Document of The World Bank FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Report No. PAD2738 INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION PROGRAM APPRAISAL DOCUMENT ON A PROPOSED SCALE-UP FACILITY CREDIT IN THE AMOUNT OF EURO 206.7 MILLION (US$250 MILLION EQUIVALENT) AND A PROPOSED GRANT IN THE AMOUNT OF SDR 34.8 MILLION (US$50 MILLION EQUIVALENT) TO BURKINA FASO FOR A WATER SUPPLY AND SANITATION PROGRAM-FOR-RESULTS June 5, 2018 Water Global Practice Africa Region 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 as of April 30, 2018) Currency Unit = XOF (CFA Franc) US$1.00 = XOF 542 US$1.00 = EUR 0.82668540 US$1.00 = SDR 0.69538182 FISCAL YEAR January 1 – December 31 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS AFD French Development Agency (Agence Française du Développement) AMOC Roadmap in Support of the Decentralization of Water Supply and Sanitation Services (Assistance à la Maîtrise d'Ouvrage Communale) ASCE-LC Superior Control and Anticorruption Authority (Autorité Supérieure de Contrôle d’Etat et de Lutte Contre la Corruption) BUNEE National Agency in charge of Environmental Assessments (Bureau National des Evaluations Environnementales) CAST Dedicated Treasury Special Account (Compte d’Affectation Spéciale Ouvert au Trésor) CEMEAU Centre of Water Businesses of ONEA (Centre des Métiers de l’Eau ONEA) CFE Financial Water Contribution (Contribution Financière d’Eau) DANIDA Danish International Development Agency DASS ONEA's Department of Sanitation (Direction de l’Assainissement) DGA General Directorate for Sanitation (Direction Générale de l’Assainissement) DGCMEF General Directorate for the Control of Public Tenders and Financial Engagements (Direction Générale du Contrôle Des Marchés et des Engagements Financiers) DGEP General Directorate for Water Supply (Direction Générale de l’Eau Potable) DGRE General Directorate for Water Resources (Direction Générale des Ressources en Eau) DGTCP General Directorate of the Treasury and Public Accounting (Direction Générale du Trésor et de la Comptabilité Publique) DISE Integrated Monitoring and Evaluation System (Dispositif Intégré de Suivi Evaluation) DLI Disbursement Linked Indicator DMP Public Procurement Directorate (Direction des Marchés Publics) DPAEP ONEA’s Ouagadougou Works Department (Direction Projec AEP Ouaga) DPI ONEA's Department of Planning and Investment (Direction de la Planification et des Investissements) DREA Regional Directorate for Water and Sanitation (Direction Régionale de l’Eau et de l’Assainissement) DRH Human Resources Directorate (Direction des Ressources Humaines) ESMS Environmental and Social Management System ESSA Environmental and Social Systems Assessment EU European Union GIS Geographic Information System GoBF Government of Burkina Faso GRS Grievance Redress Service IDA International Development Association IFSA Integrated Fiduciary Systems Assessment IGF General Finance Inspectorate (Inspection Générale des Finances) ITS Technical Inspection Services IVA Independent Verification Agency IWRM Integrated Water Resources Management M&E Monitoring and Evaluation MDG Millennium Development Goal MEA Ministry of Water and Sanitation (Ministère de l’Eau et l’Assainissement) MINEFID Ministry of Economy, Finance and Development (Ministère de l'Economie, des Finances et du Développement) MTGES Technical Manual for Environmental and Social Management (Manuel Technique pour la Gestion Environnementale et Sociale) NGO Non-goverment organization NPV Net Present value O&M Operation and Maintenance ONEA National Office for Urban Water Supply and Sanitation (Office National de l’Eau et de l’Assainissement) OP/BP Operations Manual/Bank Procedure PAGIRE Action Plan for Water Resource Management (Plan d’Action pour la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau) PAP Program Action Plan PCU Program Coordination Unit PDO Program Development Objective PforR Program-for-Results PGEA National Governance Program for the Water and Sanitation Sector (Programme Gouvernance du Secteur Eau et Assainissement à l'Horizon 2030) PN-AEP National Water Supply Program (Programme National d’Approvisionnement en Eau Potable à l'Horizon 2030) PN-AEPA National Water Supply and Sanitation Program (Programme National d'Approvisionnement en Eau Potable et d'Assainissement à l'Horizon 2015) PN-AEUE National Sanitation and Wastewater Program (Programme National d’Assainissement des Eaux Usées et Excréta à l'Horizon 2030) PN-AH National Program for Dam Development (Programme National des Aménagements Hydrauliques à l'Horizon 2030) PNDES National Economic and Social Development Program (Plan National de Développement Economique et Social à l’Horizon 2020) PN-GIRE National Program for Integrated Water Resource Management (Programme National pour la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau à l'Horizon 2030) POM Program Operations Manual PPP Public-private Partnership PSU ONEA’s Program Support Unit RA Results Area SCD Systematic Country Diagnostic SDG Sustainable Development Goal SDR Special Drawing Rights ii SIDA Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency SISC Strategic Implementation Support Consultants SNIEau National Water Information System (Système National d’Information sur l’Eau) SP-GIRE Permanent Secretariat for Integrated Water Resource Management (Secrétariat Permanent de la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau) SUF IDA Scale-up Facility ToR Terms of Reference UNICEF United Nations Children’s Fund WAEMU West African Economic and Monetary Union WUA Water Users’ Association (Association d’Usagers de l’Eau) Regional Vice President: Makhtar Diop Country Director: Pierre Frank Laporte Senior Global Practice Director: Guang Zhe Chen Practice Manager: Steven N. Schonberger Task Team Leaders: Carolina Dominguez Torres, Seydou Traore iii BASIC INFORMATION B Is this a regionally tagged project? Financing Instrument No Program-for-Results Financing Bank/IFC Collaboration Does this operation have an IPF component? No No Proposed Program Development Objective(s) The Program Development Objective (PDO) is to improve access to water supply and sanitation services in targeted areas Organizations Borrower: Burkina Faso Implementing Ministry of Water and Sanitation (Ministère de l’Eau et l’Assainissement, MEA) Agency: National Office for Urban Water Supply and Sanitation (Office National de l’Eau et de l’Assainissement, ONEA) COST & FINANCING SUMMARY (USD Millions) Total Project Cost 365.00 Countepart funding 65.00 International Development Association (IDA) Grant 50.00 Scale-Up Facility (SUF) 250.00 Total Program Financing 365.00 Financing Gap 0.00 Financing (USD Millions) Expected Disbursements (USD Millions) Fiscal Year 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Absolute 26.1 64.8 86.8 74.3 37.4 10.6 Cumulative 26.1 90.9 177.7 252.0 289.4 300.0 INSTITUTIONAL DATA Practice Area (Lead) Water Contributing Practice Areas Climate Change and Disaster Screening Yes iv Private Capital Mobilized No Gender Tag Does the program plan to undertake any of the following? a. Analysis to identify Project-relevant gaps between males and females, especially in light of country gaps identified through SCD and CPF: YES b. Specific action(s) to address the gender gaps identified in (a) and/or to improve women or men's empowerment: YES c. Include Indicators in results framework to monitor outcomes from actions identified in (b): YES SYSTEMATIC OPERATIONS RISK-RATING TOOL (SORT) Risk Category Rating 1. Political and Governance Moderate 2. Macroeconomic Moderate 3. Sector Strategies and Policies Moderate 4. Technical Design of Project or Program Substantial 5. Institutional Capacity for Implementation and Substantial Sustainability 6. Fiduciary Substantial 7. Environment and Social Moderate 8. Stakeholders Moderate 9. Other 10. Overall Substantial COMPLIANCE Policy Does the program depart from the CPF in content or in other significant respects? [ ] Yes [✔] No Does the program require any waivers of Bank policies? [ ] Yes [✔] No Safeguard Policies Triggered Safeguard Policies Yes No Projects on International Waterways OP/BP 7.50 ✔ Projects in Disputed Areas OP/BP 7.60 ✔ ii Legal Covenants Sections and Description The Recipient shall (i) establish by no later than 90 days after the Effective Date and thereafter maintain the Steering Committee (Comite de Revue), chaired by the Secretary General of MEA, and integrated by functionaries of the Recipient’s entities participating in the Program, with resources, staffing and terms of reference satisfactory to the Association, for purposes of advising the MEA and the Program Implementing Entity on matters relative to the carrying out of the Program; and (ii) ensure the Steering Committee meets at a minimum two times per year in ordinary sessions -and as needed in extraordinary sessions- for the purposes of (A) reviewing and adopting the Program’s implementation plan in conformity with the POM; (B) reviewing and adopting the Program’s evaluations; (C) reviewing and adopting the financial reports; the annual activity, budget, and procurement plans; and carries out other advisory functions provided for steering committees of development projects and programs by the Recipient’s Decree 2018-0092/PRES/PM/MINEFID of February 15, 2018 on regulation of development projects and programs implemented in Burkina Faso. Sections and Description The Recipient shall maintain the PCU throughout the implementation of the Program with resources, staffing and terms of reference satisfactory to the Association. Sections and Description The Recipient shall cause the Program Implementing Entity to carry out its Respective Parts of the Program and coordinate all related Program activities including reporting on the achievements of the Disbursement Linked Indicators (as defined in Section IV of Schedule 2), with MEA, all in accordance with the POM. Sections and Description The Recipient shall cause the Program Implementing Entity to maintain the PSU throughout the implementation of the Program with resources, staffing and terms of reference satisfactory to the Association. The PSU shall report to the PCU. Sections and Description The Recipient shall by no later than the date eight months following the Effective Date, recruit, under terms of reference and in a manner satisfactory to the Association, the Independent Verification Agent for purposes of carrying out the independent verification of all DLIs and achievement of the DLRs, pursuant to the criteria and procedures set out in the POM. Sections and Description The Recipient shall submit to the Association the corresponding verification reports in a timely manner and in form and substance satisfactory to the Association. Sections and Description To facilitate the carrying out of the Program Implementing Entity’s Respective Parts of the Program, the Recipient shall make part of the proceeds of the Credit available to the Program Implementing Entity under a subsidiary agreement between the Recipient and the Program Implementing Entity, under terms and conditions approved by the Association (“Subsidiary Agreement”). Sections and Description In the carrying out of its Respective Parts of the Program, the Recipient, through MEA and the PCU shall be supported by: iii (i) the General Directorate for Water Supply and the General Directorate for Sanitation in the implementation of activities under Parts 1(d) and 2(b), which shall work through the Regional Directorates for Water and Sanitation to implement Program activities related to rural water supply and sanitation, in particular to ensure data collection for the verification of results; (ii) the Permanent Secretariat for Integrated Water Resource Management in the implementation of activities under Part 3, working in close collaboration with the General Directorate for Water Resources; and (iii) the Human Resources Directorate in the implementation of activities under Part 4(a). Sections and Description The Recipient shall cause the Program Implementing Entity to carry out its Respective Parts of the Program through the PSU, with the support of: (i) the Ouagadougou Works Department in the implementation of the water supply-related activities in Part 1 related to the city of Ouagadougou; (ii) the Department of Planning and Investment in the implementation of the urban water supply- related activities under Part 1 that are not related to the water supply to the city of Ouagadougou; (iii) the Department of Sanitation in the implementation of activities under Part 2(a); and (iv) the Human Resources Department implementation of activities under Part 4(b). Sections and Description The Recipient shall ensure that the Program excludes any activities which: A. in the opinion of the Association, are likely to have significant adverse impacts that are sensitive, diverse, or unprecedented on the environment and/or affected people, including but not limited to schemes that involve construction or rehabilitation of dams that are greater or equal to 10 m in height, sludge treatment plans, extensions of the sewerage system, groundwater-based schemes in overexploited and critical basins that do not integrate source sustainability measures, undertaking of any activity that uses asbestos, and undertaking of any activity involving major land acquisition; or B. involve the procurement of: (1) works, estimated to cost US$75,000,000 equivalent or more per contract; (2) goods, estimated to cost US$50,000,000 equivalent or more per contract; (3) non- consulting services, estimated to cost US$50,000,000 equivalent or more per contract; or (4) consulting services, estimated to cost US$20,000,000 equivalent or more per contract. Conditions Type Description The Financing Agreement for the Credit and Grant has been executed and delivered and all conditions precedent to its effectiveness or to the right of the Recipient to Effectiveness make withdrawals under it (other than the effectiveness of the Financing Agreement) have been fulfilled. The Recipient has established the PCU in a manner and with composition, functions, and resources satisfactory to the Association, including a Program coordinator, a Effectiveness monitoring and evaluation specialist, a procurement specialist, a financial management specialist, an environmental safeguards specialist, a social safeguards specialist, and an internal controller. The Recipient has opened the account referred to in Section 2.02 of the Financing Effectiveness Agreement. iv The Subsidiary Agreement has been executed on behalf of the Recipient and the Effectiveness Program Implementing Entity. The Program Implementing Entity has established the PSU in a manner and with composition, functions, and resources satisfactory to the Association, including a unit Effectiveness coordinator, a monitoring and evaluation specialist, a procurement specialist, a financial management specialist, an environmental safeguards specialist, and a social safeguards specialist. The Recipient and the Program Implementing Entity have adopted the Program Effectiveness Operations Manual for their respective Parts in form and substance satisfactory to the Association. TASK TEAM Bank Staff Name Role Specialization Unit Carolina Dominguez Torres Team Leader(ADM Water and Sanitation GWA07 Responsible) Seydou Traore Team Leader Water and Sanitation GWA07 Matar Fall Team Member Water and Sanitation GWA07 Mohamed El Hafedh Hendah Procurement Procurement GGOPF Specialist(ADM Responsible) Mamata Tiendrebeogo Team Member Procurement GGOPF Jean Charles Amon Kra Financial Management Financial Management GGOAW Specialist Gabriel Dedu Team Member Fraud and Corruption GGOAW Abdoulaye Gadiere Environmental Safeguards Environmental Safeguards GEN07 Specialist Gertrude Marie Mathilda Social Safeguards Social Safeguards GSU01 Coulibaly Zombre Specialist Jean Vincent Koua Team Member GWA07 Bienvenue Helene Karambiri Team Member AFMBF Lilian Pena Peer Reviewer Water and Sanitation GWA02 Abedalrazq F. Khalil Peer Reviewer Water Resources GWA02 Management Jane Jamieson Peer Reviewer PPP GTIFP Susanna Smets Peer Reviewer Water and Sanitation GWA03 v BURKINA FASO Burkina Faso Water Supply and Sanitation Program TABLE OF CONTENTS I. STRATEGIC CONTEXT ..................................................................................................................1 A. Country Context................................................................................................................................ 1 B. Sectoral and Institutional Context .................................................................................................... 2 C. Relationship to the CAS/CPF and Rationale for Use of Instrument .................................................. 5 II. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION.............................................................................................................7 A. Program Development Objective(s) (PDO) and PDO Level Results Indicators ................................. 7 B. PforR Program Scope ........................................................................................................................ 8 C. Disbursement Linked Indicators and Verification Protocols .......................................................... 15 III. PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION .................................................................................................. 18 A. Institutional and Implementation Arrangements .......................................................................... 18 B. Results Monitoring and Evaluation................................................................................................. 19 C. Disbursement Arrangements.......................................................................................................... 20 D. Capacity Building ............................................................................................................................ 21 IV. ASSESSMENT SUMMARY .......................................................................................................... 21 A. Technical (including program economic evaluation) ..................................................................... 21 B. Fiduciary.......................................................................................................................................... 24 C. Environmental and Social ............................................................................................................... 26 D. Risk Assessment ............................................................................................................................. 29 ANNEX 1. DETAILED PROGRAM DESCRIPTION ................................................................................... 30 ANNEX 2. RESULTS FRAMEWORK MATRIX ........................................................................................ 67 ANNEX 3. DISBURSEMENT LINKED INDICATORS, DISBURSEMENT ARRANGEMENTS AND VERIFICATION PROTOCOLS ..................................................................................................................................... 75 ANNEX 4. SUMMARY OF TECHNICAL ASSESSMENT ............................................................................ 90 ANNEX 5. SUMMARY OF THE INTEGRATED FIDUCIARY SYSTEMS ASSESSMENT .................................. 93 ANNEX 6. SUMMARY OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL SYSTEMS ASSESSMENT ............................. 103 ANNEX 7. PROGRAM ACTION PLAN ................................................................................................ 113 ANNEX 8. IMPLEMENTATION SUPPORT PLAN ................................................................................. 116 ANNEX 9. MAP OF THE PROGRAM’S WATER SUPPLY AND SANITATION TARGETED AREAS ............... 118 I. STRATEGIC CONTEXT A. Country Context 1. Despite strong economic performance, averaging 5.5 percent growth per year over the last 15 years, Burkina Faso remains one of the poorest countries in the world. Burkina Faso’s economy is heavily reliant on agricultural production (especially cotton), with roughly 80 percent of employment linked to subsistence farming and contributing to 40 percent of the gross domestic product. More than 40 percent (or 7.7 million) of the population lived below the poverty line in 2014, and remain almost completely excluded from basic services and from access to infrastructure. Per capita gross national income was US$627 in 2016. The country ranked 185 among 188 countries included in the 2015 Human Development Index. 2. Burkina Faso’s population is growing rapidly, increasing pressure on service delivery and water resources. At an annual growth rate of 3.1 percent, the estimated population of 19.5 million in 2017 is expected to grow to 29 million in 2030. Furthermore, Burkina Faso experiences one of the fastest urbanization rates on the continent, at 5.7 percent per year. This is particularly evident in the capital city of Ouagadougou, and the second city of Bobo-Dioulasso, which have annual population growth rates of 7.2 percent and 11 percent, respectively. Still, 70 percent of the population lives in rural areas where access to services, including adequate water and sanitation, are significantly lagging urban areas, particularly in the southwest regions where the Program will intervene. 3. The sustainability of water resources is a significant concern in Burkina Faso. Water resources play a pivotal role for hydropower generation, agriculture, fisheries, domestic water supply, and industry. At 852 m3 per year per person, Burkina Faso’s available renewable water resource per capita is well below the water scarcity threshold of 1,000 m3 per year per person. This is further aggravated by the hydro- geological conditions and flat topography which lead to much of the rainfall becoming unavailable through run off, evaporation and deep infiltration, with major impacts on year-round access to water. Whereas the country is crossed by five main cross-border rivers,1 only two of them are permanent year-round. About 80 percent of the country is located on low-yield, hard-rock aquifers. Rapid population growth, environmental degradation, and pollution of water resources2 increase the vulnerability of Burkina Faso’s hydrological systems. 4. Climate change is expected to have significant impacts on water resource availability in the country. Water resources are highly vulnerable to climate change due to their intrinsic relation to rain, temperature, and wind patterns. Average temperature increases are projected to be 0.8°C by 2025, and 1.7°C by 2050; accompanied by a rainfall reduction of 3.4 percent by 2025, and 7.3 percent by 2050, with significant inter-annual and seasonal variations3. It is expected that by 2050, there will be significant reductions in water volumes in Burkina Faso’s major river basins: Comoe (69 percent), Mouhoun (73 percent), Nakambe (30 percent), and Niger (42 percent). Evidence-based decision making, including for allocating water resources across uses and for climate change mitigation and adaption planning, is hampered by insufficient, unreliable, and outdated knowledge of the location and quantity of surface and 1 Mouhoun - Black Volta, Nakambé - White Volta, Nazinon - Red Volta, Comoé, and Niger River. 2 Water resources are increasingly polluted due to mining and industrial activities, agricultural production (pesticides and herbicides for cotton), and urban sewage. 3 National Plan for Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation. groundwater resources; by outdated and dilapidated observation networks; and by the lack of a repository for water-related information. B. Sectoral and Institutional Context 5. Since the mid-1990s the Government of Burkina Faso (GoBF) has built a comprehensive and well-defined legal and institutional framework for water supply, sanitation and integrated water resources management (IWRM). The Ministry of Water and Sanitation (Ministère de l’Eau et l’Assainissement, MEA), created in 2016, is responsible for determining priorities, setting policies and standards for water development, managing and regulating water resources, and regulating water and sanitation services. The National Office for Urban Water Supply and Sanitation (Office National de l’Eau et de l’Assainissement, ONEA), an autonomous publicly owned utility, is responsible for the provision of water supply, on-site sanitation, and sewerage services in 57 urban centers in Burkina Faso. Since 2009, as part of the decentralization process, the municipalities are responsible for planning, developing, and delivering water supply and sanitation services in rural areas. However, transfer of responsibilities to municipalities has not been accompanied by adequate financial and human resources. Significant policy reforms have taken place, including: the commercialization and modernization of ONEA; the delegation of water supply operations in rural areas to water user associations (Association d’Usagers de l’Eau, WUAs), non-government organizations (NGOs), and private operators; and, the adoption of IWRM principles in national policies and plans. 6. GoBF has developed a program approach focused on improving water supply and sanitation services and IWRM. In 2003, GoBF adopted the Action Plan for IWRM (Plan d’Action pour la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau, PAGIRE, 2003–2015), under which five river basin organizations were created and two adopted master plans for water management and water sources’ protection. However, the river basin organizations are not fully operational and are understaffed. In 2006, the GoBF adopted the National Water Supply and Sanitation Program (Programme National d'Approvisionnement en Eau Potable et d' Assainissement 2015, PN-AEPA 2006-2015). The PN-AEPA encompassed a US$1 billion investment program for achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in urban and rural areas4, within a framework of IWRM. Under the PN-AEPA access to water and sanitation services was improved, though in rural areas the results were below expectations. Also, improvements in institutional arrengements, programming, monitoring and evaluation (M&E), and better harmonization of the reporting system were achieved. Finally, in 2016 a dedicated line ministry (the MEA) was created. 7. More recently, GoBF adopted a second generation of sectoral programs for 2016–2030. Based on the National Development Economic and Social Development Plan Program (Programme National de Développement Économique et Social, PNDES, 2016–2020), the National Water Policy for 2016–2030, and in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),5 GoBF adopted: (a) the National Water Supply Program (Programme National d’Approvisionnement en Eau Potable 2016–2030, PN-AEP); (b) the National Sanitation and Wastewater Program (Programme National d’Assainissement des Eaux Usées et Excreta 2016–2030, PN-AEUE); (c) the National Program for IWRM (Programme National pour la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau 2016–2030, PN-GIRE); (d) the National Water and Sanitation Governance Program (Programme Gouvernance du Secteur Eau et Assainissement 2016–2030, PGEA); and (e) the 4 The aim of the MDGs was to halve, by 2015, the proportion of people without adequate access to drinking water and sanitation as compared to 2005. 5 For the sector, SDG 6 provides for universal access to water supply and end to open defecation by 2030. 2 National Plan for Dam Development (Programme National des Aménagements Hydrauliques 2016–2030, PN-AH). These five programs reflect GoBF's response to sectoral issues and challenges. 8. In urban areas, ONEA’s institutional transformation program coupled with capital investments, resulted in a significant increase in access to improved water in urban areas - from 37 percent to 91 percent - between 1990 and 2016. Key measures taken included the recruitment of dedicated and experienced management, the increase in water supply by the construction of the Ziga Dam, a service contract with a private operator, and the introduction of block rates. However, the urban water sector faces a major sustainability challenge associated with increasing water demand, driven by strong urban population growth, in particular in Ouagadougou (ONEA’s largest center). 9. Despite its strong operational performance, ONEA’s financial equilibrium is fragile. ONEA is a well-performing utility, with 2.8 staff per 1,000 connections and 18 percent of non-revenue water (compared to median values of 11.0 and 35 percent region-wide). In the last few years ONEA has been able to cover operation and maintenance (O&M) costs, debt service, and make a partial contribution to capital expenditures. Yet, ONEA’s financial viability is threatened by: (a) the lack of regular tariff adjustments to reflect pass-through changes to increasing operational costs such as energy, chemicals and labor; (b) a tariff structure that heavily relies on industrial and commercial customers to cross- subsidize the lifeline tariff; (c) the significant change in the customer profile, whereby new customers are generally limiting consumption at the level of the highly subsidized lifeline tariff below 8 m3 per month; (d) rapid, spatially extensive growth in peri-urban areas - in particular in Ouagadougou and Bobo- Dioulasso - requiring significant investments in network expansion; and, (e) the addition of fast growing towns, with poorly developed infrastructure, to ONEA’s coverage area. 10. Progress in rural areas has been accompanied by a major service delivery reform. Between 1990 and 2016, access to an improved water source increased from only 10 percent to 65 percent in rural areas, though significant disparities remained, with lower rates in the southwestern regions. In 2000, GoBF introduced a substantial reform whereby boreholes equipped with hand pumps were to be managed by WUAs through a delegation agreement signed between the municipality and the WUA. Pump maintenance and repair are ensured by an operator based on a contract signed with the municipality. Water supply systems are to be managed by a third party (private operator, NGO, or ONEA), recruited by the municipality based on competitive bidding. 11. The successful implementation of the rural water reform is demonstrated by remarkable functionality rates of 88.6 percent for the hand pumps, and 84.3 percent for the rural water systems. In 2014, GoBF undertook several initiatives to address the challenge of securing provisions for O&M and extending rural water supply systems, such as adopting the Roadmap in Support of the Decentralization of Water Supply and Sanitation Services (Assistance à la Maîtrise d'Ouvrage Communale, or AMOC), developing a tariff study for rural water; and developing a public-private partnership (PPP) strategy for the water sector. Currently, 6,834 WUAs have signed a delegation agreement with the municipality (84.8 percent out of 8,059 recognized WUAs); 155 out of 623 recognized private providers have signed a contract for O&M; and 12 operators have been delegated the management of 445 water supply systems (57 percent of the existing 780 systems), of which 22 are operated by ONEA and 267 by private operators (mainly local). However, major challenges remain, including: professionalizing private sector operators; improving water supply systems management; strengthening municipal technical services for the delegation and supervision of water supply systems; improving cost recovery; and ensuring equal access. 3 12. Expanding access to improved sanitation has been much more challenging. Only one out of five people has access to improved sanitation facilities overall, and even in urban areas, only 38 percent of the population has access to improved sanitation services6. Despite the close-to-universal reliance on on-site sanitation facilities, sludge emptying is informal and only four sludge treatment plants exist in Ouagadougou and Bobo-Dioulasso with a combined treatment capacity of less than 1,000 m3/day of sludge. There is no strategy in place for sludge treatment management. Sewerage networks only exist in the Ouagadougou business district, and serve less than 1 percent of Ouagadougou’s population. Sanitation fees are insufficient, varying between US$0.03 and US$0.10 per m3 of water consumed, depending on the type of sanitation facility. 13. In rural areas, only 12 percent of the population have access to improved sanitation facilities and around 75 percent of rural households still practice open defecation. Substantial awareness, education and behavioral change campaigns are needed to increase demand for improved sanitation facilities and their use, as past experience has shown that the population does not understand, or is not convinced of, the beneficial effects of latrines. Local capacity for building latrines in rural areas is also a limitation. 14. Public latrines in schools, health centers and public places in urban and rural areas are insufficient, often poorly built and without permanent handwashing facilities. In addition, the existing ones are often poorly managed and insufficiently maintained. 15. World Bank engagement in the sector. Over the last two decades, the World Bank has been one of Burkina Faso’s leading partners in the development of the water and sanitation sector. Through the World Bank financed Ouagadougou Water Supply Project (P000306, 2001–2007), new water storage capacity (the Ziga Dam) and a primary transmission network were developed, in addition to secondary and tertiary water distribution networks, and social connections (household and standpipes) to low- income households. The World Bank support was key for the successful turnaround of ONEA, by promoting efficiency in urban water supply operations and contracting out ONEA's commercial, financial, and accounting functions. Under the ongoing Urban Water Sector Project (P106909, 2008–2018), a significant increase in access to improved water and sanitation services has been achieved through the provision of social connections, household latrines, and school latrines in main urban areas (Ouagadougou, Bobo-Dioulasso, Koudougou, and Dedougou); and ONEA’s financial equilibrium and performance has been maintained. Through the World Bank-financed pilot project for the delegation of the management of water supply systems to private operators in peri-urban settlements in Ouagadougou, in 2015, more than 107,000 people gained access to improved water services. On the rural front, under the World Bank-financed Community-Based Rural Development Project (P035673, 2001–2013), about 1.4 million people in rural areas gained access to clean water. Furthermore, the World Bank has supported rural water supply development through the Water and Sanitation Program for more than a decade, including the development of a private sector strategy for rural water systems and a pro-poor water tariff study. In June 2017, in response to the Government’s request, the World Bank completed an assessment of IWRM) in the country,7 providing a detailed road map to improve IWRM, including strengthening the knowledge of water resources in the country. 6 The country did not achieve the urban sanitation MDG target of 57 percent of the urban population served by an improved sanitation facility in 2015. 7 Based on the priorities identified established by the PN-GIRE 2016–2030. 4 16. Vision and priorities of GoBF. GoBF’s vision is that by 2030, the country's water resources are defined and effectively managed to achieve universal access to improved water and sanitation services to contribute to sustainable development, in line with the SDG 6. Accordingly, the National Water Policy includes the following priorities: (a) ensuring universal access to water and sanitation with a major emphasis on the poorest and most vulnerable populations; (b) improving the knowledge and management of water resources in the country through research and human capital strengthening; (c) promoting the long-term sustainability of the sector including increasingly engaging the private sector in the management of water supply systems, giving priority to maintenance of existing investments, mobilizing internal resources for the sustainable financing of the sector; and (d) promoting regional and international cooperation in the management of shared water resources. C. Relationship to the CAS/CPF and Rationale for Use of Instrument 17. The Program is aligned with the World Bank’s twin goals of ending extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity, and with GoBF’s priority to improve Burkina Faso’s human, physical, natural, and institutional capital8. The Program will contribute to reducing poverty, foster inclusion and shared prosperity in Burkina Faso through improvements in water supply and sanitation services in underserved areas (peri-urban areas, secondary towns, and rural areas). By strengthening water resources information and monitoring, the Program will allow for evidence-based decision making and planning when it comes to allocation of water resources across sectors, contributing to mitigating the impacts of climate change. Also, the Program will have a strong focus on reducing the bias against women, by providing adequate water and sanitation services and supporting opportunities for women through human capital strengthening activities. Finally, the Program is aligned with the upcoming Country Partnership Framework (FY18-FY23) objective 2.4 of expanding access to water and sanitation services to the poor. 18. The Program will contribute towards the achievement of SDG 6 which calls for universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking water, sanitation and hygiene for all by 2030. In particular, the Program will contribute to SDG target 6.1 “By 2030, achieve universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking water for all”; SDG target 6.2 “By 2030, achieve access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene for all and end open defecation, paying special attention to the needs of women and girls and those in vulnerable situations”; and SDG target 6.5 “By 2030, implement IWRM at all levels, including through transboundary cooperation as appropriate”. 19. Human capital strengthening. The Program will support the Government’s efforts to strengthen the sector’s human capital for provision of water supply and sanitation services and water resource monitoring and management at the national and municipal levels. Focus will be placed on developing win- win partnerships between government agencies, municipalities, and selected universities and research centers and support applied research and technical and vocational training (bachelor, master, and doctorate levels) to provide MEA, ONEA, and municipal technical services with qualified staff in key disciplines where skills are most needed. A strong focus will be placed on benefiting women with the training opportunities financed by the Program, in particular to increase the number of qualified female staff in technical positions in MEA, ONEA, and municipal technical services. Finally, there will be a strong emphasis on the strengthening of human resources linked to IWRM as a means to ensure the use of the 8 SCD Report No. 114393, March 2017. 5 knowledge developed under the Program and the sustainability of the decision-support model for the management of the aquifers. 20. Citizen engagement. Citizen engagement is at the core of the institutional reform process whereby water will be delivered with increased accountability, transparency, and local-level grievance mechanisms. Communities and municipalities in the Program areas will be involved in identifying priority investments in their respective areas, through public consultations and meetings. Female beneficiaries and women’s groups will be actively engaged to reflect women’s voices in identifying investments of significance to them. The communities will also be involved in monitoring the quality of civil works through community monitoring processes. 21. Climate change. The Program was screened for climate change and disaster risk using the World Bank screening tool and concluded that the Program risk to climate change and disaster is moderate based on Burkina Faso’s exposure to climate and geophysical hazards, including droughts, floods, and extreme temperatures. The capacity of GoBF to cope with climate change impacts still needs to be developed. Data availability is limited due to inadequate forecast and monitoring systems, which limits the capacity to make reliable forecasts on extreme weather events, and therefore affects the quality of decision making at the central, departmental, and municipal levels. The Program aims at building resilience against some of these risks. The Program will include a dedicated results area (RA) to enhance water resource knowledge and monitoring, which in turn will contribute toward climate change mitigation and adaptation knowledge gaps. 22. IDA Scale-Up Facility (SUF). SUF financing has been mobilized for the Program in view of its strong, transformative development impact in terms of rapidly accelerating access to basic water and sanitation services while laying the basis for increased private participation in service delivery. Specifically: (a) more than 1.1 million people will benefit from improved water supply and 1.3 million people from improved sanitation services; and (b) improvements in the sustainability of service delivery, including on O&M of assets and cost-recovery, will provide the basis for mobilizing private sector financing. By improving ONEA’s operational efficiency, establishing an effective asset management approach for rural water supply and sanitation, updating the financial modeling and revising the tariff structures in urban and rural areas, and delegating rural water supply and sanitation services to private operators, the Program will create the enabling environment to attract private capital on a nation-wide basis either for direct financing and operation of larger scale assets, such as water or sludge treatment facilities, or through the private, delegated operators who will have some rehabilitation and network extension responsibilities as is already occurring with peri-urban operators. Rationale for Using the Program-for-Results (PforR) instrument 23. The PforR is the most appropriate instrument for supporting GoBF’s program approach for the sector. The PforR instrument will enhance the impact of the World Bank’s financial and technical support and strengthen the overall results orientation of GoBF. In doing so, it will contribute to: x Program ownership. The highest levels of GoBF are committed to achieve the objectives of the PN-AEP, the PN-AEUE, and the PN-GIRE programs, which are under implementation since 2017. The PforR instrument will support the GoBF program approach to improve water supply, sanitation, and IWRM. x Improvements in implementation of government programs. The Program provides an opportunity to support and strengthen the implementation of government programs and 6 improves the institutional framework and stakeholder capacity for the management of water and sanitation services and water resources. The World Bank’s technical assessment of the quality of the Program, including the Results Framework, expenditure framework, and supporting systems, is satisfactory and the Program systems meet the World Bank policy requirements (OP/BP 9.00). Although the Program will support specific interventions, the World Bank’s contribution is anticipated to foster improvements in terms of effectiveness and efficiency in the overall water supply and sanitation sector over the next 13 years (the implementation period for the PN-AEP, the PN-AEUE, and the PN-GIRE is 2016–2030). x Improvements in national systems and procedures. The Program builds upon the country’s fiduciary and environmental and social management systems (ESMS), which were evaluated as adequate for Program implementation. Through the Program Action Plan (PAP) the Program will continue to provide support to strengthen country fiduciary systems related to audits, budgeting and planning, and compliance with procurement deadlines. Also, the PAP includes actions related to the strengthening of the ESMS related to the environmental and social management of the Program investments and environmental and social management capacity of MEA and ONEA. x Results orientation. The choice of the PforR instrument responds to GoBF’s commitment to programmatic approaches focused on results, rather than donor-focused investment execution as reflected in the Matrix of Sector Performance Indicators for 2017–2020.9 The use of the PforR instrument will establish clear links between IDA disbursements and the delivery of results, as demonstrated by the inclusion of seven disbursement link indicators (DLIs). In doing so, the PforR instrument reinforces GoBF’s shared results orientation. x Coordination with other development partners. The PforR instrument facilitates coordination between development partners and the Government. The Program builds upon the past experience of the country in implementing result based sectoral budget support programs for water and sanitation, financed by the European Union (EU), the Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA), and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) over the past 10 years. II. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION A. Program Development Objective(s) (PDO) and PDO Level Results Indicators 24. The PDO is to improve access to water supply and sanitation services in targeted areas. 25. Two PDO level indicators will be used to monitor progress towards the achievement of the PDO: (a) People provided with access to an improved water source under the Program (number, disaggregated by female, urban, rural); and (b) People provided with access to improved sanitation facilities under the Program (number, disaggregated by female, urban, rural). A set of intermediate results indicators will be used to measure and track intermediate steps toward achieving the PDO. Details, including indicator definitions and targets, are provided in Annex 2. 9 Matrice des Indicateurs de Performances 2017–2020 du Secteur Eau et Assainissement that clearly identifies specific actions, and corresponding indicators, to be undertaken under each of the five sectoral programs. 7 B. PforR Program Scope Government Programs 26. The Program will support key objectives of the PN-AEP and the PN-AEUE in targeted areas, and the PN-GIRE. These three programs aim at providing universal access to water supply and sanitation services, in the context of the SDG 6, and strengthen IWRM. Specifically, the Program will support the following objectives10: (a) for the PN-AEP: ensure sustainable access to improved water supply services in urban and rural areas, sustainable manage water supply infrastructure, and improve capacity for water supply management; (b) for the PN-AEUE: ensure sustainable access to improved sanitation services in urban and rural areas, eradicate open defecation by promoting behavioral change, optimize wastewater and sludge management, develop research in the field of wastewater treatment and on-site sanitation, and build capacity for subsector financing, management and steering; and, (c) for the PN-GIRE: improve water resources information for decision making, and develop reliable decision-making support tools. 27. The estimated cost of these three national programs (PN-AEP, PN-AEUE, and PN-GIRE) for the 2016-2030 period is estimated at US$5 billion. The required financial resources for the next five years equal US$1.1 billion. The Water Supply and Sanitation Program consists of three RAs that are mapped to the national PN-AEP, PN-AEUE and PN-GIRE programs11. World Bank-Financed Program-for-Results - ‘The Program’ 28. The Program supported by the World Bank focuses on results aimed at: (a) increasing access, sustainability, effectiveness, and responsibility for the delivery of water supply and sanitation services in urban and rural areas; (b) strengthening the knowledge base for IWRM; and (c) boosting human capital for sustainable service delivery. The duration of the Program will be five years, with targeted completion in December 2023. Table 1. Geographical Scope of Activities Results Area (RA) Urban Rural RA 1. Improved access to water 11 centers of ONEA: Ouagadougou, Kaya, Korsimoro, Selected communities of 64 supply Boussouma, Yako, Gourcy, Boussé, Gon-Boussougou, municipalities of four Mogtédo, Béguédo, and Tiébélé targeted regions (Hauts- RA 2. Improved access to The 11 centers indicated above plus Dédougou, Bassins, Boucle du Mouhoun, sanitation Nouna, and Bobo-Dioulasso Cascades, and the Southwest) RA 3. Improved access to reliable information on water Nationwide resources Cross-cutting. Human capital strengthening Nationwide 29. Scope of the Program. Given the broad coverage of the PN-AEP, the PN-AEUE, and the PN-GIRE, and the limited resources available through the Program, a selective approach to supporting the PN-AEP, 10 The Program supports the objectives of these programs as follows: (a) for the PN-AEP, the objectives defined in Table 16 of Section 3.6. of the PN-AEP; (b) for the PN-AEUE, the objectives defined in Section 2.1.2 of the PN-AEP; and (c) for the PN-GIRE, the objectives No. 5 and 6 defined in Table 3 of Section 6 of the PN-GIRE. 11 See Annex 1 for more details, in particular Table A1.2 that presents the specific objectives of each of the three national programs supported by the Program. 8 the PN-AEUE, and the PN-GIRE has been adopted. The Program supports the objectives of the PN-AEP and the PN-AEUE in targeted areas for investments related to increasing access to water supply and sanitation; and selected objectives of the PN-GIRE related to strengthening the knowledge and monitoring of water resources (Table 1). The Program further supports sectoral reforms and human capital strengthening to improve the performance of the sectors covered by the Program. 