Document of The World Bank FOROFFICIAL USEONLY ReportNo: 35843-RO PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT ONA PROPOSEDLOAN INANAMOUNT EQUALTOEUR 106.2MILLION (US$131.7 MILLIONEQUIVALENT) TO ROMANIA FORA MUNICIPALSERVICESPROJECT May 25,2006 InfrastructureDepartment South CentralEurope CountryUnit EuropeandCentralAsia Region This document has a restricteddistributionand may be usedby recipientsonly in the performanceof their official duties. Its contents mav not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank authorization. CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS Currency Unit = New RomanianL e i (RON) 1 = RON3.48 US$1 = RON3.04 1 = US$1.24 FISCAL YEAR January 1 - December31 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS ANB AphNovaBucureSti (Bucharest water supply private concessionaire) ANRSC Autoritatea Nationalade Reglementare pentru Servicii Publice de Gospodarie ARBAC Agency for RegulatingWater Supply and Sewerage inBucharest BOD BiologicalOxygen Demand CPS Country Partnership Strategy EIA Environmental Impact Assessment EIB EuropeanInvestment Bank ERR Economic rate of return EU EuropeanUnion GOR Government of Romania IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank) ICB International Competitive bidding ICPDR International Commissionfor Protectionof the Danube River ICR Implementation Completion Report IF1 InternationalFinancial Institution m InterimFinancialReport ISPA Instrument for Structural Policies for Pre-Accession MoPF Ministry of Public Finance MoEWM Ministry of Environment and Water Management NBF Not Bank Financed NCB National Competitive Bidding PE PopulationEquivalent QCBS Quality and Cost Based Selection RAAC Regional Autonomous Water and Sewerage Company RED RoadEconomic DecisionModel RGAB Regia Autonomd de Apd Bucurejti -.Bucharest MunicipalWater Company (Bucharest Water and SewerageCompany) SOP Sector Operational Program UNDB United Nations Development Business WWTP Waste Water Treatment Plant Vice President: Shigeo Katsu Country Director: Anand K.Seth Sector Manager: Sumter Lee Travers Task TeamLeader: Sudipto Sarkar ROMANIA MUNICIPAL SERVICES PROJECT CONTENTS Page A STRATEGIC CONTEXT AND RATIONALE . ................................................................................. 1 1. Country and sector issues................................................................................................................. 1 2. Rationale for Bank involvement....................................................................................................... 2 3. Higher level objectives to which the project contributes ................................................................. 3 B PROJECTDESCRIPTION . ................................................................................................................. 3 1. Lendinginstrument .......................................................................................................................... 3 2. Project development objective and key indicators ........................................................................... 3 3. Project components .......................................................................................................................... 4 4. Lessons learned and reflected inthe project design ......................................................................... 7 5. Alternatives considered and reasons for rejection............................................................................ 7 C IMPLEMENTATION . .......................................................................................................................... 8 1. Partnership arrangements (if applicable).......................................................................................... 8 2. Institutional and implementation arrangements............................................................................... 8 3. Monitoringand evaluation of outcomes/results ............................................................................... 9 4. Sustainability.................................................................................................................................... 9 5. Critical risksand possible controversialaspects ............................................................................ 10 6. Loan conditions and covenants ...................................................................................................... 11 D APPRAISALSUMMARY . ................................................................................................................. 13 1. Economic and financial analyses ................................................................................................... 13 2. Technical........................................................................................................................................ 16 3. Fiduciary ........................................................................................................................................ 16 4. Social.............................................................................................................................................. 17 5. Environment................................................................................................................................... 18 6. Safeguard policies.......................................................................................................................... 18 7. Policy Exceptions and Readiness................................................................................................... 20 ANNEXES Annex 1: Country and Sector or Program Background ........................................................................ 21 Annex 2: Major Related Projects Financedby the Bank and/or other Agencies ................................ 25 Annex 3: Results Framework and Monitoring ....................................................................................... 26 Annex 4: Detailed Project Description .................................................................................................... 28 Annex 5: Project Costs .............................................................................................................................. 34 Annex 6: Implementation Arrangements ................................................................................................ 35 Annex 7: Financial Management andDisbursement Arrangements ................................................... 37 Annex 8: ProcurementArrangements .................................................................................................... 42 Annex 9: Economicand Financial Analysis ............................................................................................ 46 Annex 10: Safeguard Policy Issues. ......................................................................................................... 61 Annex 11:Project Preparationand Supervision .................................................................................... 65 Annex 12: Documents inthe Project File ................................................................................................ 66 Annex 13: Statement of Loans and Credits ............................................................................................ 67 Annex 14: Country at a Glance ................................................................................................................ 69 Annex 15: Maps ......................................................................................................................................... 71 BRD 34517 ROMANIA MUNICIPALSERVICESPROJECT PROJECTAPPRAISALDOCUMENT EUROPEAND CENTRALASIA REGION ECSIE Date: May 25,2006 TeamLeader: Sudipto Sarkar Country Director: Anand K.Seth Sectors: General water, sanitation and flood Sector ManagerAIirector: Sumter Lee Travers protection sector (100%) Themes: Other urban development (P) Project ID: PO88252 Environmental screening category: B (Partial Assessment) Lending Instrument: Specific Investment Loan For Loandcredits/Others: Total Bank financing: Euro 106.2 million, denominated inEuro (US$ 131.7 million equivalent) I - Pronosed terms: Variable SureadLoan; 17 years maturitv with 5 years graceueriod I RECONSTRUCTIONAND I I I DEVELOPMENT Total: 145.0 25.6 170.6 Borrower:Romania, representedby the Ministry of Public Finance (MoPF) ResponsibleAgencies: Ministry ofEnvironment andWater Management (MoEWM); Municipality of Bucharest: and Municiualitv of Arad. FY 07 08 09 10 11 Annual 9.8 26.3 32.9 39.6 23.1 Cumulative 9.8 36.1 69.0 108.6 131.7 Does the project depart from the CAS in content or other significant respects?Ref. PAD A.3 [ ]Yes [XI No Does the project require any exceptions from Bank policies? []Yes [XI No Ref. PAD 0.7 Have these been approved by Bank management? []Yes [IN0 I s approval for any policy exception sought from the Board? [ ]Yes [ 1No Does the project include any critical risks rated "substantial" or "high"? Ref. PAD C.5 [x]Yes [ ] N o Does the project meet the Regionalcriteria for readiness for implementation? Ref. PAD D.7 [xlYes [ ] N o Project development objective Ref. PAD B.2, TechnicalAnnex 3 The objective of the project i s to assist Romania to meet EU environmental directives in the water and wastewater sector, thereby improving the quality and coverage of water and wastewater services. This objective will be met through: a) the support of infrastructure development in the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad to provide better water and wastewater service and improve stormwater management; and b) preparationof priority water and wastewater projects in 11counties. Project description [one-sentence summary of each component] Ref. PAD B.3.a, TechnicalAnnex 4 The ptoject will have three components: a) Component 1:Urban services inBucharest municipality which will include provision of urban services -water, sewerage, drainage, and road surfacing -inpriority neighborhoods. ' b) Component 2: Urban services inArad municipality which will include provision of urban services - sewerage, drainage, and road surfacing-inpriority neighborhoods. c) Component 3: Consulting services to prepare for water and wastewater projects in 11counties. Prepared projects will be submitted for fundingto the EUStructural and Cohesion funds. Which safeguard policies are triggered, if any? Ref. PAD 0.6, TechnicalAnnex 10 - Project on InternationalWaterways (OP 7.50) - Piloting the use of Borrower Systems to Address Environmental and Social Safeguard Issues in Bank supported projects (OP 4.00) Significant, non-standard conditions, if any, for: Ref. PAD C.6 Board presentation: Not applicable Loan effectiveness: Subsidiary Agreement and Subsidiary Loan Agreement, respectively, with the Municipalities of Bucharest and Arad are signed and inforce. Covenants applicable to project implementation: Details inC6. A. STRATEGIC CONTEXT AND RATIONALE 1. Countryandsectorissues In 2007, Romania is expected to join the European Union (EU). As part of the negotiations to join the EU, the Romanian Government has agreedto follow the acquis communautaire which is the entire body of legislation of the European Communities and Union. All EUmember states have to follow the acquis which i s divided into various themes, one of which i s environmental protection that provides specific directives on water and wastewater. It is estimated that the investment costs alone to meet the EUdirectives on improving water services and wastewater services will be around 5.6 billion and 9.5 billion respectively (by end 2018). These costs mainly relate to increasing the coverage of piped water supply, developing sewerage networks, and constructingwastewater treatment plants. Inaddition to these investments, the economy will have to bear the operation and maintenance costs and the investment costs to rehabilitate the existing infrastructure. As part of the National Development Plan (NDP), the Government has drafted a Sector Operational Program (SOP) for the environment sector which will be finalized by December 2006 (details in Annex 1). The SOP has beenreviewedby the EU,reaffirms Romania's commitment to meet EUdirectives, and outlines the plans to use Structural and Cohesion funds, wherever possible. The SOP outlines six areas of priority actions: modernizing the water and wastewater systems, integrated waste management systems, improvement of municipal heating systems, nature protection, measures to protect against floods and coastal erosion, and technical assistance. Out of these six areas, two are directly relevant for the project: e Extension and modernization of water and wastewater systems. This will be done through the formation of regional water and wastewater system operators. Through these operators, good quality service at affordable tariffs will be provided. The SOP outlines the following indicatorsto measureprogress. B y 2013: > 250 new localities will have new or rehabilitated water systems, operated by regional > utilities; 70% of the population will have access to piped water. Currently 52% of the population > benefits from this service; 250 new wastewater treatment plants will be operational in compliance with EU Directives; and 9 60% of the wastewater collected will be adequately treated. Currently, 35% is treated; 0 Technical assistance. To be able to implement the SOP and effectively absorb EUCohesion and Structural funds, Technical Assistance (TA) i s planned which will include: project preparation, strengthening the central and local government agencies responsible for programming and utilizing the EU grants, monitoring and evaluation of the progress made in implementing SOP, and public awarenesscampaigns. The indicators for the TA are being developed and will include: number of projects prepared, training provided, audits completed, and number of public awarenessevents completed. To help the Government meet the EU directives, the EU has provided grants through its pre-accession instruments (EU Phare program and the Instrument for Structural Policies for Pre-Accession (ISPA) program) and will continue to do so in the future through the Structural and Cohesion Funds. However, the EU grant funds are expected to cover only around 31% of the total investment costs to meet EU directives and the rest of the financing will be raised from other sources. To this end, Romania will spend central and local government resources, either for the provision of co-financing for EU grants or for 1 stand-alone investments (without EU grants) that are necessary to meet EU directives. For the latter, expenditures would meet the EU's additionality principle where Romania i s expected to undertake important and necessary investments to meet the EUdirectives. The Ministry of Public Finance (MoPF) intends to account the public expenditures incurred in this project as additional innature and report them accordingly to the EU. Investmentsproposedunder this project -covering the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad -are fully in line with the strategic priorities of the Government (as documented in the SOP) and the two municipalities. The criteria usedby the Government to define the investment priorities include the size of the affected population, improvement in the quality of surface or groundwater due to wastewater treatment, investment size, presence of an operator to provide water and wastewater services, per capita water consumption, and incidence of water borne diseases. High priority investments are expected to be completedbetween 2006 and 2009. Bucharest, Romania's capital with a population of around 2.2 million, does not have full piped water coverage and part of the city is not served by any operator. About 20% of the population draws water from wells where the quality of the water i s not ensured as per EUdirectives. In the project areas of the city, the population i s also not connected with sewerage. This population uses septic tanks which are not of good quality increasingthe risk of contamination of groundwater that is currently a source of drinking water. In Arad, a city with a population of 190,000people, about 90% of the citizens in the project areas do not have access to sewerage networks. The project will also support the development of stormwater drainage to reduce flooding in the two cities. Inbothcities, the project will require the existing water and wastewater concessionaires to expand services to the project areas in line with the strategic action of the SOPto improve access of the populationto utilities and piped water supply. Among the many projects that will have to be completed in the country to meet EU directives, the projects in Bucharest and Arad municipalities are fully prepared. As preparation for the Municipal Services Project, the possibility of working with other municipalities was explored but project preparation in other municipalities is not as advanced as in Bucharest and Arad municipalities. The projects in Bucharest and Arad were prepared by the municipalities using their own resources, approved by the respective municipal councils, reviewed by an inter-ministerial commission, chaired by the Ministry of Public Finance (MoPF), and have support of the central Government and the municipalities for implementation. As a SOP undertaking, the Government has also started to prepare water and wastewater projects across all counties in Romania. Prepared projects will be eligible for financing from the EU Structural and Cohesion grant funds. Thus, it is important to develop these projects so that Romania i s able to fully utilize EUgrant funds. The Government has already started project preparation in 30 of the 41 counties in the country. This project will support project preparation in the remaining 11 counties, representing a population of around 5 million. Projects will be prepared at the county level and thus will include multiple small and medium towns and settlements. Prepared projects will be submitted to the EUto seek EUCohesion and Structural grant funds 2. Rationale for Bank involvement Romania and the Bank have agreed that the Bank's strategy towards Romania will be to assist the country to accede to the EU. The proposed Country Partnership Strategy (scheduled to be reviewed by the Board on June 13, 2006) includes the Municipal Services Project which will help Romania to comply with the EU'senvironmental directives by supporting necessary investments in the water and wastewater sector. Further, the project will help Romania prepare projects which will be eligible to receive EU Structural and Cohesion grant funds. 2 The project builds on the successful Bank-financed Bucharest Water Supply Project (Loan No. IBRD- 4079, 1996 to 2001) which supported the public water operator, Bucharest Water and Sewerage Company (RGAB). Under the Bucharest Water Supply Project, the Bank supported the rehabilitation of the existing water network and reduction in water losses and supported the involvement of the private sector. The experience gained by the Bank and the Bucharest municipality on the Bucharest Water Supply Project will be useful to implement this project. 3. Higher levelobjectives to which the project contributes The project will assist Romaniato meet its commitment to the EUas it will help the country to implement priority environmental investments and in meeting these investment needs, develop a pipeline of projects that can utilize EUStructural and Cohesion funds. The project will directly improve the quality of water and wastewater services and reduce flooding of low lying city areas where new drainage networks will be built. The project also supports urban services (water, sewerage, and stormwater) which will support urban development in Bucharest and Arad and allow water and wastewater services to be provided as per EUdirectives. B. PROJECTDESCRIPTION 1. Lendinginstrument This project will be processedas a Specific Investment Loan (SIL). 2. Project development objective and key indicators The objective of the project is to assist Romania to meet EU environmental directives in the water and wastewater sector, thereby improving the quality and coverage of water and wastewater services. This objective will be met through: a) the support of infrastructure development in the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad to provide better water and wastewater service and improve stormwater management; and b) preparation of priority water and wastewater projects in 11 counties. Prepared projects will be submitted for financing by EU Structural and Cohesion grants along with other co-financing. The indicators to determine project progress are summarized below and details are presented inAnnex 3. 0 Improved access to water supply meeting EUstandards; 0 Improved access to sanitation meeting EUstandards; 0 Proportion of the project area protected from flooding; 0 Improved road surfacing (in areas where water, sewerage, and stormwater networks will be laid); and 0 Project applications prepared for EUfunding. 