the project, representing an annual average o f about $18 million, with average annual levels over the f i r s t five years o f production o f about $45 million. See PAD, p. 26 for details. 66. For Cameroon, the PAD listed the following outputs and associated K P I s : Output: substantial revenues from export o f Doba oil KPI: increase in government by at least $40 million per year in 2005-07 Output: private sector owned and operated export system KPI: physical completion and commissioning o f Export system before end-2004 Output: construction and operation o f the o i l export system in an environmentally and socially sound manner KPI: Achievement o f targets and norms prescribed in the EMP, includingunder the Compensation Plan, and the Indigenous Peoples Plan. 55 12. This evaluation i s based on the two core objectives, that is, the common themes evident in the above objectives: to develop the Doba o i l fields in order to increase the fiscal revenues o f Cameroon and Chad available for priority poverty reduction expenditures; and to carry out this development in an environmentally and socially sound manner. 13. Components. The PDPP supplied the following infrastructure and equipment needed to enable the export o f Chadian oil: a field system, including the drilling and operation o f about 300 wells in Chad; and an export system, including a 1,070 kilometer buried pipeline to Kribi in Cameroon’s southwestern coast, an 11 kilometer submarine pipeline from the coast to offshore floating storage and loading facilities, and pumping stations. 14. Environmental and social impact mitigation, although not a component in the PDPP, was an imperative demanded by the international community for COTCO, TOTCO, and both governments. The governments received IDA credits for strengthening their environmental and social management capabilities. The PDPP components were not revised. 15. Costs. The private Consortium that capitalized, constructed, and i s operating the PDPP consists o f ExxonMobil, Chevron, and Petronas o f Malaysia. The actual project cost amounted to $4.8 billion, compared to appraisal estimates o f $3.7 billion, with the cost overrun o f $1.1 billion funded by the Consortium. Table A. 1 shows the actual and estimated costs (including contingencies and excluding $15 million for preparation) and financing sources. A $400 million bond issue was cancelled for lack o f market interest and Consortium equity covered the gap. 16. The Field System was funded by equity from the Consortium. The Export System was financed by equity and loans to TOTCO and COTCO. IFC provided an A Loan o f $13.9 million and a B Loan o f equal amount to TOTCO for the construction o f the Chad portion o f the Export System. IFC also provided an A Loan o f $86.1 million and a B Loan o f equal amount to COTCO for the construction o f the Cameroon portion o f the Export System. Other commercial loans totaling $400 million were provided through U.S. Eximbank and Coface. In addition to the IFC loans, IBRD provided loans o f $39.5 million and $53.4 million, respectively, to Chad and Cameroon to finance their equity participation in the Export System. 56 Table A.l. Project Cost and Financing By Component (US$ million equivalent) Appraisal Actual Field System Export System Field System Export System Government equity 0 117.5 0 119 Of which IBRD 0 92.9 0 90.6 Co-financing by 1,521 2,084.5 2,648.3 2,050 Consortium Of which IFC 0 400 0 200 Commercial banks 0 1,oo 0 400 Consortium equity 132 1 684.5 2648.3 1,450 Total 1.52 1 2.202 I 2.648.3 2.169 Implementation Experience 17. Key Dates. The pipeline construction was completed in July 2003, 18 months ahead o f schedule, with o i l deliveries starting in October 2003. Considering the size and complexity o f the project and i t s challenging location, the early completion was a major achievement. As o f February 2009, the project was producing about 120,000 barrels per day (bbl/d), less than half o f the original target production rate o f 225,000 bbl/d. Actual o i l production has been hindered by early water breakthrough, water disposal limitations, damage in some o f the producing wells, and pressure depletion in one zone. The project has been addressing the production shortfalls through the use o f three satellite fields (since 2005) as well as an in-fill drilling program6’ (since 2005) that has expanded the footprint o f the project and increased land requirements. 18. Monitoring and Evaluation. The quality o f the project’s M&E is rated modest. The PDPP was designed to set relevant date-bound targets, and i t s logical framework was consistent throughout. I t specified the right data required on expenditures, output (for example, drilling progress, pipeline construction, and E M P activities), and outcome (for example, petroleum exports, generated revenues, amounts transferred to Treasuries, and expenditures on priority sectors). Decision-making in the project has been informed by M&E data. For example, the shortfall in the quantity and quality o f crude production led to new investments by the Consortium. Also, data on the allocation o f revenues to priority sectors prompted a dialogue between the WB and government o f Chad that led to a new M O U in 2006. 19. However, there were shortcomings in the monitoring o f the actual use o f petroleum revenues. At project close in June 2005, the welfare and poverty impact o f the poverty- reduction activities financed by these revenues were unknown and there were no provisions (for example, through surveys) to evaluate it. There were also iags in the monitoring o f construction funding and compliance with covenants. Internal evaluation o f the PDPP (ICR, 67 Based on information from the ECMG reports from 2005, among other sources, IFC considers that the infill drilling began in 2005, whereas EEPCI states that the infill drilling began in mid-2008, and the additional wells drilled between 2003 and 2008 were development wells within the original 40-acre well-spacing pattern. 57 #36560, December 2006, and IEG-WB review; XPSR, November 2005, and IEG-IFC review), made no effort to measure the project’s results for poverty reduction. 20. Given the scope and complexity o f the project, specialized consultants were engaged to provide independent opinion and expert knowledge on issues relating to o i l reserves, construction, insurance, and ongoing environmental and social impacts. On behalf o f the WBG, IFC appointed a consultant, D’Appollonia (Genoa, Italy), as the External Compliance Monitoring Group (ECMG) to monitor the implementation o f the EMP by the Consortium and to assess the work o f the governments’ implementing agencies in Chad and Cameroon. The ECMG visited the project 3 times a year during the construction phase o f the project and has continued to do so once a year during the current operational phase. The average cost o f the ECMG’s services i s about $400,000 per annum and i t s reports are available on the project and IFC Web sites. Supervision visits by IFC environmental and social specialists are carried out regularly in coordination with their counterpart consultants from ECMG. 2 1. In addition, five distinguished individuals-the International Advisory Group (1AG)-were appointed in February 2001 to provide an independent overview o f the project, and to advise the WB president and the two governments on the progress in achieving the ’ broad objectives o f the pipeline project and the related capacity-building projects. The work o f the IAG was expected to continue for up to 10 years and involved visits twice a year to the two countries. The average annual cost o f IAG’s services i s about $600,000 and i t s reports are also available on the project Web site. IAG i s about to end i t s monitoring role in the project, with the final report expected in June 2009. 22. Financial Management. The evaluation team found financial management aspects o f the project to be satisfactory. 23. Procurement. The evaluation team found no procurement issues in the project. 24. Environmental and Social Safeguards. The Environmental and Social Clearance Memorandum (ESCM) dated September 15, 1999, identifiedthe following environmental and social safeguard policies and guidelines6*that should be referenced in the investment agreement. The project EIA led to the preparation o f an EMP that would govern the processes and actions required to comply with environmental and social safeguard policies and guidelines in both countries. The IFC was tasked with supervising the implementation o f the EMP. Main Findings 25. The handling o f environmental and social project issues was satisfactory in both countries. EEPCI, COTCO, and TOTCO have performed well in meeting EMP requirements and Bank safeguards, particularly in the areas o f health and safety, emissions, water 68. The applicable safeguard policies and guidelines are: OP 4.01 Policy on Environmental Assessment, dated October 1998; OD 4.20 Indigenous People, dated June 1999; World Bank Operational Policy Note 11.03, Management o f Cultural Property, dated September 1986; OD 4.30 Involuntary Resettlement, dated June 1, 1990; World Bank General Environmental Guidelines dated July 1, 1998; IFC General Health and Safety Guidelines, July 1, 1998; and Onshore O i l & Gas Guidelines, dated July 1, 1995; OD 4.15, Poverty Reduction; and OP7.50, International Waterways. 58 management, solid waste management, and oil spill response planning and implementation. At the same time, in Chad, there are risks to the livelihoods o f communities and individuals from the in-fill drilling program (with total wells eventually reaching about 700, compared to the estimated 287 at appraisal). 26. One major benefit o f IFC involvement was i t s insistence on establishing the multitieredmonitoring structure. Although the national government agencies ran into difficulties and failed to perform as expected, the’monitoring by ECMG and by IFC’s Environment and Social Department was important in dealing with complex issues to which there was no easy solution. Two important examples were: (i) the resettlement and compensation challenges in Chad resulting from the more extensive land acquisition associated with the in-fill drilling program; and (ii) the institutional and financial problems experienced by FEDEC, which required actions by both IFC and COTCO. IFC’s contribution remains important in ensuring that required.mitigation actions are implemented so as to continue to meet the objectives described in the EMP. 27. In the IFC Environment and Social Review (April 14,2006), applicable safeguard policies, guidelines, and procedures were evaluated and rated. Comments were provided and compliance or non-compliance determinations were made. The review concluded that the project materially complied with all relevant policies, guidelines, and procedures. It received a satisfactory rating. The following section presents information to determine compliance with safeguard policies and guidelines from 2006 to the present. OD 4.20, Indigenous Peoples 28. The EMP identified the Bakola Pygmy and Bantu settlements in Southern Cameroon as vulnerable to the impacts o f the pipeline construction. The decision about where to locate the pipeline took these settlements into account. However, to mitigate potential long-term indirect adverse impacts associated with constructing and operating the pipeline in Pygmy and Bantu-inhabited areas between Lolodorf and Kribi, an Indigenous Peoples Plan was developed. 29. The IPP contained background information on Bakola Pygmies and the interdependent Bantu communities in the immediate vicinity o f COTCO’s easement between Lolodorf and Kribi, along with results from community consultations. The objective o f the IPP was to provide long-term benefits to the project-affected Pygmy population via assistance to programs and projects that address health, education, and agriculture in the region. In addition, due to the Bantu’s historical association with the Bakola Pygmies in the Atlantic Littoral Forest, the IPP addresses some health issues o f Bantu groups. Hence, the IPP included an organizational framework for developing and implementing IPP programs in basic literacy, education, hygiene assistance, improved water supplies, and agriculture. Six hundred thousand dollars (360 million FCFA) o f COTCO’s $3.5 million (2,100 million FCFA) capital contribution to the Foundation for Environment and Development in Cameroon (FEDEC) was earmarked and managed to fund IPP-related programs. 30. Project monitoring reports from ECMG and IFC and the FEDEC Evaluation Report (October 2007) point to ongoing implementation successes along with challenges for continuing implementation o f the IPP. Despite financial difficulties in FEDEC, programs in 59 citizenship, housing, education, health, and agriculture are continuing, though at a reduced level. The level o f participation o f some Pygmy communities in FEDEC-supported programs i s considerably lower than expected, and there appears to be some tension between Pygmy leadership and the implementing organization, RAPID. As o f May 2009, agreement has been reached by IFC, COTCO and FEDEC to fund the long-term IPP. 3 1. Finally, the ongoing financial and management problems faced by FEDEC, if left unresolved, will likely have a serious negative impact on continued implementation o f IPP activities as well as the environmental offsets detailed in the EMP. O P N 11.03, Management of Cultural Property 32. In 2003, The World Bank declared two Level I11non-compliances in Cameroon. Both were related to project activities at sites that previously had been identified as high-priority archaeological sites (ECA-68 and ECA-163). A special archeological mission by the ECMG determined that these areas could have been avoided, hence the Level I11non-compliance. COTCO was asked to develop and implement an acceptable mitigation program. The program consisted of: preparation o f a scientific report that summarized findings and opportunities for future archeological research in the areas traversed by the pipeline; funding to support post- graduate studies for two Cameroonian archeology students; and the establishment o f a curation facility to house recovered artifacts and support further archeological work in Cameroon and Chad. Monitoring by ECMG and IFC confirm that COTCO i s meeting its obligations to mitigate the non-compliances. No other non-compliances have been reported. OD 4.30, Involuntary Resettlement 33. . Chad. I n November 2005, ECMG recommended implementing the provision in the EMP for an evaluation o f the Consortium’s resettlement and compensation activities “at the end o f the first agricultural cycle after the construction o f the fixed facilities has been completed.” The Chad Resettlement and Compensation Plan Evaluation Study was carried out between April 2006 and August 2006. The evaluation assessed the adequacy o f the Chad Resettlement and Compensation Plan (CRCP) for addressing changes in project scope and land requirements arising from more extensive drilling and production well development in the O i l Fields Development Area (OFDA) than was envisaged in the original CRCP. 34. The evaluation had three major findings. First, the original CRCP was not performing as intended primarily due to the more extensive land use associated with the need to drill more wells to reach production targets. Second, CRCP-prescribed mitigations are assessed as no longer adequate to address the magnitude o f project impacts on the agricultural livelihood o f households and on community resources (bush and fallow), particularly in a small number o f villages where land to support populations i s already scarce. Third, as o f June 2006, the project had permanently compensated 1,243 hectares o f land in the OFDA, exceeding CRCP estimates by about 65 percent. A further 1,698 hectares o f land had been temporarily compensated, nearly twice the area estimated by the CRCP.69 69. The report recommendedthat compensation be reviewed for all villages and where necessary adjusted to reflect their differing levels of communal land loss and that livelihood strategies place emphasis on providing project-affected people with replacement land. 60 35. Since issuing the report, both ECMG and IAG have observed that EEPCI has started to implement some o f the reports’ recommendations, particularly those related to land use process and to effective management o f impacts and o f compensation information. The Land Use Management Action Plan (LUMAP) uses a geographic information system (GIS) to demarcate village land area according to use and who has traditional rights to specific plots. For agricultural land it specifies which plots are under cultivation and which are in fallow. The LUMAP program h as helpedthe EMP team to ensure that temporarily occupied land i s restored and returned to previous users; there i s a high degree o f accuracy in data collection and information management pertaining to compensation (both individual and community) and household socioeconomic information; most seriously affected villages and households are prioritized based on the principles recommended in the Chad Resettlement and Compensation Plan Evaluation Study; and based on this prioritization, Site-Specific Plans are devised for the most severely affected settlements. 36. The IEG evaluation mission observed in February 2009 that LUMAP has been undertakenin 4 o f the 10 most affected villages in the OFDA (Danmadjia, Dildo, Dokaidilti, and Ngalaba)70.The data have not been fully analyzed, but preliminary analysis suggests that current compensation and resettlement programs are likely to be adequate in mitigating the impacts associated with the increased permanent land acquisition o f the in-fill drilling program at least for those 4 villages. The remaining 6 villages should be completed in 4-6 months. 37. In November 2008, IFC engaged Environ to undertake a Cumulative Environmental and Social Impact Assessment focused on the in-fill drilling program. The report i s currently a “confidential draft,” and i t s findings are not available for use in the current IEG report. However, IFC and ECMG believe that the in-fill program does not pay adequate attention to the conclusions o f the Chad Resettlement and Compensation Plan report and that this could be considered non-compliance. 38. In terms o f land return, satisfactory results are now achieved and the footprint o f temporary facilities i s being significantly reduced. Five hundred nine o f 549 well pads have been restored to the dimensions committed to in the EMP. W h i l e not all o f them are yet effectively returned for community use, this i s s t i l l a remarkable achievement (ECMG 2008). A new procedure has been devised for the quitus (clearance) o f land return. W h i l e before only the village chief was expected to sign the quitus document, previous landowners are now identified and invited to sign as well; in this manner they are informed that their land i s ready for cultivation, and are much better placed to claim to use it (ECMG 2008). 39. Cameroon. During the construction phase, COTCO implemented a compensation program for individuals and villages affected by the pipeline construction. The program followed the guidelines in the EMP. Villages received community compensation such as water wells and water points, electrification, community centers, schools etc. The program encompassed a total o f 650 distinct micro-development projects for the benefit o f 266 villages in the vicinity o f the pipeline and other permanent facilities such as the pump stations and the ’O According to ECMG (April-May 2009), the Village Land Use Survey had been completed in 8 villages (Dokaidilti, Dildo, Ngalaba, Mouarom, Danmadjia, Begada, Mbanga and Bela) and was on-going in Bero, covering a total o f 2061 households. 61 marine terminal. At the completion o f the construction phase, the project allocated over 1.84 billion FCFA ($2.8 million) for community and regional compensation in Cameroon. 40. During the operations phase, compensation activities generally relate to the ongoing Social Statement Process to resolve a l i s t o f concerns and grievances developed in collaboration with local NGOs, representatives o f the government o f Cameroon, and villagers. There are also periodic requirements to compensate for land use required for maintenance or facilities improvements. The COTCO-PSMC-NGO platform for cooperation meets regularly and functions as intended. Since 2005,357 out o f 456 grievances (80 percent) have been resolved. From project inception until end-2008 there remain 142 unresolved grievance cases. Some communities and individuals are dissatisfied with the outcomes and continue to press the platform for mitigation o f impacts, particularly since they are receiving l i t t l e information about the status o f claims dating back several years. NGOs believe that the processing time for grievance resolution i s too long. COTCO admits that managing expectations has been very difficult. 41. Total individual compensation (cash and in-kind) for both phases in Cameroon has reached about $1 1.5 million. NGOs, while supportive o f the EMP and i t s processes, believe that a project o f such scale should have longer-term economic development impacts at the village level. External monitoring suggests that compensation programs are being implemented according to the guidelines specified in the EMP. Onshore Oil and Gas Guidelines 42. The key production and control practices were monitored closely by EEPCI and the ECMGe71 With the exception o f gas flaring, the project consistently complied with the requirements detailed in the EMP72.Gas flaring i s discussed below in the section on Air Emissions and Air Quality. World Bank General Environmental Guideline and IFC General Health and Safety Guidelines 43. Air Emissions and Air Quality: Stack emissions and ambient air quality at facilities in both Cameroon and Chad are within established guidelines. A Level 1 non-compliance for excessive flaring was raised by the EMP team in August 2006. Flaring volumes o f natural gas associated with the produced crude were higher than the project target level o f 1.1 million cubic feet per day during most o f 2007. Two additional compressors were installed in April 2008, which helped drop flaring to about 0.65 million cubic feet per day. When compressors are under repair or maintenance, flaring increases. Energy needs for the project continue to rise and EEPCI i s now beginning to use most associated gas for power generation. 7 1. Maximize the use o f freshwater gel-based mud systems, dispose of drilling muds in a manner that minimizes the impact on the environment, reuse invert (diesel-based) muds, reuse drilling-mudpond decant water, the reuse o f produced water for steam generation when steam i s used to stimulate reservoir production, minimize gas flaring, and scrub sour gases. ’*In 2007 and until April 2008, flaring was above the target level o f 1.1 MSCFD defined in the Consortium’s License To Operate. ECMG (April-May 2009) has noted that since the Miandoum compression station has become operative the Project the project has met the target level o f 1.1 MCFD/day 62 44. In 2005 ECMG reported a significant non-compliance with commitments made by the project at the time o f the completion certificate issuance. In response to this observation, EEPCI has revitalized and strengthened i t s dust control and mitigation program. This program includes: (i) an increase in paved road surface in the OFDA (a total o f 20.8 kilometers were paved in 2007 and 2008); and (ii) the application o f molasses during the dry season. Dust control along the spine road and in the OFDA appears now to be adequate and compliant with project commitments. 45. Liquid Effluents: Functioning systems for data collection and monitoring are in place. Systems to treat and process waste are functioning according to guidelines detailed in the EMP. 46. Hazardous Materials and Wastes: Functioning systems for data collection and monitoring are in place. Systems to treat and process waste are functioning according to EMP guidelines. 47. Solid Wastes: Waste management continues to be a challenge for the project, especially at Kome. Volumes o f waste are considerably higher than estimated due to the lack o f infrastructure and markets for scrap metal etc. in Chad. Hazardous waste incinerators frequently break down and waste i s being stored in drums. Waste recycling and donation programs appear to be effective. A Chadian company has been contracted to handle plastics and food waste composting. The EMP team i s actively looking for new approaches to ensure waste i s efficiently and cost-effectively processed. 48. Health: From the human health perspective, malaria and HIV/AIDS are the big concerns in both Chad and Cameroon. All employees and visitors are required to take malaria medication unless they are determined to have immune status. In addition, there i s an ongoing education program, which serves as a constant reminder o f the serious health effects o f contracting malaria and HIV/AIDS. Employees are randomly checked to ensure that they are taking the malaria medication. 49. Safety: The Recordable Incident Rate captures even minor injury accidents, a broad measure o f safety performance. In 2007 and 2008, project workers kept their historically l o w recordable incident rate well below the average rate o f the petroleum industry as a whole. The Year End 2008 rate o f 0.23 incidents per 200,000 working hours i s three times better than U.S.petroleum industry average (based on reports from participating companies to the American Petroleum Institute). 50. Drinking Water: The project maintains a thorough water quality and quantity monitoring system in both countries. This system includes: surface and groundwater withdrawals in the OFDA, monitoring o f water for human consumption from project- installed wells, regional groundwater monitoring in and around project facilities in both countries, and groundwater monitoring at project solid waste landfill sites. A laboratory in the Netherlands verifies water quality. N o problem areas have been identified. 63 5 1. Monitoring, records and reporting: At all levels o f record keeping and reporting, efforts by the project have improved over time. ECMG has provided regular guidance and suggestions on how to improve the system. EMP-Defined Offsets: The Foundation for Environment and Development in Cameroon 52. The creation o f FEDEC was proposed by the World Bank as an offset for OP 4.04 and OP 4.20. FEDEC would provide long-term financing to support the ongoing management cost o f two new national parks, Campo Ma’an and Mbam and Djerem and the implementation o f the IPP for BagyeliBakola (Pygmies) communities. 53. COTCO provided initial seed money o f $3.5 million that would be managed as an expendable endowment by a third-party fund investment manager. At design two important assumptions were made: first, that this level o f investment would be sufficient to support the two parks and the IPP for 28 years; and second, that FEDEC was expected to raise additional funds from international donors. The design o f the investment portion o f FEDEC’s institutional structure was based on previous experiences undertaken with World Bank/GEF resources. FEDEC has had no success in raising additional money, which may be due to the foundation’s perceived close association with ExxonMobil. 54. Despite ongoing implementation challenges FEDEC’s support has been extremely important for both national parks and for the IPP. Prior to FEDEC’s support, neither park had a management plan or the resources to implement one. Mbam and Djerem National Park i s managed by the World Conservation Society (WCS) and receives about $160,000 per year, substantially more than what was estimated in the EMP. The additional costs are due to the dollar devaluation, the provision o f budget for costs that were supposed to be met by the government (park guard salaries), and to increased costs over time. WCS has devoted considerable resources to working with local communities, pastoralists, and fishermen to obtain their help in implementing the management plan. WCS i s also implementing alternative livelihood programs, has partnerships with research institutes, and has established agreements with logging companies and safari operators. Both these enterprises now provide annual financial contributions to the park. The park employs 34 ecoguards that are paid by WCS and the government o f Cameroon. Unfortunately, in 2008 WCS lost some o f i t s non- FEDEC support, which i s affecting i t s ability to continue i t s operations at the park. There i s also a disagreement over the use o f funds that were advanced by FEDEC. 