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GEF Co-Financing Sub-Regional Workshop for GEF Focal Points Middle East and North Africa Casablanca, Morocco, 24-25 November 2008

GEF Co-Financing

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GEF Co-Financing. Sub-Regional Workshop for GEF Focal Points Middle East and North Africa Casablanca, Morocco, 24-25 November 2008. What is GEF Co-financing?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: GEF Co-Financing

GEF Co-Financing

Sub-Regional Workshop for GEF Focal PointsMiddle East and North Africa

Casablanca, Morocco, 24-25 November 2008

Page 2: GEF Co-Financing

What is GEF Co-financing?

GEF Co-financing comprises the total of cash and in-kind resources committed by governments, other multilateral or bilateral sources, the private sector, NGOs, the project beneficiaries and the concerned GEF agency, all of which are essential for meeting the GEF project objectives

Adequate co-financing is expected for GEF-financed MSPs and FSPs; 1:4 co-financing ratio is the average, 1:1 is minimum benchmark targeted

Page 3: GEF Co-Financing

What is NOT GEF Co-financing?

Finance for baseline activities when such activities are not essential for achieving the GEF objectives

Financing for other activities that are related to the project or to similar commitments but which are not essential for the project’s successful implementation (termed “Associated Financing”)

Additional resources – beyond those committed to the project itself – that are mobilized later as a direct result of the project, e.g, for further replication of the project (termed “Leveraged Resources”)

Page 4: GEF Co-Financing

Why is Co-financing important?

A key principle underlying GEF’s success in its efforts to have significant positive impact on the global environment

A key indicator of the strength of the commitment of the counterparts, beneficiaries, and donors and GEF Agencies

Helps ensure the success and local acceptance of those projects by linking them to sustainable development, and thereby maximizes and sustains their impacts

Page 5: GEF Co-Financing

GEF Co-financing: Past and Present Ratios

GEF Phase GEF Grant

($m) GEF Co-

financing ($m) Total Project

Cost ($m) Co-financing

Ratio Pilot phase 739.55 2,724.40 3,481.95 1 : 3.7 GEF - 1 1,254.85 3,655.98 4,910.83 1 : 2.9 GEF - 2 1,912.41 6,299.33 8,211.74 1 : 3.3 GEF - 3 2,893.98 12,380.74 15,274.72 1 : 4.3 GEF – 4 (to date) 854.07 5,542.48 6,396.55 1 : 6.5 Total 7,654.86 30,602.93 38,257.79 1 : 4.0 Source: GEF Secretariat figures as of 31 December 2007

Page 6: GEF Co-Financing

Sources of Co-financing

GEF Agency’s own co-financing

Government contribution (counterpart commitments)

Other funding provided by multilateral and bilateral organizations, NGOs, private sector, and project participants

Page 7: GEF Co-Financing

Types of Co-financing

Grants

Loans

Credits

Equity investments

Commitment of in-kind support

Page 8: GEF Co-Financing

Identification of Co-financing

At PIF stage, initial co-financing commitments by GEF Agency, Government, and other possible sources

At project document stage, detailed and documented information on sources and amounts of co-financing

At CEO endorsement, official letter of confirmation in English of co-financing is required from donors (GEF Agency, government, others)