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Agreement between Colombia and the Executive Committee for the national phase-out of Annex A (Groups I and II) substances


1.   This Agreement represents the understanding of the Republic of Colombia (the “Country”) and the Executive Committee with respect to the complete phase-out of controlled use of the ozone- depleting substances set out in Appendix 1-A (the “Substances”) prior to 2010 compliance with Protocol schedules.

2.   The Country agrees to phase out the controlled use of the Substances in Annex A (Groups I and II) of the Montreal Protocol in accordance with the annual phase-out targets set out in rows 1A and 5A of Appendix 2-A (the “Targets”) and this Agreement. The annual phase out targets will, at a minimum, correspond to the reduction schedules mandated by the Montreal Protocol. The Country accepts that, by its acceptance of this Agreement and performance by the Executive Committee of its funding obligations described in paragraph 3, it is precluded from applying for or receiving further funding from the Multilateral Fund in respect to the Substances.

3.   Subject to compliance by the Country with its obligations set out in this Agreement, the Executive Committee agrees in principle to provide the funding set out in row 9 of Appendix 2 A (the “Funding”) to the Country. The Executive Committee will, in principle, provide this funding at the Executive Committee meetings specified in Appendix 3-A (the “Funding Disbursement Schedule”).

4.   The Country will meet the consumption limits for each Substance as indicated in Appendix 2-A. It will also accept independent verification by the relevant Implementing Agency of achievement of these consumption limits as described in paragraph 9 of this Agreement.

5.   The Executive Committee will not provide the Funding in accordance with the Funding Disbursement Schedule unless the Country satisfies the following conditions at least 30 days prior to the applicable Executive Committee meeting set out in the Funding Disbursement Schedule:

      (a)  that the Country has met the Target for the applicable year;

      (b)  that the meeting of these Targets has been independently verified as described in paragraph 9;

      (c)  that the Country has substantially completed all actions set out in the last Annual Implementation Programme; and

      (d)  that the Country has submitted and received endorsement from the Executive Committee for an annual implementation programme in the form of Appendix 4 A (the “Annual Implementation Programmes”) in respect of the year for which funding is being requested.

6.   The Country will ensure that it conducts accurate monitoring of its activities under this Agreement. The institutions set out in Appendix 5-A (the “Monitoring”) will monitor and report on that monitoring in accordance with the roles and responsibilities set out in Appendix 5-A. This monitoring will also be subject to independent verification as described in paragraph 9.

7.   While the Funding was determined on the basis of estimates of the needs of the Country to carry out its obligations under this Agreement, the Executive Committee agrees that the Country may use the Funding for other purposes that can be demonstrated to facilitate the smoothest possible phase-out, consistent with this Agreement, whether or not that use of funds was contemplated in determining the amount of funding under this Agreement. Any changes in the use of the Funding must, however, be documented in advance in the Country’s Annual Implementation Programme, endorsed by the Executive Committee as described in sub paragraph 5(d) and be subject to independent verification as described in paragraph 9.

8.   Specific attention will be paid to the execution of the activities in the servicing sector, in particular:

      (a)  the Country would use the flexibility available under this Agreement to address specific needs that might arise during project implementation;

      (b)  the technician-licensing programme for the refrigeration and air conditioning service sector would be implemented in stages so that resources can be diverted to other activities, such as additional training or procurement of service tools, if the proposed results are not achieved, and will be closely monitored in accordance with Appendix 5-A of this Agreement.

9.   The Country agrees to assume overall responsibility for the management and implementation of this Agreement and of all activities undertaken by it or on its behalf to fulfill the obligations under this Agreement. UNDP (the “Lead IA”) has agreed to be the lead implementing agency in respect of the Country’s activities under this Agreement. The Lead IA will be responsible for carrying out the activities listed in Appendix 6-A, including but not limited to independent verification. The Country also agrees to periodic evaluations, which will be carried out under the monitoring and evaluation work programmes of the Multilateral Fund. The Executive Committee agrees, in principle, to provide the Lead IA with the fees set out in row 10 of Appendix 2-A.

10.  Should the Country, for any reason, not meet the Targets for the elimination of the Substances in Annex A Groups I and II of the Montreal Protocol or otherwise does not comply with this Agreement, then the Country agrees that it will not be entitled to the Funding in accordance with the Funding Disbursement Schedule. At the discretion of the Executive Committee, funding will be reinstated according to a revised Funding Disbursement Schedule determined by the Executive Committee after the Country has demonstrated that it has satisfied all of its obligations that were due to be met prior to receipt of the next installment of Funding under the Funding Disbursement Schedule. The Country acknowledges that the Executive Committee may reduce the amount of the Funding by the amounts set out in Appendix 7-A in respect of each ODP tonnes of reductions in consumption not achieved in any one year.