3 3. Project components The project will have three components, on which information i s presented below and in Annex 4. A summary of the cost and financing plan for the project is shown inTable 1. Description Financing Counterpart Component 1 Component2 1 1 Component3 11.0 2.1 Project 137.3 106.2 31.1 Front EndFee 0.3 0.0 0.3 Total 137.6 106.2 I 31.4 1 P Component 1: Urban services in Bucharest Municipality. Eligible expenditures under this component would be for: (a) Works for the provision of new urban services - water, sewerage, drainage and road surfacing- in priority neighborhoods; and (b) Technical Assistance to prepare bidding documents, for construction supervision, support to the municipality to implement the project, and complete financial audits. About 20% of the population of the city does not have access to water supply and wastewater services that meet EU standards. Through this project, access to water and wastewater services will increase significantly in the project areas, in line with Romania's commitment to the EU (Details inAnnexes 3 and 4). The municipality has embarked on a 5-year program, consisting of four phases, to improve the urban infrastructure in the city to EU standards. The program comes out of the General Urban Plan, the Water Supply Master Plan and the Wastewater Master Plan which prioritize areas of greatest need and future growth within the city. This project covers Phase Iof this program and foresees the extension of water supply, sewerage and stormwater services in two out of the six sectors in the city. Withinthese two sectors, the municipality has identified 7 priority locations - a combination of partly built-up area and new residential areas - based on the approved urban development plan. The project will include the following: 0 Water supply: Households in built-upareas now relying on well water will be connected and water will be supplied to new development areas. Inthe new development areas, the project will extend the water and wastewater investments made under the EU PHARE project to provide services to priority new developments. The pipelines will improve the hydraulics of the city-wide water supply network and improve the reliability of water supply and pressure in the network which in turn will improve the functioning of the system. The existing water treatment plant and transmission lines have sufficient capacity for the proposed extension areas; 0 Sewerage: Households will be connected to the sewer system, which will feed a wastewater treatment plant that has sufficient design capacity for the increased sewerage load. This treatment plant i s currently beingupgraded with assistancefrom the EU; 4 0 Stormwater drainage: Stormwater drains will be laid to reduce flooding, especially in the low lying areas of the city. Lagoons will be used to retain stormwater to reduce the hydraulic load to the receiving water body; and e Road paving: The water and wastewater services in Bucharest municipality are provided by Apa Nova, a private operator, through a concession contract with the Bucharest municipality. As per the concession contract, the concessionaire can take on the responsibility of providing water and wastewater services only once the streets are paved. B y paving the roads, the municipality will be in a position to include the project areas in the concession contract. Paving has additional benefits for traffic and for reducing siltation instormwater drains. k Compone.nt 2: Urban services in Arad Municipality. Eligible expenditures under this component would be for: (a) Works for the provision of new urban services - sewerage, drainage and road surfacing - in priority neighborhoods; and (b) Technical Assistance to prepare bidding documents, for construction supervision, support to the municipality to implement the project, and complete financial audits. Arad i s experiencing rapid industrial growth stimulated by the industrial zones created within the city and the border trade with Hungary and other EU Member States. Meeting EU standards throughimproved urban services is a highpriority for the municipality, includingthe construction of a sewerage and stormwater network to meet the growth needs. In Arad, the water and wastewater services are provided by Regional Autonomous Water and Sewerage Company (RAAC) Arad, a publicly-owned company that has a service contract with the County Council for the operation and maintenance of water and wastewater assets in five areas in the county, including the Arad municipality. RAAC i s a public company and was not competitively selected. According to Romanian Law on State Aid, and in line with EUpolicy on State Aid, the operator that would operate the assets and benefirfrom the support provided by MoPF under this project should be selected on a competitive basis. To this end, Arad municipality will carry out a public tender to select and conclude a service or concession contract with an operator, by June 30,2008, which will provide wastewater and drainage services through the assets created under the project. The national regulator for local services Autoritatea Nationala de Reglementare pentru Servicii Publice de Gospodarie (ANRSC) will regulate the selected operator. The project will cover three districts (Bujac, Gai, and Sanicolaul Mic) in Arad municipality and benefit a current population of 22,000, representing about 90% of the population inthese districts, which does not have access to public sewerage and uses septic tanks that leak into the groundwater. The project areas also need proper drainage facilities as they are prone to flooding. The project investments are: 0 Sewerage: Households will be connected to the sewer system, which will feed a new wastewater treatment plant being built with EU financing. This plant will treat the collected wastewater to EUstandards; e Stormwater drainage: Stormwater drainage will be installed, especially in the low lying project areas; and a Road paving: Roads in which sewerage pipes and stormwater drains are installed will be restored to at least their original quality. However, road paving has benefits for the traffic and the impact on vehicle maintenance and reduces siltation of the stormwater drains. The municipality will determine, prior to construction, whether or not roads in each district should be paved. This determination will be based on a satisfactory economic rate of return for the Bank to provide the no objection to roadpaving. 5 P Component 3: Project Application for the EU. Eligible expenditures under this component will be for consulting services to prepare the audits for the project and project applications for EU financing, including feasibility studies and preparation of complete tender dossiers. This component will be implemented by the Ministry of Environment and Water Management (MoEWM) which will ensure the following: (a) Romania complies with its commitments made to the EU on making improvements in the environmental sector; and (b) EU grant funds, as available, are effectively used. The MoEWM has chosen 11 counties, covering about 5 million people, where priority water and wastewater projects will be prepared. These counties are: Arad, Sibiu, Galati, Dolj, Ilfov, Mehedinti, Vrancea, Bistrita - Nasaud, Braila, Constanta, and Ialomita. The MoEWM has already started preparing projects in 30 counties and with the additional 11 counties covered in the Municipal Services Project, project preparation will have started in all counties in the country. Within the MoEWM, the General Directorate for Management of Structural Instruments will manage this component. As this directorate is responsible for the programming of EUStructural and Cohesion Funds for the environmental sector, it i s fully aware of the EUprocedures that will be followed under this project. There will be 2 consulting contracts that will be distributed over 11counties, and work will start in all the counties at the same time. The Terms of Reference for the feasibility studies will be similar to the ones used for the other counties that have also started the process of preparing projects to secure EU grant funds (ISPA Measure No: 2003 RO 16P PA 013; Technical Assistance for Project Preparation in the Environment Sector located in Romania; and ISPA Measure No: 2005 RO 16 PPA 001 Technical Assistance for Project Preparation in the Environmental Sector in Romania). The consulting assignment will be carried out intwo phases: Phase 1 (a) data collection and assessment of the water and wastewater infrastructure needs ineachcounty; (b) development of a Master Plan at the county level to identify priorities, taking into account the current situation. The Master Plan should consider all water and wastewater needs at the county level to enable Romania meet to the EU's environmental acquis. It should also be systemic in nature, taking into account the challenges faced by the small and medium sized municipalities to raise financing for the investments; (c) completion of a detailed feasibility study that will include technical, financial and economic analysis, Environmental Impact Assessment, and institutional analysis; (d) completion of an Application Form to seek EUCohesion and Structural Funds; (e) Institutional strengthening for efficient management of environmental investments. Training will be provided to: the MoEWM as the Managing Authority of the Environment Sector Operational Program; the Regional Environmental Protection Agencies as Intermediate Bodies to implement the SOP; and small towns and settlements in the above mentioned 11counties as the final beneficiaries of the project. 6 Preparing complete tender dossiers for services and works, goods, and services contracts for the implementation of the feasibility studies carried out inPhase 1. These contracts will be financed through EUCohesion and Structuralfunds 4. Lessonslearned and reflectedinthe project design The Bank has been involved in municipal projects over many years and across many countries, including those that are current EUmember states and are in accession negotiations with the EU. The experience under the Bucharest Water Supply Project which closed in December 2001i s also well documented in the Bank's Project Performance Assessment Report (June 2003) and Implementation Completion Report (June 2002). Key relevant lessons are: 0 Sustainedpolitical support is critical for municipal investments: Municipal projects often tend to be institutionally complex due to the involvement of two levels of government -central and local which often have different priorities. This leads to delays in project implementation, even in projects that are fully justifiable on economic grounds. In this project, the political support i s strong inbothlevels of government as the investments will help Romania meet its commitment to the EUwhich is a common political and economic goal across the country. This political support to implement the project will remain given the aspiration inthe country for Romania to be a fully integrated EUmember state. 0 The scale and complexity of the project must reflect the capacity of the implementing agencies. The Bucharest Water Supply Project did not engage in a large-scale and complex operation as the beneficiary at that time (in 1996) had limited experience in the implementation of externally financed projects. In the last decade, both the municipalities of Bucharest and h a d have strengthened their institutional capacity and implemented externally financed projects including those financed by the EU. Through the programming and use of ISPA funds and the programming of EU Structural and Cohesion funds, the MoEWM has gained sufficient program and project management experience. Inthis project, the implementation arrangements reflect the advanced institutional capacity of the two municipalities and the MoEWM. 0 Lack of preparedprojects has been a bottleneck to successhlly absorb EUfunds. The utilization rate of the EUISPA grant funds was slow inthe initial years, although progress has been made to virtually commit all the ISPA resources available to Romania. One of the reasons for the slow absorption of EUfunds was that well prepared projects were not in place. Having learned from this lesson, the Government has taken a country-wide approach of preparing a project pipeline that can use EUStructural and Cohesion Funds. Component 3 i s specifically designed to support this initiative of the Government and will help to prepare projects in multiple small towns and settlements. 5. Alternatives consideredand reasonsfor rejection The following options were considered but not pursued as explained below 0 Co-financewith the EU Cohesion and Structural .grants. The project is being implemented at a time when EU ISPA grants have been committed but the Cohesion and Structural funds are not yet programmed. Thus, co-financing with Cohesion and Structural funds was not possible at this stage. Even inthe future, when Romania becomes part of EU, the Cohesion and Structural funds 7 will finance a portion of the total costs of the country to meet EUwater and wastewater directives and there will be projects that will need financing from non-EU grant resources. The Government has identified this project as one where the Bank loan will finance investments that will help the country meet EUdirectives, but for which EUgrant funds are not available. Thus, the project i s not displacingany EUgrants. For component 3, the project i s helpingto develop an investment pipeline for which EUgrant funds for project preparation are not currently available. Thus, through this component, the Bank project allows earlier action than would have been possible otherwise. Further, by having a project pipeline ready, this component will facilitate the absorption of EUCohesion and Structural funds, once they are available. 0 Lend directly to the local government (municipality) with a sovereign guarantee: This option was considered and discussed during project preparation. However, the Government preferred to borrow the Bank loan proceeds and provide them to the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad and the MoEWM. 0 Lend directly to the utilities: The option of making the Bank loan funds available to the water and wastewater utilities in Bucharest and Arad was considered. However, as explained above, due to the Romanian Law on State Aid, a new operator - competitively selected - will be introduced after the assets are created in Arad municipality. Thus, this option could not be pursued as the operator i s not in place in Arad. In Bucharest, Apa Nova does not own the network assets but uses them through a concession contract to provide services. If Apa Nova used the Bank loan to create assets and then transfer them to the municipality, the existing concession contract in Bucharest would have to be significantly amended and that was not a preferred option for the municipality. It would be a fundamental change in the Bucharest concession contract which mentions that Apa Nova will take on services in streets after the municipality installs the network infrastructure and paves the street, which are activities to be carried out by the municipality under the project. C. IMPLEMENTATION 1. Partnershiparrangements(if applicable) The Government and the Bank will fully co-ordinate the activities of this project with the EU, given the central theme of this project to help Romania meet its commitment to the EU. Both the Government and the Bank have had discussions with the EUon the project which i s supportive of the proposed activities. 2. Institutionaland implementationarrangements The Borrower of the Bank loan will be Romania, represented by the MoPF, and the project will be implemented by the following three implementing entities: municipality of Bucharest, municipality of Arad, and the MoEWM. The municipality of Bucharest implemented the Bank-financed Bucharest Water Supply Project and the MoEWM i s currently implementing the Bank-financed Hazard Risk Mitigation and Emergency Preparedness Project. This experience of working with the Bank on other projects was taken into account in developing the implementation arrangements for this project. Details are provided inAnnex 6. There will be a Loan Agreement between Romania and the Bank for all three components of the project. For components 1 and 2, Project Agreements will also be in place between the Bank and the two municipalities. In addition, there will also be Subsidiary Loan Agreement between the MoPF and Arad municipality. Further, there will be a Subsidiary Agreement between MoPF and Bucharest municipality. 8 Both municipalities have experience inhandling internationally financed projects and have the capacity to implement the project. For Component 3, the Borrower, through the MoPF will transfer a portion of the proceeds of the loan to the MoEWM pursuant to its internal procedures. In the MoEWM, the General Directorate for Management of Structural Instruments will be responsible for implementation of this project. This General Directorate i s responsible for programming, monitoring, and authorizing payments for the EU Structural and Cohesionfunds for the environmental sector. Thus, this General Directorate will be able to fully integrate the activities of the Bank with the other ongoing activities related to EU accession, including development of a project pipeline. A Director inthis General Directorate has been assigned to implement the project and for financial managementpurposes, the accounting system of MoEWM will be used. All three implementing entities have staff specialized intechnical, financial, accounting, and procurement matters. These staff members will be responsible for implementing the project. Through the Loan Agreement and the Project Agreements, the MoEWM and the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad will provide assurancesthat they will provide adequate staffing to effectively implement the project. 3. Monitoring and evaluationof outcomedresults The Project Progress Report will be used to monitor and evaluate project progress. The parameters to be monitored are outlined in the Results Framework and Monitoring (Annex 3). The Project Progress Report will be prepared semi-annually by the three implementing entities - the Bucharest municipality, Arad municipality, and the MoEWM -and submitted to the MoPF and the Bank. 4. Sustainability The sustainability of the investments supported under the project is highly likely as the project supports basic services such as water supply, sewerage and stormwater drainage with the first two subject to specific EUperformance standards and monitoring. The national regulatory system will also ensure the sustainability of services. ANRSC i s the national regulator for local services for all cities in the country and it regulates the quality of service and ensures that a proper tariff methodology i s followed. As per the tariff methodology, the utilities propose a tariff to ANRSC; and tariffs endorsed by ANRSC are approved by the municipalities and applied by the operators. ANRSC also monitors service performance standards of utilities. In Bucharest the water and wastewater services are provided by Apa Nova, a utility that has majority private ownership, through a concession contract. In addition to ANRSC, the concession contract i s regulated by Bucharest Regulatory Agency for Water Supply and Sewerage (ARBAC) which also has a mandate to ensure that service levels as agreed in the concession contract are being met. To ensure sustainability of services, the municipality will: (a) keep Apa Nova informed about the project duringthe design and construction phases and provide relevant information, as needed; (b) assign Apa Nova, under the concession contract, to take on the water, wastewater, and stormwater services in the areas covered under the project. The Bank will receive regular reports of ARBAC and annual reports of Apa Nova to see how Apa Nova i s meeting national performance standards; (c) phase the implementation of this project so that investments are made in line with the development of the Baneasa District (the new residential district receiving bulk services and distribution network); and d) ensure that the sector municipalities maintain the roads as per the ongoing road maintenance program. InArad, as explained inSection B3, the municipality will carry out a competitive public tender processto select by June 30, 2008 an operator that would provide wastewater and drainage services in the areas 9 covered under the project. The contract will be signed between the Arad municipality and the operator and the contract i s expected to be long term in nature. ANRSC will regulate the contract on matters of tariffs and performance standards. To ensure the sustainability of investments, the municipality will: (a) select an operator for the sewerage and drainage services through a competitive process to ensure economic prices for the consumers; (b) ensure that the selected operator maintains national performance standards on service delivery, as regulated by ANRSC; and (c) ensure that road maintenance i s outsourced to a private firm, selected on a competitive basis, as per the practice inthe municipality. Given that a national regulatory regime i s already in place, separate tariff covenants have not been designed under the project. However, to ensure the sustainability of investments and proper service, under the Loan Agreement, the Government will ensure that the regulatory activities of ANRSC are not hampered, especially those related to timely endorsement of tariffs and monitoring service performance standards. In addition, through the Project Agreement, Bucharest municipality will agree to approve tariffs proposed by Apa Nova and endorsed by ANRSC. Similarly, through the Project Agreement, the Arad municipality will agree to approve tariffs proposed by the operator to be competitively selected. 