1.1 Project background
Differentiating high-quality Public-Private Partnership (PPP) projects that are fit for purpose for the SDGs from the rest is a crucial step in implementing the People-first PPP approach in national infrastructure policies and programmes.
In November 2018, the UNECE Working Party (WP) on PPPs recognized that identifying a proper evaluation methodology for scoring PPP projects, and encourage the various partners to make them People-first was the next most crucial step in implementing the People-first PPP approach; and that a joint effort from multiple stakeholders, including contributions from a broad group of experts and organizations was needed to develop such a methodology. The WP therefore requested the secretariat to give priority to the development of such a methodology, and to submit a proposal for the creation of an evaluation methodology project team to the Bureau, for consideration and approval.
1.2 Project rationale
Despite huge interest and commitment by all stakeholders in contributing to achieving the SDGs, there lacks real evidence on impact and performance of projects, which is a major lacuna, especially with regards to infrastructure projects. There is presently no mechanism to monitor the impact of these projects. Such a mechanism is however required for two reasons:
1.3 Project objective and benefits
The objective is to have a robust, standardized methodology to assess the extent to which PPP projects – either at the design and procurement stages or during Operations and Maintenance – are aligned with the SDGs, the overall objective being scaling up the People-first PPP concept so that existing PPP approaches lead to positive, measurable, intentional and tangible SDG impacts.
Specifically, the impact assessment tool will assist:
a. Governments in evaluating projects at each of the PPP phases:
b. Development agencies, Multilateral Development Banks, and other lenders in financing viable and bankable projects with high economic, social and environmental added value.
c. Private companies in adjusting their projects or in designing new ones with impact on sustainable infrastructure development in key sectors (energy, water, transport, education, healthcare, etc.) in the regions that require most resources. Private companies can use this tool not only for investment decisions (e.g. impact investment) but also as a mechanism to deliver high-performance in PPP projects (utility and infrastructure companies).
d. Stakeholders including CSOs, including NGOs and academia, in assessing new and existing PPP projects at different stages of their lifecycle towards the achievement of the SDGs. The tool could also be used to enhance PPPs that do not meet the SDG requirements. Reporting on progress of infrastructure projects will improve transparency and governance in that it can strengthen people’s right to express their views on the merits and demerits of specific projects.
e. In increasing the availability of good data on SDG-compliant projects and in scaling up knowledge on assessing sustainable impact of infrastructure PPPs.
f. UNECE in enriching its 500 People-first PPP case study compendium.
Version: 1.0
2.1 Application scope
The impact assessment tool should be readily usable by governments, private sector, private lenders, and international organizations, and applicable to all PPP sectors and all categories of PPP projects, whether they are small-scaled or large-scaled, national or cross-border. It can be applied to publicly-owned projects, PPP projects - both government-pay PPPs and concessions (user-pay) - or any other partnership frameworks (e.g. institutional PPPs).
2.2 Project activities and sequences
The design of this tool will result from a multi-stakeholder consultation process and a robust collaborative endeavor therefore ensuring effective implementation and wide-scale adoption. The development process should be conducted in a constant back-and-forth process compliant with the following sequences before the tool goes back to the Bureau for its consideration and approval:
The project deliverables are:
3.1 The People-first PPP Project Impact Assessment Tool (“Tool”)
The Tool will consist of an evaluation methodology based on selected outcomes and indicators, and a rating index based on a weighting mechanism. In designing the Tool, the project team should meet the following requirements:
a. Benchmark at least 5 existing evaluation tools, including those developed by organizations[1] and individual experts[2].
b. Use the five People-first core outcomes[3] and other factors, including:
- Intent: extent to which parties to the project intend to achieve environmental and social impact from their project;
- Verification: that the impacts/outcomes are in fact able to be verified;
c. Identify relevant methodological frameworks or indicators under each outcome. These must be Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Reasonable and Time-bounded (SMART).
d. Weigh each indicator and design a scoring mechanism and a rating index.