55. Campo Ma’an National Park i s managed by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and receives about $130,000 per year, which i s also more than originally estimated in the EMP. Their current contract runs from January 2007 to December 2010. WWF works in four main program areas: park protection, partnerships, bioecological monitoring, and transboundary issues. WWF believes that the FEDEC support has been instrumental in i t s ability to raise additional funds for the program. This may be another reason why donors have not supported FEDEC directly because it’s easier for them to directly support the actual implementing organization. 56. Since its creation, FEDEC has faced a number o f financial and management challenges. In i t s January 2005 report, the ECMG described some o f the more important problems faced by FEDEC, including the beginnings o f financial difficulties associated with 64 the falling value o f the US. dollar against the CFA and the lack o f success in raising additional funding from donors. Each succeeding ECMG report, along with observations provided by the IAG and the project Inspection Panel, have highlighted ongoing financial difficulties, i t s inability to raise funds, and its need to draw down capital to support i t s operations. E C M G notes in i t s June 2008 report that the a m o y t drawn from the funds exceeds what was foreseen by over $1.O million. The Inspection Panel noted that i t s budget projections for the IPP program appeared to be inadequate to support the programmatic elements o f the IPP. Finally, the FEDEC Evaluation Report o f October 2007, which looked at the three programs in depth, including the preparation o f cost simulations, recommended that FEDEC would require an additional $3.3 million to meet i t s long-term objectives. 57. Over the past few years, IFC, COTCO, and the government o f Cameroon have attempted to address the deteriorating financial situation. Discussions have been held and proposals made to increase the endowment through additional capital inputs from both COTCO and the IFC. At the time o f report preparation these discussions are continuing and a draft action plan has been prepared. At the same time, FEDEC’s situation continues to worsen. The recent decline in world stock markets has further eroded i t s capital endowment. COTCO has provided some interim funding to help operations, but a long-term solution has not been agreed. One must question the commitment o f all the parties to finding a solution considering the financial situation has worsened since 2005. 58. The design o f FEDEC could have been better. Initial capitalization was inadequate and that, coupled with FEDEC’s inability to raise additional money, has contributed to its ongoing financial difficulties. Limits on the drawdown should have been put in place. It also appears that rate o f return estimates may have been too optimistic and there was no provision on how to meet budget requirements during times when investments do not perform. If additional resources are provided to the endowment, stricter controls should be placed on the drawdown. RELEVANCE 59. Objectives. At approval; the pipeline project’s objectives were consistent with the priorities o f the Country Assistance Strategies o f Chad and Cameroon. The project represented a significant opportunity for Chad to develop i t s o i l resources and use the revenues to finance expenditures in sectors with the potential to reduce poverty. This was consistent with the Bank Group’s country strategy o f increasing domestic revenues by stimulating private sector-led growth through significant foreign direct investment. For Cameroon, the project was expected to provide an additional source o f income for financing priority development expenditures in the social sectors and rehabilitation o f basic infrastructure, two key elements in the WBG’s strategy for long-term growth and poverty reduction in the country. 60. The objectives were relevant in at least two ways. First, the project directly addressed the issues o f private sector development and poverty reduction in both countries. Second, it matched the Consortium’s interest in exploiting and exporting o i l with governments’ interest in increasing fiscal revenues for priority sector expenditures with the potential for poverty alleviation. However, as noted in the main text, the objectives did not include aspects o f efficiency o f expenditures. Therefore, the relevance o f the PDOs i s rated modest. 65 61. Design. The project’s design ensured that the facilities would be successfully built and operated with adequate safeguards and private sector involvement. Also, at appraisal, special measures were taken to maximize the likelihood that most o f the additional government revenues to Chad would be spent o n poverty reduction initiatives, namely, a 1999 law and the IDA-supported Petroleum Revenue Management Program that allocated the revenues to expenditures on public health and social services, education, infrastructure, rural development (agriculture and livestock), environmental protection, and water resources. The P A D also listed two K P I s that set annual targets for oil-revenue-financed priority sector expenditures in the two countries. However, as noted in the in main text, the emphasis on inputs rather than results made the project design ineffective. The quality o f project design i s rated modest. 62. The project featured five layers o f externalhnternal monitoring, including the IAG and ECMG. The multiple layers o f oversight have been useful for tracking the progress in a transparent fashion. 63. Overall, the project relevance is rated modest, based on modest ratings o f relevance o f objectives and o f design EFFICIENCY 64. Economic Internal Rate o f Return (EIRR). The NPV projected at completion (June 2005, based o n the Bank’s Implementation Completion Report) was $3,721 million versus $1,417 million estimated at appraisal, that is, 162 percent higher. Chad’s share ($1,884 million) i s 300 percent higher due to higher-than-expected o i l prices, but Cameroon’s share ($1 12 million) i s 22 percent lower due to lower-than-expected o i l output. These estimates were based on conservative assumptions about production and prices. 65. f Return (FRR). For the purposes o f this evaluation, FRR was Financial Rate o estimated using a financial model. The FRR exceeded the W A C C (weighted average cost o f capital) benchmark significantly, implying excellent investment returns for project financiers. 66. Economic Rate o f Return (ERR). In addition to the FRR, the ERR for the project was computed using the financial model. L i k e the FRR, the high value o f ERR suggests that the project has provided significant net economic benefits. As noted elsewhere, the FRR and ERR measures do not take into account the distribution o f costs and benefits among stakeholders. 67. With the unraveling o f the PRMP and the Bank’s exit from the Chad portion o f the project in August 2008, there is even greater uncertainty n o w about the judicious use o f o i l revenues for poverty reduction purposes. Even when the Petroleum Revenue Management Program was in force, the government o f Chad had expanded the scope o f the priority sectors to include security and territorial administration and eliminated the Future Generations Fund. The government o f Chad undertook these actions unilaterally, without inputs from the development partners. 68. Overall, efficiency o f the project i s rated high. 66 EFFICACY 69. Project Development Objectives. The project’s efficacy in achieving the core PDOs i s rated modest. Objective 1: To develop the Doba oilfields in order to increase thefiscal revenues of Cameroon and Chad available for priority poverty reduction expenditures 70. Chad. The achievement o f this objective was modest in Chad. Though o i l production started earlier than planned, the 8 1 million barrels per year target was not (and will not be) achieved73due to production setbacks on account o f unfavorable geological conditions. Price discounts for Chad o i l with respect to the Brent marker crude was about $10-1 5 per barrel. However, these adverse factors were more than offset by higher-than-projected crude prices, on average $39.2 (2003-08) versus $16.4 per barrel. 71. By end-2008, Chad’s share o f project revenues had reached $4,383 million,74 implying an average annual revenue o f $835 million for the operational phase (Q4-2003 to 44-2008), a much higher level than expected at appraisal, thanks to high o i l prices. Cumulative oil revenues in Chad are close to three times the levels anticipated at appraisal for the entire l i f e o f the project.75As noted in the main text (Table 3), however, during the 2004-07 period, the share o f expenditures going to priority sectors amounted to 53 percent o f the total, well short o f the expected 70 percent at approval. (See the annex on the PRMP for a fuller discussion o f the public expenditure aspects o f the program.) 72. Cameroon. The achievement o f this objective was modest in Cameroon. According to EEPCI’s production figures, 288.3 million barrels o f o i l has been exported so far (Q4-2003 to Q4-2008), implying estimated transit fees o f $1 18.2 million and total revenues o f $177 million76for the operational phase. This leads to an annual average o f $22.5 million, well short o f the $40 million per year expected at appraisal. As noted earlier, the o i l revenue shortfall in Cameroon has been due to the lower-than-expected production levels stemming from well productivity problems. Objective 2: To carry out the oil development and transportprogram in an environmentally and socially sound manner 73. The achievement o f this objective was substantial in both countries. The pipeline project has been challenging from an environmental and social perspective, comprising sensitive and complex aspects related to selection o f the pipeline corridor, land use and 73. Oil production peaked in 2005 at 63 million barrels for the year. 74. These figures are based on the latest Esso-Chad project update (“Project Update #25, Annual report 2008) from i t s Web site. 75. The pipeline project was expected to generate total government revenues o f about $1.677 billion over the life o f the project (28 years). 76. As per the project agreement, Cameroon receives 41c per barrel, which leads to estimates o f total transit fees (transit fees make up about 66 percent o f Cameroon’s project revenues. Income tax and dividends from COTCO are additional sources o f revenues) o f $1 18.2 million (288.3 x 0.41 x 1000000) and total revenues o f $177.4 million (1 18.2/0.66) for the operational phase (44-2003 to 44-2008). 67 impacts to both terrestrial and marine habitats as a result o f pipeline construction, oil spill prevention, control o f air emissions and liquid effluents, and a multitude o f socioeconomic impacts including involvement o f indigenous communities and cultural resources in two African countries. Extensive GIS work was undertaken to select the optimal pipeline route to follow main road and railroad routes for minimum disturbance o f protected and environmentally sensitive areas like Deng Deng forest in Cameroon. The project properly addressed the effects o f construction on indigenous peoples, optimizing the pipeline corridor through Cameroon’s Atlantic Littoral Forest to avoid Pygmy settlements in Bakola/Bageli. 74. During the operations phase, EEPCI, COTCO, and the TOTCO have performed well in meeting EMP requirements and Bank safeguards, particularly for health and safety, emissions, water management, solid waste management, and o i l spill response planning and implementation. O i l spill response plans (EEPCI’s) and equipment at drilling sites, pump stations, and the unloading bay in the Kribi tanker terminal are adequate. The malaria prevention program has cut the malaria infection rate among employees over the past six years (2002-08) by a factor o f 40-reducing the rate recorded in 2008 to only 2.5 percent of the 2002 rate. Compensation and resettlement programs in both countries have achieved mixed results, but overall have functioned as intended. The same can be said o f the EMP defined offsets (FEDEC), which have had difficulties meeting EMP defined goals. Project monitoring organizations (ECMG, IAG, and the IFC Environment and Social Department) have reported on these implementation difficulties in a comprehensive way, which has led to technical changes in program implementation. 75. Evidence from ECMG, IAG, and the IEG mission (February 2009) suggests that the project complies with relevant national ESHS laws and regulations and applicable WBG environmental and health and safety policies and guidelines. Environmental management, communication with stakeholders including WBG, and supervision o f compliance with EMP during the project was successfully delegated to D’Appolonia, an Italian consulting firm that took the responsibilities o f the ECMG. DEVELOPMENT OUTCOME 76. Performance Ratings per Development Objective. Based on i t s modest relevance, high efficiency, and modest efficacy ratings, the project’s overall outcome i s rated moderately satisfactory. The sub-ratings for each o f the core PDOs are shown in Table A.2. Table A.2. Sub-ratings and Outcome Rating Based on the Achievement o f the Project Development Objectives Objectives Relevance Efficiency Efficacy OUTCOME 1. to develop the Doba o i l fields in order to increase the Modest Modest fiscal revenues o f Cameroon and Chad available for priority poverty reduction expenditures 2. to carry out t h i s development in an environmentally , Substantial Substantial and sociallv sound manner Overall Outcome Rating Modest High Modest Moderately satisfactorv 68 77. Direct effects on beneficiaries: Over and above the government spending o f o i l revenues, the pipeline project generated significant direct benefits to the two economies, such as employment, training, supplier development, compensation (individual and community), infrastructure improvements, and community investments by the Consortium. Given the overall paucity o f state capacity in the two countries-more so in Chad than Cameroon-for program execution and service delivery, the project played (and continues to play) a critical role in the lives o f communities around the project. 78. Employment and training:,Employment o f nationals peaked at just under 10,000 (4,166, or 42 percent, in Chad and 5,796, or 58 percent in Cameroon) during the construction phase in 2002. At end-2008, the project employed 6,409 people, with 5,246 (82 percent) in Chad and 1,163 (18 percent) in Cameroon. These figures reflect the fact that during the construction phase o f the project, most o f the employment came from building the pipeline in Cameroon, whereas during the operational phase, most o f the employment relates to oil production-related work in the OFDA in Chad. O f this workforce, nationals (Chadians and Cameroonians) held over 88 percent (Chad, 87 percent; Cameroon, 92 percent) o f the project’s direct employment o f 6,409 jobs. (For comparison, 87 percent o f the ExxonMobil workforce in Nigeria at year-end 2008 i s national.) The high participation rate o f nationals in the workforce i s also consistent with ExxonMobil’s goal o f workforce nationalization in host countries. Almost 70 percent o f the Chadians and Cameroonians working for the project held skilled or semi-skilled positions at end-2008. The project has provided significant opportunities for transfer o f knowledge to Chadians and Cameroonians through formal training and on-the-job experience. 79. Compensation: Since the project began (to end-2008), a total o f over 12 billion FCFA (nearly 19.7 million; 53 percent in Chad and 47 percent in Cameroon) in individual compensation (cash and in-kindpayments) has been paid. The project has also undertaken community compensation programs with in-kindmicro-development programs that benefit entire communities affected by the project. In Cameroon, for example, the project has supported about 350 community projects (to end-2008) such as school classrooms, community houses, market shelters, latrines, water wells, and soccer fields. Since most o f the project facilities have been completed in both countries, compensation-like employment- has stabilized below the 2000-03 period when the central oil facilities, initial oil development, and the Export System were constructed. In Chad, ongoing Compensation relates to land needed for new wells for increasing o i l production. In Cameroon, where construction ended in 2002, current compensation activities relate to the resolution o f outstanding grievances and maintenance or facilities improvements. 80. Community investments: The project has made a number o f community donations in Chad and Cameroon. Since the beginning o f the project (to end-2008), the project’s total contributions to community investment-health clinics, school classrooms, etc.-have totaled about $12.25 million. Esso-Chad, the project operator, also provides logistical support for the national polio vaccination days and distributes mosquito bed nets in Chad. 8 1. Infrastructure improvements: In connection with the project, improvement or construction o f 900 kilometers o f roads has been undertaken in the two countries. The project also built a major bridge connecting the two countries across the Mbere River. The project 69 also refurbishedover 200 Cameroonian national railway cars and six locomotives. The project funded and installed fiber optic cable with the pipeline during project construction. Cameroon has used the cable to allow phone and Internet connectivity to many parts of Northern Cameroon. 82. Private sector development: Given the enclave nature o f the petroleum sector in Chad, i t s impact on the domestic economy has been limited (more detailed analysis i s being done on the project’s impacts on the non-oil sector). The project has strengthened private sector activity in the two countries, despite the challenging investment. (In the 2009 Doing Business report, Chad ranked near the bottom, at 175 out o f 18 1 economies. Cameroon fared slightly better, with a rank o f 164.) During construction, the project maintained a database o f Chadian businesses ranging in size from one-person outfits to the state-owned water and electric utility company. O f the close to 3,000 businesses covered in the database, approximately 2,000 have done business with the project at least once during the construction phase and about 450 work for the project on a regular basis. Overall, enterprises working for the project tend to improve their business practices, ranging from a firmer grasp o f tendering and bidding processes, a better understanding o f expectations about quality control and timeliness o f deliveries, and a greater appreciation o f general business management. The building o f the pipeline has also increased the economic value o f other o i l reserves in Chad and has made exploration more attractive. 83. Chad SMEprogram: IFC launched the Chad Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) Initiative in June 2000 as a linkage project to support the pipeline project. The initiative aimed to expand the participation o f local businesses in the economic activity generated by the project, in particular, to help the expansion o f the private sector in Chad through the development and support o f SMEs. W h i l e the project had less traction with EEPCI during the construction phase (2000-03), there was a realignment o f interests between EEPCI’s need for local content during the operational phase and the revamped activities o f the Chad SME program. The program currently consists o f four components: entrepreneurship capacity building, business linkages, access to finance, and business enabling environment. The focal point o f the IFC Advisory Services operations in Chad i s the Enterprise Center that IFC founded in November 2005-as a Business Linkage component-in partnership with the Chamber o f Commerce o f Chad. In 2005, EEPCI decided to carry out all i t s procurement needs (about $300 million annually) in Chad electronically through i t s e-procurement system. The Enterprise Center has become the key tool for EEPCI to build a diverse local supplier network to meet some o f i t s procurement needs locally, as part o f the effort to build national content. By purchasing goods and services in-country and developing long-term supplier relationships, EEPCI has supported the development o f the local private sector. The project’s purchases o f goods and services from local suppliers have totaled over $1.9 billion since the project began (to end-2008). In Chad, the estimated spending to date i s more than $1.2 billion and in Cameroon, about $69 1 million.” 77. These local spending figures include three types o f business: purely local (owned and operated by ChadiansICameroonians), purely foreign (owned and operated by foreigners such as Schlumberger, KBR, others), andjoint ventures between local and foreign firms. 70 R I S K S TO DEVELOPMENT OUTCOME 84. With the unraveling o f the PRMP and the withdrawal o f the WI3 from the Chad portion o f the project, risks to development outcome are substantial. The government o f Chad is now under no compulsion to channel resources to priority sectors as before, which had the potential to reduce poverty and improve the lives o f the Chadian people. With regard to the environmental and social aspects o f the project, risks to development outcome are moderate. E C M G will continue to monitor the project for I F C and other lenders over the l i f e o f the loan (until 2013). However, with the winding up o f CTSCN and the withdrawal o f the Bank from the Chad portion o f the project, there is no institutional capacity in the government o f Chad to track the environmental and social aspects o f the project. 85. The biggest risk to development outcome is the failure to allocate enough revenues to priority sector expenditures for poverty reduction. In Chad especially, the capacity for economic management is (and is expected to remain) weak, after the failure o f the IDA Petroleum Economy Management Project. Government commitment has proven highly fickle on budget priorities and the allocation o f petroleum proceeds. Unrest and wars in the region are putting both under a lot o f stress. From the environmental perspective, both countries failed to live up to their commitments regarding the necessary strengthening o f capacity for environmental policy and monitoring. Environmental management through compliance with the EMP has been met by the private companies, EEPCI, COTCO, and TOTCO. Currently, these three companies, along with E C M G and IAG, are doing the environmental monitoring o f activities associated with o i l production and transportation. 86. With the private sector in control, especially the current high-caliber operators, technical and production risks appear modest and can be managed. Energy infrastructure i s seldom left to deteriorate and, unlike in many other infrastructure sectors, in the petroleum sector prices are set on a strictly commercial basis. Geological risks will continue to exist, but despite the production shortfall in Doba, other fields have been (and perhaps will be) developed as their commercial potential is boosted by the proximity o f the pipeline and the prospect o f high crude prices. 87. In the case o f Cameroon, risks to development outcome are moderate, given that the project had a relatively minor impact in Cameroon to begin with, due to the shortfalls in o i l production on account o f unexpected reservoir and well productivity problems. As in the case o f Chad, E C M G will continue to monitor the environmental and social aspects o f the project in Cameroon. Also, given the unsatisfactory performance o f the environmental management capacity building project (CAPACE) in Cameroon, institutional capacity to monitor environmental and social effects i s limited. With the closing o f the CAPACE project, the WI3 and government o f Cameroon are no longer interacting o n project-level environmental and social issues. 71 World Bank Group Performance QUALITY AT ENTRY 88. The project’s quality at entry i s rated moderately satisfactory, due to shortfalls in project design and definition o f objectives. The project featured significant collaboration between World Bank and IFC. The WBG chose to undertake a high-risk (and potentially high-reward) operation in a sector where i t s financing and safeguards policies have been (and are) very restrictive. WBG was also able to help maximize project relevance and design while financing only about 3 percent o f the cost. At entry, it was considered highly innovative to tie a petroleum project’s revenues to poverty reduction objectives, as a brave new economic experiment to deal with the “resource curse” phenomenon, despite the shortfalls in project design noted elsewhere. Preparation was thorough, including due diligence on project costs and production potential, upfront agreements in key areas such as the EMP, innovative supervision arrangements, and an earmarking o f benefits in Chad that became law in 1999. 89. A critical risk to the project, relating directly to i t s sustainability and i t s potential to maximize development impact, was the weak capacity o f Chadian and, to a lesser extent, Cameroonian institutions. The three IDA-fundedcapacity-building projects (two in Chad, one in Cameroon) were formulated to address these weaknesses. 90. The project was appropriately screened to Category A. An extensive Environmental Impact Assessment was prepared by the client to address alternatives for the pipeline corridor, selection o f the preferred right-of-way, land use and habitat modification, socioeconomic impacts, effects o f construction on indigenous peoples, and emergency response and o i l spill contingency plans for the entire pipeline and drilling project. The EIA became the basis for the 19-volume Environmental Management Plan to be followed during implementation. During preparation the client indicated that it would not apply Bank safeguards but would be obligated to use the EMP to deal with the environmental and social impacts that would result from i t s activities. 91. Prior to appraisal, the EMP was reviewed by the IFC and WB and revisions were undertaken resulting in changes such as the rerouting o f the pipeline to avoid environmentally sensitive areas and the creation o f nature reserves to offset the unavoidable impairment to the environment that the project would cause. Specifically, the pipeline route was modified to avoid crossing the Mbere Rift Valley and the Deng Deng forest in Cameroon. Crossing the Atlantic Littoral Forest could not be avoided, but the pipeline route, which roughly paralleled an existing road, was optimized to minimize damage to areas with high biodiversity. In addition, the Consortium agreed to provide funds to support the development and implementation o f management plans for two protected areas in Cameroon to offset any residual biodiversity impacts as well as the IPP. 92. The EMP provided the relevant guidelines that would govern the construction and operation phases and incorporates IFC/WB environmental and social safeguards relating to natural habitats, indigenous peoples, cultural properties, and involuntary resettlement. The EMP covers crucial aspects including induced access to sensitive areas, solid waste 72 management, compensation and resettlement, in-migration, o i l spill response plans, and health and safety. 93. The E M P has served as the key guiding document for the E C M G and the IFC’s environmental and social specialists assigned to the project as well as the Consortium. The EMP was an excellent tool during the construction phase but has faced a number o f challenging circumstances during the operational phase. In 2005, Exxon began an in-fill drilling program to enhance well productivity’’. This program will increase the number o f wells in the O F D A by up to 400, thereby increasing the overall size o f the project’s footprint. This activity was not foreseen in the EIA, and it i s unclear how the EMP can be used as guidance for this drilling program. The I F C i s n o w evaluating its options, including requesting that the E M P be amended. I F C also helped introduce improvements to the concession agreements to reduce possibilities o f disputes and ensure fairness. QUALITY OF SUPERVISION 94. The quality o f supervision is rated satisfactory. There was an implicit division o f labor between the WB and IFC, with the WB particularly focused on the implementation o f Chad’s PRMP and the three capacity-building projects, while I F C dealt with the technical, financial and aspects o f the pipeline project. I F C handled the relationship with the project and the other commercial lenders while the World Bank managed the relationship with the government. 