30. In urban areas, the Program will intervene in a total of 14 urban centers. In 11 urban centers, the interventions will include water supply and sanitation, while in three urban centers, the Program will intervene only in delivering sanitation services12 (Table 1 and Annex 9). Activities include strengthening of existing systems, creating new water supply systems, and boosting access rates to improved water and sanitation facilities. About 69 percent of the total urban population resides in the cities of Ouagadougou, Bobo-Dioulasso, Kaya, Gourcy, Yako, Dédougou, Nouna, Gon-Boussougou, Tiébélé, Korsimoro, Béguédo, Boussé, Boussouma, Mogtédo. These cities are characterized by rapid population growth. The selection of urban areas also considers the low level of production and pumping capacity in the Kaya and Yako, the reinforcement of which will be the basis to improve services to neighboring centers (Korsimoro, Boussouma, Gourcy, and Boussé). Finally, the Program will intervene in four new centers where the current access to improved water supply is below 30 percent. 31. In rural areas, the Program will intervene in four targeted regions: Hauts-Bassins, Boucle du Mouhoun, Cascades, and Southwest. These regions were selected based on the low rates of access to improved water supply (less than 70 percent), which are among the lowest rates of the country; and, the low rates of access to improved sanitation facilities (less than 12 percent), also among the lowest in the country. The selection also considered the on-going support provided by other developing partners like the French Development Agency (Agence Française du Développement, AFD), the EU, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and other donors in the remaining nine regions. 32. The Program will intervene in selected beneficiary communities within 64 municipalities distributed among the four targeted regions as follows: 24 of the 47 municipalities in the Boucle de Mouhoun Region; 10 of the 17 municipalities in the Cascades Region; 16 of the 33 municipalities in the Hauts-Bassins Region; and 14 of the 28 municipalities in the Southwest Region. The selected beneficiary communities are expected to gain access to improved water supply at the household level or at the communal level, and access to improved sanitation at the household level by means of improved latrines. The selection of the beneficiary communities will be based on a number of criteria, of which the most important will be: (a) availability of water sources, developed by other projects or by this program, so that people in the community can gain access to improved water supply; (b) completion of sanitation, hygiene and behavioral change campaigns; (c) commitment of the municipal authority towards latrine campaigns and reduction of open defecation; and (d) level of commitment of the households in the community to build the superstructure of the latrines with their own resources. Whereas household commitment is expected to be 100 percent, a minimum of 80 percent will be required. This will ensure that the Program brings about a robust solution to water and sanitation challenges and maximizes the impact of IDA support. 33. On the IWRM front, the Program supports two key strategic actions of the PN-GIRE: (a) improving knowledge on water resources; and (b) operationalizing the National Water Information System (Système National d’Information sur l’Eau, SNIEau). The support for these two actions responds to the 12 For Dédougou, Nouna, and Bobo-Dioulasso the Program will intervene only for sanitation as DANIDA on-going program is being implemented in these three urban centers on water supply. 9 Government’s request to strengthen the knowledge base on water resources and its accessibility to allow for adequate decision making, including the allocation of water to different sectors and uses. 34. Through the human capital strengthening activities, the Program seeks to support the objectives of the PN-AEP, PN-AEUE and PN-GIRE programs related to boosting the capacity for service delivery. Program Activities 35. The Program’s three RAs are: RA 1. Improved access to water supply; RA 2. Improved access to sanitation; and, RA 3. Improved access to reliable information on water resources. Annex 1 provides a detailed Program description. In addition, the Program includes a cross cutting area aiming at human capital strengthening. RA 1. Improved access to water supply 36. For urban water, the Program will support the development of priority infrastructure to improve urban water supply service delivery through: (a) the expansion of access to improved water supply through installation of approximately 81,885 new metered household connections and approximately 333 standposts; (b) the expansion of water production capacity, pumping and storage facilities in selected urban centers; (c) the development of water master plans for the city of Ouagadougou for the period following year 2030; and (d) the development of pre-feasibility studies for selected urban centers. 37. The Program supports improvements in the operational efficiency of ONEA through: (a) improving the geographic information system (GIS); (b) sectorization of the water supply network of the city of Ouagadougou to identify and reduce water losses; and (c) strengthening the capacity of its operational and management staff by means of technical courses and training, and the hiring of key specialists through the human capital strengthening programs supported by the Program. 38. The Program will also strengthen ONEA’s financial equilibrium through: (a) adjusting the existing urban water supply tariff; (b) carrying out of urban water supply tariff structure studies13 and adoption of new water supply tariff structure; and (c) developing tools and applications to improve customer support and monitor service performance, including optimizing production costs (improve energy efficiencies during operational management and strengthen the capacities of staff in the management of water losses). 39. For rural water the Program will support: (a) the installation of approximately 1,100 boreholes equipped with hand pumps, including approximately 400 in health centers and schools selected in accordance with criteria set out in the Program Operations Manual (POM); (b) the construction of 90 new water supply systems in locations selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (c) the rehabilitation of 60 existing water supply systems selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (d) the development of 10 feasibility studies for clustered water supply systems; (e) the adoption by the Recipient of a new rural water tariff; and (f) scale-up the Integrated Monitoring and Evaluation System (Dispositif Intégré de Suivi Evaluation, DISE) to the regions of Hauts-Bassins, Boucle du Mouhoun, 13 A tariff study will be conducted and take into account the affordability, efficiency and required investments to achieve the targets of SDG 6. This tariff study will lead to a new tariff model and tariff structure. 10 Cascades, and Southwest. To optimize water service provision costs the Program will promote solar pumping14. 40. Asset management will be aligned with the policies for water supply in rural areas in Burkina Faso. Stand-alone boreholes equipped with hand pumps will be managed by WUAs. The operation and management of water supply system will be delegated to a third party, such as an NGO, a private operator, or ONEA. The management of a rural water supply system will follow the provisions of the tariff study, the PPP strategy and the AMOC. The service contracts for the management of a water supply system will be for a renewable contract period of 15 years and at least 20 supply systems will be assigned per operator. The rehabilitation of 60 existing systems may be carried out by an operator, which after completion of the works will be responsible for the management of the systems and mobilize the financial resources to enable system expansion. 41. Long-term financial sustainability of water supply. Through the DLIs, the Program encourages measures that will allow for more efficient and accountable water supply service delivery. This includes, among others, adjustments of the existing urban water supply tariff; adoption of a new tariff in urban and rural areas, which would enable financial equilibrium while maintaining affordability for low income people; support for the delegation of rural water systems to independent operators; strengthening of the M&E function; and implementation of a substantial human capital strengthening program, which includes the hiring of staff for the MEA, ONEA, and/or municipal technical services. These measures are critical elements for the long-term sustainability of the sector, and will have positive impacts on service delivery. 42. Potential climate change mitigation co-benefits. In urban areas, in particular in the Ouagadougou system, the Program seeks to incentivize reductions in water losses, increase energy and water use efficiency and reduce energy costs, thus potentially bringing climate change mitigation co-benefits. The increased adoption of solar pumping for rural water supply schemes, away from diesel dependence, also contributes to climate change mitigations. The construction and rehabilitation of new rural water supply schemes will result in more climate change-resilient water supply infrastructure that are potentially relevant for climate change adaptation co-benefits. RA 2. Improved access to sanitation 43. This RA supports the priorities of GoBF established in the PNDES and the PN-AEUE by means of: (a) awareness and behavioral change campaigns aiming at improving hygiene practices and promoting the use of latrines; (b) provision of partial subsidies for household latrines, provided that sufficient demand is generated and the household is committed to complete the latrine superstructure; and (c) provision of sanitation cabins in schools, health centers and public places in blocks equipped with permanent handwashing facilities, including developing management arrangements to ensure that sanitation cabins are operational and adequately maintained. 14 This is the intention of the PN-AEP. The option to power the water supply systems by solar energy will be considered a priority. Since the 1990s, Burkina Faso has accumulated considerable experience in the use of solar energy for water supply systems, including the Regional Project Phase Solar I (PRS-I) and Phase II (PRS-II). The electrical network of the SONABEL or other producers of electricity should supplement/complement the solar energy where this is needed. The use of thermal generators should be considered as a last resort and only in combination with the solar systems. Thermal generators should only be considered in areas without electricity network and when water production does not cover the daily needs of the locality with the operation time of the only source of solar energy. 11 44. For urban sanitation, the Program will support: (a) the construction of approximately 42,500 new household latrines (ventilated improved pit or flush toilet types only) and rehabilitation of 42,500 household latrines; (b) the construction of approximately 1,050 new sanitation cabins with male, female, and handicapped compartments, provided with water and permanent hand-washing facilities, at schools, health centers and public places selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (c) the development of sanitation plans in eight urban centers included in the Program; (d) the implementation of awareness and behavioral change campaigns aiming at improving hygiene practices and promoting the use of latrines; and (e) the development of a fecal sludge management strategy. 45. These activities will be in line with the operational implementation strategy of ONEA, focused on generating demand by means of awareness and behavioral change campaigns, and based on the principles of local stakeholder involvement. Information, education, and awareness campaigns will promote the development of local actors, such as artisans and small businesses, to participate in the delivery of latrines by manufacturing their components and building the latrines. These latrines will be built in areas and to households that, following sensitization campaigns, have a demand for latrines and are committed to pay for or build its superstructure, and to operate and maintain the latrine and follow adequate hygiene practices. 46. For rural sanitation, in the selected rural municipalities of the four targeted regions, the Program will support: (a) the construction of approximately 50,000 new household latrines (type ventilated improved pit only); (b) the construction of approximately 10,200 sanitation cabins with male, female, and handicapped compartments, provided with water and permanent hand-washing facilities, to be located at schools, health centers, and public places selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (c) the implementation of awareness and behavioral change campaigns aiming at improving hygiene practices and promoting the use of latrines; (d) the development of key research in the sanitation field; and (e) the development of strategies for adequate management and sustainability of public latrines. 47. In rural areas, the construction of latrines, except for its superstructure, will be executed by construction companies that will be accompanied and supervised at all times (before, during, and post construction) by a social engineering company. The capacity of MEA, the General Directorate for Sanitation (Direction Générale de l’Assainissement, DGA), and municipal technical services will be strengthened by providing technical support, tracking progress, and ensuring a continued social mobilization in the area of sanitation and water supply at the municipal level. RA 3. Improved access to reliable information on water resources 48. This RA supports the priorities of GoBF established in the PN-GIRE. The Program aims at strengthening IWRM by: (a) strengthening surface water knowledge and monitoring; (b) strengthening groundwater knowledge and monitoring; and (c) operationalizing the SNIEau. 49. Strengthened surface water knowledge and monitoring. Under this RA, the Program will support the strengthening of the surface water knowledge and monitoring network nationwide through: (a) carrying out a study for and implementing the optimization of the existing hydrometric network, acquiring and installing necessary equipment and software to modernize a maximum of 20 hydrometric stations, and equipping and training the staff of the units in charge of data collection at the MEA15; and (b) 15 Water Data Collection and Disemonation Information Units (Unités de Collecte et de Diffusion de l’Information sur l’Eau, UCDIEau). 12 supporting the optimization of the surface water quality network through undertaking an optimization study and semi-annual sampling campaigns. 50. Strengthened groundwater knowledge and monitoring. Under this RA, the Program will support the strengthening of groundwater knowledge and monitoring network nationwide through: (a) undertaking a study for the optimization of the existing piezometric network; (b) the organization and update of existing data on groundwater resources; (c) the development of Productive Boreholes in the hard rock aquifer by undertaking a multicriteria analysis for the identification of 50 favorable zones for productive boreholes and the drilling of 50 productive boreholes; and (d) the development of a model for the management of aquifers of the western sedimentary basin by undertaking geophysical seismic and electric campaigns, the drilling of 16 deep recognition wells equipped with 14 piezometers, reports on water withdrawals, and calibrated geological and hydrogeological models. 51. Operationalization of the SNIEau. Under this RA, the Program will support the operationalizing of the SNIEau 3 through: (a) providing support for the development of the SNIEau web-platform to be used for data dissemination; (b) preparing a draft decree to institutionalize the SNIEau; (c) establishing data exchange protocols between SNIEau and its partners; and (d) publicizing the water data repository. All the water resource information developed under RA 3 should be made available through the SNIEau. The data obtained from the DISE system will be available through the SNIEau, as well as all the process and results for the technical and training programs financed under the Program. Emphasis will be placed on improving quality of and access to water information, and on expanding public access beyond data to analytical results (trends, water balance, among others). 52. Potential climate change mitigation co-benefits. The activities included in RA 3 are relevant to climate change adaptation and could be potentially included in the calculation of adaptation co-benefits. Cross cutting area. Human capital strengthening 53. Based on the objectives of the PN-AEP, PN-AEUE and PN-GIRE programs, a key element of the Program is the significant focus on human capital strengthening for service delivery, which is incentivized by the financial incentives included in DLI 7, and actively encouraging participation of women. The human resources base for water supply, sanitation, and IWRM is limited in terms of number of staff and skills set. Women represent a small share of the total staff of MEA and ONEA, and even a lower share of the technical staff. Within MEA only 29 percent of all staff are women; and the percentage drops to 21 percent when considering the share of women in technical positions. In ONEA, women represent only 19 percent of the total labor force; and women represent only 3.7 percent of the technical staff. 54. Human resource capacity of MEA. Most of MEA’s staff are within the management and finance discipline, including large numbers of supporting staff (administrative and secretary functions). The technical staff are limited and MEA faces a barrier in hiring due to market constrains, in particular in regard to IWRM. Only 44 percent of MEA staff are experts, mainly specialized in rural development and engineering, with a major challenge in the field of surface water and ground water resources. MEA is particularly understaffed of technicians16 in the field of hydraulic structures and rural works. It is estimated that a total of 340 specialists are additionally required (of which 70 in the field of IWRM and 270 in the field of rural water and sanitation) to enable MEA to fulfill its mission. 16 The number of technicians should be more than doubled for handling the implementation of all planned structures. 13 55. Human resource capacity of ONEA. At ONEA, 57 percent of total employees are technical staff. ONEA is expanding its services into new centers and these will require more technical staff. Also, as ONEA is advancing in expanding its sludge treatment capacity, waste water capacity, and extension of sewerage, additional staff trained in these areas is required. 56. Human resource capacity of municipal technical services. In the four regions where the Program will intervene for rural water supply and sanitation activities, technical municipal services are currently understaffed or are not staffed at all, limiting their ability to fulfill their mandate as part of the decentralization process. Municipal services are expected to be staffed by at least one technical expert on water supply and sanitation, but this is often not the case. AMOC foresees significant support for staffing of technical services with qualified staff by providing financial resources from MEA to the hiring of the technical staff. 57. The Program will strongly incentivize the strengthening of the human capital base of the MEA, ONEA and municipal technical services. To strength the skills of existing staff of MEA and ONEA, and municipal actors in accordance with criteria set out in the POM in critical areas of services delivery, with particular emphasis on IWRM through financing of beneficiaries’ tuition and other related costs to participate in four types of programs: (a) technical and training programs; (b) specialization programs; (c) doctoral programs; and (d) short-term training; and the integration of individuals having completed the technical and training programs into the MEA, ONEA or municipal technical services selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM. Indeed, to increase the number of staff in MEA, ONEA and municipal technical services, which currently are severely constrained, after completion of technical and training programs, the Program seeks to incentivize that a number of graduates of these programs be integrated into the MEA, ONEA, and/or the municipal technical services. Therefore, it is expected that the Program provides a solid foundation for the sustainability of results by strengthening the skill base and increasing the current levels of staff within MEA, ONEA and municipal technical services. 58. The Program will seek to actively encourage women to apply to the scholarships for technical and training programs provided through the Program, and to benefit MEA and ONEA female staff of the opportunities provided through specialization, doctoral and short-term training. The Program would encourage women to participate by intense communication campaigns in public media (including television, radio, newspapers, and social media) to reach potential female candidates, and publishing opportunities in MEA’s and ONEA’s websites. Financing and Program costs 59. The total Program financing is US$365 million. This includes: (a) the household contribution of US$34 million (in-kind for the completion of the latrine super-structure in urban and rural areas); GoBF contribution of US$31 million (including the contribution from MEA and ONEA), which will be made available for the Program through the Program Dedicated Treasury Special Account (Compte d’Affectation Spéciale ouvert au Trésor, CAST); and (c) IDA contribution for US$300 million, of which US$50 million in the form of a grant and US$250 million as a credit from the IDA-18 SUF (Table 2). 14 Table 2. Program Financing (US$ million) Amount Source % of total (US$ million) Household in-kind contribution 34 9 GoBF 31 8 IDA Grant 50 14 IDA SUF 250 68 Total Program financing 365 100 60. Program exclusions. The Program will exclude activities that are likely to have significant adverse impacts on the environment and/or affect people, including but not limited to schemes that involve construction or rehabilitation of dams that are greater or equal to 10 m in height, sludge treatment plans, extensions of the sewerage system, groundwater-based schemes in overexploited and critical basins that do not integrate source sustainability measures, undertaking of any activity that uses asbestos, and undertaking of any activity involving major land acquisition. It is envisaged that there is no high-value contract exceeding Operations Procurement Review Committee threshold17 value that qualifies for procurement exclusions. 61. Maximizing finance for development. The Program will contribute significantly to GoBF’s efforts to mobilize private finance for the water supply and sanitation sectors trough the incentives provided in the DLIs and activities included in the RA 1 and RA 2. It is expected that private finance will be mobilized not later than three years following Program completion. Under RA 1, the Program provides incentives to strengthen ONEA’s financial sustainability (by improving its operation and technical performance, and adopting a new tariff structure), which is a key element to mobilize private finance in the medium to long- term. Also, under RA 1, the Program seeks to strengthen service delivery in rural areas (by boosting the capacity of municipal service providers and private operations) and incentivize the delegation of rural water systems to private operators, with a view that in the medium term private operations could also mobilize private finance for needed capital investments. Under RA 2, the Program will enable private finance in the development of a sludge management strategy, whereby the investments of the private sector will be key to expand the existing limited sludge treatment capacity and contribute to the operation of new plants, as well as participate in the collection/transportation of sludge. Also, under RA 2, the Program will provide opportunities for private participation the management of latrines in public places. C. Disbursement Linked Indicators and Verification Protocols 62. The disbursement model consists of seven DLIs. The DLIs have been selected based on the following criteria: (a) importance for successful implementation; (b) potential to incentivize improvements within GoBF’s programs; (c) practicality and cost-effectiveness of verification; and (d) GoBF’s capacity to achieve the DLI during the Program implementation period. The DLIs intend to incentivize the achievement of tangible outputs and outcomes, and strengthen the institutions involved in water supply, sanitation, and IWRM. The DLIs are presented in Figure 1. The underlying definitions used in the DLIs are presented in Annex 3. 17 Operations Procurement Review Committee threshold value is as follows: (a) works (including turnkey, supply and installation of plant and equipment, PPPs), estimated to cost US$75,000,000 equivalent or more per contract; (b) goods, information technology, and non-consulting services, estimated to cost US$50,000,000 equivalent or more per contract; (c) consultant services, estimated to cost US20,000,000 equivalent or more per contract. 15 63. DLI 1 seeks to provide financial incentives for increasing access to water supply to people living in urban and rural areas, supporting the achievement of the SDG No. 6, in targeted areas where there are major challenges for the expansion of sustainable water supply services. Access will be provided by means of household water connections, standposts and boreholes equipped with handpumps. Figure 1. RAs and Disbursement Linked Indicators (DLIs) 64. DLI 2 will support the construction of surface and groundwater water production facilities that are essential to increase access to improved water services in secondary urban centers and rural areas. The Program seeks to incentivize water production expansion in urban and rural centers where there is a significant deficit of water production and therefore provision of adequate water supply services are severely constrained. 65. DLI 3 will provide incentives for strengthening the financial sustainability of water supply service provision. In the first year, the DLI provides strong financial incentives for (a) the adoption by the Council of Ministers of the rural water supply tariff structure; and (b) the adjustment of the lifeline tariff (0 to 8 m3) charged by ONEA in urban centers. From year 2 onwards, DLI 3 seeks to incentivize the undertaking of a study and adoption of a new urban tariff structure that responds to the objectives of: providing affordable access to urban population according to their socio-economic levels, and ensuring the necessary economic and financial equilibrium in the provision of water services. It will also incentivize the validation of the new tariff structure by means of public hearings, and its adoption and implementation. 66. DLI 4 encompasses strong incentives for the provision of improved sanitation to people living in urban and rural areas by means of improved household latrines, supporting the achievement of the SDG No. 6. Targeted areas will be subject to information, education and behavioral change campaigns prior to the commencement of any construction to secure high demand for sanitation and appropriate O&M of the facilities. Pit excavation and the provision and installation of the slab will be done at no cost for the beneficiaries, provided that beneficiary households make a commitment to build the superstructure and 16 maintain the facility with their own resources. Therefore, the DLI will incentivize the Government to ensure that the household is committed towards the investments and mobilizes the adequate financing to build the super-structure, which in turn is a significant step towards ensuring its use and maintenance. 67. DLI 5 seeks to incentivize the strengthened institutional sanitation, by means of providing new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers and public places in urban and rural areas, in blocks of latrines equipped with permanent handwashing facilities, and incentivize their O&M. To ensure an efficient management and the sustainability of the facilities, which has been a common problem in the past, adequate management arrangements will be defined. As for the facilities in public places, management will be delegated to a third party, under municipal oversight, which will be responsible for the O&M of the facilities and will charge a user fee to the public. In addition, DLI 5 provides financial incentives to promote good O&M of the facilities. 68. DLI 6 seeks to provide incentives for the development of a decision-support model for the management of the aquifers (in the sedimentary and hard-rock basin) that will allow for a better allocation of water resources. The DLI incentivizes the development of a geological and hydrogeological model in the western sedimentary aquifer, which is the largest and most productive and has a strategic relevance as a buffer for economic and social planning. Also, the DLI provides financial incentives for the planning of water resources abstraction, in particular for water supply uses, in the hard-rock basin by developing a multicriteria analysis leading to the identification and drilling of 50 productive boreholes. 69. DLI 7 seeks to provide incentives for the strengthening of human capital at the central and municipal level for the provision of water and sanitation services, and for IWRM, which is a key element for the sustainability of results achieved by the Program. Therefore, financial incentives will be provided to strengthen the capacity of professionals internal and external to sector institutions by means of: technical and training programs, specialization, doctoral programs, and continuous education courses. Attention will be given to addressing long standing gender imbalances at senior levels of sector decision making, by addressing aspects of equity, and equal training opportunities for women. Given the scarcity of specialized personnel at various sector institutions, the Program will provide incentives to entice external beneficiaries of technical and training programs to be absorbed by MEA, ONEA, and/or municipal technical services. 70. Disbursements will be made according to the achievements under the Program. Funds will be used to finance the activities included in the Program. It will be the responsibility of MEA and ONEA to prepare annual activity, procurement plans, and budgets. As part of the PAP, MEA and ONEA should adopt annual procurement plans and disbursement estimates two months following the inclusion in the Finance Law of the Program’s annual budget. 71. Verification Protocol. All DLIs will be independently verified by an independent verification agent (IVA). The verification protocol uses data from civil works supervision reports, household surveys, progress reports from the PCU and ONEA’s Program Support Unit (PSU), consolidated results reports submitted by the PCU to the MEA, and random physical verification. The IVA will prepare a Results Verification Report, which will be shared with the Program PCU and the World Bank. A key use of the Results Verification Report will be to determine the amount of the eligible disbursement to be made based on the results achieved. If the World Bank finds that the disbursement request meets the terms of the Financing Agreement, the World Bank will disburse the corresponding funds to Ministry of Economy, Finance and Development (Ministère de l'Economie, des Finances et du Développement, MINEFID). 17 III. PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION A. Institutional and Implementation Arrangements 72. A Steering Committee (Comité de Revue), chaired by the General Secretary of MEA, will provide oversight of the Program and ensure that the Program is on track to meet the Program objectives. The Steering Committee will meet twice per year (ordinary sessions), with the purpose of: (a) reviewing and adopting the Program implementation plan; (b) reviewing and adopting the Program evaluations; and (c) reviewing and adopting the financial reports; the annual activity, budget, and procurement plans; among other function established in the Decree 2018-0092 of 2018. The Program will have two implementing agencies: MEA and ONEA. 73. A Program Coordination Unit (PCU) will be established within MEA. The PCU will act as the interlocutor with the World Bank on behalf of GoBF. The PCU will ensure that the Program is implemented according to the POM, and will be responsible for the coordination, day-to-day management of the Program activities, monitoring results, and generating performance and financial reports on Program implementation. The PCU will be responsible for providing relevant information to the IVA for the independent verification of results. The PCU will be responsible for preparing the consolidated interim financial reports and the consolidated annual financial statements. The PCU will be at least staffed with: A Program Coordinator, an M&E specialist, a procurement specialist, a financial management specialist, an accountant, an environmental safeguard specialist, a social safeguard specialist, and an internal controller. The PCU Program Coordinator, M&E specialist, procurement specialist, and financial management specialist will be recruited on a competitive basis. Furthermore, a full time, dedicated financial and public procurement controller will be appointed by MINEFID and assigned to the PCU to speed up processing of transactions and payments. 74. ONEA will establish a Program Support Unit (PSU) dedicated exclusively to support the implementation of Program activities under ONEA’s responsibility, and report on results achieved by ONEA. The PSU will be at least staffed with: a PSU Coordinator, an M&E specialist, a procurement specialist, a financial management specialist, an environmental safeguard specialist, and a social safeguard specialist. The PSU Coordinator, M&E specialist, procurement specialist, environmental safeguards, and social safeguards specialist will be recruited on a competitive basis. The internal control will be done by ONEA’s Internal Control Department. ONEA PSU will report to the PCU. 75. Program activities will be implemented by MEA’s directorates and ONEA departments. Formal implementation responsibility has been established as follows: x Within MEA, the General Directorate for Water Supply (Direction Générale de l’Eau Potable, DGEP) and the DGA will implement the Program activities related to rural water supply and rural sanitation included in RA 1 and RA 2. The DGA and DGEP will work through the Regional Directorates for Water and Sanitation (Direction Régionale de l’Eau et de l’Assainissement, DREAs) to implement Program activities related to rural water supply and sanitation, in particular to ensure data collection for the verification of results. The Permanent Secretariat for Integrated Water Resource Management (Secrétariat Permanent de la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau, SP-GIRE) will implement the activities under RA 3, working in close collaboration with the General Directorate for Water Resources (Direction Générale des Ressources en Eau, DGRE). The Human Resources Directorate (Direction des Ressources Humaines, DRH) will be in charge of the 18 management of the programs for human capital strengthening supported by the Program related to MEA and the municipal technical services. x Within ONEA, the Ouagadougou Works Department (Direction Projec AEP Ouaga, DPAEP) will implement the Ouagadougou water supply-related activities included in RA 1. The Department of Planning and Investment (Direction de la Planification et des Investissements, DPI) will implement the urban water supply-related activities in the remaining 10 urban centers where the Program will intervene for urban water supply. ONEA's Department of Sanitation (Direction de l’Assainissement, DASS) will implement all the sanitation-related activities included in RA 2 in the fourteen targeted urban centers. ONEA’s DRH will be in charge of the management of the programs for human capital strengthening supported by the Program related to ONEA. 76. MINEFID plays a central role in achieving the Program results. The MINEFID will be responsible for the execution of the Program budget (ensuring fund flows) and setting standards and processes for the financial management of the Program. 77. Given the complex and multidimensional nature of the program, and in view of its implementation challenges, DGA, DGEP, SP-GIRE and ONEA departments will be assisted by strategic implementation support consultants (SISC) in technical aspects, including providing technical inputs into: (a) terms of references (ToRs), feasibility level and detailed design studies; (b) tendering and procurement processes; and (c) quality control of main deliverables of studies conducted under the Program. The SISC will be competitively selected with relevant national and international experience. SISC will provide support and guidance and provide the opportunity for implementing agencies’ staff to learn on the job. It is important that the ToR for the SISC give adequate emphasis to this capacity development role. 78. Given GoBF’s desire to initiate Program implementation immediately after declaration of effectiveness, it has been agreed that conditional to the extension of the closing date of the on-going Urban Water Sector Project (currently December 31, 2018), remaining Project funds will be available for financing the PCU, the PSU, and SISC, and the Government will shortly initiate the process of recruiting the PCU and PSU staff and hiring the SISC. B. Results Monitoring and Evaluation 79. Program M&E. The Results Framework (Annex 2) is the basis of monitoring Program results. It consists of PDO indicators and intermediate-level indicators, some of which are DLIs. Monitoring of the indicators in the Results Framework will be conducted semi-annually during the program implementation period. This will ensure effective tracking of progress so that corrective measures can be taken to ensure the achievement of the PDO. The Program will require several of the results indicators to be disaggregated by gender (Annex 2). This will facilitate gender-related planning and management of the Program. 80. The M&E function will be assumed by the PCU, which has the overall coordination and responsibility for M&E for the Program. The PSU will be in charge of monitoring of activities under ONEA’s responsibility, and will provide needed inputs to the PCU for the consolidation of Program results. M&E specialists will be hired for the PCU and PSU to ensure the M&E function. 81. Progress reviews. To facilitate knowledge sharing and problem solving, semi-annual meetings will be held at the management level to review progress, identify and propose remedies for any weaknesses, and identify and propose modalities for scaling up successes beyond the Program. In addition to regular 19 implementation support missions, semi-annual reviews will be critical for early identification of problems and opportunities with the Program. 82. Midterm review. The midterm review will be an opportunity to review the Program framework and potentially adjust the DLIs. This includes the options of reallocation of disbursement amounts between the DLIs or cancellation of DLIs. The review will also assess the quality and impact of the human capital strengthening activities supported by the PforR. 83. DISE Scale-up. The DISE is a consolidated M&E system under pilot phase for three national programs (PGEA, PN-AEP, and PN-AEUE),18 and thus at present it only covers water supply and sanitation- related information. The DISE is expected to be the unique M&E system for the sector, covering all the 13 regions of Burkina Faso—including urban and rural areas. The Program will support the scale-up of the implementation of the DISE to the four targeted regions included in the Program. C. Disbursement Arrangements 84. A Dedicated Treasury Special Account (CAST) will be opened at the Treasury to avoid cash rationing and streamline the payment process of the Program. The CAST will enable resources to be directly linked to spending, in contrast to the general budget where resources cannot be allocated to specific expenditure. The creation of CASTs is provided for in the Public Finance Organic Law. The National Assembly is responsible for approving the establishment of CASTs and their expenditure ceilings. CASTs facilitate: (a) the monitoring of resources and their related expenditures in the national budget; (b) the carrying forward of unused but committed budgetary allocations, which is an exception to the principle of the annual budgetary system; (c) the management of transactions directly through the Integrated Financial Management System for budget monitoring; and (d) separate reporting on implementation and an independent audit since CAST transactions can be extracted from the CID and the IT application for accounting. 85. The CAST will be replenished with World Bank/IDA disbursements and Governments’ contribution to the Program (including MEA’s and ONEA’s contributions). The World Bank will transfer the eligible disbursements based on the Results Verification Report submitted by IVA to the PCU and World Bank. Disbursement requests will be submitted to the World Bank using the World Bank’s standard disbursement forms through the e-disbursement functionality in the World Bank’s Client Connection system. The funds for the Program will be spent by MEA and ONEA and are not expected to be transferred further to the communities. All payments of expenditures incurred by MEA and ONEA will be paid through the CAST under the direct responsibility of the General Directorate of the Treasury and Public Accounting (Direction Générale du Trésor et de la Comptabilité Publique, DGTCP). 86. For ONEA, the yearly allocated budget under the Program will be facilitated through the ‘capital transfer’ mechanism that will follow the country public expenditure chain with some flexibilities to avoid delays. ONEA will follow its financial management procedures to execute the budget and report to MEA. The administrative control bodies will reserve the right to verify the expenditures ex-post. 87. Advance payment. An advance of 25 percent of the eligible PforR Program amount (US$75 million) will be disbursed following the effectiveness of the Financial Agreement. When the DLI(s) against which an advance has been disbursed are achieved, the amount of the advance will be deducted 18 At a later stage, the DISE is expected to also cover the PN-GIRE and the PN-AH. 20 (recovered) from the total amount due to be disbursed under such DLI(s). The advance amount recovered by the World Bank is then available for additional advances (‘revolving advance’). The World Bank requires that the Borrower refund any advances (or portion of advances) if the DLIs have not been met (or have been only partially met) by the closing date, promptly upon notice thereof by the World Bank. 88. Consolidated financial statements. The PCU shall prepare Program consolidated financial statements annually. The Program report will include consolidated financial statements that will cover all Program activities, expenditures and sources of funds. The Court of Accounts (Supreme Audit Institution) will audit the consolidated Program financial statements. The Program Audit Report and audited consolidated Program financial statements shall be submitted to the World Bank within nine (9) months after the end of the financial year. 89. Program reconciliation. If the World Bank establishes after the closing date that the withdrawn financing balance exceeds the total amount paid for Program expenditures, exclusive of any such amounts financed by any other financier or by the World Bank under any other loan, credit or grant, the Borrower shall, promptly upon notice from the World Bank, refund to the World Bank such excess amount of the withdrawn financing balance. The World Bank shall then cancel the refunded amount of the withdrawn financing balance. D. Capacity Building 90. The Program provides incentives for significant capacity buiding, as demonstrated by the inclusion of a cross cutting area: human capital srtregtening (described above). In addition to the four types of programs financed by the PforR, the Program includes several capacity building activities for stakeholders in the sector, including the private sector, that will also contribute to strengthening the human capital base for water supply and sanitation, including training on contract management, accountability, gender, citizen engagement, hygiene behavior change, reporting, new tariff structure, PPP strategy for rural water system for water supply operators, among others. IV. ASSESSMENT SUMMARY A. Technical (including program economic evaluation) 91. As part of the Program preparation, a Technical Assessment of the Program was carried out. The assessment concluded that the Program is strategically relevant and technically sound. A number of weaknesses have been identified. These will be addressed through the adoption of key measures included in the PAP. The Annex 4 provides a detailed summary of the Program’s Technical Assessment. 92. The Program is strategically relevant. In Burkina Faso, low levels of investments—in particular, in sanitation—have resulted in poor development outcomes. The Program is at the heart of the Government’s efforts to increase access to water and sanitation and improve IWRM. As a reflection of its strategic importance, GoBF has adopted the National Water Policy in 2016 and five operational programs, which aimed at achieving the SDG 6 for water, sanitation and IWRM by 2030. 93. The Program will contribute to fund a substantial portion of GoBF’s national programs to deliver universal access to water and sanitation services. It will support the establishment of institutional, contractual and financial arrangements that will enable GoBF to achieve its strategic priorities to provide universal access to water and sanitation services, and strengthen sector governance. The Program will provide incentives to expand access to water supply for 1.1 million people, and to improved sanitation for 21 1.3 million people. It will support core actions included in the PN-AEP and the PN-AEUE, which consists of extending existing and constructing new piped waters supply systems in urban and rural areas, to expand access to improved household sanitation facilities, and improved water supply and sanitation services in schools, health centers and public places. 94. Based on the recently completed Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD) for Burkina Faso, which is the basis for the development of the upcoming Country Partnership Framework (CPF), the Program is aligned with the country priorities on improving the management of natural resources (including water resources), promoting skills development, and reducing gender bias. 95. The Program is technically sound. It will allow addressing a number of identified weaknesses in the water supply, sanitation and IWRM sectors in Burkina Faso, through an emphasis on greater service standardization, increasing the scale of service delivery, education and communication campaigns to boost latrine demand, maintenance of latrines and sanitation cabins, expanding the knowledge of the western aquifer, and locating new water supply sources in the hard-rock aquifer. 96. The Program approach to deliver access through a mix of household connections, standposts and boreholes is in line with an ongoing shift in customers’ preferences towards household connections, whilst recognizing the fact that boreholes and standpost supplies provide a good first step and will be needed for some time, particularly in the poorest areas. A key strength of the Program’s technical design is linked to the overlapping of water supply and sanitation investments in targeted areas so as to maximize the Program impacts. 97. The Program builds upon the programmatic approach adopted by GoBF, which has been a catalyst for the mobilization of resources for the sector, as well as lessons learnt from the implementation of the first generation of government programs and a number of projects funded by development partners, including the World Bank, and lessons learned from similar reforms in Sub-Saharan Africa. The World Bank’s longstanding engagement on water supply and sanitation in Burkina Faso has provided the motivation for the Program. 98. The Program’s institutional arrangements are sound and well-aligned with GoBF’s programs and ongoing reforms. Having a main counterpart for Program implementation through the establishment of the PCU within MEA will provide clarity of focus and leadership for implementation of the Program, as it is aligned with the Decree 2018-0092 of 2018, which prescribes the general regulations for Program and Project operations in Burkina Faso. Also, establishing a dedicated PSU within ONEA will ensure the adequate attention to Program implementation, in particular concerning strong coordination of ONEA Program activities, M&E, financial and safeguards aspects. The establishment of the PCU and PSU and staffing are key elements of the PAP. 99. Program’s expenditure framework. The Program will be mostly financed by the IDA (US$300 million). The overall cost of the supported Program (US$365 million), including the portion financed by the World Bank, will be included in the multi-year expenditure programming documents. Underlying unit costs were assessed to be in line with comparable regional benchmarks. The Program’s expenditure framework will be anchored in the national budget programming process. 