3.2 Key recommendations for the effective implementation of the Tool
The validation group will consider the possibility of developing the following implementation mechanisms and will make recommendations accordingly:
a. A voluntary certification mechanism for governments and their partners on delivering People-first PPP projects. The role of various stakeholder groups - not UNECE - in providing these certificates should be looked at.
b. An IT “knowledge-sharing platform” (e.g. the multilateral IT platform SOURCE financed by the MDBs) to centralize index results and the inputs and outputs leading to the People-first PPP outcomes. Such a platform can help increase the volume of official statistical data on PPP projects and disseminate results to all stakeholders, thereby facilitating the large-scale adoption of the Tool. Duplication should be avoided, but if such a platform does not exist or is not appropriate to host this tool, and is to be created, it could be developed jointly with IFIs, consultancy firms or non-for-profit actors.
c. Deployment of the Tool in 10 flagship projects [4], ensuring reporting of (annual) results.
d. Development of a management strategy to establish a continuous, self-sustaining process for global roll-out, in order to scale up the Tool to an increasing number of projects in developed, developing and least developed countries.
e. Design and dissemination of an implementation guide, training materials, capacity building activities in selected countries, etc.
[1] E.g. Toyo University PPP School, IESE Business School, Tsinghua University. Other tools that could be looked at include, inter alia, the Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure Envision framework, the UNEP FI's Positive Impact Initiative Radar and Model Frameworks, etc. The project team might also consider using the UNECE draft benchmark developed on the basis of the People-first Guiding Principles.
[2] E.g. David Dombkins, Yu Namba, Pedro Neves, Alex Wong.
[3] Namely: Improve access to and equity in essential services, enhance environmental sustainability and resilience; Ensure economic effectiveness; ensure replicability and scalability; promote stakeholder engagement. Further detail on these outcomes can be found in the Guiding Principles on People-first PPPs for the SDGs.
[4] The 10 flagship projects are one of the three pillars of the cooperation between UNECE and the China National Development and Reform Commission.
The focus is global as the Tool will be designed to facilitate wide-scale implementation of the Guiding Principles on People-first PPPs for the SDGs.
Whether the Tool will be successfully implemented and applicable for a global audience will depend amongst other factors on the level of consultation and validation that will lead to its development. The design process must therefore integrate the views of a broad range of stakeholders including representatives from governments, international organizations (UN bodies, the UN Regional Commissions, UN agencies, etc.), Multilateral Development Banks, lenders, the business community, academia, NGOs and CSOs, as well as individual experts from developed and developing countries.
5.1 Project team
The Project Team will be comprised of two groups performing too separate but related tasks:
a. A technical group, composed of experts with specialist knowledge in the areas of PPP and evaluation methodologies and impact assessment, coming from diverse backgrounds, especially with experience in low and middle-income countries.
b. An inclusive, multi-stakeholder validation group subdivided into sub-validation groups: PPP Units, international organizations including UN bodies, Multilateral Development Banks, lenders, the business community, academia, NGOs/CSOs.
5.2 Project Co-leaders
Two co-leaders have been identified
E-mail: [email protected]
5.3 Role of the UNECE secretariat
Team members and co-leaders will work under the overall responsibility of the UNECE secretariat, which will appoint a project lead to oversee the entire project process.
Project leader | James Stewart |
---|---|
Editor |
Project participants shall provide resources for their own participation. The project’s existence and functioning shall not require any additional resources from the UNECE secretariat.
ODP Step | ODP Name | Estimated Completion Date | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Project initiation | 2019 May | Project approval by the Bureau of the Working Party on PPPs |
2 | Stakeholder mobilization | 2019 May-July | |
3 | Developing the initial draft | (tbc) | First version of the tool tested against actual projects and revised accordingly |
4 | Public review | (tbc) | Publication of draft tool on the UNECE website for public review |
5 | Endorsement | (tbc) | Endorsement of tool by the Working Party on PPPs |
6 | Approval | (tbc) | Submission of tool to the UNECE Committee on Innovation, Competitiveness and Public Private Partnerships for approval |
7 | Maintenance |