95. The project featured three innovations to strengthen project supervision: the Committee on the Monitoring and Oversight o f Petroleum Resources to monitor the management and expenditures o f o i l revenues; E C M G to report to I F C on the operational work by the Consortium and both governments; and IAG to advise the World Bank president and the two governments. This additional oversight made supervision more effective and transparent but was costly at about $1.O million per year. 96. IFC’s supervision o f the project’s environmental and social aspects has been consistent and extensive. Supervision is carried out in close coordination with the World Bank and the ECMG, which focuses i t s efforts on reviewing the projects compliance with the EMP. As part o f the project completion requirements, the E C M G certified that the project’s construction phase complied with the EMP. Given the extent and importance o f environmental and social issues, specialized consultants were engaged to provide independent opinion and expert knowledge o n ongoing environmental and social impacts. I F C worked closely with these consultants to ensure that emerging issues were addressed in a timely and decisive manner. Supervision visits by environmental and social specialists were carried out regularly in coordination with their counterpart consultants resulting in a close and trusting dialogue with the experts. The frequency o f these site visits was much higher than normal (at least twice a year during project construction). The Independent Advisory Group (IAG) that advises the WBG on project issues, including those that impede achievement o f the project’s broader development objectives, has also supported supervision 78Based on information from the ECMG reports from 2005, among other sources, IFC considers that the infill drilling began in 2005, whereas EEPCI states that the infill drilling began in mid-2008, and the additional wells drilled between 2003 and 2008 were development wells within the original 40-acre well-spacing pattern. 73 efforts through independent verification o f problematic issues including those characterized as environmental and social. 97. During the operational phase, the IFC’s Environment and Social Department has: (i) ensured mitigation o f archeology-related Level I11non-compliance in Cameroon; (ii) ensured the recommendations from the Barkley-Koppert report on EEPCI Resettlement and Compensation Activities are acted upon including the implementation o f the Land Use Management Action Plan (LUMAP); (iii) assessed and developed an action plan to meet the ongoing financial and operational challenges being faced by the Foundation for Environment and Development in Cameroon (FEDEC); and (iv) worked closely with the ECMG in evaluating all environmental and social issues and following up with the Consortium when actions are required. The Environmental and Social Department has also closely monitored the project’s activities in areas in and around indigenous Pygmy communities in Southern Cameroon and has provided ongoing inputs and guidance to FEDEC’s program with the local NGO, RAPID. IFC’s environmental and social specialists have also followed up with EEPCI, TOTCO, and COTCO on health and safety issues during both the construction and operational phases. 98. Regarding FEDEC,the E C M G first identified administrative and financial issues during i t s December 2004 monitoring visit. During the November 2005 monitoring visit, a number o f critical observations were made, among them: N o additional funds had been raised and no new donor support had been achieved in the preceding 12 months. Cooperation between FEDEC and the government o f Cameroon was lacking and had not improved. FEDEC’s financial constraints had been further exacerbated by the fall o f the U.S. dollar against the CFA Franc. 99. These issues and others have continued to be problems for FEDEC. An extensive evaluation undertakenin October 2007 analyzed the institutional challenges faced by FEDEC and recommended a plan o f action. Nevertheless, by the end o f 2008, the problems appear to have worsened and are s t i l l unresolved despite efforts by IFC and the Consortium to find solutions. 100. Overall, World Bank Group performance i s rated moderately satisfactory. ROLE WORLD BANKGROUP 101. WBG role and contribution were in three main areas: mobilize long-term financing from commercial sources; instill confidence in the project’s arrangements and operation; and raise the standard and quality o f the project’s environmental and social due diligence. It helped raise the standard and quality o f the environmental assessments, mitigation plans, and public consultations and disclosure undertaken by the project. When needed, the WBG helped support Chad’s regulatory and supervisory functions on the project while trying to build the country’s capacity to perform these functions. The WBG was also involved in mediating the ongoing dialogue between Chad and the Consortium, particularly on contentious issues such as the quality discount to Doba o i l price and measurement o f sales 74 volumes. However, the main thrust o f the World Bank Group’s role and contribution to the project relate mainly to political risk mitigation, particularly in terms o f trying to improve governance and building institutional capacity. Following the W B ’ s withdrawal from the Chad portion o f the project, IFC’s role has been enhanced and become more critical, especially regarding environmental and social issues. Borrower and Client Performance 102. Overall, borrower performance i s rated moderately satisfactory, with some shortcomings (discussed below). The governments’ performance was moderately satisfactory. Both countries showed project ownership in many ways at the outset; for example, they secured the pipeline right-of-way and Chad passed the Petroleum Management Revenue Law in 1999. They were also very cooperative in the design and implementation o f the physical project arrangements. However, neither government fulfilled agreements for establishing and continuously providing support for competent environmental and social monitoring structures. Cameroon’s performance i s rated satisfactory, Chad’s i s moderately unsatisfactory because o f its breach o f the Loan Agreement on revenue allocation in 2006 and the ultimate unraveling o f the Petroleum Revenue Management Program in 2008. 103. The implementing agency (EEPCI) performance i s rated satisfactory during both the construction and operations phases. EEPCI was very efficient in project execution, monitoring, and problem-solving, in particular, replacing the Consortium partners who dropped out, filling the financing gap after the bond issue f e l l through, and getting rid o f the excess water in the pipeline. I t cooperated with the governments and the Bank, applying Bank guidelines on procurement for jointly financed components and for the EMP. 104. The client has adhered to the requirements o f the EMP and has been cooperative in providing access to information required by the various monitoring and supervision entities: ECMG, IAG, and IFC. Reporting to third parties and IFC has been comprehensive, descriptive, and transparent, but despite a massive information dissemination program, some local stakeholders s t i l l felt that more communication was needed. The client has also facilitated work by consultants such as R. Barkley and G. Koppert who preparedthe report on EEPCI Resettlement and Compensation Activities. Apart from the mitigation activities required by the EMP, the client has an ongoing donations program funded from i t s own resources for communities living near the facilities in both Cameroon and Chad. This program includes construction projects such as water wells, schools, and community centers along with donations o f wood and other construction materials. 105. Although some issues continue to be problematic, the client has had reasonable success in mitigating most o f the environmental and social impacts o f i t s activities, considering the size and complexity o f the project. Some o f the most important examples are: (i)i t s o i l spill response management system, which includes automatic shutoff to reduce the quantity o f spills and quick response by specialized spill clean-up specialists; (ii) i t s efforts to reduce well pad size and return land to farmers; (iii) i t s active participation in the pipeline steering committee in Cameroon; (iv) i t s efforts to assist in finding a solution to FEDEC’s financial problems; and (v) its efforts to revise the resettlement and compensation program in Chad based on the recommendations o f the BarkleyKoppert report. 75 106. The client has been responsive to close supervision by and continued dialogue with IFC and the ECMG, leading to early identification o f emerging issues and satisfactory mitigation o f impacts according to best practice, the EMP and World Bank Group policies and guidelines. At the same time, the client has been steadfast in i t s opposition to suggested changes in the EMP-proposed by IFC and supported by the ECMG-related to the in-fill drilling program and the dramatic increase in the project’s footprint in Chad. The client believes that it i s legally bound to the required actions detailed in the EMP and new issues that have emerged can be addressed by changes in the implementation procedures (internal execution procedures) without the need to change the EMP principles which have been defined at the beginning o f the project. W h i l e the client has provided the necessary resources to implement the Land Use Management Action Plan (LUMAP), ECMG, IAG, and IFC have serious concerns about the livelihood impacts on villages o f the in-filldrilling program and the dramatic increase in land use by the project for wells, flow lines, roads, etc. I t i s unclear how the potential need for in-fill drilling was not identified in the EIA considering that this i s a fairly common practice. 107. The number o f non-compliances over the past few years has fallen from 49 in 2005 to 17 in 2008. For the second half o f 2008, project environmental monitors recorded 7 Environmental Management Plan non-compliance situations, 3 in the third quarter and 4 in the fourth quarter. Two o f the non-compliances were categorized as Level I1 situations. There were no Level 1 11situations. Two spills occurred during this reporting period (EEPCI 2008). 108. The client has also maintained fairly good relations with local NGOs. Representatives o f COTCO (Cameroon) participate in the work o f the Pipeline Steering and Monitoring Committee (PSMC), which consists o f project stakeholders, including NGOs. Most o f the committee’s work involves grievances from individuals and communities that date back to the construction period. W h i l e mechanisms such as the Platform for Cooperation and Social Assessment (COTCO-PSMC-NGO) are in place to fairly and transparently resolve grievances, some cases remain unresolved. COTCO has indicated that they will continue to work to resolve pending cases but recognizes that in some cases other parties (contractors and subcontractors) bear the responsibility. In Chad, grievance issues are generally taken up directly with EEPCI through the EMP office. The government’s participation through the Comite Technique National de Suivi et de Contrde (CTNSC) ended in 2006. EEPCI reports that complaints are at their lowest level since the operations phase began in 2003. Annex B. Cameroon: Petroleum Environment Capacity Enhancement Project (Credit 3372-CM) Summary: Project Outcome and Lessons 1. The CAPECE Project i s part o f a cluster o f technical assistance (TA) and advisory projects financed by the WB and IFC that supported capacity building related to the Chad- Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project (PDPP). The objectives o f the CAPECE Project were to establish national capacity for the environmental management and monitoring o f the PDPP and to ensure the environmental sustainability o f future projects, programs, and policies in Cameroon’s petroleum sector, including the establishment o f the necessary regulatory fiamework. The project was consistent with the Cameroon Country Assistance Strategy (CAS), which highlighted the accelerated development o f oil, gas, and mineral resources as a key strategic goal for the country, to be carried out in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner. MAINFINDINGS 2. Based on modest ratings for relevance, efficacy, and efficiency, overall project outcome i s rated unsatisfactory. Serious project delays meant that the government’s Pipeline Steering and Monitoring Committee (PSMC) was not able to independently monitor construction o f the Chad-Cameroon pipeline between 2000 and 2003. Instead, during that period, Exxon self-regulated while the External Compliance Monitoring Group (ECMG) conducted monitoring on behalf o f IFC. The PSMC and i t s three field u n i t s have been strengthened through equipment and training, as well as the initial operations o f the Environmental Management Information System (EMIS), but effective national capacity for regulation and monitoring has not yet been mainstreamed across the concerned sector ministries (notably the Ministry o f Environment), as intended. 3. The PSMC continues to operate within the management and reporting structure o f the Socie‘te‘ Nationale des Hydrocarbures (SNH), the national o i l company, potentially risking conflicts o f interest and compromising i t s independence. Thus, although the recently established Consultative Platform-including PSMC, COTCO, other government ministries, and NGOs-has proven useful in sharing information and airing grievances at i t s annual or semi-annual meetings, the close affiliation with S NH could weaken PSMC’s ability to resolve social the grievances that continued long after the completion o f pipeline construction in 2003. 4. Government support at entry and i t s commitment during implementation have been weak. Twelve decrees have been prepared under the project to enforce the 1996 Cameroon Environment Code. However, only the Decree on Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA) has been approved, while the rest have been awaiting the Prime Minister’s approval for several years. The critically important National O i l Spill Response Plan (NORSP) has also not been approved. Although PSMC has developed a stronger coordinating and facilitating role among the PDPP stakeholders, COTCO i s s t i l l self-regulating to a significant extent. This arrangement was tested and proved unsatisfactory during the 2008 oil spill, when 77 external communication was seriously delayed and the extent and potential impacts of the spill were not known for several days, at possible peril to the residents at Kribi. LESSONS 5. Significant lessons from the project are as follows: Setting PDOs: When seeking to improve capacity from a l o w base, project expectations need to be realistic and may prove to be counterproductive if they are too ambitious in their scope. In this project, the focus should have been on the ' immediate and already highly complex needs o f the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline, rather than seeking to improve the vastly more challenging environmental and social safeguards capacity o f the country as a whole. Packaging o f TA components: A TA project with a relatively small outlay needs to avoid the temptation to package together too many interventions at multiple levels, which can result in expending a disproportionate amount o f attention and energy on procurement and logistics. In this project, the large number o f sub-components was all the more difficult to handle due to lack o f familiarity and experience with Bank procedures. Leveraging o f investments and timing: Capacity-building operations can work in a complementary manner with investment projects. W h i l e such operations are necessary to strengthen the overall policy and institutional framework, the investment projects associated with them could transform these policies into actions on the ground while providing hands-on experience to the concerned institutions and staff. However, those TA projects should start several years ahead o f the investment projects, given the long lead times associated with capacity building. The Project OBJECTIVES, COMPONENTS, AND COSTS 6. According to the Development Credit Agreement (DCA), the CAPECE Project's objectives were: to help develop and establish a national capacity for the environmental management and monitoring o f the Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project (PDPP); and to help ensure the environmental sustainability o f future projects, programs, and policies in the petroleum sector, including strengthening the capacity to mitigate the negative social and environmental impacts o f the PDPP and the establishment o f an environmental regulatory framework for the petroleum sector. 7. The project objectives and associated outcome targets (discussed in the Efficacy section) were not revised during implementation. There were two amendments to the DCA, the first dated March 24,2004, and the second dated December 13,2005. The amendments dealt with changes in the project schedule, procurement arrangements, budget reallocation, as 78 well as the schedule for meeting the performance indicators. According to the DCA,79the key indicators included: e publication o f environmental decrees in the borrower’s Official Journal by December 3 1, 2001, and training o f officials in this new regulatory framework; e completion o f a Long-term Vision Study for an effective and sustainable regulatory framework for the petroleum sector by July 1, 2004, and an assessment o f the application o f this framework; e publication and adoption o f a government O i l Spill Response Plan by July 1, 2002; and e an Environmental Management Information System (EMIS), as well as a project management and M&E system, in place and fully operational by July 1,2001. 8. The project’s components were as follows: e Component 1: Strengthening the institutional, regulatory, and legal framework (estimated cost at appraisal, $1.25 million; actual cost, $0.65 million): Drafting, dissemination, and enforcement o f implementing regulations for environmental legislation; strengthening the enforcement capacity o f all agencies involved in the Environmental Management Plan (EMP) for the PDPP, through technical advisory services, training, and public information campaigns. A Long-Term Vision Study to assess the present institutions and their performance, as well as to identify and evaluate the options for an effective and sustainable environmental regulatory framework for the petroleum sector. e Component 2: Strengthening coordinating capacities for environmental management (estimated cost at appraisal, $1.04 million; actual cost, $0.87 million): 1 Strengthening PDPP central coordination at the Permanent Secretariat o f the Pipeline Steering and Monitoring Committee (PSMC) by conducting training on environmental management, environmental assessment and review, environmental monitoring, design and implementation o f environmental mitigating measures, environmental health and administrative matters, through the provision o f technical advisory services, training for staff specialized in biophysics, socioeconomics, and human health, and conducting a program o f public information, education, and communication. Strengthening the capacity o f the three field units reporting directly to the Permanent Secretariat o f the PSMC by providing technical advisory services, conducting training on natural resources and pollution prevention and management related to the pipeline, as well as on conflict management and public health management, and the acquisition o f equipment. e Component 3 : Strengthening public intervention capacity for environmental management (estimated cost at appraisal, $2.7 lmillion; actual cost, $3.44 million): ~~~ 79. Schedule 6, Implementation Indicators. 79 1 Strengthening the capacity o f health centers and districts in the vicinity o f the pipeline constructed under the CCPP, through the acquisition o f equipment and medical supplies, the carrying out o f building maintenance and laboratory analyses, as well as the sub-contracting o f public awareness and social marketing . campaigns to private voluntary organizations. Carrying out a study to design a national emergency o i l spill response plan against accidental pollution by hydrocarbons, and initial implementation o f the plan, through the provision o f technical advisory services and the acquisition o f equipment. 9 Strengthening the capacity o f the ministries responsible for environment, mining, land use planning, housing, and transport, and decentralized administrative units o f said ministries in the vicinity o f the CCPP pipeline through the provision o f technical advisory services, training, and equipment. Component 4. Project management, monitoring, and evaluation (estimated cost at appraisal, $0.77 million; actual cost, $0.36 million): 1 Preparation and dissemination o f reports related to the biophysical environment, marine biology, socioeconomy, and environmental health through the provision o f technical advisory services rendered by an International Advisory Panel. 9 Establishment and maintenance o f a project management, monitoring, and evaluation system and an Environmental Management Information System to respond to the information needs o f the PSMC regarding: (i) the management, monitoring, and evaluation o f the project activities; and (ii) the supervision, implementation, and monitoring o f the EMP. 9. The final project cost ($15.1 million) was 37 percent higher than the appraisal cost estimates, for which IDA disbursed $5.32 million equivalent. The costs per project component and the government’s contribution are shown in Table B.1. Table B.l. Appraisal versus Actual Costs (US$ million) Project Component Appraisal Actual Amount Actual as % of Estimate Disbursed Appraised Estimate I D A Credit: Development o f an Enabling Regulatory Framework 1.25 0.65 52% Strengthening Coordinating Capacity 1.04 0.87 84% Strengthening Intervention Capacity 2.71 3.44 127% Project Management, Monitoring and Evaluation 0.77 0.36 47% SUBTOTAL 5.77 5.32 92% Government Contribution: 5.23 9.79 187% TOTAL PROJECT COST 11.00 15.11 137% 80 Implementation Experience 10. Key Dates. The project’s effectiveness was delayed by nine months after Board approval due to the government’s delays in meeting the conditions o f effectiveness. A 15 percent disbursement rate was reached only at the start o f 2004, when the pipeline investments were already completed and operational. The project’s closing date was also delayed to November 30, 2007, nearly two years after the original closing date, mainly due to the delays in staffing the three field units and PSMC’s lack o f knowledge regarding Bank procurement, financial reporting, and other procedures, which slowed down the completion o f project activities, notably the Long-Term Vision Study (the project’s second development objective). 11. Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E). The indicators for the objective were in the form o f outputs rather than outcomes. These indicators include progress in the implementation o f decrees and regulations; the identification and monitoring o f environmental standards and norms; and the training o f staff. The EMP did not have adequate targets that could be reflected in the M&E design. The project commissioned a socioeconomic study in 2003 and gathered baseline data, which were used later in a similar study for 2005-07, but no significant follow-up actions on these studies have been reported. 12. Environmental and Social Safeguards. The project was classified as Category “C” under the Bank’s safeguard policies, since it was a TA project that would have no adverse impacts on the physical and social environment. N o safeguard issues arose during project implementation. While this TA support project focused on strengthening the government’s capacity, the actual environmental and social outcomes by Exxon and i t s affiliates,” who implemented the pipeline project, and the performance ratings and findings o f IFC, who supervised the project, are discussed in Annex A. That assessment covers the results o f Environmental Management Plan, the Indigenous Peoples’ Plan, the compensation outcomes, the continuing risks presented by the weaknesses o f FEDECS1 and i t s lack o f funding, the new risks presented by EEPCI’s plans for a significantly expanded in-fill drilling program, and the findings and recommendations o f the high-level agenciess2that monitored the environmental and social aspects o f the PDPP over the past eight years. 13. Fiduciary Aspects. The project’s use o f funds was low during the three first years. Internal budget controls were weak and the accounting system was not fully operational while the commitment and availability o f staff was inadequate. However, PSMC regularly provided financial and audit reports with some improvements over time in their content and format. 80. COTCO (Cameroon Oil Transport Company) and TOTCO (Tchad Oil Transport Company) 8 1. T h e Foundationfor Environment and Development, which was established with initial COTCO funding to implement the Indigenous Peoples’ Plan for the Bagyelfiakola (pygmy) communities, as well develop and manage two new national parks (Campo Ma’an Park and Mbam-Djerem Park) over the long term. 82. Specifically the External Compliance Monitoring Group (ECMG), financed by IFC, and the International Advisory Group, financed by the World Bank. 81 14. Procurement. Procurement was very complex for a project o f this size, involving 33 transactions for consulting services and 22 for purchasing o f equipment. Procurement f e l l behind schedule because o f unrealistic plans, lack o f experienced staff, inadequate monitoring o f the delivery time, the absence o f submission o f performance security by the contractors and insufficient response time granted to prepare bids for N C B contracts. RELEVANCE 15. Objectives. While strengthening the national capacity for independent monitoring o f the Chad-Cameroon pipeline is critically important, the formulation o f the first objective l e f t open the option o f concentrating this capacity building o n the PSMC. The PSMC was created by decree in 1997 and remains within the Socie‘te‘ Nationale d’Hydrocarbures (SNH), the national o i l company, in an apparent conflict o f interest. While S N H (and PSMC by affiliation) i s mandated to look after the country’s o i l interests, the CAPECE Project was supposed to build the government’s capacity to supervise and monitor objectively the implementation o f the EMP for the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project. From the start o f the appraisal this has been a highly contentious issue between the Bank and the government because the direct and subsidiary relationship o f PSMC with S N H has repeatedly cast doubt over PSMC’s independence. Moreover, the first objective was also formulated to assume that the national monitoring capacity could be in place in time for the construction o f the pipeline, a goal that was clearly impossible to implement given the very l o w level o f capacity that existed when the project was appraised. The second objective was formulated too broadly to cover the government’s capacity to manage the overall environmental and social impacts o f the petroleum sector in Cameroon, extending significantly beyond the urgent focus on the monitoring needs for the pipeline. This led to an overly ambitious project design, which proved difficult to implement in a country with l i t t l e interest or capacity in environmental management. The relevance o f the first objective i s substantial, while that o f the second objective i s modest, leading to an overall modest rating for the relevance o f the PDOs. 16. Design. The project design recognized the l o w level o f expertise for environmental management and limited capacity to absorb new training for this purpose. However, the project design was ambitious in assuming that a quantum improvement could be achieved through programming a large number o f activities that would be carried out with the help o f international consultants. The government’s commitment was overestimated, even though it was not initially persuaded o f the usefulness o f the project and needed to be convinced by the international community and the international operators. The project design underestimated the risk that PSMC would not always ensure adequate budgetary resources as well as their transparent and efficient allocation. The likelihood o f an Advisory Panel being employed was also overestimated (it was canceled), given that the government previously had been reluctant to create a similar advisory panel for the Chad-Cameroon pipeline. The quality o f project design i s rated modest. 17. The project’s overall relevance is modest, based o n modest ratings for relevance o f objectives and design. 82 EFFICIENCY 18. Under the Bank’s operational guidelines, an ERR i s not required for technical assistance projects. However, given the long time delays and cost overrun, the efficiency o f the project i s considered modest. EFFICACY 19. The project’s overall efficacy i s rated modest, based on the assessment below for each o f the development objectives. Objective One: to assist the Borrower to develop and establish a national capacityfor the environmental management and monitoring o f the Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project. 