5. Critical risks and possiblecontroversial aspects The risks and mitigation measures are summarized below. There are no controversial aspects related to the project which respondsto the aquis obligation undertaken by the Government. M resources to meet ions, as necessary. Failure to do so could lead to S the project closes. effective project over to an operator M M M estimated by the Bucharest Baneasadistrict such that services are only provided inareas where municipality. Iconnections are assured. H-High; S -Significant; M-Moderate; and N-Negligible 10 6. Loan conditions and covenants The list below i s a summary of the key loan conditions and covenants in the legal documents of the project. In the legal documents, the Government is referred to as the Borrower and the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad as Project ImplementingEntities. LoanAgreement Key conditions o f the Loan Agreement are listed below. Effectiveness Condition e The Borrower has executed a Subsidiary Agreement and a Subsidiary Loan Agreement, respectively, with the Municipality of Bucharest and the Municipality of Arad, and they are valid, inforce and bindinginaccordancewiththeir terms. Other Conditions The Borrower shall maintain within the MoEWM adequate staff and financial resources to effectively implement component 3 of the project; The Borrower shall ensure that component 3 of the project i s carried out in conformity with the provisions of the Romanian Environmental Legislation and Cultural Property Legislation. Accordingly, the first three environmental impact assessment studies will be sent to the Bank; The Borrower, through the MoEWM, shall submit to the Bank a consolidated Project Progress Report covering all three components of the project on a semi-annual basis not later than two (2) months after the end of the periodcovered by such reports; The Borrower shallmaintain a financial management system acceptable to the Bank; The project's financial statements, withdrawal applications and relevant Designated Account will be audited by independent auditors acceptable to the Bank and on terms of reference acceptable to the Bank. The annual audited financial statements and audit report will be provided to the Bank within six months after the end of each fiscal year; The Borrower through the MoEWM will prepare a consolidated mid-term report of the project by April 30,2008, including measures to be taken to efficiently complete all parts of the project; and will review this report with the Banknot later than June 30, 2008; and The Borrower shall not take or permit to be taken any action that would affect the operations of ANRSC with respect to: (i) endorsing tariffs proposed by Apa Nova and the operator to be selected in Arad municipality, in line with applicable legislation to modify tariffs; and (ii) monitoring compliance by Apa Nova and the selected operator in Arad to meet applicable performance indicators for the delivery of public services. Bucharest Project Agreement The Bucharest Municipality shall: e maintain adequate staff and financial resources to effectively implement component 1 of the project; e ensure that component 1 of the project i s carried out in conformity with the provisions of the Romanian EnvironmentalLegislation and Cultural Property Legislation; e ensure that implementation of component 1 of the project does not cause, or result in, resettlement as defined inthe Loan Agreement; 11 shall submit to the MoEW a Project Progress Report on a semi-annual basis, outlining the progress made in meeting the monitoring indicators for component 1of the project; maintain a financial management system acceptableto the Bank; ensure that the project's financial statements, withdrawal applications and relevant Designated Account are audited by independent auditors acceptable to the Bank and on Terms of Reference acceptable to the Bank. The annual audited financial statements and audit report will be provided to the Bank within six months after the endof each fiscal year; prepare a mid-termreport by March 31,2008, including measuresto carry out component 1of the project efficiently; and submit this report to MoEWM and the Bank, and review the report with the Bank not later than June 30,2008; keep Apa Nova informed about the progress inthe implementation of component 1of the project during the design and construction phase and provide to it the relevant information needed for Apa Nova to take on the services inthe project area and provide them in an efficient manner; upon an exchange of views with Apa Nova, extend the area of the concession contract upon completion of the works financed under component 1of the project; provide to the Bank annual reports of Apa Nova including the information on how Apa Nova i s meeting performance standards established by ANRSC; inBaneasa district, agree with the developer upon a phasedimplementation planof component 1 of the project to ensurethat services are only provided to those areas that have been developed; ensure that the sector municipalities maintain the roads as per the ongoing road maintenance program; through its General Council: (i) approve tariffs proposed by Apa Nova and endorsed by ANRSC for drinking water supply and sewerage services in accordance with the provisions of national legislation and the concession contract with Apa Nova; and (ii)ensure adequate operation of ARBAC to monitor Apa Nova's compliance with the level of services stipulatedinthe concession contract and submitto the Bank ARBAC's annual report on an annual basis; submit to the Borrower and the Bank: (i) June 30 of each year, the actual revenues and by expenditure of the preceding year and the estimated draft budget for the current year; and (ii) by December 31of eachyear, the draft budget for the following year; and take corrective actions agreed upon with the Borrower and the Bank as necessary to ensure that it i s able to meet its financial obligations under the project which shall enable the Project ImplementingEntity to make available the counterpart funds ina timely manner. Arad Project Agreement The Arad Municipality shall: a maintain adequate staff and financial resources to effectively implement component 2 of the project; 0 ensure that component 2 of the project i s carried out in conformity with the provisions of the RomanianEnvironmentalLegislation and Cultural Property Legislation; 0 ensure that implementation of component 2 of the project does not cause, or result in, resettlement as defined inthe Loan Agreement; 0 shall submit to the MoEW a Project Progress Report on a semi-annual basis, outlining the progress made inmeetingthe monitoring indicators for component 2 of the project; a maintain a financial management system acceptable to the Bank; a ensure that the project's financial statements, withdrawal applications and the relevant Designated Account are audited by independent auditors acceptable to the Bank and on Terms of Reference acceptableto the Bank. The annual audited financial statements and audit report will be provided to the Bank within six months after the end of each fiscal year; 12 prepare a mid-term report by March 31,2008, including measures to carry out component 2 of the project efficiently; and submit this report to MoEWM and the Bank, and review the report with the Bank not later than June 30, 2008; undertake a public competitive tender process to conclude a service or a concession contract with an operator, by June 30, 2008, which will provide wastewater and drainage services through the assets created under component 2 of the project; provide to the Bank, annual report of the selected operator, including information on how it is meeting performance standards established by ANRSC; ensure that road maintenance i s outsourced to a private firm selected on a competitive basis pursuant to the practice in the municipality; through its Local Council approve tariffs, proposed by the selected operator and endorsed by ANRSC, for sewerage and drainage services as per the provisions of national legislation; ensure that the proceeds of the loan will finance only road paving investments that yield a satisfactory economic rate of return; such assessment are to be based on an economic analysis previously reviewed and approved by the Bank; a submit to the Borrower and the Bank (i) June 30 of each year, the actual revenues and by expenditure of the preceding year and the estimated draft budget for the current year; and (ii) by December 31of each year, the draft budget for the following year; and take corrective actions agreed upon with the Borrower and the Bank as necessaryto ensure that it i s able to meet its financial obligations under the project which shall enable the Project ImplementingEntity to make available the counterpart funds ina timely manner. D. APPRAISAL SUMMARY 1. Economic andfinancial analyses Economic analysis The project i s justified on regulatory grounds given Romania's commitment to meet EUdirectives. The water supply, sewerage, and drainage investments proposed in this project are fully consistent with the commitments made by Romania to the EU and reflect the priorities of the Government (as expressed in the SOP) and the municipalities. Moreover, in Bucharest, the investments will support Apa Nova providing services in areas that do not have access to piped water and sewerage services and are not served by any utility. The incidence of water borne diseases in Bucharest and Arad are higher than the national average (see table 2). Through improvements in the water supply and sewerage system, the municipalities expect to reduce these diseases. Although the Government has identified improved health as an expected outcome of the investments, they lack epidemiological analysis demonstrating a causal linkbetween the two. Therefore, noestimate of healthbenefits has been attempted. Bucharest Arad I NationalAverage Dysentery 6 19 3 Hepatitis A 24 17 17 Acute Diarrhea 381 467 142 13 Inaddition to the benefits from improved water and wastewater services of the serviced population, water supply pipelines will improve the hydraulics of the city-wide water supply network and improve the reliability and pressure in the network which in turn will improve the functioning of the system for the whole municipality. Water and Wastewater Investments The benefits of these investments are: (a) positive externalities at the regional and country levels due to the environmental improvements supported by the project. These externalities are difficult to quantify and as a result not included in a cost benefit analysis; (b) provision of water and wastewater services through an operator, which will improve the quality of service and reduce health and environmental risks. The incremental revenues due to piped water are used as a proxy for benefits of piped water services (convenience, better quality). Similarly, incremental wastewater revenues are used as a proxy for benefits of having a sewage system and discontinuingthe use of septic tanks; (c) increase in the value of property and land where the infrastructure will be upgraded. The expected increase inthe value of the property as judged by municipal authorities will be tremendous as seen in the incremental property tax revenues that the city plans to collect from the project areas. The property tax i s assessed at around 0.2% of the value of the property and the expected incremental taxes from the project areas are as follows: Bucharest (2009) - RON 866,000; and Arad (2010) - RON908,000. The incrementaltax, representing a low estimate of the benefit of increased property value due to the upgraded infrastructure, i s estimated to be 12.8 and 10.4 annually on a per capita basis inBucharest and Arad, respectively. A cost-benefit analysis for the water and wastewater investments was completed. The analysis did not capture the externalities and the full amount of increase in property value. Thus, the rates of return are a low estimate. Nevertheless, they provide ajustification for the investments (Details inAnnex 9). 0 Bucharest (areas with existing population): These are the Straulesti, Vatra Noua, Giulesti Sarbi, Giulesti Triaj districts that need water and sewerage services. The expected rate of return i s 12.3%. 0 Bucharest (growth areas): These are the Banasea, Otopeni North, and Odai districts which are growth areas and where the city has to provide water and wastewater services. The rate of return i s 9.4%. 0 Arad: the sewage network will benefit the domestic population in the Gai, Bujac, and Sanicolaul Mic areas. In addition, the industries will benefit from the sewage installed. The rate of return i s 6.2%, which is acceptablefor such sewage investments, given the positive externalities. Stormwater Currently, most areas are served by a combined wastewater system. This results in a low concentration of BOD in wastewaters reaching the treatment plant. In most areas under the project, separate wastewater systems have been proposed due to the following reasons: (a) the increased BOD concentration in the sewerage will improve the operation of the Waste Water Treatment Plant (WWTP) to be completed in 2010 inBucharest and 2008 in Arad; (b) by constructing separate wastewater systems in most districts in Bucharest and Arad, the additional hydraulic load reaching the WWTPs will be reduced; (c) in both cities it is possible to discharge stormwater near the project areas into open channels and rivers, and thus avoiding the construction of larger diameter pipes that would be needed to transport the wastewater over long distances. 14 A cost benefit analysis for stormwater has not been shown as the benefits of flood prevention and improved environmental and health conditions are difficult to quantify. During project implementation, both municipalities will have to demonstrate that the most cost effective design solution was chosen, prior to the Bank's no objection for financing. Road Paving Streets in which water, sewerage or stormwater pipes have been laid require the road to be restored to at least its original state. However, roads will be paved where there is a compelling economic justification for the investment. InBucharest, Apa Novawill only take onthe responsibility of provision of water and wastewater services innew areas once the municipality has pavedthe roads. This is acondition of the concession contract for Apa Nova to expand services. Expanding water and wastewater service provision through utilities is also an objective of the Government. Thus, inproject areas, paving of roads i sjustified. InArad, road paving will be financed if the investment is shown to have a satisfactory economic rate of return. This analysis will be carried out during project implementation. The Bank's Roads Economic Decision Model (RED) will be used for the analysis. This model takes into account, the traffic, condition of unpaved roads in dry and wet seasons, vehicle speed, types of paving, and accident rates. The municipality will conduct the analysis with assistancefrom the Bank. Financial Analysis The Borrower of the Bank loan will be Romania represented by its MoPF and the Bank loan will be denominated in Euros. The Government agreed on the following approach for its support to the municipalities. The decision to support the investments was taken by the central Government based on the country's need to meet EUdirectives and the highlevel of environmental externalities involved in the project. InBucharest, the municipality will finance 35% of the project costs ( 25.9 million) from its own sources, the remaining 65% will be financed through the Bank loan which will be provided to the municipality by the MoPF on a grant basis. This grant assistance from the MoPF to Bucharest i s in line with the EUgrant assistance provided for projects where EU Cohesion and Structural grant funds are expected to finance 80% of costs of projects (where EUgrants are available). The MoPF intends to incur the expenditure for the project and report it to the EU as Government contribution towards implementing the SOP, in line with EU's additionality principle where important investments - to meet EU directives - need to be completed even without the availability of EU grants. This assistance to the Bucharest municipality i s very small compared to the overall transfers from the central Government to Bucharest. In 2006, the expected transfers, mainly due to shared tax, will be around 465 million (RON 1.634 million), which will remain stable at the level of 462 billion (Annex 9; Table 4). In Arad, the municipality will contribute about 3.1 million as counterpart funds and the Bank loan will be 47.2 million, which will be on-lent to the municipality of Arad at terms and conditions that are identical to the Bank loan to the Government. The Arad municipality will service 20% of the debt (includingprincipal and interest) and the remaining debt service will be borne by the MoPF. This will be in line with the EUgrant assistanceprovided for projects where EUCohesion and Structural grant funds are expected to finance 80% of project costs. All charges related to the Arad portion of the loan will be borne by the Arad municipality. Compared to the volume of central Government transfers, the assistance provided by the MoPF on this project i s small. In 2006, the central Government transfers to Arad municipality are expected to be around 34 million, which will steadily increase over 17 years, the period 15 over which MoPF will provide the debt service support (Annex 9; Table 5). As in Bucharest, the expenditures incurred by the central Government for the Arad portion of the project will also be reported by the MoPF to the EUas central Government financing of the SOP. The municipalities will be responsible for providing the counterpart funds for the project and in the case of Arad the municipality will also be responsible for a portion of debt service. Financial projections, which were reviewed by the Borrower, of the two municipalities are shown in Annex 9. In the projections, the revenue and expenditure streams match because Romanian legislation requires that the budget for public institutions should be full balanced without any surplus or deficit. The exchange rate risks for both municipalities have been taken into consideration by adjusting the EUR to RON exchange rate with the projected RON inflation. However, the exchange rate risk in Bucharest does not arise as it will not service the Bank loan. The projections indicate that both municipalities will be able to meet their obligations in regards to (a) local counterpart financing for the project; and (b) debt service (Arad only), while remaining in compliance with the applicable limits on borrowing. To ensure that municipalities have adequate revenues to implement the project, the following i s included in the Project Agreement: on an annual basis, the municipalities will present to the MoPF and the Bank the budgeted and actual revenues and expenditures for the year and the draft budget for the next year. The incremental revenues and expenditures of the municipality due to the project will be presentedinthe actual and budget statements. In Bucharest, the counterpart funding requirements are small compared to the overall revenues of the municipality and as a result the non-availability of counterpart funds i s not expected to be an issue. The expenditures under this project have already been programmed under the total capital expenditures of the municipality. Nevertheless, the municipality has set aside reserves that will be used for the project, in case there i s a shortage of funds. After 2010, there will be no counterpart funding requirements or debt service requirements for Bucharest. 2. Technical There are no outstanding technical issues related to the project. Detailed feasibility studies were conducted to determine the technical options followed under the project. The Bank provided comments on draft feasibility reports. Some design features were modified based on the comments provided by the Bank - such as the scaling-down of the investments proposed for stormwater treatment, and the review of design and construction standards to comply with current EU practices. The proposed investments are technically viable, well tested and not complicated. The Project Progress Report will be used to determine the progress made in meeting the project outcome indicators. Details are provided in Annexes 3 and 4. 3. Fiduciary Procurement The procurement arrangements of the project are satisfactory. The implementing entities - Bucharest and Arad municipalities and MoEWM - are familiar with procurement procedures followed by International Financial Institutions (PIS) and have adequate capacity to implement the project. The Bucharest municipality and the MoEWM have also worked with the Bank on other projects and are familiar with Bank's procurement procedures. Moreover,, the number of contracts will be limited which will minimize the procurement procedures to be followed. Detailed are provided in Annex 8. 