100. Economic analysis. The Program will benefit approximately 1.1 million people who will receive improved water supply services and 1.3 million people who will have access to improved sanitation facilities. Beneficiaries will spend less time fetching water and will benefit from higher drinking water quality. They will be able to access greater water volumes and will suffer from less service interruptions 22 due to technical breakdowns. Particular attention will be paid to ensuring that women and girls can benefit from improved access, so that they can in turn benefit from greater economic opportunities (including from being involved in water service delivery) and educational opportunities. In addition, the Program will generate local jobs in the area of water supply and sanitation delivery and will reduce pressure on the use of local groundwater resources (through stronger monitoring and management of these resources) and of energy sources (through an emphasis on connecting piped rural water supply systems to the grid or relying on solar energy). 101. On the sanitation side, one of the major benefits of the Program is savings in health expenditure. The Program, supported by strong information, education, and communication campaigns, will contribute to reducing the sanitation related diseases by improving sanitation and hygiene practices at the household level and in schools, health centers, and public places. 102. An economic analysis was conducted to compare costs and benefits with and without the Program. Costs and benefit streams were projected over 30 years and discounted at a social discount rate of 6 percent based on the World Bank guidance for preparation of Economic Analysis. Costs included Program costs associated to delivery of water supply and sanitation services, and operating and maintenance costs and households’ contributions to finance the latrine superstructure. 103. The analysis yielded a benefit-cost ratio of 5.7, which is in line with international estimates of similar investments in areas with limited access to water supply. The net present value (NPV) of costs and benefits is US$1.5 billion when a 6 percent discount rate is used. A sensitivity analysis was conducted on a number of parameters, including the discount rate, the value of time and the impact of the investments on diarrheal illness reduction, and operating costs. The NPV remained positive under all these scenarios. 104. Climate change mitigation, adaptation, and potential co-benefits. The adaptation co-benefits are based on specific activities supported by the RAs, due to water supply infrastructure being designed to be climate resilient and the activities linked to water resource knowledge strengthening. The improvement in schemes would result in more climate change resilient water supply infrastructure and the adoption of solar pumping technology that potentially carry climate adaptation co-benefits. Prudent O&M activities would reduce losses, increase efficiency, and reduce energy costs. The drop in both energy consumption and the use of diesel pump sets will lead to a reduction in fossil fuel usage, which will have a climate change mitigation effect. The increased knowledge of location, quantity, and quality of groundwater resources will contribute toward climate adaption by providing critical information for development and investment planning, including, but not limited to, water allocations across sectors and sources of water supply for domestic use. 105. Program Action Plan (PAP). The PAP includes legally binding actions that are considered crucial for advancing water and sanitation service delivery in Burkina Faso, strengthening knowledge on water resources, and improving human capital for service delivery and were identified as potential constraints in the three assessments (Technical, Fiduciary, and Environmental and Social). The PAP will be monitored through regular supervision missions and will be reported on annually by the PCU. The actions will be executed through instructions contained in the POM.19 The POM sets forth GoBF regulations and laws 19 The POM includes the following sections: Introduction to the Program, Objectives and Guiding Principles, Organization and implementation, PAP, Water Supply and Safety, Sanitation and Hygiene, Capacity Building and Policy Support, Procurement, Financial Management, Governance and Anti-corruption, Environment Management, Social Aspects, Annual Program Plans and Program Reports, Monitoring and Evaluation, Verification, and Definitions. 23 that will govern the various aspects of the Program and the supplemental provisions necessary to address the gaps identified in the PAP. The list of the actions agreed upon is provided in Annex 7. B. Fiduciary 106. As part of Program preparation, the World Bank carried out an Integrated Fiduciary Systems Assessment (IFSA). The IFSA concludes that the Program’s Integrated Fiduciary Systems have the capabilities to provide reasonable assurance that the grant and credit proceeds will be used for intended purposes with the objective of supporting the achievement of the Program objectives. The Annex 5 provides a detailed summary of the Program’s IFSA. 107. The IFSA concluded that the legislative and institutional framework for procurement, financial management, governance and anti-corruption in place in Burkina Faso is acceptable. The framework is in line with international standards. The national institutions in charge of internal and external controls have generally demonstrated their ability to fulfill their legal mandate, despite financial and human resources constraints. MEA’s and ONEA’s fiduciary procedures, tools and staffing arrangements are deemed acceptable. The IFSA identified a number of weaknesses and risks in the overall fiduciary, governance and anticorruption systems warranting the design of specific actions to mitigate them in the Program context. Program Financial Management Systems 108. The design of the Program relies on the existing financial management systems and institutions in Burkina Faso. In addition to the two implementing agencies (MEA and ONEA), MINEFID has a central role to play in achieving the Program results in terms of budget execution and release of funds and elaborating the standards and processes for program financial management. The systems maintained by the MINEFID provide a guarantee in terms of fiduciary risks. 109. Planning and budgeting. Planning and budgeting related to the Program will follow the national procedures. The overall cost of the supported Program is included in the multi-year expenditure programming documents. The PAP requires the inclusion in the Annual Finance Law of the Program’s annual budget. 110. Accounting and financial reporting. The existing public expenditure chain will be used in the Program. The PCU within MEA will be responsible for preparing consolidated interim financial reports and annual financial statements of the Program. The interim financial reports will be submitted to the World Bank not later than 45 days following the end of the semester. 111. Internal controls and external audit. The Technical Inspection Services within MEA, the General Finance Inspectorate (Inspection Générale des Finances, IGF) within MINEFID, the Court of Accounts and the Superior Control and Anticorruption Authority (Autorité Supérieure de Contrôle d’Etat et de Lutte Contre la Corruption, ASCE-LC) are involved in the implementation of the Program to carry out the functions of internal and external audits. Contracts under the Program will be subject to ex-post control. Semi-annual internal audits and reviews covering operational, technical, procurement, and financial aspects of the Program will be conducted. 112. The annual audited financial statements of the Program, inclusive of the transactions in the CAST, will be the basis for the annual financial assurance required by the World Bank. External audits of the Program’s consolidated annual financial statements prepared by the PCU will be done by the Court of Accounts for the activities implemented both by MEA and ONEA. 24 113. Flow of funds. The CAST for the Program will be opened at the Central Bank of the West African States, which will be replenished with IDA disbursements and GoBF’s contribution to the Program. All payments under the Program will be made through the CAST. ONEA will not open a separate bank account to make payments of expenditures incurred under the Program. Program Procurement Systems 114. The national procedures for award, execution and settlement of public contracts and public service delegations20 will apply to the Program. In the context of the Program aspects of the existing procurement process, publication of notices, international tendering and capacity for contract administration should be improved. 115. Procurement capacity. The procurement experience of the staff of MEA and ONEA General Directorate for Procurement (Direction Générale des Marchés Publics, DMP) is limited, which will potentially generate procurement and disbursement delays. To mitigate this risk, the PAP includes measures seeking to reinforce the capacity of MEA DMP and technical services and ONEA DMP and technical services by providing training on procurement and acquiring needed equipment. Furthermore, implementation arrangements include the recruitment of a full-time procurement specialist dedicated to the Program in the PCU to provide the day to day support to the SP-GIRE, the DGEP, the DGA, and the DRH and recruitment of a full-time procurement specialist dedicated to the Program in the PSU to support the implementation of ONEA’s activities under the Program. 116. Internal procurement controls. The IFSA found that there is limited internal procurement controls to verify internal compliance with the procurement rules in place before moving forward in the procurement process and signing contracts. To mitigate this risk, within the POM detailed procurement procedures defining the role and skills of each stakeholder in the public procurement chain within MEA and ONEA, with a focus on control, will be included. To reinforce procurement controls for the contracts related to activities financed under the Program, implementation arrangements included the appointment of an internal controller as part of the PCU. 117. Procurement delays. To reduce delays in procurement process, the PAP will request the adoption of annual procurement plans and disbursement estimates based on the annual approved budget of the Program. The Program will monitor delays in the procurement process of contracts funded by the Program. 118. International tendering and international publication. To successfully achieved the Program results, a number of contracts will require international tendering and international publication to ensure sufficient competition and technical skills. The POM will define thresholds above which the procurement process should be open internationally. Also, the advertising of notices of contracts procured by MEA and ONEA in the context of the Program will be done in an international publication. Program governance and anti-corruption systems 119. The Program will prioritize an effective governance oversight through increased accountability of the sector to citizens; increased monitoring and auditing; and greater disclosure and transparency. The 20 Described in the Law No. 039-2016 / AN on the General Regulation of Public Contracts and detailed in the Decree No2017-0049 / PRES / PM / MINEFID of February 1, 2017. 25 MEA and ONEA should prepare bi-annual reports on fraud and corruption cases related to activities under the Program. 120. GoBF has agreed to follow the World Bank’s Anti-Corruption Guidelines that apply to all PforR lending operations. Key arrangements for the implementation of these guidelines will be included in the POM. This will set out the steps that GoBF will take to: (a) report on allegations of fraud and corruption in the Program and how they are handled; (b) apply the World Bank’s debarment list to the Program; and (c) assist any World Bank investigation under the Anti-Corruption Guidelines by ensuring cooperation from those involved in the Program, including ensuring that these participants will be obligated to cooperate with the World Bank. The World Bank will monitor the arrangements for the implementation of the Anti- Corruption Guidelines, considering the experience of the existing PforR operation in Burkina Faso, and consider updates to the POM as appropriate. 121. Complaints Handling and Grievance Redress. Citizens’ complaints and grievances pertaining to the Program will be coordinated and addressed by the Ombudsman (Médiateur du Faso) and the ASCE- LC, using the grievance redress systems and administrative structures of these institutions. A memorandum of understanding should be signed between the Mediateur and ASCE-LC to promote collaboration between the two focal institutions in handling complaints and mismanagement of the Program funds. C. Environmental and Social 122. As part of Program preparation, the World Bank carried out an Environmental and Social System Assessment (ESSA), in close collaboration with GoBF, to identify potential environmental and social impacts under the Program. In accordance with the requirements of the World Bank’s policy on PforR, the ESSA assessed the national systems with respect to institutional capacity and performance, policy and regulatory bases, consultation mechanisms and grievance management to mitigate the impacts. The Program’s activities were analyzed to identify expected environmental and social risks and impacts. The Annex 6 provides a detailed summary of the Program’s ESSA. 123. A National Public Consultation to disseminate the findings of the ESSA was held on March 27, 2018. Representatives from all stakeholders, development partners, civil society organizations and the private sector participated in the consultations. Comments from the workshop were incorporated into the final version of the ESSA. The ESSA report was dislosed on April 21, 2018 and is publicly available in the World Bank's external website. 124. The ESSA concludes that the Program ESMS is adequate for PforR financing and that the activities to be funded under the Program should by their nature, characteristics and size, generate low-to- moderate environmental and social impacts and generally bring beneficial and positive environmental and social impacts. The national project screening system in place provides adequate mitigation measures of infrastructure and rehabilitation activities. The ESSA further concludes that overall the ESMS is appropriately equipped with the necessary tools and processes to identify, mitigate, and report on possible environmental and social impacts of Program activities. Accordingly, it finds that the risk of negative environmental and social impacts is addressed through the relevant ESMS provisions and operational procedures. 125. Environmental and social impacts of the Program. The Program’s supported activities are expected to have an overall positive impact, which will be maintained over the long term, including: 26 significant improvements in access to improved water supply sources and improved sanitation facilities; reduction of reliance on open defecation; reduction of the incidence of waterborne disease; improvement of hygiene practices; strengthening of the institutional capacities of stakeholders at national, regional, and local levels; and enhancements in the O&M of sanitation cabins in schools, health centers and public places. 126. Adverse social impacts are anticipated to be low to moderate and easy to mitigate. Investments may include some forms, more or less temporary, of involuntary resettlement of residential or business households, acquisition of private lands or restrictions on access to local social and economic infrastructure. In addition, there is a potential risks of work related accidents, both for the constructions workers and the nearby populations, due to poor signage. Most of negative social impacts will be time- bounded and spatially restricted (due to the relatively low land requirements of the various investments planned under the Program and the use of state-owned land). As part of the preparation of Environment and Social Impact Assessment and the Implementation of Environmental and Social Management Plans, mitigation measures for the potential risk related to gender-based violence, labor influx and child labor will be taken into consideration. 127. Adverse environmental impacts are anticipated to be low to moderate and easy to mitigate. Environmental impacts are expected to be typical construction impacts, site-specific, and generally limited to air or water pollution, production and management of waste, use and disposal of hazardous materials. Other non-construction works could have some adverse environmental impacts or risks (on water uptake, water contamination, among others). Adequate mitigation measures will be taken during the preparation and implementation of infrastructure works. 128. ESMS. The ESSA analyzed the strengths, gaps, risks and opportunities of the country’s ESMS against the core principles and key planning elements intended to ensure that PforR operations are designed and implemented to maximize the potential environmental and social benefits, while avoiding, minimizing, or otherwise mitigating adverse environmental or social impacts. Overall, Burkina Faso’s ESMS is comprehensive and consistent with the core principles of World Bank’s PforR policy. Burkina Faso’s legal framework and related action plans are conducive to environmental protection and social development. However, there are a number of constraints in the ESMS including: (a) whereas most institutions are in place and their mandate has been defined, there is a limited coordination among them, and limited human and financial resources; (b) coordination between central and regional levels are weak; (c) administrative procedures are slow, constraining timely decision-making; and (d) public inquiries do not result in proper public consultation. The PAP will support specific measures to improve the conditions for the performance of the ESMS in the implementation and monitoring of the Program activities, as follows: 129. Preparation of a Technical Manual for Environmental and Social Management (Manuel Technique pour la Gestion Environnementale et Sociale, MTGES) of the Program investments, which will be an integral part of the POM. A training program will be developed for the implementation of the MTGES for all the different stakeholders involved in the implementation of the Program. 130. Adoption of an interinstitutional convention between MEA and ONEA, on the one hand, and preparation and enforcement of an interinstitutional cooperation agreement between MEA and the National Agency in charge of Environmental Assessments (Bureau National des Evaluations Environnementales – BUNEE), on the other hand. The content of this agreement will establish the conditions for collaboration (awareness raising; information and training; rapid review and certification of sub-projects; environmental and social control and monitoring; among others). 27 131. Appointment of dedicated environmental specialists and social management specialists within the PCU and the PSU, who will be employed full-time throughout the implementation of the Program. 132. Specialized training in monitoring and control of environmental and social mitigation and reporting measures. This more in-depth training in monitoring and control of environmental and social mitigation and reporting measures will be provided to representatives of all local, regional and national institutions involved in collecting, processing and analyzing information regarding the implementation of mitigation measures. 133. Developing citizen engagement guidelines. MEA and ONEA will jointly develop guidelines to ensure the effective participation of and consultation with local people, targeted beneficiary community, and vulnerable groups. The guidelines will ensure adequate gender-sensitive consultations in selection of interventions, management of WUAs, and in implementation of all the components of the Program. 134. Based on the climate and disaster risk screening, there is no potential negative impact of the Program activities. In view of the risks identified by the ESSA, the environmental and social risk rating of the Program is assessed to be moderate. 135. Gender assessment. A gender assessment conducted as part of the Program’s preparation identified gaps between men and women’s voice and participation at all levels of decision making. The assessment found that female staff are underrepresented in technical and leadership positions. According to the assessment, women make up 21 percent of technical staff in MEA and only 3.7 percent of technical staff in ONEA. It also highlighted the gender differences reflected in how much time is spent by women collecting household water as compared to men, and the extent to which women’s specific sanitation needs were met in schools, health centers, bus stops and market places. 136. The findings of the gender assessment informed the Program design, in particular the human capital strengthening activities and the need to develop a gender action plan, which is a key action included in the PAP. To address the low number of female employees in technical positions of MEA and ONEA, the Program will use communication campaigns and outreach to encourage women to apply for scholarships for technical and training programs, and participate in other training programs offered under the Program. Technical and training programs last between two to three years and are intended to compensate the current under-representation of certain professions within MEA and ONEA in the fields of water supply and sanitation and IWRM. The number of female participants in these programs will be monitored in the results framework. The gender action plan will aim at, but not be limited to, institutionalizing gender and creating an enabling environment for gender in management and in operations under the Program. The gender action plan could include, among other elements, actively promoting female water technicians and engineers, training on sanitation and hygiene to promote their active participation, training on mechanism to prevent gender-based violence and mitigation measures, continuous sensitization of all sectors on social and cultural discriminatory practices and norms underpinning gender inequalities and discrimination against women, and the participation of women in governance and WUAs. 137. WB’s Grievance Redress Service (GRS). Communities and individuals who believe that they are adversely affected because of a Bank supported PforR operation, as defined by the applicable policy and procedures, may submit complaints to the existing Program grievance redress mechanism or the WB’s GRS. The GRS ensures that complaints received are promptly reviewed to address pertinent concerns. Affected communities and individuals may submit their complaint to the WB’s independent Inspection 28 Panel which determines whether harm occurred, or could occur, because of WB non-compliance with its policies and procedures. Complaints may be submitted at any time after concerns have been brought directly to the World Bank’s attention, and Bank Management has been given an opportunity to respond. For information on how to submit complaints to the World Bank’s corporate GRS, please visit http://www.worldbank.org/GRS. For information on how to submit complaints to the World Bank Inspection Panel, please visit www.inspectionpanel.org. D. Risk Assessment 138. The risk assessment is informed by the results of the technical, fiduciary, and ESMS assessments. The overall risk rating of the operation is Substantial. 139. The political and governance risk is rated as Moderate. On the political side, there is a cautious optimism that has prevailed after peaceful elections in November 2015. However, the tenuous security situation is posing a risk to stability. The overall governance environment in Burkina Faso is conducive for reforms and the water supply, sanitation, and IWRM sectors are ahead of many sectors in the reform process, though the decentralization of water supply and sanitation services is not yet fully implemented posing a risk for the sustainability of Program results. 140. The technical design risk has been assessed as Substantial. Some of the activities under RA 3 are part of the current work plan of the SP-GIRE (observation networks), but others are new in the context of Burkina Faso and hence require the strong support of SISC. The proposed interventions for water and sanitation are not complex, but for rural activities the implementation of Program activities requires strong coordination between MEA and its decentralized offices (DREAs). Also, sanitation activities require strong information, education and communication campaigns to create the demand for latrines and ensure the household contribution for the completion of the superstructure. 141. The risk associated with institutional capacity for implementation and sustainability is assessed as Substantial. Whereas ONEA has demonstrated strong capacity for project implementation in the ongoing Urban Water Sector Project (P106909), the technical departments of MEA are at a different level in particular, SP-GIRE. The Program implementation arrangement place significant emphasis on improving institutional capacity to address MEA’s capacity constraints. SISC will be hired early during Program implementation to ensure adequate technical support, in particular with regard to water resources activities. With the aim of strengthening the financial sustainability of water service delivery in urban and rural areas, the Program includes DLI 3 which refers to the adoption of cost-recovery tariff structures. In addition, a PCU within MEA and a PSU within ONEA will be staffed with dedicated coordinators and full- time specialists to ensure adequate coordination, and sufficient support during Program implementation, in particular in regard to M&E, fiduciary and safeguards aspects. The World Bank team will ensure close implementation support during the first year of implementation. 142. The fiduciary risk is assessed as Substantial, as explained under “Section B. Fiduciary”. The environmental and social risk is assessed as Moderate, as explained under “Section C. Environmental and Social”. . 29 Annex 1. Detailed Program description A. Scope of the Program 1. The Water Supply and Sanitation Program aims at supporting GoBF’s (GoBF) national plans for improving water supply and sanitation services and IWRM by incentivizing infrastructure investments and reforms in water and sanitation sector within targeted urban and rural areas, strengthening the water resources knowledge base, and promoting institutional strengthening through human capital building. 2. Since the mid-1990s, Burkina Faso has made significant strides to build a comprehensive legal and well-defined institutional framework to improve water supply and sanitation and IWRM. The MEA is responsible for determining priorities, setting policies and standards for water development, and managing and regulating water resources, including water and sanitation services. The National Office for Urban Water Supply and Sanitation (Office National de l’Eau et de l’Assainissement, ONEA), an autonomous publicly owned utility, is responsible for water supply, on-site sanitation, and sewerage provision in 57 urban centers in Burkina Faso. Significant policy reforms included the commercialization and modernization of ONEA; the delegation of water supply operations in rural areas to water user association, NGOs, and private operators; and, the adoption of IWRM principles in national policies and plans. 3. Since 2009, as part of the decentralization process, the municipalities are responsible for planning, developing, and managing water supply and sanitation services in rural areas. Despite the early foundations laid in the Constitution of 1991 and the decentralization of water supply and sanitation services initiated in 2006, the actual transfer of responsibilities accompanied with financial and human resources only started in 2009 and is yet to be fully achieved. In 2014, GoBF adopted AMOC, whereby MEA plays a central role in building the capacity of the municipalities and local actors for sustainable service delivery. The AMOC includes a human resources plan that provides financial resources of MEA during a period of ten years to strengthen municipal water supply and sanitation technical services. The support of MEA is to be gradually phased out as local capacities are strengthened. However, today a number of municipalities lack the necessary financial and human resources to undertake the planning, developing, and delivery of water supply and sanitation services in rural areas. B. The Government’s programs 4. Since the early 2000’s Burkina Faso adopted a program approach for improving water supply and sanitation services and IWRM, consisting on two generation of programs: from 2003-2015 and from 2016- 2030. 5. First generation of programs: 2003-2015. The first generation of programs included the Action Plan for IWRM, (Plan d’Action pour la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau, PAGIRE, 2003–2015) and the National Program for Water Supply and Sanitation (Programme National d'Approvisionnement en Eau Potable et d' Assainissement, PN-AEPA, 2007-2015). 6. In 2003, the PAGIRE (2003–2015) was adopted by GoBF and five river basin organizations established. Two of these river basin organizations have developed a River Basin Master Plan for Water Management (Schéma directeur d’aménagement et de gestion des eaux) and implemented a plan to protect water sources in terms of quantity and quality. Also, the CFE, which finance water resource 30 management actions including Water Agencies, started to be collected, though as of 2015 it amounted to only US$1.1 million. 7. In 2006, the PN-AEPA (2007-2015) was adopted by GoBF, leading to US$1 billion investments for achieving the MDGs in urban and rural areas21 within a framework of IWRM. The PN-AEPA significantly contributed to improve access to water and sanitation services. Other improvements include strengthened planning, M&E, and the creation of a more uniform reporting system. MEA was established in 2016 as a line ministry. 8. Second generation of programs: 2016-2030. GoBF has adopted a second generation of programs in the water, sanitation and IWRM sector, based on the following National Water Policy Guiding Principles: 9. Ensure the right of universal access to improved water and sanitation, on the basis of the human rights-based approach, with particular attention to the poorest and most vulnerable populations. This Guiding Principle is to be developed through the following implementation strategies: x Implement whenever possible the “clustered-village” approach to satisfactorily providing rural water service x For water supply and sanitation apply a “service approach” rather than an “asset approach”. In the specific case of the water supply, this strategy will consist of the promotion of private connections and the densification of standposts in rural areas. x Promote the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) 10. Improve knowledge and management of the country's water resources through the development of research and capacity building to ensure better management. Effective water resources management needs to focus on the issues of concern: (i) pollution resulting from the development of agricultural and mining activities; (ii) overexploitation of water resources; (ii) degradation and silting of waterways; and (iv) the recovery of the financial resources necessary for the sustainable management of the country's water resources. 11. Promote Sustainable Development to ensure the sustainability of actions undertaken in the water and sanitation sector, which meets the conditions of economic efficiency, environmental sustainability and social equity. The requirement of sustainability requires among others: x Partner with the private sector (PPP approach) for water supply and irrigation, in view of the decline in public aid to development, and the need to ensure the sustainability of investments x Give priority to rehabilitation, consolidation of infrastructure, considering the large number of hydraulic structures to be rehabilitated (dams, hydro-agricultural development, water supply systems, etc.), granting high priority to the maintenance of existing investments x Increase the mobilization of internal resources for sustainable financing of the water sector x Promote regional and international cooperation in the management of shared water resources. 12. GoBF has adopted a second generation of programs, comprising five national sectoral programs for the 2016–2030 period, based on the National Program for Economic and Social Development 21 The aim of the MDG related to WSS was halving the proportion of people that in 2005 had no adequate access to drinking water and sanitation by 2015. 31 (Programme national de développement économique et social, PNDES, 2016–2020), the National Water Policy (2016–2030) and the SDG 622, as follows: x The National Water Supply Program (Programme national d’approvisionnement en eau potable, PN-AEP, 2016–2030), adopted by Arrete No. 2016-15/MEA/CAB/ of June 9, 2016; x The National Sanitation and Wastewater Program (Programme National d’Assainissement des Eaux Usées et Excréta, PN-AEUE, 2016–2030), adopted by Arrete 2017-041/MEA/CAB of March 28, 2017. x The National Program for Integrated Water Resource Management (Programme National pour la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau, PN-GIRE, 2016–2030), adopted by Arrete 2016/MEA/CAB, of June 9, 2016. x The National Water and Sanitation Governance Program (Programme Gouvernance du secteur Eau et Assainissement, PGEA, 2016–2030); and x The National Program for Dam Development (Programme National des Aménagements Hydrauliques, PN-AH, 2016–2030). 13. These five operational programs reflect the government's response to sector issues and challenges, but they require continuity in the effort to mobilize financial resources, good governance, a focus on the outcomes and impacts of investments, and a strong and reliable sector framework including an administration with the capacity to make good decisions, as well as a stable legal framework known to users, businesses and investors. The 2016-2020 action plans were adopted in 2018. 14. The PN-AEP, PN-AUE and PN-GIRE national programs are implemented through five-year action plans, the first of which covers the period 2016-2020 with a projected overall budget of US$ 1088 million, of which 62 percent for the PN-AEP, 35 percent for the PN-AUE, and 4 percent for the PN-GIRE. The total requirements to fund the three programs from 2016 to 2030 is US$4212 million (Table A1.1). Table A1.1. Estimated budget for the PN-AEP, PN-AEUE, and PN-GIRE (US$ million) National Program 2016-2020 2021-2025 2026-2030 Total PN-AEP 671 706 903 2280 PN-AEUE 377 777 674 1828 PN-GIRE 40 33 31 104 Total 1088 1516 1607 4212 Source: PN-AEP 2016-2030, PN-AEUE 2016-2030, and PN-GIRE 2016-2030, 15. The Program is integrated with GoBF's priorities to provide universal access to water and sanitation services, and to strengthen water resource management. On the basis of the objectives and actions proposed in the government sector programs, the Program will fund a subset of investments included in the PN-AEP and the PN-AEUE in targeted geographical areas, and some key actions included in the PN-GIRE Table A1.2). The Program builds upon GoBF’s policy priorities and will support the objectives articulated within the PN-AEP, PN-AUE and PN-GIRE in selected urban and rural areas23. 22 For the WSS sector, SDG 6 provides for universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking water, sanitation and hygiene, and end to open defecation by 2030. 23The Program supports the objectives of these programs as follows: (a) for the PN-AEP, the objectives defined in Table 16 of Section 3.6. of the PN-AEP; (b) for the PN-AEUE, the objectives defined in Section 2.1.2 of the PN-AEP; and (c) for the PN-GIRE, 32 Table A1.2. Objectives and Actions of the PN-AEP, PN-AEUE, and PN-GIRE Government Specific Objective of the Government Actions Included in the government PforR Program Program 24 Program Program Supported National Ensure sustainable access to improved Implementing sustainable access to Yes Water Supply water supply services drinking water Program (PN- Sustainable manage water supply Managing water supply services Yes AEP) infrastructure Improve capacity for water supply Strengthening the institutional framework Yes management and management tools National Ensure sustainable access to improved Implementing sustainable access to Yes Sanitation and sanitation services sanitation Wastewater Eradicate open defecation by promoting Eradicating open defecation and Yes Program (PN– behavioral change promoting adequate hygiene and AEUE) sanitation practices in rural and urban areas Optimize wastewater and sludge Optimizing management and collection of Yes management wastewater and sludge Develop research in the field of wastewater Undertaking research in the field of Yes treatment and on-site sanitation sanitation Build capacity for subsector financing, Providing capacity building for sector Yes management and steering financing, management, and steering National Improve water resources information for Improving information on water resources Yes Program for decision making Integrated Develop reliable decision-making support Operationalizing the National Water Yes Water tools Information System (SNIEau) Resource Increase capacity and efficiency of river Adopting and implementing river basin No [1] Management basin organizations management plans (PN-GIRE) Increase the financial water contribution Defining and implementing a strategy to No [1] for the protection of water resources increase the financial water contribution Sustainably preserve the quality of the Protecting water sources for different No [1] water resources for the various uses water uses Protect water sources Defining and implementing an action plan No [1] for preventing invasion of water plants Incorporate transversal or cross sectoral Strengthening technical capacities for the Yes issues within water management monitoring of cross sectoral issues Change stakeholders’ behavior regarding Adopting communication campaigns in this No [1] the protection and uses of water domain Reduce regulatory offenses in water Enforcing IWRM regulations No [1] Note: [1] These actions of the PN-GIRE are supported by EU, DANIDA and Sida on-going programs. The PN-AEP 2016-2030 16. The strategic objective of PN-AEP 2016-2030 is to sustainably meet water supply needs of the population in quantity and quality and thus contribute to the achievement of the SDG 6. The strategic axes selected for the PN-AEP are: x Axis 1. Knowledge of the water sector: o To develop action research for water supply service delivery the objectives No. 5 and 6 defined in Table 3 of Section 6 of the PN-GIRE. 24 The Program supports the objectives of these programs as follows: (a) for the PN-AEP, the objectives defined in Table 16 of Section 3.6. of the PN-AEP; (b) for the PN-AEUE, the objectives defined in Section 2.1.2 of the PN-AEP; and (c) for the PN-GIRE, the objectives No. 5 and 6 defined in Table 3 of Section 6 of the PN-GIRE. 33 o Strengthen capacity for knowledge, monitoring and evaluation of water resources for water supply o Promote the acquisition, use, and dissemination of water data for use with water supply system o Reduce water-related risks by better understanding these risks and implementing preventive measures x Axis 2. Mobilization of water resources: o Promote the “water service approach” rather than an “asset approach” o Increase investments for the mobilization (production, treatment, transport, distribution and marketing) of groundwater and surface water resources for drinking water, with a view to achieving universal access to water while targeting priority villages / localities / neighborhoods without access to improved water x Axis 3. Management of water supply service: o Pursue the implementation of the reform of water supply management system in rural and semi-urban areas, while ensuring that the state and the local authorities ensure that the poorest people have access to the infrastructure. water, through the establishment of appropriate mechanisms that ensure equity and sustainability o In urban areas, improve the efficiency and effectiveness of water service delivery while taking appropriate measures to maintain the financial equilibrium of the urban water supply sub-sector o Promote the development of PPPs in infrastructure management and public water service x Axis 4. Management of the water sector: o Ensure better management of the sector by putting in place an effective institutional mechanism, a unified intervention framework and efficient management and control tools. o Implement a human resources development plan for the sector 17. The expected results linked to the urban component of the PN-AEP 2016-2030 are: (a) to increase the access rate to improved water supply from 91 to 100 percent, with the increase of the number of people served from 3.3 million at the end of 2016 to around 8 million by the end of 2030; and, (b) the creation of 20 new centers, increasing the number of existing urban centers served by ONEA from 57 to 77 urban centers. 18. The expected results linked to the rural component of the PN-AEP 2016-2030 are: (a) to increase the access rate to improved water supply from 65 to 100 percent by (i) increasing the population served by standposts from 7 percent in 2014 to 24 percent in 2030 and (ii) increasing the population served by private connections from 0.3 percent in 2014 to 56 percent in 2030. By 2030 about 20 percent of the rural population (about 3.5 million people) will still be served by boreholes equipped with manual operated pumps. 34 Table A1.3. Objectives PN-AEP Rural Component (2015-2030) Rural water systems Boreholes equipped with Water Connections (#) (#) manual operated pumps (#) distribution Period Private mains New Rehabilitated Standposts New Rehabilitated Connections (Kms) 2015 - 2020 100 225 4,854 104,004 5,406 3,899 3,883 2020 - 2025 136 86 3,008 289,093 3,900 2,795 4,395 2025 - 2030 222 86 734 603,823 2,323 2,911 4,253 Total 458 397 8,596 996,920 11,629 9,605 12,531 (2015 – 2030) Source: PN-AEP 2016-2030 The 2016-2030 PN-AEUE 19. The overall objective of PN-AEUE 2016-2030 is to ensure sustainable access to sanitation services (including on-site and network services), and achieve the SDG 6 concerning sanitation. The strategic axes selected for the PN-AEUE are: x Axis 1. Ensure universal access to sanitation. This strategic axis aims to ensure the right of universal access to sanitation on the basis of the human rights-based approach, taking into account the concerns of the poorest and most vulnerable population. This includes: o End open defecation through community-based approaches such as community/leader led total sanitation o Ensure adequate and sustainable sanitation services in all institutions and public places o In rural areas, the strategy is to improve the rate of access to a sustainable sanitation service by stimulating self-realization and setting up a diversified technological offer o In urban areas, in addition to self-realization and the establishment of service delivery options, it will also proceed to rehabilitate and develop sanitation networks in the main urban areas to increase the rate of access to a sustainable sanitation service x Axis 2: Ensure sustainable financing of the sanitation sub-sector o Large-scale promotion of Leader Led Total Sanitation o The development of the PPPs for sanitation o The development of new endogenous financing mechanisms o The development of mechanisms to encourage self-realization x Axis 3: Promote communication for behavioral change. The communication strategy will focus on advocacy, outreach and mass communication: o Community-based communication will rely on community relays that will be trained beforehand and equipped with communication tools adapted to each community and based on participatory approaches o Mass communication will be done through radio, television, print press, public entertainment, theaters forums and other innovative tools o School-based hygiene education to induce changes across children (school governments, school health clubs) and through community-based training (with village or community health committees) 20. In terms of the urban component, the expected results are (a) the coverage of the intervention area from 57 to 77 centers, (b) the progression of access to improvd sanitation from 38 to 100 percent by 2030 (Table A1.4). 35 Table A1.4. Projected number of urban latrines under the PN-AEUE Targeted access Program Estimated urban Population to be # of # of latrines rate to improved Phase population served households to be built sanitation (%) 2016-2020 7,008,229 3,854,526 55% 727,269 249,899 2021-2025 8,991,033 7,192,802 80% 1,357,132 326,900 2026-2030 11,340,300 11,340,300 100% 2,139,679 395,476 Source : PN-AEUE 2016-2030 21. As for the rural component of the 2016-2030 PN-AEUE the expected results are (a) ending open defecation in 100 percent of rural municipalities and (b) changing the rate of access to sanitation from 13. 4 percent in 2016 to 100 percent in 2030 (Table A1.5). Table A1.5. Projected number of rural latrines under the PN-AEUE Targeted access Program Estimated rural Population to be # of # of latrines rate to improved Phase population served households to be built sanitation (%) 2016-2020 14,480,929 3,620,232 25% 517,176 210,342 2021-2025 16,043,904 12,032,928 75% 1,718,990 992,951 2026-2030 17,331,400 17,331,400 100% 2,475,914 740,189 Source : PN-AEUE 2016-2030 The 2016-2030 PN-GIRE 22. The strategic objective of the 2016-2030 PN-GIRE is to sustainably contribute to the meet the needs of users and aquatic ecosystems for freshwater. The strategic approaches of the PN-GIRE are: x Engage all stakeholders in carrying out concrete actions to protect water resources in the field x Develop and consolidate the river basin organizations x Strengthen the water police x Advance in the implementation of the CFE x Develop and sustain the national water information system x Develop the interactions between IWRM and decentralization processes x Continue the development of regional and international cooperation x Integrate gender, poverty, growth, human rights and climate change aspects in the planning implementation of actions and their monitoring and evaluation in the field of water resources 23. The main expected results are: (a) the reduction of water-related offenses, (b) the improvement of the recovery of the CFE from 55 percent in 2015 to 100 percent in 2030, (c) the adoption of all Water Development and Management Master Plans (SDAGE) as well as multi-year intervention programs, (d) increasing the density of measurement networks, (e) improving the knowledge and management of water resources. 36 Rationale for Using the Program-for-Results (Program) Instrument 24. The PforR is the most appropriate instrument for supporting GoBF’s program approach for the sector, which has been implemented since 2003 through two generations of sector programs25. These programs have led to significant investments, and supported important progress in access to water supply and sanitation services and IWRM. The PforR instrument will enhance the impact of the World Bank’s financial and technical support and strengthen the overall results orientation of GoBF. In doing so it will facilitate the following: x Program ownership. The highest levels of GoBF are committed to achieve the objectives of the PN-AEP, the PN-AEUE, and the PN-GIRE programs, which are under implementation since 2017. The PforR instrument will support the GoBF program approach for the water supply, sanitation, and IWRM sectors. x Improvements in implementation of government programs. The Program provides an opportunity to support and strengthen the implementation of government programs and improves the institutional framework and stakeholder capacity for the management of water and sanitation services and water resources. The World Bank’s assessment of the quality of the Program, including the Results Framework, expenditure framework, and supporting systems, is satisfactory and the Program systems meets the OP/BP 9.00 requirements. Although the Program will support specific interventions, the World Bank’s contribution is anticipated to foster improvements in terms of effectiveness and efficiency in the overall program over the next 13 years (the implementation period for the PN-AEP, the PN-AEUE, and the PN-GIRE is 2017–2030). Linkages between the different programs (PN-AEP, PN-AEUE and PN-GIRE), the sectoral reform strategies and the use of the country’s existing systems were established. x Improvements in national systems and procedures. The Program builds upon the country’s fiduciary and ESMS. Burkina Faso has made significant progress in public financial management and procurement reforms. An assessment of the program fiduciary arrangements (IFSA) was conducted to evaluate the Program systems and to determine whether they provide reasonable assurance that the Program funds will be used for their intended purposes, with due attention to the principles of economy, efficiency, effectiveness, transparency and accountability. The Environmental and Social Systems Assessment (ESSA) was undertaken to have a thorough understanding of the environmental and social risks, benefits, impacts and opportunities linked to the Program. Through the PAP the Program will continue to provide support to strengthen country fiduciary systems related to audits, budgeting and planning, and compliance of procurement timeframe. Also, the PAP includes actions related to the strengthening of the ESMS related to the environmental and social management of the Program investments and environmental and social management capacity of MEA and ONEA. x Results orientation. The choice of the PforR instrument responds to GoBF’s focus toward results rather than investment execution as reflected in the Matrix of Sector Performance Indicators for 2017–2020.26 The use of the PforR instrument will establish clear links between IDA disbursements (disbursement link indicators, DLIs) and the delivery of results. In doing so, the 25 The first generation of programs was implemented between 2003 and 2016 and includes the PN-AEP 2007–2015 and the PAGIRE 2003–2015. The second generation of sectoral programs, adopted in 2016, is under implementation since 2017, and includes five national programs for 2016–2030. 