Document of The World Bank FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Report No: 66391-CM PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT ON A PROPOSED GRANT FROM THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY TRUST FUND IN THE AMOUNT OF US$3.5 MILLION TO THE REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON FOR THE CONSERVATION AND SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT WITHIN THE NGOYLA-MINTOM FOREST PROJECT March 14, 2012 This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by recipients only in the performance of their official duties. Its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank authorization. CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (Exchange Rate Effective 20 January 2012) Currency Unit = XAF (Communauté Financière Africaine franc) [FCFA 507.235 = US$1] FISCAL YEAR January 1 – December 31 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS AFD French Development Agency CAS Country Assistance Strategy CBSP Congo Basin Strategic Program DA Designated Account DSCE Growth and Employment Strategy Document (“Document de Stratégie pour la Croissance et l’Emploi�) DFID UK Department for International Development EA Environmental Assessment ESMP Environmental and Social Management Plan ESIA Environmental and Social Impact Assessment EU European Union FA Financing Agreement FEICOM Special fund for Inter Council Equipment and Interventions (“Fonds Spécial d’Equipement et d’Intervention Intercommunale�). FESP/PSFE (Forest and Environment Development Program (“Programme Sectoriel Forêt Environnement�) FLEGT Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade FM Financial Management GDP Gross Domestic Product GEF Global Environment Facility GIZ German Agency for International Cooperation GoC Government of Cameroon HIPC Highly Indebted Poor Countries IDA International Development Association IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development IMF International Monetary Fund IPP Indigenous Peoples Plan ISR Implementation Status and Results Report IUCN International Union for Conservation of Nature LSM Livelihood Support Mechanism ii M&E Monitoring and Evaluation MINADER Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (“Ministère de l’Agriculture et du Développement Rural�) MINAS Ministry of Social Affairs (“Ministère des Affaires Sociales�). MINATD Ministry of Territorial Administration and Decentralization (“Ministère de l’Administration Territorial et de la Décentralisation�) MINDAF Ministry of State Property and Land Tenure (“Ministère des Domaines et des Affaires Foncières�) MINEPDED Ministry of Environment, Nature Protection & Sustainable Development. (“Ministère de l’Environnement, de la Protection de la Nature et du Développement Durable�). MINEPAT Ministry of Economy, Planning and Regional Development (“Ministère de l‘Economie, de la Planification, et de l’Aménagement du Territoire�). MINFI Ministry of Finance (“Ministère de Finance�). MINFOF Ministry of Forests and Wildlife (“Ministère des Forêts et de la Faune�). MINMIDIT Ministry of Industry, Mines, and Technological Development (“Ministère de l’Industrie, des Mines et du Développement Technologique�) NGO Non-Governmental Organization NTFP Non-Timber Forest Products PDO Project Development Objective PF Process Framework PIU Project Implementation Unit PNDP Community Development Program Support Project (Programme National de Développement Participatif) PRECESSE Projet de Renforcement des Capacités Environnementales et Sociales (Environmental & Social Capacity Building for the Energy Sector Project) REDD+ Reduction of Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (with additional focus on biodiversity conservation and poverty alleviation). SA Social Assessment TA Technical Assistance TOR Terms of Reference TRIDOM Projet GEF « Conservation de la Biodiversité transfrontalière dans l‟interzone Tri-National du Dja, Odzala, Minkebe » TTL Task Team Leader UTO Technical Operation Unit WB World Bank WWF World Wildlife Fund Regional Vice President: Obiageli K. Ezekwesili Country Director: Gregor Binkert Sector Director: Jamal Saghir Sector Manager: Idah Z. Pswarayi-Riddihough Task Team Leader: James Acworth iii REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON Conservation & Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project TABLE OF CONTENTS Page I. STRATEGIC CONTEXT ....................................................................................................... 1 A. Country Context ............................................................................................................... 1 B. Sectoral and Institutional Context .................................................................................... 2 C. Higher Level Objectives to which the Project Contributes .............................................. 4 II. PROJECT DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES......................................................................... 5 A. PDO .................................................................................................................................. 5 B. Project Beneficiaries ........................................................................................................ 6 C. PDO Level Results Indicators .......................................................................................... 6 III. PROJECT DESCRIPTION .................................................................................................. 7 A. Project components .......................................................................................................... 7 B. Project Financing.............................................................................................................. 9 C. Lessons Learned and Reflected in the Project Design ................................................... 11 IV. Implementation .................................................................................................................. 13 A. Institutional and Implementation Arrangements ............................................................ 13 B. Results Monitoring and Evaluation ................................................................................ 14 C. Sustainability .................................................................................................................. 15 V. Key Risks and Mitigation Measures ..................................................................................... 16 VI. Appraisal Summary ........................................................................................................... 18 A. Economic and Financial Analysis .................................................................................. 18 B. Technical ........................................................................................................................ 19 C. Financial Management ................................................................................................... 19 D. Procurement ................................................................................................................... 20 E. Social (including safeguards) ......................................................................................... 21 F. Environment (including safeguards) .............................................................................. 22 Annex 1: Results Framework and Monitoring.............................................................................. 25 Annex 2: Detailed Project Description ........................................................................................ 28 Annex 3: Implementation Arrangements ..................................................................................... 45 Annex 4: Operational Risk Assessment Framework (ORAF) ...................................................... 73 Annex 5: Implementation Support Plan........................................................................................ 78 iv Annex 6: GEF Incremental Cost Analysis .................................................................................... 82 Annex 7: Recent History of the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif................................................... 89 Annex 8: Biodiversity of the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif. ...................................................... 90 v PAD DATA SHEET Cameroon Conservation & Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT . AFRICA AFTEN . Basic Information Date: 14-March-2012 Sectors: Forestry (100%) Country Director: Gregor Binkert Themes: Biodiversity (100%) Sector Manager/Director: Idah Z. Pswarayi-Riddihough/Jamal Saghir Project ID: P118018 EA Category: B - Partial Assessment Lending Instrument: Specific Investment Loan Focal Area: Biodiversity Team Leader(s): James Michael Acworth Joint IFC: No . Borrower: Republic of Cameroon Responsible Agency: Ministry of Forests and Wildlife Contact: Denis Koulagna Title: Secretary General Telephone No.: 23799818365 Email: koulagnakkd@yahoo.fr . Project Implementation Period: Start Date: 05-Apr-2012 End Date: 30-Jun-2017 Expected Effectiveness Date: 15-Aug-2012 Expected Closing Date: 30-Jun-2017 . Project Financing Data(US$M) [ ] Loan [X] Grant [ ] Other [ ] Credit [ ] Guarantee For Loans/Credits/Others Total Project Cost (US$M): 3.50 Total Bank Financing (US$M): 0.00 . Financing Source Amount(US$M) BORROWER/RECIPIENT 0.00 Global Environment Facility (GEF) 3.50 Total 3.50 . Expected Disbursements (in USD Million) Fiscal Year 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Annual 0.00 0.40 0.50 0.60 0.80 1.20 0.00 0.00 0.00 Cumulative 0.00 0.40 0.90 1.50 2.30 3.50 3.50 3.50 3.50 . vi Global Environmental Objective(s) The PDO is to improve the conservation and management of the Core Area* and improve access to income-generating activities for local communities in the project area. *Core Area means the area(s), measuring in their aggregate no less than 160,000 hectares, within the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif, identified by the Recipient with the explicit agreement in writing of the World Bank to be classified and managed for conservation and low-impact community use. . Components Component Name Cost (USD Millions) Component 1 - Strengthen government and civil society capacity for participatory planning and management 1.57 of the core areas that are proposed for conservation and low impact community use. Component 2 - Design and Implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM). 1.41 Component 3 - Design and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System for the Ngoyla- 0.52 Mintom Forest Massif; and Project Management . Compliance Policy Does the project depart from the CAS in content or in other significant respects? Yes [ ] No [ X ] . Does the project require any waivers of Bank policies? Yes [ ] No [ X ] Have these been approved by Bank management? Yes [ ] No [ ] Is approval for any policy waiver sought from the Board? Yes [ ] No [ X ] Does the project meet the Regional criteria for readiness for implementation? Yes [ X ] No [] . Safeguard Policies Triggered by the Project Yes No Environmental Assessment OP/BP 4.01 X Natural Habitats OP/BP 4.04 X Forests OP/BP 4.36 X Pest Management OP 4.09 X Physical Cultural Resources OP/BP 4.11 X Indigenous Peoples OP/BP 4.10 X Involuntary Resettlement OP/BP 4.12 X Safety of Dams OP/BP 4.37 X Projects on International Waterways OP/BP 7.50 X Projects in Disputed Areas OP/BP 7.60 X . Legal Covenants Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency Government Authorization: 15-Aug-2012 Financing Agreement Reference 5.01 (a) Description of Covenant The execution and delivery of the Financing Agreement on behalf of the Recipient have been duly authorized or ratified by all necessary governmental action. vii Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency Steering Committee: 15-Aug-2012 Financing Agreement Reference 5.01 (b) Description of Covenant The Recipient has established the Steering Committee in accordance with the provisions of Section I.A.1 of Schedule 2 to the Financing Agreement. Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency Project Implementation Unit (PIU): 15-Aug-2012 Financing Agreement Reference 5.01 (c) Description of Covenant The Recipient has established the PIU within MINFOF and has assigned to the PIU, the following qualified staff: a Project coordinator, a financial management officer and a procurement officer. Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency Project Implementation Manual: 15-Aug-2012 Financing Agreement Reference 5.01 (d) Description of Covenant The Recipient has adopted the Project Implementation Manual in accordance with the provisions of Section I.F of Schedule 2 to the Financing Agreement. Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency Appointment of Technical Experts to PIU: 17-Dec-2012 Financing Agreement Reference Schedule 2 Section I A2b. Description of Covenant The Recipient shall appoint to the PIU the following Experts: environmental and social management; forest management; participatory natural resources management; Monitoring & Evaluation; and regional development. Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency Procurement adviser and Financial Management adviser: 17-Dec-2012 Financing Agreement Reference Schedule 2Section I A 2b. Description of Covenant The Recipient shall recruit a procurement adviser and a financial management adviser; all with qualifications and terms of reference acceptable to the World Bank; Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency Computerized financial management and accounting system: 17-Dec-2012 Financing Agreement Reference: Schedule 2Section II B4 Description of Covenant The Recipient has set up, within the Project Implementation Unit, a computerized financial management and accounting system satisfactory to the World Bank. Name Recurrent Due Date Frequency External auditors: 17-Dec-2012 Financing Agreement Reference: Schedule 2Section II B5 Description of Covenant Not later than 4 months after the Effectiveness date, the external auditors for the project have been hired with qualifications acceptable to the World Bank; . Team Composition Bank Staff Name Title Specialization Unit Claudia Sobrevila Senior Environmental Specialist Senior Environmental AFTEN Specialist Salimata D. Follea Operations Analyst Operations Analyst AFTEN viii Paola Agostini Senior Economist Senior Economist AFTEN Leoncie Niyonahabonye Office Manager Office Manager AFTEN Dahlia Lotayef Program Coordinator Program Coordinator AFTEN Cheikh A. T. Sagna Senior Social Development Specialist Senior Social Development AFTCS Specialist Aissatou Diallo Senior Financial Officer Senior Financial Officer CTRLA Gayatri Kanungo Consultant Consultant AFTEN Kouami Hounsinou Messan Senior Procurement Specialist Senior Procurement AFTPC Specialist Emeran Serge M. Menang Forestry Specialist Forestry Specialist AFTEN Evouna Enagnon Ernest Eric Adda Financial Management Specialist Financial Management AFTFM Specialist Jeanne d'Arc Edima Team Assistant Team Assistant AFCC1 James Michael Acworth Sr Forestry Spec. Team Lead AFTEN Kolie Ousmane Maurice Megnan Sr Financial Management Specialist Sr Financial Management AFTFM Specialist Nneoma Veronica Nwogu Counsel Counsel LEGAF Ananie Cyrille Ekoumou Abanda Forestry Specialist Forestry Specialist AFTEN Mountaga Ndiaye E T Consultant E T Consultant AFTPC Non Bank Staff Name Title Office Phone City . Locations Country First Administrative Location Planned Actual Comments Division . ix PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON Conservation & Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project I. STRATEGIC CONTEXT A. Country Context 1. Cameroon‟s geography ranges from Sahelian semi-desert in the North through grassland to the humid rainforest biome of the Congo Basin in the South, with a range of climatic and vegetative zones in between. Cameroon is endowed with significant natural resources, including oil, high value timber species, and extensive mineral deposits. Its fertile soils and favorable climate also grows a diversity of agricultural products for export (coffee, cotton, cocoa, rubber) and 70 percent of the population depends on agriculture and pastoral activities for their livelihood. While oil revenues have been declining for the past 3 years, untapped resources include natural gas, bauxite, diamonds, gold, iron, and cobalt, much of which is located in forested areas. The economy is relatively diversified, with services accounting for 43.2 percent of 2010 GDP, agriculture 21.7, manufacturing 27.7 percent, and oil and mining 6.5 percent. 2. Despite this considerable natural resource endowment and huge development potential, the country‟s economic growth has been lagging behind the average growth rate for sub-Saharan countries. Poor infrastructure, an unfavorable business environment, and weak governance hamper economic activity and make it difficult to reach the growth rates needed to reduce poverty, which remains widespread: about 40 percent of the country‟s population living under the poverty threshold of US$1 per day. After a period of continuous progress from the 1960s until 1992, life expectancy dropped from 54.8 years in 1992 to 51.4 in 20091, and Cameroon ranks 150th of 169 countries in the 2011 Human Development Index2. Average 2003-2007 annual GDP growth was 3.3 percent and per-capita growth was very low at 0.6 percent because of the high population growth rate. As a result, extreme poverty remained unchanged and even worsened in rural areas. GDP growth in 2011 is estimated to have reached 4.1 percent, against 3.2 percent in 2010 on the back of stronger non-oil activities, which expanded by about 4 percent in 2011 (particularly food crops, forestry, construction, transport, and telecoms). Average inflation in the first three quarters of 2011 was 2.9 percent driven by rising food prices3, up from 0.9 percent in 2010. Cameroon ranks 161 out of 183 in the Doing Business Index (2012), moving up 10 positions since 2010, but governance challenges continue to deter increased investment. 1 Africa Development Indicators 2011, World Bank 2 Human Development Index Report 2011, UNDP. 3 Cameroon Economic Update, January 2012, World Bank Cameroon Country Office. 1 B. Sectoral and Institutional Context 3. The general responsibility for forest management and policy implementation in Cameroon resides with the Ministry of Forests and Wildlife (MINFOF). Over the past two decades, guided by a national Zoning Plan which the Government adopted in 1995, MINFOF has expanded the total area classified as permanent forest, reaching 8.72 million hectares by 2011. A further 3.12 million hectares have been declared as permanent forest, but are pending classification and an additional 1.5 million hectares are planned to become permanent forest. Once completed, this will bring the total Permanent Forest estate to 13.4 million hectares. Approximately 4.1 million hectares of this estate are allocated for commercial logging, and an additional 3.2 million hectares are in the process of competitive attribution for industrial logging. A further 641,000 hectares are planned for logging, which will result in a total of 8 million hectares of production forest. Also part of this Permanent Forest Estate, the Protected Area network has been expanded to protect some of Cameroon‟s rich biodiversity, and now covers over 3.7 million hectares accounting for 8.11% of the country‟s land area4. 4. Cameroon‟s forests are an important source of income: in 2008, timber exports accounted for 11.5 per cent of export revenues. This share fell by 38.4% in 2009 but during 2010 and 2011 export volumes and prices have recovered and now exceed pre-2008 levels. 5. However, Cameroon is entering a period of major investment in large energy and transport infrastructure, as well as mining which threaten the considerable advances made in establishing and valorizing a permanent forest estate. There are trade-offs between these investments and other land use objectives, such as biodiversity conservation, forest dwellers‟ livelihoods (including indigenous peoples), agriculture, timber production and maintenance of forest carbon stocks. Judging from recent experience (e.g. the issuance of mining permits overlapping with national parks and production forests, and transfer of proposed permanent forest areas back to non-permanent forest status for agricultural development) the country‟s ability to address such trade-offs is limited. The reasons for this are complex and include the high anticipated returns from mining and agricultural development, a lack of political will to protect global public goods in the absence of commensurate compensation, a weak policy and institutional framework for working across sectors, and lack of sufficient information on comparative economic benefits of land use options. 6. If nothing is done to remedy this situation, it may lead to major conflicts, economic inefficiencies, as well as the irreversible loss of biodiversity. To respond to these challenges, the Government of Cameroon is currently preparing a Master Plan to aid spatial development at the country level, a new legal framework for land management, and a national strategy for sustainable land management. A new Law to lay down guidelines for territorial planning and sustainable development in Cameroon was published in May 2011 but still lacks implementing regulations. The Government has also supported various initiatives to address shortcomings in specific sectors, including a Bank supported project to strengthen the institutional and regulatory framework in the Mining sector and to clarify environmental and social development obligations. 4 By 2011, Cameroon had established 18 National Parks covering 2.9m hectares, 7 Wildlife Reserves covering 702,000 hectares, and 4 Wildlife Sanctuaries covering 142,000 hectares. 2 Rationale for Bank involvement 7. The World Bank has been having an active dialogue on forestry sector for more than 2 decades, through various instruments: investment lending (GEF Biodiversity Conservation and Management Project: 1995-2002) as well a series of reforms implemented through structural adjustment credits (SACs) and the debt-relief initiative (HIPC). Most recently the Bank has been one of the major investors in the Forest & Environment Sector Program (FESP 2006-11), a national program designed by Government, to which donors decided to contribute with different instruments, in a coordinated manner. The Bank contribution to the FESP included a Development Policy Lending (DPL) operation, funded by an IDA Grant (P070656: SDR 17,300,000) and GEF funding (P073020, US$10 million). Other partners (France, DFiD) also supported the FESP through budgetary support and a common matrix was set up to monitor the progress made. The DPL has contributed to the strengthening of public and private efforts to achieve socially-, economically-, and ecologically-sustainable use of national forest and wildlife resources, and has supported various initiatives in environmental monitoring, policy oversight, law enforcement, forest management, biodiversity conservation, and community-based forest activities. However, the DPL operation suffered from delayed achievement of key indicators, in part due to design issues5, and in part due to new interests in forest land such as mining and plantations development, and was closed in December 2011. 8. The GEF-funded project presented below is situated in the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif, a block of approximately 900,000 hectares of largely unexploited forest in South Cameroon, which is essential for the maintenance of biological connectivity between Minkébé National Park in Gabon and adjacent Protected Areas in Cameroon (Dja Wildlife Reserve and Nki National Park) as well as Odzala in the Republic of Congo (see Figures at end of document and Table 1 in Annex 7). A 1995 indicative zoning plan designated the massif to become permanent forest, but meso-zoning6 to define specific areas for conservation, commercial timber production and other uses is still ongoing. A proposal for establishing „conservation concessions‟ in the massif has been on the table for over 10 years, but MINFOF has not yet received a sufficiently attractive offer to set aside part or all of the area for long-term conservation. To date, MINFOF has made limited investment in protecting or managing the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif and unregulated hunting is depleting its wildlife populations. 9. The imminent construction of a new international highway, and likely development of an iron ore mine and associated railway and energy infrastructure in the area within the project lifetime, will greatly alter the local social dynamics and economics of land use. It is therefore critical to legally secure core areas of the Ngoyla-Mintom massif and to put them under effective management, which is the overall objective of this GEF project. 10. Though the GEF funding available for this project is limited, this project is strategic as it will serve as a valuable pilot project to test alternative approaches to natural resources management and revenue sharing that learn from past experiences, and should be applicable in future Bank investments in Cameroon‟s forestry and biodiversity sectors. The country assistance 5 Lessons learned and measures to address them in the design of this project are presented in Section III(C). 6 For the purposes of this project, we use the following terminology: Land Use Planning (Plan de Zonage) is the process by which land is allocated between forestry and other land uses (and was completed in the project area in 1995); meso-zoning refers to the process of defining different forest areas to specific legal status and management purposes; micro-zoning is the process of defining detailed management sub-units within the larger forest management units, that will be designated specific forest management objectives and activities. 3 strategy (2010-2013) envisages that any such investments will “improve transparency, equity and sustainability in the use of natural resources� and will strengthen public and private efforts to achieve socially, economically, and ecologically sustainable use of national forest and wildlife resources, including protected areas. GoC sees Ngoyla Mintom as a priority site for potential REDD projects and the area therefore serves as a laboratory for designing and testing such mechanisms. It complements a set of parallel investments which aim to develop the national readiness and capacity for “Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation� (REDD) initiatives (using Forest Carbon Partnership Facility funds), and a regional initiative (using GEF resources) to strengthen Congo Basin countries' capacities on REDD issues. 11. In summary, this modest but critical GEF investment in securing and managing core areas within the Ngoyla Mintom has the potential to generate important lessons and experience that will inform future Bank investments in Cameroon as well as in neighboring countries. C. Higher Level Objectives to which the Project Contributes 12. Relevance to National Development priorities: Cameroon‟s development ambitions, as expressed in its Vision 2035 document are to a large extent based on its natural resource wealth, while remaining conscious of the risks of over-exploitation, negative environmental impacts of development, and climate change. The proposed project is aligned with Vision 2035, which recognizes that land use planning and management is essential to secure integrated and sustainable development, and proposes to put in place contractual obligations for joint management of space by the state and decentralized authorities, in collaboration with the private sector and forest adjacent communities. It is also aligned with the “Rural Sector� component of Cameroon‟s Strategy Document for Growth and Employment (DSCE) 2010-2020, which includes programs and sub-programs to: develop forestry production, through management and regeneration of permanent forests, and the valorization of forest and faunal resources; to improve the quality of life through improved socio-economic infrastructure, community development and community management; and to ensure sustainable management of natural resources through management of humid zones, environmental management of rural activities and management of biodiversity; and to improve the institutional framework, ensuring coherence of interventions, reinforcement of capacities, and development of financing mechanisms. 13. Relevance to World Bank priorities in Cameroon: The project is fully consistent with the World Bank Africa Strategy, and FY10-13 Country Assistance Strategy Framework (Report No. 52997 – CM approved by the Board on March 30, 2010) whose foundation is improved governance. In particular, it is aligned with Strategic Theme One: “Increasing Cameroon‟s Competitiveness�, whose sub-component 1 aims to “improve transparency, equity and sustainability in the use of natural resources, including protected areas�. The Ngoyla Mintom project serves as a pilot by: testing participatory planning approaches; demonstrating how funds for local community development can be managed transparently and equitably for sustainable local development; and strengthening the capacity of local Civil Society to perform a watchdog role vis-à-vis illegal forest activities and management of natural resource revenues, thereby stimulating demand-side governance. 14. Relevance to GEF Strategic Priorities: The project primarily contributes to GEF-4 Strategic Objective 1 (SO1 - Catalyzing the Sustainability of Protected Areas Systems). In particular the project is fully aligned with the Strategic Program 3 (SP3: Strengthening terrestrial 4 Protected Area networks), and Strategic Program 1 (SP1 – Sustainable financing of PA systems at the national level). Key activities that contribute to SO1 include strengthening institutions and providing training for consultations; community based natural resource management, and communications under sub-component 1.1; the detailed socio-economic analyses of protected area management options under sub-component 1.2 which will help appreciate the impact of scenarios on different stakeholders; and support to the preparation of classification proposals and drafting of management plans for priority conservation areas within Ngoyla-Mintom Forest block under sub-component 1.3. Significantly in alignment with SP1, the proposed project is piloting a Livelihood Support Mechanism (developed under Component 2) since this is conceived as a critical component of a future Sustainable Financing Mechanism being supported by the TRIDOM project, and which will be further supported by future IDA investments within the context of the Cameroon Country Assistance Strategy. 15. This project is also fully consistent with the current GEF4 Sustainable Forest Management Framework - supported through the existing biodiversity strategic programs, and in line with the GEF‟s mandate of protecting global environmental goods. 16. This project falls under the larger regional framework of the Strategic Program for Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) in the Congo Basin (CBSP), which presents a programmatic approach aiming to deliver multiple global environmental benefits across the Congo River Basin ecosystem and adding value to a portfolio of projects envisioned under the Strategic Program. The project contributes to all three Strategic Program components: Program Component 1 (Maintaining Ecosystem functions and values, especially biodiversity and carbon- based capital in the regional network of protected areas); Component 2 (Fostering Sustainable Management and use of forest and water resources in the larger productive landscape of the Congo Basin), and Component 3 (Strengthening the policy, regulatory, institutional and sustainable financing framework for sustainable ecosystem management). The project‟s investments in: capacity building in sustainable management, biodiversity conservation, strengthening the rights of local people for community based natural resources management; and improving livelihoods of local communities, forest dwellers and vulnerable groups who depend on the natural resources of the Congo Basin, contribute to most of the Strategic Program‟s 12 expected outcomes. II. PROJECT DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES A. PDO 17. The project development objective is to improve the conservation and management of the Core Area and improve access to income-generating activities for local communities. 18. “Core Area� means the area(s), measuring in their aggregate no less than 160,000 hectares, within the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif, identified by the Recipient with the explicit agreement in writing of the World Bank to be classified and managed for conservation and low- impact community use. Selection of the Core Area will be guided by its high biodiversity conservation value and its role as critical corridor between the existing Protected Areas within the cross-border “Tri-National� (TRIDOM) zone between Cameroon, Congo and Gabon. 5 19. This Core Area will be managed in compliance with IUCN Category VI “Managed Resource Protected Areas� that can generate economic benefits for the Republic of Cameroon, but will explicitly exclude logging. B. Project Beneficiaries 20. The Ngoyla Mintom area is home to approximately 10,200 people living in about 60 localities within and around the massif, including an estimated 3,000 members of the Baka community, identified as indigenous people in Cameroon. While they are becoming increasingly sedentarised, both through choice and because of Government policies, they still spend the majority of their time hunting, fishing and gathering non-timber forest products in the forest. 21. The primary beneficiaries of the project will be those among this community whose livelihoods traditionally depend on the diverse natural resources within the Ngoyla Mintom forest. The benefits include: support to better define and secure their traditional rights of access to the forest for hunting, gathering and cultural activities in future classification documents and management plans; improve sustainable use of forest resources through training and other support; and provision of alternative livelihoods initiatives for those whose use of forest resources may be restricted under future management scenarios. 22. The project will in particular aim to ensure that indigenous people benefit from a proportionally equitable share of the project activities and investments to support new income- generating activities, and that their customary access rights to the forest are better defined. Such rights will either be sustained, or if restricted, shall be adequately compensated. 23. If the new, more inclusive approach to the conservation and management of forests in Ngoyla-Mintom is successful and lessons learned could contribute to future revision of national forest and wildlife policy, and the Ministry‟s approach to management of Protected Areas in Cameroon: consequently, many local communities and indigenous peoples, beyond the Ngoyla Mintom project site, would benefit from the project beyond the lifetime of the project. C. PDO Level Results Indicators 24. The following indicators will be used to monitor the achievement of the PDO.  GEF Management Effectiveness Tracking Tool (METT) score has increased by 50% over baseline value (26) for the core areas by project closure.  Conservation and management of core areas: (a) Draft Decree for Classification of core areas is prepared, validated and submitted by MINFOF to Prime Minister‟s Office for endorsement; (b) Draft Management Plan for core areas is drafted, validated and submitted to MINFOF for adoption.  1,000 people (10% of population) are directly benefiting from the Project (primarily from Livelihood Support Mechanism). 6 III. PROJECT DESCRIPTION A. Project components The proposed project consists of three interlinked components. Component 1 – Strengthen government and civil society capacity for participatory planning and management of the core areas. (Indicative budget for component: US$ 1.571million GEF) 25. The objective of this component is to strengthen the capacity of the government and civil society to manage priority “core areas� proposed for conservation and low impact community use. “Core Areas� means one or more areas selected for conservation guided by their high biodiversity conservation value, and their role as critical corridors between the existing Protected Areas within the TRIDOM7 area. These core areas within the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif will be selected on the basis of biological surveys currently being undertaken by Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF), and the meso-zoning plan that is currently being prepared under two separate projects8. This GEF project will not actually contribute to the preparation of the meso-zoning plan, which should already be advanced or completed by the time the project becomes effective, but will rather focus on participatory planning and management of the identified core areas. The Project will promote a model of conservation for the core areas based on sustainable use and community management that: avoids opportunity costs; reduces costs of management and policing by outsiders; and minimizes conflicts between external managers and communities. Empowerment of communities to manage and hunt wildlife sustainably in defined zones, to the exclusion of outsiders, will be prioritized, instead of investing solely in blanket efforts to eliminate all forms of hunting. While there will be industrial and community based logging in the Ngoyla-Mintom massif in the future, the core areas will be managed for conservation and low impact community use compatible with IUCN Protected Area Category VI, and will explicitly exclude logging. 