16 Financial Management The first Country Financial Accountability Assessment (CFAA) for Romania was finalized in December 2003 and concluded that the overall fiduciary risk associated with the public financial management and financial accountability arrangements of the Romanian government administration i s moderate. The assessment concluded that systems for accounting, financial reporting, and internal control represent areas of high risk while budgeting, cash management, external audit, and Parliamentary oversight represent a lower risk. The financial management arrangementsof the project are satisfactory. Details are provided in Annex 7. The project will rely, to the extent possible, on the country's financial management country systems, as follows: Implementing entities - the project will be implemented by the Bucharest and Arad municipalities and the MoEWM usingexisting mechanisms inthese institutions; Staffing - project implementation will be carried out by employees of Bucharest and Arad municipalities and the MoEWM; Internal control - the project will use the existing internal control mechanisms of the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad and within MoEWM with additional procedures developed for the project; Flow of funds -the loan funds will be used to directly pay contractors or suppliers or through the Designated Accounts; Internal audit -as the internal audit departments inthe implementing entities continue to develop, the project will rely to the extent possible on these for the project internal audit; External audit - the Romanian Supreme Audit Institution, Court of Accounts will perform an operational review of the project; and Accounting and reporting system - the project will rely on the existing systems within the implementingentities. The Borrower i s in compliance with its audit covenants for existing Bank-financed projects. The formats of the Interim Financial Reports (IFR) and the financial reports and the Terms of Reference have been agreed. The issues raised in the CFAA have been addressed in the following manner: a detailed review of the financial management systems was conducted for each implementing entity; each implementing entity will set up distinct project-specific accounting ledgers; project accounting staff are employees of the implementing entities; the format of the IFRand audit TORShave been agreed with the Bank; and project financial statementswill be annually audited by independent auditors. 4. Social The project will have significant social benefits due to increased coverage of basic services such as water and wastewater, in line with the urban development plans of Bucharest and Arad municipalities. The project will also support urban development in the northern part of Bucharest, which i s a growing residential and commercial area. The infrastructure development in Arad will support the industrial growth in the city and support efforts to create a significant number of new jobs. In addition, the stormwater drainage will reduce flooding inthe cities of Bucharest and Arad. 17 The project will also support the development of water and wastewater investments in 11counties. Once these investments are completed, the population in these counties will receive improved water and wastewater services. The financing arrangements for the Bucharest and Arad project components have been designed specifically taking into account the affordability of tariffs. Currently, the social affordability of tariffs is around RON 2.0/m3 of water' which is close to the combined water and wastewater tariffs in the two municipalities (with VAT): e Bucharest: RON 2.01/m3(water RON 1.38/m3;wastewater RON0.39/m3; VAT 19%); and e Arad: 2.03/m3(water RON 1.39/m3;wastewater RON0.32/m3; VAT 19%) The tariff methodology used by ANRSC takes into account affordability conditions in line with the practices of EUmember countries in establishing a tariff methodology. Thus, the project will rely on the national system of establishing tariffs and the Government will facilitate proper functioning of ANRSC with regards to endorsing tariffs and regulating service standards. 5. Environment The project will have an important and a positive environmental impact and will lead to: (a) provision of good quality piped water service (Bucharest); (b) reductionof pollution of groundwater which i s currently affected by leaking septic tanks; and (c) elimination of flooding in urban areas. Further, these investments will help. Romania comply with the EU environmental directives, in line with the commitments made by the country to the EUto become an EUmember state. The component with the MoEWM i s designed to implement the Romanian environmental Sector Operational Plan. Priority water and wastewater investments will be defined in 11 counties and once these investments are completed, improved environmental conditions will be available to the population of these counties. 6. Safeguard policies Safeguard Policies Triggered by the Project Yes No EnvironmentalAssessment (OP/BP/GP 4.01) [I [XI Natural Habitats (OP/BP 4.04) Pest Management (OP 4.09) Cultural Property (OPN 11.03, being revised as OP 4.11) Involuntary Resettlement (OP/BP 4.12) Indigenous Peoples (OD 4.20, beingrevised as OP 4.10) Forests (OP/BP 4.36) Safety of Dams (OP/BP 4.37) Projects inDisputed Areas (OP/BP/GP 7.60)* Projects on InternationalWaterways (OP/BP/GP 7.50) Piloting the Use of Borrower Systems to Address Environmental and Social Safeguard Issues inBank-SupportedProjects (OP [XI 4.00) The assumptions are: annual household income 2,500; affordable level of water and wastewater bills - 3% of household income; 2.8 persons per household; per capita daily consumption - 125 liters. * By supportingthe proposedproject, the Bank does not intend to prejudice the final determination of the parties' claims on the disputed areas 18 For the project, the following safeguards will be triggered: (a) Projects on International Waterways; and (b) Piloting the Use of Borrower Systems to Address Environmental and Social Safeguard Issues inBank Supported Projects. Under the latter policy, the Bank i s recommending the use of Romanian systems to address environmental and social safeguard issues in this project in the following areas: (a) EnvironmentalAssessment; and (b) Cultural Property. For components 1 and 2, works will be carried out on public lands owned by the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad. The municipalities through the Project Agreements have confirmed to the Bank that all construction will take place on land that i s owned by them and on which there are no persons with legal claims to the land. Thus, the project will not result in any adverse impact on people due to loss of access to land or other assets. As a result the Bank's policy on Involuntary Resettlement will not be triggered. The final designs for the constructionhave not yet been completed and the land to be used for the works will be selected in line with the confirmations provided by the municipalities in the Project Agreements. Based on field visits, and information and assurances provided by the municipalities, the Bank team confirms that the approach proposed by the municipalities will help avoid any adverse impact on people due to project activities. Compliance with this approach will be verified during Bank supervision missions. Equivalence and Acceptability Assessments: This project was selected for piloting the use of country systems under the Bank's OP/BP 4.00. Thus, a safeguards diagnostic study was undertaken to assess: (a) the equivalence of Romanian systems and World Bank requirements; and (b) the acceptability of implementation practices, track record and capacity of the agencies involved.2 The equivalence and acceptability assessment was carried out by an interdisciplinary team of Bank staff in collaboration with relevant Government staff. The Bank review included meetings and site visits in cooperation with environmentalofficials at the central, regional and local levels. The methodology included desk review of current legislation and supporting mandatory guidelines. The results of the diagnostic review indicate that the operational principles of Environmental Assessment as statedinTable A1 of OP4.00 and the RomanianEnvironmentalImpact Assessment (EIA) system have many common features and that there are no gaps in equivalency. With respect to the acceptability, it was also found that Romania's current approach to EL4 conforms to OP 4.00. As per Bank's policy on Environmental Assessment, the project i s categorized as an environmental category B since the investments will be related to small civil works without significant impact to the environment. Regardingcultural property, the Romanian systems are equivalent to that of the Bank and appropriate for application, if needed. If the project requires construction or rehabilitation near historic buildings or other physical cultural resources, or if "chance finds" are encountered, Romanian systems are at least as effective as those outlined in OP/BP 4.00 on such points. Inventories of buildings and sites of cultural significance are available, and stakeholders are consulted to assess whether proposed investment projects might cause impact. Local experts on archeology, architecture and other relevant fields are brought infor assessments before construction decisions are made, and if "chance finds" are encountered during construction. Bank supervision on safeguard-related matters will continue, on a semi-annual basis, throughout the implementation of the proposed project to: (a) ensure compliance with equivalent and acceptable Romanianprocedures; and (b) track results inenvironmentaloutcomes. Safeguards Diagnostic Review for Piloting the Use of Romanian Systems to Address Environmental and Social Safeguard Issues in the Proposed World Bank-Assisted Romania Municipal Services Project and Transport Sector Support Project. Equivalence andAcceptability Assessment Report. World Bank, Final Draft April, 2006. 19 Public Consultation and Disclosure: Staff from the Ministry of Environment and Water Management (MoEWM) and the World Bank jointly organized a public consultation workshop to discuss the draft version of the Equivalence and Acceptability Report in Bucharest in December 2005. The MoEWM had circulated copies of the Executive Summary of the draft report to a large number individuals and relevant agencies inviting them to participate in the public consultation and comment on the report. Over thirty- five people, representing non-Government officials, consultants, academia, and various Government departments, attended this workshop. Participants expressed their support to the proposal to pilot Romanian environmental and social system in the context of the project and agreed with the findings and gap filling actions proposed to achieve and sustain equivalence and acceptability. The full report, including the executive summary, was disclosed inRomania and inWashington on January 25,2006. The equivalency analysis did not cover the Bank's policy on International Waterways where the Bank's policy will apply for components 1and 2 of the project as: in Bucharest stormwater will be discharged to the Dambovita River that discharges to the Arges River that flows into the Danube River - an international waterway. In Arad the stormwater discharge will flow into the Mures river that flows into the Tisza river in Hungary which meets the Danube in Hungary before it flows through Romania to the Black Sea. Further, in both cities, additional wastewater will be collected due to sewerage connections. This wastewater will be fully treated before it is discharged to the Mures and Dambovita rivers. Although the impact of the project i s negligible compared to the flow of the Danube River, in accordance with Bank policies, the MoEWM informed the International Commission for Protection of the Danube River (ICPDR) on December 28, 2005 about this project. On February 22, 2006, the ICPDR replied to the MoEWM acknowledging receipt of the letter from the Government and did not raise any objections to the project. The ICPDR also mentioned that it had informed the riparians and welcomed the initiative taken by Romania to improve the Danube water quality. For component 3, the MoEWM sent a supplemental notification to ICPDR on May 15, 2006. In the supplemental notification, Romania informed the ICPDR that it would like to access EU Structural and Cohesion funds in 11counties. To this end, Technical Assistance under the Bank project is required for preparing project applications to secure EUgrants, institutional strengthening of stakeholders, screening of projects to establish priorities, preparation of feasibility studies, and completing tender dossiers (including detailed design and engineering studies). The notification also mentions that given the nature of the investments (improve water and wastewater quality), adverse effects on the riparian countries are not expected. The ICPDR was given until May 31, 2006 to respond to the supplemental notification. A response time of 15 days was considered sufficient as the notification i s supplemental in nature, for activities that are not expected to have any adverse effects on the riparians. 7. Policy Exceptionsand Readiness The project does not require any exceptions to Bank policies. The project i s ready for implementation as indicatedthrough the following: 0 Fiduciary arrangements-financial management and procurement -are satisfactory and inplace; 0 The staff inthe municipalities of Bucharest and Arad and the MoEWM has been assignedto work on the project; 0 The financing arrangement of the project has been confirmed with the MoPF, MoEWM, and the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad; 0 The feasibility study for the entire project has been completed and a General Procurement Notice has been issued to select a consultant to carry out the detailed design and pre-qualify contractors that will carry out the works; and 0 The disclosure requirements of the project have been met. 20 Annex 1: Country and Sector or ProgramBackground ROMANIA: MUNICIPALSERVICESPROJECT Sector Background As part of its accession negotiations, Romania has agreed to comply with the EUdirectives on water and wastewater. The key issues and the actions being taken by Romania are summarized below. DrinkingWater The Drinking Water Directive (98/83/EC) focuses on the quality of water intended for human consumption and introduces a comprehensive monitoring regime for various parameters affecting human health, while taking actions to disseminate results and increase public awareness of drinking water quality concerns. Investments are required throughout the agreed implementation period to improve the quality of delivered drinking water. Some of the key issues affecting water quality in Romania are high levels of bacteria, pesticides, nitrates in groundwater sources, and heavy metals in a limited number of communities due to past pollution. In addition, the aging water distribution network leads to high water losses and increases operation and maintenance costs. Further, the materials used in some pipes - asbestos cement, lead, and iron-need to be replaced. About 65% of the population is served through piped water sources. Romania has 9 water treatment plants in cities with more than 200,000 people and 14 plants serving cities where the population ranges from 100,000 to 200,000. All the larger communities are expected to reach compliance with EU water quality parameters by 2010 and the smaller communities3by 2015. Wastewater The Urban Wastewater Directive (91/27IEEC) aims to help protect the environment from the adverse effects of wastewater discharges and wastewater of certain industrial sectors. It requires household wastewater to be collected and treated inall communities with a population equivalent greater than 2,000. Tertiary treatment i s required for identified "sensitive" areas in the EU. Romania's commitments to the EUinclude designating the entire territory of Romania as "sensitive", due to its location inthe Black Sea and Danube River Water Basins which have internationally known concerns with nutrient loading. Approximately 52% of inhabitants have access to wastewater collection and treatment systems- with approximately 90% of this coverage in urban areas and approximately 10%coverage in rural areas. As a baseline - 112 wastewater treatment plants in Romania have primary (mechanical) treatment, 228 have biological treatment, and 6 treatment plants use chemical treatment. Key issues affecting the sector include: poor wastewater quality of discharges to open waterways due to low levels of treatment; lack of sewage network coverage for a high percentage of the population; sewage leaks in areas where the sewerage network is not in good condition; and inadequate tariffs to meet operation and maintenance costs which will go up to meet wastewater treatment costs. Investments related to meeting this directive include construction of new treatment plants and rehabilitation of existing ones. In addition, sewerage networks have to be rehabilitatedand extended. 111 water treatment plants serving between 10,000 - 100,000 people; and 1,774 water treatment plants serving communities with less than 10,000 people. 21 Sectoral Operational Program SOP Environment - Romania has drafted a Sectoral Operational Program (SOP) for the environmental sector which lays out the plan of the country to meet its commitment to the EU. The SOP i s in draft form and the version described below has incorporated the comments from the EU. The SOP i s expected to be finalized by December 2006. The SOP has the following objectives: 9 Improvement of access to water infrastructure, by providingwater supply and wastewater services inline with EUpractices and policies, inmost urban areas by 2015. 9 Improvement of soil quality, by improving waste management services and improving environmental conditions of landfills in a minimum of 30 counties, in line with EU practices and policies by 2015. 9 Reduction of negative environmental impacts caused by old municipal thermal plants in polluted localities by 2015. 9 Protection and improvement of biodiversity and natural heritage by supporting protected area management, including NATURA 2000 implementation. 9 Reduction of natural disasters affecting the population, by implementing preventive measuresin most vulnerable areas by 2015. To meet the above objectives, Romania is planningthe following six priority activities which will be co- ordinated by the MoEWM: 1. Extension and modernization of water and wastewater systems. (Total Cost: 2,870.59 million) The development of regional management systems for water and wastewater i s planned. For the water and wastewater services, currently, there are about 950 operators throughout the country. The Government plans to group these operators into regional operators functioning at the county level and license the regional operators through ANRSC. Through these regional operators, good quality service at affordable tariffs will be provided. The operators are also expected to upgrade the infrastructure to provide efficient services. Indicative activities are: constructiodmodernization of water sources intended for the drinking water abstraction; constructionhehabilitation of water treatment plants; extensiodrehabilitation of water and sewerage networks; constructiodupgrading of wastewater treatment plants; constructionlrehabilitation of sludge treatment facilities; and metering and purchase of laboratory equipment, leakage detectionequipment. The SOP outlines the following indicators to measureprogress. B y 2013: 9 250 new localities will have new or rehabilitated water systems, operated by regional utilities; 9 70% of the population will have access to piped water. Currently 52% of the population benefits from this service; 9 250 new wastewater treatment plants will be operational in compliance with EU Directives; and 9 60% of the wastewater collected will be adequately treated. Currently, 35% i s treated; 22 2. Development of integrated waste management systems and reduction of hazardous sites. (Total Cost: 966.25 million) An integrated waste managementsystemis planned. Indicative activities are: construction of new municipal waste disposal facilites and transfer stations; construction of sorting, recycling and composting facilities; purchase and installation of waste collection systems; purchase of waste transport vehicles; construction of environmentally sound landfills for municipal hazardous waste (medical waste, electric and electronics waste etc.) and other waste streams (construction and demolition waste etc.); and rehabilitation of old landfills. The SOP outlines the following indicators to measureprogress. By 2013: 9 8 millionpeople will benefit from the strategic projects for waste management; and 9 90 old landfills will be rehabillitated. To date, 13 have been rehabilitated. 