26 Matrice des Indicateurs de Performances 2017–2020 du Secteur Eau et Assainissement that clearly identifies specific actions, and corresponding indicators, to be undertaken under each of the five sectoral programs. 37 Program instrument reinforces GoBF results orientation. The Program is linked to a set of simple and measurable indicators. x Coordination with other development partners. The PforR facilitates coordination between GoBF and development partners. The Program builds upon the past experience of the country in implementing result based sectoral budget support programs for water, sanitation, and IWRM financed by the EU, the DANIDA, and Sida over the past 10 years. 25. Program financing and duration. The Program will be implemented during a period of five years, with targeted completion in December 2023. 26. The estimated cost of the three national programs (PN-AEP, PN-AEUE, and PN-GIRE) for the 2016- 2030 period is estimated at US$5 billion. The required financial resources for the next five years equal US$1.1 billion. Several donors, in particular EU, the AFD, DANIDA, and Sida have mobilized resources to finance parts of the three government programs. 27. The total Program financing, as defined in the PAD, is US$365 million. This includes: (a) the household contribution for US$34 million (in-kind for the completion of the latrine super-structure in urban and rural areas); GoBF contribution for US$31 million (including the contribution from MEA and ONEA), which will be made available for the Program through the Program CAST; and (c) IDA contribution for US$300 million, of which US$50 million in the form of a grant and US$250 million as a credit from the IDA SUF (Table A1.6). 28. SUF financing has been mobilized for the Program in view of its strong, potentially transformative development impact, as follows: (a) more than 1.1 people will benefit from improved water supply and 1.3 million people from improved sanitation services; (b) accent on sustainability of service delivery, including on O&M of assets and cost-recovery, will contribute to crowd in third party resources and experience; (c) in-depth knowledge of the sedimentary and hard-rock aquifers will enable adequate allocation of water resources, contributing to reducing the impacts of water shocks and climate variability, and strengthening resilience; and (d) emphasis on the development of the human capital for water supply, sanitation, and IWRM – including strengthening women’s voice and participation - will enhance sustainability of Program results. By improving ONEA’s operational efficiency, establishing an effective asset management approach for rural water supply and sanitation, updating the financial modeling and revising the tariff structures in urban and rural areas, and delegating rural water supply and sanitation services to private operators, the Program will create the enabling environment to attract private capital on a nation-wide basis either for direct financing and operation of larger scale assets, such as water or sludge treatment facilities, or through the private, delegated operators who will have some rehabilitation and network extension responsibilities as is already occurring with peri-urban operators. Table A1.6. Program Financing (US$ million) Source Amount (US$ million) % of total Household in-kind contribution 34 9 GoBF 31 8 IDA Grant 50 14 IDA SUF 250 68 Total Program financing 365 100 38 World Bank and donor engagements 29. The Program will complement and build upon the on-going World Bank financed in Urban Water Supply and Sanitation Project (P106909), and of other development partners and NGOs programs and projects, in particular EU, DANIDA, Sida and AFD. 30. World Bank engagement in the sector. Over the last two decades, the World Bank has been a leading partner in the development of the water and sanitation sector.27 Through the World Bank financed Ouagadougou Water Supply Project (P000306, 2001–2007), new water storage capacity (the Ziga Dam) and a main delivery network were developed, in addition to secondary and tertiary water distribution networks, private connections, and water standposts to low-income households. The World Bank support was key for the successful turnaround of ONEA, by promoting efficiency in urban water supply operations and contracting out ONEA's commercial, financial, and accounting functions. Under the ongoing US$160 million Urban Water Sector Project (P106909, 2008–2018), a significant increase in the access to improved water and sanitation has been achieved through the provision of social connections, household latrines, and school latrines in main urban areas (Ouagadougou, Bobo-Dioulasso, Koudougou, and Dedougou); and ONEA’s financial equilibrium and performance has been maintained. Through the World Bank-financed pilot project for the delegation of the management of water supply systems in peri-urban settlements in Ouagadougou, in 2015, more than 107,000 people gained access to improved water services. On the rural front, under the World Bank-financed Community-Based Rural Development Project (P035673, 2001– 2013), about 1.4 million people in rural areas gained access to clean water. Furthermore, the World Bank has supported rural water supply development through the Water and Sanitation Program for more than a decade, including the development of a private sector strategy for rural water systems and a pro-poor water tariff study. In June 2017, in response to the Government’s request, the World Bank completed an assessment of water resources in the country,28 which provides a detailed road map to improve IWRM, including strengthening the knowledge of water resources in the country, aiming at enhanced IWRM. 31. The EU provides budget sector support and technical assistance to the water supply and sanitation sectors. EU priority areas of support are the improvement of the sector governance by promoting an effective decentralization of the water and sanitation services, strengthening the role and participation of civil society, improving M&E systems for the sector and support increased access to improved water supply and sanitation services with particular attention to reducing geographical inequalities. Also, EU provides budget support for the operationalization of IWRM, including providing support to the river basin organizations, implementation of the CFE and enforcing IWRM regulations. Through technical assistance, the EU finances the development of sanitation facilities in rural areas, accompanied by information, education, and communication campaigns and support to the AMOC. 32. DANIDA provides budget support and technical assistance to the municipalities to improve their planning capacity and implementation and management of water supply systems in the regions of Boucle du Mouhoun, Hauts-Bassins and Cascades. A strong engagement for improving access to drinking water supply is ongoing: plans to expand water production capacities in sedimentary aquifers, create multi- village water supply schemes in the municipalities of Bama, Fô and Padema (province of Houet) and enhance local capacities for the management of these schemes, expand the existing water supply network of ONEA towards neighboring centers such as Dori/Gorom-Gorom, Nouna/Dédougou and Ouahigouya, 27 More than US$266 million have been mobilized for World Bank operations and technical assistance covering water supply and sanitation projects in urban and rural areas, and IWRM. 28 Based on the priorities identified established by the PN-GIRE 2016–2030. 39 conduct research to identify potential high yield drilling boreholes to create new multi-village schemes, and develop regional water supply plans in addition to the municipal development plans. 33. DANIDA, in collaboration with Sida, supports IWRM by providing support to reduce existing water conflicts and improve the knowledge of water resources by strengthening the capacities of river basin organizations (through the development of River Basin Management Plans and assessment of the CFE), promoting participation of all water users (through water committees) and the protection of water sources (control of waste water disposal). Finally, DANIDA also intervenes by strengthening human resources for water resource management by providing scholarships for technical and training programs. 34. AFD provides project support for water supply and sanitation in selected urban centers and intervenes in rural areas of the Sahel region. In Ouagadougou, AFD is currently providing funding for the expansion of the production capacity from the Ziga Dam, the expansion of the distribution network, the installation of social connections, technical assistance for the reduction of water losses, expanding the sewerage network by 30 kilometers, and finance a sludge treatment plan. In Bobo-Dialousso the AFD intervenes to improve the operational and technical performance of the system, in particular by reducing energy costs through solar energy use. In the Sahel region, AFD supports the development of 30 rural water systems and the delegation of water systems to the private sector, and provides support to the AMOC. Vision and priorities for GoBF 35. GoBF’s vision is that by 2030 the country's water resource is known and effectively managed to achieve universal access to improved water and sanitation services to contribute to sustainable development. Accordingly, the National Water Policy includes the following priorities. First, ensuring universal access to water and sanitation with a major emphasis on the poorest and most vulnerable populations. Second, improving the knowledge and management of water resources in the country through research and capacity strengthening of the actors in the water supply, sanitation, and IWRM sector. The effective management of water resources should focus on (a) the overexploitation of water resources; (b) the degradation of water banks and the silting of waterways; (c) the pollution resulting from the development of farming and mining activity; and (d) the increase of financial resources necessary for the sustainable management of water resources in the country. Third, promoting the long-term sustainability of the sector including increasingly engaging the private sector in the management of water supply systems, giving priority to maintenance of existing investments, mobilizing internal resources for the sustainable financing of the sector, and promoting regional and international cooperation in the management of shared water resources. Lessons from past programs and projects 36. The programmatic approach adopted in the last 15 years has been a catalyst for the mobilization of resources for the sector, in particular the mobilization of external funding and own national resources. The support provided by technical and financial cooperation in terms of human resources to the various implementation entities, both at central and decentralized level (technical assistance and project management) has been a decisive factor that furthers the impact of the Program approach. 37. Steering committees, dedicated program coordination/implementation units, and strategic support are key for successful implementation. The existence of program steering and dialogue frameworks has made it possible to address significant obstacles to the progress of the programs and the sector as a whole. The creation of an independent program implementation unit (Ziga Contracting 40 Authority and an urban unit for the PN-AEPA), staffed with full-time, dedicated, and experienced specialists was essential for the achievement of the expected of results. Also, the stability of the staff involved in the activities was crucial to ensure the programs’ performance. The availability of technical assistance has been important to guarantee the technical quality of the design, procurement documents, and deliverables. 38. DREAs play a central role in achieving the results of the sector's investment programs. The municipality adopts, with the support of the DREAs, the municipal water and sanitation development plan, which is a key programming instrument. The existence of updated plans at the start of the programs is one of the keys to success of the intervention strategy. 39. The approaches to the construction of sanitation facilities have encouraged a consensus in terms of an intervention strategy that consists of supporting households through a partial subsidy of materials (cement and iron for the slab, ventilation chimneys, fly screens, and placing the sub-structure combined with the contribution of households for the super-structure and reinforced by strong implementation of the information, education and communication campaigns. Choosing a competent information, education and communication entity for each region is key for the achievement of results. 40. Periodic audits have been important to review quality and performance of program implementation. C. Program development objective, geographical scope and results areas 41. The PDO is to improve access to water supply and sanitation services in targeted areas. Two PDO level indicators will be used to monitor progress towards the achievement of the Program PDO: 1) People provided with access to an improved water source (number, disaggregated by female, urban, rurar) - Corporate Results Indicator; and 2) People provided with access to improved sanitation services (number, disaggregated by female, urban, rural) - Corporate Results Indicator. 42. The Water Supply and Sanitation Program consists of three RAs that are mapped to the national PN-AEP, PN-AUE and PN-GIRE programs, in addition to a cross cutting area (human capital strengthening). The geographical scope of the planned activities under the different result areas is presented in Table A1.7 and Map in Annex 9. Table A1.7. Geographical Scope of Activities Results Area Urban Rural RA 1. Improved access to 11 centers of ONEA: Ouagadougou, Selected communities of 64 water supply Kaya, Korsimoro, Boussouma, Yako, municipalities of four targeted Gourcy, Boussé; Gon-Boussougou, regions: Hauts-Bassins, Boucle du Mogtédo, Béguédo, and Tiébélé Mouhoun, Cascades, and the RA 2. Improved access to The 11 centers above plus Dédougou, Southwest sanitation Nouna, and Bobo-Dioulasso RA 3. Improved access to Nationwide reliable information on water resources Cross-cutting. Human capital Nationwide strengthening 41 43. In urban areas the Program will intervene in a total of 14 urban centers. In 11 urban centers the interventions will include water supply and sanitation, while in three urban centers the Program will intervene only for delivery of sanitation services29. Activities include strengthening of the already existing systems, creating new water supply systems following GoBF strategy for urban water, and boosting access rates to improved sanitation facilities. About 69 percent of the total urban population (or 3,664,745 inhabitants in 2017) resides in the cities of Ouagadougou, Bobo-Dioulasso, Kaya, Gourcy, Yako, Dédougou, Nouna, Gon-Boussougou, Tiébélé, Korsimoro, Béguédo, Boussé, Boussouma, Mogtédo. These cities are characterized by rapid and uncontrolled growth and strong urbanization driven by rural migration. Ouagadougou and Bobo-Dioulasso had an average growth rate of 7 percent per year between 1996 and 2006. Newcomers often settle in areas that are not covered or recognized by official urban planning. The selection of urban areas also considers the low level of production and pumping capacity in the Kaya and Yako, the reinforcement of which will be the basis to improve services to satellite towns of Korsimoro- Boussouma, Gourcy, and Boussé. Finally, the Program will intervene in four new centers where the current access to improve water supply is below 30 percent. 44. In rural areas the Program will intervene in four targeted regions: Hauts-Bassins, Boucle du Mouhoun, Cascades, and Southwest. These regions were selected based on the low rates of access to improved water supply (less than 70 percent), which are among the lowest rates of the country; and, the low rates of access to improved sanitation facilities (less than 12 percent), also among the lowest in the country. The selection also considered the on-going support provided by other developing partners like the AFD, the EU, UNICEF, and other donors in the remaining nine regions. 45. The Program will intervene in selected beneficiary communities within 64 municipalities distributed among the four targeted regions as follows: 24 of the 47 municipalities in the Boucle de Mouhoun Region; 10 of the 17 municipalities in the Cascades Region; 16 of the 33 municipalities in the Hauts-Bassins Region; and 14 of the 28 municipalities in the Southwest Region. The selected beneficiary communities are expected to gain access to improved water supply at the household level or at the communal level, and access to improved sanitation at the household level by means of improved latrines. The selection of the beneficiary communities will be based on a number of criteria, of which the most important will be: (a) availability of water sources, developed by other projects or by this program, so that people in the community can gain access to improved water supply; (b) completion of sanitation, hygiene and behavioral change campaigns; (c) commitment of the municipal authority towards latrine campaigns and reduction of open defecation; and (d) level of commitment of the households in the community to build the superstructure of the latrines with their own resources. Whereas household commitment is expected to be 100 percent, a minimum of 80 percent will be required. This will ensure that the Program brings about a robust solution to water and sanitation challenges and maximizes the impact of IDA support. The Program will intervene in selected beneficiary municipalities at the household level and at the communal level to the possible extend. 46. On the IWRM front, the Program supports two key strategic actions of the PN-GIRE: (a) improving knowledge on surface and groundwater resources, including its location, quantity and quality; and (b) operationalizing the National Water Information System (Système National d’Information sur l’Eau, SNIEau). The Program’s support for these two actions responds to the Government’s request to 29 For Dédougou, Nouna, and Bobo-Dioulasso the Program will intervene only for sanitation as DANIDA is currently intervening in these three urban centers on water supply. 42 strengthen the knowledge base on water resources and its accessibility to allow for adequate decision making, including the allocation of water to different sectors and uses. 47. Through the human capital strengthening activities, the Program seeks to support the objectives of the PN-AEP, PN-AEUE and PN-GIRE programs related to boosting the capacity for service delivery. RA 1. Improved access to water supply Context 48. On the urban water front major policy reforms of the water sector, coupled with a utility transformation program30 and important capital investments, led to a significant increase in access to improved water in urban areas from 37 percent to 91 percent between 1990 and 2016 (Table A1.8). Today ONEA is considered one of the best-performing water utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa, with 2.8 staff per 1,000 connections, 18.6 percent of NRW, and 91 percent of the urban population provided with access to improved water. Table A1.8. Access to urban drinking water by regions within ONEA centers Region Population Household Standposts Population Access rate connections served (#) (#) (#) (#) (%) Ouagadougou 2,560,049 248,647 1,885 2,544,568 99 Bobo-Dioulasso 1,154,970 75,176 905 1,018,322 88 North West 749,054 44,192 890 618,208 83 North East 677,413 32,446 639 505,611 75 Total 5,199,859 400,461 4,319 4,686,709 91 Source: ONEA 2016 Annual Report 49. Looking forward, the sustainability of the urban water sector faces two major challenges associated with the low water availability and weak financial viability. An increased demand for water resources is driven by strong population growth and urbanization, which is aggravated by an uncontrolled expansion of the urban space. In some regions, addressing increased demand is challenging in view of the low availability of groundwater resources in the hard rock aquifers that cover 80 percent of the territory.31 50. ONEA has been able to maintain its financial equilibrium as it is able to fully cover O&M costs and debt service, and even make a partial contribution to capital investments, with the revenues collected from its operations. However, ONEA’s financial viability is threatened by: (a) the lack of regular tariff adjustments to reflect pass-through changes to operational expenditures such as energy, chemicals and labor; (b) a tariff structure that heavily relies on industrial and commercial customers to subsidize the lifeline tariff, which applies to every customer regardless of income level; (c) the significant change in the customer profile, whereby increasingly more customers fall under the highly subsidized lifeline tariff below 8 m3 per month; (d) rapid urbanization, in particular of Ouagadougou and Bobo-Dioulasso peri- 30 Key measures taken include the recruitment of dedicated and experienced management staff, the increase in water supply by the construction of the Ziga Dam, a service contract with a private operator, and the introduction of cross-subsidy tariffs and block rates. 31 High yield sedimentary aquifers cover 20 percent of the territory and are mainly located in the South West. Sedimentary aquifers in the North and South East of the territory are small. 43 urban areas that require significant investments to expand the services; and (e) fast growing centers where the existing water infrastructure is limited. 51. ONEA’s financial equilibrium is largely sustained by one main center: Ouagadougou. 60 percent of ONEA’s revenue is derived from water supply connections within the city of Ouagadougou alone, hence cross-subsidizing services to secondary and smaller centers. Although non-revenue water in the Ouagadougou system can be considered acceptable by international standards, it has increased during the last three years from 17 percent to 18.3 percent and 18.7 percent due to increased physical losses in the distribution network. 52. The Program provides incentives to ONEA to address the threats to its financial viability by means of: a new tariff structure that better allocates costs while remaining affordable to low income people; the sectorization of the Ouagadougou water distribution network, combined with a leak detection program; improved customer management services; and an energy audit to reduce energy costs. All these planned activities should significantly improve the financial performance of ONEA. 53. On the rural water front progress has been accompanied by a major service delivery reform. Between 1990 and 2016 access to an improved water sources increased from only 10 percent to 65 percent, though significant disparities remained with the southwestern regions mostly lagging (Figure A1.1). 54. In 2000, GoBF introduced a substantial reform for the service provision in rural water supply. Stand-alone boreholes equipped with hand pumps needed to be managed by WUAs through a delegation agreement signed between the municipality and the WUA. Furthermore, in 2009 GoBF transferred the responsibility of the provision of water supply and sanitation services to municipalities, except for those under the responsibility of ONEA. Measures have been implemented to revitalize the WUAs. The technical agent and president of the municipal council play an important role as representatives of the municipalities in these agreements. The maintenance and repair of the pumps is ensured by a private provider based on a contract signed with the municipality. Rural water supply systems are to be managed by a third party (private operators, NGOs, or ONEA) recruited by the municipality based on public bidding. Figure A1.1 Rural access rate to improved water supply, by region 100 88.5 90 82.9 79.4 80 74.7 72.7 71.2 70.8 67.8 65 70 62.5 55.5 54.3 51.4 60 49 50 40 30 20 10 0 Notes: [1] Column in yellow denotates the average of the 13 regions for access to rural water supply; [2] Columns in orange indicates the four targeted regions included in the Program Source: Balance Report of the PN-AEPA 2015. 44 55. The successful implementation of the reform is demonstrated by a remarkable functionality rate: 88.6 percent for the hand pumps and 84.3 percent of the rural water systems. Currently, 6,834 WUAs of 8,059 recognized WUAs had signed a delegation agreement with the municipality (84.8 percent); 155 of 623 recognized private providers had signed a contract for O&M; and 12 operators had been delegated the management of 445 water supply systems (60 percent of the existing 780 systems), of which 22 are operated by ONEA and 267 by private operators (mainly local). In 2014, GoBF undertook several initiatives to address the challenge of securing provisions for O&M and extend rural water supply systems such as adopting the AMOC, developing a tariff study for rural water; and developing a PPP strategy for the water sector. 56. To further progress in rural areas, the sector needs to increase water production capacities in low yield hard rock aquifers, which cover 80 percent of the territory. Other challenges include professionalizing private sector operations, improving the management of water supply systems, strengthening local capacities for the management of water supply systems, and ensuring equal access to water supply and sanitation services across regions. Description of activities 57. For urban water this RA supports the priorities of GoBF established in the PNDES and the PN-AEP. For urban water, the Program will incentivize the development of priority infrastructure to improve urban water supply service delivery through: (a) the expansion of access to improved water supply through installation of approximately 81,885 new metered household connections and approximately 333 standposts; (b) the expansion of water production capacity, pumping and storage facilities in selected urban centers; (c) the development of water master plans for the city of Ouagadougou for the period following year 2030; and, (d) the development of pre-feasibility studies for selected urban centers. 58. In Ouagadougou, the Program will support: (a) the increase in the storage capacity of 8,000 m3, (b) the extension of the network of 725 km; (c) the installation of 70,000 social connections and the construction of 100 standposts, including in two informal neighborhoods of the city; and (d) a comprehensive study that identifies alternative sources of water to ensure water supply to the city beyond 2030. 59. In secondary centers, the Program will support significant water supply system enhancements. In response to the increasing water demand in the centers of Yako, Gourcy and Boussé, the Program will increase the water production capacity (with 500 m3/h), expand distribution (163 km of network) and increase connections (2,575 connections and 50 standposts). Similarly, the Program will support the extension of the Kaya system to include the Korsimoro and Boussouma secondary centers and adding production capacity (200 m3/h), the increase in the storage capacity of 2,600 m3, the extension of the network of 125 km, and the installation of 3,100 social connections and 60 standposts. Finally, the Program will support the creation of four stand-alone water supply systems in Gon-Boussougou, Mogtédo, Béguédo, and Tiébélé with a total combined production capacity of 6,330 m3 per day; a storage capacity of 1,200 m3; and the installation of 92 km of network, 6,210 social connections, and 123 standposts. In addition to infrastructure works, the Program will support the development of master plans based on the priorities established by the PN-AEP. 60. The Program seeks to incentivize improvements in the operational efficiency of ONEA through: (a) improving the GIS; (b) the sectorization of the water supply network of the city of Ouagadougou to identify and reduce water losses; and (c) strengthening the capacity of its operational and management 45 staff by means of technical courses and training, and the hiring of key specialists through the human capital strengthening programs supported by the Program. 61. The Program also seeks to incentivize the strengthening of ONEA’s financial equilibrium through: (a) adjusting the existing urban water supply tariff; (b) carrying out of urban water supply tariff structure studies32 and adoption of new water supply tariff structure; and (c) developing tools and applications to improve customer support and monitor service performance, including optimizing production costs (improve energy efficiencies during operational management and strengthen the capacities of staff in the management of water losses). 62. For rural water, the Program will support: (a) the installation of approximately 1,100 boreholes equipped with hand pumps, including approximately 400 in health centers and schools selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (b) the construction of 90 new water supply systems in locations selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (c) the rehabilitation of 60 existing water supply systems selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (d) the development of 10 feasibility studies for clustered water supply systems; (e) the adoption by the Recipient of a new rural water tariff; and (f) the scale-up the DISE to the regions of Hauts-Bassins, Boucle du Mouhoun, Cascades, and Southwest. To optimize water service provision costs the Program will promote solar pumping33. 63. The Program will incentivize the strengthening of its human capital by providing training opportunities to staff at ONEA, the DGEP, DREAs, and municipal technical services, and the hiring of selected specialists, in particular at the municipal level in support of the AMOC. 64. Asset management will be aligned with the policies for water supply in Burkina Faso. Stand-alone boreholes equipped with hand pumps will be managed by WUA. The operation and management of water supply system will be delegated to a third party, such as an NGO, a private operator, or ONEA. The management of the water supply system by the partner follows the prescriptions of the tariff study, the PPP strategy and the AMOC. The service contracts for the management of the water supply system will be for a renewable contract period of 15 years and at least 20 supply systems will be assigned per operator. The rehabilitation of 60 existing systems may be carried out by a private partner that will be responsible for the management of the works and will also mobilize the financial resources to enable an expansion of the network that responds to the water demands until 2030. 65. The indicative number of household connections, standpoints and boreholes by year, by rural and urban areas, is presented in Table A1.9. The results included in the table above will be monitored as part of the Program Implementation Plan. For that end, the POM will include the indicators presented in Table 32 A tariff study will be conducted and take into account the affordability, efficiency and required investments to achieve the targets of SDG 6. This tariff study will lead to a new tariff model and tariff structure. 33 This is the intention of the PN-AEP. The option to power the water supply systems by solar energy will be considered a priority. Since the 1990s, Burkina Faso has accumulated considerable experience in the use of solar energy for water supply systems, including the Regional Project Phase Solar I (PRS-I) and Phase II (PRS-II). The electrical network of the SONABEL or other producers of electricity should supplement/complement the solar energy where this is needed. The use of thermal generators should be considered as a last resort and only in combination with the solar systems. Thermal generators should only be considered in areas without electricity network and when water production does not cover the daily needs of the locality with the operation time of the only source of solar energy. 46 A1.9. The norms regarding the number of people served per type of water source are presented in Table A1.10. Table A1.9. Indicative Schedule of Connections Per Year [1] Type of POM Indicator [3] Targeted improved water YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Total Area source Urban Household Number of new household 18,000 20,500 20,500 20,500 2,385 81,885 connection connections built under the Program in target urban areas Standposts Number of new standpost 50 150 100 33 0 333 built under the Program in targeted urban areas Rural Household Number of household new 392 504 304 0 0 1,200 connection connections built under the Program in target rural areas Standposts Number of new standpost 315 401 254 0 0 970 built under the Program in targeted rural areas Boreholes Number of new boreholes 192 443 65 0 0 700 equipped with equipped with manual manual operated pumps for operated pumps household use built under for household the Program in targeted use [2] rural areas Total Household Number of household new 18,392 21,004 20,804 20,500 2,385 83,085 connection connections built under the Program Standposts Number of new standpost build under the Program 365 551 354 33 - 1,303 Borehole for Number of new boreholes household use equipped with manual [2] operated pumps for household use built under the Program 192 443 65 - - 700 Notes: [1] Figures per year (not cumulative); [2] The total number of boreholes financed by the Program is 1,100 (all in rural areas), of which 700 will be installed for household use and 400 in institutions such as schools and health centers; [3] The POM will included the indicators presented in the table. Table A1.10. Norms Applicable for the Calculation of Beneficiaries Number of People per Type of Connection/Facility Type of Connection/Facility Urban Rural Ouagadougou Other urban centers Household connection 6 7 10 Standpost 300 400 500 Borehole equipped with hand pumps Not applicable 300 66. Long-term water supply sustainability. Through the DLIs, the Program encourages measures that will allow for more efficient and accountable water supply service delivery. This includes, among others, adjustments of the existing urban water supply tariff; adoption of new tariff in urban and rural areas, which would enable financial equilibrium while maintaining affordability to low income people; support 47 for the delegation of rural water systems to independent operators; strengthened the M&E function; and implementation of a substantial human capital strengthening program, which includes the hiring of staff for the MEA, ONEA, and/or municipal technical services. These measures are critical elements for the long-term sustainability of the sector, and will have positive impacts on service delivery. 67. The development of citizen engagement guidelines will ensure the effective participation of and consultation with local people, targeted beneficiary community, and vulnerable groups, and will include adequate gender-sensitive consultations in selection of interventions, management of WUAs, and in implementation of all the components of the Program. 68. Potential climate co-benefits. In urban areas, in particular in the Ouagadougou system, the Program seek to incentivize reductions in physical losses, increase energy and water use efficiency and reduce energy costs, thus potentially carry climate change mitigation co-benefits. The increased adoption of solar photovoltaic pumping technology for rural water supply schemes, away from diesel dependence, also potentially qualifies for climate mitigation co-benefits. The rehabilitation and building on new rural water supply schemes will result in more climate change-resilient water supply infrastructure that are potentially relevant for climate change adaptation co-benefits. RA 2. Improved access to sanitation Context 69. In urban areas, only 38 percent of the population has access to adequate sanitation services (Table A1.11), with about 12.8 percent of the urban population still practicing open defecation. Among those that use latrines, 12.9 percent of households have improved latrines, while 87.1 percent of households continue to use inadequate facilities (non-hygienic traditional latrines). Despite the close-to- universal reliance on on-site sanitation facilities, sludge emptying is informal and only four sludge treatment plants exist in Ouagadougou and Bobo-Dioulasso with a combined treatment capacity of less than 1,000 m3/day of sludge. Sewerage networks only exist in Ouagadougou business district and serve less than 1 percent of Ouagadougou’s population. Sanitation fees are insufficient, varying between US$0.03 and US$0.10 per m3 of water consumed, depending on the type of sanitation facility. Table A1.11. Access to sanitation services by regions within ONEA centers. ONEA’s Region Population Household Sewer Population Access rate facilities connections served (#) (#) (#) (#) (%) Ouagadougou 2,594,465 124,996 1,105 1,261,009 49 Bobo-Dioulasso 1,167,868 37,899 274 381,730 3 North West 755,366 19,474 - 194,737 6 North East 682,161 15,524 - 155,236 23 Total 5,199,859 197,892 1,379 1,992,712 38 70. In rural areas, only 12 percent of the population have access to improved sanitation facilities and around 75 percent of the rural households still practice open defecation (Figure A1.2). Awareness campaigns and education and behavioral change programs are needed to increase access to sanitation in Burkina Faso, since part of the population does not understand or is not convinced of the beneficial effects of latrines. 48 Figure A1.2 Rural access rate to improved sanitation, by region 30 24.3 25 19.7 20 15.4 14.7 15 12.2 12.1 12 11.9 11.9 9.6 9.5 9.2 10 7.8 5.6 5 0 Notes: [1] Column in yellow denotates the average of the 13 regions for access to improved sanitation in rural areas; [2] Columns in orange indicates the four regions of the Program support for improved sanitation in rural areas Source: Balance Report of the PN-AEPA 2015. 71. Latrines in schools, health centers and public places in both urban and rural areas, are insufficient and often poorly built and without permanent handwashing facilities. In addition, the existing ones are often poorly managed and insufficiently maintained leading to the latrines not being utilized or abandoned. 72. Adequate planning, managing and monitoring of sanitation services require the participation and involvement of many stakeholders (ranging from central to regional and local level government institutions, sanitation specialists, NGOs, private operators, masons, sanitation committees and people in general). The Program will support and provide incentives for addressing current issues in targeted areas, which GoBF could scale up to the rest of the country, and for strengthening human capital at national, regional and local levels. Description of activities 73. This RA supports the priorities of GoBF established in the PNDES (2016–2020) and the PN-AEUE. The Program will support and incentivize increasing access to sanitation services, by means of: (a) awareness and behavioral change campaigns aiming at improving hygiene practices and promoting the use of latrines; (b) provision of partial subsidies for household latrines, provided that sufficient demand is generated and the household is committed to complete the latrine superstructure; and (c) provision of sanitation cabins in schools, health centers and public places in blocks equipped with permanent handwashing facilities, including developing management arrangements to ensure that latrines are operational and adequately maintained. 74. For urban sanitation, the Program will support: (a) the construction of approximately 42,500 new household latrines (ventilated improved pit or flush toilet types only) and rehabilitation of 42,500 household latrines (Table A1.12); (b) the construction of approximately 1,050 new sanitation cabins with male, female, and handicapped compartments, provided with water and permanent hand-washing facilities, at schools, health centers and public places selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (c) the development of sanitation plans in eight urban centers included in the Program; (d) the 49 implementation of awareness and behavioral change campaigns aiming at improving hygiene practices and promoting the use of latrines; and (e) the development of a fecal sludge management strategy. Table A1.12. Distribution of household latrines and sanitation cabins, by ONEA center ONEA Center Number of household Number of sanitation cabins latrines Schools Health centers Public Total (VIP or TCM) Places Ouagadougou 50,000 195 36 99 330 Bobo-Dioulasso 20,000 135 24 66 225 Kaya 3,000 21 9 15 45 Dedougou 2,000 21 6 18 45 Gourcy 2,000 21 6 18 45 Nouna 1,500 18 6 18 42 Yako 1,250 15 6 18 39 Gombousgou 500 15 3 21 39 Mogtedo 1,000 15 6 21 42 Beguedo 1,000 15 3 21 39 Tiebele 625 15 3 21 39 Bousse 1,000 15 6 21 42 Korsimoro 750 15 3 21 39 Boussouma 375 15 3 21 39 Total 85,000 531 120 399 1,050 75. These activities will be in line with the operational implementation strategy of ONEA, focused on generating demand by means of awareness and behavioral change campaigns, and based on the principles of local stakeholder involvement. Information and awareness campaigns will promote the development of local actors, such as artisans and small businesses, to participate in the delivery of latrines by manufacturing their components and building the latrines. These latrines will be built in areas and to households that, following sensitization campaigns, have a demand for latrines and are committed to pay for or build its superstructure, and to operate and maintain the latrine and follow adequate hygiene practices. 76. For rural sanitation, in the selected rural municipalities of the four targeted regions, the Program will support: (a) the construction of approximately 50,000 new household latrines (type ventilated improved pit only) (Table A1.13); (b) the construction of approximately 10,200 sanitation cabins with male, female, and handicapped compartments, provided with water and permanent hand-washing facilities, to be located at schools, health centers, and public places selected in accordance with criteria set out in the POM; (c) the implementation of awareness and behavioral change campaigns aiming at improving hygiene practices and promoting the use of latrines; (d) the development of key research in the sanitation field; and (e) the development of strategies for adequate management and sustainability of public latrines. Table A1.13. Distribution of VIP household latrines, by targeted region Targeted region Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Total Boucle du Mouhoun 0 5,850 5,850 5,850 1,950 19,500 Cascades 0 2,700 2,700 2,700 900 9,000 Hauts-Bassins 0 4,200 4,200 4,200 1,400 14,000 Sud-Ouest 0 2,250 2,250 2,250 750 7,500 Total 0 15,000 15,000 15,000 5,000 50,000 50 77. The capacity of MEA, the DGA, and municipal technical services will be strengthened by providing technical support, tracking progress, and ensuring a continued social mobilization in the area of sanitation and water supply at the municipal level. 78. In view of the low capacity of local actors, in rural areas the construction of new latrines, except for its superstructure, will be executed by construction companies that will be accompanied and supervised at all times (before, during, and after construction) by a social engineering company, in addition to the needed supervision of works. Procurement of construction companies will be done competitively in packages that will group communities where the sensitization campaigns have generated a minimum participation of the households that want latrines and are committed to build the superstructure and to an adequate use of the latrine. In order to strengthen the capacity of local communities to build and rehabilitate latrines after the latrines have been constructed, the contracts will include a capacity building role whereby local masons and artisans are trained in the fabrication of spare parts and installation of latrines. 79. In order for the result to be verified as per DLI 4, all household latrines built under the Program must comply with the technical specifications by the national government and have the superstructure completed. The indicative number of household latrines by year, by rural and urban areas is presented in Table A1.14. Table A1.14. Indicative Schedule of New and Rehabilitated Household Latrines Per Year [1] Total Targeted Area YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 (cumulative) Urban 15,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 10,000 85,000 Rural 15,000 15,000 15,000 5,000 50,000 Total 15,000 35,000 35,000 35,000 15,000 135,000 Note: [1] Figures per year (non- cumulative). 80. In order for the result to be verified as per DLI 5, all sanitation cabins built under the Program in urban and rural areas must comply with the technical specifications by the national government, including that the blocks of latrines are equipped with permanent handwashing facilities and cabins for male, females, and handicapped. A cabin for females with menstruation should be part of the block of latrines. A cabin is defined as an improved latrine with a door dedicated for individual use at a time. Also, the Program will incentivize the adoption of a facility management plan so to guarantee that institutional latrines are operational and properly maintained. Further specifications will be provided in the POM. Table A1.15. Indicative Schedule of new sanitation cabins, per Year [1] Targeted Type of Total Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 area institution (cumulative) Schools - 700 1,400 1,400 700 4,200 Health centers - 400 1,200 600 200 2,400 Rural Public places - 600 1,200 1,200 600 3,600 Schools 90 180 141 120 - 531 Health centers 30 30 30 30 - 120 Urban Public places 30 90 129 150 - 399 Schools 90 880 1,541 1,520 700 4,731 Urban Health centers 30 430 1,230 630 200 2,520 and rural Public places 30 690 1,329 1,350 600 3,999 Total 150 2,000 4,100 3,500 1,500 11,250 Note: [1] Figures per year (non- cumulative). 51 81. The indicative number of sanitation cabins built in in rural and urban areas, and by year is presented in Table A1.15. The POM should include indicators to allow tracking of the results presented in Table A1.15 by rural and urban areas. RA 3. Improved access to reliable information on water resources Context 82. The sustainability of water resources is a significant concern in Burkina Faso, in particular, in view of the multiple water uses that underpin the economy such as agriculture (80 percent total employment), hydropower, domestic water supply, and industry (mining). Domestic water supply is strongly dependent on groundwater resources, particularly in smaller towns and rural areas. In Bobo Dioulasso drinking water supply relies entirely on groundwater while for the capital groundwater reserves represents a reliable source of freshwater in the dry season. In Ouagadougou, less than 20 percent of water supply is from groundwater sources. 83. Challenges. Rapid population growth, climate change, environmental degradation, and pollution of water resources34 increases the vulnerability of Burkina Faso’s hydrological systems. Evidence-based decision making and water allocation models are hampered by insufficient, unreliable, and outdated knowledge of the location and quantity of surface and groundwater resources. Furthermore, economic development is often concentrated in certain parts of the country (growth poles) and as such a very high localized water demand increases pressure on water resources. This will require improving and expanding the existing monitoring network of surface and groundwater at national scale and disseminate the water- related information. Even though there still are uncertainties related to the conclusions issued from the climate models, Burkina Faso is vulnerable to climate change. 84. In view of the scarcity of surface water, on the one hand, and of the heavy demands for groundwater on the other, the knowledge of groundwater resources becomes a fundamental aspect for their sustainable management. An adequate knowledge of the resource (the location and characterization of the aquifers, the amount of water available, the development of the resource under the effects of climate and well pumping, the water pollution risks, etc.) should allow for evidence based decision making, in particular for water allocation across sectors and uses. The Program provides incentives for the development of a decision and support model for the management of the aquifers to better understand ground water resources laying in the hard rock aquifer and the western sedimentary aquifer. Likewise, the design and equipment of an optimized piezometric network is planned, in order to sustain a continuous monitoring of groundwater resources. Description of activities 85. This RA supports the priorities of GoBF established in the PN-GIRE 2016–2030. The Program aims at strengthening IWRM by: (a) strengthening surface water knowledge and monitoring; (b) strengthening groundwater knowledge and monitoring; and (c) operationalizing the SNIEau. 