20. The project’s first objective was achieved only to a modest extent. Given the project delays, it was not possible for the PSMC to have a fully independent monitoring capability to assess environmental and social compliance o f the EMP during construction phase. This affected the government’s performance during the entire construction period. The pipeline project’s compliance with the World Bank Group’s safeguard policies, as well as i t s adherence to standards and norms required under the EMP are assessed in Annex A. 21. In 2007/08, which represents a significant delay since the pipeline was already constructed in 2003, a Consultative Platform comprisin PSMC, several ministries (Environment, Infrastructure, Health), and local NGOs*$ started to meet periodically to discuss pipeline monitoring reports and hear continuing grievances from individuals and communities along the pipeline. However, some sector ministries and non-official informants have indicated that, although the Consultative Platform i s very useful for sharing information and airing divergent views, it has not yet proven to be an effective instrument to influence operational decisions related to the pipeline and arbitrate social grievances from affected communities. This may be related to the fact that the Consultative Platform meets only once or twice a year, and that the PSMC, which chairs the meetings, remains within the national oil company in a potential conflict o f interest (see Objective 2, below). 22. The PSMC and the three field u n i t s that were established received equipment and training, including instrumentation required for the Environmental Management Information System (EMIS), which has just recently become operational. Other ministries and civil society organizations (CSOs) also participated in workshops and public consultations, but intersectoral monitoring capacity has not been mainstreamed as intended (for example, the Land Ministry remains very weak with respect to land cadastres, and the Ministry o f Environment, while consulted, has no active role in environmental matters related to the pipeline). On social aspects, the PSMC monitored the implementation o f the Indigenous People Plan (IPP) and reported an increase in agricultural activities, an increase in school attendance and hospital visits, promotion o f citizenship through the granting o f national identity cards, and provision o f housing benefits. A survey conducted by PSMC shows that 83. T h e Implementation Completion Report for the pipeline project (dated December 2006) recommendedthe formation o f this platform. 83 almost all o f the 23 8 villages affected by the pipeline were compensated. However, community grievances and N G O complaints have continued and remained unresolved for several years, as reported by affected community leaders and individuals whom the IEG mission visited. (The negative findings o f the more recent 2007 Barclay-Koppert report are discussed in the main text.) Moreover, FEDEC remains weak and lacks the financing to continue i t s mandate o f managing and implementing the IPP for the Pygmy communities and two new national parks (see para. 12, above, and the detailed discussion in Annex A). After initial delay, the PSMC worked through nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and CSOs to raise awareness o f the public on health and social impacts o f the CCPP, primarily on HIV/AIDS in the villages along the pipeline route and among indigenous peoples’ groups. However, there is no evidence on the effectiveness o f these awareness-raising activities due to lack o f monitoring. PSMC monitored the compensation plan due to archeological impact in a satisfactory manner. Objective Two: on a medium to long-term basis, to help ensure the environmental f future projects, programs and policies in the Borrower’s petroleum sector, sustainability o including strengthening the Borrower’s capacity to mitigate the negative social and environmental impacts o f the PDP Project and the establishment o f an environmental regulatory framework for the petroleum sector. 23. Achievement o f the second objective was negligible. K e y indicators (see para. 7, above) were not achieved. Environmental decrees (with the exception o f the EIA Decree) were not published, and the new regulatory framework was not put in place. The Long-Term Vision Study was s t i l l incomplete as o f the IEG mission in February 2009. Compared to the 2002 target, the government has not yet approved a National O i l Spill Response Plan. Finally, the Environmental Management Information System (EMIS) has only recently become operational, too late for the construction o f the pipeline. These outcomes pale in comparison to the project’s intention, which according to the DCA84was to strengthen the enforcement capacity o f all agencies involved in the EMP implementation and monitoring, including disseminating, implementing, and enforcing environmental legislation and related administrative procedures. 24. In terms o f preparation o f regulations for environmental management o f the o i l sector, 12 decrees have been prepared for enforcement o f the 1996 Cameroon Environmental Code. O f these, only the decree on EIA has been approved and is currently in force. The rest are yet to be approved at the level o f the Prime Minister, where the draft decrees have been waiting for approval for several years. 25. NGOs have raised issues about possible weakening o f the EIA Decree. The PSMC indicated that the draft texts o f decrees prepared under the project can be modified by the sponsoring ministries before they are submitted to the Prime Minister’s office for approval. With respect to the EIA decree, some informants interviewed by the IEG mission raised the issue that the text o f the (approved) EIA Decree may have departed in important and unwelcome ways from the original draft text prepared by the project’s consultants. As 84. Schedule 2, Description o f the Project. 84 evidence, those informants indicated that the approval date o f the EIA Decree preceded the completion date o f the EIA draft text that was prepared under the project. 26. The project developed a National O i l Spill Response Plan (NOSRP), but this has not yet been formally approved or adopted as a law. In the consultative processes related to drafting the NOSRP, some progress was made in clarifying the rules, norms, and guidelines o f hydrocarbon exploitation, and defining the roles o f all entities that are involved. ECMG reported that COTCO handled an o i l spill in early 2008 in a professional manner, although there were shortcomings in external communication with respect to the incident, as it took four days before information on the spill reached PSMC and the government. Information on environmental and social safeguards was disseminated as part o f the Environmental Management Information System (EMIS), periodic newsletters, and annual meetings. However, the PSMC has showed some weaknesses in the timely dissemination o f information, which was often indicated by N G O and individual informants to the IEG mission. 27. Around 200 staff from 13 ministries and the PSMC Secretariat who were involved in supervising the environmental and social aspects o f the Chad-Cameroon pipeline and other infrastructure projects were trained in the monitoring and mitigation o f environmental impacts. There were no specific indicators to assess the effect o f this training. 28. The project had unintended impacts. On the positive side, it helped to involve women from affected communities, including indigenous peoples groups, in activities funded by FEDECS5 and as laborers for COTCO. Women also participated in training sessions and awareness campaigns for controlling the spread o f HIV/AIDS. The project also helped build the country’s capacity to monitor social aspects connected to labor in a large infrastructure project. There was a positive change in the administrative culture toward collaboration between government agencies and NGOs. 29. Two studies conducted during the project highlighted the long-term economic and social impacts o f the pipeline, particularly in the Kribi area, showing that the improvement o f the road infrastructure during the project facilitated access and movement o f sections o f the population, and strengthened health service delivery to communities in the corridor o f the pipeline. The establishment o f the two biological diversity offsets (Campo Ma’an and M’bam and Djerem National Park) included a management plan and a legal status that will bring them under the highest level o f protection under the 1994 Forest Law. 30. On the negative side, large migration occurred toward localities along the pipeline to take advantage o f the improved infrastructure and availability o f jobs. N G O documents indicate that this may have increased exposure to HIV/AIDS, although no quantitative evidence has been provided, and there has been no consistent government follow-up or regular monitoring. Pollution o f river water in certain localities along the pipeline has limited the access to potable water for the inhabitants. Fishermen blame the destruction o f the natural reef offshore o f Kribi for reducing their fish catch. The Deng Deng forest, a biodiversity 85. The Fondation pour I’environnement et le dkveloppement au Cameroun, which was established with COTCOiExxonMobil funding to assist in the implementationo f the Indigenous Peoples Plan for the project. 85 hotspot, continues to be prone to poaching and illegal logging despite protection provided under the EMP. OUTCOME 3 1. Based on i t s modest relevance, modest efficiency, and modest efficacy, the project’s overall outcome i s rated unsatisfactory. The sub-ratings for each o f the two development objectives are shown in Table B.2. Table B.2. Sub-ratings and Outcome Rating Based on the Achievement o f the Project Development Objectives Objectives Relevance Efficiency Efficacy OUTCOME o f PDOs 1. to develop and establish a national capacity for the Substantial Modest Modest environmental management and monitoring o f the Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project 2. on a medium to long-term basis, to help ensure the Modest Modest Negligible environ-mental sustainability o f future projects, programs and policies in the Borrower’s petroleum sector, including strengtheningthe Borrower’s capacity to mitigate the negative social and environ- mental impacts o f the Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project and the establishment o f an environmental regulatory frame-work for the petroleum sector Overall Outcome Rating Modest Modest Modest Unsatisfactory R I S K S TO DEVELOPMENT OUTCOME 32. Owing to i t s legal mandate and the experience and training gained during the project, the PSMC expects to continue to act as a “one-stop shop” for managing the environmental and social impacts o f pipelines, and any infrastructure projects falling within the area o f influence o f the CCPP. After project completion, PSMC continues to function with the same level o f staff as during the project. Presently, the PSMC i s financed by SNH, which raises a conflict o f interest in that SNH i s the petroleum arm o f the government and a representative on the Board o f Cameroon O i l Transport Corporation (COTCO). The government intends to follow upon the recommendations o f the Long-Term Vision Study in a follow-on environment and social capacity-building project. However, Cameroon has a long way to go in formalizing i t s environmental regulations for environmental management, improving capacity, and meeting standards and norms. When considered together with the low to varying commitment shown by the government, the overall risk to development outcomes i s significant. BANKPERFORMANCE 33. QuaZity at Entry. As already discussed, the relevance o f project design i s modest. In retrospect, the Bank should have requested a Quality at Entry Review, which may have yielded recommendations and guidance on how to simplify the project design and tailor it to 86 the country’s existing human and financial resources. On the positive side, the Bank consulted local NGOs and government stakeholders throughout the design, preparation, and implementation period. Quality at entry was moderately satisfactory. 34. Quality of Supervision. The Bank allocated sufficient budget and staff resources for supervision. The supervision teams included staff that had a good knowledge o f Cameroon’s government structure and environmental issues, and brought relevant environmental experience from other countries. Following decentralization o f the Bank’s functions to the Country Office, local staff in operational, financial, and procurement management provided continuity. Supervision missions were proactive in prevailing upon the PSMC to share budget information and training plans with all relevant ministries and upon the government to implement its commitments, including the appointment o f an International Advisory Panel. This ultimately resulted in the government agreeing to hire individual international experts to provide advice on the NOSRP and implement the training plan o n coastal zone management and marine environment protection. However, the supervision reports could have provided better information on the Key Performance Indicators and related them clearly to the development outcome and institutional progress ratings. 35. A midterm review (MTR) in July 2003 made several recommendations relating to speeding up implementation and training, improving collaboration among the Cameroon O i l Transport Corporation (COTCO), the PMSC, and other entities, and to launch the Long- Term Vision Study. But the MTR missed the opportunity to propose simplifying the project components to renew focus on monitoring the E M P o f the pipeline. This was particularly important in the light o f the Inspection Panel concern relating to the project’s delay in monitoring the EMP, which the Bank acknowledged was constrained by inadequate institutional and human resources. Bank supervision was moderately satisfactory. 36. Overall Bank performance i s moderately satisfactory. PERFORMANCE BORROWER 37. Government Performance. The government was not initially convinced about the usefulness o f the project, and though commitment improved as project design progressed, it was not consistent during implementation. The government showed limited interest in supporting the decision-making process, speeding up project effectiveness and implementation, enacting environmental decrees, and approving the National Oil Spill Response Plan. However, the government provided additional counterpart funds o f $4.56 million to increase the original amount o f $5.23 million to $9.79 million. Government performance was moderately unsatisfactory. 3 8. Implementing Agency Performance. The PSMC, which i s competently staffed at the level o f its management and the three field units, implemented its overall mandate with some delays because o f initial weaknesses in project fiduciary management. After the MTR, it agreed to recruit and use outside consultants to help speed up the procurement and disbursement processes and build its own capacity for project management. Consultation with stakeholders and affected people took long to become effective. The Consultation Platform-following a recommendation from the pipeline project’s December 2006 Implementation Completion Report-was organized and started consultations with other 87 ministries, NGOs, and various stakeholders in 2007-08 period. Based on reports by external monitoring groups, supervision has improved over time with staff trained and equipped by the project and better monitoring processes implemented,by field-based PSMC teams and experts. PSMC’s affiliation with S N H, however, continues to raise issues o f conflict o f interest. Implementing agency performance i s rated moderately satisfactory. 39. Given the strong weight o f the government’s lack o f interest and progress in finalizing key actions, overall borrower performance i s rated moderately unsatisfactory. 88 Annex C. Chad: Petroleum Sector Management Capacity- Building Project (Credit 3373-CD) Summary: Project Outcome and Lessons 1. The Petroleum Sector Management Capacity-Building Project i s part o f a cluster of technical assistance (TA) and advisory projects financed by the WB and IFC that supported capacity building related to the Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project (PDPP). The main objective o f this particular TA project was to strengthen the capacity o f Chad to manage the development o f i t s petroleum resources in an environmentally and socially sound manner, consistent with the Chad Country Assistance Strategy. FINDINGS MAIN 2. Based on i t s modest relevance, efficacy, and efficiency, overall project outcome i s rated unsatisfactory. The performance o f this Chad project has many similarities with the parallel project in Cameroon (Annex B). The delays in effectiveness and procurement meant that the government’s monitoring agency, CTNSC 86 was not able to conduct independent monitoring during the development o f the Doba o i l field and the construction o f Chad’s section o f the Chad-Cameroon pipeline from 2000-03, Instead, during that time, EEPCI self- regulated while the External Compliance Monitoring Group (ECMG) conducted monitoring on behalf o f IFC. 3. As an indirect result o f suspension o f Bank operations in Chad in 2006, whatever nascent capacity was being built within NTCMC and i t s field staff collapsed for lack o f IDA funding. An Environmental Management Information System (EMIS) was initiated but not fully developed. Effective national capacity for regulation and monitoring was far from being mainstreamed across the concerned sector ministries, notably the Ministry o f Environment and Water Resources (MEW), as intended. 4. Unlike Cameroon, there i s no Consultative Platform in Chad to share information and air grievances at regular meetingss7,despite mounting local and WBG concerns related to the expansion o f in-fill drilling by EEPCI, which would reach triple the level appraised under the original Environmental Management Plan (EMP). With the Bank’s departure from the petroleum sector, the NGOS have lost the protective mantle that the Bank’s leadership and convening role has provided over the past decade, thus exposing them to greater risks when publicly raising environmental and social issues related to Chad’s petroleum development program. Despite a slow start but promising initial results, the FACIL (Fonds d ’Actions Concerte‘es d ’Initiative Locale) microfinancing and small community development program intended to mitigate social impacts also collapsed when the Bank pulled out o f the petroleum 86. Comite‘ Technique Nationale de Suivi et ContrGle (CTNSC). 87 According to ECMG (April-May 2009), meetings with communities and with eligible persons are now held regularly for passing messages and explaining procedures. Meetings have also been held with local authorities and NOGs. 89 sector, which meant that the pending Supplemental Grant (intended to continue community development-type programs) could not be approved before the credit’s closing date. 5. Government support at entry and its commitment during implementation have been very weak. None o f the intended environmental regulations have been approved, much less publicly debated or disclosed. The country does not have implementing regulations for a critically important National O i l Spill Response Plan. EEPCI is almost entirely self- regulating, since there i s no independent government presence on the ground. To date, an environmental decree or implementing regulations have not yet been adopted, and the M E W does not have any monitorable performance indicators related to geophysical, forestry, health, and other relevant areas within its responsibility. Although the MMEP has developed some economic and technical indicators related to. producing o i l concessions, these remain weak, and regular updating and monitoring still needs to be strengthened significantly. LESSONS 6. The main lessons learned from the project’s experience are: e Borrower commitment: Effective implementation o f capacity-building projects requires solid commitment from the borrower at the highest levels, and must take place in the context o f clear policy support for environmental and social management objectives, coupled with the political determination to reach them. e A pre-existing legalfiamework: In nearly all cases, but especially in extractive industries, an appropriate legal, institutional, and regulatory framework should be in place before production starts, in order to facilitate the building o f capacity. e Adequate assessment o f institutional and absorptive capacities at entry: Human, financial, and institutional constraints must be carefully assessed. Only on the basis o f such an assessment can realistic expectations be built as to what can be achieved through this type o f TA project. There should be maximum clarity about what types o f capacity need to be created and which personnel are to be targeted. Moreover, capacity building should be properly sequenced. e Sharpfocus on objectives that can be implemented Temptations to simultaneously cover multiple sectors and many activities should be avoided. Inclusion of, for example, infrastructure-building components are likely to prove a serious distraction for both financial and human resources in a relatively small TA project. e Capacity building needs to focus on existing permanent national institutions: Training and other capacity-building efforts should not be focused o n temporary entities that have no political or operational authority and are thus unable to mainstream reforms. e Full assessment o f the impact o f the Bank’s actions: When the Bank decides to invoke remedies for borrower non-compliance, it is important to assess not only the Bank’s desired effect on the top government authorities, but the impact o f the Bank’s actions on ultimate project beneficiaries as well. In this project, the Bank’s seven-month suspension o f operations in Chad and disbursements o f IDA funds in 2006 (in addition to the failure to meet conditions for the Supplemental Grant) led to the disintegration and eventual collapse o f the capacity-building and environmental and 90 social mitigation programs that the project sought to support-to the detriment of the poor, local populations in the o i l field and pipeline development area that the project sought to serve. Every effort should be made to ensure that the Bank, in taking such major actions, does not subvert i t s own poverty reduction goals. The Project OBJECTIVES, COMPONENTS, AND COSTS 7. According to the Development Credit Agreement (DCA), the project objectives were: to better manage the development o f petroleum resources in an environmentally and socially sound manner; and to increase the use o f petroleum resources generated from the Chad Export Project. 8. The second objective is inappropriate, since revenue management and public expenditure aspects were pursued in other projects in the cluster. Consequently, in this case the formulation o f the development objectives in the Project Appraisal Document (PAD) guided the implementation o f the project and therefore was used as the basis for this evaluation. 9. The P A D states that the project would: strengthen the capacity o f Chad to manage the development o f i t s petroleum resources in an environmentally and socially sound manner, beginning with the Doba Petroleum Project (DPP)88 in southern Chad; strengthen the capacity o f Chad to minimize and mitigate the potential negative environmental and social impacts o f the DPP o n the producing region; strengthen local capacity in the Doba region, and provide opportunities for the region’s residents to improve their living conditions; and establish an effective framework for further sound private sector investment in the petroleum sector, and engage effectively with such investors. 10. The PDOs and Key Performance Indicators were not revised during project implementation. 11. The project consisted o f two components: Component 1: DPP management (estimated cost at appraisal, $18.9 million; actual cost, $18.2 million). This component accounted for 71 percent o f total project costs, and consisted of: strengthening the government’s capacity by developing technical, social, and environmental competence in the Ministry o f Environment and Water Resources (MEWR), Comite Technique National de Suivi et de Contrtjle, or CTNSC), the 88. This i s the same as the Chad Export Project cited in the D C A ’ s statement o f objectives. 91 Doba Project Unit (DPU) set up to monitor the operations o f the DPP, and the Ministry o f Mines, Energy, and Petroleum (MMEP); mitigating negative impacts o f the DPP on the producing region by limiting migration through a communications campaign, financing social infrastructure facilities, and supporting local development activities; and 1 conducting information and communication activities, including the development o f a monitoring and information system, and generating accurate public information on the DPP and the project with a view to encouraging dialogue among stakeholders. This part o f the project included the F A C I L program (Fonds d ’Actions Concerte‘es d’lnitiative Locale), which provided grants or loans to finance microprojects and small-scale community activities in the Doba area related to infrastructure for health, education, sanitation, water supply, and market access. FACIL also included income- and labor-generating projects, as well as specialized training for NGOs, CSOs, municipalities, and communities. Component 2: The second component was aimed at building petroleum sector management capacity (estimated cost at appraisal, $5.3 million; actual cost, $5.5 million). This component consisted of: 1 strengthening the environmental and social regulatory framework applicable to petroleum development projects in Chad, drawing on the lessons o f the DPP; and 1 strengthening Chad’s capacity to manage the technical aspects o f the sector and i t s ability to attract, negotiate, and engage with potential investors, inter alia, through developing an effective management information system, training, and promotion activities. 12. At closing, total project costs were $25.7 million-including a refinanced Project Preparation Facility advance o f $2.2 million--or $0.5 million less than the $26.2 million estimated at appraisal. However, there were substantial cost overruns during the first years o f implementation, and the Credit proceeds were almost entirely committed by mid-2003, In October 2005, the borrower requested a reallocation among expenditure categories in the D C A to cover the higher than anticipated costs o f consulting services due mainly to the weakness o f the U.S. dollar against the Euro. The consulting services category was increased by $3.1 million (or 46 percent), financed by reductions mainly in unallocated expenditures, operating costs, and microprojects. 13. By 2005, the Credit was fully utilized. In July 2004, the borrower requested a Supplemental Grant (SG) o f $10 million. However, there were delays in fulfilling Board presentation requirements, specifically a Letter o f Sector Strategy, assurance o f counterpart funding availability, and a procurement plan. Moreover, as noted, the Bank suspension o f operations in Chad in 2006 meant that the Supplemental Grant could not be approved before project closure. 14. The estimated and actual costs are presented in Table C. 1 92 Table C.l. Appraisal versus Actual Project Costs Components Appraisal ActuaUZatest Percentage estimate estimate of appraisal (US$ (US$ million) million) A. Doba project management (i) Government capacity Environment (technical and institutional support) 6.7 9.4 140% Technical experts and training 2.1 2.1 100% Project coordination and support 0.3 0.3 100% (ii) Producing region Induced impacts in oil-producing region 9.0 5.6 62% (iii) Additional information activities Monitoring, information-gathering, dissemination, and 0.8 0.8 100% communication B. Petroleum sector management Petroleum sector environmental and regulatory framework 0.7 0.9 129% Petroleum sector information management system 4.6 4.6 100% C. Refinancing o f PPF advances PPF advances 2.0 2.0 100% Total project costs 26.2 25.7 98% 15. The IDA Credit o f $23.7 million equivalent financed 92 percent o f project costs. The contribution o f the government was $2 million, $0.5 million less than foreseen at appraisal. Implementation Experience 16. Key Dates. The Credit’s effectiveness on March 2001 represented a delay o f 9 months after Board approval. The delay was the resuIt o f disagreements between the government and the Bank concerning the institutional arrangements for implementation and difficulties in staffing the project implementation unit (PIU). The closing date was extended twice. The first extension, for four months from December 3 1,2005, to April 30,2006, was to allow what was thought to be sufficient time for preparation o f the Supplemental Grant. The second extension, until December 3 1,2006, was to allow completion o f ongoing activities, which had been delayed during the Bank’s suspension o f the country’s lending portfolio. 