26. The project will more specifically implement three main sub-components. a. The first sub-component will strengthen capacity of relevant government entities and civil society organizations to support participatory forest management and community based natural resource management by: (a) strengthening institutional and operational capacity of MINFOF to manage core areas of the Ngoyla-Mintom massif; (b) reinforcing multi-stakeholder consultation platforms to ensure coordination and consultation among stakeholders during planning and decision-making processes; (c) strengthening capacity of Local Civil Society Organizations / NGOs to perform watchdog / whistleblower functions; (d) definition and implementation of a local convention on the management of wildlife and control of hunting; and (e) implementing a Communication and Outreach program. 7 TRIDOM is the cross-border “Tri-National� zone between Cameroon, Congo and Gabon. It connects the Dja Faunal Reserve (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) and the Nki National Park in Cameroon, the Minkebe National Park in Gabon, and the Odzala National Park in Congo (see Figures in Annex 2, and Annex 8). 8 An EU funded WWF implemented project, entitled “Reduction of deforestation and degradation in the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Massif by implementing integral sustainable management in the framework of the Dja-Odzala- Minkebe (TRIDOM) Landscape� ; and a GEF funded TRIDOM project implemented by UNOPS (see Annex 3). 7 b. The second sub-component will (a) carry out studies of the socio-economic implications of classification and management options on local communities, and in particular on the traditional forest access rights of Indigenous People; and (b) confirm local communities‟ acceptance of classification and management of the core areas for conservation and low impact community use, through thorough stakeholder surveys with members of the consultation platforms. c. The third sub-component will (a) prepare classification proposals for selected core areas following a consultative participatory approach and (b) draft management plans for a sub-set of priority “core areas� within the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest massif that are proposed to become part of the permanent forest estate. The designated legal status of these “core areas� could be one or more of various options9 but will accommodate appropriate community participation in its management and use. The final decision will be the outcome of negotiations with all stakeholders. 27. All three sub-components will be supported by the communication and outreach program that communicates to local populations and other stakeholders the importance and benefits of successful project implementation. Component 2 – Design and Implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM). (Indicative budget for component: US$1.406 GEF) 28. This component will design and pilot a Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM) that will address immediate social and development needs of the local communities and indigenous peoples with priority given to those groups that have traditional use rights in the forest and in particular those members of the local community who stand to lose from reduced access to the forest resulting from the future classification and sustainable management of the core area(s) identified for conservation / low impact forest uses. 29. The LSM will be managed by an independent Management Contractor, who will report to the Project Implementation Unit, under a performance based contract. The LSM will in priority invest in micro-projects that increase economic alternatives and reduce the community‟s current dependence on the unsustainable use of natural resources in core areas in order to support them in transition to more sustainable resource-use patterns. Such micro-projects may include: a) support to establishment and/or improvement of alternative income-generating activities with conservation-compatible / low environmental impact such as crop farming, livestock husbandry, pisciculture, apiculture; simple market places, network building, and trade facilitation; and b) provision of basic social infrastructure such as wells, latrines, basic maintenance of critical sectors of access roads. Support for development of this type is widely considered to be essential to secure community support for the future classification and conservation oriented management of such a forest. 30. Two main sub-components are envisaged: a. The first sub-component will design, and pilot a Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM) in accordance with the approved Operational Procedures, which will include a series of outreach and training activities to build local capacity to access the LSM; 9 The current Forest Law provides for a range of options within the Permanent Forest Estate, including Faunal Sanctuary, Faunal Reserve, Hunting Zone, National Park or Integral Ecological Reserve. 8 b. Second sub-component: Evaluation of the Livelihood Support Mechanism with a view to developing subsequent scale-up recommendations. 31. The Management Contractor will design the LSM based on a review of existing methodologies for similar successful mechanisms, and in close consultation with the local stakeholders. The Operational Procedures for the LSM will: adapt best practice to local conditions; outline procedures for planning and proposing micro-projects; define eligibility criteria for screening potential beneficiaries and micro-projects that could be supported; include financial, economic, social and environmental screening procedures; and describe methods for approval, monitoring and accountability for the micro-projects. The Operational Procedures will be adopted through a validation workshop with representatives of the local community as a project activity prior to the LSM becoming operational. Component 3 - Design and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System for the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif; and Project Management. (Indicative budget for component: US$ 0.523 million GEF) 32. This component has two sub-components: a. The first sub-component will design and implement a long term M&E system that tracks social, economic, and ecological information for the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif; and second, project management. The M&E system will be designed to provide a framework for monitoring socio-economic changes within the communities living around the larger forest massif, but investment on data collection of forest use and ecological indicators will focus on the core areas for conservation and low impact community use. In particular, the M&E system will monitor levels of participation and consensus reached over time among local stakeholders including indigenous peoples and vulnerable groups during the legal classification process, and preparation of management plans for core areas. It will also monitor the number of people benefiting and type of benefit delivered by the project in general, and the Livelihood Support Mechanism in particular. Several tools are envisaged under this component: the GEF Tracking Tool for Biodiversity Projects; Forest cover monitoring; participatory socio-economic and ecological impact monitoring. b. The second sub-component is Project Management, including Project level M&E. B. Project Financing 1. Lending Instrument 33. The Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project is a full-sized, stand-alone GEF Project, with a five-year implementation period, to be financed by a GEF Grant in the amount of US$3.50 million. The GoC contribution to the Project is estimated at US$2.07million of in-kind contributions in the form of Ministry staff time to manage the project, construction of office and accommodation facilities, and provision of administrative services. 9 2. Project Cost and Financing 34. Total project financing requirements are estimated at US$ 5.573 million, inclusive of price and physical contingencies, and government in-kind contributions. A summary of Component costs and financing sources is provided in Table 1 below. Table 1. Project Costs by Component and Source of Financing (US$ Million) Components GEF Govt TOTAL (in kind) Component 1 – Strengthen government and civil society capacity for 1.571 1.934 3.505 participatory planning and management of the core areas. Component 2 – Design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism 1.406 0.036 1.442 Component 3 - Design and implement a long term M&E System for the 0.523 0.103 0.626 Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif; and Project Management TOTAL 3.5 2.073 5.573 35. The project will complement and closely collaborate with two existing projects, already operational in the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif: 1) A WWF Project entitled “Reduction of deforestation and degradation in the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Massif by implementing integral sustainable management in the framework of the Dja-Odzala-Minkebe (TRIDOM) Landscape� is a 5 year EUR3m project (EUR 2.5m from the European Union) which became effective in April 2011. 2) A GEF funded Project « Conservation de la Biodiversité transfrontalière dans l‟interzone Tri-National du Dja, Odzala, Minkébé » (TRIDOM Project) covers Cameroon, Gabon and Congo. The project is implemented by UNDP / UNOPS with a budget of US$10m from GEF. It became effective in 2008 and will run for seven years. The financing from this project is not shown in the table above since it is GEF funded. 36. Other projects active in the Ngoyla Mintom area include:  SNV provides support to: 10 Community Forests adjacent to the Ngoyla-Mintom forest massif; NTFP producers; and strengthening capacity of civil society organizations in forest management and governance (funded by EU APV-FLEGT and own resources with budget of EUR3.5m – or US$5.1m, of which US$0.6m is targeted at the Ngoyla-Mintom massif);  Local NGO “OPFCR� which provides technical support to 7 local Community Forests to move towards Certification (US$0.5m from Rainforest Alliance);  IUCN REDD/civil society capacity building within TRIDOM; local advocacy and capacity building of civil society groups; and a Pro-poor project which will support stakeholders‟ analysis and identification of main drivers of change within TRIDOM landscapes and Cameroon segment in particular (US$0.2m from CBFF, DANIDA and IUCN Netherlands);  WB IDA funded Mining Sector Capacity Building Project (PRECASEM, P122153, US$30m), has the development objective “to improve efficiency, transparency, and sustainability of mining sector management.� Of relevance to the Ngoyla-Mintom project, PRECASEM will support Social and Environmental management of mining (US$2.5m); creation and support to accountability Platforms (US$1.2m); Coordination between Mines, Forests and Environment Stakeholders (US$1m); and Local and Regional Linkages 10 (US$2m). Opportunities for synergies with this project further strengthen the case for this current investment in Ngoyla-Mintom;  WB IDA funded Agricultural Competitiveness Project (PACA – P112635 - US$56.6m) has the development objective to “increase the competitiveness of beneficiary producer organizations working on target value chains�. The IDA funded “Community Development Program Support Project� (PNDP – P113027 - US$40m total budget) has the development objective to “improve delivery of specified basic social services in targeted communes and extend the ongoing process in support of decentralization to new regions�. Both projects operate in the South Region but have not yet funded activities and investments in the Ngoyla Mintom region. The PNDP project is financing the capacity building of local Councils and the preparation of Council Development Plans for the South Region, which will include the Ngoyla and Mintom municipalities. These two projects will invest up to US$1m total in support to rural development initiatives and infrastructure within the Ngoyla-Mintom area. 37. Combined (excluding GEF funding to TRIDOM Project), these projects provide parallel baseline financing of approximately US$14.9 million. This financing supports the baseline and development costs complementary to the GEF alternative. C. Lessons Learned and Reflected in the Project Design 38. The Project design reflects lessons drawn from 20 years of support in Cameroon: (i). Protected Areas and Integrated Conservation and Development Projects (ICDPs). Cameroon‟s low level of tourism development and only sporadic additional project funding from International Community means that Protected Areas represent a net cost to Treasury and local communities. In absence of economic alternatives, adjacent communities have resorted to unsustainable use and illegal hunting in "state-owned" protected areas. The mixed experiences of ICDPs (that aim to classify Protected Areas that exclude sustainable use, while supporting alternative income generating activities outside the Protected Area) have been taken into account. The resulting project design promotes a model of conservation based on sustainable use and community management that: avoids opportunity costs; reduces costs of management and policing by outsiders; and minimizes conflicts between external managers and communities. Empowerment of communities to manage and hunt wildlife sustainably, in defined zones to the exclusion of outsiders will be prioritized, instead of investing solely in blanket efforts to eliminate all forms of hunting. Component 2 prioritizes investments that diffuse technologies to improve a few existing income generating activities (IGAs) that: are proven to be economically viable; do not in themselves threaten biodiversity or attract migrants; improve land and labor productivity in preference to investments that simply expand agricultural production. (ii). Land Use Planning. The 1995 Zoning Plan that designated Ngoyla Mintom as part of the future Permanent Forest Estate (PFE) was envisaged to be further fine-tuned during a meso- zoning process prior to legal classification of the PFE. The classification process was to be conducted through in-depth consultation with local communities to determine and take fully into consideration their traditional and user rights. In some cases, the consultation process has lacked sufficient rigor, resulting in State owned Production Forests and Protected Areas that have tended to constrain local community customary rights - sometimes without concrete benefits or adequate compensation for foregone rights. Ongoing meso-zoning, and future classification and 11 management planning processes in the Ngoyla-Mintom area will be participatory and transparent, and prioritize local development needs over external interests so that decisions are taken on the basis of the best interests of local communities (in particular Indigenous People). (iii) Inter-Ministerial Coordination. In addition, the 1995 indicative land-use plans have not always been respected by other sectors, which initiate their own incompatible developments in the same space - for example the Ministry of Mines has issued two mining concessions overlapping with the Boumba Bek National Park. The Mining Sector Capacity Building project (PRECASEM) aims to address this shortcoming, and the Ngoyla Mintom Project implementation team will need coordinate closely with the PRECASEM team. (iv). Classification of Permanent Forest Estate –"Long Term" forest concessions have been allocated without always first classifying the forest as part of the Permanent Forest Estate. This is technically illegal. Some such Concessions (especially those that have not been well managed) are now degraded and hold little interest to the commercial logging industry. The State is now very unlikely to complete classification of these areas and is instead converting some of them to other uses (such as agriculture). Once broad consensus for a meso-zoning plan for Ngoyla- Mintom has been achieved, it must be followed up immediately by the classification process. The legally defined classification process itself involves further analysis and consultation and can correct any imperfections in the land use or meso-zoning plans. (v). Ecological and social sustainability of logging. Quality of forest management and support for social development in concessions has been extremely variable in Cameroon in terms of: respect of the regulations; standards of forest management and environmental protection; respect of commitments to contribute to social development in their vicinity. A number of larger companies have certified their operations (FSC, certified legal wood and other schemes) which have significantly improved their social and environmental management standards. To date almost 800,000 hectares are FSC certified. Capacity building to local Councils and Communities to benefit from the share of forestry revenues destined for their development has been inadequate, and monitoring often non-existent. Third Party Certification and independent monitoring by Civil Society has done a lot to improve these standards above the average. The GEF project will invest in building capacity of local communities and local government to better plan and monitor how project resources (through a Livelihood Support Mechanism), and longer- term natural resource revenues, are used. MINFOF will encourage forest concessions allocated in the area to pursue certification within its first 3 years of operations. (vi). Weak Capacity in MINFOF in the field. While MINFOF have many highly qualified staff, it remains centralized, with weak presence of professional staff in the field to monitor and control operations. With low salaries, governance issues abound, undermining its capacity to perform its oversight role, resulting in very little downward accountability to stakeholders. The project will: support MINFOF‟s establishment of a specialized unit (Technical Operation Units or “UTO� in French) with a defined mandate and clear staff job descriptions; and finance a comprehensive training package for the UTO staff. MINFOF will use its own resources to establish performance-based incentive systems which can overcome many of the inherent institutional problems. UTOs have been established in six other priority protected areas, securing additional human and financial resources for their effective creation and management. (vii). Role of State and non-state actors in conservation. Due to fundamental weaknesses in the state‟s institutions for Protected Area management and inadequate financing from Treasury 12 (see 1 above), conservation efforts over the past 20 years have depended heavily on external funding and the involvement of international organizations. While this has led to some degree of protection where support is provided, long-term national ownership of the conservation objective is weak, and conservation efforts have not been sustained when external technical and financial resources are withdrawn. Further, the distinction of roles between the State, and external support agencies (such as Conservation NGOs), has become blurred - in particular with respect to law enforcement operations, and monitoring. Under the project design, investment in strengthening the State capacity to manage the Ngoyla-Mintom area is envisaged through facilitating the establishment of a Technical Operations Unit. Long term ecological and socio-economic monitoring will be contracted out to an independent body, so as to provide an independent verification of success of conservation efforts to conservation financiers, and of socio-economic impacts to those who contribute funds to development of adjacent communities. The project will also support the strengthening of watch-dog capacities of local communities. IV. Implementation A. Institutional and Implementation Arrangements 39. The project will be implemented by the Ministry of Forests and Wildlife (Ministère des Forêts et de la Faune, MINFOF). The Project management structures will comprise: 40. A Steering Committee (Comité de Pilotage): It will be established to oversee the GEF Ngoyla Mintom project. Committee Membership includes representatives of key Ministries who have a role in supervising investments and operations in the Ngoyla Mintom massif (including MINFOF, MINEPAT, MINEPDED); two representatives of civil society chosen by the two stakeholder platforms to be established in the region. The Steering Committee will invite other Ministries (such as MINIMIDT, MINAS, MINADER, MINEPIA, MINATD, MINDAC) as and when needed to address specific inter-sectoral issues that relate to them. This committee will be chaired by MINFOF and will meet at least once a year to (a) provide overall guidance and ensure coordination between all parties; (b) provide overall supervision for project implementation; (c) review the annual work plans and budget; (d) review the annual implementation performance report to be prepared by the Project Implementation Unit, and oversee the implementation of corrective actions, when necessary; (e) enhance synergy between the GEF project and other initiatives being implemented in the project site; (f) provide advice on strategies for the management of natural resources and sustainable development of the project zone. One representative from each of the projects in place in the Ngoyla Mintom area (TRIDOM project, WWF project), and all financial contributors to the development of the Ngoyla-Mintom zone (donors, and private sector) will be invited to Steering Committee meetings as observers. 41. A Project Implementation Unit (PIU): MINFOF will create a PIU which will be responsible for project implementation. This Unit will be headed by a Project Coordinator, who will be supported by a Financial Management Officer and a Procurement Officer. The Unit will also benefit from inputs from five additional technical experts, all to be designated by their respective Ministries, including a Regional development / planning expert; a participatory natural resources management expert; a forest management expert; a Monitoring & Evaluation expert; and an environmental and social management expert in charge of overseeing all social and 13 environmental related technical aspects. A Financial Adviser and a Procurement Adviser will be recruited to build the capacity of the designated Financial Management and Procurement Officers in the first year of operations. 42. Fiduciary responsibilities: The financial management and procurement responsibilities will be undertaken by a Financial Management Officer and a Procurement Officer, who will be appointed by MINFOF, and trained using project funds to oversee these responsibilities. They will be physically located in the Ministry of Forests. 43. Livelihood Support Mechanism: Component 2 of the project will be tendered to a suitably qualified Management Contractor which will be selected on the basis of terms of reference, qualifications and experience satisfactory to the Association. This Management Contractor will have full fiduciary responsibility for procurement and financial management of the funds allocated for the LSM. The Management Contractor will be responsible for the detailed design of the LSM and for its implementation, and will prepare Operational Procedures for implementation of the LSM satisfactory to the Association. Collaboration with other projects 44. The project has been prepared, and will be implemented, in close coordination with other projects working in the area. At the national level, there are close links with the National REDD+ preparation process (managed by MINEPDED), and at regional level with the GEF Regional REDD+ Capacity Building Project. Coordination with the GEF funded TRIDOM Project (Cameroon component) and the EU funded WWF implemented Projects will be achieved by holding regular coordination meetings between the three projects to ensure administrative efficiency, streamlining of budgeted annual workplans and close coordination of activities. 45. Coordination with the team implementing the IDA funded Mining Sector Capacity Building Project (PRECASEM – P122153) is strategic, since this project has put some focus on the development of „southern corridor‟ which passes through Ngoyla Mintom area, and inter alia will put emphasis on “integration of mining into local/regional development.� The PIU staff will also liaise with teams of two other World Bank projects: The Agricultural Competitiveness Project (PACA – P112635) and the Development Program Support Project (PNDP – P113027) which both operate in the South Region but have not yet funded activities and investments in the Ngoyla Mintom region. The PNDP project is financing the capacity building of local Councils and the preparation of Council Development Plans for the South Region, which will include the Ngoyla and Mintom municipalities. The project will support preparation of Local Development Plans (LDPs) where they do not exist, or, build on existing plans to integrate forest resource management related activities that may be supported by the project. B. Results Monitoring and Evaluation 46. The PIU established by MINFOF will be responsible for the overall management and implementation of the project results and output level M&E framework, to evaluate project performance. This will include managing the flow of information from the field to the Ministry, and producing periodic monitoring reports. 47. In order to strengthen reporting capacities for monitoring the impacts of the project, the project will invest in additional external support to develop a long term M&E system and baseline that monitors both ecological indicators for the core area, and socio-economic well- 14 being of the local communities that have historically used this core area (Sub-Component 3.1). External expertise will be contracted to provide ongoing technical assistance to MINFOF in the design and implementation of this long term environmental and social M&E system. 48. The results framework (Annex 1) outlines key performance indicators, data collection methods, database maintenance, a timetable for collection, and responsible agencies to supervise and monitor the implementation of the project and its progress towards meeting its objectives. C. Sustainability 49. The project puts the following elements in place to address sustainability: 1) Preparation for classification and subsequent management of core areas will be supported through participation of, and consultations with, all stakeholders to ensure that the impacts of the project are sustained, and conflicts and illegal activities are reduced. This change in attitudes and behaviors can result in ecological and social sustainability. The sustainability of the core area will be assured by MINFOF commitment of its own human and financial resources for its management and protection as part of its contribution to the project. Formal links with implementation teams of other parallel projects in the area (GEF TRIDOM, and GEF Regional Protected Area Sustainable Financing Projects) will be secured to explore potential long-term financing mechanism for Ngoyla-Mintom. The expressed interest of mining companies to support conservation underpins optimism that private sector funds will become available to continue to finance conservation in the area. 2) At the national level, sustainability of the project will be increased by the cross-sectoral nature of the Project Steering Committee, which includes all relevant ministries including MINEPAT which is responsible for Land Use Planning and MINEPDED which is responsible for environmental protection, biodiversity conservation, and coordinating REDD+ initiatives, making it easier to address cross-sectoral issues. 3) At the local level, the Stakeholder Platforms established or supported by the project will constitute an inclusive institutional framework for inter-sectoral coordination, consultation and sustainable forest management. This will help to ensure that collaborative relationships are developed and sustained between the project and other external actors on the one hand and the local communities and indigenous peoples in the area on the other. 4) At the local level, the project will facilitate MINFOF to establish a special purpose Technical Operations Unit (UTO) to manage the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif. The Project will provide technical and financial support to the creation and functioning of the UTO and PIU staff will work closely with those of the UTO. The UTO will be a permanent structure, thereby taking over the role played by the PIU, and guaranteeing the maintenance of institutional capacity to manage the site beyond the lifetime of the project. This UTO will include staff of three Ministries (MINFOF, MINEPDED and MINEPAT) and will serve as the Government‟s focal point for all projects supporting work relating to Ngoyla Mintom. 5) Component 2 of the project will contract a Management Contractor to design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM) through consultation with all stakeholders. The resulting mechanism can serve as a common framework for distribution of forest and wildlife derived revenues from multiple sources to sustain conservation and community development activities in the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif. It is anticipated that the LSM will become a 15 key component of a longer term sustainable financing mechanism that will serve to support local development beyond the lifetime of the project. The interest of third party financiers to put funds into one shared mechanism will be explored with other donors and the private sector. The Management Contractor will build capacity of the local councils and local committees at village level to prepare Local Development Plans and select and implement small scale investments. In the long term, once local council capacities have been built, these activities will continue without necessarily involving a Management Contractor. However, if the Management Contractor offers value for money as a partner for service delivery and local development, councils and their development partners may opt to continue with them. 6) Local Committees will be established by the project, and will play a key role in managing the Livelihood Support Mechanism. By modeling them on an existing legal text10, the project is creating a built in financial sustainability, since these committees will continue to exist after the project completion. The same committees will be able to process incoming funds from other sources, as envisaged in the text of the Decision. V. Key Risks and Mitigation Measures A. Risk Ratings Summary Table Rating Stakeholder Risk High Implementing Agency Risk - Capacity High - Governance High Project Risk - Design High - Social and Environmental Moderate - Program and Donor High - Delivery Monitoring and Sustainability Moderate - Other (Impacts of other developments) High Overall Implementation Risk High B. Overall Risk Rating Explanation 50. The key risks identified that could hinder achievement of the Project Development Objective, and the proposed mitigation measures to address them, are summarized in the Operational Risk Assessment Framework (Annex 4). They are mostly tied to the sector context and development of other economic sectors. These risks will be addressed through strategic 10 Arrêté Conjoint No 520: MINATD/ MINFI/ MINFOF of 03 June 2010 defining the “modalities for use and monitoring of the management of revenues from exploitation of forest and wildlife resources for Councils and adjacent village communities� 16 planning, improvement of participatory processes and consultation, and capacity building. The overall risks are therefore rated as Moderate during preparation and High during implementation. Below are a few highlights: 51. Some members of the community may be too poor to wait for, or too disorganized to access, the benefits of the project. The Livelihood Support Mechanism aims to reduce this risk. 52. The imminent construction of a new international highway, and likely construction of an iron ore mine and associated railway and energy infrastructure in the area within the project lifetime, will greatly alter the local social dynamics and economics of land use, increasing the risk that both local and external stakeholders will challenge the adoption of forest management options geared towards conservation and low-impact community use. 53. The existence of multiple donors and investors in the area is both a risk, due to increasing complexity of coordination multiple interventions, and an advantage, because it can provide the capacity and resources to transform the area, and ensure that there is close third party monitoring of the Ministry‟s GEF funded operations. The establishment of a UTO, which will coordinate all projects in the area, and regular coordination meetings between all project teams, will address this risk. 54. Weak MINFOF capacity for community based conservation. This risk is addressed through institutional strengthening (support to creation and operations of a UTO and targeted training) and also by simultaneous investments by various other support projects in the area. 55. The Government has sent contradictory signals over the past few years on uses it intends to promote in the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest massif. While the Ngoyla-Mintom was under the “Productive forest� category under the 1995 zoning plan, MINFOF earlier considered pioneering the “Conservation Concession� concept in this area. A back-and forth dialogue with the international community (donors as well as conservation NGOs) has been on-going for the last 10 years without reaching a firm commitment from the Government (see Annex 7). In 2009, the Government of Cameroon launched a call for expressions of interest for the Ngoyla-Mintom Forests: while several proposals were submitted for commercial timber exploitations, others presented biodiversity conservation and carbon finance options. In addition, as indicated above, infrastructure developments are planned in this area. There is thus a risk that the Government takes an early decision to allocate parts of the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest massif for industrial logging and/or a REDD deal, before local stakeholders have been adequately informed and consulted, and before they have provided broad support for the proposals. The Project will therefore work towards securing core areas for conservation and low-impact community use and ensure that all project funded activities are compliant with Bank safeguard policies. 56. Risk of not implementing the project: The existence of valuable natural resources in the Ngoyla Mintom forest and expansion of road infrastructure through the area will in itself likely lead to widespread development of industrial and artisanal logging, expansion of commercial cocoa plantations, and potentially the installation of large scale agricultural plantations in the area. These developments would in turn stimulate rapid immigration to the area, thereby increasing pressure on its natural resources, particularly wildlife for bushmeat to feed the expanding population, and contributing to degradation of habitats, loss of biodiversity, reduction of environmental services and undermining indigenous peoples‟ communities‟ way of life. While the planned iron ore mining will not extend beyond the known deposits, artisanal gold mining is already expanding into the Ngoyla-Mintom forest. By contributing to the 17 establishment of protected areas, the project can limit environmental degradation and loss of biodiversity in core areas. Therefore, the risks of not implementing the project are perceived as much greater than those entailed in project implementation. VI. Appraisal Summary A. Economic and Financial Analysis 57. Based on the nature of the project, classical financial and economic analyses cannot accurately measure its local impacts, and even less so those at country or global level. The paucity of robust, reliable environmental databases in Cameroon, and the difficulty in monetizing environmental and social benefits, such as conservation of biodiversity and other ecosystem services and prevention of social conflict, exacerbates the difficulty of measuring and valuing many of the effects involved, especially the likely off-site benefits (positive externalities) of any future forest classification under various options of legal protection of forest. Consequently, while a quantitative cost benefit analysis of this project has not been conducted, a more qualitative Incremental Cost Analysis, following GEF guidelines, has been prepared and is presented in Annex 6. In addition, all proposals for sub-projects / investments under the planned Livelihood Support Mechanism (see Component 2) will be evaluated for financial and economic soundness under the selection process. 58. The project will bring about a range of environmental, economic, social and institutional benefits. Institutional capacity building provides the enabling environment for more sustainable forest management, improved governance and transparency in the forest sector, and an increased flow of benefits from forests to communities and the government. More transparent, participatory forest management practices will likely result in social benefits such as reduced conflict among forest users, and broad participation of civil society during the future classification, management planning and decision-making processes, which is expected to lead to greater trust between citizens and government. The ensuing, more easily quantifiable economic benefits are the direct economic benefits to local communities from investment in sustainable socio-economic development activities via a Livelihood Support Mechanism under component 2 (and enabled by the capacity building of component 1). 59. Long-term availability of natural resources essential for local livelihoods (fuelwood, water, fertile soil, wildlife and various non-timber forest products, etc.), resulting from improved management of the area‟s natural resources will also generate a sustainable flow of economic and social benefits for local communities. On the other hand, project implementation may reduce short-term benefits by limiting unsustainable activities, i.e. incurring opportunity costs from foregone use of certain parts of the forest by local communities for other productive uses such as hunting and gathering, or by enforcement of laws relating to the hunting of protected species. By design, the project sets out to minimize such restrictions beyond a return to sustainable off-take levels, and suspension of illegal activities, which will cause short term reductions of income. Since opportunity costs are likely to occur in the short-term, and some of the benefits will only materialize over the longer term, active engagement and buy-in of local stakeholders is necessary, as well as support for local socio-economic development initiatives that go beyond usual protected area management activities. The Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM) developed under Component 2 will contribute to the sustainable socio-economic development of 18 the local population and ensure community support for conservation activities, while longer term sustainable financing mechanisms are being put in place by other projects. A well-functioning LSM will likely attract additional private sector investments, increasing funds for local development and serving as a key component of any future sustainable financing mechanism. 