86. Strengthened surface water knowledge and monitoring. Under this RA, the Program will support the strengthening of the surface water knowledge and monitoring network nationwide through: (a) carrying out a study for and implementing the optimization of the existing hydrometric network, acquiring 34 Water resources are increasingly polluted due to mining and industrial, agricultural (pesticides and herbicides for cotton), and even lack of urban sewage facilities. 52 and installing necessary equipment and software to modernize a maximum of 20 hydrometric stations, and equipping and training the staff of the units in charge of data collection at the MEA; and (b) supporting the optimization of the surface water quality network through undertaking an optimization study and semi-annual sampling campaigns. 87. Strengthened groundwater knowledge and monitoring. Under this RA, the Program will support the strengthening of groundwater knowledge and monitoring network nationwide through: (a) undertaking a study for the optimization of the existing piezometric network; (b) the organization and update of existing data on groundwater resources; (c) the development of productive boreholes in the hard rock aquifer by undertaking a multicriteria analysis for the identification of 50 favorable zones for productive boreholes and the drilling of 50 productive boreholes; and (d) the development of a model for the management of aquifers of the western sedimentary basin by undertaking geophysical seismic and electric campaigns, the drilling of 16 deep recognition wells equipped with 14 piezometers, reports on water withdrawals, and calibrated geological and hydrogeological models. 88. Operationalization of the SNIEau. Under this RA, the Program will support the operationalizing of the SNIEau 3 through: (a) providing support for the development of the SNIEau web-platform to be used for data dissemination; (b) preparing a draft decree to institutionalize the SNIEau; (c) establishing data exchange protocols between SNIEau and its partners; and (d) publicizing the water data repository. All the water resource information developed under RA 3 should be made available through the SNIEau. The data obtained from the DISE system will be available through the SNIEau, as well as all the process and results for the technical and training programs financed under the Program. Emphasis will be placed on improving quality of and access to water information, and on expanding public access beyond data to analytical results (trends, water balance, among others). Cross cutting area. Human capital strengthening Context 89. The human resources base for water supply, sanitation, and IWRM is limited in terms of number of staff and skills set. This has been identified as a key constraint for the development of the sector by the PGEA 2016-2030. The implementation plan of the PGEA seeks to ensure efficient, effective and quality management of the human resources by developing plans for: (a) the development and planning of human resources of the actors of the water and sanitation sector; and (b) improving managers' managerial capacities. The PGEA places an important emphasis on increasing the participation of women in technical and leadership positions. 90. The relative low number of staff vis-à-vis the needs are explained by the lack of financing of the institutions, in particular for municipal technical services; and the lack of financing of students to access education. The shortages in general are significant and concern the following profiles35: technical field: hydro-geologists, geophysicists, hydrologists, civil engineers; technical field (other): agronomists, architects, mechanical engineers; administration and finance: managers, accountants, secretaries, administrative staff; and social development specialists: sociologists, community mobilizers, and lawyers, communication specialists, health workers (health education). 35 Mapping human resource capacity gaps in the water supply and sanitation sector. Data collected 2011-2012, report published April 2013. International Water Association. 53 91. The deficit in staff numbers is compounded by the fact that current staff in MEA, ONEA, and municipal technical services are not adequately and appropriately educated to meet the challenges of increasing drinking-water and sanitation service provision, and IWRM. 92. Human resource capacity of MEA. Most of MEA’s staff are within the management and finance discipline, including large numbers of supporting staff (administrative, and secretary functions). The technical staff are limited and MEA faces a barrier in hiring due to market constraints, in particular in regard to WMR. Only 44 percent (i.e. 319 specialists of 734 total employees) of MEA staff is composed by experts that are mainly specialized in rural development and engineering, with a major challenge in the field of surface water and ground water resources. MEA is particularly understaffed of technicians36 in the field of hydraulic structures and rural works. It is estimated that a total of 340 specialists are additionally required (of which 70 in the field of IWRM and 270 in the field of rural water and sanitation) to enable MEA to fulfill its mission. Table A1.16 MEA staff, by job type and gender Job type Men Women Total % of woman Technical 251 68 319 21 Non- technical 269 146 415 35 Total 520 214 734 29 93. Human resource capacity of ONEA. At ONEA, 57 percent of total employees are technical staff (i.e. 534 specialists of 929 total employees). ONEA is expanding its services into new centers and these will require more technical staff. Also, as ONEA is advancing in expanding its sludge treatment capacity, waste water capacity, and extension of sewerage additional staff trained in these areas is required. Table A1.17. ONEA staff, by job type and gender Job type Men Women Total % of woman Technical 514 20 534 4 Non- technical 235 160 395 41 Total 749 180 929 19 94. Human resource capacity of municipal technical services. In the four regions where the Program will intervene for rural water supply and sanitation activities, technical municipal services are currently understaffed or are not staffed at all, limiting their ability to take over the functions assigned as part of the decentralization process. Municipal services are supposed to be staffed by at least one technical expert on water supply and sanitation, but this is often not the case. The AMOC foresees significant support for supporting the staffing of technical services with qualified staff by providing financial resources from MEA to the hiring of technical staff. The financial resources are expected to be completely phased out in 10 years. 95. Gender. Women represent a small share of the total staff of MEA and ONEA, and even a lower share of the technical staff. Within MEA, only 29 percent all staff are woman; and the percentage drops to 21 percent when considering the share of women in technical positions. In ONEA, women represent only 19 percent of the total labor force; and the participation rate of woman in professional positions merely represents 3.7 percent (i.e. 20 female specialists in total). 36 The number of technicians should be more than doubled for handling the implementation of all planned structures 54 96. The proportion of men working in the water supply, sanitation, and IWRM sectors is partly explained bythe unequal distribution of graduate outputs. Women in Burkina Faso are often excluded from education opportunities and concomitantly from the workforce. In addition, the prevalence of certain discriminatory perceptions, suggesting that a man is more productive than a woman, favors the recruitment of men. Furthermore, in previous years socio-cultural and economic factors predisposed families to enroll boys in school rather than girls37. 97. There are several national wide gender equality policies, aiming at: (a) eradicating discriminatory gender practices through encouraging girls’ education and the provision of scholarships for women; (b) creating an environment conducive to employing women, as per the rules of the labor law and labor code; and (c) changing the perception that women cannot do the work previously reserved for men. 98. The Program will seek to actively encourage women to apply to the scholarships for technical and training programs provided through the Program, and to benefit MEA and ONEA female staff of the opportunities provided through specialization, doctoral and short-term training. The Program would encourage women to participate by intense communication campaigns in public media (including television, radio, newspapers, and social media) to reach women potential candidates, and publishing opportunities in MEA’s and ONEA’s websites. 99. Supply of human resources to the water supply, sanitation, and IWRM sectors. There are several national and international institutions (universities, research institutes, and training centers) available to provide the market with the needed skills to work in the water supply, sanitation, and IWRM sectors. However, the number of people being trained each year for absorption into the labor market, especially IWRM, is not enough to fill the gap. It is a fact that there is a mismatch between the training provided and the needs in the field38. 100. In particular, the Centre of Water Businesses of ONEA (Centre des Métiers de l’Eau ONEA - CEMEAU) provides short term training in project management for communal water supply and sanitation, utility management, simplified water supply systems, production and distribution of drinking water, sanitation (sewage and excreta). This institute trains about 500 people at municipal level each year. After a five-year period of technical assistance (2010-2015), CEMEAU has an organization, facilities, training programs and technical resources that are generally satisfactory39. 101. The CEMEAU capacity is limited due to weaknesses of its human resources, mainly as regards the trainers. Today, training is provided almost entirely by external consultants. Their competence is not in question, but their availability is limited and impacts the responsiveness of the CEMEAU to meet requests for training setup. More seriously, the lack of CEMEAU staff with both pedagogical skills and skills on the themes of the AEPA prevents it from capitalizing on the actions carried out. The pedagogy implemented at CEMEAU, which is also adapted to the chosen target (operational training aimed at all levels, but mainly 37 Mapping human resource capacity gaps in the water supply and sanitation sector. Data collected 2011-2012, report published April 2013. International Water Association. 38 Mapping human resource capacity gaps in the water supply and sanitation sector. Data collected 2011-2012, report published April 2013. International Water Association. 39 Mission d’appui au developpement et a l’autonomisation du Centre des Metiers de l’eau (CEMEAU de l’ONEA. Rapport de fin de mission, 25 août 2016. EU/ONEA. 55 workers and technicians) uses technical forms, practical work, case studies. These can only be built progressively by specialized thematic trainers40. Description of activities 102. The Program will incentivize the strengthening of the human capital base of the MEA, ONEA and municipalities on two main aspects: (a) to increase the number of staff in MEA, ONEA and technical services of the municipalities, which currently are severely constrained, in particular in technical fields; and (b) to strengthen the skills of existing staff of MEA and ONEA, the private sector, and municipal actors in critical areas of service delivery, with a particular emphasis on IWRM where most of the needs are. The lack of quality as well as the low numbers of human resources working in the water supply and sanitation sector is directly linked to the low financial capacity of organizations to meet the demands for water and sanitation facilities41. 103. The Program will finance four types of programs: (a) technical and training programs; (b) specialization; (c) doctoral programs; and (d) short-term training, as follows: 104. Technical and training programs. The Program will provide scholarships for technical and training programs that last between two to three years. These programs are intended to compensate the current under-representation of certain professions within MEA and ONEA in the fields of water supply and sanitation and IWRM. Potential candidates should be currently external to MEA/ONEA and will be selected on a competitive basis. Selection procedures are planned at the start of year 1, year 2, and year 3. Financial support will cover tuition, room, board and transportation costs are needed. 105. After completion of technical and training programs, the Program seeks to incentivize that a number of graduates of technical and training programs are integrated into the MEA, ONEA, and the municipal technical services (together defined as “Public Administration”) (Table A1.18). Therefore, it is expected that the Program provides a solid foundation for the sustainability of results by increasing the current levels of staff within MEA, ONEA and municipal technical services. In line with the provisions of the AMOC, MEA is engaged to provide the funding to pay the salaries of the new hires for the municipal technical services for a total of 10 years, of which five years will be fully paid and five years will be with a partial support. In order to qualify for payment under DLI 7, the staff absorbed by the Public Administration should be hired under a labor contract of at least five years duration. Table A1.18. Indicative schedule of beneficiaries of technical and training programs [1] Areas of technical and training programs YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Total IWRM 45 25 0 0 0 70 Rural water and sanitation 85 80 35 0 0 200 Urban water and sanitation 7 3 0 0 0 10 Total beneficiaries of technical and training programs 137 108 35 0 0 280 of which integrated into the Public Administration 0 0 82 65 21 168 Note: [1] Figures per year (non- cumulative), except for total. 40 Mission d’appui au developpement et a l’autonomisation du Centre des Metiers de l’eau (CEMEAU de l’ONEA. Rapport de fin de mission, 25 août 2016. EU/ONEA. 41 Mapping human resource capacity gaps in the water supply and sanitation sector. Data collected 2011-2012, report published April 2013. International Water Association. 56 106. Specialization program. Specialization programs funded through the Program are to last between nine months and two years, after which a professional master’s degree will be granted. Specialization programs will focus on IWRM (see Table A1.19), as this is an area of major deficit within MEA. Potential candidates of specialization programs should be currently employed by MEA and/or ONEA to acquire certain skills and knowledge that will help them to better fulfill their current job. Table A1.19. Indicative schedule of beneficiaries of IWRM specialization programs [1] Areas of Specialization YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Total Hydrogeological modeling 0 5 0 0 0 5 Flood forecasting 0 0 5 0 0 5 Water chemistry and quality standards 10 0 0 0 0 10 Geological modeling 0 2 0 0 0 2 Information systems 0 0 2 0 0 2 Biology Ecology and Aquatic Ecosystems Management 10 0 0 0 0 10 Total beneficiaries 20 7 7 0 0 34 Note: [1] Figures per year (non- cumulative), except for total. 107. Doctoral programs. The Program will finance two doctoral students in the fields of IWRM and one doctoral student in sanitation. The selection of students will take place in year 1 and year 2 and the doctoral program will last for four years. Doctoral opportunities will be advertised externally and hence staff currently employed by MEA and ONEA can also benefit from these opportunities. 108. Short-term training. The Program will incentivize the provision of short term trainings of less than one month for the staff of MEA, ONEA, and municipal technical services, which will be organized as practical or theoretical sessions. A large share of the training programs will be delivered by the CEMEAU, providing an opportunity for the Center to grow and consolidate its external offerings. 109. The short-term trainings will allow existing staff to update their knowledge and learn from the latest technological or research developments in the areas of water supply, sanitation, IWRM, and program management. Also, of particular importance is the training to be provided to CEMAU trainers on learning methodologies to reinforce the capacity of the Center to provide the training required under the Program. These trainings will be open to participants throughout the Program duration (Table A1.20). Table A1.20. Indicative schedule of beneficiaries of short-term training [1] Areas of short term training YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Total IWRM 45 61 55 30 0 191 Rural water and sanitation 60 70 25 0 0 155 Urban water and sanitation 171 123 80 105 0 479 Management and finance 177 152 90 90 0 509 Total beneficiaries 453 406 250 225 0 1334 Note: [1] Figures per year (non- cumulative), except for total. 110. The number of beneficiaries of human capital strengthening programs financed under the Program per year are shown in Table A1.21. 111. The management of the programs financed under the PforR will be delegated to the Human Resources Directorate (Direction des Ressources Humaines, DRH) of MEA and ONEA, respectively. The respective DRH will manage the selection process of the beneficiaries of technical and training programs, 57 specialization, and doctorates; and the recruitment processes of the graduates of technical and training programs that will be absorbed by the MEA, ONEA, and municipal technical services. The DRHs will also be in charge of the needed agreements with the institutions (universities, institutes, and training centers) in charge of delivering the programs. Finally, the DRHs will be in charge of consolidating in an annual report the results of the programs financed by the PforR. Table A1.21. Beneficiaries of human capital programs [1] Type of program YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Total Beneficiaries of technical and training programs 137 108 35 0 0 280 Beneficiaries of specialization 20 7 7 0 0 34 Beneficiaries of doctoral programs 1 2 0 0 0 3 Beneficiaries of short-term training 453 406 250 225 0 1334 Note: [1] Figures per year (non- cumulative), except for total. 112. Other capacity building activities. In addition to the four types of programs describe above, the Program includes several capacity building activities for stakeholders in the sector that will also contribute to strengthening the human capital base for water supply and sanitation. These activities are embedded in the tree RA, and include, among others, training on the following areas: x Contract management, accountability, reporting, new tariff structure, PPP strategy for rural water system for water supply operators; x Management of water supply systems for water supply operators and municipal technical services; x Technical aspects of water supply and sanitation service delivery for water supply operators and municipal technical services; x Manufacturing of sanitation materials, in targeted urban centers for local artisans (masons, bricklayers, etc.) x Promote Hygiene practices, at the national and local level; and x The decision support system for IWRM, in both the hard rock aquifer and the western basin sedimentary aquifer. 113. The result chain of the Program is depicted in Figure A1.3. As shown, the incentives provided by the DLIs constitute key links of the results chain that will work in tandem to achieve the PDO. 58 Figure A1.3. Program’s results chain 59 Excluded Activities 114. The Program will exclude activities that are likely to have significant adverse impacts on the environment and/or affected people, including but not limited to schemes that involve construction or rehabilitation of dams that are greater or equal to 10 m in height, sludge treatment plans, extensions of the sewerage system, groundwater-based schemes in overexploited and critical basins that do not integrate source sustainability measures, undertaking of any activity that uses asbestos, and undertaking of any activity involving major land acquisition. It is envisaged that there is no high-value contract exceeding Operations Procurement Review Committee threshold42 value that would qualify for procurement exclusions. D. Disbursed Link Indicators (DLIs) 115. The disbursement model consists of seven DLIs (Table A1.22 and Annex 3). The DLIs have been selected based on the following criteria: (a) importance for successful implementation; (b) potential to incentivize improvements within GoBF’s programs; (c) practicality and cost-effectiveness of verification; and (d) GoBF’s capacity to achieve the DLI during the Program implementation period. The DLIs intend to incentivize the achievement of tangible outputs and outcomes, and strengthen the institutions involved in water supply, sanitation, and IWRM. The DLIs are presented in Figure 1. The underlying definitions used in the DLIs are presented in Annex 3. The DLIs correspond to the pressing needs to: increase access to water and sanitation services and improve their sustainability; improve information and accessibility to information on water resources, which is critical to properly allocate scarce water resources; and improve the sector human capital base by training water sector professionals and increase the staff of MEA, ONEA and municipal technical services. The ensemble of DLIs takes into account lessons learned from prior sector interventions in Burkina Faso, and from other PforRs, by combining process and outcome DLIs, providing incentives to achieve key milestones towards attaining the Program goals. A detailed description of each DLI is included as Annex 3. 116. DLI 1 seeks to provide financial incentives for increasing access to water supply to people living in urban and rural areas, supporting the achievement of the SDG No. 6, in targeted areas where there are major challenges for the expansion of sustainable water supply services. Access will be provided by means of household water connections, standposts and boreholes equipped with handpumps. 117. DLI 2 will support the construction of surface and groundwater water production facilities that are critical to increase access to improved water services in secondary urban centers and rural areas. The Program seeks to incentivize water production expansion in urban and rural centers where there is a significant deficit of water production and therefore provision of adequate water supply services are severely constrained. 118. DLI 3 will provide incentives for strengthening the financial sustainability of water supply service provision. In the first year, the DLI provides strong financial incentives for (a) the adoption by the Council of Ministers of the rural water supply tariff structure; and (b) the adjustment of the lifeline tariff (0 to 8 m3) charged by ONEA in urban centers. From year 2 onwards, DLI 3 seeks to incentivize the undertaking of a study and adoption of a new urban tariff structure that responds to the objectives of: providing 42 Operations Procurement Review Committee threshold value is as follows: (a) works (including turnkey, supply and installation of plant and equipment, PPPs), estimated to cost US$75,000,000 equivalent or more per contract; (b) goods, information technology, and non-consulting services, estimated to cost US$50,000,000 equivalent or more per contract; (c) consultant services, estimated to cost US$20,000,000 equivalent or more per contract. 60 affordable access to urban population according to their socio-economic levels, and ensuring the necessary economic and financial equilibrium in the provision of water services. It will also incentivize the validation of the new tariff structure by means of public hearings, and its adoption and implementation. Table A1.22. RAs and DLIs of the Program RA DLIs DLIs within the main DLI Amount of IDA financed allocated (US$ million) RA 1. Improved DLI 1. People provided with DLI 1.1. People provided with access to an improved water 90 [1] access to water access to an improved water source in targeted urban areas supply source under the Program DLI 1.2. People provided with access to an improved water source in targeted rural areas DLI 2. Water production Not applicable 25 [2] capacity constructed under the Program DLI 3. Adoption of water Not applicable 15 [1] supply tariff structures RA 2. Improved DLI 4. People provided with DLI 4.1. People provided with access to improved 70 [1] access to access to improved sanitation facilities in targeted urban areas sanitation sanitation facilities under the DLI 4.2. People provided with access to improved Program sanitation facilities in targeted rural areas DLI 5. Number of new DLI 5.1 Number of new sanitation cabins in schools, health 25 [2] sanitation cabins in schools, centers, and public places built under the Program health centers, and public equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted urban places built under the areas Program equipped with DLI 5.2 Number of new sanitation cabins in schools, health handwashing facilities centers, and public places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted rural areas DLI 5.3 Percentage of sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places equipped with handwashing facilities built under the Program that are operational and properly maintained RA 3. Improved DLI 6. A decision- support DLI 6.1. A model for the management of aquifers of the 35 [1] access to reliable model for the management western sedimentary basin is available information on of the aquifers is available DLI 6.2. Number of productive boreholes in the hard rock water resources aquifer drilled under the Program Cross-cutting DLI 7. Improved human DLI 7.1. Number of beneficiaries of technical and training 39.4 [1] capital for water, sanitation, programs financed by the Program and IWRM DLI 7.2. Number of beneficiaries of specialization programs financed by the Program DLI 7.3. Number of beneficiaries of doctoral programs financed by the Program DLI 7.4. Number of beneficiaries of short-term training financed by the Program DLI 7.5. Number of beneficiaries of technical and training programs financed by the Program integrated into the administration Front-end fee 0.625 Total 300 Note: [1] This ILD is financed by the IDA credit from the SUF; [2] This ILD is financed by the IDA grant Further details on the DLIs are presented in Annex 3. 119. DLI 4 encompasses strong incentives for the provision of improved sanitation to people living in urban and rural areas by means of improved household latrines, supporting the achievement of the SDG No. 6. Targeted areas will be subject to information, education and behavioral change campaigns prior to 61 the commencement of any construction to secure high demand for sanitation and appropriate O&M of the facilities. Pit excavation and the provision and installation of the slab will be done at no cost for the beneficiaries, provided that beneficiary households make a commitment to build the superstructure and maintain the facility with their own resources. The DLI will incentivize the Government to ensure that the household is committed towards the investments and mobilizes the adequate financing to build the super- structure, which in turn is a significant step towards ensuring its use and maintenance. 120. DLI 5 seeks to incentivize the strengthened institutional sanitation, by means of providing new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers and public places in urban and rural areas, in blocks of latrines equipped with permanent handwashing facilities, and incentivize their O&M. To ensure an efficient management and the sustainability of the facilities, which has been a common problem in the past, adequate management arrangements will be defined. As for the facilities in public places, management will be delegated to a third party, under municipal oversight, which will be responsible for the O&M of the facilities and will charge a user fee to the public. In addition, DLI 5 provides financial incentives to promote good O&M of the facilities. 121. DLI 6 seeks to provide incentives for the development of a decision-support model for the management of the aquifers (in the sedimentary and hard-rock basin) that will allow for a better allocation of water resources. The DLI incentivizes the development of a geological and hydrogeological model in the western sedimentary aquifer, which is the largest and most productive and has a strategic relevance as a buffer for economic and social planning. Also, the DLI provides financial incentives for the planning of water resources abstraction, in particular for water supply uses, in the hard-rock basin by developing a multicriteria analysis leading to the identification and drilling of 50 productive boreholes. 122. DLI 7 seeks to provide incentives for the strengthening of human capital at the central and municipal level for the provision of water and sanitation services, and for IWRM, which is a key element for the sustainability of results achieved by the Program. Therefore, financial incentives will be provided to strengthen the capacity of professionals internal and external to sector institutions by means of: technical and training programs, specialization, doctoral programs, and continuous education courses. Attention will be given to addressing long standing gender imbalances at senior levels of sector decision making, by addressing aspects of equity, and equal training opportunities for women. Given the scarcity of specialized personnel at various sector institutions, the Program will provide incentives to entice external beneficiaries of technical and training programs to be absorbed by MEA, ONEA, and/or municipal technical services. 123. Disbursements will be made according to the achievements under the Program. Funds will be used to finance the activities included in the Program. It will be the responsibility of MEA and ONEA to prepare annual activity, procurement plans, and budgets. As part of the PAP, MEA and ONEA should adopt annual procurement plans and disbursement estimates two months following the inclusion in the Finance Law of the Program’s annual budget. 124. Verification Protocol. All DLIs will be independently verified by an IVA. The verification protocols are detailed in Annex 3. GoBF’s existing DISE, MEA, and ONEA’s M&E system, and regular sector-related reporting arrangements will be the basis for providing the data needed to verify most of the Program results. The verification protocol uses data from civil works supervision reports, customer surveys, progress reports from the PCU and PSU, consolidated results reports submitted by the PCU to the MEA, and random physical verification. In accordance with good audit practice, physical verification will take place against a sampling framework. On this basis, the IVA will prepare a Results Verification Report which 62 will be shared with the Program PCU and the World Bank. A key use of the Results Verification Report will be to determine the amount of the eligible disbursement to be made based on the results achieved. If the World Bank finds that the disbursement request meets the terms of the Financing Agreement, the World Bank will disburse the corresponding funds to MINEFID. 125. The primary responsibility for collecting and reporting results for DLIs 1 through 5 will fall on ONEA for urban areas, and on DREAs for rural areas. The information provided will be validated by ONEA’s PSU for urban areas, and the DGEP and DGA for water and sanitation in rural areas, respectively. The information will be reviewed and consolidated by the PCU and the IVA will verify and confirm the results by means of reviewing all of the documents and physically inspecting representative random samples. Once the DISE becomes functional in the four regions targeted by the Program, the data will be fed into the DISE system and eventually be made available through the SNIEau website. 126. The primary responsibility for collecting and reporting results for DLI 6 will correspond to the SP- GIRE with the technical support from the SISC, as needed. The information will be reviewed and consolidated by the PCU and verified by the IVA. 127. As for DLI 7, the primary information will be provided by the participating academic and training institutions and validated by MEA’s DRH, for the fields of IWRM and Rural Water and Sanitation, and by ONEA’s DRH for urban water and sanitation. The PCU will review and consolidate all the reports from ONEA and the MEA, and it will submit the consolidated report to the IVA. The IVA shall verify the information on the reports and will interview a random sample of beneficiaries to corroborate the information in the reports. Further details on the verification process for each DLI are included in Annex 3. 128. Any advance from the World Bank could be adjusted or rolled over until the end of the Program, for final adjustment. The disbursements under the DLIs would be compared with Program expenditures in the last year of the Program and a refund would be sought if DLIs paid are more than the Program expenditures. Any other sources of financing must be deducted from the calculations. This is in line with the Program financial management guidelines where the DLIs amount disbursed would be compared with the Program expenditure. 129. Baseline. While baselines are drawn from existing data within MEA and ONEA, an assessment will be undertaken to validate the baseline information of all the DLIs during the first year of the implementation. E. Implementation arrangements 130. A Steering Committee (Comité de Revue), chaired by the General Secretary of MEA, will provide oversight of the Program and ensure convergence towards the Program objectives. The Steering Committee will meet twice per year (ordinary sessions), with the purpose of: (a) reviewing and adopting the Program’s implementation plan; (b) reviewing and adopting the Program’s evaluations; and (c) reviewing and adopting the financial reports; the annual activity, budget, and procurement plans; among other function established in the Decree 2018-0092 of 2018. 131. A PCU will be established within MEA. The PCU will act as the interlocutor with the World Bank on behalf of GoBF. The PCU will ensure that the Program is implemented according to the POM, and will be responsible for the coordination, day-to-day management of the Program activities, monitoring results, and generating performance and financial reports on Program implementation. The PCU will be 63 responsible for providing relevant information to the IVA for the independent verification of results. The PCU will be responsible for preparing the consolidated interim financial reports and the consolidated annual financial statements. The PCU will be at least staffed with: A Program Coordinator, an M&E specialist, a procurement specialist, a financial management specialist, an accountant, an environmental safeguard specialist, a social safeguard specialist, and an internal controller. The PCU Program Coordinator, M&E specialist, procurement specialist, and financial management specialist will be recruited on a competitive basis. Furthermore, a full time, dedicated financial and public procurement controller will be appointed by MINEFID and assigned to the PCU to speed up processing of transactions and payments. 132. ONEA will establish a Program Support Unit (PSU) dedicated exclusively to support the implementation of Program activities under ONEA’s responsibility, and report on results achieved by ONEA. The PSU will be at least staffed with: a PSU Coordinator, an M&E specialist, a procurement specialist, a financial management specialist, an environmental safeguard specialist, and a social safeguard specialist. The PSU Coordinator, M&E specialist, procurement specialist, environmental safeguards, and social safeguards specialist will be recruited on a competitive basis. The internal control will be done by ONEA’s Internal Control Department. ONEA PSU will report to the PCU. 133. The POM will include a clear description of the function of each specialist of the PCU and the PSU, the qualification and experience required, and method of selection, including details on the mechanism to proceed with a competitive external selection when applicable. Table A1.23. Role of MEA and ONEA Departments in relation to RAs Results Area (RA) Urban Rural RA 1. Improved access to water supply ONEA/ DPAEP MEA/DGEP ONEA/ DPI RA 2. Improved access to sanitation ONEA/ DASS MEA/DGA RA 3. Improved access to reliable MEA/ SP-GIRE information on water resources Human Capital Strengthening ONEA/DRH MEA/DRH 134. Program activities will be implemented by MEA’s directorates and ONEA departments. Formal implementation responsibility has been established as follows (see Table A1.23): x Within MEA, the General Directorate for Water Supply (Direction Générale de l’Eau potable, DGA) and the General Directorate for Sanitation (Direction Générale de l’Assainissement, DGA) will implement the Program activities related to rural water supply and rural sanitation included in RA 1 and RA 2. The DGA and DGEP will work through the DREAs to implement Program activities related to rural water supply and sanitation, in particular to ensure data collection for the verification of results. The Permanent Secretariat for Integrated Water Resource Management (Secrétariat Permanent de la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau, SP-GIRE) will implement the activities under RA 3, working in close collaboration with the DGRE. The DRH will be in charge of the management of the programs for human capital strengthening supported by the Program related to MEA and the municipal technical services. x Within ONEA, the Ouagadougou Works Department (Direction Projec AEP Ouaga, DPAEP) will implement the Ouagadougou water supply-related activities included in RA 1. The DPI will implement the urban water supply-related activities in the remaining 10 urban centers where the Program will intervene for urban water supply. ONEA's DASS will implement all the sanitation- 64 related activities included in RA 2 in the fourteen targeted urban centers. ONEA’s DRH will be in charge of the management of the programs for human capital strengthening supported by the Program related to ONEA. 135. The MINEFID plays a central role in achieving the Program results. The MINEFID is responsible for the execution of the Program budget (ensuring fund flows) and setting standards and processes for the financial management of the Program. 136. Given the complex and multidimensional nature of the program, and in view of its implementation challenges, the DGA, DGEP, SP-GIRE and ONEA departments will be assisted by strategic implementation support consultants (SISC) in technical aspects, including providing technical inputs into: (a) ToRs, feasibility level and detailed design studies; (b) tendering and procurement processes; and (c) quality control of main deliverables of studies conducted under the Program. The SISC will be competitively selected with relevant national and international experience. The SISC will provide support and guidance and provide the opportunity for implementing agencies’ staff to learn on the job. It is important that the ToR for the SISC give adequate emphasis to this capacity development role. 137. Given GoBF’s desire to initiate Program implementation immediately after declaration of effectiveness, it has been agreed that conditional to the extension of the closing date of the on-going Urban Water Sector Project (currently December 31, 2018), remaining funds will be available for financing the PCU, the PSU, and the SISC, and the Government will shortly initiate the process of selecting the PCU and PSU staff and hiring the SISC. F. Program M&E 138. The Results Framework (Annex 2) is the basis of monitoring Program results. It consists of PDO indicators and intermediate-level indicators, some of which are DLIs. Monitoring of the indicators in the Results Framework will be conducted semi-annually during the program implementation period for both DLIs and non-DLIs. This will ensure effective tracking of progress so that corrective measures can be taken to ensure the achievement of the PDO. The Program will require several of the results indicators to be disaggregated by gender (Annex 2). This will facilitate gender-related planning and management of the Program. 139. The M&E function will be assumed by the PCU, which has the overall coordination and responsibility for M&E for the Program. The PSU will be in charge of monitoring activities under ONEA’s responsibility, and will provided need inputs to the PCU for the consolidation of Program results. M&E specialists will be hired for the PCU and PSU to ensure the M&E function. 140. The World Bank will provide implementation support to the PCU and the PSU at ONEA and the implementation agencies on all aspects of implementation, monitoring, and reporting as outlined in the implementation support plan (Annex 8), including supporting the PCU in the verification aspects of its mandate and its relationship with the IVA. 141. An important lesson learned from the implementation of programs and projects in the sector is that it is important to monitor performance and take corrective actions as soon as possible. A considerable amount of M&E capacity will be provided under the Program, including: (a) the recruitment of dedicated M&E specialists in the PCU and PSU; (b) the recruitment of an IVA; (c) the World Bank implementation support plan; and (d) the progress reviews and the mid-term review. In addition, the M&E function within the MEA will be strengthened by the technical assistance financed by DANIDA for this specific purpose. 65 142. Progress reviews. The Government and the World Bank have a shared interest in seeing the Program succeed and the successful experience be put to broader use within the implementation of the sectoral government programs. To facilitate such knowledge sharing and problem solving, semi-annual meetings will be held at the management level to review progress, identify and propose remedies for any weaknesses, and identify and propose modalities for scaling up successes beyond the Program. In addition to regular implementation support missions, semi-annual reviews will be critical for early identification of problems and opportunities with the Program. 143. Midterm review. The midterm review will be an opportunity to review the Program framework and potentially adjust the DLIs. This includes the options of reallocation of disbursement amounts between the DLIs or cancellation of DLIs. The review will also assess the quality and impact of the human capital programs supported by the PforR. 144. DISE Scale-up. The DISE is a consolidated M&E system under pilot phase for three national programs (PGEA, PN-AEP, and PN-AEUE)43, and thus at present it only covers water supply and sanitation- related information. It is expected that this integrated system corrects the deficiencies of the PN-AEP M&E system, allowing to follow the interventions of all actors whose contributions are important for the achievement of sectoral objectives. The DISE is expected to be the unique M&E system for the sector, covering all the 13 regions of Burkina Faso—including urban and rural areas. The DREAs are in charge of collecting, reviewing and processing the data at the regional level. The coordination of the DISE is ensured at the central level by the DGEP for rural water, the DGA for rural sanitation, and ONEA for urban water and urban sanitation. 145. Since January 2017, the DISE is being piloted in three of the PforR targeted regions (Boucle du Mouhoun, Cascades, Hauts-Bassins) with financing from DANIDA and Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ). Results include the acquisition of 80 mobile phones, 15 laptops, and kits for water quality analyses; the configuration of the questionnaires on the phones; the training supervisors, regional controllers, and investigators for data collection in the Cascades region; and the collection and data cleaning in 103 municipalities of the three pilot regions. To complete the pilot phase, actions include the collection of data in Bobo Dioulasso, the processing of data and the calculation of indicators, and the data report. 