17. Monitoring and Evaluation. The quality o f the project’s M&E is negligible. The PAD indicators are mostly based on outputs rather than outcomes, and for the most part are neither quantified nor time-bound. The approach for measuring the four basic output indicators shown in the Results Framework o f the Implementation Completion Report (ICR) was not clear: (i) effective government monitoring o f the DPP, including financial and technical aspects; (ii) effective implementation o f the DPP Environmental Management Plan; (iii)social infrastructure improvements in the producing region; and (iv) substantially increased government dealings with new investors. The four intermediate outcome indicators 93 were actually also output indicators: (i)o i l price comparators reflect pertinent international price; (ii) environmental regulations for the petroleum sector are developed and a new Hydrocarbons Code i s prepared; (iii) capacity in the Environment Ministry and CTNSC to monitor environmental and social aspects o f petroleum activities is strengthened; and (iv) the pressure o f migrating population on the region i s mitigated. 18. In sum, there were no objective, time-bound outcome benchmarks for the project’s capacity-building objective, which should have been made available to project stakeholders. Although the PAD’SAnnex 2 contains a summary data sheet for a fuller and more sophisticated management information system (MIS), this was not properly developed, implemented, or maintained, and necessary data were not collected. The sustainability o f M&E capabilities developed in /CTNSC and D P U is in serious doubt (some informants say “decimated”). These two agencies do not have the capacity or the organizational structure to mainstream M&E practices. 19. Environmental and Social Safeguards. The project was classified Category C under the Bank’s safeguard policies, as a TA project that would have no adverse impacts on the physical and social environment. N o safeguard issues arose during project implementation. The Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project, however, had important environmental and social impacts, which are discussed in Annex A o f this report. 20. Financial Management Aspects. The project’s financial management system- including accounting, controls, auditing, and reporting-was adequate and satisfied Bank requirements. However, major fiduciary issues arose during project implementation. The Special Account was drawn down to finance ineligible expenditures. Several unpaid invoices are outstanding because the government made commitments beyond Credit resources. While the Bank’s portfolio in Chad was suspended in 2006, the PIU lacked access to government counterpart funding but used the Special Account to finance expenditures. Six months after the project’s closing date, the outstanding balances in the Special Accounts o f D P U ($213,000) and CTNSC ($700,000) had not yet been refunded by the government. The F A C I L program reimbursed $40,000 to CTNSC, but this has not yet been repaid to the project. Some o f these problems resulted from the pressure to keep up with the accelerated pipeline construction schedule. In other cases, however, the issues arose from the government’s delays in providing counterpart funds. Although the government is responsible for reimbursing unused funds in the Special Accounts, amounts are s t i l l outstanding and invoices remained unpaid for a period after the Credit closed. 2 1. Procurement. The DCA’s procurement provisions were violated o n numerous occasions: contracts were awarded without the Bank’s non-objection; single-source contracting was excessively used; bidding was fragmented; ceiling amounts were exceeded; and either there was no procurement plan or it was not observed. RELEVANCE 22. Objectives. The project i s consistent with the goals o f the 1996 Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) o f restoring public sector capacity, focusing public expenditures on poverty reduction, and creating an environment favorable to private sector development. I t i s also consistent with the principal objective o f the 2001 and 2003 CASs, to assist Chad in making 94 the best use o f i t s petroleum revenues as it attempts to attain the Millennium Development Goals. The project i s relevant to one o f the two pillars o f the 2003 CAS, which is to strengthen governance and the institutional arrangements for public resource management and service delivery, the r u l e o f law, and the establishment o f robust social and environmental safeguards, as Chad exploits i t s o i l reserves. However, as in Cameroon, the objective o f strengthening the entire petroleum sector significantly exceeded the immediate needs o f monitoring o i l field development and pipeline construction. Consequently, the relevance o f objectives was modest. 23. Design. The objective o f strengthening the entire petroleum sector resulted in a design that was too complex and ambitious for the existing country capacity. (This finding i s similar to that o f the parallel project in Cameroon and the revenue management project in Chad.) The project’s design did not adequately address the l o w absorptive capacity o f the civil servants who were targeted for capacity building, although this was well known during project appraisal. The emphasis and funding for training was insufficient. Given the l o w capacity to start with, the project (as in Cameroon) attempted to tackle too many activities and sectonvide issues instead o f focusing on the immediate needs o f the already-highly complex o i l field development and pipeline project. During project preparation, there was inadequate attention on ensuring coherence between the PDOs and the burgeoning responsibilities yet weak capacities o f the Chadian institutions involved. The relevance o f design was modest. 24. Although the project’s objectives are relevant, the flaws o f i t s design weighed very heavily as a factor underlying the serious problems encountered during implementation. Overall project relevance i s modest. EFFICIENCY 25. Under the Bank’s operational guidelines, an ERR i s not required for technical assistance projects. However, given the long implementation delays and issues related to financial management and procurement, the efficiency o f the project i s considered modest. EFFICACY Objective 1: to strengthen the capacity of Chad to manage the development of its petroleum resources in an environmentally and socially sound manner, beginning with the Doba Petroleum Project (DPP) 26. Achievement o f this objective was negligible. Capacity building was ad hoc and although some competencies were initially developed, the nascent institutions-most importantly the pipeline coordinating committee (CTNSC)-all collapsed soon after the IDA funding was interrupted when the Bank suspended its operations in 2006. IEG’s document review and interviews show that there was no clear training plan under the project, and the training that was carried out did not fit established patterns o f career development in Chad’s public service. The funding allocated for training was insufficient. Most training was provided to project implementation units (PIUs) or other temporary structures with no long- 95 term operating responsibilities or political authority. There was no coherent capacity-building strategy and no sustainable improvement in institutional capacity. 27. Nearly all the trained staff l e f t government service because o f the poor to non-existent career perspectives and the uncertain future o f the government institutions themselves. Any modest impact that the project may have had was underminedby adverse institutional changes made by the government. In 2005, the decision to create a National O i l Company and vest i t with national coordination responsibilities undermined the capacity o f other bodies, notably the MMEP, and spread scarce skills even more thinly. 89 28. Severe weaknesses s t i l l characterize the government institutions responsible for the petroleum sector, and there i s no independent monitoring on behalf o f Chad o f the environmental and social aspects o f the petroleum investments and Exxon’s operations. Objective 2: to strengthen the capacity of Chad to minimize and mitigate the potential negative environmental and social impacts o f the DPP on the producing region 29. Achievement o f this objective was negligible. The DPU’s petroleum inspectors initially helped to apply appropriate quality and quantity control procedures to the export o f crude oil. The DPU also carried out regular analysis o f royalties and initiated the launch and supervision o f external audits. Improved coordination with the operating Consortium enabled improved management o f land, water supply, and sanitation for the benefit o f local communities and new arrivals. Reportedly, prevention campaigns financed by the project have heightened awareness o f the dangers o f sexually transmitted diseases among truckers and other high-risk groups, although systematic evidence i s not available. Sustainable forest management practices were introduced in six pilot villages. At least toward the end o f the construction period, CTNSC monitored the O i l Field Development Area and gained credibility with the Consortium through i t s technical reviews o f the Consortium’s environmental proposals. 90 30. However, these improvements were not sustained. The MIS was not properly developed, implemented, or maintained, leading to the ongoing difficulties in collecting, analyzing, and using social and environmental data. A robust institutional framework necessary to support continued environmental protection and mitigation activities has not been developed. Although there was some tentative provision in the 2007 national budget for CTNSC, it did not materialize and the committee was eventually dissolved. Guidelines for implementing the Environmental Management Plan were prepared in 2005, but no Environmental Decree or regulations have been adopted. Although an O i l Spill Response Plan was approved by the Cabinet, implementing regulations have not yet been developed. Objective 3: to strengthen local capacity in the Doba region, andprovide opportunitiesfor the region’s residents to improve their living conditions 89. The destruction o f the ministry and i t s records during the rebel attack severely compoundedthe problem. 90. External Compliance Monitoring Group Report, June 2003. 96 3 1. Achievement o f this objective was modest. Although the F A C I L program (Fonds d’Actions ConcertCes d’Initiative Locale) got o f f to a slow start due to delays in recruiting qualified personnel and poor cash management by CTNCS, its micro-credit loans were given to 8,000 people for economic and commercial activities in 10 cantons, though the outcomes for employment creation and increased living standards have not been evaluated. In terms of social infrastructure, 29 school buildings and 58 new classrooms were built, seven bridges were constructed or rehabilitated, and drinking water supply systems were improved. Training courses on a variety o f topics (such as masonry and poultry breeding) were delivered to some 500 people, though again it i s not known h o w useful they were in actually raising incomes due to lack o f M&E. Women played an active role o n F A C I L committees and were directly assisted in the promotion o f income-generating activities. 32. These improvements, however, were not sustained. No institutional or other measures were taken to ensure the regular maintenance o f the new infrastructure. When IDA suspended disbursements, the F A C I L program disintegrated and eventually ceased. At present, an unspecified number o f invoices to small and medium enterprises and other community investors who participated in the program remain unpaid. Objective 4: to establish an effective framework for further soundprivate sector investment in the petroleum sector and engage effectively with such investors 33. Achievement o f this objective was modest. Considerable efforts were made in technical and financial training for staff o f the DPU, MMEP, and Ministry o f Finance. However, as noted earlier, many o f the people concerned have left government, leaving little capacity to negotiate with foreign private investors. A model was successfully developed to help the government determine the price differential between Doba Blend crude o i l and Brent (commonly used as international price benchmark). However, MMEP has not kept current its subscription to Platts Oilgram, which supplies the monthly input o f freight rates and o i l prices required by the model. Hence, the model cannot be regularly used. 34. Accelerated negotiations (unforeseen at the time o f project preparation) were successfully conducted for the renewal o f the Consortium’s concession after the pipeline’s construction phase was completed much faster than anticipated. The negotiations were carried out principally by specialized technical and legal consultants, and it i s unclear how much capacity has been transferred to Chadian officials. The government has been actively promoting the petroleum sector, and three new concessions were signed in 2004. 35. The quality o f the promotion effort has been undermined by lack o f funding under the project to develop an information system for geological, geophysical, and petrophysical data. This data i s currently stored by the Consortium. The greatest shortcoming with regard to this objective is the failure to improve sector governance through the strengthening o f institutions and the establishment o f a legal framework favoring a clear separation between policy, implementation and monitoring responsibilities. Although the project supported the preparation o f a new hydrocarbon law, there i s a lack o f political support for key governance measures in Chad in general, and in the petroleum sector specifically. 36. The project’s overall efficacy i s modest. 97 OUTCOME 37. The project’s outcome i s unsatisfactory. I t s principal development objective-to build Chadian capacity to manage the country’s petroleum sector-has not been achieved, partly due to poor design and partly from lack o f government commitment and ownership. Moreover, the seven-month suspension o f Bank operations in 2006 led to the rapid erosion and eventual loss o f whatever capacity had been built under the project, and the termination o f the promising FACIL program. The sub-ratings comprising the overall outcome rating are shown in Table C.2. Table C.2. Sub-ratings and Outcome Rating Based on the Achievement o f the Project Development Objectives Objectives Relevance Efficiency Efficacy OUTCOME of PDOs (a) to strengthen the capacity o f Chad to manage the Modest Modest Negligible n an development o f i t s petroleum resources i environmentally and socially sound manner, beginning with the Doba Petroleum Project (DPP) in southern Chad (b) to strengthen the capacity o f Chad to minimize Substantial Modest Negligible and mitigate the potential negative environmental and social impacts o f the DPP on the producing region (c) to strengthen local capacity in the Doba region, Substantial Modest Modest and provide opportunities for the region’s residents to improve their living conditions (d) to establish an effective framework for further Modest Modest Modest sound private sector investment in the petroleum sector, and engage effectively with such investors Overall Outcome Rating Modest Modest Modest Unsatisfactory RISK TO DEVELOPMENT OUTCOME 38. The risk to development outcome i s high. First, the project has failed to develop an institutional and legal framework capable o f supporting environmental protection and mitigation activities. Second, capacity constraints in the sector ministries have only been partially addressed. Third, the CTNSC has lost nearly all o f i t s trained staff. As for DPU, some o f i t s personnel have been absorbed into MMEP, but no further budgetary provision i s to be made for the institution itself. Fourth, it i s not certain whether MMEP w i l l have the financial resources to conduct the regular training programs necessary to keep i t s staff abreast o f changing developments in the oil industry. Similarly, the ministry may be unable to secure sufficient funding to acquire essential equipment or to create and maintain a petroleum database. The capacity constraints o f the MMEP may have been further exacerbated by the creation o f a National O i l Company. Fifth, there i s currently no financing for continuing the project activities, which have collapsed. Finally, with respect to Chad’s participation in the Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project, there i s no longer a budgetary provision for national coordination, which has practically ceased to exist. 98 BANKPERFORMANCE 39. Quality at entry was unsatisfactory. In addition to the major design shortcomings described previously, risks were inadequately assessed, notably institutional and fiduciary capacities, and mitigating measures were weak. For example, two important risks were considered modest, namely, the low and weakening government commitment and capacity to strengthen the sector, and the inadequate use made o f trained Chadians. These were to be mitigated by Bank support, linkage to the implementation o f the PDPP, and improved working conditions. With hindsight, it i s clear that linking the project to the implementation o f a large and highly visible engineering activity like the pipeline project led to unrealistic demands in a country with severely limited human resources and capacity. More attention should have been given to proactively targeting and sequencing the functions and skill types that were likely to be critical in the short to medium term. The design was hasty, and the PAD’S M&E indicators are not quantifiable, time-bound, or outcome-oriented. 40. Supervision was moderately unsatisfactory. It was hampered by inappropriate design and staffing problems. During the first three years o f implementation, the task team had no petroleum specialist. Inadequate supervision contributed to the project’s considerable financial and fiduciary difficulties. Despite manifest problems, supervision missions classified the project as satisfactory until mid-2005; only after that date was it rated moderately unsatisfactory and then unsatisfactory. 41. Perhaps the most regrettable aspect o f the Bank’s performance i s the apparently inadequate assessment o f the full impact o f the Bank’s actions related to the suspension o f relations with Chad as a result o f i t s unilateral amendments o f the petroleum revenue management agreements. The need for additional funding for capacity-building project activities was recognized, but given the Bank’s seven-month suspension o f operations in Chad, the Supplemental Grant could not be approved before the 2006 closing date. This led to the disintegration and eventual collapse o f the slow but promising capacity-building and environmentalhocial mitigation programs that the project sought to support-to the detriment o f the people in the oil field and pipeline development area that the project sought to serve. Every effort should be made to ensure that the Bank, in taking such major actions, does not subvert i t s own poverty reduction goals. 42. The Bank’s performance i s rated moderately unsatisfactory. PERFORMANCE BORROWER 43. During project preparation, the government appeared committed to the project, but it opposed many o f its features during implementation. Intense dialogue and the intervention o f senior Bank management was needed to convince the authorities o f the need to improve their petroleum sector management capabilities. By late 2004, commitment was wavering once again. 44. Serious fiduciary and financial management issues contributed to an exhaustion o f project funds by 2005. In December 2005, Parliament approved the government’s decision to amend unilaterally the Petroleum Revenue Management Law, in contravention o f both the D C A for this project and the Loan Agreement for the pipeline project. As part o f the Bank 99 response, all disbursements were suspended, including under this project, and did not resume until July 2006-by which time the National O i l Company had been created, the PIUs had lost almost their entire staffs, the already weak interagency coordination was debilitated, and project-trained government personnel left. The government could have filled the funding gap with some o f the substantial resources already accruing from o i l revenue, but did not. The government’s performance was unsatisfactory. 45. Most o f the shortcomings o f the implementing entities were the fault o f the government rather than o f the entities themselves. National coordination, even before its absorption into the MMEP, proved unable to carry out its appointed tasks or to contribute effectively to the building o f the institutional and legal framework for the sector. NCTMC/CTNSC steadily improved its capacity during implementation and gained credibility with the Consortium. However, its valuable work was undermined by lack o f coordination with the DPU, and later by inadequate funding, and the entity was eventually dissolved. Overall implementing agency performance was unsatisfactory. 46. The borrower’s overall performance i s rated unsatisfactory. 100 Annex D. Chad: Management o f the Petroleum Economy Project (Credit 33 16-CD) Summary: Project Outcome and Lessons 1. The Management o f the Petroleum Economy Project, o f about $19.5 million, including an IDA Credit o f about $17.5 million, i s part o f the cluster o f technical assistance (TA) and advisory projects financed by the W E3 and I F C that supported the Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project (PDPP). This project focused on the management o f the o i l revenue from the PDPP. MAINFINDINGS 2. Based mainly o n the ratings for efficacy and efficiency, the overall project outcome is rated unsatisfactory. W h i l e the project objective itself was relevant, the design was overloaded, too ambitious, lacking selectivity and focus, and oriented toward fiscal management best practice rather than addressing the basic weaknesses o f the country’s public financial management system. The underlying issue was that the project design, in effect, assumed that the capacity the project was supposed to help develop was already largely in place. The flaws in project design were compounded by loose implementation arrangements, lack o f continuity o f supervision, and most importantly, weak government commitment and growing non-compliance with budgetary rules. As a consequence, the project objective was not met. LESSONS 3. The main lessons learned from the project’s experience are: The critical need to design aproject o f this type around the institutional and capacity realities of the country. Related to the above is the need to focus on improving the basic plumbing ofpublic expenditure management, not on introducing sophisticated practices, recognizing that capacity is inherently relative to the complexity o f the tasks the system is expected to perform. In this case, the failure to focus on concrete improvements in the preparation o f good investment projects (including recurrent cost provision) and on the nuts and bolts o f budget execution led to wasteful investments and divergence between budgeted and actual expenditure. Performance indicators need to be limited to thefew key ones that are critical to achieving the objectives and are monitorable. The plethora o f performance indicators in the project was related to the overloaded design but contributed to diverting attention away from the efficiency o f expenditure. Also, listing dozens o f K e y Performance Indicators o f diverse importance and questionable clarity made robust monitoring impossible. PERs can be very useful but cannot by themselves remedy major weaknesses in budget preparation and execution. In this case, the logical sequence went from PRSP formulation through sector expenditure programs that would underpin an MTEF that 101 would frame an annual budget containing integrated programs approved by the CollBge-with the necessary practical improvements in the system addressed by the annual PERs. Unfortunately, aside from the weakness or absence o f the various l i n k s in this chain, the excellent diagnoses and recommendations o f the various PERs were mostly ignored. * Continuity o f supervision is always critical for good project implementation, and higher-level guidance and monitoring should not be allowed to supersede or diminish the role and responsibility o f the designated TTL. In this case, the project had six TTLs in its seven years-a syndrome not unrelated to the assignment o f high- powered consultants with de facto supervisory and direct implementation responsibilities during the f i r s t three years. The Project OBJECTIVES 4. The Project Appraisal Document (PAD) stated the objective as to “help Chad to build capacity to implement i t s petroleum revenue management strategy to enable it to effectively absorb and allocate expected o i l revenue, and thus pursue the poverty-reduction objective of petroleum resources development.” This general objective was articulated into the following (more generic and ambitious than the primary objective): to help improve the quality and effectiveness o f Chad’s public resource management, with a view to ensuring the priority use o f o i l revenue to alleviate key infrastructure and human resource bottlenecks that constrain growth and poverty reduction, and mitigating the potential negative macroeconomic, governance, and social impact of o i l exports; to help build Chad’s capacity to increase public expenditure in priority poverty reduction activities (basic health and education, social affairs, essential infrastructure, and rural development), while maintaining a sound macroeconomic environment conducive to economic growth, increasing the efficiency, transparency, and accountability o f the government’s finances, and promoting a participatory approach to foster better governance. COMPONENTS AND COSTS 5. The project had five components: 0 Component 1: Strengthening public financial management ($8.2 million, or 42 percent o f total). Increasing efficiency, transparency, and accountability o f public financial management; upgrading and rationalization o f budget cycle, including the macroeconomic and public expenditure framework, budget programming, revenue mobilization, expenditure circuits, debt and cash flow management, and internal control and audit system. 0 Component 2: Poverty database and strategy ($3.0 million, 16 percent). Analytical and policy underpinning for allocating public resources and assessing the impact o f public expenditure on poverty reduction. Support to producing and maintaining 102 poverty database and reporting system, and participatory articulation o f a strategy for poverty reduction. Component 3: Humanresource development ($1.3 million, 7 percent). Implementation o f administrative reform, giving priority to institutional and staff reform (organization, job profiles, training, recruitment, incentive system, accountability) in pilot economic administrations. Component 4: Oversight and control ($1.3 million, 7 percent). Implementation o f oversight capacities in the Auditor General’s Office and the civil society as well as the information and consultation o f the civil society on the implementation o f the petroleum revenue management strategy. Component 5:-Monitoring economic reform and coordinating capacity building ($3.7 million, 19 percent). Support to existing institutions in charge o f monitoring structural adjustment and coordinating capacity building-primarily in the Cellule Econornique o f the Ministry o f Finance. 