11.  The Funding components of this Agreement will not be modified on the basis of any future Executive Committee decision that may affect the Funding of any other consumption sector projects or any other related activities in the Country.

12.  The Country will comply with any reasonable request of the Executive Committee and the Lead IA to facilitate implementation of this Agreement. In particular, it will provide access by the Lead IA to information necessary to verify compliance with this Agreement.

13.  All of the agreements set out in this Agreement are undertaken solely within the context of the Montreal Protocol and as specified in this Agreement. All terms used in this Agreement have the meaning ascribed to them in the Protocol unless otherwise defined herein.

Appendices

Appendix 1-A: The Substances

Annex A:

 

Group I

 

CFC-11, CFC-12, CFC-113 CFC 114 and CFC-115

 

 

Group II

 

Halons

 

Appendix 2-A: The Targets, and Funding

 

2003 (1)

 

2004

 

2005

 

2006

 

2007

 

2008

 

2009

 

2010

 

1. Max allowable total consumption of Annex A Group I substances (ODP tonnes)

 

2,208.00

 

2,208.00

 

1,104.00

 

1,104.00

 

331.20

 

331.20

 

331.20

 

0.00

 

1-A. Max agreed total consumption of Annex A Group I substances (ODP tonnes)

 

1,083.35

 

1,057.45

 

1,020.45

 

750.00

 

330.80

 

247.80

 

152.50

 

0.00

 

2. Reduction from ongoing projects

 

 

25.90

 

0.00

 

132.80

 

123.20

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

3. New reduction under plan

 

 

 

37.00

 

137.65

 

296.00

 

83.00

 

95.30

 

152.50

 

4. Total annual reduction of Annex A Group I substances (ODP tonnes) (2)

 

 

25.90

 

37.00

 

270.45

 

419.20

 

83.00

 

95.30

 

152.50

 

5. Max allowable total consumption of Annex A Group II substances (ODP tonnes)

 

187.70

 

187.70

 

93.85

 

93.85

 

93.85

 

93.85

 

93.85

 

0.00

 

5-A. Max agreed total consumption of Annex A Group II substances (ODP tonnes)

 

4.40

 

4.40

 

4.40

 

4.40

 

3.30

 

2.20

 

1.10

 

0.00

 

6. Reduction from ongoing projects

 

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

7. New reduction under plan

 

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

1.10

 

1.10

 

1.10

 

1.10

 

8. Total annual reduction of second substance (ODP tonnes) (2)

 

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

0.00

 

1.10

 

1.10

 

1.10

 

1.10

 

9. Lead I.A. agreed funding (US $)

 

2,146,820

 

 

2,353,180

 

 

 

 

 

 

10. Lead I.A. support costs (US $)

 

161,012

 

 

176,488

 

 

 

 

 

 

11. Total agreed funding (US $)

 

2,307,832

 

 

2,529,668

 

 

 

 

 

 

(1) As of January 2003. Applicable to all the years.

(2) Total annual reduction to be verified as of 1 January of the year heading the column.

Appendix 3-A: Funding Disbursement Schedule

Funding will be submitted for approval at the last meeting of the year previous to the starting year of the bi-annual plan. Due to the level of funding involved, only two submissions for funding are being proposed. The schedule of submissions for funding will be:

Year

 

Milestones

 

Disbursement

 

2003

 

Signature of agreement

 

2,146,820

 

2005

 

Yearly CFC consumption target achieved for 2005: 1,020.45 ODP tonnes

Phase out achieved during 2005: 270.45 ODP tonnes

CRM project successfully completed

First batch of legal measures (CFC Import Licensing System) already designed, agreed upon and about to be enacted

Technician-licensing scheme already designed, technician licensing procedures started, equipment and tools procured

Information campaign already designed and being implemented

Monitoring programme already designed and being implemented

HBMP system design, registry of halon users and code of good practices completed, HBMP under operation

 

2,353,180

 

Total

 

 

4,500,000

 

Appendix 4-A: Format of Annual Implementation Programme

1.

 

Data

 

 

 

Country

 

 

 

Year of plan

 

 

 

# of years completed

 

 

 

# of years remaining under the plan

 

 

 

Target ODS consumption of the preceding year

 

 

 

Target ODS consumption of the year of plan

 

 

 

Level of funding requested

 

 

 

Lead implementing agency

 

 

2.   Targets

Indicators

 

Preceding year

 

Year of plan

 

Reduction

 

Supply of ODS

 

Import

 

 

 

 

Total (1)

 

 

 

 

Demand of ODS

 

Manufacturing

 

 

 

 

Servicing

 

 

 

 

Stockpiling

 

 

 

 

Total (2)

 

 

 

 

3.   Industry Action

Sector

 

Consumption preceding year (1)

 