146. Based on the results and lessons learned from this pilot phase, the Program will support the scale- up of the implementation of the DISE in the four regions targeted for the Program. Support will be provided for the DGEP, DGA, the MEA’s directorate in charge of studies, and the DREAs to carry out their functions in the context of the roadmap for the implementation of the DISE. 43 At a later stage, the DISE is expected to also cover the PN-GIRE and the PN-AH. 66 Annex 2. Results Framework Matrix Table A2.1. PDO-Level Indicators PDO-Level Indicator DLI Unit Baseline Targets [1] Frequency Data Source/ Collection Core YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Program Development Objective: Improve access to water supply and sanitation services in targeted areas People provided with access X 1 Number 0 Semi- MEA and ONEA; annual to an improved water source annual verification of results under the Program 284,920 701,960 1,002,700 1,141,900 1,158,595 report, IVA Census 2006, 52 percent of Of which female Number 0 148,158 365,019 521,404 593,788 602,469 population are women Of which urban Number 0 123,500 289,500 470,500 609,700 626,395 Of which rural Number 0 161,420 412,460 532,200 532,200 532,200 People provided with access X 4 Number 0 150,000 500,000 850,000 1,200,000 1,350,000 Semi- MEA and ONEA; annual to improved sanitation annual verification of results facilities under the Program report, IVA Census 2006, 52 percent of Of which female Number 0 78,000 260,000 442,000 624,000 702,000 population are women Of which urban Number 0 150,000 350,000 550,000 750,000 850,000 Of which rural Number 0 0 150,000 300,000 450,000 500,000 Note: [1] Cumulative results presented in the table 67 Table A2.2. Intermediate Results Indicators Intermediate Results Indicator Unit Baseline Targets [1] Frequency Data Source/ Core DLI Collection YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Program Development Objective: Improve access to water supply and sanitation services in targeted areas Water production capacity 2 Cubic 0 1,680 3,544 17,544 17,544 17,544 Annual Civil works constructed under the Program meters/ day supervision reports, ONEA, and IVA Adoption of water supply tariff 3 Yes/No No -Adoption of Completion of Validation of Adoption of Annual MEA and ONEA; structures [2] rural water urban water the proposed new urban annual supply tariff tariff study and new water water tariff verification of structure development of tariff structure, structure results report, - Adjustment of new water tariff including public IVA urban water structure hearings tariff Percentage of complaints % 0 0% 40% 50% 60% 70% Semi- ONEA resolved within the established annual timeframes Number of rural water systems Number 0 0 0 30 40 50 Semi- DGEP built under the Program annual delegated for management to a third part Number of latrines built or Number 0 15,000 35,000 55,000 75,000 85,000 Semi- Civil works rehabilitated under the annual supervision Program in targeted urban reports, ONEA, and IVA areas Number of new latrines built Number 0 - 15,000 30,000 45,000 50,000 Semi- Civil works under the Program in targeted annual supervision rural areas reports, DGA, and IVA Number of new sanitation 5 Number 0 150 2,150 6,250 9,750 11,250 Semi- Civil works cabins in schools, health Annual supervision centers, and public places built reports, ONEA, and IVA under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities Percentage of sanitation cabins 5 % 0 N/A >=70% >=70% >=80% >=80% Semi- Civil works in schools, health centers, and annual supervision public places equipped with reports, DGA, and IVA handwashing facilities built under the Program that are operational and properly maintained 68 Intermediate Results Indicator Unit Baseline Targets [1] Frequency Data Source/ Core DLI Collection YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Percentage of hydrometric and Percent #% A plan for the 20 hydrometric A plan for the 90% of 90% of the Annual SP-GIRE, DGRE piezometric stations optimization of stations optimization of hydrometric hydrometric operational the equipped with the piezometric stations of and hydrometric digital recorders network the piezometric network and scales completed optimized stations of the completed limnometric network are optimized operational, networks are data operational, collected at data collected given at given intervals, and intervals, and providing providing reliable data reliable data Number of productive 6 Number 0 A multicriteria 25 50 50 50 Annual SP-GIRE, DGRE analysis for the boreholes in the hard rock identification of aquifer drilled under the 50 favorable Program zones for productive boreholes in the hard rock basin completed A model for the management 6 Yes/No No - 1 geophysical - 2 geophysical - 10 deep - Reports on -A calibrated Annual MEA and ONEA, seismic and seismic and recognition wells aquifer hydrogeological Annual of aquifers of the western electric campaign electric campaigns with eight (8) geometry, model completed sedimentary basin is available verification of completed completed piezometers lithology and - Hydrogeological results report, [2] - 6 deep drilled aquifer maps of the recognition wells - A report on characteristics, aquifer are IVA with six (6) water and a updated piezometers withdrawals calibrated drilled completed geological model completed A database for groundwater Yes/No No A consolidated The database is Annual SP-GIRE, DGRE, resources established and and organized updated with and IVA updated [2] database of the data existing data on obtained from groundwater optimized available monitoring stations IWRM data and information Yes/No No SNIEau web SNIEau web SNIEau web SNIEau web SNIEau web Annual SP-GIRE, DGRE available to the public through portal designed portal tested portal portal portal the SNIEau accessible to accessible to accessible to the public, with the public, the public, with uploaded data with uploaded data on water uploaded on water supply and data on supply and 69 Intermediate Results Indicator Unit Baseline Targets [1] Frequency Data Source/ Core DLI Collection YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 sanitation from water supply sanitation from the DISE and the DISE, and sanitation optimized from the hydrometric DISE and and optimized piezometric hydrometric stations stations Number of beneficiaries of 7 Number 0 137 245 280 280 280 Semi- Participating technical and training programs annual academic and financed by the Program training institutions, MEA and ONEA, Annual verification of results report, IVA Number of female beneficiaries 7 Number 0 10 20 30 30 30 Semi- Participating of technical and training annual academic and programs financed by the training institutions, MEA Program and ONEA, Annual verification of results report, IVA Number of beneficiaries of 7 Number 0 20 27 34 34 34 Semi- Participating specialization programs annual academic and financed by the Program training institutions, MEA and ONEA, Annual verification of results report, IVA Number of beneficiaries of 7 Number 0 1 3 3 3 3 Semi- Participating doctoral programs financed by annual academic and the Program training institutions, MEA and ONEA, Annual verification of results report, IVA 70 Intermediate Results Indicator Unit Baseline Targets [1] Frequency Data Source/ Core DLI Collection YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 Number of beneficiaries of 7 Number 0 453 859 1,109 1,334 1,334 Semi- Participating short-term training financed by annual academic and the Program training institutions, MEA and ONEA, Annual verification of results report, IVA Number of beneficiaries of 7 Number 0 0 0 82 147 168 Semi- Participating technical and training programs annual academic and financed by the Program training institutions, MEA integrated into the Public and ONEA, administration Annual verification of results report, IVA Note: [1] Cumulative results presented in the table, except otherwise noted in the indicator; [2] Not cumulative 71 Table A2.3. Indicators’ definitions PDO Level Indicators Indicator Definition People provided with access to an This indicator measures the cumulative number of people who benefited from improved water supply services that have been newly improved water source under the constructed through the Program in selected urban and rural areas included in the Program. This includes additional people provided Program with access to improved water sources financed by the Program. Improved water sources financed under the Program include piped household connections and community water points (public standposts and boreholes equipped with manual operated pumps). The definition of ‘improved water sources’ follows that of the Joint Monitoring Program of UNICEF and the World Health Organization. The number of people served will be calculated by adding the results of multiplying (a) the actual number of household connections newly installed under the Program by the estimated number of people per household connection and (b) the actual number of new standposts and new boreholes equipped with manual operated pumps by the estimated number of people served per standpost or borehole. The norms of people served per type of water source is included in Annex 1 of the PAD. If people are provided with access to ‘improved water sources’ through both a household connection and a community water point, they should be counted only once. The total number of people benefiting from the Program should be disaggregated by gender and by rural/urban areas. Service in urban areas will be provided by household connections and standposts. Service in rural areas will be provided by household connections, standposts, and boreholes. The indicator does not include the number of people benefiting from improved water supply sources rehabilitated under the Program. The total number of people benefiting from the Program should be disaggregated by gender and by rural/urban areas. People provided with access to This indicator measures the cumulative number of people who benefited from improved sanitation facilities that have been constructed improved sanitation services under the or rehabilitated through the Program in selected urban (newly constructed and rehabilitated) and rural areas (only newly constructed) Program included in the Program. Improved sanitation facilities include VIP and TCM latrines. It does not include flush or pour-flush to elsewhere (that is, not to a piped sewer system, septic tank, or pit latrine); pit latrine without slab/open pit; bucket; hanging toilet or hanging latrine; shared facilities of any type; or no facilities, bush, or field. The definition of ‘improved sanitation facilities’ follows that of the UNICEF- World Health Organization Joint Monitoring Program. The number of people provided with access will be estimated by multiplying the actual number of improved sanitation facilities with the estimated number of people per household using the improved sanitation facility built/rehabilitated under the Program. It is assumed that 10 people benefit from an improved latrine both in urban and rural areas. Beneficiaries from school, health centers, and market sanitation cabins should not be included in this indicator. The total number of people benefiting from the Program should be disaggregated by gender and by rural/urban areas. Intermediate Results Indicators Indicator Definition Water production capacity constructed The capacity of the newly constructed water production by means of treated surface water facilities and groundwater boreholes that under the Program produce potable water that meets Burkina Faso’s quality standards, measured in cubic meters (m3) per day. The baseline is zero. As no production increases due to the Program are expected in Ouagadougou, this indicator primarily refers to the newly built production capacity in secondary urban centers and in the 90 rural water supply systems (90 boreholes). Adoption of water supply tariff At present the tariff study for the rural water supply has been concluded and the recommendations are yet to be approved by the Council structures of Ministries. A result in year 1 will be the adoption of the new rural water supply tariff structure by the Council of Ministers. For urban water supply, a result in year 1 will be the adjustment of the current urban water tariff. By year 2, a new tariff study for urban water supply will be completed and a new water tariff structure recommended. A national validation of the recommended new urban 72 water tariff structure should take place by year 3, and the validated new urban water tariff structure should be approved by the Council of Ministers by year 4. Percentage of complaints resolved This indicator refers only to complaints received by ONEA. The timeframes vary according to the severity of the issues reported by means within the established timeframes of the complaints. The POM will specify the timeframes for handling complains according to their severity. Number of rural water systems built Third parties might be a duly established association of neighbors, or a private entity licensed to provide water supply services for a period under the Program delegated for of time. management to a third party Number of latrines built or rehabilitated This indicator captures both new latrines and rehabilitated latrines under the Program in targeted urban areas. A maximum of 42,500 under the Program in targeted urban latrines will be rehabilitated under the Porgram in targeted urban areas. Only two types of latrines will be built/rehabilitated in urban areas areas: VIP or TCM. To secure high demand for sanitation and appropriate O&M of the facilities, targeted areas will be subject to information, education and behavioral change campaigns prior to the commencement of any works. Pit excavation and the provision and installation of the slab households will be done at no cost for the beneficiaries, provided they make a commitment to build the superstructure and maintain the facility with their own resources. Number of new latrines built under the Only new latrines will be built in selected rural municipalities of the four targeted regions. Improved latrines should be of type VIP. To Program in targeted rural areas secure high demand for sanitation and appropriate O&M of the facilities, targeted areas will be subject to information, education and behavioral change campaigns prior to the commencement of any works. Pit excavation and the provision and installation of the slab households will be done at no cost for the beneficiaries, provided they make a commitment to build the superstructure and maintain the facility with their own resources. The Program will support the development of local masons and local fabrication of slabs and other materials needed for the construction of a latrine. Number of new sanitation cabins in A sanitation cabin is defined as an improved latrine with a door dedicated for individual use at a time. All sanitation cabins built under the schools, health centers, and public Program in urban and rural areas must comply with the technical specifications by the national government, including permanent places built under the Program handwashing facilities and cabins for male, females, and handicapped. A cabin for females with menstruation should be part of the block equipped with handwashing facilities of latrines. Percentage of sanitation cabins in This indicator measures the percentage of sanitation cabins that were built in previous years (under the Program) that are operational schools, health centers, and public and properly maintained. The POM will provide further details on the minimal standards required for a new sanitation cabin to be places equipped with handwashing considered “operational and properly maintained”. facilities built under the Program that are operational and properly maintained Percentage of hydrometric and This indicator provides information on the progress made on the optimization and functionality of the hydrometric and piezometric piezometric stations operational networks under the responsibility of the MEA. Number of productive boreholes in the It is expected that as a result of the geotechnical studies, 50 new productive boreholes will be identified and placed in service hard rock aquifer identified under the Program A model for the management of The model for the management of aquifers of the western sedimentary basin aims at achieving an in-depth, reliable knowledge of the aquifers of the western sedimentary groundwater resources in Burkina Faso in the western sedimentary aquifers, which at present are barely known in terms of quantity, basin is available quality, and patterns of recharge. This indicator provides information on the different stages of the study of the western sedimentary basin, which will conclude with a model for the management of the aquifers under the western sedimentary basin. 73 A database for groundwater resources This indicator provides information on the progress made to have a reliable database with a baseline on the groundwater resources in established and updated Burkina Faso. IWRM data and information available to This indicator provides information on the progress undertaken to operationalize the SNIEau and make water-related information the public through the SNIEau available to the general public and decision makers. Number of beneficiaries of technical The human capital strengthening activities financed by the Program include four types of Programs: (a) technical and training programs; and training programs financed by the (b) specialization programs; (c) doctoral programs; and (d) short-term training. Technical and training programs last between two to three Program years. Potential candidates should be currently external to MEA/ONEA and will be selected on a competitive basis. After the completion of technical and training Program, a number of beneficiaries will be absorbed by the MEA, ONEA or municipal training programs to work in non-temporary positions under a labor contract of at least five (5) years duration. Number of female beneficiaries of This indicator captures the number of female beneficiaries of technical and training programs financed by the Program. Technical and technical and training programs training programs last between 2 to 3 years. Potential candidates should be currently external to MEA/ONEA and will be selected on a financed by the Program competitive basis. After the completion of technical and training Program a number of beneficiaries will be absorbed by the MEA, ONEA or municipal training programs to work in non-temporary positions under a labor contract of at least five (5) years duration. Number of beneficiaries of Specialization programs funded through the Program are to last between nine months and two years, after which a professional master’s specialization programs financed by the degree will be granted. Potential candidates of specialization programs should be currently employed by MEA and/or ONEA to acquire Program certain skills and knowledge that will help them to better fulfill their current job. Number of beneficiaries of doctoral Doctoral programs should last a maximum of four years. programs financed by the Program Number of beneficiaries of short-term Short term trainings should last a maximum of one month and should benefit of MEA, ONEA, and municipal technical services. training financed by the Program Number of beneficiaries of technical This indicator provides information on the number of beneficiaries of technical and training programs financed by the Program who upon and training programs financed by the successful completion of their studies are hired by the MEA, ONEA, and/or municipal technical services to work in non-temporary Program integrated into the Public positions under a labor contract of at least five (5) years duration. administration 74 Annex 3. Disbursement Linked Indicators, Disbursement Arrangements and Verification Protocols Table A3.1. Disbursement Linked Indicator Matrix Total DLI Allocation As % of Total Financing DLI Indicative Timeline for DLI Achievement [3] DLI [1] (US$, millions) Amount Baseline [2] YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 RA 1. Improved access to water supply DLI 1. People provided with access to an improved water source under the 284,920 417,040 300,740 139,200 16,695 0 Program Allocated amount [4] 90 30% 22.1 3OBJEC 23.4 10.8 1.3 DLI 1.1. People provided with access to an improved water source in targeted 0 123,500 166,000 181,000 139,200 16,695 urban areas Allocated amount [4] 49 9.6 12.9 14.1 10.8 1.3 DLI 1.2. People provided with access to an improved water source in targeted 0 161,420 251,040 119,740 0 0 rural areas Allocated amount [4] 41 12.5 19.5 9.3 0.0 0 DLI 2. Water production capacity constructed under the Program 0 1,680 1,864 14,000 0 0 Allocated amount [4] 25 8% 2.4 2.7 19.9 0 0 DLI 3. Adoption of water supply tariff structures Not - Adoption of Completion of Validation of the Adoption of applicable rural water supply urban water tariff proposed new new urban tariff structure study, including urban water tariff water tariff - Adjustment of new water tariff structure, structure urban water tariff structure including public hearings Allocated amount [4] 15 5% 5 3 3 4 0 RA 2. Improved access to sanitation DLI 4. People provided with access to improved sanitation facilities under the 0 150,000 350,000 350,000 350,000 150,000 Program Allocated amount [4] 70 23% 7.8 18.1 18.1 18.1 7.8 DLI 4.1. People provided with access to improved sanitation facilities in targeted 150,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 100,000 0 urban areas Allocated amount [4] 44 7.8 10.4 10.4 10.4 5.2 DLI 4.2. People provided with access to improved sanitation facilities in targeted 0 150,000 150,000 150,000 50,000 0 rural areas Allocated amount [4] 26 0.0 7.8 7.8 7.8 2.6 DLI 5. Number of new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public 0 150 2,000 4,100 3,500 1,500 places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities Allocated amount [4] 25 8% 0.3 4.9 8.4 7.4 4.0 75 Total DLI Allocation As % of Total Financing DLI Indicative Timeline for DLI Achievement [3] DLI [1] (US$, millions) Amount Baseline [2] YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 DLI 5.1 Number of new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public 0 150 300 300 300 0 places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted urban areas Allocated amount [4] 1.8 0.3 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.0 DLI 5.2 Number of new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public 0 0 1,700 3,800 3,200 1,500 places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted rural areas Allocated amount [4] 17.2 0.0 2.9 6.4 5.4 2.5 DLI 5.3 Percentage of sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public 0 Not applicable >=70% >=70% >=80% >=80% places equipped with handwashing facilities built under the Program that are operational and properly maintained Allocated amount [4] 6 0 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 RA 3. Improved access to reliable information on water resources DLI 6. A decision -support model for the management of the aquifers is available Not - 1 geophysical - 2 geophysical - 10 deep - Reports on -A calibrated applicable seismic and seismic and recognition wells aquifer hydrogeological electric campaign electric with eight (8) geometry, model completed campaigns piezometers lithology and completed - - A multicriteria completed drilled aquifer Hydrogeological analysis for the - 6 deep - A report on characteristics, maps of the identification of recognition wells water withdraws and a aquifer are 50 favorable with six (6) completed calibrated updated zones for piezometers - 25 productive geological productive drilled wells in the hard- model boreholes in the - 25 productive rock aquifer completed hard rock basin wells in the hard- drilled completed rock aquifer drilled Allocated amount [4] 35 12% Not 2.50 8.8 11.3 6.3 6.3 applicable DLI 6.1. A model for the management of aquifers of the western sedimentary Not - 1 geophysical - 2 geophysical - 10 deep Reports on -A calibrated basin is available applicable seismic and seismic and recognition wells aquifer hydrogeological electric campaign electric with eight (8) geometry, model completed campaigns piezometers lithology and completed - completed drilled aquifer Hydrogeological - 6 deep - A report on characteristics, maps of the recognition wells water withdraws and a aquifer are with six (6) completed calibrated updated piezometers geological drilled model completed Allocated amount [4] 25 2.50 3.8 6.3 6.3 6.3 76 Total DLI Allocation As % of Total Financing DLI Indicative Timeline for DLI Achievement [3] DLI [1] (US$, millions) Amount Baseline [2] YR 1 YR 2 YR 3 YR 4 YR 5 DLI 6.2. Number of productive boreholes in the hard rock aquifer drilled under the Not A multicriteria 25 productive 25 productive Program applicable analysis for the wells in the hard- wells in the hard- identification of rock aquifer rock aquifer 50 favorable drilled drilled zones for productive boreholes in the hard rock basin completed Allocated amount [4] 10 5 5 Cross-cutting DLI 7. Improved human capital for water, sanitation, and IWRM 0 611 523 292 225 0 Allocated amount [4] 39.4 13% 11.0 8.7 10.9 6.9 1.9 DLI 7.1. Number of beneficiaries of technical and training programs financed by 0 137 108 35 0 0 the Program Allocated amount [4] 11.6 5.7 4.5 1.5 0 0 DLI 7.2. Number of beneficiaries of specialization programs financed by the 0 20 7 7 0 0 Program Allocated amount [4] 3.9 2.3 0.8 0.8 0.0 0.0 DLI 7.3. Number of beneficiaries of doctoral programs financed by the Program 0 1 2 0 0 0 Allocated amount [4] 2.0 0.7 1.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 DLI 7.4. Number of beneficiaries of short-term training financed by the Program 0 453 406 250 225 0 Allocated amount [4] 6.9 2.3 2.1 1.3 1.2 0.0 DLI 7.5. Number of beneficiaries of technical and training programs financed by 0 0 0 82 65 21 the Program integrated into the Public administration Allocated amount [4] 15.0 0.0 0.0 7.3 5.8 1.9 Front-end fee [4] 0.625 0.25 Total Financing Allocated 300 100 Note: [1] Definitions for the indicators provided in Annex 2; [2] Allocated amount in US$ million per year per DLI is rounded; [3] Targets are for each year and not cumulative; [4] Allocated amount is estimated based on expected results; [5] Front-end fee only applies to the credit of US$250 million. 77 Table A3.2. DLI Verification Protocol Table Definition [1] /Description of Scalability of Protocol to Evaluate Achievement of the DLI and Data/Result Verification DLI Disbursements Data Verification Achievement (Yes/No) Procedure [2] Source Entity DLI 1. People provided Access to improved water sources will be Yes DREAs IVA x All targeted areas included in the Program will be considered for DLI 1. with access to an provided by means of new water household DGEP x ONEA departments and the DREAs would be responsible for timely data collection in their improved water connections, standposts, or boreholes ONEA respective area. Once the DISE becomes fully functional in the targeted areas, the data will be source under the equipped with hand pumps, constructed under fed into the DISE system and later made available through the SNIEau website. Program the Program. Improved water source means x ONEA departments and the DREAs shall prepare reports on the number of new household that water provided by these facilities meets connections, standposts and boreholes providing improved water services in any given year, DLI 1.1. People GoBF’s water quality standards. The number of and the number of people served in accordance to the standards per type of facility. The provided with access people served will be calculated using ONEA’s DREAs will submit the reports to the DGEP, and ONEA departments to ONEA PSU for their to an improved water and rural standards of people-served/facility. internal validation. source in targeted Further details will be provided in the POM. x The DGEP and ONEA PSU should submit validated and consolidated reports to the PCU. urban areas x The PCU will be responsible for quality control and consolidating the data obtained from the Payments will be made in proportion to the DGEP (for rural water) and ONEA PSU (urban water) and submit a report to the IVA. DLI 1.2. People achievements by MEA and ONEA under DLI 1.1. x The IVA shall verify the data reported by the PCU. The verification methodology and minimum provided with access and DLI 1.2. reporting standards are provided in the POM. to an improved water x Every year, the IVA will carry out physical inspection of: source in targeted Undisbursed amounts in any given year can be o Representative random samples of the new household connections and new standposts rural areas rolled over to the next year. installed in the given year for every urban area included in the Program; and o Representative random samples of new household connections, standposts and boreholes built in the given year in rural areas for every municipality included in the Program. DLI 2. Water Increased water production financed under the Yes ONEA IVA x ONEA department and the DREAs shall prepare reports on the completion of the works and production capacity Program by means of the construction of new DGEP satisfactory testing of the operation of the new urban and rural production facilities, constructed under the urban and rural water production facilities. DREAs respectively. The DREAs will submit the reports to the DGEP, and ONEA departments to ONEA Program Further details will be provided in the POM. PSU for their internal validation. x The DGEP and ONEA PSU should submit validated and consolidated reports to the PCU on the Payments will be made in proportion to the compliance of the new facilities with the water quality and volumetric compliance. production capacity measured in m3/day x The PCU will be responsible for consolidating the data obtained from the DGEP (for rural added per year. water) and ONEA PSU (urban water) and submit a report to the IVA. x The IVA will verify the achievement of this DLI by physically examining the completion of the Undisbursed amounts in any given year can be works and satisfactory operation of: rolled over to the next year. o ONEA’s new production facilities at Gon-Boussougou, Mogtédo, Béguédo, Tiébélé, Toecé (for the Yako-Gourcy-Bousse system), and Kaya (for the Kaya-Korsimoro- Boussouma system). The inspection shall include, among others: the satisfactory operation of pumps, treatment facilities and related equipment and control devices at their design capacity. o For the 90 boreholes drill for the new rural water supply systems, the IVA shall verify the satisfactory operation of pumps and the static levels of water in the boreholes. DLI 3. Adoption of This DLI indicates whether new tariffs for rural No MEA IVA x A new tariff structure for rural water will be considered adopted if the Council of Ministers water supply tariff water services have been adopted. ONEA approves it and it is officially published. structures x The verification of the increase in the current urban water tariff for ONEA will be done based on the official publication of the revised existing tariff. 78 Definition [1] /Description of Scalability of Protocol to Evaluate Achievement of the DLI and Data/Result Verification DLI Disbursements Data Verification Achievement (Yes/No) Procedure [2] Source Entity This DLI also measures whether a new tariff x ONEA will prepare a new urban water tariff structure that, based upon the mid and long term structure for urban water services has been projections provided by its financial model, complies with the requirements of covering: the developed and adopted. operational costs of the provision of urban water and sanitation services, which will have to meet the efficiency parameters established; its debt service; the depreciation of infrastructures Payments under this DLI will be made in lump- for the production and distribution of water, and for the collection and treatment of sum amounts. wastewater; and a portion of the capital expenditures. The proposed new urban water tariff structure will be validated by means of public hearings. The new urban water tariff structure Undisbursed amounts in any given year can be for urban water services will have to be approved by the Council of Ministers and will be rolled over to the next year. considered adopted when it is officially published. x The PCU will confirm to the IVA that the above steps have been taking and will submit the necessary documentation. The IVA will review the documentation to verify the achievement of this DLI in each of the years DLI 4. People provided Access to improved household sanitation Yes DREAs IVA x All targeted areas included in the Program will be considered for DLI 4. with access to facility in rural and urban areas will be DGA x ONEA department and the DREAs will be responsible for timely data collection in their improved sanitation provided by means of VIP and TCM latrines. ONEA respective targeted area. Once the DISE becomes fully functional in the targeted areas, the facilities under the The sub-structure, including pit excavation and data will be fed into the DISE system. Program the provision and installation of the slab for x ONEA department and the DREAs shall prepare reports on the information, education and beneficiary households, will be done at no cost behavioral change campaigns prior to any construction of latrines, and the number of DLI 4.1. People for the beneficiaries. The superstructure will improved household facilities constructed/rehabilitated in a given year. The DREAs will submit provided with access be completed by the household with their own the performance report to the DGA, and ONEA departments to ONEA PSU, for their internal to improved resources. In order to qualify for payment, the review and validation. sanitation facilities in latrines should be completed, including the x The DGA and ONEA PSU should submit the validated and consolidated reports to the PCU. targeted urban areas super-structure. In urban areas, a maximum of x The PCU will be responsible for consolidating the data coming from the DGA (for rural 50 percent of the latrines can be rehabilitated sanitation) and ONEA PSU (urban sanitation) and submit a report to the IVA. DLI 4.2. People latrines. No rehabilitation is allowed in rural x The IVA shall verify the data reported by the PCU. The verification methodology and minimum provided with access areas. Further details will be provided in the reporting standards are provided in the POM. to improved POM. x Every year, the IVA will carry out physical inspection of sanitation facilities in o A representative random sample of the improved household latrines built or targeted rural areas The number of people served will be rehabilitated in the given year for every urban area included in the Program; and calculated using BF’s standards of people- o A representative random sample of the new improved household latrines built in the served/facility. given year in rural areas for every region included in the Program. x DLIs 1 and 4 will be independently sampled but samples may overlap. To secure high demand for sanitation and appropriate O&M of the facilities, targeted areas will be subject to information, education and behavioral change campaigns prior to the commencement of any works. Payments will be made in proportion to the achievements by MEA and ONEA for DLI 4.1 and DLI 4.2. Undisbursed amounts in any given year can be rolled over to the next year. 79 Definition [1] /Description of Scalability of Protocol to Evaluate Achievement of the DLI and Data/Result Verification DLI Disbursements Data Verification Achievement (Yes/No) Procedure [2] Source Entity DLI 5. Number of new New sanitation cabins will be constructed at Yes DREAs IVA x All targeted areas included in the Program will be considered for DLI 5. sanitation cabins in schools, health centers and public places. The DGA x ONEA and the DREAs will be responsible for timely data collection in their respective targeted schools, health new cabins could be added to existing blocks ONEA area. Once the DISE becomes fully functional in the targeted areas, the data will be fed into the centers, and public or might constitute a new block of sanitation DISE system. places built under the cabins. x ONEA departments and the DREAs shall prepare reports on the number new sanitation cabins Program equipped in schools, health centers, and public places equipped with handwashing facilities built in the with handwashing A sanitation cabin is defined as an improved given year, and on the O&M of the sanitation cabins. The DREAs will submit the performance facilities latrine with a door dedicated for individual use report to the DGA and ONEA department the PSU for their review and internal validation. at a time. All sanitation cabins built under the x The PCU will be responsible for consolidating the data coming from the DGA (for rural DLI 5.1 Number of Program in urban and rural areas must comply sanitation) and ONEA PSU (urban sanitation). new sanitation cabins with the technical specifications by the x The IVA shall verify the data reported by the PCU. The verification methodology and minimum in schools, health national government, including permanent reporting standards are provided in the POM. centers, and public handwashing facilities and cabins for male, x Every year, the IVA will carry out physical inspection of: places built under the females, and handicapped. A cabin for females o A representative random sample of the new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, Program equipped with menstruation should be part of the block and public places built under the Program in urban areas in the given year to ensure that with handwashing of latrines. The POM will further define the they were properly constructed and are operational; and, that the blocks of latrines facilities in targeted conditions for a sanitation cabin to qualify for where the new cabins were built are equipped with permanent handwashing facilities. urban areas payment. o A representative random sample of the new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program in rural areas in the given year to ensure that DLI 5.2 Number of Payments will be made in proportion to the they were properly constructed and are operational; and, that the blocks of latrines new sanitation cabins achievements by the DGA and ONEA for DLI where the new cabins were built are equipped with permanent handwashing facilities. in schools, health 5.1 and DLI 5.2. Undisbursed amounts in any o A representative random sample of the sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and centers, and public given year can be rolled over to the next year. public places equipped with handwashing facilities in urban and rural areas that were places built under the built under the Program in previous years to ensure that they remain operational and Program equipped Under DLI 5.3. to qualify for payment, the new are properly maintained. with handwashing sanitation cabins built under the Program in facilities in targeted schools, health centers and public places rural areas should be operational and properly maintained. To ensure an efficient DLI 5.3 Percentage of management and sustainability of the sanitation cabins in facilities, facility management committees will schools, health be established at schools and health center centers, and public where the new cabins will be build. As for the places equipped with new cabins in public places management will handwashing facilities be delegated to a third party under municipal built under the oversight. The private entities will be Program that are responsible for the O&M of the facilities and operational and could charge a user fee to the public. Further properly maintained details will be provided in the POM. Payments associated with DLI 5.3 will be lump-sum. DLI 6. A decision- This DLI includes two results, as follows: No DGRE IVA For DLI 6.1 the results will be verified as follows: support model for the SP-GIRE Year 1 management of the DLI 6.1 refers to the availability of a model for SISC x The contractor in charge of the geophysical and electric campaign will deliver a report on the aquifers is available the management of aquifers of the western geophysical seismic profile of about 130 km with a description of the different geological 80 Definition [1] /Description of Scalability of Protocol to Evaluate Achievement of the DLI and Data/Result Verification DLI Disbursements Data Verification Achievement (Yes/No) Procedure [2] Source Entity sedimentary basin, which will be fully layers and their depths. The report will be reviewed technically by the SISC who will submit a DLI 6.1. A model for completed by year 5. Payments will be made progress report to the SP-GIRE. the management of yearly based upon the achievement of key x The SP-GIRE, upon satisfactory reception of the report on the geophysical and electric aquifers of the milestones. campaign and the review of the progress report from the SISC, will submit a consolidated western sedimentary report to the PCU. basin is available The DLI 6.2 refers to the multicriteria analysis x The PCU verifies the information and submits the report to the IVA. for the identification of at least 50 favorable x The IVA will perform a desk review of the information in accordance with the POM and the DLI 6.2. Number of zones for productive boreholes in the hard technical specification of the ToR for the completion of the geophysical and electric campaign. productive boreholes rock basin in year 1; the drilling of 25 in the hard rock productive boreholes in year 2, and the drilling Year 2 aquifer drilled under of another 25 productive boreholes in year 3. x For the geophysical and electric campaign (of about 270 km), the verification will follow the the Program same verification protocol as established in Year 1. Payments under this DLI will be made in lump- x For the drilling of the six (6) deep recognition wells equipped with six (6) piezometers, the sum amounts. verification will be done as follows: o The contractor in charge of the drilling of the depth wells will deliver a report on the Undisbursed amounts in any given year can be execution of the six wells and six piezometers that, in conjunction with the report of the rolled over to the next year contractor in charge of the supervision of works, will be the basis for the verification. This information will be reviewed technically by the SISC who will submit a progress report to the SP-GIRE. o The SP-GIRE, after verifying the reports from the contractor, the supervision firm, and the progress report from the SISC, will submit a consolidated report to the PCU. o The PCU verifies the information and submits the report to the IVA. o The IVA will perform a desk review of the information in accordance with the POM and will proceed to perform a physical inspection of six deep wells and six piezometers in accordance to the technical specifications of the ToR for the drilling works. Year 3 x For the drilling of the ten (10) deep recognition wells equipped with eight (8) piezometers, the verification will follow the same verification protocol as established in Year 2. x For the report on the water withdrawals, the verification will be done as follows: o The report on water withdrawals produced by a consulting firm will be revised technically by the SISC, who will submit a progress report to the SP-GIRE. o The SP-GIRE, upon satisfactory reception of the report on water withdrawals and the review of the progress report from the SISC, will submit a consolidated report to the PCU. o The PCU verifies the information and submits the report to the IVA. o The IVA will perform a desk review of the information in accordance with the POM and the technical specifications of the ToR for the completion of the geophysical and electric campaign. Year 4 x The contractor(s) in charge of the reports on: (a) the aquifer geometry; (b) the lithology and aquifer characteristics; and (c) the calibrated geological model, will submit report(s) to the SP- 81 Definition [1] /Description of Scalability of Protocol to Evaluate Achievement of the DLI and Data/Result Verification DLI Disbursements Data Verification Achievement (Yes/No) Procedure [2] Source Entity GIRE, which will be technically reviewed by the SICSs that in turn will submit a progress report to the SP-GIRE. x The SP-GIRE, upon satisfactory reception of the reports from the contractor (s) and the review of the progress report from the SISC, will submit the report to the PCU. x The PCU verifies the information and submits the report to the IVA. x The IVA will perform a desk review of all the information submitted in accordance with the POM and the technical specifications of the ToR for the completion of the different reports Year 5 x The reports delivered by the contractors on: (a) the calibrated hydrogeological model and the tests performed to ensure its functionality, and (b) the hydrological updated maps of the aquifer are technically reviewed by the SICSs, who will submit a progress report to the SP- GIRE on the modelling, including the results of the conceptual and numerical hydrogeological model, as well as the results of the simulations. x The SP-GIRE, upon satisfactory reception of the reports from the contractor (s) and the review of the progress report from the SISC, will submit the report to the PCU. x The PCU verifies the information and submits the report to the IVA. x The IVA will perform a desk review of all the information submitted, including performing simulation tests to verify the operation and reliability of the model in accordance with the ToR of the assignment. For DLI 6.2 the results will be verified as follows: Year 1 x The contractor in charge of the multicriteria analysis for the identification of 50 favorable zones for productive boreholes in the hard rock basin will submit report to the SP-GIRE, which will be technically reviewed by the SICSs that in turn will submit a progress report to the SP- GIRE. x The SP-GIRE, upon satisfactory reception of the reports from the contractor and the review of the progress report from the SISC, will submit the report to the PCU. x The PCU verifies the information and submits the report to the IVA. x The IVA will perform a desk review of all the information submitted in accordance with the POM and the technical specifications of the ToR for the completion of the assignment. Year 2 and Year 3 x The contractor in charge of the drilling of the shallow, productive wells in the hard-rock basin will deliver a report on the execution of 25 wells that comply with the technical specifications required in the ToR, which in conjunction with the report of the supervision firm, will be the basis for the verification. This information will be reviewed technically by the SISC who will submit a progress report to the SP-GIRE. x The SP-GIRE, after verifying the reports from the contractor, the supervision firm, and the progress report from the SISC will submit a consolidated report to the PCU. x The PCU verifies the information and submits the report to the IVA. 82 Definition [1] /Description of Scalability of Protocol to Evaluate Achievement of the DLI and Data/Result Verification DLI Disbursements Data Verification Achievement (Yes/No) Procedure [2] Source Entity x The IVA will perform a desk review of the information in accordance with the POM and will proceed to perform a physical inspection of the 25 shallow wells in accordance to the technical specifications of the ToR for the drilling works. DLI 7. Improved Human capital for water, sanitation and IWRM Yes MEA IVA For DLI 7.1, DLI 7.2, and DLI 7.3 the results will be verified as follows: human capital for will be improved by means of achieving DLI 7.1 DGRE Year 1 to Year 5 water, sanitation, and to DLI 7.5: (a) technical and training programs ONEA x For (a) technical and training programs; (b) specialization programs; and (c) doctoral programs IWRM with a duration of two to three years; (b) DREAs each academic or training institution shall submit to MEA’s DRH (for the fields of IWRM, rural specialization programs a duration of nine water supply, and rural sanitation), or to ONEA’s DRH (for urban water and urban sanitation), DLI 7.1. Number of months to two years; (c) doctoral degrees that the following: (a) lists of beneficiaries duly registered in the respective fields for each of their beneficiaries of will have a duration of four years; (d) short- registered beneficiaries; and (b) annual reports on the progress made or successful technical and training term training with a maximum duration of one completion of the programs, as the case may be, for each of their registered beneficiaries. programs financed by month; and (e) a number of beneficiaries of Summary of results should be disaggregated by gender. the Program technical and training programs financed by x Once verified, the MEA’s DRH shall submit a report to the PCU on the beneficiaries of (a) the Program integrated into the Public technical and training programs; (b) specialization programs; and (c) doctoral programs. DLI 7.2. Number of administration. Similarly, ONEA’s DRH shall submit a report to ONEA PSU on the verified beneficiaries of (a) beneficiaries of technical and training programs; (b) specialization programs; and (c) doctoral programs, which specialization Payments will be made in proportion to the will then be submitted to the PCU. programs financed by achievements made under DLI 7.1, DLI 7.2, DLI x The PCU will produce a consolidated report of the results attained in relation to DLI 7.1, DLI the Program 7.3, DLI 7.4, and DLI 7.5. Under DLI 7.5 In order 7.2 and DLI 7.3 to submit to the IVA for the verification of results. Summary of results should to qualify for payment the staff absorbed by be disaggregated by gender. DLI 7.3. Number of the Public Administration should be hired x Based on the consolidated report submitted by PCU, the IVA will: (a) perform a desk review of beneficiaries of under a labor contract of at least five years the information, (b) verify the information with the concerning universities, research centers, doctoral programs duration. and training centers, and (c) interview a random sample of beneficiaries to corroborate the financed by the information in the reports. Program Undisbursed amounts in any given year can be rolled over to the next year. For DLI 7.4 the results will be verified as follows: DLI 7.4. Number of Year 1 to Year 5 beneficiaries of short- x For short term training, each training institution will submit to MEA’s DRH (for the fields of term training financed IWRM, rural water, and rural sanitation) or to ONEA’s DRH (for urban water and urban by the Program sanitation), signed lists of beneficiaries that have successfully completed the training. Summary of results should be disaggregated by gender. DLI 7.5. Number of x Once verified, the MEA’s DRH shall submit a report to the PCU on the beneficiaries of the beneficiaries of short-term training programs. Similarly, ONEA’s DRH shall submit a report to ONEA PSU on technical and training the verified beneficiaries who have successfully completed the short training, which will programs financed by submit it to the PCU. the Program x The PCU will produce a consolidated report of the results attained in relation to DLI 7.4 to integrated into the submit to the IVA for the verification of results. Summary of results should be disaggregated Public administration by gender. x Based on the consolidated report submitted by PCU, the IVA will: (a) perform a desk review of the information; (b) verify the information with the concerned universities, research centers, and training centers; and (c) interview a random sample of beneficiaries to corroborate the information in the reports. For DLI 7.5 the results will be verified as follows: 83 Definition [1] /Description of Scalability of Protocol to Evaluate Achievement of the DLI and Data/Result Verification DLI Disbursements Data Verification Achievement (Yes/No) Procedure [2] Source Entity Year 3 to Year 5 x MEA’s DRH and ONEA’s DRH will prepare a report for each beneficiary of technical and training programs that was hired after successful completion of the studies. Hiring should be made for a non-temporary position, and the staff should be under a labor contract of a minimum five-year duration. The report should include detailed information on the education of the staff, backgrounds and the position and responsibilities for which they were hired, copies of the signed contracts, and MEA’s DRH and ONEA’s DRH will submit them to the PCU. x The PCU will be responsible for consolidating all the reports from ONEA and MEA and submitting the consolidated report to the IVA. Summary of results should be disaggregated by gender. x The IVA shall verify the information on the reports and will interview the staff hired to corroborate the information in the reports. Note: [1] Definitions for the indicators provided in Annex 2; [2] Sampling methodology to be defined in the POM 84 Table A3.3. World Bank Disbursement Table DLI World Bank Of which Financing Deadline for DLI Minimum DLI Value to be Target DLI Value(s) for Determination of Financing Amount to Be Disbursed Financing Available for Achievement achieved to trigger World Bank Against Achieved and Verified DLI Value(s) allocated to (US$, millions) disbursements of World Bank Disbursements the DLI Financing Purposes Prior Advance (US$ Results s millions) [1] DLI 1. People provided 90 0 20 Results will be This is a linearly scalable 1,158,595 people Payments will be made in proportion to the with access to an reported and DLI. Minimum DLI value in a provided with achievements. improved water source verified annually year is 10,000 people access to an For DLR 1.1. Year 1 to Year 5 = US$77.7 per person under the Program provided with access to an improved water served by an improved water source built under the improved water source source under the Program in targeted urban areas DLI 1.1. People provided 49 Program For DLR 1.2. Year 1 to Year 5 = US$ US$77.7 per person with access to an served by an improved wat10er source built under the improved water source in Program in targeted rural areas targeted urban areas Formula for disbursement = # people provided with access to an improved water source in targeted urban areas × US$77.7 + # people provided with access to an improved water source in targeted rural areas × US$77.7 DLI 1.2. People provided 41 with access to an Hypothetical Example: In year 2, 25,000 people are verified to have achieved DLI 1.1 and 25,000 people are verified to have achieved improved water source in DLI 1.2, so disbursement will be: targeted rural areas 25,000 people provided with access to an improved water source in targeted urban areas × US$77.7 + 25,000 people provided with access to an improved water source in targeted rural areas × US$77.7 = US$3.9 m DLI 2. Water production 25 0 5 Results will be >0 17,544 m3/ day Payments will be made in proportion to the capacity constructed reported and achievements. under the Program verified annually. Year 1 to Year 5 = US$ 1,425 per m3 per day of added water production capacity built under the Program Formula for disbursement = m3 per day of added water production capacity × US$1,425 Hypothetical Example: in year 2, 1,500 m3 per day of added water production capacity are verified to have achieved DLI 2, so disbursement will be: 1,500 m3 per day of added water production capacity × US$1,425 = US$2.1 m DLI 3. Adoption of water 15 5 5 Results will be N/A N/A Year 1. US$3 million for the adoption of rural water supply tariff structures reported and supply tariff structure; AND US$2 million for the verified once the adjustment of urban water tariff official Year 2. US$3 million for the Preparation of urban water publication of tariff study and corresponding new tariff structure the new rural Year 3. US$ 3 million for the validation of the urban water tariff water tariff study and corresponding new tariff structure structure is Year 4. US$ 4 million for the adoption of new urban done. water tariff structure For the urban Year 5. No disbursement water supply tariff structure, results will be reported and verified annually 85 DLI World Bank Of which Financing Deadline for DLI Minimum DLI Value to be Target DLI Value(s) for Determination of Financing Amount to Be Disbursed Financing Available for Achievement achieved to trigger World Bank Against Achieved and Verified DLI Value(s) allocated to (US$, millions) disbursements of World Bank Disbursements the DLI Financing Purposes Prior Advance (US$ Results s millions) [1] DLI 4. People provided 70 0 20 Results will be This is a linearly scalable 1,350,000 people Payments will be made in proportion to the with access to improved reported and DLI. Minimum DLI value in a provided with achievements. sanitation facilities under verified annually year is 10,000 people access to improved the Program provided with access to sanitation facilities For DLR 4.1. Year 1 to Year 5 = US$51.9 per person improved sanitation provided with access to improved sanitation facilities in DLI 4.1. People provided 44 facilities under the Program targeted urban areas with access to improved For DLR 4.2. Year 1 to Year 5 = US$51.9 per person sanitation facilities in provided with access to improved sanitation facilities in targeted urban areas targeted rural areas Formula for disbursement = # People provided with access to improved sanitation facilities in targeted urban areas × US$51.9 + # DLI 4.2. People provided 26 People provided with access to improved sanitation facilities in targeted rural areas × US$51.9 with access to improved sanitation facilities in Hypothetical Example: In year 2, 40,000 people are verified to have achieved DLI 4.1 and 40,000 people are verified to have achieved targeted rural areas DLI 4.2, so disbursement will be: 40,000 with access to improved sanitation facilities in targeted urban areas × US$51.9 + 40,000 with access to improved sanitation facilities in targeted rural areas × US$51.9 = US$4.1 m DLI 5. Number of new 25 0 5 Results will be Minimum DLI 5.1 value in a 11,250 new Payments will be made as follows: sanitation cabins in reported and year is 100 of new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, verified annually sanitation cabins in schools, schools, health For DLR 5.1. Year 1 to Year 5 = US$ 1,689 for a new and public places built health centers, and public centers, and public sanitation cabin in schools, health centers, and public under the Program places built under the places built under places built under the Program equipped with equipped with Program equipped with the Program handwashing facilities in targeted urban areas handwashing facilities handwashing facilities in equipped with targeted urban areas handwashing For DLR 5.2. Year 1 to Year 5 = US$ 1,689 for a new DLI 5.1 Number of new 1.8 facilities sanitation cabin in schools, health centers, and public sanitation cabins in Minimum DLI 5.2 value is places built under the Program equipped with schools, health centers, 100 new sanitation cabins in handwashing facilities in targeted rural areas and public places built schools, health centers, and under the Program public places built under the For DLR5.3: equipped with Program equipped with Year 1 – No disbursement. handwashing facilities in handwashing facilities in Year 2. US$1.5 million if at least 70 percent of the targeted urban areas targeted rural areas sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places equipped with handwashing facilities built under DLI 5.2 Number of new 17.2 Minimum DLI5.3 value in a the Program in year 1 are verified to be operational and sanitation cabins in year is 70 percent of the properly maintained schools, health centers, sanitation cabins in schools, Year 3. US$1.5 million if at least 70 percent of the and public places built health centers, and public sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public under the Program places built under the places equipped with handwashing facilities built under equipped with Program in the previous the Program in years 1 and 2 are verified to be year(s) that are verified to operational and properly maintained. 