60. Environmental benefits compared with the „without-project‟ scenario include reduced deforestation, improved management, reduced poaching, better protection of endangered species, and an enabling environment for realization of a range of environmental services from the core area. Though these have substantial economic and social value, they are extremely difficult to quantify. The Project‟s stimulation of local communities‟ participation in the sustainable management of their local natural resources – for example through participatory forest management planning and sustainable income generating activities – could also have substantial, though not directly quantifiable, environmental, as well as economic, benefits. 61. As an integral part of comparing forest management options during the forest classification and management planning processes, sub-component 1.2 of the project will undertake more detailed socio-economic analyses to assess the economic and financial value of different legal gazettement and management options for the core areas from the perspective of different stakeholders. This will help underpin the long-term implications of selection of any of the options, and provide the basis for approaching potential buyers of ecosystem services with a clear negotiation stance. Current uncertainties about values and markets mean that further research will be conducted before attempting quantitative economic analysis of these schemes. B. Technical 62. The Project has been developed on the basis of experiences and lessons learned from the existing FESP Program and responds to the issues raised by the various safeguards studies that included consultations with stakeholders. A range of options for the future management of the priority conservation zone have been compared, and analyzed by the preparation team, in close consultation with the Ministry, other projects intervening and the area, and with stakeholders in the field. The creation of a strictly protected core area that was originally proposed in earlier concept notes has been replaced with a more community based natural resource management option that focuses on engaging with stakeholders and finding common ground for sustainable management. The proposed target of establishing an IUCN Category VI Managed Resource Protected Area does not preclude most conceivable outcomes from the planning process, allowing flexibility in the final legal status, and management arrangements for core areas for conservation and low-impact community use. C. Financial Management 63. In accordance with the new Financial Assessment Principles and African Financial Management (AFTFM) Unit‟s risk assessment (ORAF) guidelines, the Financial Management arrangements of the Ngoyla Mintom Project were assessed in Yaoundé to determine whether it is acceptable to the Bank, in particular, to assess whether: (i) the implementing entity has acceptable and adequate financial management arrangements to ensure that the GEF funds will be used for their intended purposes in an efficient and economical way; (ii) the Ngoyla Mintom project financial reports will be prepared in an accurate, reliable and timely manner; and (iii) 19 project‟s assets (as applicable) will be safeguarded. Based on project implementation arrangements, the overall financial management responsibility will rest with a Project Implementation Unit (PIU) whose fiduciary staff will be housed within MINFOF in Yaoundé, Cameroon. 64. The conclusion of the Financial Management Assessment is that FM arrangements within the Ministry need to be improved before grant effectiveness for the Ngoyla Mintom project to satisfy the Bank‟s minimum requirements under OP/BP 10.02 and will then be adequate to provide, with reasonable assurance, accurate and timely information on project status required by IDA. To this effect, project-specific FM procedures will be elaborated in the Project Implementation Manual and an acceptable Financial Management Adviser will be recruited for the first year of project operations, and on a short term basis thereafter, as required. An accounting system will be procured and acceptable external auditor will be recruited. 65. The overall FM risk is considered Substantial. The assessment recommends some measures to be implemented at time of effectiveness and others prior to effectiveness. These measures and the details of the financial management arrangements are described in the FM section of Annex 3. 66. Guidelines on Preventing and Combating Fraud and Corruption in Projects Financed by IBRD Loans and IDA Credits and Grants", dated October 15, 2006 and updated January 2011, shall apply to the project. D. Procurement 67. The procurement risk assessment of MINFOF, and its Multi-donor basket fund revealed the following: (i) neither the Ministry, nor the Management Unit of the Ministry‟s Multi-donor basket fund, have experience in the implementation of Bank-financed projects; (ii) the Ministry has no qualified procurement officer accustomed to the World Bank procurement procedure; (iii) there is a procedural manual for the Multi-donor basket fund, but this manual is not in compliance with the requirement for the use of World Bank procedures and doesn‟t allow an efficient implementation of the project as far as the procurement institutional arrangement is concerned; (iv) the Tender Boards of the Ministry in charge of Forestry are not diligent; (v) there are bottlenecks in the implementation of Ministry‟s activities because of delays related to administrative approval of procurement or technical documents; and (vi) a comprehensive record keeping system needs to be established. 68. A mitigation action plan has been developed for the Ministry in charge of Forestry including: (i) Establish a Project Implementation Unit with a Procurement Officer from the Ministry in charge of Forestry with qualifications and experiences acceptable to the Bank, and dedicated to the Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Project; (ii) Recruitment of a qualified Procurement Adviser, for at least one year, with main responsibilities to train and provide sustainable capacity building in World Bank procurement procedures to the PIU, especially the above mentioned Procurement Officer; (iii) Continue to assess MINFOF‟s procurement tender board performance, and if required, establish a specialized procurement Tender Board, in form and substance satisfactory to World Bank, as well as all of the tender boards members nominated. The text shall define the procurement arrangements and approvals authorities in order to mitigate the lack of provisions in the code for “delegation of 20 authority“ by the presidents of tender boards and by the procuring entities (the 2 major potential bottlenecks for project implementation and budget execution); (iv) Elaborate specific procedures in a Project Implementation Manual (PIM) for the project, and the delegation of authority for the management of small contracts to the Project Coordinator; and (v) Setting up a comprehensive record keeping system. 69. A first realistic draft Procurement Plan covering the first 18 months of project implementation has been prepared, and was finalized during negotiations. It will be updated at least annually (or as required) to reflect project implementation needs. 70. The revised Procurement Guidelines: “Procurement of Goods, Works and Non- Consulting Services under IBRD Loans and IDA Credits & Grants by World Bank Borrowers� dated January 2011; and Consultant Guidelines: “Selection and Employment of Consultants under IBRD Loans and IDA Credits & Grants by World Bank Borrowers� dated January 2011 (jointly, “the revised Procurement and Consultant Guidelines�) shall apply to this project. E. Social (including safeguards) 71. The project expects to have positive social impacts, notably through improving local communities‟ livelihood and quality of life. However, as the project will support the preparation for classification and better management of priority conservation areas, it might impact local populations‟ livelihood through limiting access to legally designated protected areas. 72. The social safeguards documents prepared by the Client are respectively a Process Framework (PF) and an Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP), and a Social Assessment (SA). The Process Framework (PF) sets forth the principles and guidelines to be followed for sustainable management of those natural resources upon which local beneficiaries, particularly Indigenous Peoples livelihood depend. Moreover, it clearly defines the way in which traditional/customary rights will be preserved and establishes a framework and process for free prior and meaningful participatory consultation with all stakeholders, including Indigenous Peoples Organizations (IPOs) and other Civil Society Organizations (CSO) currently working with/supporting local beneficiary communities, in order to ensure that the project abides by the triggered safeguard policies‟ principles and guidelines, and does take into consideration local communities‟ needs and opinions and benefits them. Furthermore, and as suggested by the safeguard policies, results of these participatory public consultations were fully shared with primary beneficiaries to foster and ensure transparency. 73. As specifically instructed by the OP 4.10 policy, a comprehensive Social Assessment (SA) was carried out based on socio-economic surveys and stakeholders, particularly Indigenous Peoples analysis, and was coupled with the Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP) to ensure that the Baka community in the area and vulnerable groups are freely and meaningfully consulted and that they benefit from the project. The Client also prepared an Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) which incorporates a section presenting an environmental and social management plan, a section on pest management and an action plan on pest management issues respectively. Each of these mentioned documents (namely, SA, IPP, PF and ESIA) was subject to further public consultation and participation exercise in the field. On 29 and 31 August, 2011, the Government organized a series of workshops in Ngoyla and Mintom localities, with the objective to present to the recipient communities the final draft safeguards documents. All 21 related minutes of these consultation reports are part of the ESIA, PF and IPP annexes. Final documents have been reviewed and cleared by both the project safeguard team and ASPEN, and disclosed in-country and at the InfoShop prior to appraisal. 74. Suspicion and potential conflicts between the different stakeholder groups is an identified risk. Good communication to secure buy-in by the different stakeholder groups and consensus among them is therefore critical to successful implementation of this project. 75. Consultations with communities and interest groups potentially affected by the project were conducted during the preparatory phase, and will be maintained during project implementation as part of a communications strategy (under sub-component 1.1) to ensure that concerns are addressed in a timely and consistent manner. A transparent conflict management approach with a clear grievance redress mechanism will also be established at the very outset (as part of sub-component 1.1), and be annexed to the Project Implementation Manual, in order to manage and resolve upfront any arising conflicts between stakeholders as soon as possible (both formal and traditional approaches will be explored for their suitable use in the context of the project). 76. Of all the stakeholders, the private sector (logging, mining and perhaps hunting) companies will generate the most income in the short to medium term, and are most likely to have the greatest impacts on the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif, its resources, and surrounding communities. These will far outweigh the likely impacts of the relatively modest investments made by this project. F. Environment (including safeguards) 77. Overall, the project offers huge potential environmental and social benefits, including contribution to the legal protection, management and sustainable use of core areas accompanied by socio-economic development and protection of natural and cultural assets. Safeguard policies 78. The project is classified as a Category B project. The Project is primarily aiming at ensuring free prior and informed consultations with local communities, particularly Indigenous Peoples and the vulnerable groups, to obtain their broad agreement with proposed forest classification (legal gazettement) and management plans of forest areas. The Project will neither finance actual gazettement, nor the implementation of forest management plans nor any related concrete investments. It is thus not expected to have any direct environmental and social large scale, significant and/or irreversible impacts. The Project might have indirect impacts in the sense that it will support the classification of priority conservation areas, and prepare management plans for areas to be designated as Protected Areas. It will also put in place a Pilot Livelihoods Support Mechanism (Component 2) to finance small scale local development initiatives in communities living in the area to compensate for reduced access and restricted levels of natural resource harvesting (in particular hunting and gathering) in the short term necessary to achieve sustainability. The approach to the safeguards triggered is presented below. 22 Safeguard Policies Triggered by the Project Yes No Environmental Assessment (OP/BP 4.01) X Natural Habitats (OP/BP 4.04) X Pest Management (OP 4.09) X Physical Cultural Resources (OP/BP 4.11) X Involuntary Resettlement (OP/BP 4.12) X Indigenous Peoples (OP/BP 4.10) X Forests (OP/BP 4.36) X Safety of Dams (OP/BP 4.37) X Projects in Disputed Areas (OP/BP 7.60) X Projects on International Waterways (OP/BP 7.50) X 79. OP 4.01 Environmental Assessment. During preparation, the Client has prepared an Environmental and Social Impacts Assessment (ESIA) that includes a section on environmental and social management plan) identifying the likely environmental and social impacts of the Project and proposed mitigating measures. The ESIA was publicly disclosed both in-country on 01/09/2012 and at the World Bank InfoShop on 01/10/2012 prior to project appraisal. During implementation, site specific Environmental and Social Management Plans suggested by the social and environmental screening process will be prepared for each Protected Area in parallel with the preparation of management plans, in accordance with the national environmental (and social) management regulations and Bank‟s safeguards policies. 80. OP 4.04 Natural Habitats. The project will promote and support the creation of protected areas (PAs) and the preparation of management plans to protect core areas of critical forest natural habitat from illegal logging, poaching and artisanal mining activities, and ensure their sustainable management through inclusive participation of local beneficiary communities. 81. OP 4.09 Pest Management. Component 2 (Livelihood Support Mechanism) of the project will support some agriculture and livestock rearing activities albeit at the small scale, which will likely involve the use of limited amounts of pesticides. All activities to be financed by this Component will be subject to a social and environmental screening process to ensure that safeguard policies are respected. The ESIA includes a specific section on Pest Management and a related action plan on how to adequately minimize any potential impacts from the misusage of pesticides and other chemical products was incorporated in the relevant section of the ESIA. Specific trainings on the IPMP will be provided to local beneficiaries during the course of project implementation. 82. OP 4.10 Indigenous Peoples. As the project will be implemented in the Ngoyla Mintom Forest block which hosts an important community of Indigenous Peoples (mainly the Baka community, about 3,000 members), it will be critical to ensure that (i) IP communities‟ livelihoods resources are not negatively affected; (ii) they have an equitable share in the benefits of the project; and (iii) all necessary measures are being taken to minimize the possible risk of marginalization. An extensive series of free prior and meaningful public consultation and participation throughout the forest massif was undertaken during project preparation which led to a broader Baka community support to the project development objectives. As prescribed by the OP/BP 4.10 policy, the borrower prepared both a Social Assessment (SA) and an Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP) which were broadly adopted by all local stakeholders (Baka, Bantou, Local Leaders and CSOs during a final round of extensive public consultation and participation 23 workshop held in the municipalities of Ngoyla and Mintom on August 29 and 31, 2011, respectively. Both the SA and IPP were publicly disclosed in-country on 12/20/2011and at the World Bank InfoShop on 01/10/2012 prior to project appraisal. 83. OP 4.11 Physical Cultural Resources. The Ngoyla Mintom forest massif hosts a substantial population of indigenous peoples, with important cultural sites which need to be preserved. As the precise physical boundaries of the selected core areas and the final definition of the project‟s activities under the Sustainable Livelihoods Mechanism have not yet been clearly identified; and as no survey of Physical Cultural Resources such as existing sites of cultural significance has been undertaken by the client, OP 4.11 has been triggered and appropriate “chance find� procedures have been included in the relevant section of the ESIA to help mitigate any potential impacts. 84. OP 4.12 Involuntary Resettlement. As the project is expected to promote the creation of a protected area, which could result in the restriction to access to the natural resources and other livelihood support means in a legally designated protected area, the Client has therefore complied with OP/BP 4.12 principles and procedures, by preparing a Process Framework (PF) which sets forth the principles and guidelines to be followed for sustainable management of these natural resources upon which local beneficiaries, particularly Indigenous Peoples livelihood depend. Hence, the PF clearly defines the tangible socioeconomic measures to be taken by the authorities to ensure the traditional rights of local populations as well as the (free prior and meaningful) consultation process during the classification and delimitation of any protected areas. The PF was publicly disclosed in-country on 12/20/2011 and at the World Bank InfoShop on 01/10/2012 prior to project appraisal. 85. OP 4.36 Forests. The project will not finance any industrial logging activities. The project activities will rather promote forest classification and participatory management by taking into consideration the different stakeholders‟ needs and demands. If a viable proposal is submitted by local communities for funding, Component 2 (Livelihood Support Mechanism) could provide funds to support implementation of Community Forest Management Plans, which may involve low-impact small-scale logging. 86. Public Consultation, Participation and Disclosure. The preparation process of all safeguards instruments was grounded on an inclusive consultation and participation of all key stakeholders. Extensive participatory public consultations at the national and local level have taken place during preparation. The Client carried out an intensive public consultation and participation with the project site populations during the whole preparation process of the safeguards instruments. On 29 and 31 August, 2011, the Government organized a series of workshops in Ngoyla and Mintom localities, with the objective to present to the recipient communities the final draft safeguards documents. All related minutes of these consultation meetings are part of the ESIA, PF and IPP annexes. Further consultations will be carried out during project implementation, since such a process is not a one-stop shop but rather an iterative process that goes throughout the project lifecycle. Stakeholder involvement in the decision- making process will further be enhanced to encourage more ownership, foster social accountability which will lead to more sustainability of project activities. All safeguard documents were disclosed publicly (on December 20, 2011, January 09 and 10, 2012 respectively) at easily accessible places and in a language understandable and easily accessible by the majority of affected and interested stakeholders including the Baka Pygmies and vulnerable groups, prior to appraisal. 24 Annex 1: Results Framework and Monitoring REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON: Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project Global Environmental Objectives . PDO Statement: The Project Development Objective (PDO) is to improve the conservation and management of the Core Area and improve access to income-generating activities for local communities in the project area. “Core Area� means the area(s), measuring in their aggregate no less than 160,000 hectares, within the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif, identified by the Recipient with the explicit agreement in writing of the World Bank to be classified and managed for conservation and low-impact community use. . Global Environmental Objective Indicators Cumulative Target Values Data Source/ Responsibility for Indicator Name Core Unit of Measure Baseline YR1 YR2 YR3 YR4 End Target Frequency Methodology Data Collection GEF Management Effectiveness Tracking Tool Number 26.00 40.00 Every 2 years METT evaluation reports. MINFOF PIU (METT) Score Conservation & management Draft Classification Decree. Yes/No No Yes At end of Project MINFOF PIU of Core Area (Classification) Reception letter from authorities Conservation & management Draft Management Plan. of Core Area (Management Yes/No No Yes At end of Project MINFOF PIU Reception letter from Minister. Plan) Records of No. people benefiting MINFOF PIU and M&E Direct project beneficiaries Number 0.00 1000.00 Annual from all components of the Expert project; Records of No. people benefiting MINFOF PIU team and Female beneficiaries Percentage 0.00 50.00 Annual from all components of the M&E Expert project; . Intermediate Results Indicators Cumulative Target Values Data Source/ Responsibility for Indicator Name Core Unit of Measure Baseline YR1 YR2 YR3 YR4 End Target Frequency Methodology Data Collection Number of stakeholder Meeting reports Meeting reports including platform(s) meetings at which including analysis MINFOF PIU and M&E Number 0.00 10.00 analysis of participation at each key stakeholders are of participation at Expert meeting. adequately represented. each meeting. Annual Strategy; Minutes of MINFOF PIU and M&E Communications strategy Yes/No No Yes Annual meeting to adopt the strategy; Expert progress reports. 25 Minutes of Local Committee Livelihood Support Village Development Plans Number 0.00 30.00 Annual Planning Meetings. Copies of Mechanism Manager with adopted LDPs. M&E Expert. Activity reports. Technical audit of LSM (1 at mid-term and one at end of project) to assess the Pilot Natural Resources success of the pilot initiatives Livelihood Support Management Initiatives Number 0.00 5.00 Annual funded by LSM in terms of Mechanism Manager with supported sustainability and replicability. M&E Specialist. NB see also PDO level results indicator No.3 for monitoring of LSM impacts. Manager of Livelihood Support Mechanism. Socio-economic monitoring data, Livelihood Support Independently confirmed by census data, local population Mechanism Beneficiaries (a) project M&E Expert who Number 0.00 500.00 Annual surveys / interviews. Alternative Income may obtain data from Records of beneficiaries and type Generating Activities multiple sources, including / value of benefits from LSM. WWF socio-economic surveys Manager of Component 2. Number of indigenous people Socio-economic monitoring data, Confirmed by project M&E who are beneficiaries of census data, local population Expert, who may obtain data alternative Income Number 0.00 150.00 Annual surveys / interviews. from multiple sources, Generating Activity projects Records of beneficiaries and type including WWF socio- funded by LSM / value of benefits from LSM. economic surveys Manager of Livelihood Socio-economic monitoring data, Support Mechanism. Livelihood Support census data, local population Independently confirmed by Mechanism Beneficiaries: (b) Number 0.00 500.00 Annual surveys / interviews. M&E Expert who may Infrastructure Records of beneficiaries and type obtain data from multiple / value of benefits from LSM. sources, including WWF socio-economic surveys Manager of Livelihood Socio-economic monitoring data, Number of indigenous people Support Mechanism and census data, local population who are beneficiaries of project M&E Expert. Number 0.00 150.00 Annual surveys / interviews. Infrastructure Projects funded Confirmed by independent Records of beneficiaries and type by LSM review conducted under / value of benefits from LSM. Component 2.2. M&E framework. Baseline data MINFOF PIU team and Long Term M&E System Yes/No No Yes Annual and re-measurement data and contracted Monitoring and analysis reports Evaluation Specialist. 26 Global Environmental Objective Indicators Indicator Name Description (indicator definition etc.) GEF Management Effectiveness Tracking Tool (METT) GEF Management Effectiveness Tracking Tool (METT) score has increased by 50 percent over baseline value (26) for the core Score area by project closure. Conservation & management of Core Area (Classification) (a): Draft Decree for Classification of core area is prepared, validated and submitted by MINFOF to Prime Minister‟s Office for endorsement. Conservation & management of Core Area (Management (b): Draft Management Plan for core area is drafted, validated and submitted to Ministry of Forestry for adoption. Plan) Direct project beneficiaries Direct beneficiaries are people or groups who directly derive benefits from an intervention (i.e., children who benefit from an immunization program; families that have a new piped water connection). Please note that this indicator requires supplemental information. Supplemental Value: Female beneficiaries (percentage). Based on the assessment and definition of direct project beneficiaries, specify what proportion of the direct project beneficiaries are female. This indicator is calculated as a percentage. Female beneficiaries Based on the assessment and definition of direct project beneficiaries, specify what percentage of the beneficiaries are female. Intermediate Results Indicators Indicator Name Description (indicator definition etc.) Number of stakeholder platform(s) meetings at which key Number of stakeholder platform(s) meetings at which key stakeholders are adequately represented. stakeholders are adequately represented. Communications strategy Communications strategy is developed and adopted and is being implemented. Village Development Plans Number of villages that have a Local Development Plan (LDPs) adopted by a duly formed “Local Committee.� Pilot Natural Resources Management Initiatives supported Number of successful community based Natural Resource Management pilot initiatives with key forest user groups that have been financed by the Livelihood Support Mechanism. Livelihood Support Mechanism Beneficiaries (a) Number of people benefiting from the Livelihood Support Mechanism, in the form of , in the form of alternative income Alternative Income Generating Activities (IGA) generating activities (IGAs) Number of indigenous people who are beneficiaries of At least 30 percent of beneficiaries of IGA projects supported by LSM should be indigenous people alternative IGA projects funded by LSM Livelihood Support Mechanism Beneficiaries: (b) Number of people benefiting from the Livelihood Support Mechanism, in the form of Socio-economic infrastructure Infrastructure Number of indigenous people who are beneficiaries of At least 30 percent of beneficiaries of Infrastructure projects supported by LSM should be indigenous people Infrastructure Projects funded by LSM Long Term M&E System Long term, socio-economic and ecological change monitoring and evaluation framework established including baselines, and progress data that monitors functioning in the core area. *Please indicate whether the indicator is a Core Sector Indicator (see further http://coreindicators) **Target values should be entered for the years data will be available, not necessarily annually. 27 Annex 2: Detailed Project Description REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON: Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project Background 1. Cameroon is one of the most biologically diverse countries in Africa, with some 335 species of mammals (including half of Africa‟s 52 species of higher primates), 848 species of birds, nine thousand species of vascular plants (of which at least 156 are endemic), 171 species of amphibians, 210 species of reptiles, and 138 species of fish. 2. The Ngoyla Mintom forest is a largely pristine rainforest massif of about 900,000 ha in the southern part of Cameroon, located between the Dja Faunal Reserve (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) and the Nki National Park in Cameroon, the Minkebe National Park in Gabon, and the Odzala National Park in Congo (see Figures at end of document, and Table 1 in Annex 7). Together, Ngoyla and Mintom Municipalities cover 90% of the Ngoyla-Mintom massif (61% and 29% respectively). The remaining 10% of the massif protrudes slightly into Messok and Lomié Municipalities (all of Forest Management Unit (UFA) 10-036 and part of UFA10-028). Due to its location, the Ngoyla Mintom forest forms an important part of a regional green corridor, with very diverse and rich ecosystems reported to contain an important stock of biodiversity, including 228 species of fish in the waterways, 37 species of large and medium sized mammals (among them about 4,000 endangered gorillas, 1,500 chimpanzees, 3,000 elephants and mandrills) and likely to contain several extremely valuable tree species (see Annex 8). UFA10-036 in particular is a critical part of the corridor that connects Dja Wildlife Reserve to the rest of the massif and onwards to the other Protected Areas of the TRIDOM Zone. Beyond its importance as a natural habitat, and a link between neighboring conservation areas, Ngoyla Mintom, like many rainforests, is also an important carbon sink and store, helping to mitigate the effects of global climate change. In addition to these global goods, the area provides local communities with many environmental and social services essential to maintaining their way of life. The local population, numbering around 10,200 people11, consists of an indigenous population of Baka pygmies, as well as a number of Bantu tribes. 3. The abundant mineral resources present in the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif and its close vicinity have been surveyed and proven under long-standing exploration mining permits. High mineral prices have resulted in an increased likelihood that investors are now ready to bring these mining operations to the exploitation phase. Though the mines are not yet operational, the exploration activities are already opening up the area and reducing transport costs for all commodities to markets. As soon as the mines become operational, the investors will construct a railway, initially to transport iron ore to a deep-water port to be built on the Atlantic coast, which will improve access and reduce transport costs to the Ngoyla Mintom forest zone. Other infrastructure projects, in particular the ongoing upgrading of the N9 road from Sangmelima to Ouesso in the Republic of Congo, will further compound the environmental and social impacts of economic development. These developments are rendering the area more attractive to commercial loggers, medium and large scale commercial farmers, particularly for cocoa, oil 11 Based on recent estimates made by WWF, and studies conducted during project preparation, the population of the Ngoyla-Mintom massif is approximately 10,200 persons in 60 villages, of which 30% are Baka Pygmies. This is much larger than was originally estimated in the Project Identification Form (PIF): 10,200 rather than 1,000 people. 28 palm and rubber, and new settlers in search of work, cheap land and new economic opportunities. Such settlers will typically all engage in small scale commercial and subsistence agriculture, hunting, and will stimulate artisanal timber extraction for house construction. As a result, the natural resources in the area face growing threats. In the absence of appropriate investments in conservation, sustainable management, effective monitoring and enforcement, the increase in a wide range of economic activities will lead to fragmentation of habitat, over- hunting of wildlife, rapid and irreversible degradation of the area‟s unique forests ecosystems, as well as indirect impacts such as sedimentation and pollution of freshwater ecosystems. These changes and impacts have far-reaching consequences for the indigenous populations and their fragile society. 4. A 1995 indicative zoning plan12 designated the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif to become permanent forest for commercial timber production. Since then, development partners have repeatedly encouraged Government of Cameroon to seek conservation organizations to lease the areas for „conservation concessions‟, which have not been forthcoming. In 2009, an international call for expressions of interest published by the Government of Government resulted in several expressions of interest for commercial timber exploitation, and a number of other proposals for „conservation concessions‟13 in the area, combining biodiversity conservation and carbon finance. However till today, none of the forest massif has been legally classified, or allocated for logging, or conservation. Two feasibility studies are under way to explore the potential for REDD+ projects in the region: one specifically for the Ngoyla Mintom forest, and the other for the Dja Biosphere Reserve and its buffer zone, which overlaps with Ngoyla-Mintom. There are two mining companies active in the area: CamIron (an iron ore mining company based to the South East of the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Block) has prepared an Environmental and Social Management Plan for the area, which envisages establishment of a conservation offset component as compensation for the environmental damage that their operations are projected to cause, and a fund for local development initiatives; and Geovic (a Cobalt and Nickel mining company) who have included similar conservation and local development initiatives in their ESMP, linked to their mine to the North East of the Ngoyla-Mintom Block. 5. Rationale: The Government of Cameroon has requested technical and financial assistance from their development partners to analyze, assess and compare the various proposals, and inform meso-zoning of the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif to define specific areas for conservation, commercial timber production and other uses. Analysis of forest management options and meso-zoning is expected to be completed with support from other projects. The GEF Project will support preparation of documents for the legal classification and participatory management of core areas identified for conservation and low impact community use. 6. Approach: The GEF project aims to support the Government of Cameroon to: strengthen its capacity on the ground for participatory planning and management of selected core areas; to design and test a livelihood support mechanism that provides immediate benefits to the local communities; and to monitor long-term the quantity and quality of the forest protection 12 Indicative land use Framework for the Southern Forested Area of Cameroon (1995). Decree No.95-466-PM. 13 Conservation concessions are a concept pioneered in other parts of the world by Conservation International, whereby the government or local resource users agree to protect an area in exchange for a steady stream of structured compensation from conservationists or other investors. However, this option is not well catered for within the national legal framework 29 areas supported by the project. It will achieve this through close consultation with, and participation of, all concerned stakeholders. 7. The precise external boundaries, appropriate legal status and fine grained micro-zoning for the protection and management of selected priority forests will be defined during the preparation of classification proposals and drafting of management plans. In areas whose protection and management will be supported by this project, the needs of local communities and the economic, social, and environmental impacts of future protection and management status will be analyzed. Positive and any potential negative impacts of the proposed classification process will be clearly communicated to all stakeholders. A livelihood support mechanism will be designed and piloted, with the specific aim to address any potential negative impacts of the proposed classification and management proposals on affected groups, and in particular will encourage and enable sustainable economic development of the area‟s natural resources while safeguarding its rich biodiversity and local communities‟ interests. The decision to proceed with proposed classification and management activities will be taken after there is evidence of broad support for such proposals among affected communities. 