Consumption year of plan (2)

 

Reduction within year of plan (1)-(2)

 

Number of projects completed

 

Number of servicing related activities

 

ODS phase-out (in ODP tonnes)

 

Manufacturing

 

Aerosol

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Foam

 

 

 

 

 

 

Refrigeration

 

 

 

 

 

 

Solvents

 

 

 

 

 

 

Other

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total

 

 

 

 

 

 

Servicing

 

Refrigeration

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Grand total

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.   Technical Assistance

      Proposed Activity:  _____________________________

      Objective:               _____________________________

      Target Group:         _____________________________

      Impact:                   _____________________________

5.   Government Action

Policy activity planned

 

Schedule of implementation

 

Type of policy control on ODS import: servicing, etc

 

 

Public awareness

 

 

Others

 

 

6.   Annual Budget

Activity

 

Planned expenditures (US $)

 

 

 

Total

 

 

7.   Administrative Fees

Appendix 5-A: Monitoring Institutions and Roles

1.   All the monitoring activities will be coordinated and managed through the project "Technical Assistance for Implementation and Monitoring", which is included within this NPP. The actual monitoring activities will be delegated to the Autonomous Regional Corporations (CARs) of the Ministry of Environment, which are located in 5 different regions of the country: Bogotá, Barranquilla, Cali, Medellín and Pereira.

2.   The CARs will coordinate the monitoring activities with the corresponding public and private organizations according to their respective roles within the NPP, which are described in chapter 5, section 3 of the project document.

3.   The Lead IA will have a particularly prominent role in the monitoring arrangements because of its mandate to monitor ODS imports, whose records will be used as a crosschecking reference in all the monitoring programmes for the different projects within the NPP. This organization will also undertake the challenging task of monitoring and controlling illegal ODS imports in to country.

4.   The certification organizations that operate in the country at the moment (Icontec and the Superintendence of Industry and Commerce) will also have a major participation in the design and implementation of monitoring activities.

5.   The success of the monitoring programme will be based on three axes: 1) well designed forms for data collection, evaluation and reporting, 2) regular programme of monitoring visits; and, 3) appropriate cross-checking of information from different sources.

6.   Each of the different projects within the NPP will need a different monitoring sub-programme suited to the objectives of the project. A more detailed description of the different monitoring sub-programme is included in the project "Technical Assistance for Implementation and Monitoring", in Annex IX of the project document.

Verification and reporting

7.   The outcome of the different elements of the NPP and of the monitoring activities will be verified independently by an external organization. The Government and the independent organization will jointly design the verification procedures as part of the design phase of the monitoring programme.

Institution for conducting the verification

8.   The Government of Colombia wishes to designate UNDP as the independent organization to carry out the verification of the NPP results and the monitoring programme.

Frequency of verification and reporting

9.   The monitoring reports will be produced and verified each year, previous to the first meeting of the Executive Committee. These reports will produce the input for the yearly implementation reports required by the Executive Committee.

Appendix 6-A: Role of the Lead IA

The Lead IA will be responsible for a range of activities to be specified in the project document along the lines of the following:

      (a)  ensuring performance and financial verification in accordance with this Agreement and with its specific internal procedures and requirements as set out in the Country’s phase-out plan;

      (b)  providing verification to the Executive Committee that the Targets have been met and associated annual activities have been completed as indicated in the Annual Implementation Programme;

      (c)  assisting the Country in preparation of the Annual Implementation Programme;

      (d)  ensuring that achievements in previous Annual Implementation Programmes are reflected in future Annual Implementation Programmes;

      (e)  reporting on the implementation of the Annual Implementation Programme commencing with the Annual Implementation Programme for the year 2004 to be prepared and submitted in year 2005;

      (f)  ensuring that appropriate independent technical experts carry out the technical reviews undertaken by the lead Implementing Agency;

      (g)  carrying out required supervision missions;

      (h)  ensuring the presence of an operating mechanism to allow effective, transparent implementation of the Annual Implementation Programme and accurate data reporting;

      (i)   verification for the Executive Committee that consumption of the Substances has been eliminated in accordance with the Targets;

      (j)   ensuring that disbursements made to the Country are based on the use of the Indicators; and

      (k)  providing assistance with policy, management and technical support when required.

Appendix 6-B: Role of Cooperating Implementing Agencies

No cooperating implementing agency is involved in the implementation of this plan.

Appendix 7-A: Reductions in Funding for Failure to Comply

In accordance with paragraph 10 of the Agreement, the amount of funding provided may be reduced by US $11,169 per ODP tonne of reductions in consumption not achieved in the year.

(UNEP/OzL.Pro/ExCom/41/87, Decision 41/52, para. 87).

(Supporting document: UNEP/OzL.Pro/ExCom/41/87 Annex XI).


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