86 DLI World Bank Of which Financing Deadline for DLI Minimum DLI Value to be Target DLI Value(s) for Determination of Financing Amount to Be Disbursed Financing Available for Achievement achieved to trigger World Bank Against Achieved and Verified DLI Value(s) allocated to (US$, millions) disbursements of World Bank Disbursements the DLI Financing Purposes Prior Advance (US$ Results s millions) [1] handwashing facilities in be operational and properly Year 4. US$1.5 million if at least 80 percent of the targeted rural areas maintained sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public 6 places equipped with handwashing facilities built under DLI 5.3 Percentage of the Program in years 1, 2, and 3 are verified to be sanitation cabins in operational and properly maintained schools, health centers, Year 5. US$1.5 million if at least 80 percent of the and public places sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public equipped with places equipped with handwashing facilities built under handwashing facilities the Program in years 1,2,3, and 4 are verified to be built under the Program operational and properly maintained that are operational and Formula for disbursement = properly maintained # of new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted urban areas × US$ 1,689 + # of new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted rural areas × US$ 1,689 + lump-sum payment if the given percentage for a given year of sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places equipped with handwashing facilities built under the Program are operational and properly maintained is attained Hypothetical Example: In year 2, 250 new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted urban areas are verified to have achieved DLI 5.1; 1,200 new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted rural areas are verified to have achieved DLI 5.2 ; and 70 percent of the blocks of latrines in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program in year 1 are verified to be operational and properly maintained, so disbursement will be: 250 new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted urban areas × US$ 1,689 + 1,200 new sanitation cabins in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program equipped with handwashing facilities in targeted rural areas × US$ 1,689 + US$1.5 million as 70 percent of the sanitation blocs in schools, health centers, and public places built under the Program in year 1 are verified to be operational and properly maintained = US$4.4 m 87 DLI World Bank Of which Financing Deadline for DLI Minimum DLI Value to be Target DLI Value(s) for Determination of Financing Amount to Be Disbursed Financing Available for Achievement achieved to trigger World Bank Against Achieved and Verified DLI Value(s) allocated to (US$, millions) disbursements of World Bank Disbursements the DLI Financing Purposes Prior Advance (US$ Results s millions) [1] DLI 6. A decision- support 35 0 10 Results will be N/A US$25 million for Payments will be made based as follows: model for the reported and the completion of management of the verified annually the model for the For DLR 6.1: aquifers is available management of aquifers of the DLI 6.1. A model for the 25 western Year 1. An amount of US$2.5 million will be disbursed management of aquifers sedimentary basin provided that a geophysical seismic profile of the western is available Year 2. An amount of US$3.75 million will be disbursed sedimentary basin is provided that: (a) two geophysical seismic profiles; (b) an available electric geophysics campaign is completed, AND (c) six US$10 million for (6) deep recognition wells are installed and equipped DLI 6.2. Number of 10 the completion of with six (6) piezometers productive boreholes in the multicriteria Year 3. An amount of US$6.25 million will be disbursed the hard rock aquifer analysis and the provided that: (a) ten (10) deep recognition wells are drilled under the Program drilling of 50 installed and equipped with eight (8) piezometers; AND productive (b) a report on the water withdrawals is completed. boreholes in the Year 4. An amount of US$6.25 million will be disbursed hard-rock basin provided that: (a) a report on aquifer geometry is completed; (b) a report on lithology and aquifer characteristics is completed; AND, (c) a calibrated geological model is completed. Year 5. An amount of US$6.25 million will be disbursed provided that: (a) a calibrated hydrogeological model is completed and tested; AND, (b) hydrogeological maps of the aquifer are updated. For DLR 6.2: Year 1. No disbursement Year 2. An amount of US$5 million will be disbursed provided that 25 productive boreholes in the hard rock basin are drilled after the needed multicriteria analysis is completed Year 2. An amount of US$5 million will be disbursed provided that 25 productive boreholes in the hard rock basin are drilled after the needed multicriteria analysis is completed Year 4 and 5. No disbursement DLI 7. Improved human 39.4 0 10 Results will be >0 US$11.6 million for Payments will be made in proportion to the capital for water, reported and beneficiaries of the achievements. sanitation, and IWRM verified annually 2-3 year technical and training DLR 7.1. Year 1 to Year 5. US$41,464 per beneficiary of 2- programs. 3 year technical and training programs to be disbursed in 88 DLI World Bank Of which Financing Deadline for DLI Minimum DLI Value to be Target DLI Value(s) for Determination of Financing Amount to Be Disbursed Financing Available for Achievement achieved to trigger World Bank Against Achieved and Verified DLI Value(s) allocated to (US$, millions) disbursements of World Bank Disbursements the DLI Financing Purposes Prior Advance (US$ Results s millions) [1] DLI 7.1. Number of two tranches: 50 percent upon verification that beneficiaries of technical 11.6 US$3.9 million for beneficiaries are duly registered in the corresponding and training programs beneficiaries of academic or training institution; and 50 percent upon financed by the Program specialization successful completion of the corresponding programs. programs DLI 7.2. Number of DLR 7.2. Year 1 to Year 5.US$115,000 per beneficiary of beneficiaries of 3.9 US$2.0 million for the specialization programs to be disbursed in two specialization programs beneficiaries of the tranches: 50 percent upon verification that beneficiaries financed by the Program doctoral programs are duly registered for the corresponding programs; and 50 percent upon their successful completion. DLI 7.3. Number of US$6.9 million for beneficiaries of doctoral 2.0 beneficiaries of DLR 7.3. Year 1 to Year 5. US$651,667 per beneficiary of programs financed by the short-term training doctoral programs to be disbursed in five tranches: 20 Program programs percent upon verification that beneficiaries are duly registered for the doctoral programs; and 20 percent DLI 7.4. Number of US$15 million for upon successful completion of each of the 4 years of beneficiaries of short-term 6.9 external Program. training financed by the beneficiaries of 2-3 Program year technical and DLR 7.4. Year 1 to Year 5. US$5,172 per beneficiary of training programs short-term training, upon certification that the DLI 7.5. Number of 15 who are hired by corresponding training has been successfully completed beneficiaries of technical MEA, ONEA, and/or and training programs the technical DLR 7.5. Year 3 to Year 5. US$89,286 per external financed by the Program municipal services beneficiary of technical, training programs hired by MEA, integrated into the Public ONEA, and/or technical municipal services and assigned administration to a non-temporary position, with a labor contract of a minimum duration of five-years [1] Allocated amount in US$ million per DLI is rounded. 89 Annex 4. Summary of technical assessment 1. As part of the Program preparation phase, a Technical Assessment of the Program was carried out. The assessment concluded that the Program is strategically relevant and technically sound. A number of weaknesses have been identified, which will be addressed through the adoption of key measures included in the PAP and the POM. 2. The Program is strategically relevant. In Burkina Faso, notwithstanding relatively high economic growth rates in the last decade, low levels of investments in water supply, sanitation and IWRM—in particular, in sanitation—have resulted in poor development outcomes. The Program is at the heart of the Government’s efforts to increase access to water and sanitation and improve IWRM. The Government has demonstrated a clear commitment towards improving sustainable access to water supply and sanitation, in a context of efficient, evidence-informed IWRM. As a reflection of its strategic importance, GoBF has adopted the National Water Policy in 2016 and five operational programs, which aimed at achieving the SDG 6 for water supply, sanitation, and IWRM by 2030. 3. The Program will contribute to fund a substantial portion of GoBF’s national programs to deliver universal access to water and sanitation services. It will support the establishment of institutional, contractual and financial arrangements that will enable GoBF to achieve its strategic priorities to provide universal access to water and sanitation services, and strengthen sector governance. The Program will significantly contribute to delivering the PN-AEP, the PN-AEUE, and the PN-GIRE. The Program will provide incentives to expand access to water supply for 1.1 million people, and to improved sanitation for 1.3 million people. The prioritization of the Program interventions in rural areas will seek to redress substantial disparities in water and sanitation service in southwestern regions, which are substantially lagging behind. It will support the core intervention included in the PN-AEP and the PN-AEUE, which consists of extending existing and constructing new piped water supply systems in urban and rural areas, to expand access to improved household sanitation facilities, and to provide improved water supply and sanitation services in schools, health centers and public places. 4. Based on the recently completed SCD for Burkina Faso, which is the basis for the development of the UPCOMING Country Partnership Framework (CPF), the Program is aligned with the country priorities on improving the management of natural resources (including water resources), promoting skills development, and reducing gender bias. Amongst the most binding constraints to inclusive growth identified were inadequate access to infrastructure services, gender imbalances and a lack of female empowerment as well as sustainability issues with respect to natural resource management. 5. The Program is technically sound. It will allow addressing a number of identified weaknesses in the water supply, sanitation and IWRM sectors in Burkina Faso, through an emphasis on greater service standardization, increasing the scale of service delivery, education and communication campaigns to boost latrine demand, maintenance of latrines and sanitation cabins, expanding the knowledge of the western aquifer, and locating new water supply sources in the hard-rock aquifer. 6. The Program’s approach to deliver access through a mix of household connections, standposts and boreholes is in line with an ongoing shift in customers’ preferences towards household connections, whilst recognizing the fact that boreholes and standpost supplies provide a good first step and will be needed for some time, particularly in the poorest areas. A key strength of the Program’s technical design is linked to the overlapping of water supply and sanitation investments in targeted areas so as to maximize the Program’s impacts. 90 7. The Program builds upon the programmatic approach adopted by GoBF, which has been a catalyst for the mobilization of resources for the sector, and lessons learnt from the implementation of the first generation of government programs and a number of projects funded by development partners (see Annex 1), including the World Bank, and lessons learned from similar reforms in Sub-Saharan Africa. The World Bank longstanding engagement on water supply and sanitation in Burkina Faso has provided the motivation for the Program. 8. The Program’s institutional arrangements are sound and well-aligned with GoBF’s Programs and ongoing reforms. Having a main counterpart for Program implementation through the establishment of the PCU within MEA will provide clarity of focus and leadership for implementation of the Program, as it is aligned with the Decree 2018-0092, adopted in February 2018, which prescribes the general regulations for Program and Project operations in Burkina Faso. Also, establishing a dedicated PSU within ONEA will ensure the adequate attention to Program implementation, in particular concerning M&E, financial and safeguards aspects. The establishment of the PCU and PSU and staffing are key elements of the PAP, and conditions of effectiveness. 9. Given the complex and multidimensional nature of the Program, as well as its implementation challenges, the DGA, DGEP, SP-GIRE and ONEA will be assisted by SISC in technical aspects, including providing technical inputs into: ToRs, feasibility level and detailed design studies, tendering and procurement processes, and quality control of main deliverables of studies conducted under the Program. The SISC will be competitively selected with relevant national and international experience. In addition to provide support and guidance, the SICS will provide the opportunity for implementing agencies’ staff to learn on the job. The ToR for the SISC should give adequate emphasis to this capacity development role, in particular to IWRM. 10. Program expenditure framework. The Program will be mostly financed by the IDA (US$300 million). A Dedicated Treasury Special Account (Compte d’Affectation Spéciale ouvert au Trésor, CAST) will be opened at the MINEFID to avoid cash rationing and streamline the payment to contractors financed under the Program. The results framework and associated DLIs have been designed to maintain incentives for efficient delivery throughout the length of the Program. The Program’s expenditure framework will be anchored in the national budget programming process. 11. M&E capacity. The PCU and PSU will provide dedicated staff and resources to ensure that the indicators are effectively monitored according to an agreed monitoring method and plan. Additionally, the PCU will be responsible to ensure that the DGA, DGEP, SP-GIRE, DRH and ONEA meets its monitoring requirements and makes adequate progress. 12. Economic analysis. The Program will benefit approximately 1.1 million people who will receive improved water supply services and 1.3 million people who will have access to an improved sanitation facility. Beneficiaries will have to spend less time fetching water and will benefit from higher drinking water quality. They will be able to access greater water volumes, in line with minimum standards for hygienic practices and will suffer from less service interruptions due to technical breakdowns. Particular attention will be paid to ensuring that women and girls can benefit from improved access, so that they can in turn benefit from greater economic opportunities (including from being involved in water service delivery) and educational opportunities. In addition, the Program will generate local jobs in the area of water supply and sanitation delivery and will reduce pressure on the use of local groundwater resources (through stronger monitoring and management of these resources) and of energy sources (through an emphasis on connecting piped rural water supply systems to the grid or relying on solar energy). Finally, 91 the decline in child morbidity will undeniably be a major impact of the Program, but this impact was not assessed in monetary terms. 13. On the sanitation side, one of the major benefits of the Program is the saving in health expenditure following the implementation of the Program. The Program impact is greater in rural areas because of the predominance of waterborne diseases. The Program, supported by a sustained information-facilitation-hygiene awareness campaign, will contribute to reducing the prevailing prevalence rates by improving hygiene practice and access to improve latrines. 14. An economic analysis was conducted to compare costs and benefits with and without the Program. Costs and benefit streams were projected over 30 years and discounted at a social discount rate of 6 percent based on the World Bank guidance for preparation of Economic Analysis. Costs included Program costs associated to delivery of water supply and sanitation services as well as operating and maintenance costs and households’ contributions. 15. The analysis yielded a benefit-cost ratio of 5.7, which is in line with international estimates of similar investments in areas with limited access to water supply. The NPV of costs and benefits is US$1.5 billion when a 6 percent discount rate is used. A sensitivity analysis was conducted on a number of parameters, including the discount rate, the value of time and the impact of the investments on diarrheal illness reduction, and operating costs. The NPV remained positive under all these scenarios. 16. Climate change mitigation, adaptation, and co-benefits. The adaptation co-benefits are based on specific activities supported by the RAs, due to water supply infrastructure being designed to be climate resilient and the activities linked to water resource knowledge strengthening. The improvement in schemes would result in more climate change resilient water supply infrastructure and the increased adoption of solar pumping technology that potentially carry climate mitigation co-benefits. Prudent O&M activities would reduce losses, increase efficiency, and reduce energy costs. The drop in both energy consumption and the use of diesel pump sets will lead to reduction in fossil fuel usage which will have a climate change mitigation effect. The increased knowledge of location, quantity, and quality of groundwater resources will contribute toward climate adaption by providing critical information for development and investment planning, including, but not limited to, water allocations across sectors and sources of water supply for domestic use. 92 Annex 5. Summary of the integrated fiduciary systems assessment 1. As part of Program preparation, the World Bank carried out an IFSA, in accordance with the World Bank’s Policy, Directive and Guidance Notes on Program for Results Financing. The objective of the assessment was to examine whether Program systems provide reasonable assurance that the financing proceeds will be used for their intended purposes, with due attention to the principles of value for money, economy, integrity, fit-for-purpose, efficiency, effectiveness, transparency, fairness, and accountability. The financial management systems were assessed to gauge the extent to which the planning, budgeting, accounting, controls, funds flow, financial reporting, and auditing systems and practices provide a reasonable assurance on the appropriate use of Program funds and safeguarding of its assets. Equally, the Program procurement systems have also been assessed to establish the extent to which the planning, the bidding, evaluation, contract award and contract administration arrangements and practices provide reasonable assurance in support of achievement of the Program results through its procurement processes and procedures. In addition, the assessment covered the aspects of capacity of the fiduciary systems and considered how Program governance systems manage the risks of fraud and corruption and how such risks will be mitigated. 2. The IFSA was carried out by an experienced team of World Bank staff included Financial Management and Procurement Specialists. The team reviewed the existing country and sector reports, discussed with client counterparts and assessed the working of systems on the ground. The findings and special arrangements needed for the Program were extensively discussed with GoBF during preparation. Government’s feedback was reflected in the final version of the IFSA. 3. Program Design and Expenditure Framework. The PDO of the operation is to improve access to water supply and sanitation services in targeted areas. The Program expenditures are estimated to total US$365 million and the implementation period is five years. The Program encompasses three RAs, namely: 1) improved access to water supply; 2) improved access to sanitation; and 3) improved access to reliable information on water resources. 4. Progress towards the PDO will be measured through a set of simple and measurable indicators. The Results Framework for the Program is included in Annex 2. Each RA is linked to DLIs, Program Actions and planned capacity support, as well as to monitoring, evaluation, and verification activities in the Program. This provides a coordinated incentive for MEA and ONEA to deliver sustainable water supply and sanitation services. 5. Institutional arrangements for Program Implementation. As explained in Annex 1, the Program will have two implementing agencies: The MEA and the ONEA. The implementation arrangements for the Program are embedded within the existing structure of MEA and ONEA. The IFSA was conducted on the basis of a methodical review of systems and practices at national and decentralized level, consultations within the country, and a review of lessons learned of World Bank’s operations in the water and sanitation sector. 6. The IFSA concludes that the Program’s Integrated Fiduciary Systems have the capabilities to provide reasonable assurance that the financing proceeds will be used for intended purposes with the objective of supporting the achievement of the Program objectives. Burkina Faso’s high score on the 2016 Quality of Budgetary and Financial Management as part of the Country Poverty and Institutional 93 Assessment44 (4 points against 3.1 for Sub-Saharan Africa), confirms the overall good performance of the country procurement and financial management systems. x The legislative and institutional framework for procurement, financial management, governance and anti-corruption in place in Burkina Faso is generally considered acceptable. The framework is in line with international standards. The operationalization of the West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU) directives into Burkina Faso national laws, including budget programming, a new procurement law and related decrees, are on track. x The national institutions in charge of internal and external controls (the Technical Inspection Services (ITS) within MEA, IGF within the MINEFID; the Court of Accounts (Cour des Comptes) and the ASCE-LC), have demonstrated their ability to fulfill their legal mandate, despites financial and human resources constraints. x MEA and ONEA fiduciary tools (procedures manual, accounting software) and staffing arrangements are deemed acceptable, subject to the strengthening of its procurement unit. In particular, the overall fiduciary performance of the US$160 million Bank-financed Urban Water Sector Project (P106909, 2008–2018) implemented by ONEA has generally been rated satisfactory. 7. The IFSA identified a number of weaknesses and risks in the overall fiduciary, governance and anticorruption systems warranting the design of specific actions to mitigate them in the context of the Program. For the purposes of the Program the key integrated fiduciary risks are presented in the table A5.1 (and further elaborated below), with corresponding mitigation measured to be included in the PAP (Annex 7). Table A5.1. Summary of IFSA PAP Proposed mitigation measure to include in the Program Action Plan Risk (PAP) Cash rationing lead to limited Open a Dedicated Treasury Special Account (Compte d’Affectation resources to fund the Program Spéciale ouvert au Trésor, CAST) and delays in processing Include in the Annual Finance Law the annual budget of the Program and transactions appoint by the Ministry of Economy and Finance, a financial and public procurement controller fully dedicated to the Program and assigned to the PCU. Procurement delays Adopt annual procurement plans for MEA and ONEA Prepare an annual report on procurement implementation Limited procurement capacity of Train staff in MEA technical services and DMP and ONEA technical services implementing agencies and DMP Staff MEA Program Coordination Unit (PCU) and ONEA Program Support Unit (PSU) with dedicated procurement and financial management staff 44 The Country Poverty and Institutional Assessment is a diagnostic tool that is intended to capture the quality of a country’s policies and institutional arrangements—i.e., its focus is on the key elements that are within the country’s control, rather than on outcomes (such as growth rates) that are influenced by elements outside the country’s control. More specifically, the Country Poverty and Institutional Assessment measures the extent to which a country’s policy and institutional framework supports sustainable growth and poverty reduction, and consequently the effective use of development assistance. The outcome of the exercise yields both an overall score and scores for all of the sixteen criteria that compose the Country Poverty and Institutional Assessment. The tool was developed and first employed in the mid-1970’s and over the years the World Bank has periodically updated and improved it o reflect the lessons of experience and the evolution of thinking about development 94 Proposed mitigation measure to include in the Program Action Plan Risk (PAP) Corruption, with the potential of Conduct internal technical, operational, procurement and financial audits reducing the value for money of of the Program on a semester basis under the leadership of IGF and in public investment in the sector collaboration with ITS and Procurement Entity Conduct external audit of annual financial statements of the Program implemented by MEA and ONEA Sign a memorandum of understating between the Mediateur du Faso and ASCE-LC to promote collaboration between the two focal institutions in handling complaints and mismanagement of the Program funds Report fraud and corruption cases on a semiannual basis to the ASCE 8. The World Bank has agreed with GoBF on the above measures. The World Bank team will work closely with GoBF throughout the implementation support period to assist with the effective implementation and completion of any agreed actions to improve and strengthen the fiduciary systems. 9. In view of the risks identified by the IFSA, the fiduciary risk rating (financial management, procurement, and governance) of the Program is assessed to be Substantial. This is due mainly to Program design, which includes the following risk factors: (a) multiplicity of directorates within MEA and departments within ONEA leading to large number of transactions expected; (b) works to be implemented in remote and geographically dispersed locations within the country; and (c) limited fiduciary capacities of ONEA and the MEA as well as the institutions of controls (e.g. ITS, court of accounts). 10. The process of preparing and completing the IFSA has been widely consultative. A dedicated IFSA mission was conducted between December 13, 2017 and January 2, 2018 to interview key stakeholders. The findings of the mission were presented to stakeholders in January 2018. During the February 2018 preparation mission, the IFSA preparation team shared the preliminary findings and proposed mitigation measures with government officials, including representatives of the MINEFID, MEA, and ONEA. Thereafter the IFSA team reflected their feedback in a revised version, which was shared with stakeholders during the month of March 2018 (in French and English versions). The final version of the IFSA was completed in April 2018 in advance of appraisal. A. Program financial management systems 11. The Program financial management systems are assessed as to the degree to which the relevant planning, budgeting, accounting and financial reporting, internal and external controls, and funds flow provide reasonable assurance on the appropriate use of Program funds and safeguarding of its assets. The design of the Program relies on the existing financial management systems and institutions in Burkina Faso. 12. Institutions involved in Program Financial Management. The two implementation agencies of the Program are MEA and ONEA. In addition, as the primary responsible of the budget elaboration process and execution and the single payer of the Program, the MINEFID has a central role to play in achieving the Program results in terms of budget execution and release of funds and elaborating the standards and processes for Program financial management. The systems maintained by the MINEFID provide a guarantee in terms of fiduciary risks. However, there is still room for improvement in the areas of budget execution, cash management and external oversight. The ITS within MEA, the IGF within MINEFID, the Court of Accounts and the ASCE-LC are involved in the implementation of the Program to carry out the 95 functions of internal and external audits. To speed up processing of transactions and payments, a financial and public procurement controller appointed by the MINEFID will be assigned on a full-time basis to the Program. 13. Planning and Budgeting. Planning and budgeting related to the Program will follow the national procedures. The overall cost of the supported Program will be included in multi-year expenditure programming documents. Based on budget instructions, the implementing agencies will prepare the budget of the Program. The consolidated budget of the Program will be integrated in the budget of the MEA. For ONEA, a procurement plan for works contracts and consulting services should be developed and approved by ONEA’s Board. The PAP requires the inclusion in the Annual Finance Law of the annual Program budget. 14. Accounting and financial reporting. For MEA, the existing public expenditure chain will be used in the Program. In order to comply with the World Bank fiduciary requirements, the PCU established at the MEA will be responsible for preparing the consolidated interim financial reports and consolidated annual financial statements that will be audited by the Court of Accounts. 15. Internal Controls and External Audit. Administrative control bodies in Burkina Faso include the ITS within MEA, the IGF within MINEFID, the Court of Accounts and the ASCE-LC, in addition to a designated financial controller of the MINEFID dedicated to the Program. As per the IFSA, their overall performance is considered acceptable, despite financial constraints and limited number of staff. 16. The IGF within MINEFID is responsible for ensuring the control of all financial, fiscal and accounting services of the State, local authorities and generally all institutions that receive, hold or manage public money. The main tasks of the Inspectorate General of Finance are to: (a) control the financial, fiscal and accounting services of the State, local authorities and public institutions; (b) ensure budgetary control of civil and military public administrations; (c) ensure the control of the financial management of projects, public institutions, state-owned companies, semi-public companies and all the companies in which the State has participation, as well as private establishments which receive subsidies from the State; (d) ensure the management of the internal control function within the department; (e) carry out organizational and functional audits of Public Administration institutions; and (f) coordinate the fight against corruption within the MINEFID. 17. The IGF will lead the internal audit mission in collaboration with ITS within MEA. ONEA has an adequate internal audit function in place. The annual audit work Program will include the review and physical verifications of work and goods and services acquired by MEA and ONEA under the Program. Contracts under the Program will be subject to ex-post control. The audited financial statements of the Program, inclusive of the transactions in the CAST, will be the basis for the financial assurance required by the World Bank. The PAP requires to conduct semester internal audits and reviews covering operational, technical, procurement, and financial aspects of the Program six months following the end of each year starting from the first year of Program effectiveness. 18. External audits of the consolidated annuals financial statements prepared by the PCU will be done by the Court of Accounts both for the activities implemented by MEA and ONEA. Among other functions, the Court of Accounts audit the regularity of the revenues and expenses described in public accounts, assesses the use of public funds, and participates in the control of the execution of the financial law. In addition, it ensures the audit of the accounts and management of state-owned, mixed-economy companies or public limited companies. Therefore, the Court of Accounts will audit on an annual basis the 96 consolidated financial statements of the Program. The Program Audit Reports and audited Program financial statements shall be submitted to the World Bank within nine (9) months following the end of each year starting from the first year of Program effectiveness. The Court of Accounts may if needed, collaborate with or use the services of, an independent auditing firm to carry out the audit of the Program annual financial statements. 19. The ASCE-LC is responsible in particular for, among other functions, monitoring the implementation of the recommendations of the control bodies and the fight against corruption. Indeed, the ASCE-LC is legally mandated to investigate corruption cases and refer substantiated cases either to the prosecutor’s office for criminal acts or to the relevant ministries and public institutions for administrative breeches. However, a large number of corruption cases transmitted for judgment at the courts are still pending after several months and in some cases several years (RANLAC). The Government has initiated the process for anticorruption branches within the two first instance tribunals and strengthen the capacity of judges to deal exclusively with corruption cases. 20. Flow of Funds. Weak budgetary controls and unpredictable revenue inflows mean that Burkina Faso at times use the availability of cash as the de facto mechanism for trying to keep expenditure within set limits, with budget execution managed through “cash rationing”. Spending may be limited by reducing the amounts that ministries are authorized to spend below the legally adopted budget. The cash-flow needs submitted by line ministries are simply reduced (often arbitrarily) from month to month, rather than honored in full through the warrants that are issued. The payment of certain obligations may be delayed. Payments for capital projects and goods and services are often the first to be delayed. In addition, the execution and management of contracts financed by the Treasury suffer from long delays in payments due to the many stakeholders involved in the authorization and liquidation process with unnecessary duplication of tasks. 21. To mitigate the risk of cash rationing and avoid long payment delays, GoBF has requested to use a CAST to avoid cash rationing and streamline the payment contractors financed under the Program. The CAST will enable resources to be directly linked to spending, in contrast to the general budget where resources cannot be allocated to specific expenditure. The creation of CASTs is provided for in the Public Finance Organic Law. The National Assembly is responsible for approving the establishment of CASTs and their expenditure ceilings. The MINEFID is familiar with CASTs which are used for sectoral budget support by other development partners. CAST is also being used for the PforR for the Public Administration Modernization Program financed by the World Bank. 22. The CAST, among others things, facilitates the: (a) monitoring of resources and their related expenditures in the national budget; (b) carrying forward unused but committed budgetary allocations, which is an exception to the principle of the annual budgetary system; (c) managing transactions directly through Integrated Financial Management System for budget monitoring; and (d) having separate reporting on implementation, as well as an independent audit, since the transactions on the CAST can be extracted from the Integrated Financial Management System and the IT application for accounting. 23. A CAST for the Program will be opened at the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO). It will be replenished with World Bank/IDA disbursements and GoBF contribution (including MEA and ONEA contributions to the Program). The CAST will be under the responsibility of the General Directorate of the DGTCP. The World Bank will transfer the eligible disbursements based on the Results Verification Report and achieved DLIs submitted by IVA to the PCU and World Bank. The funds for the Program will be spent by MEA and ONEA and are not expected to be transferred further to the communities. All expenditures 97 incurred in the Program by MEA and ONEA will be paid through the CAST under the responsibility of the DGTCP. A dedicated financial and public procurement controller will be appointed by the MINEFID to work on the Program. ONEA will not manage any bank account to make payment of activities implemented in the Program. ONEA will follow its financial management procedures to execute the budget and report to MEA. The administrative control bodies will reserve the right to verify the expenditures ex-post. Figure A5.1 Flowchart of fund flows to CAST World Bank Program Account at the Central Bank of West African States (Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest /BCEAO) Ministry of Economy, Finance and Development (MINEFID) CAST MEA’s suppliers ONEA’s suppliers 24. Disbursement arrangements from the World Bank. Disbursements of the IDA credit will be made at the request of the Borrower upon achievement of DLIs. Disbursement requests will be submitted to the World Bank using the World Bank’s standard disbursement forms through the e-disbursement functionality in the World Bank’s Client Connection system. B. Program procurement systems 25. The national procedures for award, execution and settlement of public contracts and public service delegations45 will apply to the Program. In the context of the Program aspects of the existing procurement process, publication of notices, international tendering and capacity for contract administration should be improved. 26. Procurement capacity. The procurement experience of the staff of MEA and ONEA DMP is limited, which will potentially generate procurement delays. Implementation arrangements include the recruitment of a dedicated procurement specialist dedicated to the Program implementation in MEA PCU to provide the day to day support to the SP-GIRE, the DGEP and the DGA and the recruitment of a 45 Described in the Law No. 039-2016 / AN on the General Regulation of Public Contracts and detailed in the Decree No2017-0049 / PRES / PM / MINEFID of February 1st, 2017. 98 dedicated procurement specialist dedicated to the Program in the PSU exclusively to support the implementation of ONEA’s activities under the Program, who will be supported by ONEA DMP as needed. 27. Internal procurement controls. The IFSA found that there is insufficient internal procurement review to verify compliance with the procurement rules in place before moving forward in the procurement process and signing contracts. For the ministries, this role is assigned to the General Directorate for the Control of Public Tenders and Financial Engagements (Direction Générale du Contrôle des Marchés et des Engagements Financiers, DGCMEF). ONEA is not subject to this process as an independent public utility. Particularly, as part of the implementation of the Urban Water Sector Project (P106909, 2008–2018), the limited internal procurement controls led to some delays in the procurement process. To mitigate this risk, within the POM detailed procurement procedures defining the role and skills of each stakeholder in the public procurement chain within MEA and ONEA, with a focus on control, will be included. To reinforce procurement controls for the contracts related to activities financed under the Program, implementation arrangements included the appointment of a dedicated internal controller as part of the PCU. This action will be part of the PAP. 28. Procurement delays. Delays in the procurement process are common in Burkina Faso. MEA and ONEA are responsible for the procurement and approval of contracts within their respective activities. The DGCMEF within MINEFID is in charge of the publication of notices and results. 29. Preparation of procurement plans. Delays are partially explained by the delayed preparation and approval of procurement plans. The PAP requests the adoption of annual procurement plans and disbursement estimates based on the annual approved budget. 30. Advertising of procurement opportunities and awards. A significant bottleneck in the procurement process is the advertising of procurement opportunities and awards in procurement revue (Revue des Marchés Publics). The DGCMEF has three days to review, give no-objection and advertise. However, in practice, this deadline is not respected. The DGCMEF’s challenges to comply with the deadlines include insufficient publication equipment (computers, scanners and printers) and limited number of staff (currently the service has only four modelers who rotate weekly). To speed up the publication process and mitigate this risk, GoBF will provide for needed equipment, such as hardware and software, for the DGCMEF. 31. The Program will monitor delays in the procurement process of contracts funded by the Program. Therefore, annual reports on procurement implementation should be submitted six (6) months following the end of each year starting from the first year of Program effectiveness. This action is included in the PAP. 32. International tendering and international publication. To successfully achieve the results of the Program, a number of contracts will require international tendering and international publication to ensure sufficient competition and technical skills. These includes, among others, contracts for strategic implementation support consultants (SICS), expanding storage and production capacity of ONEA’s urban centers, building and rehabilitating rural water supply systems, constructing latrines in targeted rural areas, drilling of deep wells in the western sedimentary basin, drilling of shallow wells in the hard-rock aquifer. 33. Even though open tendering is the default method it does not appear that for high-value and high- complexity contracts open tendering must be open internationally. In addition, there is no provision for the publication of international notices. Therefore, the IFSA recommends: 99 x Establishing clear thresholds above which procurement process should be open internationally. Procurement for works contracts above five milliards FCFA, goods and non-consultancy contracts above five hundred million FCFA, and consultant services contracts estimated to three hundred million FCFA and above, use an international approach of the market. These thresholds should be included in the POM. x Advertising notices of contracts procured by MEA and ONEA in the context of the Program in an international publication support like UNDB or dgMarket. This measure should be stated in the POM. During Program preparation MEA and ONEA should ideally enter into a partnership with an international publication to ease the task of proceeding with international notice once the Program is declared effective. x Reviewing the quality of standard bidding documents to enhance participation of international bidders. The Government via ARCOP has developed a standard bidding documents reflecting the new procurement framework and WAEMU guidelines. For this purpose, the IFSA recommends supporting ARCOP to improve key aspects of the standard bidding documents, including but not limited to: (a) allow certain percentage of the total contract value to be expressed in in hard currency to reduce the risk of price fluctuation for complex contracts above certain thresholds; and (b) introduce amicable dispute resolution and arbitration mechanism. 34. Procurement exclusions. There will be no high-value contract exceeding Operations Procurement Review Committee threshold value that would qualify for procurement exclusions. C. Program governance and anti-corruption systems 35. Corruption in the water sector is high, with the potential of reducing the value for money of public investment in the sector. Generally, corruption could be difficult to identify because the phenomenon is complex, multi-layered and frequently interwoven with politics and wider social structures. It is often systemic and institutionalized, in the sense that persistent informal rules have developed, which reinforce corrupt practices within organizations46. 36. The creation of the ASCE-LC in 2007 has provided an opportunity to step-up Burkina Faso’s efforts in the fight against corruption. ASCE is currently concentrating on the investigation of corruption cases, focusing on the identification of individual responsibilities when funds are misappropriated. A major achievement of the progress made by ASCE is the elaboration of indicators to follow up the impact of anti- corruption actions and the adoption of a statistical reporting system on pending and closed corruption cases. ASCE has also set up a toll-free number to handle corruption, allegation and trigger investigation. 