8. The GEF project will be implemented in parallel with the WWF and TRIDOM projects, and any other partners working in the Ngoyla Mintom area. Project Development Objective and Indicators 9. The PDO is to improve the conservation and management of the Core Area and improve access to income-generating activities for local communities. “Core Area� means the area(s), measuring in their aggregate no less than 160,000 hectares, within the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif, identified by the Recipient with the explicit agreement in writing of the World Bank to be classified and managed for conservation and low-impact community use. 10. The Global Environment Objective (GEO) and PDO are the same and directly contribute to GEF-4 Strategic Objective 1 (SO-1) (Catalyzing the Sustainability of Protected Area Systems) and Strategic Program 3 (SP3): “Strengthening Terrestrial Protected Area Networks, of the GEF Biodiversity Program. Project Components 11. Project activities will be articulated around three major components: (i) Strengthen government and civil society capacity for participatory planning and management of the core areas that are proposed for conservation and low impact extraction; (ii) Design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM); and; (iii) Design and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System for the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif; and Project management. Component 1 – Strengthen government and civil society capacity for participatory planning and management of the core areas. (Indicative budget for component: GEF US$1.571m) 30 12. The objective of this component is to strengthen the capacity of the government and civil society to plan for, and implement the participatory classification and management of core areas proposed for conservation and low impact community use. “Core areas� means areas of not less than 160,000 hectares selected for conservation guided by their high conservation value, and their role as critical corridors between the existing Protected Areas within the TRIDOM area. These core areas within the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif will be selected on the basis of biological surveys currently being undertaken by WWF, and the meso-zoning plan that is currently being prepared under two separate projects14. However, the GEF project will not actually contribute to the preparation of the meso-zoning plan, which should already be advanced or completed by the time the project becomes effective. 13. To achieve this, the project will: strengthen institutions and increase capacity for participatory forest management and community based natural resource management (sub- component 1.1); conduct socio-economic studies that assess the likely implications of proposed classification and management, and conduct consultations to gauge the level of community support for such proposals (sub-component 1.2); and initiate the process of preparing classification proposals to secure the appropriate legal status and drafting management plans for Ngoyla-Mintom Forest block (sub-component 1.3). Sub-component 1.1. Strengthen capacity of relevant government entities and civil society organizations to support participatory forest management and community-based natural resource management. (GEF US$1.121m) 14. This sub-component will focus on improving the capacity of all stakeholders and local institutions to participate actively in consultations relating to the legal classification and preparation of management plans for the Ngoyla Mintom Forest massif. 15. (a) Strengthen institutional and operational capacity of MINFOF to manage the Ngoyla- Mintom site and implement the project: To ensure effective management of the area, there is need to strengthen MINFOF‟s currently weak capacities in the field as provided by limited numbers of staff of the Divisional Forestry Delegations in a) the Dja et Lobo and b) the Haut Nyong Divisions. This will be achieved by facilitating the creation and strengthening of a special purpose Technical Operations Unit15 with a multi-sectoral staffing that will include experts on forest management, participatory natural resources management, and a team of ecoguards. The PIU will also benefit from part time inputs from nominated experts on land use planning, and environmental and social safeguards16. UTOs are permanent structures and therefore this option ensures the maintenance of institutional capacity to manage the site beyond the lifetime of the project. 16. (b) Reinforce multi-stakeholder consultation platforms: MINFOF and its partners are in the process of establishing stakeholder platforms to guide the ongoing meso-zoning process, through planned workshops and seminars at the village, Sub-Division and Divisional levels. The 14 An EU funded WWF implemented project, and a GEF funded TRIDOM project implemented by UNOPS are described, in Annex 3. 15 Technical Operation Units (Unité Technique Operationelle or „UTO‟) are commonly established by MINFOF in other priority conservation sites. Details are provided under Annex 3. 16 The UTO will be further strengthened by contracting three additional service providers from the private sector to deliver sub-components 1.1 (communications); 2.1 (Livelihoods Support Mechanism); and 3.1 (Long Term Monitoring). 31 Project will provide technical and financial resources to support the strengthening and operational costs of these platforms during the subsequent classification preparation and management planning processes. At the outset of project implementation, the Project Coordinator will define a common consultation framework with WWF and other partners that lays out which actors have a substantial interest in the Ngoyla Mintom Forest massif to ensure that consultations are held with carefully selected representatives of all stakeholders, including indigenous peoples and other local communities, to ascertain their views, help them articulate and map their rights and interests, and identify potential positive or negative impacts of different classification and management options prior to decision making. The platform(s) will include representatives of local government, the deconcentrated administration, local communities and indigenous people living in the area, private-sector firms engaged in or interested in commercial exploitation of the area‟s natural resources or in tourism operations and; local / regional decentralized government entities and civil society organizations. The Project will allocate its support to these platforms strategically, to avoid any overlap with the support to be provided through a separate WWF-funded project. The GEF Project will maintain accurate and comprehensive documentation of all stakeholder consultation processes. 17. Tailored training packages will be contracted designed and delivered to relevant MINFOF staff, and other key agencies working with the project to ensure that relevant institutions have the capacity to implement the project in accordance with the national legal framework and global best practice. Training will be provided in a range of topics, such as, but not limited to, the following: environmental & social management (including WB safeguards policies), financial management and procurement procedures; effective consultations during classification processes; and participatory natural resource management. 18. MINFOF is currently constructing an office and staff accommodation block at Ngoyla for Nki National Park that can also serve MINFOF staff working in the eastern section of the Ngoyla-Mintom area. MINFOF plans to construct a field base in Mintom to serve the needs of its staff with its own resources. This will not be treated as counterpart funds but in-kind parallel funding for GEF purposes. The project will contribute to the equipping of these offices and contribute to their initial operating costs. 19. (c) Strengthen capacity of Local Civil Society Organizations / NGOs to perform watchdog / whistleblower functions: State and Private actors are more likely to be held to account if local CSOs / NGOs are a) capable of accessing and disseminating information about the legal rights and obligations of all actors, b) ensuring that the Livelihood Support Mechanism is well managed and a fair share of resources are allocated to disadvantaged groups; and c) empowered to hold state agents and private sector to account in their respect and enforcement of the law, and their contractual obligations, respectively. Specific efforts will be made to extend or duplicate the role of the national Independent Observer to regional and local levels, in priority by co-opting the FLEGT project to expedite this action. The project will make an initial investment in training CSOs/NGOs in these roles. Further funds will be accessed through the Livelihood Support Mechanism or from other external sources. 20. (d) Definition and implementation of a local convention on the management of hunting. Before investing in any anti-poaching campaign, MINFOF will negotiate a clear convention with local communities on how to manage hunting in the Ngoyla-Mintom massif. This convention will clarify customary hunting rights, and differentiate subsistence and commercial hunting in a pragmatic fashion (where necessary providing clarity beyond the text of the regulations in force). 32 The objective is to avoid creating unnecessary conflict between local hunters and game rangers/eco-guards to be contracted by the project, and to build on the sense of local ownership of the area‟s wildlife resources, and encourage a partnership between MINFOF and local communities for sustainable management of wildlife and control of illegal hunting. 21. (e) Communication and Outreach program: Local NGO representatives and government officials consulted during project preparation raised the problem of lack of information regarding important initiatives in the area, such as the legal framework for land management, forest classification and management. They also expressed the need for awareness-raising on sustainable natural resource management issues among local populations if a conservation / sustainable-development project is to succeed. A strategy of law enforcement alone would be counterproductive and increase conflicts in the area. 22. The Project Coordinator shall ensure effective communication with the local populations about the importance and benefits of successful project implementation. It is also crucial to engage local communities in every stage of project implementation in order to optimize alignment of the project activities with their interests and way of life, thereby increasing local buy-in and ownership of the project and consequently its chances of success. 23. The project will finance a qualified communications consultant to build capacities of the Government and local partners and assist them as necessary to prepare and disseminate information prior to consultations. The consultant will be responsible for preparing a communications strategy, ensuring communications with the local population, and where necessary, managing conflicts. The consultant will also support interaction with the Network of Parliamentarians for the Sustainable Management of Central African Forest Humid Ecosystems (REPAR) to help raise awareness at the political level on the benefits inherent to the project. 24. The Communication Team will more specifically:  Prepare a communications strategy that disseminates relevant information to all stakeholders (local, national, international) about the project, in particular: the Cameroon Legal Framework; applicable World Bank Safeguards policies and instruments; implications of the proposed classification and management options for the priority conservation and community use areas; and other forthcoming developments in the area. In particular, the Communication Strategy will need to inform stakeholders on the stance of the Project towards hunting in the massif (see 1.1(d) above), distinguishing between traditional user rights and poaching. The Strategy will also communicate the net costs and benefits of project implementation compared to the “without-project� situation17. The Communications Strategy will allow for two-way communication – in particular by providing a mechanism for stakeholders to express their grievances which will be established at the very outset, as well as a clear procedure to respond to criticism, redress grievances, manage and resolve arising conflicts between stakeholders as soon as possible, and will establish a mediation committee for this purpose. The communication strategy will be validated at a public workshop. 17 This comparison will be prepared on the results of the socio-economic analyses conducted under Sub-Component 1.2. 33  Disseminate adequate, appropriate and reliable information prior to consultations and decision making to ensure free, prior, informed consultations with all affected stakeholders on all project activities that have potential impacts on local communities and indigenous people. These include the consultations for the classification of forest areas, preparation of management plans, and design of the Livelihood Support Mechanism. Specific emphasis will be put on communicating to local communities the importance of sustainable management of their natural resources, of taking ownership of this process, and of potential costs and benefits to them in the short and long term. Efforts will also be made to convey to local communities that they are an active partner in this project and have the power to direct its design and implementation.  Organize awareness-raising workshops both at the central level (ministries) and the local level and conducted in local language to ensure broad endorsement of the project by government staff and local communities. Sub-component 1.2: (a) Carrying out of studies of the socio-economic & environmental implications of, and (b) confirmation of Local Communities‟ acceptance of, proposed classification and management of the core area for conservation and low impact community use. (GEF US$0.150m) 25. This sub-component will evaluate the potential socio-economic costs and benefits of proposed classification and management plans, and to conduct consultations that assess the support of the local communities and their acceptance of the proposed measures before implementation of such proposals. Two studies will be completed: a) A Socio-economic analysis of the likely financial, social, environmental and other costs / benefits (participation, sense of ownership, community use of resources, changes in access rights, etc) that result from different classification and management options for priority conservation and community use areas. The need for, and purpose of this study is clearly defined in the Process Framework and the Indigenous People‟s Plan, and will make use of available socio-economic and environmental data and estimates18. The study will also draw on lessons learned regarding how traditional use rights have been secured during classification of protected areas in the Central African Region. The project will collect complimentary data, as necessary to allow more in-depth analyses and will conduct public consultation on this study. 26. The results of the different classification and management scenarios for core areas for conservation and sustainable community use will be discussed in public consultation and validation workshops so that additional consensus-building, identification of trade-offs, and possible compensatory measures that need to be addressed during the classification process can be discussed. The resulting report will be shared with all stakeholders to support the process of classifying and preparing socially acceptable and economically justifiable multipurpose management plans. These studies will be restricted to cover only those core areas for conservation and sustainable community use within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest block whose classification the project is considering to finance. 27. The detailed socio-economic analysis will serve multiple purposes. It will be used to: 18 WWF has already prepared some estimates of potential costs & benefits of different land uses. Both WWF and TRIDOM Projects are collecting additional data during their meso-zoning process. 34 i. estimate net socio-economic impacts of various classification and management options for the core areas for conservation and sustainable community use (inter alia illustrating the division of benefits and costs between different stakeholders at local, national and global levels; monetary and non-monetary values, etc), in order to provide a clear picture of the baseline situation, winners and losers, and local and global “impacts� of classification. ii. define the economic cost of any restriction of access rights for specific stakeholders that will inform the classification and management process for core areas for conservation and sustainable community use and provide a basis for any compensatory package. 28. The project coordinator will explore lessons learned from other countries and regions on how to make best use of such analyses, and incorporate them into criteria for screening and deciding on the likely sustainability of different classification and management options, particularly in terms of their ecological values, socio-economic impacts and political feasibility. b) Conduct surveys to assess broad community acceptance of the classification proposals and draft management plans before adoption. The objective is to assess whether the community affected by the classification proposals for core areas for conservation and sustainable community use are sufficiently informed, and have reached a broad consensus in support of the plans before classification proposals and draft management plans are submitted for official approval. These surveys will ensure that participatory approaches have been applied throughout the planning and implementation process. Sub-component 1.3: Preparation of classification proposals, and draft management plans for the core areas� designated for permanent forest status within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Massif (GEF US$0.300m) 29. Taking into account the meso-zoning plan prepared by MINFOF with support from WWF and TRIDOM, the Project team will select “core areas� for conservation that are proposed to become part of the permanent forest estate, in which it will invest resources in the classification (also referred to as gazettement) and management planning processes19. The proposed legal status of these “core areas� could be one or more of various options20 but will accommodate appropriate community participation in its management and use. Precedents for more community participation in Protected Area management exist in Cameroon, for example the classification decree for the Campo Ma‟an National Park allows for Baka to continue traditional hunting within the National Park. Mt. Cameroon NP Classification Decree allows for some community use. The legal status proposed for the “core area� will be the outcome of negotiations with all stakeholders. These “core areas� will be a subset of the entire Ngoyla- Mintom forest massif. Criteria for selection of these core areas are as follows:  Forest areas proposed as priorities for conservation and low-impact community use. 19 Note that the consultation process to determine the purpose of classification, and user rights is supported under sub-component 1.1 and a survey to assess community support before submission of the classification proposal to the Ministry is supported under sub-component 1.2. 20 The current Forest Law provides for a range of options within the Permanent Forest Estate, including Faunal Sanctuary, Faunal Reserve, Hunting Zone, National Park or Integral Ecological Reserve. The ongoing revision of the law may create new options or modify what is possible in one or more of the existing options. The final decision will depend on the outcome of consultations, and will aim to find a pragmatic solution that ensures adequate participation of, and benefits to the local community, while also legally securing the area from external pressures. 35  Forest areas where industrial logging will not take place. 30. Support to the classification process: The precise external boundaries, and fine grained details of protection and management of priority forests selected for classification, will be defined through a participatory process. The project will finance the material, labor and professional costs of opening, demarcating and surveying of agreed boundaries, through competitive tender. 31. Support to the forest management planning process: Based on the results of the classification process, the project will support preparation of at least 1 management plan, by financing: forest inventory costs; participatory mapping and all activities related to the preparation of management plans. Technical support contracted for the preparation of participatory mapping and management plans will be awarded through competitive tender. 32. The GEF project‟s support to the preparation for classification (legal gazettement) of priority forest areas would be targeted so as to complement (not duplicate) any similar activities planned by the WWF and TRIDOM projects. Technical and financial support for Council Forests is available from the “Centre Technique de la Foresterie Communale� that receives finance from diverse sources, and will not be financed by this GEF project. Support for Community Forest creation and management are available from other projects working in the area (WWF, SNV, Rainforest Alliance). If needed, additional GEF support for eligible Community Forests can be requested from the Livelihood Support Mechanism (see Component 2) if defined in local development plans, and not from this component. Classification processes or management plans that remain incomplete or not yet officially approved within the project lifetime would be completed with other government and/or development partner investments. Component 2 – Design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM) (Indicative budget for component: US$1.406m GEF) 33. This component will design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism that will address immediate social and development needs of the local communities and indigenous peoples to encourage their adoption of conservation measures in the Ngoyla-Mintom massif. The main economic activities in the region are hunting, fishing, gathering of non-timber forest products, and small scale agriculture, primarily for domestic consumption. Distance and poor roads to market has hampered production of bulky, lower value food crops for the market. The only significant cash crop is cocoa, whose cultivation has expanded rapidly in recent years in response to higher market prices. However, production technology is still basic. Coffee and Palm Oil are also grown for market but to a lesser extent. Priority will be given to those groups that have traditional use rights in the forest and in particular those who stand to lose from reduced access to the forest resulting from the proposed classification and sustainable management of core areas identified for priority conservation / low impact forest uses under sub- component 1.3. Criteria for selecting potential beneficiaries of the Livelihood Support Mechanism will be defined in an Aide-Memoire or the Operational Procedures at the beginning of implementation/first mission. 34. Selection criteria will prioritize support to micro-projects that increase economic alternatives and reduce the community‟s current dependence on the unsustainable use of natural resources in order to support them in transition to more sustainable resource-use patterns. 36 Support for development of this type is widely considered to be essential to secure support for conservation oriented classification and management. 35. The design of the Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM) will be guided by the model for forest revenue sharing envisaged in Joint Decision No. 520 (MINFOF / MINFI / MINADT), which provides a legal basis for local committees that can prepare Local Development Plans that will guide the use of LSM funds. However, appropriate modifications will be made to adapt it to the project objectives. 36. Specifically for the purpose of using GEF funds for the LSM, the following are proposed:  GEF Project funds will be used exclusively at local level – i.e. a percentage will not be re-centralized to the treasury or FEICOM as envisaged in the Arrêté;  The distribution of funds between local council and community level projects will be agreed during the preparation of the Operational Procedures.  GEF Funds will not pass through the Council‟s accounts unless they have been audited to meet Bank Financial Management standards (for example those benefiting from PNDP support) - instead they will be managed directly by a competitively selected Management Contractor.  Activities eligible for LSM support must be compatible with the agreed land use of the site in which it is proposed to take place, and the overall conservation and sustainable use within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest massif (defined under sub-component 1.2);  GEF Funds will not co-fund activities that are also being funded by other donors.  GEF Funds will prioritize investments that are linked to improved management and protection of forest and wildlife resources;  GEF Funds will not be used for any works of a scale or nature that would by national law or WB safeguard standards require an environmental impact assessment or that would require resettlement resulting in Affected Persons21.  A proportion of GEF funds will be allocated pro-rata to marginalized groups (in particular Indigenous People). Other necessary modifications will be defined in the Operational Procedures for the LSM. 37. The broad scope and nature of activities that will be eligible for support by the LSM are defined in guiding principles for the LSM that have been prepared during project preparation. These guiding principles will form part of the tender package for potential Management Contractors, whose task will be to refine, and implement detailed Operational Procedures. These Operational Procedures will be compliant with the Bank Standard Procurement and Financial Management rules. The detailed design of the LSM will be completed by the competitively contracted Management Contractor based on a review of existing methodologies for similar successful mechanisms. The resulting Operational Procedures will: adapt best practice to local 21 “Affected Person� means a person who as a result of: (i) the involuntary taking of land under the Project is affected in any of the following ways: (A) relocation or loss of shelter; (B) loss of assets or access to assets; or (C) loss of income sources or means of livelihood, whether or not the affected person must move to another location; or (ii) the involuntary restriction of access to legally designated parks and protected areas suffers adverse impacts on his or her livelihood. 37 conditions; outline procedures for planning and proposing micro-projects; define eligibility criteria for screening potential beneficiaries and micro-projects that could be supported; include financial, economic, social and environmental screening procedures; and describe methods for approval, monitoring and accountability for the micro-projects. The refined draft Operational Procedures will be subject to a public validation workshop; will be approved by the Ministry of Forests and then subject to a non-objection from the Bank. Once approved, the LSM Operational Procedures will form an integral part of the Contract of the Management Contractor. 38. The LSM will reflect the objectives captured in the box below, and will be outlined in the Terms of Reference for the Management Contractor. The LSM will finance activities that: support sustainable forest use; provide an alternative to harvesting natural resources from the Ngoyla-Mintom forest massif; and provide basic social infrastructure. Selection of eligible activities will be based on the following broad criteria (i) be proposed by established local community groups; (ii) have a demonstrable positive impact on the conservation of the Ngoyla-Mintom forest massif and its biodiversity; (iii) be consistent with the national policies and in due course the specific management plans for the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif; (iv) meet social and environmental soundness equity and transparency criteria; (v) include a percentage contribution in cash or kind by the proponent and (vi) include arrangements for accountability and (vii) be able to demonstrate financial sustainability in the long-term. The list below indicates some of the activities that would be considered during the design phase for eligibility and is based on the priority needs22 expressed during the preparation missions: 1 Support the establishment and operational costs of community groups that aim to undertake sustainable community management of natural resources (registration as e.g. Common Initiative Groups or Associations); 2 Support to establishment and/or improvement of a few existing alternative income-generating activities (IGAs) that are targeted in priority at groups of forest users who are likely to face restrictions of access; are proven to be economically viable in the project site; do not in themselves threaten biodiversity or attract migrants; improve land and labor productivity in preference to investments that simply expand agricultural production. Examples include intensification of cocoa farming, livestock husbandry, pisciculture, apiculture, and construction of associated buildings (crop storage facilities, drying facilities, livestock enclosures, etc); simple market places, network building, and trade facilitation. 3 Put in place a pilot mechanism for compensating community members for wildlife damage to crops / property. 4 Provision of basic social infrastructure such as wells, latrines, maintenance of critical sectors of access roads. 5 Technical and financial assistance to prepare application dossiers, draft management plans and finance their subsequent implementation in Community Forests and community managed hunting zones. The final list of eligible activities will be defined in the Operational Procedures for the Livelihood Support Mechanism, which will become an integral part of the Management Contractors‟ contract and be subject to non- objection by the Bank. Funding will be provided through various instruments (procurement of works, materials and technical advisory services, etc). Design of selection procedures for investment in agricultural projects will be done in close coordination with the PACA project implementation team in the field to avoid funding projects that could more easily be financed by PACA. Design of selection procedures for investment for social infrastructure projects will be done in close coordination with the PNDP project implementation teams in the field to avoid funding projects that could more 22 During project preparation missions, the Bank team and Safeguards consultants ascertained that communities‟ development expectations were fairly uniform throughout the region, namely livestock rearing (pigs, chickens), fish farming, community forestry, agriculture (the main crops in the area were cited as cacao, oil palm, plantain, and manioc, with cacao specifically mentioned as a commercial crop), and domestication / agroforestry (in particular integrating NTFPs such as bush mango). Communities emphasized their need for accompanying and follow-up measures, such as training and technical assistance (e.g. regarding social and economic organizational aspects and market-development and access), as well as their general needs – schools, hospitals, electricity, better roads, and clean accessible sources of drinking water. 38 easily be financed by PNDP. Consultation meeting to validate the Livelihood Support Mechanism: A consultation meeting will be held to validate the proposed design of the Mechanism and its Operational Procedures before they are presented for non-objection to the Bank. Thereafter, during project implementation, meetings will be held periodically to review proposals and the investments made, and impacts of LSM investments. Six-monthly LSM progress reports will be made available by the Management Contractor, through the Project Coordinator to the Project Steering Committee. 39. This Component will be implemented through the following two sub-components: Sub-Component 2.1: Design, and piloting of a Livelihood Support Mechanism in accordance with the approved Operational Procedures. (GEF US$1.326 m) Three activities are envisaged to implement this sub-component: 40. (a) Contract a Management Contractor to design and manage the Livelihood Support Mechanism. A Management Contractor with relevant experience of rural development will be contracted, under a performance based contract23. The Management Contractor will be responsible for completing the detailed design of the Operational Procedures for the LSM. The Operational Procedures will be subject to validation by MINFOF and a public validation workshop, and a non-objection from the Bank. Once agreed, they will become an integral part of the Management Contractor‟s contract (see activity and box above). The Management Contractor will thenceforth be responsible for the establishment and smooth operation of the Livelihood Support Mechanism in accordance with the approved Operational Procedures. This Management Contractor will designate a full time staff with appropriate expertise to manage all aspects of Sub-Component 2.1. This staff shall be field based for the majority of the time. The Management Contractor will report to the Project Coordinator and work closely with the project team, local councils, and will coordinate with other sources of funding available to the Ngoyla- Mintom region to maximize harmonization of efforts. 41. The Management Contractor will have fiduciary responsibility for delivery of these micro-projects and the competitive selection process will therefore evaluate fiduciary management capacities against World Bank standards24. The Management Contractor will charge a percentage management fee (maximum 15%) for funds successfully disbursed to micro- projects and reclaim allowable operating costs and management fees, against periodic technical and financial reports. 42. The Local Committees will make recommendations to the Management Contractor to allocate a budget to selected micro-projects that meet the criteria defined in the Operational Procedures via a regular process for selection of micro-projects, allocation of funds, monitoring and accounting. 43. (b) Implement outreach and training activities to build local capacity to access and manage the Livelihood Support Mechanism. Given the relatively low levels of social 23 The decision to use a Management Contractor as delivery mechanism for this component responds to the fact that rural development is not the mandate of a Technical Operations Unit (the main project implementation agency). Further, a sole contract to a competent delegated authority will greatly simplify delivery of many small investments in multiple micro-projects. 24 To meet this requirement, the Management Contractor is likely to be an NGO or consultancy bureau specialized in rural development with a proven track record of managing and accounting for donor funds to international standards. 39 organization observed in the Ngoyla Mintom area, and the need to ensure that local communities (and especially Indigenous People) access the support mechanism equitably, the project will take proactive steps early in its lifetime to invest in initial group formation and basic organizational development so that marginalized groups can actively participate in local planning processes, through which they can collectively voice their proposals for micro-projects that could be supported by the Livelihood Support Mechanism. Such organizational support will be provided by the Management Contractor directly, or outsourced to a qualified NGO or service provider(s) to work with specific target groups. While other capacity building activities are packaged under Component 1 (creation of Stakeholder Platforms, etc), this activity is included in Component 2 because the capacity building to make the LSM operational is best contracted out to the same Management Contractor that manages the LSM, as the activities are strongly inter-dependent. 44. The Management Contractor will also support “Local Committees� to periodically prepare or refine Local Development Plans following the conceptual model outlined in the Joint Decision No. 520, with representatives from all villages. The resulting Local Development Plan will guide the selection of micro-projects to be financed by the Livelihood Support Mechanism25. These committees will periodically prepare work plans and budgets for a set of micro-projects against criteria defined in the Operational Procedures. 45. (c) Fund Micro-projects: The Management Contractor will draft and sign a memorandum of understanding with beneficiary groups for the approved micro-projects. This MoU will be copied to the Project Coordinator and the Mayor of the relevant Council, to ensure that there is full transparency, recording of all funded projects against the Council‟s local development plans and avoidance of double funding. Once the MoU is signed, the Management Contractor will then publicly tender for service providers to deliver agreed micro-projects. Fiduciary control and responsibility for delivery of these micro-projects will be the responsibility of the Management Contractor. The Management Contractor will submit quarterly unaudited financial reports and will be subject to annual financial audits. Sub-component 2.2: Evaluation of the Livelihood Support Mechanism with a view to developing subsequent scale-up recommendations (GEF US$0.080m). 