3. Improvement of municipal heating systems in selected priority area. (Total Cost: 400 million) The plan i s to reduce the negative impact on the environment and human health in urban areas mostly pollutedby old district heating systems. Indicative activities are: upgrading large combustion plants with new technologies (rehabilitation of boilers and turbines); introduction of best available technologies for reduction of SOz, NO,, and dust; introduction of metering; rehabilitation of non-compliant slag and ash landfills; and rehabilitation of hot water and heating distribution networks. The SOP outlines the following indicator to measureprogress. By 2013: 9 air quality improved in8 localities due to rehabilitateddistrict heating systems. 4. Implementation of Adequate Management Systems for Nature Protection. (Total Cost: 187.5 million) Activities will support biodiversity and nature conservation through development of an adequate management framework for protected areas, including NATURA2000 sites. Indicative activities are: capacity building for related institutions; completion of scientific studies including monitoring, mapping and preparation of inventories; development and implementation of management plans for the protected areas and Natura 2000 sites (ecological reconstruction, infrastructure development, public awareness, high biodiversity .value land acquisition inorder to become state public property). The SOP outlines the following indicators to measureprogress. By 2013: 9 managementplans effective in 35 protected areas; and 9 50% of the protected area benefitingfrom nature conservation measures 23 5. Implementation of adequate infrastructure of natural risk prevention in most vulnerable areas. (Total Cost: 279.17 million) Activities will focus on protection against floods and reducing coastal erosion in the southern Romanian Black Sea shore. Indicative activities are: construction works for flood prevention; development of hazard and flood risk maps; and rehabilitation of Black Sea shore affected by erosion. The indicators for this priority are being developed and will include: population benefiting from floods protection measures, and kilometres of seashore rehabilitated. 6. Technical assistance. (Total Cost: 200 million) To be able to implement the SOP and effectively absorb EU Cohesion and Structural funds, Technical Assistance (TA) i s planned. Indicative activities are: project preparation; strengthening the central and local government agencies responsible for programming and utilizing the EUgrants; monitoring and evaluation of the progress made in implementing SOP; and public awarenesscampaigns. The indicators for the TA are being developed and will include: number of projects prepared, training provided, audits completed, and number of public awarenessevents completed. FinancingPlan The SOP covers the period between 2007 and 2013, the program i s expected to cost around 4,903.51 million, and the financing plan i s shown below. The total EUgrants to finance the SOP are expected to be around 3,960 million, representing about 23.5% of the total EUgrants allocated for Romania. The central and the local governments, together, are expected to contribute about 943.51 million over the same period. The breakdowns on allocation of EU grants by year and the cost and financing plan are shown below. CF-CohesionFund; ERDF-EuropeanRegionalDevelopmentFund I I 24 Annex 2: Major Related Projects Financed by the Bank and/or other Agencies ROMANIA: MUNICIPALSERVICESPROJECT The most relevant Bank-financed project in the sector is the Bucharest Water Supply Project which had the following review: 0 The Project Performance Assessment Report prepared by the Bank's Operations Evaluation Department (June 9, 2003) rated the outcome of the project as `satisfactory', its sustainability as `likely' and its institutional development impact as `substantial'. The project i s cited as "an example of successful assistance by the World Bank Group where the Bank helped prepare and finance much needed rehabilitation investments which facilitated the private concession for which the Government of Romania was assistedby the InternationalFinance Corporation. Once a private concession became a possibility the Bank vigorously supported it." 0 The Implementation Completion Report (June 24, 2002) rated the outcome of the project as `satisfactory' and the institutional development of the project as `substantial' given that the project supported the involvement of the Apa Nova, the private concessionaire that i s now providing services to the city. 25 Annex 3: ResultsFramework and Monitoring ROMANIA: MUNICIPALSERVICESPROJECT ResultsFramework Improved access to water supply Determine the progress made in Environmental directives in the meetingEUstandards; meetingthe project objective water and wastewater sector, thereby Improved access to sanitation improving the quality and coverage meetingEUstandards; of water and wastewater services. Proportion of the project area This objective will be met through: protectedfrom flooding; Improved road surfacing (in areas a) the support of infrastructure where water, sewerage, and development in the municipalities of stormwater networks will be laid); Bucharestand Arad to provide better and water and wastewater service and Projects applications prepared for improve stormwater management; EUfunding and b) preparation of priority water and mediateOutcome Procurementof construction Status of water, sewerage, stormwater, The status of the works contracts contracts and works on schedulefor and roadpaving contracts will be usedto monitor &ad and Bucharest implementation progressand corrective actions will be taken, as needed Procurementof consulting contracts Status of the consulting contracts for The status of the consultancy and consultancy assignmenton the preparationof projects in 11 contracts will be usedto monitor schedule for the component counties implementation progressand managedby MoEWM corrective actionswill be taken, as needed 26 I I -8 a 9 32 3-8oC 3 32 2 2 2 04: 8 P I P 0 2 a* I0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 o c 0 0 za .c .4 VI VI Y Y 3 b0 C 8 C 8 Annex 4: Detailed Project Description ROMANIA: MUNICIPAL SERVICESPROJECT Details of components 1and 2 of the project are presentedbelow. A. BUCHARESTCOMPONENT Background Bucharest, the capital of Romania, i s the country's largest city with a population of 2.2 million. The city i s divided into six sectors and currently about 20% of the population does not have access to centralized and quality water supply and sewerage services. Flooding of the city occurs frequently which creates health hazards. Further, the existing infrastructure i s old and requires rehabilitation for the provision of quality service. Inorder to addresscity's water supply and wastewater services need, the municipality has embarked on a 5-year upgrading program, consistent with the General Urban Plan for the metropolitan area which was approved in November 2005 and a Wastewater Master Plan (2004). The urban plan has four phases: Phase Iforesees the extension of water supply and wastewater services in sectors 1 and 6 of the city which i s expected to start in 2006; in Phase 2, services will be extended to sectors 3 and 4; in Phase 3, services will be extended for sectors 2 and 5; and Phase 4 will be to improve the services in the entire metropolitan area. This project covers Phase 1of the upgrading program. Sectors 1and 6 were selected for the first phase mainly due to the highneedfor improved services: 22% and 24% of households do not have water supply in sectors 1 and 6, respectively. Similarly about 25% and 40% of households do not have sewerage connections in sectors 1and 6, respectively. Further, the proposed investments in sector 1will also help the expected urban development inthe northern part of the city. The city i s served by a combined wastewater system (combined sewerage and stormwater system). Wastewater i s collected in a culvert-interceptor underneath the Dambovita River and delivered to the Glina wastewater treatment plant (WWTP). The effluent from the treatment plant discharges into the Dambovita River, which i s a tributary to the Danube. The WWTP i s currently under renovation, financed in part by an ISPA grant. The renovation is scheduled to start mid 2006 and will be conducted in three phases: Phase Ifor mechanical and biological treatment by 2010 for a flow capacity of 10 mVs; Phase I1 to increasethe capacity to 20 m3/sby 2015; and Phase I11for tertiary treatment to remove nutrients. Proposedinvestmentsunder the project The investments and the proposed costs are summarized below. The cost estimates were carried out in 2005 and include Value Added Tax (VAT). Physical contingencies of 10% for the works and supply have been included inthe cost. Investments have been designed for the population in 2035. 28 BUCHARESTPROJECTCOST AND FINANING (Euro 1000) I COST I FINANCING ~ DESCRIPTION Baneasa Odai Straulesti Vava Noua Chitila Triaj Giulesti Sarbi Sector 1 Sector 1 Sector Sector 1 Sector 1 Sector 1 Sector6 Total Bank Municipality Water supply 4,962 315 8,539 1,180 1,347 265 6,162 22,770 14,801 7,970 Sewage 3,473 730 828 858 1,565 969 960 9,384 6,099 3,284 Drainage 1,828 457 1,997 1,931 0 0 2,430 8,644 5,618 3,025 RoadPaving 9,463 613 0 3,131 3,645 1,326 4,699 22,876 14,869 8,007 Sub-total 19,726 2,115 11,365 7,100 6,557 2,560 14,251 63,674 41,388 22,286 2. TA andEngineering 6,590 4,284 2,307 3. Audit 200 0 200 4. Pricecontingencies 3,408 2,328 1,079 TOTAL 73,8721 48,000 25,872 (a) Water suuulv. Domestic customers in built-up areas will be connected and bulk water will be supplied to new development areas. The existing water treatment plant and transmission lines have sufficient capacity for the proposed extension areas. The investments are in line with Romania's commitmentsto meet EUdirectives. (b) Sewerage. Sewerage connections will increase and the wastewater treatment has sufficient design capacity for the increased sewerage load. Further, it i s expected that the operation of the treatment plant will improve due to the increased pollution concentration of the wastewater. The investments are inline with Romania's commitments to meet EUdirectives. (c) Stormwater drainage. An enhanced separate system has been designed (for most areas) to allow the stormwater discharge to comply with the EU directive 2000/60/EC; however a combined system has been designed in a few districts for various technical reasons. Stormwater pipes will be laid above the sewer pipes and the two will connected by a small pipe at specified intervals. This will allow a small amount of stormwater, including the first flush which typically has the most pollution, to flow to the sewerage system and be treated. The rest of the stormwater will flow through screens and grit chambers to reduce the pollution to the receiving water body. Lagoons will be used to retain stormwater to reduce the hydraulic load to the receiving water body. (d) Road uavinq. Roads with new water supply and wastewater services laid in them need to be paved in order for Apa Nova to take over their operation and maintenance, as per the concession contract. National roads and highways are managed and maintained by the National Company for Motorways and National Roads. Streets are managed and maintained by the ADP (Public Domain Administration), a department of the respective Sector Municipalities. Summary of the investments inproject districts The Municipality has identified 7 priority districts in sector 1 and 6 based on the approved urban development plan. The districts consist of built up areas which currently do not have water and wastewater services and new residential areas. The population served by the project (residents and business demand) is projected to exceed 133,000 by the year 2034 as per the General Urban Plan. The main growth will come from the Otopeni North and the Banasea regions which are growing very fast and as aresult the development of infrastructure inthese areas is included inPhaseIof the urban development program. 29 1. Baneasa District (Sector 1). Baneasa i s a new area under development by a private developer to provide residential, business and commercial facilities. The construction of commercial areas i s well advanced and the construction of the 3,000 housing units will start in mid 2006. An EUPhare financed project i s under implementation which will bring in water to this district and also construct two 2500m3 reservoirs and a water pumping station. This project i s expected to be completed in 2007. The Bank's project will help to buildthe water, sewerage, and stormwater networks in the district. Road paving will be done inthe 20 hectares(ha.) of the publicly owned land inthis district. 2. Vatra Noua District (Sector I) is a built-up area of 50 ha. where the proposed investments are: (a) Water: it will be supplied through the extension of the 400 mm. pipeline along George Sisesti Street and 12.2 km distribution pipelines within the district; (b) A combined sewerage and stormwater system has been designed as the system i s small and a part has already been constructed. The new wastewater network will be 9.6 km long and the wastewater i s discharged by gravity through 5 outlet points into the existing main sewer along Gheorghe Sisesti Street; and (c) Roads: 11.1 km of roads (6 m wide) will be paved. 3. Straulesti District (Sector 1) is a built-up area of 115 ha. where the proposed investments are: (a) Water: It will be provided through the main line being constructed under the Otopeni-North project and a 12.1km distribution pipeline within the district; (b) Sewerage: 10.7 kmof sewerage will be constructed and the wastewater will discharge to the existing main sewer along the Bucharest-Targoviste road by gravity; (c) Stormwater: 10.9 km of network will be constructed; and (d) Roads: 9.5 km of roads (6 m wide) will be paved. 4. Otopeni North and Baneasa North Area (Sector 1) comprises an area of 570 ha for urban development for an estimated population of 80,000 to 95,000 people. Development of the area has not yet started, so the project will only provide bulk water to the area without the distribution network and bring inthe sewerage connection points to the perimeter of the area. Investments include: (a) Water: bulk supply through mains of 14.3 km, (b) Sewerage: Extension of a main sewer line by 2.9 km, and (c) Stormwater - 0.6 kmof collector with outfall structure and discharge into a lagoon; 5. Odai District (Sector 1) is a green-field area of 32 ha. where social housing will be built. Proposed ' investments are: (a) Water: it will be provided from the Otopeni North and Baneasa North project and through the 1.1kmdistribution system; (b) Sewerage: 1.1km of sewerage networks will be installed and the wastewater will be discharged to the sewer line in the Bucharest - Targoviste road; (c) Stormwater: 1.3 kmof collectors will be constructed which will allow 1350.m3of underground and in-line storage; (d) Roads: 1.5 km. of roads (6mwide) will be paved. 30 6. Chitilu Triaj Area (Sector I) is a built-up area of 70 ha. where the proposed investments are: (a) Water: It will be supplied through 1.7 kmof distribution system; (b) Wastewater: Since the area is small and near a combined system, a combined sewerage and stormwater system has been designed. The proposed wastewater network has a length of 1.0 km and the wastewater will be pumped to an existing main collector; and (c) Roads: 4.5 km.of roads (6 mwide) will be paved. 7. Giulesti Surbi District (Sector 6) is an area of 200 ha and only part of the area is built-upwith partial drinking water and wastewater services. A large portion of the district is regularly flooded. Proposed investments are: (a) Water: construction of 10.3 km transmission main and 13.8 km distribution system; (b) Sewerage: a separate sewerage system has been designed for this district, except for some small area where a combined system exists already. 10.6 kmof collectors will be constructed, the Boanca sewer line will be extended by 1.1km, and a pumping station will be built; (c) Stormwater: 10.6 kmof stormwater pipes will be installed. An additional drainage system of 2.3 kmhas been foreseen to lower the very high groundwater table in the south easternpart of the area; and (d) Roads: 10.2 km. of roads (6 and 10m) will be paved. B. ARAD COMPONENT Background Arad i s a medium-size city of 190,000 located inthe west of Romania close to the Hungarian border. It i s situated on the Mures River which enters Hungary 50 km downstream of Arad and flows into the Tisza River which in turn flows into the Danube. The municipality has recently experienced rapid industrial growth stimulated by the automotive industry and border trade with Hungary and the EU. The strategic plan of Arad municipality identified the development of urban services as one of the highest priorities. The plan lays out short, medium and long term plans for the construction of 220 km of sewerage and stormwater network. This project addresses priority districts identified in the plan where infrastructure will be developed. These three areas are Gai, Bujac and Sanicolaul where 90% of the population does not have access to public sewerage and the districts are frequently flooded due to non- existent or insufficient drainage facilities. A summary of the population covered under the project follows: Area Population Current Year 2025 Bujac 10,249 12,159 Gai 8,144 9,664 Sanicolaul Mic 3,938 4,716 Total 22,331 26,539 Arad i s served by a combined wastewater system (combined sewerage and stormwater system). The wastewater is collected in a main collector and delivered to the wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) which comprises currently only mechanical treatment. The WWTP i s under rehabilitation, financed by ISPA, and i s expected to be completed in 2008 when it will be able to treat sewerage coming from the entire project area up to a tertiary level, so as to comply with the applicable discharge standards in sensitive areas. 31 Proposed investmentsunder the project The investments and the proposed costs are summarized below. The cost estimates were carried out in 2005 and include Value Added Tax (VAT). Physical contingencies of 10% for the works and supply have beenincluded inthe cost. Investments have been designed for the population in 2025. COST I FINANCING DESCRIPTION Gai District Bujac District Sanicolaul Totall Bank Municipality 1.Works Sewage 3,158 3,238 1,431 7,826 7,356 470 Drainage 6,574 6,801 2,044 15,42C 14,494 925 RoadPaving 7,224 7,959 4,955 20,138 18,930 1,208 Sub-total 16,956 17,998 8,430 43,384 40,781 2,603 2. TA and Engineering 3,685 3,466 221 3. Audit 20c 0 200 4. Pricecontingencies 3,03C 2,917 113 TOTAL I 50,301 47,163 3,138 Investments to be supported under the project have been identified in a feasibility study financed by the municipality. The project will support the following types of investments: (a) Sewerage. A separate sewerage and stormwater system will be used due to technical and environment considerations, and consistent with common practice in the EU. The sewerage investments are inline with Romania's commitments to meet EUdirectives. (b) Stormwater drainage. An enhanced separate system has been designed, similar to Bucharest. All pumping stations will be equipped with remote monitoring and control of the pumps. The municipality of Arad has chosen to use piped stormwater drainage instead of open channels due to the lack of space, increased safety, and ease of maintenance. As the groundwater table i s high inthe project districts, the stormwater pipes will be laidno deeperthan 3.5 to 4 meters. (c) Road paving. Roads with an unpaved surface cause comparatively higher maintenance cost, as they easily cause the stormwater drainage system to get clogged by sand and solid particles, while manhole covers are frequently damaged. Therefore, it was agreedto carry out paving of the roads for those streets, in which wastewater and stormwater services shall be laid, that are economically viable, in order to ensure sustainable operation. Economic viability will be determined during project implementation, prior to Bank financing. Summary of the investments inproject districts 1. BujacDistrict is a residentialdistrict located in the north-westem part of Arad, with a surface area of 325 ha. Only 10% of the population i s connected to a sewerage system. Proposed investment are: (a) Sewerage: 40.3 km of sewerage distribution network, collected by gravity and pumped by two pumping stations into proposed collectors, which will discharge into the existing collector in Targului Street; (b) Stormwater: 39.1 kmnetwork and two outlet points will be constructed. The stormwater will be pumped into the lagoons and discharged by gravity into the Muresel channel that flows into the Mures River; and (c) Roads: 35.3 kmof roads (6 and 7 m. wide) will be paved. Currently only 4.Ikmi s paved. 2. Gai District is located at the northern outskirts of the town and has a total area of 720 ha. An industrial park is planned to be constructed to the north of this area. At present, only one street in the 32 south-east of the district i s connected to a public sewerage system. Proposed investments are: (a) Sewerage: 29.6 km of distribution network connected; (b) Stormwater: 29.1 km of network constructed along with 3 retentionlagoons; and (c) Roads: 31.0 kmof roads (6 and 7 meters wide) will be paved. 