37. In particular, in the last five years GoBF has taken several initiatives to tackle corruption, but implementation is hampered by weak capacity and limited availability of resources. In 2015 a comprehensive Anticorruption Law47 was adopted to strengthen the legal framework on transparency and accountability in the public sector. At the sector level, the National Governance Program for the Water and Sanitation Sector (Programme gouvernance du secteur eau et assainissement, PNGEA) seeks, among other objectives, to improve coordination for the fight against corruption and other economic crimes in the water sector. While these initiatives testify to the Government’s seriousness in tackling corruption, measurable impact has been limited so far. 46 United Nations Development Program (2011) Fighting Corruption in the water Sector Methods, Tools and Good Practices 47 Loi 04/2015 portant prévention et répression de la corruption au Burkina Faso. 100 38. The Program should prioritize an effective governance oversight through increased accountability of the sector to citizens; increased monitoring and auditing; and greater disclosure and transparency. The IFSA recommends: x Increasing monitoring and auditing through support to systematic tracking and reporting on sector spending by the sector, to foster efficiency and accountability in the use of resources, and prioritize auditing sector accounts. x Updating the sector websites to develop a coherent online presence with user-friendly content and functionalities to enhance greater disclosure and transparency. x Developing and adopting a sector wide citizen engagement strategy. 39. As part of the PAP and in order to monitor corruption and fraud in the Program, MEA and ONEA should prepare bi-annual reports on fraud and corruption cases related to activities under the Program two months following the end of each calendar semester starting from the first year of Program effectiveness. The reports should be submitted to the ASCE-LC. 40. GoBF has agreed to follow the World Bank’s Anti-Corruption Guidelines that apply to all PforR lending operations. Key arrangements for the implementation of these guidelines will be included in the POM. The POM will set out the steps that GoBF will take to (a) report on allegations of fraud and corruption in the Program and how they are handled; (b) apply the World Bank’s debarment list to the Program; and (c) assist any World Bank investigation under the Anti-Corruption Guidelines by ensuring cooperation from those involved in the Program, including ensuring that these participants will be obligated to cooperate with the World Bank. The World Bank will monitor the arrangements for the implementation of the Anti-Corruption Guidelines, considering the experience of the existing PforR operation in Burkina Faso, and consider updates to the POM, as appropriate. 41. Complaints Handling and Grievance Redress. Citizens’ complaints and grievances pertaining to the Program will be coordinated and addressed by the Ombudsman (the Médiateur du Faso) and the ASCE-LC, using the grievance redress systems and administrative structures of these institutions. Through focal points established at the local level and regional delegations, the Mediateur will be responsible for (a) receiving and responding to, and resolving complaints pertaining to rules, procedures and unfair treatments under the Program; (b) forwarding all complaints related to fraud and corruption to the ASCE- LC in accordance with the terms defined in the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) and Grievance Redress Manual of the Program; and (c) maintaining the register of complaints, preparing reports annually on grievance redress activities specifically for the Program. Technical support will be provided to the Médiateur to support the implementation of key aspects of the Médiateur’s action plan to improve capacity of its regional offices and appoint focal points for communes. The ASCE’s role in the grievance redress process will consist of receiving complaints on fraud and corruption, not only from the Médiateur, but also directly from citizens through its normal processes and taking steps to investigate and take action in accordance with its operation manual, regulations and the terms of the MoU. 42. The existing country grievance redress systems have been assessed as functioning reasonably well. The Médiateur du Faso is a classical, single-purpose, complaint handling body, with relatively strong capacity at the center and weak decentralized units in the regions. As explained earlier, the ASCE is legally mandated to investigate corruption cases and refer substantiated cases either to the prosecutor’s office for criminal acts or to the relevant Ministries and public institutions for administrative breeches. Though investigative capacity needs to be strengthened and sanctions need to be followed through, the ASCE is assessed as having demonstrated relatively strong ability to perform its legal mandates. 101 43. As part of the PAP, a memorandum of understating should be signed between the Mediateur and ASCE-LC to promote collaboration between the two focal institutions in handling complaints and mismanagement of the Program funds. The MoU will provide institutional and operational guidelines for compliance with the World Bank’s governance and anti-corruption requirements on respecting the World Bank debarment list, transparent reporting and effective handling of grievances, including fraud and corruption allegations. 44. With the support of the Program, a communications strategy will be developed to promote awareness of citizens on the proposed Grievance Redress Mechanism and technical support will be provided to the Médiateur du Faso to improve capacity of its regional offices and appointment of focal points for communes. 45. WB’s Grievance Redress Service (GRS). Communities and individuals who believe that they are adversely affected because of a Bank supported PforR operation, as defined by the applicable policy and procedures, may submit complaints to the existing Program grievance redress mechanism or the WB’s GRS. The GRS ensures that complaints received are promptly reviewed to address pertinent concerns. Affected communities and individuals may submit their complaint to the WB’s independent Inspection Panel which determines whether harm occurred, or could occur, because of WB non-compliance with its policies and procedures. Complaints may be submitted at any time after concerns have been brought directly to the World Bank’s attention, and Bank Management has been given an opportunity to respond. For information on how to submit complaints to the World Bank’s corporate GRS, please visit http://www.worldbank.org/GRS. For information on how to submit complaints to the World Bank Inspection Panel, please visit www.inspectionpanel.org. 102 Annex 6. Summary of environmental and social systems assessment 1. As part of Program preparation, the World Bank carried out an ESSA, in accordance with the requirements of OP 9.00, PforR Financing, to identify the strengths, weaknesses, and shortcomings of the Program’s ESMS with a view to assessing the adequacy of the ESMS for Program financing and identifying key actions to improve the environmental and social management performance of the Program. Specific objectives include: x Verifying that the potential environmental and social risks and impacts of the Program were subject to an adequate initial screening. x Ensuring that environmental and social mitigation measures to avoid, minimize, offset, and/or compensate any adverse impacts and promote environmental and social sustainability will be applied to activities that will have potential environmental and social negative impacts. x Identifying suitable measures to strengthen the ESMS. These measures to be implemented by the Borrower will be agreed upon between the Borrower and the World Bank. The proposed measures shall be part of the PAP. 2. The ESSA concludes that the Program ESMS is adequate for PforR financing and that the activities to be funded under the Program should, by their nature, characteristics and size, generate low-to-moderate environmental and social impacts and generally bring beneficial and positive environmental and social impacts. The national project screening system in place provides adequate mitigation measures in the case of infrastructure and rehabilitation activities. The ESSA further concludes that, subject to the adoption of the recommendations outlined below, the ESMS is appropriately equipped with the necessary tools and processes to identify, mitigate, and report on possible environmental and social impacts of Program activities. Accordingly, it finds that the risk of negative environmental and social impacts is addressed through the relevant ESMS provisions and operational procedures. 3. To adequately manage inherent risks and promote sustainable development, ESSA focuses on the six Core Principles of the World Bank's Policy, namely: (a) General Principles of Environmental and Social Assessment; (b) Natural habitats and physical Cultural Resources; (c) Public and worker Safety; (d) Land acquisition; (e) Indigenous people and Vulnerable groups; and (f) Social conflict. 4. Methodology. The preparation of ESSA and the development of measures to strengthen ESMSs has benefited from various information and a significant process of consultation with institutional actors, especially: x The review of available documents and data on national environmental and social procedures and the related political, institutional and regulatory frameworks, analysis of the environmental and social safeguards capacities of institutions involved in the Program; and World Bank documentation on PforRs and ESSAs; x Interviews and working meetings with representatives of state and non-state institutions involved in the Program and key stakeholders and field visits; x Consultations with representatives of key stakeholders and civil society organizations to identify environmental and social issues of the Program, assess technical assistance and capacity building needs. Extensive consultations were held during the ESSA dedicated mission of January 2018 and mission results’ presented to stakeholders at the end of January 2018, the presentation of the preliminary results to stakeholders during the preparation mission of February 2018. 103 x A National Public Consultation was held on March 27th, 2018 to disseminate the findings of the ESSA with the participation of representatives from all stakeholders, development partners, civil society organizations and the private sector. Comments from the workshop were incorporated in the final version of the ESSA. x The ESSA report is available on the World Bank's external website. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/511841524343098005/pdf/Draft-Environmental- and-Social-Systems-Assessment-ESSA-Burkina-Faso-Water-Supply-and-Sanitation-Program- P164345.pdf . It was disclosed on the World Bank portal on April 21, 2018. A. Environmental and social impacts of the Program 5. The Program supports the GoBF priorities for providing universal access to water supply services, sanitation services, and strengthening WRM. Based on the objectives and actions proposed by the Government Sector Programs, the Program to be supported by this IDA operation will finance a subset of investments included in the National Water Supply Program (Programme national d’approvisionnement en eau potable à l'horizon 2030, PN-AEP) and the National Sanitation and Wastewater Program (Programme National d’Assainissement des Eaux Usées et Excréta à l'horizon 2030, PN-AEUE) in selected geographical areas and the key actions of the National Program for Integrated Water Resource Management (Programme National pour la Gestion Intégrée des Ressources en Eau à l'horizon 2030, PN- GIRE). The Program is designed around three RAs, as follows: 6. Result Area 1. Improved access to water supply. The Program will support the development of priority infrastructure to improve water supply and enhance its operational efficiency. Geographically, the RA 1 will cover urban areas including Ouagadougou and 10 additional secondary centers, and selected rural municipalities in four selected regions. 7. Result Area 2. Improved access to sanitation. The Program will support sustainable access to sanitation services. In urban and rural areas, the Program will support the construction of household latrines and public latrines with male/female compartments (in schools and markets. Geographically, the RA 2 will cover urban areas including Ouagadougou and 13 additional secondary centers and selected rural areas of four targeted regions. 8. Result Area 3. Improved access to reliable information on water resources. The Program aims at strengthening WRM by upgrading, optimizing, and modernizing surface and groundwater resources observation networks for surface water and groundwater sources; strengthening water resources knowledge; and operationalizing the SNIEau. Geographically, the RA 3 will be implemented across Burkina Faso. 9. Beneficial environmental and social impacts. Program activities – which are aimed at increasing access to water supply and sanitation service and to strengthen service delivery arrangements in selected rural areas - will generate major beneficial effects both on the environment and communities that should be maintained over the long term, including: access to drinking water and improved sanitation facilities; reduction in the reliance on open defecation; reduction of the incidence of waterborne disease; improvement of hygiene practices; strengthening of the institutional capacities of the stakeholders at national, regional, and local levels; change of people's behavior regarding the use of community facilities; as well as fight against poverty and unemployment. 104 10. Diverse negative environmental and social risks. The investments’ negative environmental and social impacts will be limited, low to medium scale, reversible and easily controllable and manageable During the works’ planning phase, the main risk is the neglect in the preparation of tender documents of environmental and social aspects and their lack of consideration when developing technical studies. During the works phase, there are several types of environmental and social risks: (a) Environmental risks linked to: adverse impacts, which are expected to be typical construction impacts that are site-specific and generally limited to air or water pollution, production and management of waste, use and disposal of hazardous materials; however, these risks can be easily mitigated. Other non-construction works could have some adverse environmental impacts or risks (on water uptake, water contamination, etc.), but adequate measures (including modeling studies) will be taken during the preparation and implementation phases; (b) Social risks: investments may include some more or less temporary forms of involuntary resettlement of residential or business households, acquisition of private lands or restrictions on access to local social and economic infrastructure. As stated, most of the negative social impacts will be time- limited and spatially restricted (due to the relatively low land requirements of the various investments planned under the program and the use of state-owned land). 11. Screening mechanism. Environmental and social screening will be conducted for each sub-project to determine the type of planning tool required based on the scale and significance of environmental and social impacts. The environmental monitoring system that will support the operation phase should allow for identifying malfunctions in real time in order to make any required correction. 12. The Program will automatically exclude any activity posing a potentially significant environmental and social risk and significant negative, irreversible, diverse, varied and unprecedented impacts. Therefore, a sub-project will be considered non-eligible if involves the following: x Construction or rehabilitation of works create significant social risks, i.e., a significant physical displacement of persons or the acquisition of large areas of private land or the demolition of a large number of single-family houses or else significant restricted access to economic and natural resources; x Construction or rehabilitation of structures that could create or exacerbate existing land-based social conflicts; x Works that could have an irreversible impact on physical cultural resources of an archaeological or historical nature or places of worship; x Works that could have and irreversible impact on any zone classified as a site of biological or ecological interest. B. Evaluation of the environmental and social management system (ESMS) 13. The Burkina Faso system for environmental management systems is relatively comprehensive and is generally consistent with the core principles of the World Bank’s policy for PforR. Burkina Faso’s legal framework and related action plans are conducive to environmental protection. Adequate institutions are in place and their mandates are established. 14. Environmental system. In Burkina Faso, environmental protection is one of the priority areas for policies to contribute to achieving the goals of sustainable development. The Burkina Faso Constitution, promulgated on 11 June 1991, contains many environmental references. The most important policies are the following: 105 x The National Economic and Social Development Program (Plan national de développement économique et social à l’horizon 2020, PNDES) aims at reforming institutions and modernizing the administration, developing human capital and boosting growth sectors for the economy and employment. x The National Sustainable Development Policy presents a vision for sustainable development by 2050. x The National Environmental Policy marks the government's desire to create a reference framework for taking environmental issues into account in development policies and strategies. x The Water Policy and Strategy contributes to sustainable development through appropriate solutions to water-related issues. x The purpose of the National Sanitation Policy and Strategy is to contribute to sustainable development by providing appropriate solutions to sanitation problems, in order to improve people's living and housing conditions, to preserve their health and protect natural resources. 15. In addition, the Environmental Code, adopted by Law N ° 006-2013 / AN of 02 April 2013, is devoted to the Strategic Environmental Assessment, the Impact Evaluation Assessment and the Notice on the Environment. 16. Finally, it should be noted that according to Law No. 021-2006 / AN of 14 November 2006, on the General Code of Territorial Communities, local and regional authorities contribute to the administration of the territory, to economic, social, educational and health development, cultural and scientific as well as the improvement of the environment. 17. Major institutional actors in charge of the environment are: x The Ministry of the Environment, the Green Economy and Climate Change (Ministere de l'Environnement, de l'Economie Verte et du Changement climatique) ensures the implementation and monitoring of the Government's policy on the environment and sanitation of the living environment. This Ministry includes several directorates, among which: The General Directorate for the Preservation of the Environment and the Directorate for the Prevention of Pollution and Environmental Risks. x The BUNEE is responsible for coordinating the implementation and monitoring of the national environmental assessment policy. x MEA has the mandate to define and implement the national policy on drinking water and sanitation. x ONEA’s mandate is to: (a) create, manage and protection of facilities for collecting, supplying, treating, and distributing drinking water for urban and industrial purposes; and (b) the creation, promotion and improvement and management of collective or individual sanitation facilities for the disposal of wastewater and excreta in urban and semi-urban areas. 18. Social systems. Burkina Faso also has an extensive legal framework as regards land tenure, land acquisition, and restructuring mechanisms. Other social aspects such as social protection of vulnerable people, labor management, child labor, and abuse on communities living in works implementation site are also addressed. The Constitution of Burkina Faso guarantees everyone the right to private property, its protection and expropriation. No one shall be deprived of his enjoyment except for reasons of public utility and on the condition of just compensation determined in accordance with the law. This compensation must be prior to the expropriation, except in case of emergency or force majeure. 106 19. In terms of land management in Burkina Faso, the organizations or management structures are defined by the RAF and the law No. 034-2009 / AN on rural land tenure and priority implementation texts. These organizations are at four levels: national, regional, communal and village. x At the national level: A national body for consultation, M&E of rural land policy and legislation is set up bringing together all public, private and public-sector stakeholders. civil society. Currently this instance is not yet operational. x At the regional level: The competent deconcentrated technical services of the State are in charge of providing support to the Rural Land Services of local authorities as stipulated by the law No. 034 on rural land tenure. x At the communal level: The Rural Land Service at the level of each rural municipality is responsible for all the activities of management and security of the land area of the municipality and activities of land tenure security of the rural property of individuals on the municipal territory. x At the village level: A Village Land Commission, created in each village and composed of customary and traditional village authorities in charge of land, is responsible for contributing to securing and managing the environment. C. Adequacy of environmental and social systems 20. The ESSA analyzed the strengths, gaps, risks and opportunities of Burkina Faso ESMS against the core principles and key planning elements intended to ensure that PforR operations are designed and implemented in a manner that maximizes potential environmental and social benefits, while avoiding, minimizing, or otherwise mitigating significant adverse environmental or social impacts that are diverse or unprecedented. From the previous analysis of the legal and institutional framework for environmental and social management in Burkina Faso, a number of conclusions can be drawn: x Most institutions are in place and their mandate has been defined. However, their actions are not coordinated and they lack human and financial resources. x There is no coordination between central and regional level. x Administrative procedures are slow and do not allow for quick and timely decision-making. x Public inquiries are often public information sessions and do not result in proper public consultation. 21. These gaps will have to be filled by appropriate reforms and arrangements. Together with the community of technical and financial partners, the World Bank is already playing and could play an important role in supporting needed improvements. However, already within the framework of this PforR, it is possible to seize the opportunity to improve certain technical and administrative aspects, create a new dynamic, clarify and consolidate partnerships and synergies between the stakeholders, and strengthen the institutional capacity of all stakeholders involved in environmental and social safeguards at the national, regional, communal and village levels. 22. Adequacy of applicable systems. The strengths, weaknesses, threats, and opportunities associated with the national systems are set forth in the light of the Core Principles applicable to the Program - as described in the World Bank Policy and Directive for PforR funding. 23. Core Principle 1: General principle of environmental and social impact assessment and management. This Principle applies to the Program. The ESSA has been prepared and its recommendations have been integrated in to the overall Program Action Plan. In line with the principles 107 set forth in ESSA, an Environmental and Social Management Plans will be prepared for any individual investment project that the initial diagnostic and screening system set up have deemed to have moderate environmental impact. x Strengths: Burkina Faso has adequate regulatory and legal frameworks to appropriately manage the environmental and social impacts of the Program and an environmental assessment institution, the BUNEE. x Weaknesses: National regulations lack precision with regard to the classification of activities and projects according to their impacts. Environmental and social project management procedures follow a centralized logic, leaving little room for regional institutions. The institutions in charge do not have the human resources or the appropriate financial means. x Opportunities: Organization of sensitization initiatives of all stakeholders and stakeholders on the issues of environmental management, impact. Initiatives to strengthen more appropriately the capacities of central and local officials in environmental and social safeguard procedures x Threats: Poor implementation of environmental and social management rules and procedures. Failure to enforce current environmental regulations in a timely manner. 24. Core Principle 2: Natural habitats and physical and cultural resources. This Principle does not apply to the Program. No investment will be eligible if it threatens fragile ecosystems. No investment will be eligible if it directly threatens the cultural and religious heritage of a region. 25. Core Principle 3: Public and workers safety. This principle applies to the Program. The work undertaken under the Program could have an impact on the safety of the public and construction site workers. Worksite workers may be exposed to work-related accidents / injuries, water pollution, air pollution, solid waste, and toxic or hazardous materials on the site. Populations in areas near the sites could also be exposed to the same hazards as well as issues associated with labor influx. x Strengths: Burkina Faso's legal / regulatory system includes safety provisions on construction sites. The safety of workers is ensured by the Labor Inspectorate. There are national policies and guidelines concerning the safety and health of the public and workers. x Weaknesses: Worker safety provisions are not always included in civil works contracts. The insufficient number of screening officers does not allow for regular monitoring of the application of site provisions. x Opportunities: Information and training on site safety measures. Local presence of branches of the Labor Inspectorate. x Threats: Inability to enforce current environmental, social, and safety regulations in timely manner. Non-involvement of Labor Inspectors 26. Core Principle 4: Land acquisition. This principle applies to the Program, because it could: (a) involve temporary physical relocations of resident households or businesses; (b) require the acquisition of private land, and, as a consequence, expropriation public purposes and involuntary resettlements of resident households or businesses; and (c) temporarily disrupt local small-scale and economic activities. A RAP will be prepared for any investment sub-project with moderate environmental impact. x Strengths: Compensation of affected persons is fixed by the existing land tenure system in Burkina Faso. 108 x Weaknesses: National land acquisition procedures are unclear and incomplete. Informal occupants are not recognized by Burkina Faso law. Customary land ownership is recognized but must be confirmed before being compensated. x Opportunities: Provide a compensation system, including for informal occupants. Ensure adequate follow-up of the affected people so that they recover the ex-ante project conditions and that they do not become poor anymore. x Threats: Non-compliance with the existing legislation. Non-compliance with existing legislation. Lack of human resources and financial means at the level of national and local institutions in charge of enforcing laws and devices. Lack of coordination between the relevant institutional actors. 27. Core Principle 5: Social considerations: indigenous peoples and vulnerable groups. This principle applies (except that there are no indigenous people in Burkina Faso). x Strengths: Sensitization initiatives are conducted to inform people about the project and to gather their observations; information posters are posted for this purpose in public places. The law provides for the services of an Ombudsman for vulnerable people. x Weaknesses: The Burkina Faso legislation does not provide for specific measures for vulnerable groups. There is no real grievance management system at the local level. x Opportunities: Define and set up a sound stakeholder engagement strategy as part of the sensitization program, targeting vulnerable groups more particularly. Specify any form of support for the most vulnerable groups. Ensuring the functionality of the grievance management system x Threats: Lack of clarity and consistency of the mechanism for implementing public consultations and engaging stakeholders could alienate poor and vulnerable groups. 28. Core Principle 6: Social considerations - Social conflict does not apply to the Program. The Program is not implemented in conflict areas. D. Gender assessment 29. A gender assessment was conducted by GoBF as part of Program preparation to inform understanding of gender gaps in water and sanitation access and management, and propose appropriate interventions. The findings of the gender assessment were used to inform the Program design. 30. The gender assessment provided critical elements for the develop of a gender action plan for the water supply, sanitation, and IWRM sector, which is a key action included in the PAP. x Strengthening human capital with a focus on gender gaps in the sector. The assessment highlighted the prevalence of social - cultural norms and attitudes underpinning gender inequalities and discrimination. The response in the action plan to weak participation of women at national and local levels is two-fold. At the national level the opportunity presented by the Program to increase the human resource shortfall of the sector will provide an opportunity to extend equal opportunities to women, to be trained as water technicians and engineers, and compete for employment by MEA and ONEA. The number of women participating in these trainings will be monitored by the Program, with a corresponding indicator included in the results framework. At the local level, within WUAs and other water committees the Program will support enhanced women’s voice, by moving beyond the current quota system. This will involve building 109 awareness among men and women on the characteristics of leadership in water, and building women’s and stakeholders awareness of the importance of representative governance structures. x Increasing women’s access to water and sanitation as assets and enablers for endowments and wellbeing. The assessment demonstrated that non-access to water and sanitation, or poorly maintained services, create practical impediments to girls and women for education, health services, working in markets and travelling from bus stops. The Program will adopt a project cycle that incorporates steps to engage, and establish preferences of girls and women at identification and design stage, before implementation begins. Aspects of design that shape accessibility, safety and privacy, and models for facility maintenance models, and menstrual hygiene management are aspects that ignored have often unseen negative consequences. The specifications in bidding requirements, feasibility studies and implementation processes will uphold these gender sensitive features and processes, as an incentive for achieving targeted outputs. x Securing gender disaggregated citizen feedback to inform adjustments. Household surveys, as part of the verification protocols, will disaggregate and monitor women’s and men’s (perceived) time taken, and safety in accessing water and sanitation services both at home, and in public intervention areas. Surveys will serve as feedback to inform adjustments to the strategies being implemented and improve satisfaction with service delivery. x Compliance to gender in the PforR at a programmatic level. The Results Framework to be developed as part of the POM will monitor the ratio of men to women accessing capacity building opportunities, the ratio of men to women represented in WUAs, and water and sanitation committees. The action plan will be used to test and eventually integrate selected gender measures in DISE, the national monitoring system under development in the sector. Ratios in committees, sanitation access by girls and boys in schools, and women’s and men’s sanitation access in market places and health centers will be tracked. 31. The assessment highlighted the need for widespread awareness raising to institutionalize gender equity principles and create an enabling environment for gender in management and in operations under the Program. E. Action Plan for Environmental and Social Management 32. The Program will support specific measures to improve the conditions for the performance of the ESMS in the implementation and monitoring of the Program activities. The actions included in the PAP are as follows: 33. Preparation of a MTGES of the Program investments for MEA and ONEA and all technical services, as well as all stakeholders, who will be involved at national, regional and local level in the implementation of the Program, so that environmental and social management procedures are duly understood, perfectly owned and followed. This Manual will be an integral part of the POM. The Manual will include, among other things, the following: x Procedure for the screening of sub-projects x Procedure for the elaboration of Environmental and Social Management Plans and Environmental and Social Impact Studies x Procedure for the elaboration of social assessment and Resettlement Action Plans x Procedures for land acquisition x Standard elements (environmental and social clauses, minimum staff, price details) for the contracts of (a) works contractors; (b) engineering consultant and (c) regional private operators 110 x Citizen engagement mechanism x Good practices guidelines for environmental and social management x Control & monitoring procedures 34. Training on MTGES. A training program will be developed for the implementation of the MTGES for all the different stakeholders involved in the implementation of the Program, in particular: the members of the environmental units of the MEA, ONEA, and of the other ministries involved, the members of the communal environment and local development departments, and of the land developments departments, of BUNEE, and of Regional Directorates of the Ministry of the Environment, the Green Economy and Climate Change. 35. Adoption of an interinstitutional convention between MEA and ONEA, on the one hand, and preparation and enforcement of an interinstitutional cooperation agreement between MEA and the BUNEE, on the other hand. The content of this agreement will establish the conditions for collaboration (awareness raising; information and training; rapid review and certification of sub-projects; environmental and social control and monitoring; among others). 36. Recruitment of Environmental and Social Management Specialists within MEA PCU and ONEA PSU. Recruitment by MEA and ONEA of a dedicated social specialist and a dedicated environmental specialist within the PCU and PSU (respectively), who will be employed full-time throughout the implementation of the Program. 37. Specialized training in monitoring and control of environmental and social mitigation and reporting measures. This more in-depth training in monitoring and control of environmental and social mitigation and reporting measures will be provided to representatives of all local, regional and national institutions (including contractors) involved in collecting, processing and analyzing information regarding the implementation of mitigation measures. 38. Develop a gender action plan for the water supply, sanitation, and IWRM sector (see above). 39. The World Bank has agreed with the Borrower on the above measures. Key measures are included into the PAP (Annex 6). Mitigation measures not included in the PAP should be included in the POM. The World Bank team will work closely with the Borrower throughout the implementation support period to assist with the effective implementation and completion of any agreed actions to improve and strengthen the ESMS. 40. WB’s Grievance Redress Service (GRS). Communities and individuals who believe that they are adversely affected because of a Bank supported PforR operation, as defined by the applicable policy and procedures, may submit complaints to the existing Program grievance redress mechanism or the WB’s GRS. The GRS ensures that complaints received are promptly reviewed to address pertinent concerns. Affected communities and individuals may submit their complaint to the WB’s independent Inspection Panel which determines whether harm occurred, or could occur, because of WB non-compliance with its policies and procedures. Complaints may be submitted at any time after concerns have been brought directly to the World Bank’s attention, and Bank Management has been given an opportunity to respond. For information on how to submit complaints to the World Bank’s corporate GRS, please visit http://www.worldbank.org/GRS. For information on how to submit complaints to the World Bank Inspection Panel, please visit www.inspectionpanel.org. 111 41. A gender assessment was conducted for the Program to explore opportunities for promoting gender mainstreaming in water and sanitation access and management, through identifying and analyzing current constraints and proposing interventions; and to promote gender equality in access to water and sanitation services and accessibility to facilities. The findings of the gender assessment informed the design of the Program, in particular the human capital strengthening activities, which will encourage women participation and contribute to increasing the proportion of women in technical positions in MEA and ONEA. Also, the PAP includes the development of a gender action plan. 42. The gender action plan will aim at, but not be limited to, institutionalizing gender and creating an enabling environment for gender in management and in operations under the Program. The gender action plan could include, among other elements, the extension of the current quota system to include leadership positions, actively promoting female water technicians and engineers, training on sanitation and hygiene to promote their active participation, training on mechanism to prevent gender-based violence and mitigation measures, continuous sensitization of all sectors on social and cultural discriminatory practices and norms underpinning gender inequalities and discrimination against women, and the participation of women in governance and WUAs. 112 Annex 7. Program Action Plan Responsible Completion Action Description DLI* Due Date Party Measurement Open a Dedicated Treasury Special Account n/a Effectiveness MINEFID, after CAST opened for the Program (Compte d’Affectation authorization of Spéciale ouvert au Trésor, CAST) National Assembly Prepare, adopt, and disseminate the n/a Effectiveness MEA, with inputs POM submitted to Program Operations Manual (POM), which from ONEA the Bank, including should include a Technical Manual for the MTGES Environmental and Social Management of the Program investments (MTGES) Create a Program Coordination Unit (PCU) n/a Effectiveness and MEA Creation of the PCU, within MEA, and staff it with at least a PCU throughout entire and recruitment of Coordinator, a monitoring and evaluation Program key staff (M&E) specialist, a procurement specialist, a implementation financial management specialist; an environmental safeguard specialist, a social safeguard specialist, and an internal controller with functions and resources agreed with the World Bank, and with staff in adequate numbers and qualifications, experience, and terms of reference agreed with the World Bank Create a Program Support Unit (PSU) within n/a Effectiveness and ONEA Creation of the PSU, ONEA, and staff it with at least a PSU throughout entire and recruitment of Coordinator, a M&E Specialist, a Program key staff procurement specialist, a financial implementation management specialist, an environmental safeguard specialist, and a social safeguard specialist with functions and resources agreed with the World Bank, and with staff in adequate numbers and qualifications, experience, and terms of reference agreed with the World Bank Recruit strategic implementation support n/a 90 days after MEA, with inputs Contract with SISCs consultants (SISC) effectiveness from ONEA signed submitted to the Bank Establish a Steering Committee (Comité de n/a 90 days after MEA MEA’s decree of Revue), chaired by the General Secretary of effectiveness creation of Steering MEA, to provide oversight of the Program Committee and ensure convergence towards the Program objectives Recruit the Independent Verification n/a 8 months after MEA, with inputs Contract with IVA Agency (IVA) effectiveness from ONEA signed submitted to the Bank Prepare, adopt, and disseminate a fecal n/a September 1, ONEA Disseminated fecal sludge management strategy for urban 2020 sludge management centers strategy for urban centers submitted to the Bank 113 Responsible Completion Action Description DLI* Due Date Party Measurement Environmental and Social Adopt an interinstitutional convention n/a 90 days after MEA and ONEA Interinstitutional between MEA, ONEA, and BUNEE. The effectiveness with BUNEE convention content of this agreement will define the submitted to the conditions for collaboration (awareness, Bank information and training initiatives; rapid review and certification of sub-projects, environmental and social control and monitoring, etc.). Develop a training program for the n/a 120 days after MEA and ONEA, Stakeholders implementation of the MTGES for the effectiveness with inputs from involved in the various stakeholders involved in the the BUNEE implementation of implementation of the Program, and train the Program trained stakeholders accordingly on the MTGES Provide specialized training in monitoring n/a 120 days after MEA and ONEA Trained provided and control of environmental and social effectiveness with BUNEE mitigation measures Develop citizen engagement guidelines to n/a 120 days after MEA and ONEA Citizen engagement ensure effective participation of and effectiveness guidelines consultation with local people, targeted submitted to the beneficiary community, and vulnerable Bank groups Develop a gender action plan for the water n/a September 1, MEA and ONEA Adopted gender supply, sanitation, and IWRM sectors 2019 action plan submitted to the Bank Fiduciary Appoint a financial and public procurement n/a Effectiveness and MINEFID Appointment of the controller dedicated to the Program and throughout entire financial and public assigned to the PCU. Program procurement implementation controller Train staff in MEA (DMP and technical n/a 90 days after MEA and ONEA Training completed services) and ONEA (DMP and technical effectiveness services) on procurement Include in the Annual Finance Law the n/a Throughout Directorate of Unaudited financial Program’s budget entire Program Budget / report of the first implementation PCU, with inputs quarter of each from PSU fiscal year of the Program implementation period Adopt annual procurement plans and n/a Throughout MEA and ONEA Procurement plans disbursement estimates based on the entire Program and disbursement annual approved budget for the Program implementation estimates submitted to the Bank Prepare an annual report on procurement n/a Six months MEA and ONEA Report submitted to implementation following the end the World Bank and of each year ARCOP starting from the 114 Responsible Completion Action Description DLI* Due Date Party Measurement first year of Program effectiveness Conduct semi-annual internal audits and n/a Six months Lead by IGF Audit reports reviews covering operational, technical, following the end within MINEFID submitted to the procurement, and financial aspects of the of each calendar in conjunction World Bank Program semester starting with the ITS from the first year within MEA of Program effectiveness Conduct annual external audit of annual n/a Nine months Court of Audit reports financial statements of the Program following the end Accounts for submitted to the of each year MEA World Bank starting from the first year of Program effectiveness Fraud and Corruption Sign a memorandum of understating n/a 120 days after Mediateur du Memorandum of between the Mediateur du Faso and ASCE- effectiveness Faso and ASCE-LC understanding LC to promote collaboration between the signed two focal institutions in handling complaints and mismanagement of the Program funds Prepare bi-annual reports on fraud and n/a Two months ASCE/PCU MEA Report submitted to corruption cases related to activities under following the end the ASCE the Program of each calendar semester starting from the first year of Program effectiveness Note: n/a = not applicable 115 Annex 8. Implementation Support Plan 1. The Implementation Support Plan is based on the implementation support guidelines for the PforR operations, adapted to the design and risk profile of the Program. The Borrower is responsible for the Program’s overall implementation, including its technical aspects. The PforR operation in Burkina Faso will require considerable focused support from the World Bank team, particularly during the early stages of implementation. The implementation agencies and the DREAs will need to make a rapid shift in the focus of their planning to ensure that available funding can be absorbed and results delivered in time and within budget envelopes. The team recognizes that the PforR mode of operation, which transfers performance risk to the implementing agencies, lays down a challenge to change numerous operational practices and norms. The basic mandate for the World Bank implementation support under the PforR is to: x Review implementation progress and achievement of Program results and DLIs; x Provide support for resolving emerging Program implementation challenges; x Provide technical support for the implementation of the PAP, the achievement of DLIs and other results, and institutional development and capacity building; x Monitor systems’ performance to ensure their continuing adequacy through Program monitoring reports, audit reports, and field visits; and x Monitor changes in risks to the PforR and compliance with legal agreements and, as needed, the PAP. 2. Key to effective implementation support will be the coordination of its timing with critical points in the timelines of planning and verification of results for payments request to the World Bank. The first implementation support mission will take place as soon as possible after effectiveness to provide direct feedback and implementation support with critical inputs and involvement of environmental, social, and fiduciary teams. 3. To support Program implementation, a POM will be jointly prepared and implemented by MEA and ONEA. The POM will provide overall guidance on Program implementation and will include information such as the detailed project description, financing plan, roles and responsibilities for implementing agencies, the role of the World Bank during implementation, key actions required to meet the PDO, fiduciary requirements (procurement, financial management and fraud and corruption), environmental and social safeguards, and the M&E arrangements. The World Bank will support implementation through regular missions and will provide guidance on implementation arrangements. 116 Table A8.1. Main Focus of Implementation Support Time Focus Skills Needed Resource Partner Estimate Role First 12 Design of water supply schemes Team leader, Legal; months and water resource knowledge gender; procurement; related activities, procurement of financial management; SISC, revision of guidelines and social and environment; manuals, gender strategy, water and sanitation establishment of arrangements specialist; IWRM for independent verification, specialist; M&E strengthening of DISE 12–48 Reviewing implementation Team leader, Legal; months progress, field verification of gender; procurement; verification reports from the IVA financial management; social and environment; water and sanitation specialist; IWRM specialist; M&E Other Independent audit/assessment of Independent technical verification of results expertise Table A8.2. Task Team Skills Mix Requirements for Implementation Support Skills Needed Number of Staff Number of Trips Comments Weeks (annual) (annual) Task team leader 24 4 International / country WRM 12 3 International / country Water supply and sanitation 20 None Country office based M&E/Verification 6 2 International / country Procurement 8 None Country office based Financial management 8 None International / country Governance 3 2 International / country Environment safeguards 8 None Country office based Social safeguards 8 None International / country Gender 4 2 International / country Legal 2 None International / country Team assistance 4 None Country office based 117 Annex 9. Map of the Program’s water supply and sanitation targeted areas 118