6. Neither the primary objective, nor the other PDOs, nor the key performance indicators, were formally revised during project implementation. However, the Midterm Review o f July 2003 led to a major financial restructuring-mainly the reallocation of over $5 million from the public finance management component to supporting the implementation o f the 2002 Procurement Code, financing construction o f the offices o f a number o f government agencies, and increasing the amount for monitoring economic reform. Implementation Experience MONT I ORN I GAND EVALUATION 7. The quality o f design o f the project’s M&E result framework i s negligible, for the following reasons: Listing 28 performance indicators, o f widely differing importance, i s incompatible with the concept of key performance indicators. Although it i s normal for institutional development assistance that important indicators are process-oriented rather than result-oriented, most o f the performance indicators in this project are entirely process-oriented or limited to the completion o f studies and submission o f reports. Several indicators are too vague to be monitorable (such as “budget control and oversight mechanisms”). Most o f the indicators that are both meaningful and monitorable would be too ambitious in any country given the time allowed (such as “implementation o f a financial management information system”). Some indicators are inconsistent with the reality o f extremely limited capacity in Chad, candidly acknowledged in the PAD (such as “implementation o f a streamlined and simplified budget expenditure system and o f improved procedures for the internal control o f expenditures”). A few are either contrary to good public expenditure management practice in developing countries (such as “introducing program budgeting in a budget system with basic weaknesses”) or to the logic o f the program design (such as “execution o f 103 the consolidated budget on the basis o f a new nomenclature, whereas the special arrangements for o i l revenue management preclude a genuinely consolidated budget”). 8. With such deeply flawed design, it i s evident that monitoring and evaluation could not be implemented, and thus no information could be collected to help inform decisions. 9. Environmental and Social Safeguards. The project was classified as Category C under the Bank’s safeguard policies, as a technical assistance project that would have no adverse impacts on the physical and social environment. N o safeguard issues arose during project implementation. 10. Fiduciary Aspects. Serious public procurement problems emerged both in Chad generally and affecting this project, especially after 2004. Arrangements for financial management were satisfactory, but the government and implementing agencies significantly delayed the measures required for compliance. RELEVANCE 11. Overall project relevance is rated modest at bets. Despite the relevance o f the project’s objective, and the coherence with the program, major flaws in design and loose implementation arrangements led to serious problems in implementation and proved responsible for the lack o f achievement o f the objectives. 12. Objectives. The project objective is fully consistent with the goals o f the Country Assistance Strategies o f 2001 and 2003, and with the overall program objective o f helping Chad escape the “resource curse,” for which the capacity to manage the o i l revenue and use it efficiently in pro-development pro-poor activities is critical. However, the articulation o f the objective was deeply flawed and excessively framed in terms o f inputs. 13. Design. As i s evident from their descriptions, the five project components were extremely broad and ambitious (except the monitoring o f reform component). Although the generality o f the components was alleviated by the specificity o f the expected outputs listed in the Project Design Summary, most o f those outputs would require, in themselves, years o f preparatory activities and sustained support. The project did follow on the earlier Economic and Financial Management Project (Cr. 1872, closed in June 1996) and the Capacity Building for Economic Management Project (Cr. 28 18, closed in June 2000), and was intended as a continuation o f those activities. I t s design reportedly factored in the lessons learned from those proj ects-the need for clear project objectives, ,government commitment, availability o f qualified counterparts, giving priority to local capacities, adequate accounting and procurement in place, continuity and depth o f supervision, adequate budgeting o f components, and donor coordination “to avoid overtaxing Chad’s limited institutional capacity.” 14. The question arises why some o f these most basic requirements had not been put in place by the two previous projects. (Indeed, the ICRs o f both the older projects rated their outcome and achievement o f most objectives satisfactory, which in hindsight raises grave doubts on the soundness o f those evaluations.) However the previous projects had been rated, 104 it remained incumbent upon the Bank to assess the capacity situation as it was at the time o f project appraisal. And, in fact, a strong sense o f realism concerning the very limited capacity is inherent in the PAD’S listing o f lessons learned, Against this background, it i s difficult to understand h o w project design could incorporate such a vast agenda o f comprehensive budgeting and administrative reform to be implemented injust four years-an agenda that would require at least a decade for proper implementation in a country with greater capacity than Chad, and a far greater investment that $17.5 million. 15. Compounding the design overload, the PAD accent on bringing best practices into Chad’s fiscal management was sharply at odds with i t s clear recognition o f the fundamental problems o f basic budget preparation and execution systems and severe capacity limitations in Chad. This i s particularly relevant to the need to ensure investment efficiency-given the project’s role within the broader program that called for a large proportion o f the o i l revenue to be invested in priority sectors. Chad’s “public investment programs” o f the 1990s were lists o f insufficiently researched project ideas assembled to attract donor funding. The priority was clearly to focus on improving that process-particularly the nuts and bolts of project preparation (including recurrent cost estimation), and investment programming of the basic sort. Instead, the design entailed a “transition from PIP to Sector Expenditure Programs,” that is, from a flawed mechanism that could be improved at acceptable transaction costs to a more advanced system for which neither basic understanding nor capacity were in place. This factor alone was in large measure responsible for the inefficiencies o f the large investment expenditures eventually financed with the massive o i l revenue. (See the main text.) The underlying paradox is that the project design in effect assumed that the institutional capacity which the project was aimed to build was already largely in place. 16. Finally, the implementation arrangements were insufficiently clear. While the M o F was responsible for the P F M component and the Ministry o f Planning for the PRSP component-as i s normal-responsibility for the other components was not clearly assigned. Some ambiguity was created by the split responsibilities o f the two implementing offices- the National Capacity-Building Secretariat (SENAREC) and the Economic Cell (Cellule Economique). And, after project effectiveness, the government created a Technical Cell 91 (Cellule Technique) in the MoF, which simply added an unnecessary administrative layer. EFFICIENCY 17. Under the Bank’s operational guidelines, an ERR i s not required for technical assistance projects. However, given the long implementation delays and issues related to financial management and procurement, the efficiency o f the project cannot be considered more than modest. EFFICACY 18. The project’s overall efficacy i s rated as negligible. As noted, the objective o f “helping Chad to build capacity to implement its petroleum revenue management strategy to enable it to effectively absorb and allocate expected o i l revenue, and thus pursue the poverty- 91. See the ICR for details (Report No.32710-TD o f October 2006). 105 reduction objective o f petroleum resources development” was articulated in the following three goals: help improve public resource management; help build capacity to increase public expenditure in priority poverty reduction activities; foster better governance. Improvingpublic resource management 19. This first goal was achieved as concerns revenue transparency but not achieved as concerns expenditure transparency or budget management. The o i l revenue management arrangements o f the program produced a level o f revenue transparency in Chad nearly unique in Africa. K e y factors include the obligation o f Exxon, under the legally binding agreement, to regularly make public the estimates o f o i l liftings and the corresponding f.0.b. export prices; the verification o f the amounts getting to the Kribi offshore terminal in Cameroon and associated publication o f the pipeline transit fees; consistency checks with the Citibank- managed account in London; and, on non-oil domestic revenue, the significant improvements in the Ministry o f Finance capacity to project tax and non-tax domestic revenues. 20. Although the continuation o f such transparency in the future i s not assured, it represents a signal improvement in the management o f public resources-flowing from the overall program design but also partly attributable to the technical assistance provided under the project. 2 1. Little improvement was achieved in public expenditure management. The 2006 PER Update, the last comprehensive one in the series, flagged the same serious problems identified by the previous PERs in expenditure programming, budget preparation, and budget execution without significant action to implement the recommended improvement^.^^ Most serious was the segmentation o f Chad’s budget resulting from the program’s earmarking o f the direct o i l revenue for expenditure in priority sectors. In effect, through the entire project period, the program caused Chad to operate four different budgets: the oil-financed budget, the aid-financed budget, the HIPC budget, and the residual domestic revenue-financed budget-with limited fungibility among them. (See the main text for an explanation.) Thus constrained, the assistance provided under the project could not be effective in improving the institutional capacity o f the budgeting system in the long run. 22. The motive for the earmarking was to ensure an acceptable intersectoral balance in the allocation o f expenditure and economic balance between investment and recurrent expenditure. The project itself was expected to fill the capacity gap and achieve both 92. The annual PERs envisaged in the project proved too heavy for government capacity, and were agreed to be replaced with more targeted annual updates and a full PER only every three or four years. In the event, the 2006 update was the first and last, in view o f the rupture o f 2006 and subsequent lack o f implementation o f the new measures agreed in the 2006 MOU. (See the main text for a description o f these developments.) The continued, involvement o f the IMF (in consultation with country and sector Bank staff at headquarters) allowed monitoring the macroeconomic and fiscal situation and led to certain improvements in the budgeting system-mainly the closure o f a number o f government bank accounts as a move toward eventual achievement o f a treasury single account system. 106 balances by helping formulate “program budgets” in each priority ministry (in line with the PRSP and consistent with a rolling MTEF), and fostering systematic improvements in expenditure management through the periodic PERs. However: progress in implementing the 2003 PRSP was extremely limited and the formulation o f the second PRSP was delayed; no MTEF was in fact produced before 2007, two years after project closing; ministries’ “program budgets” were disconnected from fiscal realities and in any case were made inoperative by the several months’ delay in putting the budget in place; the budget was assembled by the Ministry o f Finance with little meaningful participation by the line ministries; the sound recommendations o f the PERs, presented with an increasing sense of urgency, were mostly ignored, and the efficiency o f expenditure was badly damaged by the failure to plan for recurrent inputs along with the large investments- producing inoperable physical facilities-and grave weaknesses in procurement, financial controls, and audit, as explained in the text. 23. The only significant improvement during the project l i f e was the installation and validation o f the debt management database. However, one may attribute to the project certain improvements in budget preparation even though they took place after the closing date. For example, in 2007, for the first time, a rudimentary three-year MTEF was put in place (loosely based on the PRSP that was then being drafted), and meaningful discussions began between the line ministries and the ministry o f finance on options for expenditure programs. Unfortunately, while budget preparation has improved somewhat compared to the situation at the time o f project approval in 2000, budget execution has worsened. Despite positive steps, including the closing o f a large number o f government accounts, a treasury single account system remains far from being achieved and-more importantly-the improved rules and financial management provisions put in place de jure have been de facto violated routinely and with imp unit^.'^ The extensive technical assistance provided through the project to improve P F M was largely wasted-in part from the inappropriate design and in part from lack o f implementation by the government. Building capacity to increase expenditure in priority activities 24. This second goal was largely achieved-judging from the actual expenditure outcomes rather than from any measure o f “capacity to spend.” As Table D.2 shows, although heavily weighted by infrastructure, actual expenditure on the priority sectors increased substantially, from an annual average o f CFAF 173 billion (including CFAF 98 billion for healtWeducatiodrura1 development) to CFAF 402 billion in 2007 (including 93. T h e introduction o f a computerized financial management information system, attempting to transplant the one developed in Burkina Faso, resulted only in producing sets o f tables with unreliable and inconsistent data. Once again, this outcome i s related to insufficient consideration o f the institutional and capacity pre-requisites for successful introduction o f complex systems. It also confirms the findings o f a later study showing that F M I S introduction in developing countries has invariably been more fraught, expensive and complex, and has taken much more time than envisaged. (Diamond and Khemani 2006.) The few countries that successfully computerized financial management information have done so from a strong foundation o f budgeting, based on a clear and agreed information technology strategy, gradually, and over a long period. 107 CFAF 207 billion for healtldeducatiodrural development). Although significantly lower than the percentage targets agreed in the program (see the text), these are substantial achievements. It i s difficult, however, to assume that the increased expenditure improved access to or quality o f actual services important for poverty reduction, in view o f the investment inefficiency and the other weaknesses in expenditure management mentioned earlier. (See the text for data on human development indicators showing a lack o f positive changes during the period.) Table D.l. Chad: Domestic Budget and Actual Expenditure, various sectors, 2004-06 and 2007 (*) (in billions o f CFAF and percent) Expenditure 2004-2006 2007 Category Budget Outturn Outturd Budget Outturn Outturd (CFAF bn) (CFAF bn) Budget (CFAF bn) (CFAF bn) Budget (percent) (percent) Total 951.0 817.9 86 762.5 696.5 91 “Non-priority” sectors 432.8 417.3 96 301.2 294.1 98 “Priority sectors” 5 18.2 400.6 77 461.3 402.4 87 Of which: Infrastructure 138.0 ’ 126.9 92 138.6 125.4 90 Health+educ.+rural devt 294.0 227.3 77 240.0 206.6 86 Other “priority” sectors 86.2 46.4 54 82.7 70.4 85 Memorandum: Health+educ.+rural devt 31 28 31 30 as % o f total expenditure Source: Based on Ministry o f Finance data and Bank staff estimates. At the time o f the evaluation, no data were available on the intersectoral execution o f the 2008 budget. (*) Includes expenditure financed from o i l revenue but excludes foreign-financed expenditure Fostering governance 25. The third goal must be interpreted as limited to public financial governance, as a small TA project cannot be expected to improve the overall governance climate in a country. Even when so limited, the three major aspects.of this goal were largely not met. If anything, the current state o f public financial governance i s worse than at the time o f Board approval in early 2000: Fiduciary risk has not lessened-financial and accounting controls are frequently bypassed during budget execution, and the Budget Discipline Court i s practically in~perative;~~ Economy and integrity have suffered from the increasingly frequent violations o f procurement regulations and routine recourse to sole-source contracts;95 94. T h i s Cour de Discipline Budge‘taire (CDP) has the mandate o f adjudicating violations o f budgetary rules by budget managers and others with the responsibility to authorize expenditure. 108 Financial accountability is very weak. The General Inspectorate o f Finance i s uncertain o f its role in practice, in view o f the creation in 2003 o f the Ministry o f General State Control and Moralization, and the staff lacks motivation- understandably in view o f the inaction after problems are uncovered. And, despite an increase in audit activity, the external audit entity (the Chambre des Comptes) is hampered by the long delays in producing the budget accounts, lack o f government follow-up to audit findings and even difficulties in obtaining from the M o F and the Ministry o f Justice i t s authorized operational funding. OUTCOME 26. The project’s outcome is unsatisfactory. I t s objective was not achieved, and little if any progress was registered in the subsidiary objectives. This was due to the interplay of overloaded project design+onflicting with the very limited capacity-and weak government ownership, compounded by the negative impact o n institutional capacity from the revenue earmarking under the overall program, and the frequent changes in team leadership. Table D.2 summarizes the subratings. Table D.2. Sub-ratings and Outcome Rating Based on the Achievement o f the Project Development Objectives Objectives (abbreviated) Relevance Efficiency Efficacy OUTCOME Improve public resource mgmt Negligible Modest Negligible Build capacity to increase expend. Significant Modest Significant Fostering governance (*) Modest Modest Negligible Overall Outcome Rating Modest Modest Negligible Unsatisfactory (*) Interpreted as limited to public financial governance. R I S K TO DEVELOPMENT OUTCOME 27. The risk to development outcome i s high. Both institutional and organizational capacity remain weak, and fiduciary risk i s likely to increase in the short term with the unexpected fall in o i l price and thus government revenue in 2009 and 201O-combined with the pressures to preserve or increase the level o f security and regime maintenance expenditures, hence risking downward pressures on pro-development, pro-poor expenditure. Staff skills remain insufficient for efficient budgeting, and motivation has been weakened by the spreading culture in which fundamental budget, procurement, and financial rules are broken with impunity. 28. While the risk is high, o i l revenue will continue to accrue in large amounts over the foreseeable future. Good development outcomes in the long run are still possible, if the slight progress actually registered in budget preparation in recent years continues, and is complemented by urgent improvements in budget execution, monitoring and control-with 95. The Procurement Control Office (Organe de ContrGle des Marches Publics-OCMP) i s proposing the creation o f a separate authority for public contracting, with private participation. The future of this proposal i s unclear, and so i s its likely effectiveness. 109 support from the ongoing multidonor program to strengthen public financial management and renewed involvement by the Bank in monitoring overall fiscal and expenditure outcomes. Especially important in this respect will be the constructive and assertive cooperation o f certain major bilateral partners. 29. There i s a scenario under which-with continued substantial o i l revenues; a focus on the basics; recognition o f capacity realities; and most important, a new determination by government-the experience learned through the Management o f the Petroleum Economy project and the program as a whole can substantially increase the development effectiveness o f expenditure and i t s pro-poor profile. The most important steps in this direction would be: in budget preparation, to refocus o n sound preparation o f investment projects (demand-driven, cost-conscious, and with the requisite balance between capital and recurrent inputs); in budget execution, to establish a robust treasury single account system, and streamline procedures while restoring legality and rule-compliance for all; in public financial accountability, to strengthen the autonomy and support the efforts o f both the Inspection Ge‘ne‘rale de 1’Etat and the Chamber o f Audit; in participation, to resume effective activity by the CollBge de Contrde, which would improve both the quality o f decisions and public support for the government. BANKPERFORMANCE 30. Quality o f entry was unsatisfactory, owing to the flaws in project design, insufficient recognition o f capacity limitations, and inappropriate performance framework. The risk assessment was partial and inadequate as well, with mitigation measures patently insufficient, 96 but what is most inconsistent with Chad’s realities and the experience o f similar projects i s the P A D Soverall rating o f risk as modest. 3 1. Supervision was moderately unsatisfactory. Most Bank staff worked diligently and with the highest degree o f commitment and competence to try and help achieve the project objectives, at least in part. Unfortunately, the best efforts at supervision could not have succeeded given the flaws in project design (and the revenue management provisions o f the whole program). Moreover, ownership and responsibility o f the task team was not helped by the assignment o f two high-powered consultants, former Bank senior staff, to de facto supervisory and direct implementation responsibilities during the first three years o f the project. (This may help explain the unusually rapid rotation o f task team leaders-six altogether in the fewer than six years o f the project.) Despite the guidance provided by competent and committed country and sector management, such lack o f continuity in direct team leadership cannot be conducive to effective supervision. Nevertheless, after the delays and financial management difficulties o f the first three years, the Midterm Review achieved both a sensible reallocation o f funding among the project components and a partial resolution o f the fiduciary issues. 96. For example, the risk o f a “temporary disparity o f treatment within the civil service” was to be mitigated by an information campaign, and that o f a failure to “review the Auditor General’s mandate” by exposure to international best practice. 110 32. Overall Bank performance i s rated unsatisfactory. PERFORMANCE BORROWER 33. Borrower performance, overall, was highly unsatisfactory. Implementing agencies, especially the Cellule Economique, did make some efforts to abide by the revenue management arrangements and to improve budgeting. Their performance was unsatisfactory, but in large measure for factors beyond their control-primarily political interference. Government performance was highly unsatisfactory. As in the case o f the program and for the other projects in the cluster, government commitment appeared very strong during project preparation but did not translate into effective support during project implementation. Most telling i s the shortfall in government contribution-less than one-third the promised amount o f $1.9 m i l l i o n 4 e s p i t e the substantial o i l revenue accruing after 2003, Also, project oversight was weak to indifferent, with failure to take the basic steps required to put in place a project financial management system and conduct adequate audits o f proj ect funds. 34. Government performance was even more questionable concerning the capacity- building dimension o f the project. The increasing tolerance for r u l e evasion, severe violations o f basic procurement and financial management procedures, lack o f accountability, and leaks o f resources between the budget allocations and the intended beneficiaries-all undermined the efforts o f a number o f committed and competent Chadian public officials and created a culture o f impunity. Especially instructive, albeit couched in technical language, is the recommendation in the 2006 PER Update to “progressively improve the arrival o f the expenditure to the final beneficiary (salaries, operational expenses, construction funds, etc.).” 35. Compounding the problem, at the same time as grave violations by some were tolerated the majority o f budget managers and civil servants remained hamstrung by an antiquated, overly centralized, and extremely burdensome set o f rules concerning budget execution, the expenditure cycle, and procurement. (In this light, the achievement, after project closure, o f a number o f minor technical improvements in the formal budgeting system should be noted, but is insufficient to permit a higher rating.) 111 A n n e x E. IFC’s Advisory Services in Chad Program Context 1. When IFC embarked on the Chad-Cameroonpipeline project in June 2000, the expected development impact o f the project included expansion o f the non-oil private sector, including foreign direct investment. As part o f this effort, IFC has used Advisory Service (AS)97 operations to assist Chadian companies in expanding their participation in the economic activities generated by the project. (See Table E.l. There have been no such AS projects in Cameroon.) Table E.1. IFC’s Advisory Service Operations in Chad: 2000-08 Name, Business Components cost ~OOO$) Start date, End date LKG: C H A D -capacity building $2.17 million 0410 112002 to SME, (#537745), -access to finance 0 110 1/2008 Value addition to -access to information. f m s FINADEV - Access to finance for microenterprises $1.5 million 03/01/2005 to T C H A D TA, through Finadev Tchad - a specialized 12.13 112007 (#534603), Access microfinance window o f Financial Bank to finance Tchad. Chad Capacity -Support for Linkages program -$400,000 06/01/2005 to Building, -Budget support for Collige -$300,000 12/30/2007 (#533974), -Technical Advisor, Ministry o f Petroleum -$200,000 Infrastructure , -Seminar on the o i l economy -$150.000 - -Technical review o f the CollDae’s -$500,000 monitoring and auditing procedures -$5001000 -Data management upgrade for Collige Total: $1.15 million* Source: IFC. Notes: *cost figures shown here relate to F M T A A s (Funding Mechanism for Technical Assistance and Advisory Services) allocations only. Total cost for the program was estimated at $2.5 million, w i t h the balance from other sources. All three are closed projects, w i t h Project Completion Reports (PCRs). Program Description and Results LINKAGES CHADSME PROJECT: 2. IFC launched the Chad Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) Initiative in July 2002 as a linkage project to support the Chad-Cameroonpipeline project. The SME program had two 97. Through Advisory Services, IFC provides advice to governments, private companies, and industry sectors on how to grow businesses sustainably as well as to create a positive investment climate, with a focus on five business lines: Access to Finance, Business Enabling Environment, Environment and Social Sustainability, Infiastructure, and Corporate Advice. A S projects are rated on s i x dimensions: (1) Strategic relevance-Did IFC do the right project at the right time?; (2) Output achievement-Were the products, capital goods, and services delivered?; (3) Outcome achievement-Were the intended short- and medium-term effects o f the intervention achieved?; (4) Impact achievement-Were the intended longer-term effects o f the intervention achieved?; (5) Efficiency-Were the costs reasonable in relation to the potential results?; and (6) IFC Role & Contribution-What was IFC’s role and contribution in engaging in t h i s intervention? Ratings on the first five dimensions are synthesized into an overall rating o f Development Effectiveness. 112 phases: the pilot phase and the development phase, with the program being more successful in the second phase. The firstlpilot phase covered the three first years (2002-04) and represented a comprehensive approach, with three components: capacity building, access to information, and access to finance, with a total o f nine activities. During the construction phase o f the pipeline project (2000-03), the SME program received little attention from EEPC19*, which was focused on the pipeline construction. In addition, the program faced the following challenges: program design unsuited for Chad; underestimation o f human and financial resources; inadequate l i n k s between program components; no monitoring and evaluation framework; and no client ownership. Overall, the pilot phase o f the SME program was not successful.’ Table E.2. Ratings o f IFC’s Advisory Service Operations in Chad: 2000-08 Name Categories PCR ratings IEG-IFC ratings LKG: Chad A: Development Effectiveness Mostly Successful Mostly Successful SME 1. Strategic Relevance Excellent Satisfactory 2. Output Achievement Satisfactory Satisfactory 3. Outcome Achievement Satisfactory Satisfactory 4. Impact Achievement Satisfactory Satisfactory 5. Efficiency Partly Unsatisfactory Partly Unsatisfactory B: IFC’s Role & Contribution Excellent Satisfactory Finadev A: Development Effectiveness Successful Mostly Unsuccessful Tchad TA 1. Strategic Relevance Unsatisfactory Satisfactory 2. Output Achievement Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory 3. Outcome Achievement Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory 4. Impact Achievement Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory 5. Efficiency Excellent Partly Unsatisfactory B: IFC’s Role & Contribution Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Chad A: Development Effectiveness N o t Rated Mostly Unsuccessful Capacity 1. Strategic Relevance Partly Unsatisfactory Satisfactory Building 2. Output Achievement Satisfactory Satisfactory 3. Outcome Achievement N o t yet achieved Partly Unsatisfactory 4. Impact Achievement N o t yet achieved Partly Unsatisfactory 5. Efficiency Partly Unsatisfactory Partly Unsatisfactory B: IFC’s Role & Contribution Satisfactory Satisfactory Overall A: Development Effectiveness Mostly Unsuccessful Assessment 1. Strategic Relevance Satisfactory of the 2. Output Achievement Satisfactory Advisory 3. Outcome Achievement Partly Unsatisfactory Service 4. Impact Achievement Partly Unsatisfactory Program 5. Efficiency Partly Unsatisfactory B: IFC’s Role & Contribution Satisfactory Source: IFC Notes: Evaluation standards are: Development Effectiveness: Highly Successful, Successful, Mostly Successful, Mostly Unsuccessful, Unsuccessful, Highly Unsuccessful, N o t Achieved, N o t Rated Strategic Relevance, Output Achievement, Efficiency, IFC’s Role & Contribution: Excellent, Satisfactory, Partly unsatisfactory, Unsatisfactory, N o t Rated Outcome Achievement, Impact Achievement: Excellent, Satisfactory, Partly unsatisfactory, Unsatisfactory, N o t Rated, N o t yet Achieved ’* IFC also had no local presence during the construction phase. 113 3. During the operational phase o f the pipeline project from 2004 onwards, with the pressure o f the construction phase deadlines disappearing, EEPCI was more receptive toward a local supplier development program. EEPCI also wanted to appease the local business community, which was disgruntled from not being included at all during the construction phase. The seconddevelopment phase o f the SME program also focused on three components: entrepreneurship capacity building, business linkages, and access to finance. The SME program currently focuses on preparing local companies to bid for goods and services contracts with EEPCI and its subcontractors, through the Enterprise Center (EC). 4. The EC was created in December 2004-part o f the business linkages component- as a joint partnership between IFC, the Chamber o f Commerce o f Chad, and EEPCI.99 EEPCI’s e-procurement experience in Chad with the EC has now been published as a manual (“Developing a Transparent System for Local Contracting,” November 2008, www.commdev.org). The manual provides a step-by-step guide for SMEs in developing countries get access to procurement opportunities with large companies through a transparent system for local contracting, based on the Chadian experience. 5. In 2005, EEPCI decided to carry out all i t s procurement for Chad (about $300 million annually) electronically through i t s e-procurement system. This was a challenging task, since Chad has l i t t l e Internet connectivity, extremely low computer literacy, and sporadic electricity (as little as one to two hours a day). IFC partnered with EEPCI to make e- procurement a reality by introducing training related to the e-procurement system at the Enterprise Center. 6. The EC has i t s main office in N’Djamena, the capital city, with satellite centers in the o i l field area (Doba, Moundou, and Sahr). The EC’s reach and network has been useful in conducting an SME mapping exercise that increased the pool o f SMEs that EEPCI could work with for local procurement. Initially, EEPCI had a l i s t o f only 17 local SMEs, but the l i s t expanded to more than 1,300 SMEs after the mapping exercise. 7. Based on current information, the EC has helped 19 local and joint venture companies get EEPCI contracts worth $33.18 million that have generated 149 jobs. Given that EEPCI’s annual procurement in Chad i s currently about $300 million, there i s significant potential for Chadian SMEs. These figures also suggest a low level o f “local content” in EEPCI’s supply chain in Chad”’ (Cameroon as well), similar to the experience o f other West African o i l producers like Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea, and Angola. 8. Based on the EC’s successful partnership with EEPCI, it has started to expand i t s local supplier development work to other clients. In June 2007, UNICEF signed an 18-month $120,000 partnership contract with the EC to train local entrepreneurs operating in the field o f water well drilling. The EC intervention will provide UNICEF local supplier identification 99. The EC concept i s being standardizedas Linkage products in other IFC projects (such as Cairn energy, India). In 2008, total spent by EEPCI in Chad was one third o f the total supply chain - $400M for foreign supplies loo and $200M for local services & supplies (50% purely local and 50% joint venture). 114 and evaluation, assistance i s setting up and structuring bids, assistance to SMEs to respond to bids, and training and consultation to improve the quality o f SMEs. 9. Under the Community Agricultural Program, the Enterprise Center i s supporting a poultry initiative to assist people displaced from their land in the O i l Fields Development Area (OFDA) to become egg producers and sell to EEPCI’s caterers, who meet their current demand (about 70,000 eggs per month) through imports from Cameroon. The poultry initiative i s currently progressing well, based on supervision reports. There i s also an ongoing pilot program for growing vegetables for the EEPCI caterer. 10. The SME program has performed better in the development phase and has contributed to local private sector development. Overall, the development effectiveness o f the Chad SME program i s rated mostly SuccessfuI). FINADEV TCHADTA 11. IFC supported Finadev as a key component o f the Chad SME Initiative that was launched in June 2000 to help local companies benefit from the economic opportunities generated by the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project. Finadev was launched in July 2001 as a specialized window o f Financial Rank Tchad and was the only licensed microfinance institution in Chad. IFC was one o f the founders o f Finadev and supported the MFI through $30,000 grant funding in the start-up phase. 12. Since inception, Finadev faced significant challenges related to the difficult investment climate in Chad, inadequate staff capacity, and weak governance. Retention rates o f clients have steadily declined over time. IFC supported Finadev through various rounds o f financial restructurings, with a view to reach the underserved SMEs in Chad. However, operating and financial results continued to be poor and IFC decided to exit the project in 2007, though other shareholders decided to continue operations with new funding. 13. The development effectiveness o f the Finadev Tchad TA i s rated unsuccessful. CHADCAPACITYBUILDING 14. The Chad Capacity Building project was conceived in December 2004, for an 18- month period, to provide financial support to the ongoing IDA projects. The IDA projects were at the heart o f the WBG capacity-building initiatives that had three major themes: (i) overall management o f the petroleum economy within the public sector bodies in Chad; (ii) development o f monitoring and supervision capabilities o f environmental and social matters within the relevant ministries in Chad and Cameroon; and (iii) SME development through technical assistance and access to finance in Chad. Given the slow progress in the IDA capacity-building projects, the WBG adopted a number o f risk mitigation measures in mid- 2004: a full-time coordinator was appointed for all o f the Bank Group’s related capacity building initiatives; additional Bank sector experts were given a clear mandate to spend the majority o f their time on capacity-building work; and IFC streamlined the SME program to only those components that had the potential for success. 15. The Chad Capacity Building project was among the first AS projects to receive FMTAAS funding, the dedicated funding source for AS operations that IFC set up in 2004 to 115 improve the sustainability o f I F C contributions toward A S operations. The Chad Capacity Building project i s a good illustration o f the close WB-IFC collaboration that marked the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project as well as the intensity o f WBG supervision efforts. IFC’s role in the program was to secure funds and provide administrative oversight. Since the activities related primarily to government entities, the WB undertook the tasks regarding planning, implementation, and supervision. 16. O f the five components o f the Chad Capacity Building project, three were for strengthening the operations o f Coll2ge, the independent body mandated to monitor the allocation and use o f o i l revenue by the government, and one was for placing an o i l expert in the Ministry o f Petroleum. The original technical advice component for the CollBge was changed to budget support, used primarily for meeting the travel expenses o f the Coll2ge members in the oil-producing region to hold meetings with the public. 17. The Technical Adviser to the Ministry o f Petroleum was installed in October 2005 only to be recalled in December as a result o f the dispute between the WB and the government over the latter’s unilateral amendment o f the Petroleum Revenue Management Law. Substantial expenses were incurred, but the objectives o f the Technical Adviser were not met. Likewise, the Seminar on O i l Economy was discontinued due to the dispute between the WB and the government. As the training was not fully carried out, the cost incurred for the only seminar (two were planned) that took place did not provide full value to the participants. Though the I F C SME-Linkages program received some funding from the Chad Capacity Building initiative, the results are reported as part o f another AS operation (see above). 18. IFC’s support for the Chad Capacity Building project was timely in i t s efforts to mitigate the perceived risks in the ongoing capacity-building initiatives through the IDA projects. However, implementation and delivery o f the program were difficult as country conditions, particularly with regard to security, caused delays and limited the pool o f consultants. Also, the timely execution o f programs was affected adversely by personnel turnover in the government. 19. Overall, the development effectiveness o f the Chad Capacity Building project is rated mostly unsuccessful. ’ Lessons 20. Understanding the needs and internal constraints o f the client company and a high degree offlexibility are essentialfor designing effective Advisory Service programs. In the pilot phase o f the Chad SME program, most o f the activities under the Africare and STEP (Support and Training Entrepreneurship Program) programs were not relevant to EEPCI. However, the poultry initiative that was started as an alternative source o f income for people displaced by the project in the O i l Field Development Area was continued. Also, the S M E program did not get traction from EEPCI in the first phase, since they were occupied with meeting the construction deadlines. 116 21. I n large, complex WBGprojects with multiple stakeholders, good WB-IFC collaboration is essential. In the case o f the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project, there was a high degree o f WB-IFC collaboration that extended to Advisory Services operations as well. In late-2004, when the WB-supervised (IDA-funded) capacity-building projects were found to be progressing slower than expected, IFC was able to provide fresh funding for sustaining the capacity-building initiatives and improve their chances o f success. I t also illustrates well the intensity o f WBG supervision efforts in the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project. 22. A strong local institutional partner is critical for success. The weak capacity at the Chamber o f Commerce o f Chad to internalize the project remains a key challenge for the sustainability o f the Enterprise Center, the current focal point o f IFC’s Advisory Service operations in Chad. Like many other Chadian institutions, the Chamber o f Commerce i s yet to complete i t s transition from a dysfunctional, politicized outfit to a consular institution truly representative o f the private sector. At a broader level, IFC i s committed to provide institutional support to the Chamber o f Commerce. I t i s expected that in a year’s time, the Chamber o f Commerce w i l l take on a more active governance role in the Enterprise Center’s management. 23. IFC ’s Linkages projects have the potential to: enable local companies participate in the economic activity created by the project; help sponsors-typically large MNCs-meet national content needs; andpromote local economic development. In the case o f the Chad- Cameroon pipeline project, the Enterprise Center became the cornerstone o f EEPCI’s procurement platform that was the sole source for all o f i t s purchases in Chad, starting in 2005, with an annual budget o f about $300 million. The Enterprise Center has helped local Chadian f i r m s compete successfully for Exxon’s procurement contracts. As discussed in greater detail in Annex A, these effects, together with other direct effects for beneficiaries, has promoted Local Economic Development. Summary and Conclusions 24. IFC’s Advisory Service operations have been an ingredient o f the WBG effort to expand the development impact o f the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project. The Chad SME program-the centerpiece o f IFC’s AS operations in Chad-contributed to WBG capacity- building initiatives in the program. Likewise, the Chad Capacity Building project supported the IDA-funded capacity-building initiatives, which failed. These two Advisory Service operations are symbolic o f the high level o f WB-IFC collaboration in the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project and the intensity o f WBG supervision efforts. 25. The Enterprise Center, which has become the focal point o f the Chad SME program, illustrates well the internal learning value o f the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project for the IFC in subsequent large, complex projects with multiple stakeholders. In particular, i t shows the symbiotic relationship between the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project and the BTC oil pipeline project approved in 2003, involving Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey, with BP as the lead private sponsor. While BTC incorporated several important features from the Chad- Cameroon pipeline project-such as environmental impact assessment, environmental management plan, consultation, compensation, multiple layers o f monitoring, and future generations fund, the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project borrowed the Enterprise Center 117 concept from BTC and has implemented it successfully in Chad, except for the supplier financing facility. 26. While local Chadian f i r m s have been successful in getting an increasing share o f procurement contracts from EEPCI"' through the EC, the overall low level o f local content remains an issue. In part, this reflects the significant supply constraints in the Chadian economy. The issue o f l o w local content,i s similar to the nationalization o f expatriate management issue that IEG-IFC has highlighted in previous evaluations o f African projects. 27. Overall, the development effectiveness o f IFC's Advisory Services operations in Chad i s rated mostly unsuccessful. 101. EEPCI's support o f local Chadian companies through procurement and engaging them in the project supply chain has generated direct benefits (discussed in greater detail in Annex A) that have contributed to local economic development. T h i s in turn has the potential to reduce the project's social risk and provide the necessary social license essential for the long-term sustainability o f the project. 119 Annex F. Basic Data Sheet Chad/Cameroon-Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project (Loan 4558) Key Project Data (in US$ million) Appraisal Actual or estimate current estimate Total project costs 3723.0 4817.0 Loan amount 93 .O 91.0 Cofmancing 3630 4726 Project Dates Original Actual Appraisal 06/23/1999 06/23/1999 Negotiations 08/09/1999 0211 11200 Board approval 10/0711999 06/06/2000 Signing Effectiveness 0913 0/2000 0 81 101200 1 Closing date 03/30/2005 06/30/2005 Staff Inputs (staff weeks) ActuaVLatest Estimate No. Staff weeks US$(lOOO) IdentificationIPreparation 193.3 1134.0 AppraisaLWegotiations 157.3 205.6 Supervision 186.9 2,034.1 ICR 4 43.6 Total 541.5 3,4 17.3 The staff weeks and totals for Supervision and ICR are not disaggregated in SAP. 120 Mission Data ~~ Stage of Project Cycle No. of persons and Specialty (e.g. 2 Performance Rating Economists, 1 FMS, etc.) Monthffear Count Specialty Implementation Development Progress Objective AppraisaUNegotiation 7/2/1999 4 Team Leader (l), Counsel (l), Environmental Specialist (l), Program Assistant (1) Supervision 6/10/2001 1 Team Leader S S 11/18/2002 1 Deputy Coordinator S S 12/03/2004 2 Lead Financial Analyst (Team S S Leader) (1); Petroleum Engineer (1) ICR 03/15/2005 1 Team Leader 121 CHAD-A MANAGEMENT OF THE PETROLEUMECONOMY PROJECT (CREDIT 3316) Key Project Data (amounts in US$ million) Appraisal Actual or estimate current estimate Total project costs 19.40 19.0 1 Loan amount 17.5 18.39 Project Dates Original Actual Appraisal 01/27/2000 0 1/27/2000 Negotiations 09/06/1999 12/09/1999 Board approval 10/07/1999 01/27/2000 Signing 04/02/2000 04/02/2000 Effectiveness 04/30/2000 0912 1/2000 Closing date 06/30/2005 06/30/2005 Staff Inputs (staff weeks) Actuanatest Estimate No. Staff weeks Identificatioflreparation N/A N/A AppraisaLiNegotiations 16 82 Supervision 250 1190.5 ICR 46 58 Total 307 1426.5 The staff weeks and totals for Supervision andICR are not disaggregated in SAP. 122 Mission Data Stage of Project Cycle No. o f persons and Specialty (e.g. 2 Performance Rating Economists, 1 FMS, etc.) MonthNear Count Specialty Implementation Development Progress Objective Identificationh'reparation 0 111999 3 Consultants 2 Financial Management 1 Principal Economist 2 Public Sector Management 1 Sr. Procurement Spec. 1 Information System AppraisaVNegotiation 0611999 3 Consultants 2 Financial Management 1 Principal Economist 2 Public Sector Management Spec. 1 Sr. Procurement Spec. 1 Information System Supervision 09/26/2000 1 Consultant (1) S 04/22/2002 2 Economist (2) S 05/21/2004 4 TTL( 1); Public Sector U Management (1); Economist (2) 05/21/2004 4 Team Leader (1); Sr. Public S S Sector Spec (1); Sr. Economist (1); Sr. Procurement Spec. (1) 10/28/2004 4 Team Leader (1); Sr. Public Sector Spec (1); Sr. Economist (1); Sr. Financial Management Spec. (1) 01/28/2005 2 Team Leader (1); Sr. Financial Management Spec. ICR 08/04/2005 1 Sr. Public Sector Management U U Spec. 123 Chad-Petroleum Sector Management Capacity Building Project (Credit 3373) Key Project Data (amounts in U S $ million) Appraisal Actual or estimate current estimate Total project costs 26.20 25.70 Loan amount 23.70 23.70 Project Dates Original Actual Appraisal 07/28/1999 07/28/1999 Negotiations 08/09/1999 0211 1/2000 Board approval 10/07/1999 06/06/2000 Signing Effectiveness 03/23/200 1 03/23/2001 Closing date 1213 1/2005 1213 112006 124 Staff Time and Cost Staff Time and Cost (Bank Budget Only) Stage of Project Cycle No. of Staff weeks USD Thousands (including travel and consultant costs) Lending FY97 26.37 FY98 116.27 FY99 160.92 FYOO 48 294.42 FYOl 1 5.49 FY02 0.00 FY03 0.00 FY04 0.00 FY05 0.00 FY06 0.00 FY07 0.00 Total 49 603.47 SupewisionIICR FY97 0.00 FY98 0.00 FY99 0.00 FYOO 6.08 FYOl 34 307.32 FY02 36 858.02 FY03 54 573.84 FY04 44 918.70 FY05 126 676.24 FY06 44 200.05 FY07 8 49.73 Total 346 3589.98 125 Mission Data Names Title Unit Responsibility/Specialty Lending (from Task Team in P A D Data Sheet) Michel Layec Lead Energy Economist AFTEG Team Leader Ignatius A. Menezes Economist AFTEG Economist Philippe Benoit Lead Specialist AFTEG Pipeline/Country Support Jean Roger Mercier Environment Specialist Environment, Biophysical aspects Tom O’Connor Senior Geologist Senior Geologist Francois Rantrua Rural Development Specialist AFT Rural Development Dimitri Kanounnikoff Information Analyst M I S Specialist Pushpa Schwartz Information Analyst Information Analysis Charles Donang Sr. Procurement Specialist AFTPC Procurement Luc Lapointe Procurement Specialist AFTS2 Operations Support David Freese Sr. Finance Officer LOAG2 Disbursements Isabella Micali Drossos Sr. Counsel LEGLA Lawyer Betrand de Chazal Financial Management Specialist AFTFM Financial Management Supervision (from Task Team Members in all archived ISRs) Marie-Francoise Marie-Nelly Sr. Program Manager AFRVP Cluster Coordinator Yves And& Prevost Sr. Environmental Specialist AFTS4 Supervision o f Environment Component Betrand Loiseau Consultant AFTEG TTL, until October 2005 Chales Donang Sr. Procurement Specialist AFTPC Procurement supervision Silvana Tordo Sr. Energy Economist COCPO TTL from October 2005, ad thematic leader for petroleum sector Isabelle Paris Sr. Environmental Specialist AFTS4 Supervision o f Environment Component Jerome Chevallier Consultant AFTH3 Local Representative until June 2004 Michel Pommier Consultant AFTVP TTL and cluster coordinator until August 2004 Etienne Nkoa Sr. Financial Management AFTFM Financial Management SDecialist SDecialist 126 Cameroon-Petroleum Environment Capacity Enhancement Project (Credit 3372) Key Project Data (amounts in US$ million) Appraisal Actual or estimate current estimate Total project costs 11.0 15.1 Loan amount 5.8 5.3 Project Dates Original Actual Appraisal 0712 111999 0712 111999 Negotiations 08/09/1999 0211 1/2000 Board approval 10/07/1999 06/06/2000 Signing Effectiveness 03/28/2001 03/28/2001 Closing Date 1213 112005 11/30/2007 Staff Time and Cost Staff Time and Cost (Bank Budget Only) Stage of Project Cycle No. o f Staff weeks USD Thousands (including travel and consultant costs) Lending FY99 104,416 FYO O 3,166 FYOl 91.802 Supervision/ICR FYOl FY02 110,752 FY03 153,826 FY04 167,927 FY05 142,064 FY06 132,807 FY07 126,833 FY08 77,220 Total 1,110,812 127 Mission Data Bank Lending and Implementation Support/Supervision Processes (a) Task Team members for Lending: Name Specialty Jean-Roger Mercier Team Leader Mohammed Abou Bekhechi Deputy Team Leader and Legalhegulatory Framework Cynthia C. Cook Socio-economic aspects, including cultural property Luc Lecuit Monitoring & Evaluation Guy-Joseph Malembeti Procurement Joseph Bonlong Financial Systems Georges Visihio Minang Relationship with NGOs and civil society Jack Titsworth Institutions Marthe Malouf-Hardesty Project Assistant 128 Supervision (from Task Team Members in all Archived ISRs) Names Title Responsibility/Specialty Mohammed Abdou Bekhechi Lead Counsel Legal and regulatory framework And TTL as o f April 1,2002 Luc Lecuit Environmental Specialist TTL till March 30,2002 and Environment Management Information System Specialist Emmanuel Noubissik Senior Operation Officer Project Management Jerome Chevalier TTL for the Cameroon Coordination between CAPECE and CCPEP Marie Francoise Marie-Nelly Senior Program Manager Cluster Coordinator Yves Prevost Senior Environment Specialist Supervision o f environmental activities Cynthia Cook Consultant Environment and social activities Jean Roger Mercier Lead Environment Specialist Environment and biophysical aspects Isabelle Paris Senior Environment Specialist Supervision o f third component o f the project Guy Joseph Malembati Procurement Specialist Procurement William Dakpo Procurement Specialist Procurement Kouami Hounsinou Messan Procurement Specialist Procurement Michel Bakuzakundi Consultant Public health and HIV/AIDS Helene Simone NDjebet Yaka Operation Analyst Disbursement Rockya Fofana Consultant Information Systems Ann Davis Gillet Consultant Communication Specialist Fridolin Ondobo Financial Management Specialist Financial Management Emeran Serge Avouna Biodiversity Specialist Biodiversity Angelie M a n i Program Assistant NGO liaison Lydie Yangouot Program Assistant Administrative assistance Germaine Mafougong Program Assistant Administrative assistance 129 A n n e x G. Selected Referenceslo2 Amnesty International, 2005. Contracting Out of Human Rights: The ChaL Cameroon peline Project, www.Amnesty.org. Index Number POL 34/-12/2005. Bannon, Ian and Paul Collier, 2003. eds. Natural Resources and Violent Conflict: Options and Actions. Washington, D.C.: World Bank. Barclay, R. and G. Koppert. 2007. Chad Resettlement and Compensation Plan Evaluation Study: Main Report. January. Calderisi, Robert. 2006. The Trouble With Africa-Why Foreign Aidlsn ’t Working. New Haven, Conn; Yale University Press. Committee 5%, Reports. Chad Government, Provisional Committee for the Management o f Petroleum Revenues Allocated to the Producing Region, Rapport d’Activites, various issues through October 2008. , Balances. Situation des Soldes en Banque au 25/12/2008 et des Engagement, February 2009. , Microcredit. Synthese sur la Mise en Place du Microcredit du CPGRP 5% dans Six Departements de l a Region du Logone Oriental et la Commune de Doba, February 2009. See also Synthese de L a Situation des Microcredits Octroyes en Decembre 2007, February 2009. ,Investments. Situation des Engagements et Paiements des Projets d ’Investissement, 2005- 2008.25 December 2008. Davis, Jeffrey, Roland0 Ossowski and Annalisa Fedelino (eds). 2003. Fiscal Policy Formulation and Implementation in Oil-Producing Countries, Washington, DC; International Monetary Fund. Devarajan, Shanta. 2008. “Two Comments on ‘Governance Indicators”’, Research Observer, Spring. Di John, Jonathan. 2007. “Oil abundance and violent political conflict: A critical assessment.” Journal of Development Studies, Vol43, N o 6, August 2007, pp. 961-986 .httv://www.informaworld,com/smpp/title-content=t7 13395 137-db=all-tab=issueslist-branches=43 - v43 Dunning, Thad. 2005. “Resource Dependence, Economic Performance, and Political Stability.” Journal of Conflict Resolution, August 2005; vol. 49: pp. 45 1 - 482 Dupety, Daniel. 2007. Third Evaluation of Construction Programs Financed by Oil Revenue, Ministry o f Public Infrastructure, December External Compliance Monitoring Group (ECMG), Post-Project Completion Report, December 2005. (See also the other ECMG reports, shown on the IFC website: http://www.ifc.org/ecmg) Gary, Ian and Nikki Reisch. 2005. Chad’s Oil: Miracle or Mirage?. Washington, DC: Catholic Relief Services and Bank Information Center, February. Gauthier , Bernard and Wali Wane. 2007. “Leakage o f public resources in the health sector: an empirical investigation o f Chad”, Policy Research Working Papers, No. 435 1; World Bank, September. Ghazvinian, John. 2007. Untapped: The Scramble for Africa’s Oil. New York: Harcourt, Horta, Korinna, Samuel Nguiffo and Delphine Djiraibe. 2007. The Chad-Cameroon Oil and Pipeline Project: A Project Non-Completion Report, Environmental Defense Fund, April. 102. Does not include a large number o f internal memoranda, emails, and other internal correspondence, n part based on that evidence as well. although the evaluation i s i 130 IAG, 2009. International Advisory Group for the Chad-Cameroon Project, Final Report. See also the previous reports o f the IAG, 2006-2008, in wwwxic-oag.org. IMF, 2009a. International Monetary Fund, Chad: SelectedIssues, IMF Country Report 09/67, January 16. , - 2009b. Chad: StaffReport for the 2008 Article I V Consultations, January 12. (See also Staff Reports for the 2006,2003 and 2001 Art.IV Consultations-www.imf.org.) , - 2007. Cameroon: Selected Issues, I M F Country Report 07/286 May 30. (See also Statistical Appendix, I M F Country Report 07/287.) International Finance Corporation, Chad Oil: Environment and Social Review. Apri1.16,2006. ,External Monitoring o f the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline Project: Lessons of experience. September 2006. Jones-Luong, Pauline and Erika Weinthal. 