3. Sanicoluul District is located at the southern boundary of the town, with an area of 240 ha and a population of 5,000 and expected to grow to 28,000. Proposed investments are: (a) Sewerage: 15.4 kmof distribution network plus three pumping stations; (b) Stormwater: 12.9 km network and a lagoon, functioning as a retention basin, to reduce the peak flow to the Mures river; and (c) Roads: Paving about 17.5 kmof roads where the sewerage and stormwater investments will take place. 33 Annex 5: Project Costs ROMANIA: MUNICIPAL SERVICESPROJECT Project Cost By Component and/or Activity Local Foreign Total million million million Component 1: Urban services inBucharest Municipality 11.1 62.8 73.9 Comuonent 2: Urban services inArad Municipality 7.5 42.8 50.3 Component 3: Project Preparation with MoEWM- 2.0 11.1 13.1 TotalPrsiectCosts 20.6 116.7 137.3 Front-endFee 0.3 0.3 TotalFinancingRequired 20.6 117.0 137.6 The cost estimates were carried out in 2005 and include 19%Value Added Tax (VAT). 34 Annex 6: Implementation Arrangements ROMANIA: MUNICIPALSERVICESPROJECT The Borrower of the Bank loan will be Romania, represented by the MoPF. The project will be implemented by the following three implementing entities: municipality of Bucharest, municipality of &ad, and the MoEWM. The legal agreementsfor the project are shownbelow. There will be a Loan Agreement between the Bank and MoPF for all three components of the project. For components 1 and 2, two Project Agreements will also be in place between the Bank and the two municipalities. There will also be a Subsidiary Loan Agreement between the MoPF and Arad municipality. In addition, there will be a Subsidiary Agreement between MoPF and Bucharest municipality. Both municipalities have experience in handling internationally financed projects and have the capacity to implement the project. For Component 3, the MoPF will provide the Bank loan funds to the MoEWM through an inter- ministerial agreement which will outline the role of the MoEWM to implement the project. In the MoEWM, the General Directorate for Management of Structural Instruments will be responsible for implementation of this project. This GeneralDirectorate i s responsible for programming, monitoring, and authorizing payments for the EUStructural and Cohesion funds for the environmental sector. Thus, this General Directorate will be able to fully integrate the activities of the Bank with the other ongoing activities relatedto EUaccession, including development of a project pipeline. A Director inthis General Directorate has been assigned to implement the project and for financial management purposes, the accounting system of MoEWM will be used. LegalAgreements I Bank MoPF I , I \ I , I I , I , I , I , 8 , I , Bucharest municipality municipality MoEWM +. - LoanAgreement ==+ Subsidiary Loan Agreement d e - . * + *----+Project Subsidiary Agreement Agreement ' Inter-ministerialAgreement 35 Day-to-day implementation and coordination of the project will be carried out by staff assigned to the project in the implementing agencies. The municipalities of Bucharest and Arad and MoEWM will each nominate a Director and qualified staff to implement the project and provide them with adequate resources to do so. The staff members should be specialized on technical, procurement, and financial management matters and may carry out other functions in the implementing agencies. The staff will implement the project and specifically carry out the following functions: (a) review the technical requirements of the project and ensure that economic investment decisions are being taken; (b) prepare bidding documents; (c) disburse loan funds and carry out proper financial management functions; (d) monitor the progress of the project and prepare and submit Project Reports to the MoPF and the Bank. 36 Annex 7: Financial Managementand DisbursementArrangements ROMANIA: MUNICIPAL SERVICESPROJECT 1. Summary CountryZssues The first Country Financial Accountability Assessment (CFAA) for Romania was finalized in December 2003. The assessment concluded that the overall fiduciary risk associated with the public financial management and financial accountability arrangements of the Romanian government administration i s moderate, with the systems for accounting, financial reporting and internal control representing areas with higher risks and budgeting, cash management and external audit and Parliamentary oversight representing lower risks. The implications of the CFAA for the project have been addressedby the following actions: 0 A detailedreview of the systems was performedfor eachimplementing entity; 0 The implementing entities will set up distinct project-specific accounting ledgers; 0 Project accounting staff are employees of the implementingentities; 0 The format of the IFRs and audit TORSagreed with the implementing entities; and 0 Project financial statements will be audited by an independent auditor annually. Risk Assessment and Mitigation Measures The riskanalysis from the Financial Management Questionnaires i s presented below. Type of Risk 1 Risk Rating 1 Comments/Mitigationmeasures and are mentioned above Entities level M Dedicated project units in charge with the project implementation established within MoEWM. and M,and municipalities of audit Terms o f Reference and the auditors have to be 37 Strengthsand Weaknesses The strengths of the project's financial management system include: (a) non-complicated fund flow structure and a centralized financial management arrangements; and (b) adequate accounting and reporting systems for the implementing entities. There are no significant weaknesses of the project financial management system. ZmplementingEntities The municipalities of Bucharest and Arad and the MoEWM will be responsible for financial management, using the existing structures of these institutions. The Loan Agreement will be signed between the World Bank (IBRD) and Romania, represented by the Ministry of Public Finance (MoPF). A Subsidiary Loan Agreement will be signed between the MoPF and the municipality of Arad. In addition, a Subsidiary Agreement will be signed between MoPF and the municipality of Bucharest. There will be an inter-ministerial agreement between MoPF and MoEWM. There will be two Project Agreements signed between the Bank and the two municipalities. Funds Flow The municipalities of Bucharest, Arad, and the MoEWM will each open a Designated Account (DA) in a commercial bank and on terms and conditions acceptable to the World Bank. Foreign currency amounts will be exchanged as needed in local currency (RON), to cover eligible expenditures payments in local currency to suppliers. Payments will be made directly by the Bank to the suppliers or through the three DAs. Government counterpart contribution payments for the component managed by MoEWM will be made from separate Treasury project accounts, and which will be used specifically for the counterpart contributions to the project. These contributions will be received monthly in accordance with normal budgetprocedures. Staffing The project units in each municipality and the MoEWM include a finance team comprising a financial manager and an accountant. The finance teams will work closely with the existing economic, budget, finance and accounting departments in their respective entities. The financial staff are employees of the implementing entities. Representatives of the project finance teams have registered to participate at the joint financial management and disbursement workshops organizedby the Bank inMay and June 2006. Accounting Policiesand Procedures The project's accounting books and records will be maintained on an accrual basis and denominated in RomanianLei (RON) with the exception of the books and records inthe DAs which will be maintained in Euros, the currency of the Bank loan. The project units will build upon the existing implementing entities' accounting procedures and internal control framework to ensure that all project procedures and controls are adequately documented, contract monitoring and invoice payment procedures are consistently adhered to and documented. Accordingly, for each contract, a monitoring sheet would be opened, filled in and updated by each implementing entity, as follows: (a) date of the contract; (b) number of the 38 contract; (c) name of the contractor; (d) contract start date; (e) contract end date; (f)name of the assigned resident inspector for works or recipient for goods or services, where relevant; (8) name of the assigned contract monitoring staff within the project team; (h) contract value; (i) list of invoices received for the contract; (j)amounts paid inrespect of the contract; (k)date of the last inspection, where relevant; and (1) record of procurement complaints. For each payment, the following standard checklist would be filled in prior to the payment of any invoice to ensure that all appropriate contract monitoring procedures have been carried out, confirming: (a) that the invoice was accompanied by an appropriate certified completion certificate by the assigned resident inspector or other goods received note or acknowledgement of receipt of the goods or services; (b) the mathematical accuracy of the invoice; (c) that the invoice agrees to the terms of payment as specified in the contract; (d) that the works described in the invoice and resident inspector's report are linked to the contracts; (e) the approval by the relevant staff member; (f)the approval by the project manager; (g) the date of payment of the invoice; and (h) that the contract monitoring sheet has been updated. The other procedures that would be performed include: close monthly project accounting books no later than the 15thof the following month; close yearly project accounting books no later than January 31'' of the following year; check the mathematical accuracy of the InterimFinancial Reports (IFRs) inputs with the accounting records; check the opening figures of the I F R s with the closing figures of the previous semester; check the semestrial I F R s figures for consistency between the various reports (Statement of Sources and Uses of Funds, Uses of Funds by Project Activities, Dedicated Accounts Statements, PhysicalProgress Reports, Procurement Reports and Contract Monitoring); reconcile monthly bank accounts statements with project accountingrecords; reconcile monthly World Bank disbursement records with project accounting books; and complete inventory and fixed assets stock taking at least once per year and more often, if needed. 2. Audit Arrangements Znternal Audit Internal audit departments exist within the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad and within MoEWM. The internal audit departments will review the project's financial management arrangements as part of their function to audit each implementing entity. The project will rely on the internal audit departments for the internal audit functions of the implementing entities. External Audit The Borrower i s incompliance with the audit covenants of existing Bank-financed projects. The project will be audited annually by independent auditors acceptable to the Bank and under Terms of Reference (TOR)acceptable to the Bank. The TORfor the audit has been agreed with the Bank. The audit scope will include the project's books and records as maintained by each implementing entity, all withdrawal applications, and the DAs. The audited project financial statements together with the auditor's opinions will be provided to the Bank within six months of the end of the reporting period 39 which i s a fiscal year. The project audit costs would be covered from their own sources by the Municipality of Bucharest and by the Municipality of Arad. The Bank loan proceeds will be used to finance the audit for the MoEWMcomponent. In addition, the Romanian Court of Accounts (CoA), the country's supreme audit institution, will continue to perform ad hoc external audits of the implementing entities, including of this project. The CoA will performan operational review of the project to look at the specific issues related to governance, efficiency and performance. The most recent audit reports prepared by the CoA for the Bucharest municipality covering FY 2004 and the Arad municipality covering FY 2003 have been reviewed. Regarding MoEWM, the CoA has not yet finalized the audit field work for FY 2004 and this report i s expected to be issued by mid2006. 3. DisbursementArrangements Bank funds will be disbursed either as direct payments by the Bank or through the three DAs which will be replenished under the transactional disbursement procedures. Withdrawal applications for the replenishments of the DAswill be sent to the Bank monthly, or when about a third of the initial deposit in the DAs has been utilized, whichever comes first. The maximum amount of the loan proceeds that may be deposited in the Designated Accounts are: 5,000,000 for the component with Bucharest and Arad municipalities; and 1,000,000 for the MoEWM component. The reimbursement of expenditures made from the DA may be made on the basis of certified Statement of Expenditures (SOEs) for the following items: (a) contracts for works less than 4,000,000; (b) consulting contracts with firms valued less than 200,000; and with individuals valued lessthan 50,000. All replenishments for transactions above the above mentioned SOE thresholds will be fully documented. Supporting documentation for all transactions, including completion reports, goods received notes and acceptance certificates, will be retained by the implementing entities and made available to the Bank during project supervision. There i s no plan to move to forecast-based periodic disbursements. The disbursement categories and the Bank financing are summarized below. Percentage of Category Amount of the Loan allocated(e) Expenditures to be financed Works, goods and consultants' services 48,000,000 659 for Urban Services in Bucharest municipality Works, goods and consultants' services 47,200,000 94% for Urbanservices in Arad municipality Consultants' services for project 11,000,000 84% 4. ReportingandMonitoring Project management-oriented un-audited Interim Financial Reports (IFRs) will be used for project monitoring and supervision. The IFRs will be prepared by the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad and MoEWM every calendar semester and the reports will be submitted to the Bank within 60 days after the end of the semester. The format of the IFR has been agreed with the Bank. The MoEWM would aggregate the IFRs for the entire project, with inputs received from the Municipality of Bucharest and from the Municipality of Arad. 40 5. InformationSystems The Bucharest and Arad municipalities and MoEWMhave inplace modem accounting software systems. Project specific ledgers will be created with the existing systems for each implementing entity to allow the respective project unit to record distinctly the operations of the project using the existing chart of accounts. 6. Supervision Plan Duringproject implementation, the Bank will supervise the project's financial management arrangements in two ways: (a) review the project's semestrial IFRs as well as the project's annual audited financial statements and auditor's management letter; and (b) during the Bank's supervision missions, review the project's financial management and disbursement arrangements (including a review of a sample of withdrawal applications and movements on the dedicated accounts) to ensure compliance with the Banks financial management requirements. 41 Annex 8: ProcurementArrangements ROMANIA: MUNICIPALSERVICESPROJECT A. General Procurement for the proposed project would be carried out in accordance with the World Bank's "Guidelines: Procurement Under IBRD Loans and IDA Credits" dated May 2004; and "Guidelines: Selection and Employment of Consultants by World Bank Borrowers" dated May 2004, and the provisions stipulated in the Legal Agreement. For each contract to be financed by the loan, the different procurement methods or consultant selection methods, the needfor prequalification, estimated costs, prior review requirements, and time frame are agreed between the Borrower and the Bank project team in the Procurement Plan. The Procurement Plan will be updated at least annually or as required to reflect the actual project implementationneeds and improvements ininstitutionalcapacity. Advertising: A General Procurement Notice (GPN) listing all main procurement packages was advertised on-line in United Nations Development Business (UNDB) on January 24, 2006. Specific Procurement Notices (SPN) for ICB Goods and Works packages will be advertised on-line in UNDB, dgMarket and on the above-mentioned websites. Advertisement of NCB contracts for goods and works would be done in local newspapers and the appropriate government website. The results of contract awards for goods and works will be posted in UNDB on-line and dgMarket as required under the Guidelines. Procurement of Works: Works procured under this project would include: rehabilitation and constructionof water supply network, sewage, drainage and road paving. Procurement will be done using the Bank's Standard BiddingDocuments (SBD) for all International Competitive Bidding(ICB) contracts for Large Works (based on FDIC-type contracts). ICB contracts estimated to cost above 4,000,000 per contract and all direct contracting will be subject to prior review by the Bank. Procurementof Goods: As currently planned, the project will include all goods and equipment required for the project as part of civil works packages. However, provisions have been made under the project to procure goods separately, if needed. In such case, ICB, NCB or shopping procedures may be followed. All ICB contracts, first NCBand Shopping Contracts will be subject to priorreview. Selectionof Consultants: Consulting services will be required to prepare the design documents and for supervision of the works contracts. In addition, consultants will be hired for the component to be managedby MoEWM to prepare a pipeline of projects. Short lists of consultants for services estimated to cost less than 200,000 equivalent per contract may be composed entirely of national consultants in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 2.7 of the Consultant Guidelines. 42 Table 8.1: Thresholds for ProcurementMethodsand Prior Review I Below 80,000 I Shopping I First contract and as agreed inthe procurement plan I Above 800,000 ICB All Below 800.000 NCB First contract and as agreed inthe urocurement ulan I Below 80,000 I Shopping 1 First contract and as agreed in the procurement planI As appropriate QCBS All As appropriate QBS All LCS Firstcontract and as agreed inthe procurementplan I FBS First contract and as agreed in the procurement plan Below 80,000 II CQ IIFirst contract and as agreed inthe procurement plan II sss All I C Firstcontract and as agreed inthe procurement plan ICB -International Competitive Bidding NCB - National Competitive Bidding QCBS - Quality and Cost based Selection QBS - Quality Based Selection LCS -Least Cost Selection FBS -FixedBudget Selection CQ - Selection based on Consultant Qualifications SSS - Single Source Selection I C-Individual Consultant Selection B. Assessment of the agency's capacity to implement procurement Staff of the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad and the MoEWM will carry out procurement activities. In November 2005, the Bank carried out the assessment of the procurement capacity to implement the project in Bucharest and Arad. The assessment reviewed the proposed organizational structure for implementing the project and the interaction between the staff working on procurement and MoPF's requirements. There i s adequatecapacity inthese two municipalities to implement the project. The MoEWM i s already implementing the Bank financed Hazard Risk Mitigation and Emergency Preparedness project and the procurement staff working on this project will also be assigned to the Municipal Services Project. As an earlier assessment was carried out for the Hazard Risk Mitigation and Emergency Preparednessproject and the MoEWM has demonstrated that it has the procurement capacity, a separate assessment was not carried out for the MunicipalServices Project. 