46. Evaluate the preliminary results of the Livelihood Support Mechanism referred to in Sub- Component 2.1 and all activities implemented with its financial support, with a view to developing subsequent scaling-up recommendations. The activities financed by the Livelihood Support Mechanism will be subject to at least two detailed technical audits during the project lifespan to assess the cost-effectiveness and impact of supported activities, and learn lessons that can be applied in an adjustment of the Operational Procedures at the mid-term, and at project completion for the purposes of recommending lessons learned / best practices that can be applied in future scaling up of the mechanism within the project area and beyond. The design and implementation of the evaluation will be undertaken by an independent institution with relevant experience. 25 The PNDP project is building capacity of Councils to prepare Council Development Plans. In theory, these plans are prepared with participation of representatives of all communities in the municipality, and should integrate results from Local Development Plans at the level of one or more village. Where these exist, they will be used as the basis for selection of micro-projects. The Management Contractor will review these Local Development Plans with the beneficiaries as a starting point for selecting micro-projects for financing with LSM funds. In particular, the Management Contract will verify that at least 30% of the LSM funds go to micro-projects identified by the Baka Community. 40 47. The institution contracted to provide independent evaluation will take part in the design stage of the Livelihood Support Mechanism and will return at the mid-term and end of project to evaluate the results. The evaluation will require the collection of baseline data on groups supported under Component 2.1 and a suitable control group and the monitoring of both groups at least for the duration of the project. The impact evaluation group will be contracted at the same time as the Management Contractor, and will work very closely with the latter, to ensure that impact evaluation is built into the design of the intervention being evaluated. 48. The Project M&E expert will also keep detailed records on the beneficiaries of the Livelihood Support Mechanism, and guide the Management Contractor who is responsible for implementation of Component 2 to ensure that targets for minimum levels of participation by indigenous people are met or exceeded. Sustainability of the Livelihood Support Mechanism 49. During the project lifetime, the funds for the Livelihood Support Mechanism will come directly from the GEF Project budget to design and test the mechanism, build local capacity for planning and managing micro-projects and assess its potential for delivering local level development impacts. As forest and wildlife derived revenues are generated by a range of new enterprises that become established in the region, a share of these funds will by default follow the same planning and monitoring procedures, since the Livelihood Support Mechanism is itself based on the same design as the Joint Decision No.520 which guides the use of forest-derived revenues. However, according to this Decision, forestry revenues are managed by the local council. This has been problematic, due to capacity, governance and accountability issues with planning, managing and accounting for funds received by the Council. The project design has therefore opted for contracting a Management Contractor to manage the project resources earmarked for rural development, but with the explicit intention of working closely with the local councils and communities to build long-term capacity of councils to manage other natural resource revenues. If the model is successful, Councils could opt to continue to outsource the management of such funds, or at least the planning, delivery and supervision of micro-projects to a Management Contractor after the project lifetime. 50. By modeling these committees on the legal text of Decision No.520, the project is creating built in sustainability, since these committees are supported by an existing legal text and will continue to exist after the project completion. The same committees will be able to budget for the use of incoming funds from other sources, such as a share of annual logging fees from nearby Forest Concessions, and in due course REDD funding – both activities are clearly envisaged in Decision No.520. 51. It is hoped that the LSM will serve as a model for private sector mining companies (who may have a legal obligation, or voluntary commitment to establish environmental or biodiversity offsets, and/or support local community development), to channel funds to local communities through a well-functioning transparent Mechanism. Component 3 – Design and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System for the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif. (Indicative budget for component: GEF US$0.523m) 41 Sub-component 3.1. Monitoring and Evaluation: (GEF US$0.346 m) 52. Contract an M&E Expert / body to design and implement the M&E system. This sub- component will be bid out to an institution with specialist expertise in Monitoring & Evaluation and a long term presence in country. This independent body will provide and logistically support a team of M&E experts who will support the PIU to design, and implement a long-term M&E system throughout the project lifetime. During project appraisal it was agreed that IUCN have specialist and unique expertise26 in designing and implementing long-term monitoring and evaluation frameworks, and that IUCN could be contracted by sole source method. 53. The contracted independent M&E body will work closely with the Project Coordinator and team to design and utilize a participatory monitoring and evaluation system that tracks social, economic, and ecological information to better assess progress made toward the project objective, and that will serve to continue to track key indicators that are required for long term monitoring of the core area of the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif and the communities that use it. 54. Set up M&E system and provide coaching to data collectors: The M&E system will be developed jointly with all project partners – including local services, community representatives, and other projects and private sector investors operating in the area. Since all three projects operating in the area have a monitoring obligation and corresponding component, design of a common and harmonized M&E framework and coordination of monitoring activities will be essential to avoid overlap and ensure efficient use of resources. Each project will monitor its own progress in implementing its defined activities and how these contribute to achievement of its own specific goals. The M&E system will also assess progress towards achieving a shared vision for development in the broader Ngoyla Mintom landscape. This shared vision will be defined through a participatory process early in the project life, and progress will be regularly monitored during annual stakeholder platform meetings. Tailored training packages will be designed and delivered to relevant MINFOF and other GoC staffs via a series of classroom and practical hands-on field training for field staff, led by the M&E expert. 55. Collect and analyze data: For the longer term monitoring system, the three projects will work under the guidance of the external expert team to agree on a division of responsibilities to establish baselines and collect data over time that can be fed into a common M&E framework. Several tools are envisaged under this component:  The GEF Tracking Tool for Biodiversity projects, for Strategic Objective 1 (SO1 - Catalyzing the Sustainability of Protected Areas Systems) will be used initially. It will be measured at the start, and end of the project to assess changes in management effectiveness of the core areas. All three projects working in the area are committed to using the same GEF Tracking Tools to report on Biodiversity impacts and outcomes of the project. Application of the Tracking Tool has no cost, beyond periodic meeting of the project partners to review and update the tables.  Biological monitoring: WWF will invest in initial biological data collection and has a comparative advantage to continue collecting such data over time. 26 IUCN have developed a long-term M&E framework for the Tri-National Sangha (TNS) Project, covering three countries (Cameroon, Central African Republic and Republic of Congo) over the past 10 years. The M&E Framework has explicitly been established to respond to the needs of multiple development partners, including the State, donors and Private Sector. 42  Forest cover monitoring: The PIU will contract a competent specialist body27 to monitor changes in forest cover and quality in the core area.  Socio-economic monitoring: Preliminary socio-economic data will be collected by the WWF and TRIDOM projects. GEF funds will be used to design a longer term socio-economic monitoring framework and to assess social impacts of the project on the level and equity of benefits attained by different target groups. The M&E system will monitor levels of participation and consensus reached over time among local stakeholders including indigenous peoples and vulnerable groups during the legal classification process, and preparation of management plans for core areas. It will also monitor the number of people benefiting and type of benefit delivered by the project in general, and the Livelihood Support Mechanism in particular.  Monitoring Safeguard implementation: The M&E system will include a regular self- assessment of compliance with World Bank safeguards as a specific indicator for regular reports. This will be used internally to track compliance. External compliance monitoring will be provided by MINEPDED and by regular World Bank supervision missions.28 56. The M&E Framework will establish procedures for engaging a core group of (multi) stakeholder representatives to contribute to regular participatory monitoring of project performance via a local monitoring and evaluation committee. Indicators will be “scored� at the beginning of the project to establish a baseline. At least one additional assessment will be made during the lifetime of the project, to measure preliminary impacts of the project, and test and if need be, refine the monitoring system. The Project Coordinator and his team will identify an institutional home and long-term financing for monitoring and evaluation operations as a specific output of the project. Sub-component 3.2. Project Management: (GEF US$0.177 m) 57. This sub-component will ensure implementation of routine administration activities, including: preparation of annual work programs, budgets, procurement, and financial management of project resources, the costs of annual audits, annual and quarterly progress reports, and overall monitoring and evaluation of project implementation, including monitoring the implementation of the project safeguards instruments will be included under project management. 58. A Project Implementation Manual (PIM) will guide the implementation of the project and will cover the following aspects: (a) detailed implementation arrangements; (b) detailed implementation schedule; (c) financial management and reporting; (d) procurement; (e) monitoring and evaluation; (f) implementation of Project‟s safeguards instruments, and (g) a conflict resolution mechanism. 27 The World Resources Institute is already monitoring forest cover and illegal logging in Cameroon. Additional capacities are being established, such as the Observatoir des Forêts d‟Afrique Centrale (OFAC) and new projects such as the JICA funded project to provide satellite imagery and analysis for REDD projects may be able to provide this service for free. However, in the absence of competition at the time of tendering the contract, the World Resources Institute may have to be hired by direct (sole-source) contract. 28 N.B. Statutory monitoring of National Environmental and Social Policy compliance will still be assured by MINEP, and Bank Safeguards Compliance will be monitored by Bank Safeguards specialists. This internal monitoring will be used in the same way as Internal Audits - catching irregularities before they become substantial. 43 59. Details of the staffing, training needs, and operations of the Project Implementation Unit (PIU) are provided in Annex 3. 60. Train Project staff: Throughout project implementation, tailored training packages will be designed and delivered to relevant MINFOF and other GoC staffs working with the Project in Bank safeguard policies, Bank Financial Management and Procurement procedures. Training in Monitoring and Evaluation procedures is provided for under sub-Component 3.1. 61. Procurement: A vehicle, office equipment, office supplies, as well as project operating costs will be supported by the component. 62. Reporting: regular reports will be prepared to monitor project implementation. 44 Annex 3: Implementation Arrangements REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON: Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project 1. Project Institutional and Implementation Arrangements i. Project administration mechanisms 1. The following institutional arrangements were developed on the basis of in-depth consultation with the senior staff of the Ministry of Forests and Wildlife29, the Ministry of Environment, Nature Protection and Sustainable Development30, and the Ministry of Economy, Planning and Regional Development31 during project preparation. The structures, and scope, for coordination were also discussed in depth with other projects operating in the same geographic area. The proposals were validated at a meeting at which all three ministries and the two existing projects operating in the area were represented at a high level. 2. Key entities involved in the project are: (i) A Steering Committee for Ngoyla-Mintom chaired by MINFOF. This Steering Committee will be responsible for ensuring coordination between relevant government ministries (see below) and Civil Society, provide general oversight and enable efficient project implementation. (ii) A Project Implementation Unit (PIU) that will be designated by MINFOF. The PIU will be responsible for implementation of project activities on the ground on behalf of MINFOF. Project management structures � Steering Committee comprised of:  Minister of Forests (MINFOF) or his representative (Chair)  Minister of Economy, Planning & Regional Development (MINEPAT) or his representative  Ministry of Environment, Nature Protection & Sustainable Development (MINEPDED) representative.  Two representatives of civil society chosen by the two stakeholder platforms to be established in the region; and  Project Coordinator (Technical Secretary);  Representatives of the projects (TRIDOM and WWF) working in Ngoyla Mintom area, and representatives of all financial contributors to the Ngoyla-Mintom zone (donors, and 29 MINFOF staffs consulted include the Secretary General, the Director of General Affairs, Director of Forestry, Director of Wildlife & Protected Areas, and the Director of the Cooperation and Programming. 30 MINEPDED staff consulted include the Secretary General, the Director of Norms and Control 31 MINEPAT staffs consulted include the Secretary General, the Director of North-South Cooperation, and the Director of Land Management. 45 private sector partners) will be invited to attend Steering Committee meetings as observers; 3. Other Ministries, Partners, and Stakeholders may be invited to specific sessions of the Steering Committee in the case of specific requirements (for example, Ministry of Territorial Administration and Decentralization - MINATD, Ministry of Social Affairs - MINAS, Ministry of Finance - MINFI, Ministry of Mining – MINIMIDT, Ministry of State Property and Land Tenure – MINDAF, Mayors, etc) to address specific inter-sectoral issues that relate to them. 4. The Project Implementation Unit (PIU) will assure the technical secretariat functions for the meeting. 5. This Steering Committee will meet at least once a year to: (a) provide overall supervision for project implementation; (b) provide overall supervision for project implementation; (c) review the annual work plans and budget; (d) review the annual implementation performance report to be prepared by the Project Implementation Unit, and oversee the implementation of corrective actions as and when necessary; (e) enhance synergy between the GEF project and other initiatives being implemented in the project site; (f) provide advice on strategies for the management of natural resources and sustainable development of the project zone. � Project Implementation Unit (PIU): 6. The Ministry of Forests, as implementing agency will need to strengthen its capacities in the field to implement this project by designation of a Project Implementation Unit. MINFOF may request nomination of some additional staff from other Ministries. The following staff will be appointed by their respective Ministers to become part of the Project Implementation Unit:  Project Coordinator;  Financial Management Officer  Procurement Officer  Regional development / planning expert;  Environmental and social management expert;  Participatory natural resources management expert.  Forest management expert.  Monitoring & Evaluation expert. 7. The respective Ministers may choose to designate the above staff through a competitive process internal to their respective Ministries. 8. Three additional service providers will be recruited competitively from the private sector:  A Management Contractor to design and implement the Livelihood Support Mechanism (Component 2).  A Communications Consultant (consultation framework, communication, conflict management under Component 1).  An independent body that will design and implement an ecological and socio-economic Monitoring and Evaluation system. 46 9. The Terms of Reference and CVs of all service providers shall be subject to a non- objection from the Bank, prior to appointment. 10. The Project Coordinator will report to the Minister of MINFOF, and will be responsible for: (a) preparation of project overall annual work plans including technical and financial report; (b) monitoring activities for annual work plans implementation; (c) supervision of overall progress and evaluation of project impacts through the PIU‟s own M&E expert, and the contracted M&E Specialist financed by the project; (d) ensuring due diligence in respect of the project safeguard instruments; (e) managing all staff of the Project as listed below, and (f) arranging for a financial audit to be performed annually. The Coordinator will be based primarily in the field, but will be provided with office space at the Ministry during visits to Headquarters. All the project staff will report to the Project Coordinator. 11. An expert in regional development (participatory and multi-sectoral planning) who will be a staff of MINEPAT. This position can be part time. The officer appointed by MINEPAT will: ensure inter-sectoral coordination on the field, will serve as permanent focal point for the duration of the project. 12. An expert in environmental and social management who will be a staff of MINEPDED or contracted from the private sector. This position can be part time. He / She will work closely with local MINFOF and MINEPDED staff, local councils, local communities and administrative and traditional authorities to: ensure that the contents of the environmental and social safeguard instruments are well understood by project implementers and stakeholders; conduct or commission studies to identify the effects of any project activities that may restrict community access to resources in the forest massif; ensure adequate implementation of mitigation measures identified in the environmental and social management plan and compliance with environmental and social safeguards of the World Bank; monitor the implementation of environmental and social management plans of other projects in the region (Mining, Roads, Rail, etc.), and contribute to the conceptualization of any future Payments for Environmental Services such as REDD in the core area within Ngoyla Mintom massif. 13. An expert in participatory management of natural resources. A MINFOF staff who will coordinate planning and participatory management of natural resources in the core areas. 14. An expert in sustainable forest management. A MINFOF staff who will: manage the Ecoguards team to secure the core areas of the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif from illegal exploitation and hunting in close collaboration with the classic MINFOF services; coordinate the preparation of management plans for core areas destined to become part of the Permanent Forest Estate; coordinate provision of technical assistance to the Councils and Community wishing to establish and / or manage Council or Community forests and monitor best practices by logging companies in the area; 15. A Financial Management Officer will be responsible for Financial Management, and Administration of the Project. This person will be will be a staff of the PIU but housed within MINFOF to ensure integration with the broader forest sector program. 16. A Procurement Officer will support Procurement functions of the Project. This person will be a staff of the PIU but housed within MINFOF to ensure integration with the broader forest sector program. 47 N.B. For the purposes of ensuring coordination with MINFOF’s existing financial management and control systems, the Financial Management and Procurements Officers will as much as possible benefit from the expertise and know-how of the Management Unit (Unité de Gestion) of the Multi-donor Basket Fund. 17. A Monitoring & Evaluation expert will be responsible for project level M&E, including monitoring the implementation of project activities against the Results Framework (Annex 1). 18. A team of Eco-guards will be deployed by the Government in year 2 of the project. The Project budget provides resources to support the field operations of the Eco-guards. Figure 1. Project Organigramme Coordination at Inter-Ministerial Steering Steering Committee Committee members: the national Level: • MINFOF Coordination at •MINEPAT the Field Level: • MINEP • Other Ministries by invitation in case of Decentralized need Administration Ngoyla Mintom Technical 2 Local Civil Society Operations Unit Representatives Regional Platforms (Technical and Planning (multi-stakeholder) Coordinators of the Committee) three Projects • GEF Ngoyla-Mintom • GEF TRIDOM • WWF Donor representatives (observers) GEF GEF Ngoyla Mintom WWF TRIDOM Project (Project Ngoyla Mintom PROJECT Management Project Unit Measures to address Capacity Constraints 19. Terms of Reference for the key PIU staff were prepared and agreed during project preparation. Once established, the PIU will need additional training to ensure efficient implementation of project activities to bank standards. 20. Throughout project implementation, tailored training packages will be designed and delivered to relevant MINFOF and other GoC staff working with the Project. Training in: Financial Management and Procurement procedures; national legal framework and global best practice in the following: environmental & social management (including the Bank‟s Safeguard policies); effective consultations during planning and classification processes, and participatory natural resources management are foreseen under sub-component 1.1. Training in Monitoring and Evaluation is foreseen under Component 3.1. Training in Financial Management & Procurement to Bank standards will be provided under Component 3.2. 48 2. Financial Management, Disbursements and Procurement a. Financial Management 21. Overview of Project and implementing agency: The project will consist of the following three components: (i) Component 1: Strengthen government and civil society capacity for participatory planning and management of the core areas (US$ 1.571 million); (ii) Component 2: Design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism (US$ 1.406 million); and (iii) Component 3: Design and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System for the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif; and Project Management (US$ 0.523million). Risk Assessment and Mitigation Risk Risk Risk Mitigating Measures Incorporated Risk after rating into Project Design mitigation measures INHERENT RISK H S Country level H Implementation of the ongoing PFM reform H Delay in the implementation of the different strategy, beyond the control of the project. PFM reforms that might hamper the overall PFM environment. Entity level H Revise the existing Manual of Procedures at S Weak financial, technical and fiduciary the multi-donor unit at MINFOF. capacity to implement project‟s activities at Recruit a Financial Management Adviser to the newly created PIU and at local levels may reinforce the new PIU to be created (TOR to hinder the implementation of project‟s be cleared by IDA). activities. Delay in making the payments of Bank LOA and FM Units will provide beneficiaries‟ contributions may also impact appropriate Disbursement and FM training or the implementation schedule of activities. encourage project FM staff to attend training at Bank accredited Institutions. Project level S Develop and implement the project S Corruption at national and local levels might Governance Action Plan. jeopardize the project‟s development impact. Adopt a Project Implementation Manual (PIM) as well as the detailed Operational procedures for Component 2. CONTROL RISK S S Budgeting S Rely on the budgeting procedures which will S be enhanced during the revision of the Possibility of committing expenditures outside existing Manual of Procedures (MoP) and the budget. No variance analysis. adoption of the new PIM. Annual work program and budget will be timely approved by the Steering Committee annually. Budget to be prepared and monitored under the responsibility of the PIU, recorded and monitored through the financial integrated system. Accounting S Recruit a Financial Management Adviser to S i. No accounting system in place; delay in facilitate the implementation of the 49 Risk Risk Risk Mitigating Measures Incorporated Risk after rating into Project Design mitigation measures keeping reliable accounting records and accounting procedures in the PIU. issuing reliable financial statements might Rely on the accounting procedures which will occur. be enhanced during the revision of the MoP ii. Existing accounting software creates and new PIM. some delays in producing accurate financial Upgrade the accounting software and train statements. the staff for adequate use. Internal Controls and Internal Audit H Development of a single Project S Insufficient safeguards and controls may Implementation Manual and its annexes on result in misuse of funds and impede the administrative, financial management and execution of the project. procurement procedures Develop and implement a tracking tool to monitor implementation of action plans with regards to weaknesses identified in previous reviews. Funds Flow S Open in an acceptable commercial bank, a S i. Funds might be diverted, used for non Designated Account to ease the cash transfer project eligible purposes or delay in cash process and ensure transparency. (See transfer process. detailed funds flow). ii. The Livelihood Support Mechanism to be Describe in the Project Implementing created under the component 2 might not Manual, arrangements (key control, be properly managed procedures for eligibility…) to ensure proper management of the Livelihood Support Mechanism. Special audit opinion will be required on the adequacy for the use of the Livelihood Support Mechanism. Financial Reporting S Agree on appropriate Interim Financial S Delay and difficulties in the preparation of Report by negotiations (Completed at acceptable IFRs Negotiations). Use the updated integrated financial management software to facilitate reporting. Auditing S Recruit an external auditor acceptable to the M The national audit capacity is weak and there Bank based on ToR that will be drawn up to is no audit arrangement in place at PIU. cover (i) ISA 240, 250 and 300 on fraud, corruption. A specific opinion will be required on the adequacy for the use of the Livelihood Support Mechanism. Overall FM risk S S The overall residual risk rating is deemed Substantial. 50 Table of audit compliance requirements Action Periodicity By whom Submit audit report within 6 Annually PIU / MINFOF months of period close. Strengths 22. A multi-donor basket fund unit is operational at the MINFOF. This multi-donor Basket Fund for the Forest Sector is based in MINFOF headquarters, Yaoundé under the control of the Director of General Affairs. It is made up of MINFOF staff and receives additional technical support from a private sector Financial Management Bureau, and from two GIZ funded Technical Advisers working within the Ministry. This TA is expected to increase and be sustained by German Cooperation funds over the next 5 years. It manages an average of US$12 million per year worth of donor expenditure. The PIU team will make use of this additional technical advisory capacity as much as possible to strengthen the PIU‟s capacity for fiduciary management of the GEF Ngoyla Mintom Project. 23. To mitigate the above-mentioned Financial Management risks, an agreed action plan includes tasks to be performed, the responsible bodies, as well as a time-frame. FM Action Plan Responsible Action to be undertaken Time-frame body 1. Recruitment of a Financial Management Adviser with Within four months MINFOF qualifications and experiences satisfactory to the Bank to of effectiveness train PIU staff and ensure that financial management and accounting standards are met. 2. Adoption of a Project Implementation Manual (including Prior to effectiveness MINFOF detailed FM and accounting procedures updated from existing manual at multi-donor unit at MINFOF) in form and substance satisfactory to IDA 3. Implementation of a computerized information system for the Within four months MINFOF financial management of the project activities including of effectiveness setting up books of accounts and incorporate project budget lines and disbursement categories into the existing chart of accounts within the PIU. 4. Agreement on Interim Financial Report (IFR) formats Completed at MINFOF Negotiations 5. Preparation of appropriate terms of references for the Completed at MINFOF recruitment of an external auditor Negotiations 6. Recruitment of external auditor to ensure that annual audit Within four months PIU / reports are timely carried out and transmitted of effectiveness MINFOF 51 FM Arrangements 24. The Ngoyla Mintom project financial management will be strengthened by the following salient features and the following FM arrangements will be put in place for a smoother implementation of the project. Special attention will be put to ensure that:  The accounting personnel are adequately qualified and experienced;  External audit is conducted yearly;  Budgeting arrangements are in place;  Funds flow arrangements are adequate and highlight the specificities of the Livelihood Support Mechanism;  The internal control system ensures the conduct of an orderly and efficient payment process, and proper recording and safeguarding of assets and resources for country specific envelopes, ensuring timely transmission of cash advances documentation;  There is good understanding of the Financial Reporting requirements given that Project fiduciary staff are trained on Financial Management and Disbursement procedures of the World Bank; and  There is satisfactory accounting software at the PIU in Yaoundé, Cameroon. 25. Staffing and Training: PIU will be staffed with a Financial Management Officer who will be located in the MINFOF offices in Yaoundé. The FM Officer will have the responsibility to collect and control the invoices, maintain the books, enter the data in the accounting software, manage project‟s bank accounts, keep the books of accounts, monitor the budget and prepare the financial reports. The Bank CTRLA and FM Units will provide adequate training disbursement and FM procedures. 26. Budgeting: The project is to be financed by the GEF grant and the activities to be financed by the grant for the project will be budgeted accordingly in the cost table. A project budget, which includes identification and costing of major activities to be carried out, has been drawn up and is reflected in the PAD. Financial Monitoring Reports (FMR), including activity reports, will be prepared on a quarterly basis to monitor the project‟s implementation. The Ngoyla Mintom work program and budget will be presented by the PIU after consultation with the respective partners and will be presented to Project Steering Committee for adoption before the beginning of each fiscal year. The PIU budgeting arrangements will be described in its Project Implementation Manual (PIM). 27. Accounting Policies and Procedures: The PIU will maintain the books and accounts of the project activities and ensure that the annual financial statements are produced in a timely manner and in accordance with OHADA (Organisation pour l‟Harmonisation en Afrique du Droit des Affaires) accounting principles – SYSCOHADA which calls for double entries system. The PIU will be responsible for preparing project accounts. The Project specific accounting books have to encompass: a cash book, ledgers, journal vouchers, fixed asset register and a contracts register. The accounting books will be updated electronically. A list of accounts codes (chart of accounts) for the Project should be drawn up and match with the classification of expenditures and sources and application of funds indicated in the Financing Agreement. The chart of accounts should be developed in a way that allows Project costs to be directly related to specific work activities and outputs of the Project. The financial management system should integrate general accounting, cost accounting, monitoring and evaluation, assets management, tracking of disbursements, and annual financial statements. A fully functioning financial 52 management system satisfactory to the Bank shall be installed not later than 4 months after the Effectiveness date. 28. The Project Implementation Manual will describe the accounting system (not exhaustive): the major transaction cycles of the Project; funds flow processes; the accounting records, supporting documents, the consolidation procedures of financial information as well as the associated controls, computer files and specific accounts in the financial statements involved in the processing of transactions; the list of accounting codes used to group transactions (chart of accounts); the accounting processes from the initiation of a transaction to its inclusion in the financial statements; authorization procedures for transactions; the financial reporting process used to prepare the financial statements and interim financial reports, including significant accounting estimates and disclosures; financial and accounting policies for the Project; budgeting procedures; financial forecasting procedures; procurement and contract administration monitoring procedures; procedures undertaken for the replenishment of the Designated Account; and auditing arrangements. 29. Internal Control and Internal Auditing: Internal control arrangements will be described in the Project Implementation Manual. This will include provisions on key controls on the Livelihood Support Mechanism in component 2 (criteria of eligibility, frequency of selection, composition of panel in charge of selection, monitoring and evaluation of activities of the beneficiaries...). The PIU will be responsible for implementing all other necessary controls to ensure: (1) that the project funds are used only for the intended purposes in an efficient and economical way, (2) the preparation of accurate, reliable and timely periodic financial reports, and (3) that the project‟s assets are adequately safeguarded. 30. No internal auditor is set to be recruited as determined by this assessment. The need for such an auditor will continue to be assessed prior to and after effectiveness and changes reflected in the project fiduciary arrangements. The need to recruit an internal auditor for the PIU, with experience and qualifications satisfactory to the Bank, will be further assessed during the first year of implementation to ensure the optimal use of said internal auditor. 31. Funds Flow: All GEF expenditures will be paid centrally from the Caisse Autonome d‟Amortissement (CAA) through commercial Banks with the existing approval mechanism applicable in Cameroon. Funds flow arrangements for the project shall be as follows: (a) World Bank will make an initial advance disbursement from the proceeds of the Grant and (b) actual expenditure will be reimbursed through submission of Withdrawal Applications. 32. The designated account will receive funds from the Grant and is set up to fund eligible expenditures based on the work plans approved by the Steering Committee; used to cover expenses incurred by the implementing agency, contractors, suppliers, etc... 53 Figure 2: Flow of Funds. GEF Grant Account CAA Designated Account MINFOF PIU Management Contractor (Component 2.1) Suppliers / Service Providers Suppliers / Service Providers Transfers of funds Flow of documents Legend Instructions to pay Payment to suppliers / Service Providers b. Disbursements 33. Disbursement Arrangements: To facilitate project implementation and reduce the volume of withdrawal applications, a Designated Account (DA) denominated in local currency FCFA in a commercial bank on terms and conditions acceptable to the World Bank will be opened. The Designated Account will received funds from the Grant Account from the World Bank in Washington DC. The ceiling for the DA will be FCFA 86.1 million and will cover about four months of eligible expenditures. The Designated Account will be used for all payments in an amount not to exceed 20% of the initial deposit to the Designated Account. Replenishment applications will be submitted monthly. 