2006. “Rethinking the Resource Curse: Ownership Structure, Institutional Capacity, and Domestic Constraints.” Annual Review Of Political Science, Vol. 9: 241- 263. Karl, Terry Lynn. 1997. The Paradox of Plenty: Oil Booms and Petro-States. Berkeley: University o f California Press. Liebenthal, Andres, Roland Mischelitsch and Ethel Tarazona. 2003 ,,Extractive Industries and Sustainable Development: An Evaluation o f World Bank Group Experience. Operations Evaluation Department (currently Independent Evaluations Group). Washington, DC; World Bank. McFerson, Haze1.2008. Governance, Resources and Conflict in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Contemporary Synthesis. Fairfax: George Mason University. McFerson, Hazel. 2007. “Legal Transplants and Institutional Development in Sub-Saharan Afiica,” Encyclopedia of Law and Society American and Global Perspectives. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, July. Mallaby, SeBastian. 2004. The World Banker. New York: Penguin. Ossowski, Rolando, Mauricio Villaherte, Paolo Medas and The0 Thomas. 2008. “Managing the Oil Revenue Boom: The Role o f Fiscal Institutions”, Occasional Papers, No.260. Washington, DC; International Monetary Fund Pegg, Scott. 2006. “Can Policy Intervention Beat the Resource Curse? Evidence from the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline Project”, African Affairs, vol 105, No.418. PRSP, 2008. Republic o f Chad, Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper, 2008-2011, April. PRSP, 2003. ,Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper, June. PRSP, 2000. ,Interim Poverty Reduction Strategy, July. RQed Larsen, Erling. 2004. “Escaping the Resource Curse and the Dutch Disease? When and Why Norway Caught up with and Forged ahead o f I t s Neighbors.” Discussion Paper No. 377, Statistics Norway, Research Department. ssb.no/publikasjoner/DP/pdf/dp3 77.pdf. Ross, Michael L. 2002. Natural Resources and Civil War: An Overview, Report for Conference on “The Governance o f Natural Resources Revenues,” World Bank/AFD, Paris, December. Sachs, Jeffrey and Andrew Warner. 1999. “The B i g Rush, Natural Resource Booms and Growth”, Journal of Development Economics, June. Shaxson, Nicholas. 2007. Poisoned Wells: The Dirty Politics of African Oil. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. UNDP, 2008. United Nations Development Programme, Human Development Report, hdr.undp.org/statistics. (See also HD Reports for previous years). USAID, 2008. United States Agency for International Development, Chad: Country Health Statistical Report, November. www.usaid.gov/our-worWgloba1-health 131 Wysham, Daphne. 2008. “The World Bank Takes the Money and Runs from Chad”, Foreign Policy in Focus, www.fpif.org. September 15. World Bank, 2008. Independent Evaluation Group, Annual Review of Development Effectiveness: Shared Global Challenges. Washington, DC. ,2007. A Decade of Measuring the Quality of Governance. Governance Matters. Worldwide Governance Indicators, 1996-2006. Washington, DC ,2006a. Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project, Report No. 36569-TD. December. ,2006b. Chad: Revue des Depenses Publiques: Mise a Jour, Report No. 36605-TD. June ,2005. Chad: Joint IDA-IMF StaffAdvisory Note on the Poverty Reduction Strategy-First Annual Progress Report. Report No. 32484-TD. June. ,2004a. Chad: Country Financial Accountability Assessment, June. ,2006a. Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project, Report No. 36569-TD. December. ,2006b. Chad: Revue des Depenses Publiques: Mise a Jour, Report No. 36605-TD. June ,2005. Chad: Joint IDA-IMF StaffAdvisory Note on the Poverty Reduction S t r a t e p F i r s t Annual Progress Report. Report No. 32484-TD. June. ,2004a. Chad: Country Financial Accountability Assessment, June. ,2004b. Chad: Public Expenditure Review: Improving the Qua@ of Public Services, June. ,2002. Chad: Public Expenditure Review: Improving Budget Managementfor Poverty Reduction 132 Annex H. Borrower Comments . I , PRESKXNC€ De LA REPUBLIQUE s****.. PRIMANRE ... .. *.I =.* * MINISTERS DE I'ECONOMIE ET DU P U N t t SECRETARIAT GENERAL ( * h 6 . b 4 Le Ministre de I'Economie e t du Pian A Madame MONIKA HUPPq Chef de Division Evaluation des projets sectoriels ( Groupe independant) Objet : Commentaires de I'Emprunteur sur le rapport d'evabation RItrospective de programme d'appui b I'Exploitation pdtrolihre e t b 1'018oduc Tchad-Cameroun du Groupe de la Banque I t' rapport cur:sidi:re le r6sultat du prugramrne gfobal cornme insatisfaisant d;; v!? <;e i'objcctif central de la reduction de la pauvretk et de I'amdlioration de la gou 'rL. I ilncc A''A qrjce B I'utiiisation des recettcs pdtroiii.res. Plus parctculiercmcnl, la per'ormcm!? ilii Gouvetnement du Tchad au regard des resultas institutioncels, fiscaux et macro- ~?C3rK?liC~lJiX ~ de gouvernance, est aussi jugee trks insatisfaisa et xJt:rixiatic:! n:mqutl de nuances conime en a manqud d'ailleurs les rapports crltrc !e Tchad et 1 3 Banque Mondiale qui ont abouti a sa decision unilatera!e dc quitter le i)riojcl et ail pd'erncnt anticipe des credits actroyfk au Gouvernement. S'II l'ittordc, le Iappcrt ne prcpd pas suffisarnrnent en compte I'impact sur le programPC cfcr; rr;ultiylcs agresstons des mercenaires armes par le Soudan cor!!re le T:has. ?io.,tmnien!, les attaques dans la capitate cn avril 2006 et en fGvricr 2008 cnt DbXiC ;G I;ouvernemt.nt a consentir d'importantes depenses de dCfense d,i ferrmre +.: n.~t;:;niil ct rcconstruction, affectant temporaircmcnt les priorit& dc la S F W . Le5 principalcs contraintes du programme SI pksicun risques !i& au programme ont.CtC a priori identifies, notammen: u !e cl~borrlcment.thlcntuel de la crisc au Darfour B ct unc instabilite sociiile m;:m:rt~e par ia non distribution des recettes petrolieres 4 des aaivitds pro..lutle COrtirt? la ;:wmici et pro ditvc!oppement b), I'ampteur des attacues des mercenarrcs b iii S C I C ~ tki .Sotldan et les destructions qu'elfes ont ocwsionnees ont et6 sans cornmiine nwsrrre avec ler risques antidpes. Ainsi, mmme le reconnait le rapport, jusqu'cn 1006, avant les attaqucs dpktedes des rnercenalres les allocations budgdtaircs Ont - . . . " . . . , ... 133 e l Id prcwion, des populatrons nctafnment ces tra.iar.lcurs VCII ill!k!U15, i’irnpdten$c pow bdndficicr LCircctement au nivcau de leurs revenus, des res50ltrte~ttr& de i’cipiwtation du petrole a ete passee soils stlence dans les risque5 rCpctturlks Cans 18 programme. Les mouvernents sociaux ont, toutefois, amene le gouvernernent j accordcr cn 2007 unc augmentatlon des salaires de 15% en rnoycnnc! L? qilS!iOE dc quatre budc#s differents auxqucls le Tchad a 4t6 scum~s(Rcccttes I h m r s , ress\?urccs pdtroliBres, IPPTE, Financement) a rcndii pliis rllfficdc la . ; i::n Ctt Sio(jrimme, l a rigidite du m6eanisme de g c s t m ucs revcnw pCtrolicrs et IC rrrdnquc: dc 5omIc5cic dc la Ba?quc Mondiale pour sa r&vision ct son adoptloci 2 I’evc~lu:rot: di. a co:?te;itc ciu Ttnad, opt constituC un corset I’lntkneur duquel I’Etat di! -lcliac i ! pu 3ff;c!iement sfficirr. / Le vtrair ~n11a:thl et le remncunement artiopb a la Eanque rnonc&, a sa i:v:.dnd?, des cr&di’s IDA et de la OIKD, d’un montant de 67,s m:lltms ?A,% 7’ii prjs r;arg.ih d ’ a v w rc5 repercussionssur la mise en muvre dc la SNRPZ. E,: dirplt de5 cantnintes imposCes par l‘agrcssion des rcbellcs dirrit;c; par ii? ;o~d;ln:, 3cs diff2rcnccs d‘interprdtation et des divcrgcnccs d’appr6ctalic!’! $iC‘: !e 3+lJ on &?it pcJi;voir mettre a l’actif du programme quelques resultat?, tanglh Les rcsultats du programme ! :r! accord avcc le rapport et pour employer ses termes, le Gouvcmmcrt c m i d ? c cffxtivcm’n! quc IC projct d’exploitation pCtroliere et d’otCoduc 7’rkac-(:;mer::i.n 2 616 sstisf2imt. L‘intetvention du GBM a acc6lerC la mise cn zuvrt: :it! m ; e ! e: :asurC ics principles parties prenantes. Ce projet a permis al: T c h d et:; disf;CM: d i l mx!s pour le financement des actions de rfklduction de la ~ d d m k ? CL de Jt:ii!inijlx!rlctt, mhmc si 1’61an a dti: momentankment k i n % par e3 , ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ : ; i j r : t t s r!lll~ Ucsi~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 6 la solde du Soudan. rrrcrccnairer .lu!;r;u’cn 2W7, tes discussions entre le Gouvernement et ;e (;BY ci:t Ct2 mxtructivcs. E l l a ont permis dc mettrc en chanticr un cmain n3rncFc. C’initratws ~ ~ a rlesqiinlles, ~ni la prise en compte de la dimeision environnemcntalc clai?s ;a ion? ::e nraaurtion du pltrole, I’arnelioration de la preparation du budget m h e si sa mise t~ nt:iv?i? rcnc.?tIC:c encore des difEcult6s et la transparence des rccfXtCC rlfirnt: si ::ti ,.:ifitct tloit d r u UrlCOre fd?. sur !a rdtionakiiltion de ta d6pensc pt~,bliqut:. Lcs rCsultats du Tchad Commc IC rccmnai;t le rapport, le volet enwronnemcntal ut social 0.i proyt d’explolrxiorl pkra’lere i ! ete assez satisfaisanr, les parties prenantes ayarit m a l i d s rddurtion des imparts, m6me si taus le$ objectifs n’ont pas &e atteirts ir!~; ~ I a r de i:? mSrnc, :1 ‘ rx!pCr: note que Ics 5 Oh de5 rcvcnus pdtro!iers prCIlJus potr ;ir5qion ! . . . I. 134 da:ivenient pel1 importants, ils correspondeqt bien au ~ L J Xrt'!en!i t J m s le , I n3cmisrnc dc yestion des revenus pCtro1ic.s. 11 wconnait aussi que ie rnCcanisrne Ce gestion des rccetles p4lrc;kkrcs acccptt par : e 'fchad c7 6t2 d' une transparcncc quasi unique en hffiqtle ... l3c plur;, il?3!b;tudc dc t:ansparen<;i? plutcit que de dissimulation s'est a t c r x . . Y, m@mes'ii &met dcls doures, ~ W C le relraii de la 3anque Mondiale et a priori sur IJ capxiti: cfe I'Etijt k:!:ii:WrT B cocrsuiiix cct effort. XGnlc, 51 le : a ~ xdc 70% des d4penscs t o u m sou'ccs confondk,es n'a 03s i t @a!tf nt s part db budget itliouC aux secteurs prioritatrcs a &e en constante d;qrrwta:ioi* 1 d."s qbt! Ii'w taux d'exkcuticn. En exCutlon budyelaire, ce'ui-61es: pesst: A W?i.b J~'% de 60°h). I 2 i I O i (ccntre unc prdvision budg@tairc eft 51 le riippoit indique que Q les resultats macro-economiques, de :Bcuc:io? dc Id ;a.vrete, de gouvernance et de developpement institutionnel oRf CrC d e c w a i r s et @i'rl-I y d 2 i t ? ]our aucun srgntt des am@Iiorations attendues s , ii n'intkgu pes IC d'ck ctiie tous ccb objcctifs ne peuvent &e r6alisds que dans IC tnoyen itt Inr:,. terr;e, c G 17iIr'W [e rtxonndit en %ljra7c ;d ri Lypcis, ECCISlT'2 et ECXZ?., sans lesquclfes il est difficilc, B mains dc: succu1L'r, <2'cv;,lucr I'tmpsct de la SNRP sur la reduction de la pawreti et IC d&cloppcment hurnain, ponenr sur Ies annCes 2003 et 2004, 3onc juste au ddou: dc I'krc pfilrolibrt!. Ces enqubtcs cokeuses ne peuvent &tre men4es que dans des per-odes rspac6es. f:'c:st. ainsi que le youvernement a retenu de larcer une truisiL;mc t!nqir;tc ?.CI)SII' e! il:S'fcn %0:(;-2011. . ~ . . . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . - . , . - - -. . 135 En conclusion En depit du retrait de la Banque Mmdiale du projet petrolier, le Gouverrwnidr: poursuit Ics rcformes entarnees avec elle. Maintenant qu’ii i ! pa :cslamr durabicniunt 151 sdcurjte et la paix . iI’rntkrieur des frontieres du pays, !I est plus 6 r T h ; d’amt!!lorcr Id yestion de scs fhances publiques et de rkalrser ses o*!jec:ifs dc i’c la p w v r e ~ ,nobrnrnent dans fc cadre du PAMFIP et dc I;CS rtlaktons r-c~hictior: ?vi‘r xitres partenaires au dCveloppernent. 136 __.__----_-.__--_ SECRETARIATGENCRAL N'Djamena le _-___-_-----__--- DIRECTION DES €TUDES ET DE L ALEGISLATION PETROUERE 137 Le rapport cfu Groupe Independant d'Evaluation (GIE) de la Banque Mondinte (BM), restitue une &valuationretrospective Uu programme d'appui B I'exploitation p&troli&re et B t'o%oduc Tchad-Cameroun du groupe de la Banque Mondiale (GBM). Le programme d'appui A I'exploitation petrolikre e! I'ol~oduc Tchad-Cameroun est ConstiW des prolets suivants : 1 Exploitation pitruliere et oleoduc Tchad-Cameroun, avec financement BIRD/SFI, 2 Tchad- Projet de Renforcement des Capacitbs de Gestron du Secteur P&Toolier, avec fnancernent IDA ; 3. Tchad-Projet de Gestion de I'Economie B I'he p&trolt&e, avec financement IDA , 4. Tchad-Activite d'Appui Conseil, avec financernent SFI , 5. Carneroun- Projet de Renforcement des Capaciths de Gestion Enuironnementale, avec financement IDA Apres avoir bribvement par16 de l'histonque du programme, ie rapport B fait ressortir les objectifs, les result& attendus et les leqons ti tirer aprhs l'exkution de chaque piojet du programme. Ces resultats de Wvaluation sont rbsumbs comme suit darts le tableau a-dessous TABLEAU DES lNDlCES DE NOTATION DES PROJETS ET DU PROGRAMME 'I. * - ------ 1, Projet d'exploitatlon pirtroli4re et d'oleoduc Tchad-Cameroun - Notation I_ - ., . _ - _ -- -"- 3 RBsultat Moddwnt satisfaisant ..---- _. ---I--- !"Risgue pour les resultats au plan du dhveloppement r--- Important 1 - _-_ I 1 'Performance dcemprunteur --- Moderani satisfaisanJ 1 I" - Perfprrnance du GBM Moderant satikkant -- 2. Cameroun-Renforcement de7CapaciGs de Gestion de 1- -- 1 I'Envimnnement 1 ____I._I "". ... i M o d h n t Insatisfaisant _I RBsuRat 1 Risque pour les r6sulfats ou plan du dCveloppement -----r-- I_" rrnpS2t , , LPztormance du GBM ,Perfaname de I'emprunteur ~~- -- Modira?t&isfaisant, -- i Moderant Insgitisfaisant , i _I" I 3. 7chad.Renforcement des Capacitds de GesGn du Secteur -- - I _-I-- -"". ' Moderant tnsatrsfaisant- --- +---- Eleve -". I Mod&ant satisfaisanf ~ -I Moderant s~tisfaisant_~- - - C L _ - _ _ _ I - ---- 1 -. _ - - -7- L . . --- I- ~ p&ultat _1 Moderant Insatisfaisant , Risque pour ies rbsultats ou prandu dbveloppement _Eteve - " A Performance du GBM o% :a dr nt Insatisfaisan!,,, ,-_ -Performance I_ --.- de I'emprunteur "_____ -- - _I_ --- *- Tresjnsa&?!qi=t_ -, I 2 138 De ce tableau if ressort en ce qui mncerne le fchad que, ni au niveau des resultals attendus, ni au niveau de la performance de t'emprunteur (c'est-8-dre le Gouvernernent du Tchad), rien n'est satisfaisant : tout est D ~ U S QU moins n&gjj. En conclusron, le rapport d'6vafuation a titablit que pour le cas du Tchad, I'objectif de I'appui du GBM au financement du programme n'a pas et& atteint, A savoir la r&duction de la pauvretC au Tchad et I'amdlioration de la gouvernence pour la meilteure utilisation possible des recettes p8trolr&res, dans le respect des principes de sauvegarde sociale et environnementaie durabies. Pow \e GIE, I'6chec du Tchad dans le programme s'expltque par le manque d'appropriation par le Gouvernernent et les manquements r&ptlt&s dans les accords de base Toutefois, le rapport reconnaif que des progrbs significatrfs ont &te faits dans les domaines suivants par ie gowernement du Tchad avec I'irnplrcattonde la Banque Mondiale (BM) ' - Protection sociale et environnenentaie , - Infrastructurerouti4re ; - A& d I'eau potable ; - Gestion des 5% des 600ts p6troliers dans la ftiglon productrice. LES LECONS AftAER Le rapport iI fait ressortir les leqons suwantes ti tirer apr& constat Regatif fait SUI l'ex4cution du progfamme d'explortation petroliere et I'oi&duc Tchad-Cameroun: I - Le respect d'engagement d'un gouvernement iI s'appropner un projet raste un dlbrnent determinant dans la reussite dudit projet . 2- Ma&& ['implication de la Banque Mondiale (BM). le programma a donne un r6sultat insatisfaisant, Donc la Banque Mondiale (BM) n'a pas pu Bviter au Tchad la N malMiction des ressources 1) ; 3- Cet Bchec n'est pas une raison suffisante pour empecher la Banque Mondiale (BM) de soutenir d'autres ptojets dans les industries extractives, car les etreurs connues au Tchad peuvent &re corrigtjes 3 139 OBSERVATIONS La lecture du rapport nom amdne faire quelques observations suivantes 1. Page 94: Le CTNSC n'a lamais et6 mis sous la tutefle du Ministkre de I'Energie,des Mines et du Pbtrote cornme le prhtend le rapport. Le CTNSC a taujours 6th ancrb au Ministere de VEnvironnement , 2- L'fhhec du gouvernement tchadien, I'ernprunteur, dott &tre nuance dans la mesure OCI le Tchad est dans une situation skcuritaire difficila d'une part et a fixe un certain nornbre de secteurs priorttaires qui n'a pas toujours I'assentirnent des bailleurs de fonds d'autre part; 3- Page 50 et page 52 : Au lteu de chercher a comprendre les raisons qui font que le Tchad est permanemrnent dans les hostilites, le rapport ne fait que critiquer les actions du gouvernement qui a utilisb une partie de la manne p$troliPre pour la defense de la patrie vis-a-vis des agtessions venant de I'ext&rieur. Ces parties du rapport qui ne fait que critiquer les actions du Gouvernement tchadien doivent &re revues. 4 140 (TRANSLATION) PRESIDENCY OF THE REPUBLIC ******* PRTMATURE ******* MINISTRY OF ECONOMY AND PLANNING ******* GENERAL SECRETARY ******* No /MEP/SG/09 The Minister o f Economy and Planning to Mrs. MONIKA HUPPI, Chief o f the Evaluation Division, Sector projects (Independent Group) Object: Borrower's comments on the performance assessment Report o f the Program for the Chad-Cameroon petroleum development and pipeline construction The report rates the program outcome as a whole unsatisfactory in light o f the program's main objective which was to achieve progress in governance and poverty alleviation by means o f o i l revenues. More specifically, the Government o f Chad's performance o n institutional, fiscal, macroeconomic and governance aspects have also been considered highly unsatisfactory. This assessment lacks nuancing, just as the relationship between Chad and the World Bank did, which ultimately led to the World Bank's unilateral decision to disengage from the project and the early repayment o f the credits allocated to the Government. Although it mentions it, the report does not attach sufficient importance to the impact which multiple attacks that Sudan-armed mercenaries led against Chad had o n the program. Specifically, the attacks on the capital conducted in April 2006 and February 2008 have forced the Government to invest massively in the defense o f the national territory and in reconstruction, affecting temporarily NSPR (National strategy for poverty reduction) priorities. Main constraints o f the program Even if many o f the program risks were identified at an early stage, among these the "possible spillover from the crisis in Darfur" and "social unrest if the o i l revenue were not 141 used for pro-poor, pro-development activities", the scale o f attacks conducted by the mercenaries paid by Sudan and the destruction they caused have extensively exceeded the anticipated risks. Thus, as the report underlines, until 2006 and before the repeated mercenary attacks, "the budgetary allocations were reasonably close to the agreed percentages and despite the divergence between budgets and outturns, actual expenditure on the priority sectors did increase". Furthermore, the impatience and pressure from the populations, particularly the workers who expected to derive direct monetary benefits from o i l resources extraction had not been listed among the potential risks. The social unrests have nevertheless prompted the Government to agree to an increase in salaries which averaged 15 percent in 2007. The management o f four different budgets which Chad was requested to maintain, (domestic revenue-financed budget, oil-financed budget, HIPC budget, aid-financed budget) made program management more difficult. The rigidity o f the o i l revenue management mechanism and the World Bank's lack o f flexibility regarding i t s revision and adaptation to Chad's context became a straight jacket in which the Government o f Chad could operate only with difficulty. The unilateral withdrawal and the early repayment to the World Bank, upon i t s request, o f all IDA and IBRD credits which amounted to US$ 67,5 millions, had repercussions o n the implementation o f the NSPR2. Despite the constraints imposed by the Sudan-armed rebel aggressions and the differences in interpretation and appreciation with the World Bank, one has to point out some tangible results o f the program. Program outcomes In agreement with the report and using i t s terms, the Government considers that the Chad Cameroon petroleum pipeline and development project has been satisfactory. The WBG involvement has accelerated project implementation and reassured the main stakeholders. This project facilitated Chad's access to resources devoted to poverty alleviation and development actions, even if this impetus was momentarily slowed down by the constant attacks led by the mercenaries paid by Sudan. Until 2007, the discussions between the WBG and the Government were constructive. They allowed the implementation o f a certain number o f initiatives, these include taking into account the environmental dimension in the o i l fields area, improving budget preparation even if its implementation remains difficult and, revenue transparency, even if efforts on public expenditure rationalisation are still needed. 142 Chad outcomes As the report acknowledges, the social and environmental dimensions o f the petroleum pipeline and development project proved to be quite satisfactory, the stakeholders implemented impact mitigation plans, even if not all objectives were attained. Similarly, the report notes that although comparatively small, the expenditures in the oil- producing region financed by the 5 percent o f o i l royalties were effectively equivalent to the agreed rate identified in the o i l resources management mechanism. I t also acknowledges that the o i l revenue management mechanism accepted by Chad has shown a "transparency nearly unique in Africa ...and that habits have been built in the direction o f openness rather than secrecy", even if raises doubts about Chad's capacity to pursue this effort following the World Bank's withdrawal. Even if the targeted 70 percent rate o f expenditures from all budgetary resources allocated to priority sectors was not reached, the budget share and expenditure effectiveness in priority sectors have improved steadily. This share rose from 48 percent to 57 percent in the executed budget o f 2007 (against a budget forecast o f 60 percent). When the report indicates that "the macroeconomic, poverty reduction, governance, and institutional development outcomes were disappointing and there i s as yet n o evidence o f the hoped-for positive improvements", i t does not consider the fact that all these objectives may only be achieved in the medium to long term, a fact that it implicitly acknowledges. The report seems surprised by the lack o f efforts to collect data to monitor human development outcomes and poverty. It ascribes this lack to the substantial delays in the NSPR2 preparation. In doing this, the authors seem to ignore two elements. First o f all, there i s no time break between the NSPRl and the NSPR2. NSPRl was implemented until NSPR2 was adopted. Implementation o f sector strategies was pursued by the ministries o f priority sectors. Furthermore, there are no fundamental changes between the two NSPR. The main line o f conduct for the NSPR2 i s to "complete what has been started, optimize the reforms initiated and improve the outcomes achieved by the NSPRl'I. Second, several o f the monetary and non monetary poverty alleviation and human development indicators can only be obtained through surveys. This applies to poverty level, its incidence and depth, as well as to net enrollment rates and infant and maternal mortality rates. These surveys are not linked to the NSPR preparation. The last round o f these surveys, ECOSIT2 and EDST2, without which it remains difficult to assess the NSPR's impact on poverty alleviation and human development, if one does not wish to speculate, apply to the 2003-2004 period, just the beginning o f the petroleum era. These costly surveys can only be conducted at long intervals. Consequently, the Government actually plans a third ECOSIT and EDST survey in 2010-201 1. 143 Conclusions Despite the World Bank’s withdrawal from the petroleum project, the Government continues to implement the reforms initiated with it. N o w that it has been able to durably restore security and peace in the country, the Government i s in a position to improve public financial management and to achieve i t s poverty alleviation objectives, in particular within the framework o f the PAMFIP and in its interactions with other development partners. CC: Mr. Louis Philippe Ong Seng Administrator for Chad with the World Bank Marie Barton Dock, Operation Director for ChadWorld Bank. OUSMANE MATAR BREME 144 CHAD REPUBLIC PROGRESS ___________ MINISTRY OF PETROLEUMAND ENERGY _____-__-__ GENERAL SECRETARY N’Djamena, the: --____-____ PETROLEUMLEGISLATIONAND STUDIES DIRECTION SYNTHESIS OF THE REPORT FROM THE INDEPENDENT EVALUATION GROUP (IEG) OF THE WORLD BANK 145 The report from the IndependentEvaluation Group (IEG) o f the World Bank (WB) presents a retrospective performance assessment o f the Chad-Cameroon petroleum development and pipeline construction program supported by the World Bank Group (WBG). ' The Chad-Cameroon petroleum development and pipeline construction program includes the following projects: 1. Chad &Cameroon: Petroleum Pipeline and Development Project, financed by IBRD and the IFC; 2. Chad: Petroleum Sector Management Capacity-Building Project, financed by IDA; 3. Chad: Petroleum Economy Management Project, financed by IDA; 4. Chad: Advisory Services financed by the IFC; 5. Cameroon: Petroleum Environment Capacity Enhancement Project, financed by IDA. After a short summary o f the program background, the report sets out the objectives, the expected outcomes and the lessons learned after each project implementation. The evaluation results are summarized in the following table. TABLE OF PROJECTS AND PROGRAM RATING INDICATORS 1. Chad and Cameroon: Petroleum Pipeline and Development Project Rating Outcome I Moderatelv satisfactorv I Risks to develonment outcome I Significant I I Borrower performance I Moderatelv satisfactorv I Outcome Moderately unsatisfactory Risks to development outcome Significant W B G performance Moderately satisfactory Borrower performance Moderately unsatisfactory I Outcome I Moderatelv unsatisfactory I I Risks to develoDment outcome I High I I W B G Derformance I Moderatelv satisfactorv I 1 Borrower Derformance I Moderatelv satisfactorv I I 4. Chad: Petroleum Economy Management Project Outcome Risks to develoDment outcome I Moderatelv unsatisfactorv I High II I W B G performance 1 Moderatelv unsatisfactorv I Borrower performance I Highly unsatisfactory 5. IFC ADVISORY SERVICES IN CHAD I Develonment effectiveness I Mostlv unsuccessful I 1 IFC's Role & Contribution I Satisfactory 146 6. PROGRAM Outcome I Moderately unsatisfactory Risk to development outcome High WBG performance Moderately unsatisfactory Borrower performance Unsatisfactory This table shows that wherever Chad i s concerned, neither expected outcomes nor the borrower’s performance (Chad Government) are satisfactory; everything i s more or less negative. In conclusion, the evaluation report states that in the case o f Chad, the objective targeted by the WBG through its financing o f the program has not been reached, namely poverty alleviation and governance improvement for the best possible use o f the o i l revenues, in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner. For the IEG, the failure o f the program in Chad i s explained by the lack o f government ownership and repeated violations o f the basic agreements. However, the report acknowledges that significant progress was made in the following areas by the Government o f Chad with World Bank support: Social and environmental protection; 0 Transportation infrastructure; Access to clean water; 0 Management o f the 5 percent o f o i l revenues in the extraction area. LESSON LEARNED The report draws the following lessons after i t s negative assessment o f the implementation o f the Chad-Cameroon petroleum development and pipeline construction program: 1. Continued Government ownership remains a major factor in project success; 2. Despite the involvement o f the World Bank, the program outcome was unsatisfactory. Therefore, the World Bank (WB) was not able to help Chad avoid the “resource curse”. 3. This failure should not prevent the World Bank from supporting other extractive industry projects, because mistakes identified in Chad may be corrected. 147 OBSERVATIONS After reading the report, we would like to express the following comments: 1. Page 94: the Comite‘ ‘Technique National de Suivi et de ContrGle (CTNSC) was never attached to the Ministry o f Mines, Energy, and Petroleum as stated by the report. The CTNSC has always been attached to the Ministry o f Environment; 2. The failure by Chad’s Government, the borrower, must be nuanced to the extent that Chad faced a difficult security situation on one hand and it identified certain priority sectors with which donor agencies did not always agree on the other hand; 3. Page 50 and 52: Instead o f trying to understand the reasons that caused Chad to be involved in permanent hostilities, the report limits i t s e l f to criticize the actions o f the Government, who invested part o f the petroleum windfall in the country’s defense in the face o f external aggressions. The parts o f the report that only criticize the Chad Government’s actions must be revised.