43 Risks relatedto procurementandthe proposed mitigation measuresare: e Limited experience inimplementing large works contract, following Bank procedures. Details of the works contracts are shown in the Procurement Plan. To address this risk, the Bank will provide support to the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad, as necessary. Also, the Bank will conduct a prior review of all works contract for contracts above the 4.0 million threshold. e Careful planning i s required to implement the project in a timely manner. To address this risk, consultants will be hired to support the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad, as needed. The overall project risk for procurement i s highgiven the overall procurement risks inRomania and i s not specific to the project. C. ProcurementPlan The Borrower, at appraisal, developed a Procurement Plan for project implementation, which provides the basis for the procurement methods. This plan will be available inthe project's database and in the Bank's external website. The Procurement Plan will be updated in agreement with the Project Team annually or as requiredto reflect the actual project implementationneeds and improvementsininstitutional capacity. Table8.2: ProcurementPlan NBF-NctBankFinanced ***piorreviewbytheBank p treviewbytbeBank P-Q:Re-qualification 44 D. Frequency of Procurement Supervision Inaddition to the prior review carried out by the Bank, there will be at least one procurement supervision mission per year to carry out post review of procurement actions. The procurement staff in the MoEWM and the municipalities of Bucharest and Arad will collect and maintainthe procurement documentation in a systematic way. 45 Annex 9: EconomicandFinancialAnalysis ROMANIA: MUNICIPAL SERVICESPROJECT ECONOMIC ANALYSIS As part of the National DevelopmentPlan(NDP), the Government has prepared a Sector Operational Plan (SOP) for the environment sector (Annex 1). The SOP has been endorsed by the EU and reaffirms Romania's commitment to meet EU directives and outlines the plans to use Structural and Cohesion funds, wherever possible. The SOP has the following three objectives, which are in line with the investments proposedinthe project: 0 improve the access of the population to public utilities; 0 improve the environmental quality which includes: (a) wastewater treatment for 200 settlement clusters with population greater than 10,000; and (b) adequate drinking water quality in all urban settlements; and 0 improve the nature protection and flood risk management. Background Brief backgroundinformation on the cities follow. Bucharest Bucharest has a population of 2.2 million and i s administratively divided into 6 sectors. Currently about 20% of the population of Bucharest does not have access to centralized and quality water supply and sewerage services. People currently rely on water from individual shallow wells with unsafe water quality. Flooding in the project areas occurs frequently. The Government considers the urban improvements inBucharest a priority which i s soon to become a capital city of an EUmember country. The municipality has embarked on a 5-year program, consisting of four phases, to improve the urban infrastructure in the city (Annex 4). This project covers Phase Io f this program and foresees the extension of water supply, sewerage and stormwater services in sectors 1 and 6 of the city, including paving of streets. Within these two sectors, the municipality has identified 7 priority locations - a combination of partly built-uparea and new developments -based on approved urban development plan. The city of Arad is located in the west in the west of Romania close to the Hungarian border, along the river Mures which enters Hungary 50 km downstream of Arad. The Mures River i s a tributary of the Tisza River which in turn discharges into the Danube River, ending up in the Black Sea. The population of Arad town i s 190,000. The town i s experiencing a rapid industrial growth stimulated by the industrial zones created within the city and with border trade with Hungary and other EUmember countries. Development of urban services i s a highpriority for the municipality which includes the construction of sewerage and stormwater network. The project will have a significant impact on economic growth by providing the supporting infrastructure to new industrial zones and residential growth areas. The project will supply sewerage and storm water services to the two new industrial zones in Gai (150 ha.) and Sanicolaual (265 ha.) areas which i s expected to create 36,000 new jobs over the next 20 years. The collected sewage will be treated by a wastewater plant being constructed with the main financing coming from EUISPA grants. 46 Overall, the project will cover three areas within the municipality. These areas are Gai, Bujac and Sanicolaul Mic and about 90% of the population (22,000 people) living in these areas has no access to public sewerage and use septic tanks. The groundwater in Arad area i s high -- less than 2 m in some places -- and the city currently pumps out the groundwater from areas that are settled which creates the risk of the septic tanks contaminating the groundwater. No water supply investments are proposedas the project areas are connected to the central water supply system. The drainage investments are necessary to avoid flooding in the three project areas which do not have sufficient drainage facilities. Floods in 2005 created damage to the low lying areas that are included in the project - about 50 streets in Bujac and Gai were flooded. The combination of insufficient drainage infrastructure and high groundwater level results in damages to foundations of buildings as seen in the recent floods. Regulatory Requirement The project i sjustified on regulatory grounds, given Romania's commitment to meet EUdirectives during the accession negotiations which are summarized below. The water supply, sewerage, and drainage investments proposedinthis project are fully consistent with the priorities of the Government, as reflected inthe SOP. 0 Water: EU Directive 98/83/EC addresses quality of water for human consumption. As per the SOP, Romania plans that by 2013, 70% of the population will be served through utilities and receive good quality water. 0 Sewerage: EU Directive 91/271/EEC outlines the process for urban water collection, treatment and discharge. As per SOP, Romania plans that by 2013, wastewater will be collected and treated from 250 new settlements with population greater than 10,000. In the Implementation Plan, initial estimate of the costs to meet EU directives, the entire territory of Romania has been classified as a `sensitive area' regarding wastewater disposal. Thus, proper usage of sewerage systems and treatment plants i s important. 0 Drainage: EUDirective 2000/60/EC defines the European water policy and specifies that river basins should be the unit for integrated water resource management. In the SOP, Romania states its intention to take a pro-active role in flood management, especially given the recent floods inthe country. Benefitsof the Project Apart from the regulatory requirement, the project will yield the following benefits. They are summarized below by sectors Water and Wastewater Investments The benefits of these investments are: 0 Positive externalities at the regional and country levels due to the environmental improvements supported by the project. These externalities are difficult to quantify and as a result are not includedinthe cost benefit analysis; 47 e Provision of water and wastewater services through an operator, which improves quality of service and reduces healthand environmental risks. The incrementalrevenues due to piped water are used as a proxy for benefits of pipedwater services (convenience, better quality). Similarly, incremental wastewater revenues are usedas a proxy for benefits of having a sewage system and discontinuing the use of septic tanks. To estimate the incremental revenue due to the project, the per capita consumption and average tariffs have been used. The per capita consumption is calculated on the basis of total volume of water sold to domestic, commercial, and industrial consumers divided by the number of consumers. The current consumption of 220 liters per capita day (lpcd) in Bucharest i s expected to decline around 165 lpcd in about 10years with an increase intariffs. InArad, the current consumption of 275 lpcd is expected to drop to around 196lpcd in about 10 years. Assumptions on decrease in per capita consumption with increase in prices are shown inthe calculations. e Increase inthe value of property and land where the infrastructure will be upgraded. The increase in the value of the property will be tremendous as seen inthe incremental property tax revenues that the city plans to collect from the project areas. The property tax i s assessed at around 0.2% of the value of the property and the incremental taxes from the project areas are as follows: Bucharest (2009) - RON 866,000; and Arad (2010) - RON 908,000. The incremental tax, representing a low estimate of the benefit of increased property value due to the upgraded infrastructure, i s estimated to be 12.8 and 10.4 on a per capita basis in Bucharest and Arad, respectively. This has been calculated by diving the tax by the number of existing homes (6,960 inBucharest; and 8,933 inArad) andthe number of members per household (2.8). For purposes of the analysis, the growth inproperty value i s assumedto start in 2008, given that citizens already know about the investments and services will start in some project areas by that time. In Bucharest the willingness to pay this tax in 2008 on a per capita basis is assumed to be 12.16 (discounted by 95% from 2009). The similar figure for Arad in 2008 i s assumed to 9.39 (discounted 95% each year from 2010). The Cost-benefit analyses are summarized below. As indicated, the analyses do not capture the externalities and the full amount of increase in property value. Thus, the rates of return are a low estimate. Nevertheless, they provide ajustification for the investments. e Bucharest (areas with existing population): These are the Straulesti, Vatra Noua, Giulesti Sarbi, Giulesti Triaj districts that need water and sewerage services. The expected rate of return i s 12.3%. The population growth in these areas i s modest (around 2%) and after the water and sewerage investments are in place and the streets are paved, they will have an opportunity to be served by Apa Nova. (Annex 9; Table 1); e Bucharest (growth areas): These are the Banasea, Otopeni North, and Odai districts which are growth areas and where the city has to provide water and wastewater services. The rate of return i s 9.4%. These areas are in the northern part of the city which i s experiencing rapid growth. Apartments, homes, and commercial buildings are expected to develop in these areas which will result in high incremental value of property. At the same time, the project i s providing bulk services in some areas (especially around Otopeni North) and investments have to be incurred by the city to provide the distribution network. The costs for the distribution network are included in the analysis. (Annex 9; Table 2); and e Arad: the sewage network will benefit the domestic population in the Gai, Bujac, and Sanicolaul Mic areas. Inaddition, the industries will benefit from the sewage installed. The rate of return is 48 6.2%, which i s acceptable for such sewage investments. The municipality estimates that by 2025 about 36,000 new jobs will be created in the industries, and some employees will come from outside Arad municipality. The incremental wastewater generated in the industries due to the employees who come from outside Arad municipality has not been taken into account, to have a conservative estimate on the incremental revenues due to wastewater treated (Annex 9; Table 3). The municipality also intends to collect a development tax based on the improvement in the project areas. The willingness to pay this tax, representing the increased property value, has not been taken into account inthe analysis to have a conservative estimate. Stormwater Currently, most areas are served by a combined wastewater system. This results in a low concentration of BOD in wastewaters reaching the treatment plant. In most areas under the project, separate wastewater systems have been proposed due to the following reasons: (a) the increased BOD concentration in the sewerage will improve the operation of the WWTP, to be completed in 2010 in Bucharest and 2008 in Arad; (b) by constructing separate wastewater systems in most districts in Bucharest and Arad, the additional hydraulic load reaching the wastewater treatment plants will be reduced; and (c) inboth cities it is possible to discharge stormwater near the project areas into open channels and rivers, and thus avoiding the construction of larger diameter pipes that would be needed to transport the wastewater over long distances. A cost benefit analysis for stormwater has not been shown as the benefits of flood prevention and improved environmental and health conditions are difficult to quantify. Duringproject implementation, both municipalities will have to demonstrate that the most cost effective design solution was chosen, prior to the Banks no objection for financing. RoadPaving Roads will be paved in Arad and Bucharest - only in the project areas - to sustain the water supply, sewerage, and drainage investments. Improved road surfaces will result in shorter travel time and less wear and tear on vehicles. InBucharest, Apa Nova(the concessionaire) will only take on the responsibility of provision of water and wastewater services in new areas once the municipality has paved the roads. This i s a condition of the concession contract for Apa Nova to expand services. Expanding water and wastewater service provision through utilities is also an objective of the Government. Thus, in project areas, roads will be paved and the implementation will be carried out as the project develops. InArad, roads will be pavedafter a cost-benefit analysis is done duringproject implementation. As some roads inArad have low traffic volume, the analysis will be conducted to confirm the need to pave roads. The Bank's Roads Economic Decision Model (RED) will be used for the analysis. This model takes into account, the traffic, condition of unpaved roads in dry and wet seasons, vehicle speed, types of paving, and accident rates. The municipality will conduct the analysis with assistancefrom the Bank team. UnitCosts The proposed technology used in laying water, sewerage, and stormwater pipes and paving roads is standard and the unit costs are within the expected construction costs in Romania, as shown below. Bucharest costs for sewerage and stormwater are higher than that of Arad as larger diameter pipes will be laid inBucharest, leading to a higher unit cost. In Arad, there are more pipes laid compared to Bucharest, apart from the outlet structures constructed that are common in both cities. This leads to a relatively 49 larger denominator in Arad to calculate cost per meter of pipes (unit cost). Further, the construction costs are expected to be higher in Bucharest given the soil conditions and the presence of more utility lines in the ground that could delay construction. The cost of materials i s assumedto be same inbothcities. Item Bucharest Arad Water supply 290/m Not applicable (all costs dividedby lengthof pipes) Sewerage 125/m 75 /m Stormwater 195/m 150 /m (all costs dividedby lengthof pipes) Roadpaving 40/mz 35 /mz (all costs dividedby area paved) FINANCIAL ANALYSIS To receive the Bank loan from the MoPF, both municipalities carried out detailed financial projections which were submitted to an inter-ministerial commission that approves loans for municipalities. As per Romanian legislation, an approval of this commission i s necessary - from a financial and technical standpoint - for the MoPF to borrow from the Bank and provide the loan funds to the municipalities. The financial information that was reviewed and approved by this commission and the MoPF i s summarized inthe attachedtables. The conclusionof the review was that bothmunicipalitieswill be able to meet their obligations in regards to: (i) local counterpart financing for the project and (ii) service, while debt remainingincompliance with the applicable limits on borrowing. Past and recent financial results For Bucharest, the total revenues in 2006 are expected to be around RON 1,828 million, compared to a figure of RON 1,261 million in 2004 (Annex 9; Table 4). The central Government budget contribution to Bucharest is expected to be around 89% in2006, primarily becauseof the tax sharing arrangements as per Romanian legislation. There has been an increase in the shared taxes collected in the Bucharest area given the increased economic activity in the city. Between 2004 and 2006, the share of central budget allocation increasedby 49% due to an increase inshared Value Added Tax (VAT) and income tax. In Arad, the total revenues in 2006 are expected to be around RON 192 million, compared to a figure of RON 147 million in 2004 (Annex 9, Table 5). In line with policies of increasing financial self reliance, Arad municipality has been increasing its share of current revenues derived through local direct and indirect taxes, and other fees and charges. Between 2004 and 2006, the locally generated revenues are expected to increaseby 73% leadingto a decline inthe share of central budget allocation to the municipal revenues. In2006, its share of current revenues will be 37% compared to a figure of 29% in 2004. Current expenditures - mainly for education, health, housing, heating subsidies, transport and other municipal services - account for the major part of total expenditures. In 2006, the current expenditures will be around 76% and 80% of total revenues for Arad and Bucharest, respectively. Capital expenditures have been limited as the operating surplus (revenues minus operating expense) i s often not adequate to pay for the investments and service the debt on borrowings. Municipal borrowings are also regulatedby legislation where the annual municipal debt service cannot exceed 20% of the sum of own revenues and shared taxes. 50 The Project The counterpart financing and the municipal debt service (Arad only) will be funded out of the general budget of the two municipalities. Incremental revenues generated due to the project will be included in the general budget of the two municipalities. The sources of the incrementalrevenues are: e Property tax (Bucharest and Arad): Romanian legislation outlines a methodology to be used to estimate property taxes. This methodology i s based on the type of property and the infrastructure available in the zone. Due to improvements under the project, both municipalities expect to collect additional property tax. In 2010, the incremental property tax is estimated to be RON 0.9 million and RON 1.06 million in Arad and Bucharest, respectively. The property tax inBucharest i s not shown explicitly, but i s included inthe non-fiscal revenues. e Development tax (Arad): A tax can be levied by a water and wastewater utility on every cubic meter of water sold as long as the use of this tax is mentioned in the concession contract between the utility and the municipality or county. Taxes collected are transferred to the municipality or the county. For Arad, the revenues from this tax are expected to be around RON 0.738 million in 2010. InBucharest, the concession contract does not include development tax and as a result it i s not considered as a source of revenue; e Concession Fee (Arad): The concession fee paid by the utility to the municipality or county may be modified, to allow the municipality or county to collect additional revenues to support investments. In had, a concession fee of RON 0.7 million (in 2010) i s assumed. This fee, however, i s subject to negotiations with the concessionaire. For Bucharest, the existing annual concession fee i s 5,000 and as per the concession agreement, the additional fees may not exceed 5,000. Thus, reliance has not been placed on using the concession fee as an incremental revenue source. In the financial projections, the revenue and expenditure streams match because Romanian legislation requires that the budget for the public institutions should be fully balanced without any surplus or loss. Considering this legislation, the capital expenditure itemi s used as a balancing item in order to match the revenues and expenditures. Reserve funds are provided for every year inthe budget, but are not shown in the budget execution account. They feed a contingency account, which i s kept outside the budget for exceptionalcircumstances (i.e. gaps incash, overspending on some investments or expenditure). Exchange rate risks for the municipalities have been taken into account as they would borrow in Euros from the MoPF. The financial projections incorporate an assumption about inflation: 9.5% (2005); 6% (2006); 4.4% (2007); 3.5% (2008); 3% from 2009-2016 and 2% from 2016 onwards. Devaluation has been assumed to be in line with inflation, although in the last 3 years, devaluation was lower than inflation. With these assumptions, the exchange rate for 1Euro is RON 3.65 (2005) and RON 4.02 (2010), reaching up to RON 5.4 in 2022, the end of the repayment. The exchange risk i s not considered as high, given that Romania's economy i s already linked to the Euro and the link will be even stronger once Romaniaenters the EU. The financial projections show the exchange rate provisions. Although the cash flows related to the project will be part of the general budget of the municipality, to increasetransparency, the cash flow related to the project is also summarized at the end of the financial statement (Annex 9, Tables 4 and 5). The cash surplus, if any relatedto the project, would be usedfor general municipal expenditure, including road maintenance. 51 - * I ~~ N e l . O m w m m w O e m m f f i N M m m e ' ?0 ?0?0?0? 0? ? ? ? m m m 9 n ? ? - - 9 m 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - - - - - - U I I I E - I- - C a a 8 &-A " I I >" L z e ! 