54 34. Disbursement Method: The project will primarily use the transaction-based disbursement method by producing electronic monthly withdrawal applications submitted to the Bank with the respective supporting documentation. The transaction-based disbursements will thus apply at project commencement. The project might shift to the report-based disbursements subject to satisfactory project fiduciary arrangements, timely submission of IFRs, and a risk assessment as determined during implementation. The project may also make use of other disbursement methods such as (i) Direct Payment method whereby the Bank may make payments, at the borrower‟s request, directly to suppliers and contractors for eligible expenditures, (ii) Advance disbursement method, whereby funds are advanced to the DA to finance eligible expenditures as they are incurred and for which the borrower subsequently provides documentation showing that such expenditures have been incurred and paid-for from the DA; and (iii) the Special Commitment method, whereby the Bank may pay amounts to a third party for eligible expenditures under special commitment entered into, in writing, at the borrower‟s request and on terms and conditions agreed between the Bank and the borrower. The Bank may reimburse the borrower for eligible expenditures eligible pre-financed by the borrower from its own resources. 35. Statement of Expenditures: Disbursements for all expenditures should be against full documentation except for items of expenditures under contracts of less than: (a) US$300,000 for civil works; (b) US$200,000 for goods; (c) US$100,000 for consultant services contracts for firms; (d) US$50,000 for consultant services contracts for individuals as well as (e) all training and operating costs, which will be claimed on the basis of Statement of Expenditures (SOEs). All supporting documentation for SOEs will be retained at the PIU in Yaoundé and will be readily accessible for review by periodic Bank supervision missions and external auditors. All disbursements against expenditures under the Livelihood Support Mechanism will be subject to financial audits within the scope of the project financial statement audit, and also ex post physical / performance audits, to determine cost effectiveness of investments (see Component 2.2) on a sample basis, to be carried out by auditors and independent technical evaluators recruited by the PIU. 36. Disbursements by category: The following table specifies the categories of Eligible Expenditures that may be financed out of the proceeds of the Financing (“Category�), the allocations of the amounts of the Grant to each Category, and the percentage of expenditures to be financed for Eligible Expenditures in each Category: Category Amount of the Grant Allocated Percentage of (expressed in Expenditures to be million USD) Financed (exclusive of VAT and Custom Duties) (1) Goods, non-consulting services, consultants‟ services, Training, and Operating Costs under Components 1, 2.174 100% 2.2, and 3 of the Project (2) Goods, works, non-consulting services, consultants‟ services, Training, and Operating Costs under 1.326 100% Component 2.1 of the Project TOTAL AMOUNT 3.5 55 37. Financial Reporting and Monitoring: Quarterly Consolidated Interim Financial Reports to be generated from the financial management system will be based on agreed upon format. These reports will be prepared and submitted to the Bank within 45 days of the end of each calendar quarter. Details of other reporting requirements, including content are to be captured in the updated manual of procedures. These include, Financial Reports, including a statement of sources and uses of funds by funding source, and a statement of uses of funds by component/activity, designated account activity, and Physical Progress. At the end of each fiscal year, the project will prepare annual financial statement. 38. Counterpart Funds: Government contributions to the project will be made through parallel in-kind contributions of staff time and investments using their own resources. 39. Auditing: Annually, audited financial statements with the management letter will be submitted to the Bank within six months of the end of the year being audited and will be submitted by the PIU. Draft TORs were shared with the Bank during negotiations. The audits will be conducted in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (ISA). The Annual Financial Statements for the project will incorporate all activities, and include: (a) a Statement of Sources and Uses of Funds showing funds from GEF and their application; (b) a Summary of Expenditures analyzed by both component and category; (c) the supporting notes in respect of significant accounting policies and accounting standards adopted by management; (d) Designated Account activity for the year showing deposits and replenishments received, payments substantiated by withdrawal applications, interest that may be earned on the account and the balance at the end of the fiscal year; (e) a summary listing of withdrawal applications by reference number, date and amount; and (f) management assertion that World Bank funds have been expensed in accordance with the intended purposes as specified in the relevant financing agreement. The audit scope will be tailored to the project‟s specific risks (e.g. Livelihood Support Mechanism under Component 2), in accordance with Bank requirements and agreed upon with the counterpart. The auditor will provide an opinion on the consolidated annual financial statements in compliance with IFAC Standards on Auditing and a special opinion on the Livelihood Support Mechanism. In addition to the audit reports, the external auditors will be expected to prepare a Management Letter giving observations, comments, and providing recommendations for improvements in accounting records, systems, controls and compliance with financial covenants in the Financing agreement. In addition, to the above audit arrangements, annual technical audit will be required to complement the financial management arrangement. In line with the new access to information policy, project will comply with the Bank disclosure policy of audit reports (e.g. make publicly available, promptly after receipt of all final financial audit reports (including qualified audit reports) and place the information provided on its the official website within one month of the report being accepted as final by the team. c. Procurement 40. Procurement Environment. The adoption of the new procurement code approved on September 24, 2004, has improved the legal and institutional frameworks of the procurement system. No special exceptions, permits or licenses need to be specified in the Financial Agreement since the new procurement code allows IDA procedures to take precedence over any contrary provisions in local regulations. However, the latest audits of public contracts by 56 independent experts revealed persistent weaknesses in procurement planning operations and practices 41. The Country Procurement Assessment Review (CPAR) conducted in 2005 indicates significant achievements in the procurement reform undertaken over the past five years. The four pillars of the system have now been put in place (in 2005 the rating of the Baseline Indicators System was 69 percent). Government‟s priority has been to develop capacities and strengthen the monitoring and evaluation of performance of the system in the public and private sectors. To that end, the Government, at the end of 2005, adopted an action plan whose main yardsticks include: (i) the preparation and adoption of a program to develop procurement capacities; (ii) the setting up of a computerized contract award system aimed at improving the planning, execution, monitoring and evaluation of operations; (iii) developing contract supervision and execution monitoring capacities; and (iv) the implementation of specific measures to ensure regulation, the strengthening of contract award rules, and the sanctions mechanism. 42. A Bank procurement mission carried out during the period of December 7-12, 2009 has identified some potential bottlenecks for project implementation and budget execution, which are laid out below: i) Lack of provisions in the Code for “delegation of authority� by the Presidents of Tender Boards and by Ministers/procuring entities. In their absence, meetings of the Tender Board cannot be held and no one is authorized to sign off on procurement documents and contracts. ii) Incentives for Tender Board members to maximize the number of meetings as, according to the Code, they are paid by meeting rather than by contract. iii) Delays in the award of the contract by the Minister/Head of the procuring agency after the Tender Board recommendation (there is no time limit defined in the Code for the Minister‟s sign off on the contract award). iv) Abuse of direct contracting and slicing of contracts that increases the transaction costs and the lead time for procurement. v) Weak technical support not always available in house and the need to outsource it. vi) Poor procurement planning and record management system and the need to address it in the project design. 43. Based on the discussions with the Government Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (Autorité de Régulation des Marchés Publics, ARMP), it has been agreed that while waiting for the Code to be revised, the above risks (see bullets i – iii, above) can be mitigated through the legal and project documents for Bank-financed project with the establishment of the specialized Tender Board by defining the procurement arrangements and approvals authorities and providing adequate technical support to projects. The enforcement of the procurement plan can address the risk of slicing to avoid more competitive methods and abuse of direct contracting. 44. It was further agreed to work in partnership with the Government for difficult systemic issues, to engage government institutions (Ministry of Finance, Secretariat of the Prime Minister, ARMP) as they are equally interested in reducing their cost of borrowing and obtaining results on the ground. 57 45. Procurement Implementation Arrangement of the project: the Ministry in charge of Forestry will be in charge of implementing the project through a Project Implementation Unit headed by a project coordinator. The Procurement Officer will be a staff member of the PIU. This Project Implementation Unit will be strengthened to have the adequate capacity to provide fiduciary support to the Project through capacity building and an insertion of an additional Procurement Advisor at the start of the project. 46. Procurement capacity assessment of the Implementation Arrangements of the project: The assessment of the capacity of the Ministry in charge of Forestry, and its Multi-donor basket fund for the purpose of the project revealed the following: (i) neither the Ministry, nor the Management Unit of the Ministry‟s Multi-donor basket fund, have experience in the implementation of Bank-financed projects; (ii) the Ministry has no qualified procurement officer accustomed to the World Bank procurement procedure; (iii) there is a procedural manual for the Multi-donor basket fund, but this manual is not in compliance with the requirement for the use of World Bank procedures and doesn‟t allow an efficient implementation of the project as far as the procurement institutional arrangement is concerned; (iv) the Tender Boards of the Ministry in charge of Forestry are not diligent; (v) there are bottlenecks in the implementation of Ministry‟s activities because of delays related to administrative approval of procurement or technical documents; and (vi) a comprehensive record keeping system needs to be established. The procurement risk rating is High. A mitigation action plan has been agreed that, if properly implemented and monitored, will bring this risk to Medium High. 47. To mitigate the above-mentioned procurement risks, an agreed action plan includes tasks to be performed, the responsible bodies, as well as a time-frame. Action to be undertaken Time-frame Responsible body Elaborate and submit a procurement plan for the Prior to negotiations. Ministry in charge Conservation and Sustainable Management within the of Forestry Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Project to IDA Provide the Project Implementation Unit with a Procurement Prior to effectiveness Ministry in charge Officer from the Ministry in charge of Forestry with of Forestry qualifications and experiences acceptable to the Bank, and dedicated to the Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Project. Recruitment of a qualified Procurement Adviser, for one Four months after the Ministry in charge year, with main responsibilities to train and provide project effectiveness of Forestry sustainable capacity building in World Bank procurement procedures to staff of the Project Implementation Unit in charge of procurement, especially the above mentioned Procurement Officer. Continue to assess MINFOF‟s procurement tender board Throughout Project Ministry in charge performance to ensure that it remains, in form and implementation. of Forestry substance, satisfactory to IDA. Elaborate specific procedures in a Project Implementation Prior to effectiveness Ministry in charge Manual (PIM) for the project in order to meet World Bank of Forestry procurement standards, and the delegation of authority for the management of small contracts to the Project 58 Action to be undertaken Time-frame Responsible body Coordinator Setting up a comprehensive record keeping system. Four months after the Ministry in charge project effectiveness of Forestry 48. Procurement activities, at a cost of CFA Francs 5 million (US$11,000 equivalent) or more, will be conducted with the technical support of the procurement Tender Board of the Ministry in charge of Forestry. For contract amounts of less than CFA Francs 5 million (US$11,000 equivalent), the Ministry in charge of Forestry will rely on an internal procurement committee. Details of the institutional arrangement and the responsibility of this internal procurement committee are defined in the Project Implementation Manual. Regarding the evaluation of technical proposals for consulting services assignment, all procurement sub- commissions shall evaluate proposals using a minimum of two specialists in the sector. 49. Procurement Guidelines. A procurement law, currently under revision, has been elaborated and was approved by the President in September 2004. However, this procurement law does not fully comply to International Standards regarding the domestic preferences, the eligibility for national competitive bidding (NCB) and the selection and recruitment of Consultants, as it appears among others that: (i) there is an absence of precision on the recruitment of NGOs and individual consultants; (ii) the short list of consultants is unlimited; and (iii) there is a requirement for consultants to submit a bid security and performance guarantee. These issues are being discussed as part of the procurement reform dialogue with the Government and are under review by authorities, as reported in the action plan of the workshop on the assessment of the procurement system held by ARMP in Yaoundé from November 27 to 28, 2007. A draft revised procurement law, based on the action plan of November‟s workshop, has been discussed with stakeholders involved in public procurement during the period June 2-4, 2009 at a national workshop. In the meantime, these shortcomings will be addressed within the framework of this project by the Project Implementation Manual. 50. Procurement for this project would be carried out in accordance with the World Bank “Guidelines: Procurement of Goods, Works, and Non-Consulting Services under IBRD Loans and IDA Credits & Grants by World Bank Borrowers� dated January 2011; and “Guidelines: Selection and Employment of Consultants under IBRD Loans and IDA Credit & Grants by World Bank Borrowers�, dated January 2011, and the provisions stipulated in the Financing Agreement. The general description of various items under different expenditure categories is described below. For each contract to be financed by the Grant, the different procurement (works, goods and non-consulting services) methods or consultant selection methods, prequalification, estimated costs, prior review requirements, and time-frame would be agreed between the Recipient and the Bank Task Team in the procurement plan. To the extent practicable, the Bank‟s Standard Bidding Documents (SBD) for goods and Standard Requests for Proposals, as well as all standard evaluation forms, would be used throughout project implementation. 51. Publicity. A comprehensive General Procurement Notice (GPN) will be prepared by the Client and submitted to the Bank. The Bank will arrange for its publication in the United Nations Development Business online (UNDB online) and on the Bank‟s external website following Board Approval, to announce major consulting assignments and any international competitive bidding (ICB). The GPN shall include all ICB for goods contracts and all large consulting 59 contracts (i.e., those estimated to cost US$200,000 or more). In addition, a specific procurement notice is required for all goods to be procured under ICB in dgMarket and UNDB online. Requests for expressions of interest (REOIs) for consulting services expected to cost more than US$300,000 shall be advertised in UNDB online. Client may also in such cases advertise REOIs in an international newspaper or a technical or financial magazine. An expression of interest is required in the national gazette or a national newspaper or in an electronic portal of free access for all consulting firm services regardless of the contract amount. In the case of NCB, a specific procurement notice will be published in the official gazette or a national newspaper of wide circulation, or on a widely used website or an electronic portal with free national and international access. Contracts awards will also be published, in accordance with the Bank‟s Procurement Guidelines (para. 2.60) and Consultants Guidelines (para. 2.31). 52. Procurement Plan. A first realistic draft Procurement Plan for project implementation providing the basis for the procurement methods was prepared and made available for discussions during appraisal. This plan, covering the first 18 months of project implementation was discussed, agreed upon, and finalized during negotiations. It will be available in the project‟s database and a summary will be disclosed on the Bank‟s external website once the project is approved by the World Bank. The procurement plan will be updated in agreement with the Bank task team at least annually or as required to reflect the actual project implementation needs and improvements in institutional capacity. 53. Procurement of Works. A project office will be constructed by the client from own resources (parallel financing) in Year 2 of the project, but this investment will not be treated as Counterpart funds. The other procurements will entail minor works32 to be carried out as part of Component 2. Given their small scale, estimated to cost less than US$50,000 per contract, and the fact that these works are generated by demand, they will be procured under the shopping procurement method for works. 54. Procurement of Goods. Goods procured under this project would include equipments, workshops, vehicles, IT equipment, etc. Taking into account (level of value added) manufactured/producers capacity in the country, procurement of goods will be bulked where feasible (similar nature and need at same time period) into bid packages of at least US$500,000 equivalent value, so that they can be procured through suitable methods to secure competitive prices. The procurement will be done using the Bank‟s SBD for all ICB. Goods estimated to cost US$500,000 equivalent and above per contract will be procured through ICB. 55. For any others goods contracts costing less than US$500,000 equivalent, NCB procurement method will be used in accordance with national procedures using Standard Bidding Document acceptable to the Bank and ensuring the following:  In accordance with paragraph 1.16 (e) of the Procurement Guidelines, each bidding document and contract financed out of the proceeds of the Financing shall provide that (a) the bidders, suppliers, contractors and their subcontractors, agents, personnel, consultants, service providers, or suppliers shall permit the Association, at its request, to inspect all accounts, records and other documents relating to the submission of bids and contract performance, and to have said accounts and records audited by auditors appointed by the 32 GEF Funds will not be used for any works of a scale or nature that would by national law or WB safeguard standards require an environmental impact assessment or that would require resettlement resulting in Affected Persons. 60 Association; and (b) the deliberate and material violation of such provision may amount to an obstructive practice as defined in paragraph 1.16 (a)(v) of the Procurement Guidelines.  Invitations to bid shall be advertised in national newspapers with wide circulation  Bidders shall be given at least one month to submit bids from the date of the invitation to bid or the date of availability of bidding documents, whichever is later.  Eligible bidders, including foreign bidders, shall be allowed to participate.  No domestic preference shall be given to domestic contractors and to domestically manufactured goods.  Bids are awarded to the lowest evaluated bidder provided that this bidder is qualified.  Fees charged for the bidding documents shall be reasonable and reflect only the cost of their printing and delivery to prospective bidders, and shall not be so high as to discourage qualified bidders. 56. Procurement of goods including those readily available off-the-shelf that cannot be grouped into bid packages of US$50,000 equivalent or more may be procured through shopping in conformity with the clause 3.5 of the Procurement Guidelines. At the beginning of project implementation, vehicles whose cost is estimated at less than US$50,000 equivalent could be procured through UNOPS. 57. Procurement of non-consulting services. Non-consulting services under this project include maintenance of the office electronic equipment and other services such as printing and editing. Non-Consulting services are likely not to exceed the equivalent of US$50,000 per contract. Procurement of such services will be done using prudent shopping procedures in conformity with the clause 3.5 of the Procurement Guidelines. 58. Selection of Consultants. Consulting services will be for the following activities: (i) technical assistance; (ii) technical studies; (iii) financial audits; (iv) social and environmental studies; etc. These consulting services will be procured with the most appropriate method among the following which are allowed by Bank guidelines and included in the approved procurement plan: (i) Quality-and Cost-Based Selection (QCBS); (ii) Quality-Based Selection (QBS); (iii) Selection under a Fixed Budget (SFB); and (iv) Least-Cost Selection (LCS). Selection Based on Consultants‟ Qualifications (CQS) will be used for assignments that shall not exceed US$200,000 equivalent. Single Source Selection (SSS) shall also be used in accordance with the provisions of paragraphs 3.8 to 3.11 of the Consultant Guidelines, with World Bank‟s prior agreement. All terms of reference will be subject to World Bank prior review. 59. Short lists of consultants for services estimated to cost less than US$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. 60. Assignments in excess of US$200,000 equivalent, and specialized technical assistant assignments, must be procured on the basis of international short-lists after appropriate advertisement in UNDB on line, dgMarket, and in the national gazette or a national newspaper or in an electronic portal of free access. 61. Consultants for services meeting the requirements of Section V of the Consultant Guidelines will be selected, under the provisions for the Selection of Individual Consultants, 61 through comparison of qualifications among candidates expressing interest in the assignment or approached directly. 62. Training, workshops and study tours. Participation in training sessions, workshops, seminars, conferences, and study tours will be subject to the approved annual programs. The latter will identify the general framework of training and similar activities for the year, including the nature of the training, study tours, workshops, number of participants, as well as estimated costs. 63. Operating costs. Operational costs, which will be financed by the project, would be procured using the project‟s financial and administrative procedures included in the project implementation manual previously agreed on by the Bank. For purposes of efficiency, operational furniture packages will be procured on the basis of 6 or 12 months need and procured competitively. For services (car maintenance, computers maintenance, etc.) to be financed through operational costs, the project will proceed by service contracting for a defined period. 64. Publication of Results and Debriefing. Publication of results of the bidding process is required for all ICBs, LIBs and Direct Contracting. Publication should take place as soon as the no objection is received, except for Direct Contracting, which may be done quarterly and in a simplified format. Publication of results for NCB and Shopping should follow the requirements of the procurement code of Cameroon. The disclosure of results is also required for selection of consultants. All consultants competing for the assignment should be informed of the result of the technical evaluation (number of points that each firm received) before the opening of the financial proposals, and at the end of the selection process the results should be published. The publication of results in selection of consultants applies to all methods, however for CQS and SSS the publication may be done quarterly and in a simplified format. The publication may be done through Client Connection. Losing bidders/consultants shall be debriefed on the reasons why they were not awarded the contract if they request explanation. 65. Fraud and Corruption. The procuring entity as well as Bidders/Suppliers/Contractors shall observe the highest standard of ethics during the procurement and execution of contracts financed under the program in accordance with paragraphs 1.16 and 1.17 of the Procurement Guidelines and paragraphs 1.23 and 1.24 of the Consultants Guidelines. 66. Frequency of procurement supervision: The capacity assessment recommended that supervision missions and field visits by the World Bank should take place at least twice a year to carry out post review of procurement actions, among other things. 62 Details of the Procurement Arrangements Goods, Works and Non Consulting Services (a) List of contract packages to be procured: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Réf Contract Estimate Cost Procure- Prequal Domestic Review Expected Comment / No (Description) (USD ment ificatio Preferenc by Bid Completio equivalent) Method n e (yes/no) Bank Opening n Date (yes/no) (Prior/ Date Post) Component 1: Strengthen government and civil society capacity G1.1 Office equipment 50,000 Shopping No No Post 01/01/2013 12/01/2014 Field equipment 50,000 Shopping No No Post 01/01/2013 12/01/2014 G1.3 Vehicles 4x4 180,000 NCB No No Prior 10/01/2012 01/01/2013 Communications materials G1.4 (Media, radio, local 38,100 Shopping No No Post 10/01/2012 06/30/2017 materials, translation, etc) Component 2: Design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism. Component 3: Design and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System Purchase of Satellite G3.1 20,000 Shopping No No Post 01/01/2013 12/01/2013 Imagery HQ Office Equipment, G3.2 15,000 Shopping No No Post 08/01/2012 12/01/2012 furniture, ICT, ICB : International Competitive Bidding NCB : National Competitive Bidding (b) ICB Contracts estimated to cost above US$5,000,000 equivalent for works and US$500,000 equivalent for goods per contract, the first NCB contract, for works and goods, eventually others as identified in the procurement plan and all Direct Contracting will be subject to prior review by the Bank. 63 Consulting Services (a) List of consulting assignments with selection methods and time schedule. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Estimate Expected Review by Comment / Ref Cost (USD Selection Proposals Description of Assignment Bank Completion No equivalent) Method Submission (Prior/Post) Date Date Component 1: Strengthen government and civil society capacity Consultant to design and deliver training packages on national legal framework and global best practice in the following: environmental & social management (including WB safeguards policies); 45,000 IC Prior 08/01/2012 12/01/2013 effective consultations during classification processes; and participatory natural resource management. Consultant to Strengthen institutional capacity of Local Civil Society 20,000 IC Post 06/01/2013 12/01/2013 Organizations / NGOs to perform watchdog / whistleblower functions Consultant for the definition and implementation of a local convention on 8,000 IC Post 01/01/2013 12/01/2013 organization of hunting Consulting firm to prepare a) a Consultation Framework Study of existing frameworks for land use planning, gazettement, management planning, and Project Monitoring / Evaluation to prepare a roadmap and identify appropriate processes and 48,000 QCBS Post 01/01/2013 06/30/2017 mechanisms for consultation consistent with Cameroon Law and b) a Communications Strategy that disseminates relevant information to all stakeholders (local, national, international) about the project (prepared by Communications team) Consulting firm for Socio-economic analysis of the likely financial, social, environmental and other costs / benefits 90,000 QCBS Prior 06/01/2014 12/01/2014 that result from different land tenure and use options, drawing on lessons learned in the Central African Region. Consultant to conduct surveys to assess broad community acceptance of the 40,000 IC Prior 09/01/2013 03/01/2015 gazettement proposals and draft management plans before adoption Consultant to support to the classification process: labor and professional costs of opening, demarcating and surveying of 90,000 Post 01/01/2014 12/01/2014 QCBS boundaries; cost of consultation meetings, etc. Consultant to complete a study to 10,000 IC Post 01/01/2014 12/01/2014 64 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Estimate Expected Review by Comment / Ref Cost (USD Selection Proposals Description of Assignment Bank Completion No equivalent) Method Submission (Prior/Post) Date Date identify and survey sacred and archaeological sites. Consultant to support the forest management planning process for priority areas: inventory costs; participatory mapping and all activities 100,000 QCBS Post 01/01/2015 12/01/2015 related to the preparation of management plans for the core areas selected for classification. Component 2: Design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism. Consulting firm, competent management contractor to design and implement the 258,000 QCBS Prior 09/01/2012 06/01/2017 Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM). Consultant to carry out independent technical and financial audit of the Livelihood Support Mechanism with a 80,000 QCBS Prior 09/01/2012 06/01/2017 view to developing subsequent scaling- up recommendations. Component 3: Design and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System Organization to set up M&E system, provide coaching to data collectors and collect field data for participatory 106,000 SSS Prior 01/01/2013 06/01/2017 monitoring of changes in ecological & socio-economic indicators* 3 Drivers 54,000 IC Post 01/01/2013 06/30/2017 Consultant for Imagery analysis 20,000 IC Post 12/01/2012 06/01/2013 Consultant to train UTO and other project staff in Bank Financial 30,000 IC Prior 07/01/2012 06/01/2013 Management Procedures Consultant to train UTO and other 30,000 IC Prior 07/01/2012 06/01/2013 project staff in Procurement Procedures Consultant to train UTO and other 10,000 IC Prior 08/01/2012 06/01/2013 project staff in Safeguard Policies Consultant, evaluation 20,000 IC Prior 12/01/2012 06/01/2017 Consultant, financial audit 40,000 LCS Prior 12/01/2012 06/01/2017 CQS: Selection Based on Consultants‟ Qualifications QCBS: Quality and Cost Based Selection LCS: Least Cost Based Selection SSS: Single Source Selection IC: Individual Consultant * During project appraisal it was agreed that IUCN have specialist and unique expertise in designing and implementing long-term monitoring and evaluation frameworks, and that IUCN could be contracted by sole source method. IUCN have developed a long-term M&E framework for the Tri-National Sangha (TNS) Project, covering three countries (Cameroon, Central African Republic and Republic of Congo) over the past 10 years. The M&E Framework has explicitly been established to respond to the needs of multiple development partners, including the State, donors and Private Sector. 65 (b) Consultancy services estimated to cost above US$200,000 equivalent for firms and US$100,000 equivalent for individuals per contract, and Single Source Selection of consultants (firms and individuals) will be subject to prior review by the Bank, as well as all audits contract and the first contracts to be awarded in accordance with each selection method of consulting firms and individual consultants regardless of contract amount. (c) Short lists composed entirely of national consultants: Short lists of consultants for services estimated to cost less than US$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. 3. Environmental and Social (including safeguards) Project Types and Locations 67. The project‟s Environmental Assessment category is a B. The environmental and social safeguards issues of the proposed project are associated with the activities of Components 1 (Strengthen government and civil society capacity for participatory planning and management of the core areas - in particular sub-component 1.3 Preparation of classification proposals, and draft management plans for core areas within Ngoyla-Mintom Forest massif) and Component 2 (Design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism). 68. The following safeguard Policies are triggered: Environmental Assessment (OP/BP 4.01); Natural Habitats (OP/BP 4.04); Physical Cultural Resources (OP/BP 4.11), Involuntary Resettlement (OP/BP 4.12); Indigenous people (OP/BP 4.10); and Forests (OP/BP 4.36). Environmental Impacts The Client has prepared a series of safeguard instruments namely an Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA), a Policy Framework, an Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP) along with a comprehensive Social Assessment (SA) that address potential impacts and mitigation measures and will guide the Project‟s activities to be carried out in line with the World Bank Safeguard Policy on Environmental Assessment (EA) (OP/BP 4.01), Indigenous Peoples (OP/BP4.10) and Involuntary Resettlement (OP/BP 4.12). Component 2 (Livelihood Support Mechanism) of the project will support some agriculture and livestock rearing activities albeit at the small scale, which will likely involve the use of limited amounts of pesticides. The ESIA and its section on environmental and social management plan provide sufficient guidance on Pesticide use to be compliant with the Bank Safeguards. All activities to be financed by this Component will be subject to a social and environmental screening process to ensure that safeguard policies are respected. The ESIA includes a specific section on Pest Management and a related action plan on how to adequately minimize any potential impacts from the misusage of pesticides and other chemical products was incorporated in the ESIA. Specific trainings on the IPMP will be provided to local beneficiaries during the course of project implementation. The ESIA was prepared in conformity with Cameroonian ESIA templates and standards, even though Cameroon Law does not require an ESIA to be done for such projects. The ESIA, as well as the PF and IPP respectively, outline possible negative impacts and consider time-bound and costed mitigation measures, institutional arrangements, capacity building and participatory monitoring and 66 evaluation issues for progressively implementing the environmental and social management plan section of the ESIA as well as other tools for tracking implementation progress and for assessing any unforeseen negative impacts that could hinder the project success. OP/BP 4.11 relating to Physical Cultural Resources is triggered, because the project area hosts a substantial indigenous people population, with important cultural sites which need to be preserved. As the precise external boundaries of the selected core protected areas and the final definition of the project‟s interventions under the Sustainable Livelihoods Mechanism have not yet been identified; and as no survey of Physical Cultural Resources such as existing sites of cultural significance has been undertaken, appropriate chance find procedures have been included in the ESIA. A budget line has been included in the project budget to carry out studies to identify any Physical Cultural Resources prior to the classification of the core area. Physical cultural resources management plans will be prepared if and when needed before actual implementation of activities. Social Impacts 69. It is expected that while the creation of some legally protected core areas may restrict access to natural resources, project interventions, including efforts to improve natural resource management, and the Livelihood Support Mechanism (Component 2) will have on balance a positive impact the project‟s main beneficiaries, who are the local communities that live within and around the Ngoyla Mintom Forest massif, specifically in the communes of Mintom and Ngoyla, and whose livelihood mostly depends on the natural resources of the Ngoyla Mintom Forest massif. 70. Local organizational capacity remains very limited despite the existence of many civil society associations and platforms for dialogue, such as Village Associations, Community Interest Groups, Farmer/Forest Committees, Development Committees and Regional Platforms for Sustainable Development. Most of these don‟t yet function effectively, if at all. The proliferation and duplication of the many organizational structures, quite a few of them imposed from the outside, probably reinforce this dysfunction. Wherever possible the project should use, and build the capacity of institutions that already exist and function (albeit with need for strengthening) within local communities rather than try and add its own structures. 