2 3 W I - I L f Annex 10: Safeguard Policy Issues ROMANIA: MUNICIPAL SERVICESPROJECT Executive summary of the final draft World Bank document (April 2006) "Equivalence and Acceptability Assessment Report for Piloting the Use of Romanian Environmental and Social Safeguards Systems in Bank-Assisted Projects" i s presentedbelow. ExecutiveSummarv Introduction 1. Following extensive global notification and consultations, in March 2005 the World Bank Board approved a pilot program to test the use of borrower or "country" systems to meet the objectives of World Bank environmental and social safeguard policies. This led to the issuance of World Bank Operational Policy 4.006(OP 4.00) which lays out specific criteria for advancing pilot projects. It was recognized in the background paper for Board consideration that sector-specific Bank operations in new member states and candidates for European Union (EU) accession hold particular promise as pilots. 2. The Municipal Services Project will support the rehabilitation and improvement of wastewater, stormwater and drinking water systems to reduce pollution, improve public health, and assist Romania in meeting environmental requirements for European Union accession. This operation i s proposed for Romania for piloting OP 4.00, and also i s subject of review inthis report. 3. Incooperation with Romanianofficials, and with the support of European Commission staff, the World Bank has compared the Romanian systems (including those which stem from EU directives) against the Operational Principles laid out in OP 4.00-Table A1 for key safeguards that would normally apply to this Bank-assisted project. This assessment included a legal and technical review; both on paper and through field interviews and site visits. 4. Report conclusions were discussed at a public meeting in Bucharest on December 12, 2005, following disclosure in Romania of a draft Executive Summary. A full draft report was disclosed in Englishin the World Bank InfoShop and in Romanian on the MoEWM web site on January 25, 2006. The comment period in Romania closed on March 10, 2006 and no comments were received from the public. PrincipalObservations EnvironmentalAssessment(EA) and CulturalProperty - 5. The World Bank examined the equivalency and acceptability of the EA process along two lines: EA approval procedures, and compliance monitoring during construction and operation. The Bank is pleased to note that there i s a well defined process in place for screening, scoping, review, public consultation during EA procedure, disclosure, and approval of EA documents. Regarding screening (i.e. determination of the appropriate EA category), projects falling on Romania's Annex Ilist' would typically fall within the World Bank's EA Category A. Mandatory full EAs required under Romania's system provide an equivalent level of attention to assessing risk, alternatives and mitigatiodmonitoring (i.e. scoping) as compared to World Bank requirements for Category A projects. The Municipal Services Project is, however, Category B for Environmental Assessment under the World Bank system. Most sub- 6 http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/Institutional/Manuals/OpManu~.nsf/tocall/~9CEDl645FB433885256FCD00776B19?0penDoc 'ument Annex Ito GD 918/2002; projectssubject to mandatoryEA; basedon EUDirective 85/337/EEC as amended 61 projects correspond to the comparable Romania Annex 11.Sub-project categories being considered under the Municipal Services Project will likely, therefore, be subject under the Romanian system to at least an equivalent approachto EA screening, scoping and analysis as set forth inWorld Bank OP 4.00. 6. A Technical Review Committee is established, according to the legal requirements, at the local, regional or national level to ensure an integrated approach to the environmental permitting procedure. At the local level, this Committee i s set up by the joint decision of the Prefect and the President of the County Council. The Committee i s composed of at least 7 members, including representatives of local or regional environmental agencies, other local officials, representatives of the Health Services, the National Environmental Guard (inspection service), the Romanian Water Company ("Apele Romane"), research institutes, and others as deemed necessary. Public participationduringthe EA process includes one public consultation, and as many as four public announcements in local newspapers or on the local environmental authority website. This approach should achieve comparable outcomes as envisaged by the Bank under OP 4.00. 7. Regarding implementation, a successful project application results in the issuance of two documents which contain mitigation and monitoring measures comparable in aim to the Environmental Management Plan required for Bank projects. Following the acceptance of the EA, an Environmental License to Construct (called the "environmental agreement") i s issued by municipal authorities for all projects with civil works. After construction, the project proponent is required by law to apply for the Environmental Permit to Operate (sometimes called "environmental authorization"), which i s issued only after a review by local or regional environmental authorities. The Environmental License sets the measureskonditions to mitigate adverse impacts during construction and i s issued by the competent environmental authority based on the information obtained during the environmental assessmentprocess. The Environmental Permit to Operate (issued by environmental authorities) verifies that mitigation and monitoring measures are inplace. 8. The permitting process includes setting wastewater discharge limits (by Apele Romane). Discharge standards and wastewater management programs (e.g. receiving water quality) set by Romanian authorities are aligning with comparable EU directives on wastewater and watershed management (as transposed into Romanian law), and are quite consistent with the Bank's narrative descriptions of good water quality management programs in the Pollution Prevention and Abatement Handbook (Part 11). 9. This review included meetings and site reviews in cooperation with environmental officials at the local and regional levels. In Romania all key environmental responsibilities fall under the Ministry of Environment and Water Management (MoEWM). Preparation for EU accession has led, and will likely continue to lead, to considerable increasesin staff at boththe policy and field levels. 10. Regarding compliance monitoring, an independent agency under the MoEWM - the National Environment Guard (NEG) - i s tasked to carry out this responsibility. The NEG i s being staffed up and responsibilities strengthened through passing bylaws and establishing good working procedures. An ambitious training program i s also being implemented. If violations in licenses or permits are found, the NEGhas a range of administrative orders and penalties to issue at its disposal. There seems to be serious commitment at the senior management level to improve the overall compliance level. The trend i s positive, with reportedly increased fines for violations, more transparency, and reduced ambiguity in setting the fines (thereby helping reduce corruption). It should be noted, however, that a fully staffed NEGwill not be inplace for about a year, so effectiveness cannot yet be fully documented. 11. In the area of Environmental Assessment, the safeguard diagnostic review concludes that there are no major gaps regarding the equivalence of Romanian systems that would inhibitpiloting. 62 12. With respect to EA implementation practices (the core of the "acceptability analyses"), the Bank finds the current approach and direction of Romanian institutions in carrying out sub-sector laws and policies (including compliance and enforcement) to conform to the goals of OP 4.00. While several areas would benefit from strengthening (as part of the country's overall improvement in environmental management and implementation of sectoral policies), these are not significant enough to hinder the Municipal Services Project from being approved as a pilot. 13. Regarding cultural property, the Bank believes that Romanian systems are equivalent and appropriate for application under this operation. If the operation would require construction or rehabilitation near historic buildings or other physical cultural resources, or if "chance finds" are encountered, the assessment concludes that Romanian systems are at least as effective as those outlined in OP/BP 4.00 on such points. Inventories of buildings and sites of cultural significance are available, and are consulted to assess whether proposed investment projects might cause impact. Local experts on archeology, architecture and other relevant fields are brought in for assessments before construction decisions are made and after, if "chance finds" are encountered during construction. While there have been reported instances where constructionhas taken place inareas of cultural importance without the full engagement and approval of experts, this does not appear to be a systemic issue which would hamper the acceptability of piloting in this area. The Bank will work with Romanian implementing authorities to closely monitor this aspect. Principal Observations Dam Safety - 14. During the preparation of the Municipal Services Project (Le. before the selection of Bucharest and &ad for the bulk of investments), it was possible that candidate sub-projects might have included rehabilitation or extension of drinking water systems where supply i s obtained from dams or other control structures. New dams would not have been financed by the project, nor would dams have been rehabilitated under the project, but the capability of Romanian authorities to ensure dam safety was considered important should water supplies under the project be associated with control structures. Good alignment was found between Romanian requirements and those of the Bank for dam safety. Experience by the World Bank in ongoing projects in Romania also suggests that the country's system for ensuring the safety of existing dams that are utilized for water supply i s adequate for piloting. The project as appraised, however, does not include investments reasonably associated with any control structures so the dam safety safeguard is not triggered. The background assessment i s included, however, for general information and possible relevance to future projects. Principal Observations Other Issues - 15. The InternationalWaterways Safeguard will be triggered by the Municipal Services project, and World Bank procedures under OP/BP 7.50 do apply. As per OP 4.00, this policy cannot be piloted for the use of borrower systems. 16. No other safeguard-related policies are currently being advanced for piloting. 63 Conclusions 17. This diagnostic review concludes that the Romanian system of laws, regulations and practices in the sectors to be supported by the proposed Municipal Services i s sufficiently equivalent to those of the World Bank, and suflciently acceptable in practice, to support piloting under OP/BP 4.00 in the areas of environmental assessmentand cultural property. Safeguard-related matters will be supervised regularly by the World Bank through the implementationof the proposed project. 64 Annex 11: Project Preparationand Supervision ROMANIA: MUNICIPAL SERVICESPROJECT Planned Actual ~ PCNreview 11/22/2004 11/22/2006 InitialPIDto PIC 12110/2004 12/1012006 Initial ISDS to PIC 12/13/2004 12/13/2006 Appraisal 05/01/2006 05/10/2006 Negotiations 05/08/2006 05/1512006 Board/RVP approval 06/22/2006 Planneddate of effectiveness 10/30/2006 Planneddate of mid-term review 06/30/2008 Planned closing date 06/30/2011 The following agencies worked with the Bank to prepare the project: Ministry of Public Finance, Ministry of Environment and Water Management, Municipality of Bucharest, and Municipality of Arad. Project preparation was supported through grant support from the Spanish Government and the Austrian Government. Bank staff and consultants who worked on the project included: Name Title Unit Sudipto Sarkar Lead Specialist (TeamLeader) ECSIE DoinaVisa Operations Officer ECSIE MichaelWebster Water and Sanitation Specialist ECSIE Claudia M.Pardinas Ocana Senior Counsel LEGEC Alexandra Ana Maria Stan Operations Officer ECSIE Ana Otilia Nutu Consultant ECSIE Henry Kerali LeadTransport Specialist ECSIE Mirela Mart Financial Management Specialist ECSPS RuxandraMaria Floroiu Consultant (Environment and Social) ECSSD Stan Peabody Lead Social Development Specialist ECSSD Vladislav Krasikov Senior Procurement Specialist ECSPS Bogdan Constantinescu Senior Financial Management Specialist ECSPS Nicholay Chistyakov Senior Finance Officer LOAGl George Alexandru Moldoveanu TeamAssistant ECCRO Larisa Marquez Senior Program Assistant ECSIE Hana Huzjak ETTemporary ECSIE Milane Reyes ProgramAssistant ECSIE Ljiljana Boranic Team Assistant ECCHR Fritz Schwaiger Consultant (Engineering) ECSIE Kishore Nadkarni Consultant (Finance) ECSIE Bank funds expended to date on project preparation: as of April 13,2006 1. Bank resources: $231,715 2. Trust funds: $34,800 -Austrian Trust Fund; $99,918 -Spanish Trust Fund 3. Total: $366,433 EstimatedApproval and Supervision costs: 1. Remainingcosts to approval: $30,000 2. Estimatedannual supervision cost: $90,000 65 Annex 12: Documentsinthe Project File ROMANIA: MUNICIPAL SERVICESPROJECT 1. MissionDocuments: Aide Memoires, letters, Back-To-Office Reports; 2. World Bank draft document (December 2005) "Equivalence and Acceptability Assessment Report for Piloting the Use of Romanian Environmental and Social Safeguards Systems in Bank-Assisted Projects"; 3. EU Environmental Directives as laid out in chapter 22 "Environmental Protection", in particular, Directives No. 98/83/EEC for drinkingwater and Directive No. 91/271/EEEC for urban wastewater; 4. EUPhare financed project (August 2005) TA for Elaboration of the Environmental Cost Assessment and Investment Plan: 5. Municipal Services Project - Review and Assessment of the WaterNVastewater and Solid Waste Management Sector; Report preparedby Eptisa International; April 2006; 6. S.C. Romair Consultants Ltd (December 2005) Rehabilitation of the urban areas with severe shortages insewerage and water supply services inBucharest Municipality (Draft Feasibility study); 7. S.C. Romair Consultants Ltd (December 2005) Rehabilitation of the urban areas with severe shortages in sewerage services inArad Municipality (Draft Feasibility study); 8. Justification Note sent by the Mayor of Bucharest received on December 20,2005; and 9. Justification Note sent by the Mayor of Arad received on December 12,2005. 66 Annex 13: Statementof Loansand Credits ROMANIA: MUNICIPALSERVICESPROJECT Difference betweenexpected and actual Original Amount inUS$Millions disbursements Project FY Purpose IBRD IDA SF GEF Cancel. Undisb. Orig. Frm. ID Rev'd PO90309 2006 JUDICIAL REFORM 130.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 131.73 9.64 0.00 PO88165 2006 KNOW ECON 60.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 58.44 0.00 0.00 PO86694 2005 ECSEEAPL #1 (CRL) 84.30 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 80.99 3.87 0.00 PO78971 2005 HEALTH SEC REF2 80.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 77.91 18.43 0.00 (APL#2) (CRL) PO87807 2005 MINE CLOSURE, ENV 120.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 119.80 7.13 0.00 & SOCIO-ECOREG (CW) PO86949 2005 MOD AGRIC SUPPT 50.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 48.84 6.71 0.00 SERVS (MAKIS) (CRL) PO83620 2005 TRANSPORT 225.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 222.57 63.40 0.00 RESTRUCTURING PO75163 2004 HAZMITIG 150.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 146.91 10.91 0.00 PO81950 2004 HAZARD 0.00 0.00 0.00 7.00 0.00 6.44 1.20 0.00 MITIGATION(GEF) PO43881 2004 IRRIGREHAB 80.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 78.47 16.44 0.00 PO81406 2003 ELECMARKET 82.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 49.86 21.41 0.00 PO68062 2003 ENERGY EFF(GEF) 0.00 0.00 0.00 10.00 0.00 5.22 5.05 0.00 PO67367 2003 FORESTDEVT 25.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 23.30 8.20 0.00 PO69679 2003 PPIBL 18.60 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 14.84 14.84 0.00 PO73967 2003 RURAL EDUC 60.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 40.40 5.27 6.94 PO66065 2002 AG POLLUTION 0.00 0.00 0.00 5.15 0.00 0.84 0.22 0.00 CONTROL(GEF) PO57960 2002 RURAL DEV ( M L #1) 40.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 21.49 14.65 0.00 PO68808 2002 SDF 2 (APL#2) 20.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2.49 1.49 1.66 PO56891 2001 RURALFIN(APL #1) 80.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 25.03 25.03 -6.97 PO08783 2001 SOC SECT DEV (SSD) 50.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 34.48 34.48 PO56337 2000 MINE CLOSURE 44.50 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 7.05 7.05 1.71 PO44176 1999 BIODIV CONSV 0.00 0.00 0.00 5.50 0.00 0.70 0.70 0.70 MGMT (GEF) PO34213 1998 GENL CADASTRE 25.50 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 9.55 9.55 9.55 PO39250 1997 ROADS2 150.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 3.10 3.10 0.00 67 STATEMENTOFIFC's HeldandDisbursedPortfolio InMillionsof US Dollars Committed Disbursed IFC IFC FY Approval Company Loan Equity Quasi Partic. Loan Equity Quasi Partic. 1999 Ambro 0.72 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.72 0.00 0.00 0.00 2003 Arctic 9.41 0.00 0.00 0.00 9.41 0.00 0.00 0.00 2002 Banc Post 0.00 8.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 8.00 0.00 0.00 2006 Banc Post 0.00 6.75 0.00 0.00 0.00 6.75 0.00 0.00 2003 BancaComerciala 63.82 0.00 0.00 0.00 63.82 0.00 0.00 0.00 2004 BancaComerciala 0.00 111.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 111.00 0.00 0.00 2006 BancaComerciala 89.38 0.00 0.00 0.00 89.38 0.00 0.00 0.00 2005 BancaTiriac 25.96 0.00 0.00 0.00 25.29 0.00 0.00 0.00 2005 DistrigazSud 0.00 47.67 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2001 ICME 7.65 0.00 0.00 0.00 7.65 0.00 0.00 0.00 2004 Mindbank 0.00 0.00 7.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 7.OO 0.00 2005 Petrotel-Lukoil 35.00 0.00 0.00 47.00 35.00 0.00 0.00 47.00 2002 ProcreditRomania 0.00 1.56 0.00 0.00 0.00 1.56 0.00 0.00 2003 ProcreditRomania 0.00 0.41 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.41 0.00 0.00 2004 ProcreditRomania 5.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 5.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2004 RZB Romania 10.00 0.00 0.00 30.00 10.00 0.00 0.00 30.00 2003 Ro-Fin 4.70 0.00 0.00 0.00 4.64 0.00 0.00 0.00 2004 Romanian-Amer... 3.OO 0.00 0.00 0.00 3.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2001 Romlease 0.89 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.89 0.00 0.00 0.00 2006 TTS SA 16.68 0.00 0.00 0.00 4.77 0.00 0.00 0.00 2004 Transilvaniabank 24.01 0.00 0.00 0.00 24.08 0.00 0.00 0.00 2005 Transilvaniabank 23.84 0.00 20.00 0.00 11.92 0.00 20.00 0.00 0.00 8.94 0.00 0.00 Approvals PendingCommitment FY Approval Company Loan Equity Quasi Partic. 2005 Banat 46.23 0.00 18.25 42.58 Dobroeea 47.83 0.00 12.93 45.24 ~ 2005 Y -~ 2005 BanvitRomania 15.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2003 Ro-FinMortgage 0.00 0.00 1.oo 0.00 68 Annex 14: Country at a Glance Romania at a glance e43 f.553 1Do 103 145 p"8 101 183 KEYECONOMICRAT 69 T 2.370 2.285 3 ka MAP SECTION IBRD 34517 22°E 28°E 24°E 26°E ROMANIA UKRAINE MUNICIPAL SERVICES To Uzhhorod PROJECT To Ivano-Frankivs'k COUNTIES IN WHICH PROJECTS WILL BE PREPARED MUNICIPALITIES IN WHICH INVESTMENTS WILL BE IMPLEMENTED ROMANIA To Balti SELECTED CITIES AND TOWNS BOTOSANI 48°N COUNTY (JUDET) CAPITALS Satu Mare Siret MARAMURES Botosani NATIONAL CAPITAL SATU MARE SUCEAVA RIVERS Baia Mare Suceava MAIN ROADS Prut Somes RAILROADS BISTRITA- To Chisinau COUNTY (JUDET) BOUNDARIES NASAUD I A S I INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARIES To Iasi Budapest Oradea Zalau Bistrita Dej SALAJ Bistrita Piatra- To Chisinau 30°E HUNGARY Neamt C L U J Roman To B I H O R Budapest Mures Cluj- MURES NEAMT Napoca Gheorgheni Vaslui MOLDOVA Tārgu Tīrgu Husi Mures HARGHITA Bacau Crisul Turda Alb Miercurea- V A S L U I Cuic B A C A U A L B A Comanesti Arad A R A D Onesti Trotus Siret To Bārlad Subotica Brad Alba Mures Iulia Medias UKRAINE 46°N COVASNA Deva S I B I U SERBIA B Timisoara BRASOVSfāntu VRANCEA Tecuci Lugoj Hunedoara Sibiu Gheorghe AND a T I M I S Timis HUNEDOARA Focsani GALATI Brasov MONTE- n Petrosani Galati NEGRO a VĀLCEA VĪLCEA ARGES BUZAU To t Resita Buzau Braila Brāila Novi Sad Buzau Tulcea CARAS - G O R J Rāmnicu PRAHOVA SEVERIN Targu Jiu Vālcea BRAILA Tārgoviste Targoviste T U L C E A Ploiesti Pitesti Jiu DĀMBOVITA DĪMBOVITA Da unauvbe Orsova Drobeta- Turnu Severin IALOMITA Ialomita Arges ILFOV Slobozia MEHEDINTI Slatina BUCURESTI Fetesti To Nis Craiova O L T Navodari Olt CALARASI TELEORMAN Calarasi Medgidia 44°N D O L J GIURGIU Duanauvbe CONSTANTA Constanta 44°N 0 25 50 75 100 Kilometers Caracal Calafat Alexandria Giurgiu Black Mangalia 0 25 50 75 Miles Turnu Magurele Sea This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank To Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any To BULGARIA Shumen endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Sofiya 24°E To To To Veliko Turnovo Shumen Varna 30°E JUNE 2006