71. Furthermore, it is expected that project will develop accompanying social development measures to provide local populations with tangible and sustainable alternatives to their dependence on the area‟s natural resources (to reduce human pressure on the area‟s natural resources), to support them in adopting these alternatives, and to support them in transition to more sustainable use of the area‟s natural resources. Specifically the proposed establishment and operation of a Livelihood Support Mechanism will focus on developing alternative income- generating activities with low environmental impacts, and positive social impacts. Altogether, these accompanying social development measures will not only build and reinforce the level of ownership shown so far by beneficiaries themselves, but also accompany the fostering of more social accountability on the sustainable use and management of existing and scarce natural resources. To do so, two socially proven approaches will be used, the “Bottom-up� and “Top- down� encouraging the creation of a promising and responsible “social network� for the sustainable use and management of these physical natural resources. 72. Furthermore, in order to build a gender approach: (i) the project will work closely with the target groups of women and youth that have shown strong interest during project preparation, 67 to build their entrepreneurial capacity and support them with the development and implementation of income-generating activities; (ii) the implementation phase will include gender orientation among the criteria which will be used in the process of selecting micro- projects for financing through the Livelihood Support Mechanism. Another priority focus group is Indigenous People. Both a Social Assessment (SA) and an Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP), have been prepared, subsequently reviewed by the project safeguard team and cleared by ASPEN. The approved SA and the IPP have been disclosed in-country and at the World Bank InfoShop prior to appraisal. 73. OP/BP 4.12: As part of social safeguards, OP/BP 4.12 Involuntary Resettlement has been triggered, not because households are expected to be physically resettled, but to be sure that potential risk of restriction of access to resources and their use, which could negatively impact on livelihoods, is tangibly addressed. In particular hunting, which is practiced throughout the massif, is likely to be restricted as a direct result of the project activities. A Process Framework has been prepared by the Client that describes: (i) project components and any activity susceptible to infringe on communities access to natural resources and/or to cause other possible prejudices to the communities; (ii) potential conflicts and possible claims related to the project; (iii) consultative and participatory definition of eligibility criteria for reparation for loss of access to resources that support their livelihood; (iv) definition of alternative mitigation measures to support the population, especially the poor and most vulnerable such as the Indigenous People in their effort to improve or reinstate their livelihood infringed upon; (v) alternative reparation methods and procedures; and (vi) a monitoring & evaluation system to ensure that viable alternative reparation measures are effectively provided by the Government. The process framework, has been reviewed by project safeguard team and approved by ASPEN, and disclosed publicly both in-country and then at the World Bank InfoShop prior to appraisal. Key Measures to be taken by the Client to Address safeguards Policy Issues 74. The Government has prepared: an Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) which incorporates a section presenting an environmental and social management plan, a section on pest management and an action plan on pest management issues, a Process Framework, an Indigenous People Plan (IPP) and a Social Assessment (SA) for the project of Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom-Forest in order to fulfill the prescription set forth with the triggering of OP4.01 Environmental Assessment policy. These instruments were subject to intensive public consultation and disclosed in-country and at the World Bank Infoshop prior to appraisal. All activities to be financed by Component 2 will be subject to a social and environmental screening process. Capacity for Safeguard Implementation 75. The Bank will provide guidance on the elaboration of the Social and Environmental Clauses of any Terms of Reference for private Contractors working for the project. The Norms and Control Department of the Ministry of Environment, Nature Protection and Sustainable Development (MINEPDED) will be responsible for providing overall quality control through the review and clearance of the ESMPs of private sector operators in the area. The Bank‟s “Environmental and Social Capacity Building for the Energy Sector Project� (PRECESSE - 68 P109588)33 is already providing general capacity building for MINEPDED to conduct Environmental monitoring and control in the context of large infrastructure projects, with an initial focus on energy projects, but may expand its operations to cover the Mining Sector after a mid-term review. Communication and coordination with the PRECESSE implementation team will therefore be sought by the Project Coordinator. Public Consultations 76. Throughout the preparation process of the safeguards documents, the local population was consulted and their points of view were taken into consideration and incorporated into the design of the project. For instance a draft local development plan was prepared and integrated in the ESIA to reflect stakeholders‟ concerns. A second round of public consultations was conducted between the 29 and 31 August 2011 at which the draft safeguard reports were presented to a broad cross section of local stakeholder representatives to gauge broad support for the project, and its associated safeguard instruments. These public consultations confirmed the project design and safeguard documents. Consultations and public meetings will continue during project implementation and are an explicit activity under sub-component 1.1. 4. Monitoring & Evaluation 77. Overall project monitoring will be the responsibility of the Project Implementation Unit using the results framework included in Annex 3 to assess progress made toward the project objective and results indicators. The PIU includes a Monitoring and Evaluation Expert. 78. Sub-component 3.1 will design and implement a long term monitoring system that tracks social, economic, and ecological changes across the massif, with a focus on the core areas. Given the limited capacity for M&E system design or data collection among MINFOF staff, an independent organization will be contracted to support the design and implementation of the M&E system and train all project staff in its implementation. This organization will also work closely with staff of other projects operating in the area to collect and compile data into a coherent M&E system for the region. A division of responsibilities for social, environmental and biological data has been agreed with project partners and a platform for dialogue, and protocols for data exchange will be established. 79. M&E data will come from a set of tools chosen to monitor key aspects of the project impacts and effectiveness:  GEF Tracking Tools will be used at the start, mid-term and end of the project.  Biological monitoring: WWF will collect biological data under their EU funded project and make it available to MINFOF.  Socio-economic monitoring: Preliminary socio-economic data will be collected by the WWF project. GEF funds will be used to finance additional data collection where required. 33 The development objective of the Environmental and Social Capacity Building for the Energy Sector Project for Cameroon is to improve the management of and the accountability for environmental and social issues related to large infrastructure investments, with an initial focus on the energy sector, but expanding to Mining sector. 69 80. The long-term M&E Framework will establish procedures for engaging a core group of (multi) stakeholder representatives to contribute to regular participatory monitoring of project performance. 81. Indicators will be “scored� at the beginning of the project to establish a baseline. At least one additional assessment will be made during the lifetime of the project, to measure preliminary impacts of the project, and test and if need be, refine the monitoring system. 82. The estimated budget for the M&E System is approximately US$346,000, which includes setting up the M&E system and providing coaching to all staff, baseline and subsequent data collection, satellite imagery purchase and analysis, the cost of contracting an M&E specialist organization for 5 years, and logistical costs of data collection. 83. A technical and financial review of the Livelihood Support Mechanism (sub-component 2.2) will be made at mid-term to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of the mechanism with a view to scaling up. 5. Role of Partners Other international agencies financing related activities: 84. WWF have maintained a long-term presence in the Ngoyla-Mintom area but with relatively small operational budgets. This, inter alia, resulted in the preparation by MINFOF of a draft meso-zoning proposal for the area in 2008/9. In 2011, WWF has received substantial new funds (2.5m EUR) from the European Union for additional work in the Ngoyla Mintom area, including the finalization and approval of a meso-zoning plan, and piloting a REDD project, and began implementation in April 2011. WWF will support the Government of Cameroon to, inter alia: complete complementary biological and socio-economic studies to update their information on land uses and scenarios in light of recent initiatives such as CamIron and REDD+ and revise land use planning scenarios and options; support coordination and facilitation mechanisms for local community bodies; organize consultation meetings to negotiate permanent forest limits and access rights; hold specific consultations with Indigenous Peoples to ensure free prior and informed consent - in compliance with the UN Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples. 85. The GEF funded TRIDOM Project34 is also providing support to the preparation of a Land Use Plan in the broader inter-zone between the Protected Areas of Southern Cameroon, 34 The GEF funded Project « Conservation de la Biodiversité transfrontalière dans l‟interzone Tri-National du Dja, Odzala, Minkébé » covers Cameroon, Gabon and Congo. It is implemented by UNDP / UNOPS with a budget of US$10m from GEF. It became effective in 2008 and will run for seven years. It aims to secure the better management of the interzone between a network of Protected Areas in Cameroon, Congo and Equatorial Guinea, by assisting the three governments in: designing and implementing a coherent land-use plan that designates protected areas, permanent forest and rural development areas; building the capacity to control resource use, to monitor trends in biodiversity and ecosystem functions, through an effective law enforcement system, collaborative management schemes with the private sector and communities, including, in particular, indigenous people; and implementation of a cost-effective monitoring system. The project also seeks to find ways to improve benefits for local communities through revenues generated from alternative livelihoods initiative to ease pressure on natural resources, and setting up a diversified sustainable financing scheme to cover the core management costs in TRIDOM, in particular costs related to law enforcement and protected area management. 70 Gabon and Congo (which includes the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif), and the establishment of a Sustainable Financing Mechanism to support the longer term management of the forest massif. 86. At the national level, there are close links with the National REDD+ preparation process and the project will benefit from coordination with the Regional REDD+ Project35 whose Component 3 will support REDD+ project developers in the region with targeted capacity building and information exchange. There are opportunities for Cameroon as a participating country to benefit from capacity building initiatives at both the national and regional level. 87. The project coordinator will also ensure close communication with various existing and forthcoming initiatives (GIZ, UNDP and WWF) to establish new mechanisms (such as REDD+, Payments for Environmental Services, Sustainable Financing Mechanisms) for financing forest and protected area management including the GEF funded Regional Congo Basin Protected Area Financing Project. 88. The Project Coordinator will maintain dialogue with the German international cooperation agency, GIZ, which is providing assistance for the development and testing of land use planning guidelines at the national level with MINEPAT. 89. Coordination with the IDA funded Mining Sector Capacity Building Project (PRECASEM – P122153) is strategic, since this project has put some focus on the development of the so-called „southern corridor‟ which passes through Ngoyla Mintom area, and inter alia will put emphasis on “integration of mining into local/regional development.� It will also build the capacity for environmental management within MINIMIDT. 90. Two World Bank projects: the Agricultural Competitiveness Project (PACA – P112635) and the Community Development Program Support Project Phase II (PNDP – P113027) both operate in the South Region but have not yet funded activities and investments in the Ngoyla Mintom region. Both projects operate Grants Mechanisms (but neither targeted at the same set of activities envisaged under Component 2). The PNDP project is financing the capacity building of local Councils, and the preparation of Council Development Plans for the South Region, which will include the Ngoyla and Mintom municipalities. The focus of PNDP is to finance priority social infrastructure (classrooms, wells, sanitation facilities, etc). PNDP finances and trains a Financial Management and Procurement Officer and a Monitoring specialist who follows up on the PNDP funded projects - both of whom are integrated into each target Municipal Council. The GEF Ngoyla Mintom Project will take advantage of these already established capacities within the Councils, and existing Council Development Plans to identify livelihood projects to be funded under Component 2 that perhaps don‟t meet the criteria or priorities of PNDP. The ability to graft the Livelihood Support Mechanism developed under Component 2 to the planning, financial management and procurement procedures established by PNDP at Council level will be evaluated during the preparation of the Operational Procedures for the Livelihood Support Mechanism. These Operational Procedures can also benefit from adapting parts of the MoP for the PNDP Livelihood Support Mechanism. Coordination between PNDP and this project will be assured, to avoid overlap of eligible projects for funding, and to 35 The GEF funded Congo Basin: Enhancing Institutional Capacities on REDD Issues for Sustainable Forest Management (P113167). The Project development objective is “to strengthen the capacities of the Congo Basin countries on REDD+ issues and on forest carbon stock measurements�. It includes 3 components: Improving knowledge and coordination on REDD + in the Congo Basin; Building technical capacities for measurement & monitoring of carbon stocks in the Congo Basin forests; Mainstreaming REDD+ concept in SFM projects. 71 maximize opportunities for synergy, in particular use of common planning, and financial management mechanisms. 91. The project preparation phase has involved intensive consultation with all the above mentioned projects and other financing agencies, to ensure alignment and synchronization of project activities and budgets, and to define a shared vision of necessary institutional structures and processes for project implementation on the ground. 92. By focusing on strengthening the capacity of MINFOF to implement this GEF project through its own structures, the project fills the important gap identified by other already operating projects, by defining long-term institutional arrangements for MINFOF on the ground. The MINFOF Technical Operational Unit (or equivalent) to be established on the ground will not only benefit from support from the GEF project, but will become the principal MINFOF counterpart institution for these other WWF and TRIDOM projects for management of the Ngoyla Mintom Forest massif. Collaboration with the above-mentioned projects will be assured by regular coordination meetings in the field. 93. The governance risks associated with a project that is primarily implemented by MINFOF will be in large part addressed by ensuring a daily working relationship with the WWF and TRIDOM teams, who will be able to provide early warning of any problems that arise. 94. During project implementation, the Project Coordinator will therefore continue to build and maintain close collaboration with these various initiatives to ensure coordination, maximize synergies and minimize duplication of efforts. 95. Structure of financing partnerships: Most of the above mentioned projects (WWF and TRIDOM) are stand-alone initiatives that were designed and operational before this project was prepared. They are therefore considered as parallel funding. 72 Annex 4: Operational Risk Assessment Framework (ORAF) REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON: Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project (P118018) Board Package Version Project Stakeholder Risks Stakeholder Risk Rating High Description: Risk Management: Some community members may be too poor to wait for A Livelihood Support Mechanism will deliver immediate and significant benefits targeted at members of the community who have traditional benefits of project, or too unorganized to seize user rights in the forest and currently depend on it for their livelihoods. opportunities within project to participate in sustainable Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2013 Status: Not Yet Due resource management. Risk Management: Commercial extraction (logging, mining) interests are Project design adopts a pragmatic approach, through focusing on the creation of a core area of modest size within the massif that strikes a strong and will lobby in favor of commercially-oriented balance between conservation and resource extraction. land use and forest management options. Resp: Bank Stage: Preparation Due Date: 31-Jan-2012 Status: Completed Conflict between stakeholders could hamper project implementation and cause damage to project and Bank‟s Risk Management: reputation. Detailed economic and financial analyses of different classification options for the core area(s) will be prepared as an output of the project, illustrating the likely net revenues to different stakeholder groups. Revenue capture by certain stakeholders could lead to inequity and resentment Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2015 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: The classification document and management plan for core area(s) will be prepared and adopted with priority on achieving local stakeholder acceptance. Implications of implementing the plan on various stakeholders will be explored and consensus built among the different stakeholder groups, through public meetings (Sub-Comp 1.2). Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2016 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: Maintain good communication to secure buy-in by the different stakeholder groups and consensus among them Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2014 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: A conflict management system with a grievance-redress mechanism will be written into Project Imp. Manual. Resp: Client Stage: Preparation Due Date: 30-Apr-2012 Status: In Progress Implementing Agency (IA) Risks (including Fiduciary Risks) Capacity Rating High Description: Risk Management: Implementing agency lacks adequate capacity (skilled An UTO will be created with mandate to strengthen local operational capacity. It will recruit community members to secure the area from staff and organizational knowledge) in certain areas, and illegal activity. in particular at the local level in the field. Existing Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2012 Status: Not Yet Due 73 capacity is not efficiently exploited by management, and Risk Management: staff are not given enough incentive to work to their full capacities. Technical training (Sub-comp 1.1) in community based NRM should improve relationships between government staff and community groups to solidify this relationship and provide additional manpower for protection. Budget preparation, execution, and control are weak. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2013 Status: Not Yet Due Internal auditing is non-existent within MINFOF. Risk Management: Management training will improve project management. Inadequate documentation and information processing may hinder project implementation and render accurate Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Sep-2012 Status: Not Yet Due project evaluation difficult. Risk Management: Linking FM and procurement specialists to the Unité de Gestion of the multi-donor Basket Fund reduces fiduciary risk. This unit benefits from stronger internal controls, investment in capacity building in Public Finance Management from GIZ, and regular audits. Resp: Client Stage: Preparation Due Date: 30-Apr-2012 Status: In Progress Risk Management: Independent audit (financial and technical) of the project (including the Livelihood Support Mechanism), and strengthened monitoring and evaluation practices. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2013 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: A monitoring expert will be part of the PIU team. Sub-component 3.1 includes trainings for effective monitoring. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2012 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: The M&E framework provides for regular participatory monitoring of project performance by a core group of (multi) stakeholder representatives. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2013 Status: Not Yet Due Governance Rating High Description: Risk Management: Governance, transparency and weak accountability could The Bank provides support to the EITI process, forestry (DPL) and mining. A Governance Partnership Facility provides extra support to significantly impact project implementation. transparent management of extractive industries. Resp: Bank Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Jan-2014 Status: In Progress Commercial interests may try to influence government to award logging, mining and agricultural concessions Risk Management: without due process or to avoid proper law enforcement. The PIU will liaise with the FLEGT Project to develop a local law enforcement plan and a local NGO will be given an independent forest monitor and whistleblower function. The Project proposes to use the mechanism outlined in Decision No.520 for distributing forest revenues. This Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2013 Status: Not Yet Due uses local institutions to build local ownership. Risk Management: Resource transfers (e.g. via Livelihood Support Mechanism) to beneficiaries will be well-documented and supervision missions will be conducted two times a year over the course of the project. 74 Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2013 Status: Not Yet Due Project Risks Design Rating High Description: Risk Management: Complexity and innovation of project design may impede The project design incorporates lessons learnt from previous / ongoing projects (successful and unsuccessful). Emerging good practices have effective implementation and impact. been built into project design, including: simplifying project design; streamlining implementation arrangements; using decentralized implementation arrangements where appropriate; and inclusion of a Livelihood Support Mechanism. Existing financing may be insufficient for proper Resp: Bank Stage: Preparation Due Date: 31-Jan-2012 Status: Completed implementation of existing design. Risk Management: Physical and social conditions may be too challenging in A detailed analysis will be conducted early in project implementation to provide a clear picture of the baseline situation, gainers and losers, and terms of overall development, access, infrastructure, skills, local and global “impacts�. This analysis will be widely disseminated (to Ministries, NGOs, development agencies and donor partners) in a and organizational capacity, possibly resulting in delays non-technical way through public forums so that additional consensus-building, identification of trade-offs, and possible compensatory needs and difficulty in implementation of some project can be discussed. This will be financed from Client's own resources and not from this Project. components. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2012 Status: Not Yet Due Some international & national environmental or social advocates are already opposing the project creating a Risk Management: reputational risk for the Bank. Close dialogue will be built with critical NGOs to try to secure their active engagement to take on the bigger challenges (which are external to the area and beyond control of MINFOF). Communities have high (unrealistic) expectations as to what the GEF Project can deliver in terms of local socio- Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2013 Status: Not Yet Due economic development. Risk Management: The project design relies on other partners (MINEPAT, The PIU staff will need to manage community expectations. The Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM) has been allocated a large share of the WWF and GEF TRIDOM Projects) to complete land use project budget, so should be able to deliver on some expectations. Additional financial resources will be sought to complement the GEF planning exercise before this project can invest in investment in the LSM. classification and management of an identified core area for conservation and low impact community use. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2014 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: The project PIU will maintain close liaison with MINEPAT to ensure that adequate GoC resources are provided to secure the completion and appropriate outcome from the Land use Planning process. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2013 Status: In Progress Social and Environmental Rating Moderate Description: Risk Management: Delay of implementation of environmental and social Project plans will be reviewed by the AFR Safeguard team, which will also participate in project supervision. safeguard requirements may harm implementation. Resp: Bank Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2012 Status: In Progress Development of mining and forestry activities in the area Risk Management: will attract populations from other regions seeking The M&E contract will include the assessment of compliance with safeguards as a specific, separate component. employment opportunities, potentially resulting in an increased level of environmental degradation. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2013 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: 75 Risk of adverse short term social impacts on local MINFOF will ensure that the Technical Operations Unit is sufficiently staffed to cover anti-poaching and other illegal activities. communities, especially indigenous population, as a result of transition to more sustainable management of the Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2014 Status: Not Yet Due resources. Risk Management: These will include restrictions on unsustainable or illegal MINEPDED will designate a staff to act as a permanent member of the UTO to monitor compliance of commercial operators with their ESMPs. economic activities (in particular commercial poaching) in Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2012 Status: Not Yet Due the Ngoyla Mintom area, which means less income for local populations, leading to resistance to the project. Risk Management: The customary rights of communities in various forest massifs will be defined in the preparatory consultative process and the project will support sustainable hunting and other legal resource uses. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Apr-2015 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: Involvement of communities in planning and implementation will build ownership & social accountability and create a venue for airing concerns, thereby allowing conflicts to be resolved early. Community involvement will also ensure that they are not dominated by external commercial interests, and can share in the benefits of any future industrial resource extraction. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Oct-2013 Status: Not Yet Due Risk Management: In addition to implementation of social safeguards (Indigenous Peoples Plan, Process Framework), Component 2 will support preparation & implementation of Local Development Plans, and a Livelihood Support Mechanism to finance targeted alternative income-generating activities with positive social impact and low environmental impact. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Aug-2013 Status: Not Yet Due Program and Donor Rating High Description: Risk Management: Multiple project interventions in Ngoyla-Mintom area Close coordination with implementation agencies has been ensured during project planning and will be maintained during project create the risk of overlapping mandates and confusion implementation. over who is responsible for what activity, outcome or Resp: Bank Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2012 Status: In Progress oversight. Risk Management: Co-financing thus far mobilized for the long term Establishment of a UTO to work with all three projects, and regular meetings between all three project implementation teams will ensure close conservation of the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif is coordination (Sub-Comp 1.3). insufficient. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2013 Status: Not Yet Due There is a risk that consultations with commercial interests in the area to establish a sustainable financing mechanism Risk Management: fail to reach any consensus. Maintain on-going communication and coordination with the rest of the donor community to secure long-term assistance. The project emphasizes identification/ development of sources of conservation finance through collaboration with other parallel projects. If successful, these mechanisms, such as REDD, may provide a sustainable source of revenue for protected area management. Resp: Bank Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2015 Status: In Progress Risk Management: Fund raising will be an important activity during the implementation phase. Targeted development partners are members of the Congo Basin Forest Fund and other international NGOs. 76 Resp: Bank Stage: Implementation Due Date: Status: Not Yet Due Delivery Monitoring and Sustainability Rating Moderate Description: Risk Management: Risk that project lacks adequate sustainability and Continue to stimulate strong ownership for the project and the long term management of the forest massif by government, and in particular measurability. related ministries, through joint action by conservation partners. Resp: Bank Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Jun-2014 Status: In Progress Risk of task team to monitor and provide implementation support to the project. Risk Management: The tasks team will continue to work with development partners and NGOs, to create a group that can provide implementation support for biodiversity conservation in the area. Resp: Bank Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2015 Status: In Progress Other (Optional) Rating High Description: Risk Management: New mining operations and related rapid migration into The project PIU will collaborate closely with other project PIUs operating in the area, and with MINEPDED to encourage strong enforcement some project areas or their development may put pressure of Private Sector Mining Investment ESMPs, monitoring and evaluation of developments in the area, in particular the Sangmelima-Ouessou on forest resources and negate or reverse project benefits. Road. The project will also train CSOs / NGOs to provide 3rd party monitoring to follow up on ESMP and contractual obligations of private Development of the mining activities in the area may also sector (see previous sections). attract populations from other regions looking for (legal or Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Dec-2015 Status: Not Yet Due illegal) income sources and employment opportunities. Risk Management: Forthcoming construction of a new international highway The project will promote transparency, providing information to all stakeholders, and engaging with the range of international and national Civil funded by the African Development Bank, and Society that can pressure large multi-national companies to adopt responsible operational policies and respect national laws. construction of an iron ore mine and associated railway in the area, will greatly alter the local social dynamics and Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 30-Apr-2015 Status: Not Yet Due economics of land use, increasing the risk that both local and external stakeholders will challenge the adoption and Risk Management: implementation of a forest management options geared These lobbying efforts are beyond the control of the project, but the Communication team will provide information on the issues to Civil towards conservation and low-impact community use. Society, the wider public and the international community. Resp: Client Stage: Implementation Due Date: 31-Mar-2015 Status: Not Yet Due 7. Overall Risk Following Review Implementation Risk Rating: High Description: There are many powerful stakeholders (logging, mining and agro-industrial companies, road and rail construction projects) investing or interested to invest much larger resources in the project area, over which the project has no direct control. Country and institutional (sector) risks are also high, and the risks relating to Implementing Agency capacity are also high. Though this project‟s risk is assessed as high, so is its potential return. Furthermore, the environmental and social risks of not implementing the project are perceived as much greater and long lasting than the risks of project implementation. The project goals are modest and are aligned with stakeholder interests to reduce this risk as much as possible. 77 Annex 5: Implementation Support Plan REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON: Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Project Strategy and Approach for Implementation Support 1. The approach for implementation support has been developed based on the nature of the project, including its risk profile. It will aim to render implementation support to the client more flexible and efficient, and will focus on implementation of the risk mitigation measures defined in the ORAF. 2. Procurement: Implementation support will include: (i) provision of training to the PIU staff as needed; (ii) review of procurement documents and provision of timely feedback to the Fiduciary Management Unit; (iii) provision of guidance on the Bank‟s Procurement Guidelines to the PIU; (iv) monitoring of procurement progress against the detailed Procurement Plan; (v) monitoring that implementation of contracts is compliant with the World Bank‟s fiduciary guidelines as well as with contract obligations. 3. Financial Management: The FM Implementation support plan will be risk based and will include: (i) review of annual audited financial statements and management letter, quarterly Interim Financial Reports (IFRs) and provision of timely follow up with PIU of issues arising, e.g. on accounting, reporting and internal controls; (ii) participation in project supervision missions as appropriate; (iii) provision of training to PIU staff as needed, with an emphasis on the adopted Financial Management System in MINFOF; (iv) provision of guidance on the Bank‟s fiduciary guidelines as well as procedures spelled out in the Project Implementation Manual (PIM); and (v) Preparation of a Operational Procedures (which will become part of the PIM) for the Livelihood Support Mechanism established under Sub-Component 2.3 which will guide a) the selection of projects to benefit from the Scheme, b) negotiation of MoUs or Contracts to be entered into between the PIU and the local communities/village association/municipalities and c) subsequent supervision of funded micro-enterprises and micro- projects. It will also include a collaborative approach with the entire Task Team specifically procurement and monitoring and evaluation for the Livelihood Support Mechanism established under component 2. 4. Environmental and Social Safeguards: Implementation support will include: (i) guidance on the preparation and disclosure of an Environmental and Social Assessment; (ii) supervision of the implementation of the prepared Process Framework and provision of training and guidance to the PIU team; (iii) third party monitoring assessing compliance with safeguards as a specific, separate component will be included in the M&E system, through coordination with other projects such as the Mining Sector Capacity Building Project (PRECASEM) and the Environmental and Social Capacity Building for the Energy Sector Project (PRECESSE). 5. Memorandum of Understanding – Local Committees and municipalities: Implementation support will include: (i) guidance on the establishment and functioning of the Local Committees established under Sub-Component 1.1, and the selection of micro-projects to be financed under Component 2. 6. Coordination with other Development Partners: Implementation support will include: (i) planning for joint local and national meetings and missions with WWF and UNOPS/UNDP whenever possible; (ii) close coordination with the large number of multilateral and bilateral 78 development partners, research institutions and international, national and local NGOs operating in the Ngoyla Mintom area. Implementation Support Plan 7. The project will require substantive technical support due the rather complex and technical nature of the activities to be financed. Most of the World Bank team members are based in the region, including fiduciary staff in the Cameroon Country office to ensure timely, efficient, and effective implementation support to the client. Formal implementation support missions and field visits will be carried out every six months. Detailed inputs from the Bank team and partners are outlined below:  Technical inputs needed: Technical inputs will be provided by an NRM specialist, and staff who have expertise in rural development and Livelihood Support Mechanisms (AFTAR), and Monitoring & Evaluation. As needed, the task team will seek additional highly-specialized technical inputs from technical partners with whom close coordination and collaboration has been established during project preparation.  Fiduciary requirements and inputs: Training will be provided by the Bank‟s financial management specialist and procurement specialist before the commencement of project implementation. The task team will further provide support to the PIU to improve fiduciary efficiency. Formal supervision of financial management will be carried out semi-annually, while procurement supervision will be carried out on a timely basis as required by the client.  Safeguards: Inputs from an environment specialist and a social specialist will be provided, despite the project‟s limited expected social and environmental impacts. Capacity building will be required for environment monitoring and reporting. On the social side, supervision will focus on implementation of the Process Framework and indigenous peoples‟ issues. Field visits will be conducted on a semi-annual basis. The social and environmental specialists are based in the sub-region.  Operation: The TTL will provide timely supervision of all operational aspects, as well as ensure coordination with the client and among World Bank team members. The TTL will lead two formal field supervisions a year and, as needed, conduct punctual missions to resolve operational issues. 79 I. Timeline of main focus of support to implementation: Time Focus Skills Needed Resource Partner Estimate Role 0-12 months Institutional arrangements and 12 SWs Technical TTL project supervision coordination inputs Set up of Livelihood Support Rural Development 4 SWs Mechanism Specialist Set up M&E system M&E Specialist(s) 4 SWs N/A Social safeguards training and 4 SWs N/A Social specialist supervision Environmental training and Environmental 4 SWs N/A supervision specialist(s) Procurement Procurement Specialist 3 SWs N/A Financial Management Financial Management 3 SWs Coordinate Supervision Specialist missions to Ensure risk mitigating measures ensure implemented by project synergies. effectiveness and that dated covenants are functioning as intended. Identification of implementation issues early in the life of the project and physical supervision of fund / grant scheme. Assistance in building appropriate financial management capacity at PIU. 12-60 months Project implementation Environmental 12 SWs Specialist Procurement Specialist 12 SWs Environment and social Environmental 12 SWs monitoring and reporting Specialist Social Specialist 12 SWs Financial management Financial Management 8 SWs Coordinate monitoring and reporting - Specialist missions to Review the continuing adequacy ensure of the financial management synergies arrangements and related risks. Other 80 II. Skills Mix Required: Skills Needed Number of Staff Weeks Number of Trips Comments Biodiversity 4 SWs annually Two Based in the region conservation/Forestry Procurement 4 SWs annually Field trips as required Country office based Social specialist 4 SWs annually Field trips as required Washington based Environment 3 SWs annually Field trips as required Based in the region specialist Financial 11 SWs annually Field trips as required Country office based management specialist Rural Development – 4 SWs annually Field trips as required AFTAR - Country Set up of Livelihood office based Support Mechanism M&E consultant 2 SWs annually One Based in the region Task team 12 SWs annually Three the first year Washington based leader/Operations and two annually Analyst from the second year III. Partners: Name Institution/Country Role David HOYLE WWF/Cameroon Director of Biodiversity conservation Louis Defo WWF/Cameroon Interim Coordinator, WWF Ngoyla Mintom Project Kirsten HEGENER GIZ/Cameroon Land Use Management Robbert Bekker UNOPS/Cameroon Regional Project Manager, GEF TRIDOM Project Paul Noupa UNOPS/Cameroon National Coordinator, GEF TRIDOM Project 81 Annex 6: GEF Incremental Cost Analysis CBSP CAMEROON: Conservation and Sustainable Management within the Ngoyla- Mintom Forest Project A. Background Context 1. Cameroon‟s geography ranges from Sahelian semi-desert in the north through grassland to the humid rainforest biome of the Congo Basin in the south, with a range of climatic and vegetative zones in between. Cameroon is endowed with significant natural resources, including oil, high value timber species, and agricultural products (coffee, cotton, cocoa). In terms of biological diversity, the country is second only to the Democratic Republic of Congo in Africa, with some 409 species of mammals (including half of Africa‟s 52 species of higher primates), 848 species of birds, nine thousand species of vascular plants (of which at least 156 are endemic), 171 species of amphibians, 210 species of reptiles, and 138 species of fish. 2. Over the past 2 decades, Cameroon has expanded its Protected Area network from almost 2.25 million hectares in 1995 to over 3.7 million hectares in 2011 accounting for 8.11% of the country‟s land area36. By 2011, the total area classified as permanent forest reached 8.72 million hectares (including the above-mentioned Protected Areas). A further 3.12 million hectares have been declared as permanent forest, but are pending classification and an additional 1.5 million hectares are planned to become permanent forest. Once completed, this would bring the total Permanent Forest estate to 13.4 million hectares. Approximately 4.1 million hectares are allocated for commercial logging, an additional 3.2 million hectares are in the process of competitive attribution for industrial logging, and a further 641,000 hectares are planned for logging (which will result in a total of 8 million hectares of production forest). 3. Scope of Analysis: The proposed project is situated in the Ngoyla Mintom forest, a pristine rainforest massif of about 900,000 ha located in the southern part of Cameroon which is essential for the maintenance of biological connectivity between Minkébé National Park in Gabon and adjacent Protected Areas in Cameroon (Dja Wildlife Reserve and Nki National Park) and the Trinational de la Sangha, as well as Odzala in Congo. Because of its location, the Ngoyla-Mintom forest forms an important part of a regional green corridor, with a very diverse ecosystem reported to contain an important stock of biodiversity including 228 species of fish in the waterways, 37 species of large and medium sized mammals including about 4,000 endangered gorillas, 1,500 chimpanzees, 3,000 elephants and mandrills. Beyond its importance as habitat, and a link between neighboring areas, Ngoyla Mintom forest is also an important carbon sink and store, helping to buffer the effects of climate change, as well as providing many other environmental services to the local community and the wider world. The Figures at the end of the document show the Ngoyla Mintom area and its importance in connecting the protected areas in Cameroon and the wider region. In an indicative land use plan (1995), the entire area was designated for commercial timber production. 4. Threats and Root causes: Threats to the natural resources in Ngoyla-Mintom can be divided into internal threats resulting from activities of the local stakeholders, and external threats resulting from new initiatives and investments in the region. Internal threats include primarily poaching for bushmeat trade, and artisanal mining. External threats include 36 By 2011, Cameroon had established 18 National Parks covering 2.9m hectares, 7 Wildlife Reserves covering 702,000 hectares, and 4 Wildlife Sanctuaries covering 142,000 hectares. 82 uncontrolled logging which could lead to forest degradation, and unsustainable development of mining. Within the project lifetime, construction of the Iron Ore Mine and associated railway will likely begin. The road through the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif is already being upgraded, which may result in rapid in-migration, social change, and greatly altered economic incentives for commercial logging, and agriculture. The potential revenues and new employment opportunities resulting from commercial logging, mining and agricultural expansion will likely be more interesting to the State, private sector, municipalities and local communities than conservation, thereby increasing the opportunity costs of adopting a pro-conservation land-use plan. B. Baseline or Business as Usual Scenario (no GEF Scenario) 5. In the absence of GEF assistance, with limited support from other donors for conservation oriented management within the massif, the Government of Cameroon would likely undertake interventions that would prioritize national economic development objectives over local community interests, or international conservation priorities. In the absence of more investment in participatory planning and control, illegal logging and mining activities will likely be greater, and the resulting increase in in-migration will lead to the rapid fragmentation of wildlife habitat, further increases in hunting pressure, in particular when planned investments in large scale mining and new infrastruture networks (road and rail) become reality. It is likely that current forest zoning that favors timber production would remain the preferred option, over management for community use, and the environmental benefits such as biodiversity, carbon sequestration, and other ecosystem services may not be optimized. Although the direct impact of mining and infrastructure development is usually localized, indirect impacts such as increased in- migration and associated increases in timber cutting, hunting and agricultural expansion will not be addressed without concrete measures to secure priority conservation areas through their classification and management. In the absence of any significant investment to identify and support alternative livelihoods, efforts to control hunting, in particular, will create conflicts. 6. The proposed project has been designed to build upon past investments, complement other ongoing activities and develop a coherent approach to the region‟s sustainable development. Two already existing initiatives in the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif form the critical baseline for this proposed project: A regional project - Biodiversity Conservation in the Transboundary Trinational Interzone of Dja, Odzala and Minkebe “TRIDOM� Project, is implemented by UNDP / UNOPS with financing in the amount of US$10m from GEF. It became effective in 2008 and will run for seven years. It aims to secure the better management of the interzone between a network of Protected Areas in Cameroon, Congo and Equatorial Guinea, by assisting the three governments in: designing and implementing a coherent land-use plan that designates protected areas, permanent forest and rural development areas; building the capacity to control resource use, to monitor trends in biodiversity and ecosystem functions, through an effective law enforcement system, collaborative management schemes with the private sector and communities, including, in particular, indigenous people; and implementation of a cost- effective monitoring system. The project also seeks to find ways to improve benefits for local communities through revenues generated from alternative livelihoods initiative to ease pressure on natural resources, and setting up a diversified sustainable financing scheme to cover the core management costs in TRIDOM, in particular costs related to law enforcement and protected area management. 83 7. However the TRIDOM project does not have sufficient funds to implement alone the Land Use Plan that it will develop (for example through investment in the Classification process). Nor does it provide significant immediate livelihood support to local communities, having limited resources to support ecotourism over a large area (8 Protected Areas in 3 countries) and to pilot some demonstration income generating activities that could potentially be scaled up. This incremental analysis does not include the TRIDOM project financing as co- financing, but rather describes this project as part of the background baseline context. 8. The EU funded WWF-implemented project targeted at the Ngoyla Mintom itself, entitled “Reduction of deforestation and degradation in the Ngoyla Mintom Forest Massif� is focusing on implementing integral sustainable management in the framework of the Dja-Odzala-Minkebe (TRIDOM) Landscape�. It is a 5 year EUR2.5m (US$3.6m) project funded by European Union and became effective in April 2011, and will invest in the following activities: Promote a platform for multi-stakeholder negotiation and adoption of a Land Use Plan; support the application procedures and management of Council and Community Forests; develop and implement a joint control plan; strengthen the participation of local NGOs and local communities in decision-making mechanisms; support forest certification of two communal forests and a logging concession; promote adoption of quality practices by a mining company (CAMIRON); support a political process to coordinate mining and forestry sectors; support the development of a REDD pilot initiative; train sub-regional administrative staff and TRIDOM actors to enable their participation in REDD activities; inform relevant policy processes at national, sub-regional and international levels based on lessons learned from local implementation. 9. The WWF project likewise provides very limited resources for the legal Classification process for any future State-owned forests, and for any livelihood support activities (staff costs and a budget of US$0.738 for grants for micro-projects). 10. Both the WWF and TRIDOM operations are committed to preparing a multipurpose meso-scale land use plan, strengthening natural resource management and controls, and securing sustainable financing mechanisms for the Ngoyla Mintom forest. Both projects envisage that MINFOF will establish a Technical Operations Unit that is central to achieving their objective, but do not provide funds for its creation or operations. 11. The GEF Ngoyla Mintom project will therefore both build upon and add value to the baseline of activities, through a focus on supporting the preparation for classification of, and drafting of management plans for priority conservation areas identified in the land use plan and the development of a Livelihood Support Mechanism that ensures the delivery of immediate livelihood benefits to affected inhabitants in the area while longer-term sustainable financing that can continue to support the Livelihood Support Mechanism is secured. The project also explicitly plans to facilitate the establishment and operations of the Technical Operations Unit which will remain a permanent MINFOF institution that will manage the Ngoyla-Mintom area in future – without which neither the WWF nor the TRIDOM projects would be sustainable. 12. Other interventions in the area include SNV‟s investment in raising awareness on the FLEGT (Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade) initiative with funds from the European Union, and promoting Non-Timber Forest Product (NTFP) value chains with Baka and Bantou groups in the Ngoyla-Mintom landscape with their own core funds. 13. IUCN will receive funds from the Congo Basin Forest Fund (CBFF) to support REDD/civil society capacity building with TRIDOM landscapes. Rainforest Alliance has also received funds from CBFF to implement a 3 year project entitled “Promotion of sustainable management of 84 forests in Cameroon through the development of local community forest enterprises�. Working through two local NGOs (CEPFILD and OPFCR), the project will support a stepwise approach towards certification in 12 Community Forests in the Southern region of Cameroon, some of which 7 are in the Dja et Lobo sub-division - in or adjacent to the Ngoyla-Mintom forest. The project aims to improve the profitability, environmental sustainability and social equity of forest management. 14. Finally, three World Bank IDA funded projects form part of the baseline: The Mining Sector Capacity Building Project (PRECASEM - US$30m) contributes to improved regulatory and institutional framework for mining sector development, with a particular focus on environmental and social management of the mining operations. Some activities (up to a value of US$6.7m) will impact directly on the Ngoyla-Mintom area, because the project will work closely with the priority mining sites (of which 2 are adjacent to Ngoyla-Mintom), thereby contributing to the project objective. The Agricultural Competitiveness Project (PACA – P112635) and the Community Development Program Support Project (PNDP – P113027) are national projects which both operate in the South Region but have not yet funded activities and investments in the Ngoyla Mintom region. The PNDP project is financing the capacity building of local Councils and the preparation of Council Development Plans for the South Region, which will include the Ngoyla and Mintom municipalities. The PACA project can competitively finance existing groups to improve production and marketing elements of specific agricultural value chains. These two projects have the potential to invest up to US$1.0m total in support to rural development initiatives and infrastructure in these municipalities. 15. The domestic and global benefits under the baseline scenario include:  a meso-zoning Plan for Ngoyla Mintom is completed;  capacities to control resource use is increased;  capacities for baseline data collection and biological monitoring exist;  some Council and Community Forests are created and being managed;  some pilot livelihood support activities have been tested;  a sustainable financing mechanism is designed, and interest of private sector to invest in it is assessed. 16. Without GEF support, under the current baseline scenario, the existing projects would not lead to satisfactory conservation and sustainable management of the majority of the Ngoyla- Mintom forest massif for the benefit of the local and indigenous communities. C. GEF Alternative Project objectives, components, results 17. The Project Development Objective (PDO) and Global Environmental Objective (GEO) are the same: to improve the conservation and management of the Core Area and improve access to income-generating activities for local communities. “Core Area� means the area(s), measuring in their aggregate no less than 160,000 hectares, within the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif, identified by the Recipient with the explicit agreement in writing of the World Bank to be classified and managed for conservation and low-impact community use. 85 Key Outcome Indicators:  GEF Management Effectiveness Tracking Tool score has increased by 50% over baseline value (26) for the core area by project end37.  A Livelihood Support Mechanism to improve local livelihoods is designed with key stakeholders and is delivering benefits to 1000 people of which at least 30% are indigenous people.  A long-term Environmental and Socio-Economic Monitoring and Evaluation system, including baselines, is established and functioning for the core area. 18. As designed the project will contribute to securing part of the forest massif for conservation and sustainable community use, through improved collaboration with stakeholders, participatory planning, and substantial investment in livelihood support mechanisms for the local communities and indigenous people living in the area. Significantly, it is anticipated that the project will secure wide stakeholder support for more conservation oriented forest management than would be possible in the without-project scenario. 19. The resulting mosaic of state, council and community managed forest areas will include multiple degrees of protection: from strict conservation (conservation easements), to multiple non-timber forest use and areas of more intensive forest management. By using a mosaic of land uses that are determined through a participatory process, the long term conservation and sustainable use can be more positive and long lasting than if the government would take a decision in the absence of such consultation with local stakeholders. 20. Under the GEF Alternative scenario, the project consists of three components (Annex 2): 21. Component 1: Strengthen government and civil society capacity in participatory planning, and management of the core areas. The activities under the component will result in the following key GEF incremental outputs: (i) strengthened capacity of (a) relevant government entities - and (b) civil society organizations - to support participatory forest management and community-based natural resource management; (ii) studies completed on (a) the socio- economic implications on local communities of future classification and management options for the core area for conservation and low impact community use; and (b) confirmation of local communities‟ acceptance of preferred classification and management options; and (iii) Classification proposals, and draft management plans prepared for “core areas� within the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest block for State forests within Ngoyla-Mintom Forest block; 22. Component 2: Design and implement a Livelihood Support Mechanism (LSM). The activities under the component will result in the following key GEF incremental outputs: (i) a LSM that will address immediate social and development needs of the local communities and indigenous peoples designed, and piloted; and (ii) The LSM is evaluated with a view to developing subsequent scale-up recommendations for the Project Area. 23. Component 3: Design and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System for the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif; and Project Management. The activities under the component will result in the following key GEF incremental outputs: - Monitoring and Evaluation: (i) M&E Expert / body contracted to design and implement a long term M&E system with baseline data. Mandates for monitoring will be clearly defined between different 37 Baseline score at start of project is 26. Target is to increase score by 50% during project lifespan = 40. 86 partners. (ii) Coaching provided to data collectors through classroom and practical field training by M&E expert; (iii) data collected and analyzed. Project Management: Routine administration activities implemented, including preparation of annual workplans, budgets, annual audits and reporting. D. Fit with GEF Strategic Priorities 24. Eligibility for GEF co-financing: Cameroon ratified the Convention on Biological Diversity in 1994 and has developed the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (NBSAP). 25. Relevance to GEF Strategic Priorities: The project primarily contributes to GEF-4 Strategic Objective 1 (SO1 - Catalyzing the Sustainability of Protected Areas Systems). In particular the project is fully aligned with the Strategic Program 3 (SP3: Strengthening terrestrial Protected Area networks), and Strategic Program 1 (SP1 – Sustainable financing of PA systems at the national level). Key activities that contribute to SO1 include strengthening institutions and providing training for consultations and community based natural resource management under sub-component 1.1; the detailed socio-economic analyses of forest classification and management options under sub-component 1.2 which will help appreciate the impact of scenarios on different stakeholders; support to the preparation of classification proposals, and drafting of management plans for State forests within Ngoyla-Mintom Forest block under sub- component 1.3. Significantly in alignment with SP1, the proposed project is piloting a Livelihood Support Mechanism (developed under Component 2) since this is proposed as a critical component of a future Sustainable Financing Mechanism being supported by the TRIDOM project. This project is also fully consistent with the current GEF4 Sustainable Forest Management Framework - supported through the existing biodiversity strategic programs, and in line with the GEF‟s mandate of protecting global environmental goods. This project falls under the larger regional framework of the Strategic Program for Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) in the Congo Basin. The Strategic Program for SFM presents a programmatic approach aiming to deliver multiple global environmental benefits across the Congo River ecosystem and adding value to a proposed portfolio of projects envisioned under the Strategic Program. E. Incremental value added by GEF funding and Global Benefits Global Environmental Benefits (GEB) 26. The GEF financing will add value through providing the funds to classify and manage core areas for conservation and low-impact community use, thereby securing key corridors that link other existing Protected Areas. Investment in community based management should ensure long term sustainable use of forest and wildlife resources, and reduce the pressure on endangered species that reside within the area. 27. With the GEF financing, incremental global environmental benefits expected include: the preparation of Classification proposals for a core area of not less than 160,000 hectares of the Ngoyla Mintom humid tropical forest biome as an IUCN Category VI Managed Resource Protected Area which will be made up of an appropriate mosaic of different forest tenure and access arrangements. This core area will be managed for conservation and low impact community use and will exclude logging. 87 28. Importantly, the lessons generated under this Project will help demonstrate how the participatory preparation and implementation of land use plans can be scaled up at the national and regional levels, and how to establish Livelihood Support programs as a key component of future sustainable financing mechanisms. Incremental Cost Calculations 29. The GEF‟s contribution of US$3.5 million to the proposed project would leverage US US$1.9 million from GoC (in kind combined) and complement the following baseline: US$3.6 million from EU, US$0.738m from WWF own resources; US$0.6m from SNV; US$0.5m from Rainforest Alliance; US$0.2m from IUCN and US$7.7m from three parallel IDA projects (Mining, PNDP and PACA projects). Table 1 below shows the overall financing support for the GEF alternative. The total costs of the GEF alternative is estimated at US$ 18.9 million, with an incremental financing of US$ 5.5 million (from GEF and GoC) and baseline support of US$ 13.3 million. F. Role of Cofinancing Table 1: GEF Alternative - Breakdown of Funding sources by components (US$ M) Components GEF Govt EU/ SNV RA / IUCN IDA PNDP / TOTAL WWF OPFCR Mining PACA Project projects Component 1 – Strengthen 1.571 1.934 0.903 0 0 0.200 4.7 0 9.307 government and civil society capacity for participatory planning, and management of the core areas. Component 2 – Design and 1.406 0.036 0.657 0.600 0.500 0 2.0 1.0 6.199 implement a Livelihood Support mechanism (LSM) Component 3.1 - Design 0.346 0.018 0.345 0 0 0 0 2.882 and implement a long term Monitoring and Evaluation System for the Ngoyla- Mintom Forest Massif; Project management 0.177 0.085 2.434 0 0 0 0 0 0.524 TOTAL 3.500 2.073 4.338 0.600 0.500 0.200 6.700 1.000 18.911 88 Annex 7: Recent History of the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif. 1. Prime-Ministerial Decree No. 95/678/PM of 18 December 1995 establishing an Indicative Framework for Land Use in the Southern Forest Area included the Ngoyla Mintom forest massif. The decree partitions the massif into nine proposed Forest Management Units (FMUs) for the purposes of commercial forest exploitation. 2. Later on, results from research revealed that the Ngoyla Mintom forest is an important site for the maintenance of biological connectivity between Minkébé National Park in Gabon and adjacent areas in Cameroon and the Trinational de la Sangha, as well as Odzala in Congo. Increasing realization that the Ngoyla Mintom area was a biodiversity hotspot gave rise to questions about the adequacy of logging concessions and/or FMU status. 3. After the 1999 Yaoundé Heads of State Summit, mainly spearheaded by WWF, the Cameroonian Government decided to offer this area as a “potential� protection forest (“projet de zone de protection de la biodiversité�) and invited offers from interested parties to lease them as conservation concessions38. However, despite various negotiations with conservation institutions, the Government did not receive an acceptable offer that compensated for the logging benefits forgone. Not surprisingly, after 10 years of unsuccessful negotiations to find an institution willing to lease the area for conservation at a fair price, pressure has been increasing on MINFOF - from both the logging industry and the local communities keen for employment - to offer the FMUs for logging (see Table 1 below for current status). 4. The 1995 Presidential Decree did not foresee the future mining-related development anticipated in the area, transportation infrastructure – road and rail – linked to this development, as well as local communities‟ current and future needs and practices. In 2009, the Government of Cameroon launched a call for expressions of interest for the Ngoyla-Mintom Forests: while several proposals were submitted for commercial timber exploitations, others presented biodiversity conservation and carbon finance options. To date, the government has not taken a decision on the area‟s allocation. Simultaneously MINFOF-WWF prepared a new proposal for the area (2008/9). Though useful as a preliminary outline for revision of the decree‟s land-use designation, the joint MINFOF-WWF proposal (2009) has not been officially adopted. Table 1 : List of Unités Forestieres d‟Aménagement in the Ngoyla Mintom Area. UFA Area (ha) Current Management Status 09-001 180,606 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) 09-002 76,840 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) 10-027 32,080 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) 10-028 77,982 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) 10-032 102,103 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) 10-033 48,321 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) 10-034 164,976 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) 10-035 101,793 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) 10-036 67,614 Fx Jan 2009 Avis au public (exploitation) N/A 51,269 Proposed Ecological Research Zone (not yet gazetted) TOTAL 903,584 Source of Information: SDIAF, MINFOF 2010. http://data.cameroun-foret.com/forest/forest-management-units Link to map: http://data.cameroun-foret.com/geobiep/atlas.php?zoom=4&lat=2.61157&lon=13.99585&layers=B00TFTT 38 Conservation concessions are a concept whereby the government or local resource users agree to protect an area in exchange for a steady stream of structured compensation from conservationists or other investors. 89 Annex 8: Biodiversity of the Ngoyla-Mintom Forest Massif. 1. According to Letouzey (1985), the Ngoyla-Mintom forest ecosystem is phytogeographically located in the Congolese „Dja district‟, marked by an absence of semi deciduous forest species and Atlantic Forest (including Ceasalpiniaceae, with the exception of the gregarious Ceasalpiniaceae such as Gilbertiodendron dewevrei), the presence of several species and some endemic genera known in Cameroon only in the Dja district, floristic attachment of the swamp forests of Haut-Nyong to Sterculia subviolacea to the Congo basin and important stands of Uapaca paludosa. The vegetation consists of the following major groups: evergreen rain forests (82% of the total), complex of swamp forest (15%), a mosaic of secondary forests, plantations and agricultural areas inhabited (1%), and forest clearings (2%). 2. A major plant and animal biodiversity is associated to this variety of vegetation types. Indeed, reconnaissance surveys carried out in the massif show the presence of more than 37 species of medium and large mammals (Nzooh, 2003) and 228 species of fish (Ulrich, 2007). In terms of other zoological groups (birds, reptiles, amphibians and Lepidoptera), evaluation performed in the adjacent protected areas (National Parks Boumba-Bek, and Nki Minkébé and the Dja Wildlife Reserve) shows that they are also equally represented (Bobo, 2002, Christy, 1994, Dowsett-Lemaire and Dowsett, 1998, MINFOF, 2005). 3. Among medium and large mammal species are found species which are internationally recognized as threatened, and therefore highly sensitive to anthropogenic pressures or disturbance of their habitats such as the bongo (Boocercus euryceros), buffalo (Syncerus caffer nanus), the Yellow-backed Duiker (Cephalophus sylvicultor) , the Water Chevrotin (Hyemoschus aquaticus), elephant (Loxodonta africana cyclotis), lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla), chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), mandrill (Mandrillus sphinx), leopard (Panthera pardus) and sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekei) (Nzooh, 2003). It seems that according to the values of the Indices of Kilometric Abundance (IKA) obtained at the end of the reconnaissance survey conducted in 2003, the Ngoyla-Mintom is still endowed with large populations of species of medium and large mammals (Nzooh , 2003). These values, compared with those obtained in the adjacent protected areas (Wall & Nku, 1999 Ekobo, 1988 Nzooh, 1999 and 2001, Nzooh et al, 2006) suggest an estimated population of 3,000 elephants, 4,000 gorillas and 1,500 chimpanzees. From the spatial distribution of the signs of activity of these species, it appears that high concentrations are found in the central and southern areas of this forest, mainly dominated by swamp forests. 4. The results of reconnaissance conducted in the Dja Reserve (Nzooh, 1999 & 2001) and in this forest (Nzooh, 2003), as well as wildlife inventories made in the National Park Minkebe (MIKE, 2005) and Nki (Nzooh et al 2006) have confirmed the existence of the elephant migration corridors between the Ngoyla-Mintom massif, the Dja Reserve (south-east), the Nki National Park (south-west) and the forest of Souanké-Sembé (Congo). Moreover, the distribution of elephant populations suggests the existence of another migration corridor between the Ngoyla-Mintom massif and the Forest Management Units 09-005a and 09-003 (between the villages and Lele Mintom), but which is now broken because of the anarchic settling of the population along the highway Mintom-Lele. The existence of these connections demonstrates the importance of the forests of Ngoyla-Mintom in the genetic flow between animal populations in protected areas of Dja, Boumba-Bek, and Nki Minkébé (Gabon). N.B. References available on request. 90 IBRD 39123 12°E 14°E 16°E CAMEROON Lake This map was produced by 1963 Level Chad the Map Design Unit of The CURRENT DESIGNATED 1973 Level World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and USES OF FORESTS AND 2001 Level any other information shown on this map do not imply, on To the part of The World Bank SAVANNA LANDS Fotokol Massaguet Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, Maltam or any endorsement or To acceptance of such Maiduguri boundaries. FOREST MANAGEMENT UNITS 12°N To Mandélia COMMUNAL AND COMMUNITY FORESTS CAMEROON NGOYLA MINTOM FOREST MANAGEMENT UNITS To Maiduguri NATIONAL PARKS AND WILDLIFE RESERVES OTHER PERMANENT FORESTS AND SAVANNA LANDS Mora CITIES AND TOWNS Maroua To Guelengdeng PROVINCE CAPITALS Yagoua NATIONAL CAPITAL Kaélé RIVERS 10°N To MAIN ROADS Figuil To Kim Pala RAILROADS To Leré INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARIES Garoua NIGERIA Touroua Bé no ué CHA D Sources: Global Forest Watch, World Resources Institute. Fa ro 0 40 80 120 160 Kilometers 8°N 8°N Mbé 0 40 80 120 Miles a Vin Ngai Ngaoundéré Banyo m ére Dj Wum Ngaoundal Tibati To Ikom Kumbo 6°N Bankim To 6°N Bamenda Sangbé Bouar Mamfe M Garoua Boulai bu Foumban Dschang Bafoussam Yoko Lo m CENT RA L A FR I CAN Bafang REPUBLI C Mb Bélabo Nkongsamba am Kadei Kumba Bertoua Yabassi Nanga Eboko Batouri i ur Wo Buea Ntui Tiko Akonolinga Abong Mbang Yola 4°N Limbe YAOUNDÉ 4°N Douala Edea Eséka EQUATORIAL Nyong Mbalmayo ba GUINEA Boum Yokadouma Lomié Echambot Kribi Ebolowa Sangmélima Lokomo Mintom Ngoyla Ambam Dja Kom Abong Mbang Mouloundou 2°N 2°N To Oyem G ul f o f EQUATORIAL GA BO N G ui n e a GUINEA CO NGO 10°E 12°E 14°E 16°E MARCH 2012 CAMEROON CURRENT DESIGNATED USES OF FORESTS AND SAVANNA LANDS PERMANENT FOREST DOMAIN: NON-PERMANENT FOREST DOMAIN: CAMEROON CAMEROON NATIONAL PARKS AND WILDLIFE RESERVES COMMUNITY FORESTS CITIES AND TOWNS Area of NGOYLA MINTOM FOREST MANAGEMENT UNITS MINING ZONES map RIVERS GABON PRODUCTION FORESTS (CONCESSIONS) RURAL LANDS UNPAVED ROADS CONGO COMMUNAL AND COUNCIL FORESTS INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARIES PROPOSED ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH ZONE to Abong Mbang 13°30’ 14°00’ 14°30’ 15°00’ to Ndelélé 3°30’ 3°30’ Nickel & Mwapak Yokadouma Cobalt Mine (Geovic) Médoum Yokadouma Zoulabot Nickel & Cobalt Mine (Geovic) Lomié Lomié-Messok DJA BIOSPHERE RESERVE Echambot Messok 3°00’ (Nemeyong) Nickel & to Moloundou 3°00’ Cobalt Mine (Geovic) Long Zoulabot 1 Malea Ancien to Sangmélima Mintom Lokomo BOUMBA BEK NATIONAL PARK NGOYLA-MINTOM Ngoyla FOREST MANAGEMENT NKI 2°30’ UNITS NATIONAL 2°30’ Dja Dom PARK Abong Mbang (Lele) Eta Chefferie 0 10 20 30 km. Iron Mine GABON (CAMIRON) Eta Frontière IBRD 39124 MARCH 2012 This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. MINKEBE The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group, C O N G O Ndongo NATIONAL PARK any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any endorsement 13°00’ or acceptance of such boundaries. 13°30’ 14°00’ 14°30’ Moloundou