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Project Cycle
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Project Cycle (for Public Sector projects)



ADB Assistance to Projects

ADB provides financing for projects that will effectively contribute to the economic and social development of the country concerned and have the strongest poverty reduction impact in conformity with the country and ADB strategies.

Project identification may require the help of outside experts, especially in the smaller and less developed DMCs. If so, ADB can provide technical assistance to help a country identify and prepare a project for possible financing.

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Project Cycle

The various stages from country programming to project completion and evaluation are known collectively as ADB's project cycle.

The documents produced are disclosed according to specific disclosure requirements and criteria for confidentiality under the new Public Communications Policy (PCP).

For more details on document types and their disclosure requirements, click on any of the stages in ADB's project cycle.

Review the definitions for terms commonly used in the PCP to ensure correct interpretation of the disclosure requirements.

Country Partnership Strategy Preparation Appraisal / Approval Implementation Evaluation

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1. Country Partnership Strategy

ADB works with each developing member country to define a medium-term development strategy and operational program, called a country partnership strategy (CPS), formerly country strategy and program. The CPS is aligned with the country's development plan and poverty reduction goals, and its preparation with the DMC’s development planning cycle.

ADB conducts assessment studies in preparation for a new CPS.

A CPS is developed in close consultation with the government and other country stakeholders including civil society, nongovernment organizations, private sector, as well as the country's other development partners. Drafts of CPSs are shared with in-country stakeholders twice during CPS development. All CPSs are posted on ADB's web site after ADB's Board of Directors endorses them.

Periodically, ADB's Operations Evaluation Department evaluates ADB's country strategy and assistance program for a country. Looking back at experience over a longer period, these country assistance program evaluations assess the development impact of ADB assistance.

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2. Preparation

Project Identification/Preparation

ADB often provides grants called project/program preparatory technical assistance (PPTA) to help the government identify and prepare feasible projects.

ADB posts on the web a brief factual summary of the project. You can search ADB's project database for a summary of the project and to see all documents related to a project in one view. The summary will either be in the form of a project profile or project information document.

During the early stage of the PPTA, a flagging exercise - called an initial poverty and social assessment — is conducted to identify those people who may be beneficially or adversely affected.

A technical assistance report is prepared as a recommendation for ADB to finance a technical assistance project.

ADB usually hires consultants to work with government counterpart staff to undertake the project's feasibility study. The consultants work closely with the various stakeholders including the government, civil society, affected people, and other development agencies working in those sectors. ADB closely monitors the consultants' work. The draft final report is reviewed at a tripartite meeting attended by representatives of the government, ADB, and the consultants. During this process, ADB with the government agrees on an executing agency for the project or program.

If the project requires resettlement of people or might adversely impact the environment, or indigenous peoples, certain safeguard assessments are prepared during this stage. The results of these assessments are made available to affected people in their draft forms (using appropriate media and approach) prior to or during consultations, and again after the documents are finalized.

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Project Examination

During project examination, ADB examines project feasibility - as presented in the consultants' report - first through a fact-finding mission and then through an appraisal mission.

The fact-finding mission - in consultation with the government and other stakeholders - examines the project's technical, financial, economic, environmental, marketing, and management aspects and potential social impact.

Detailed project risks and sensitivity analyses are carried out to assess viability of the proposed project. Loan terms and conditions for loan effectiveness are discussed to improve sector performance and address key policy issues.

One of the tools ADB staff use for project design is the design and monitoring framework, which is posted on the web as a draft before the project's appraisal mission.

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3. Appraisal / Approval

Appraisal

Following the examination in the field, the appraisal mission conducts further field study, analyses and consultation, as required. The mission then prepares a loan proposal report and draws up a draft loan agreement for negotiation.

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Loan Negotiation

After appraisal, the draft loan agreement and draft project proposal is submitted to all parties involved including the Government for review. Feedback is collected, and the Government is then called for negotiation with ADB.

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Board Approval

After negotiations with the government, the loan proposal is submitted to ADB's Board of Directors for approval. This report is known as the Report and Recommendation of the President (RRP). It is posted on the web after Board approval, along with the associated legal agreements.

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Loan Signing

After Board approval, the document is sent to the borrowing country's Government for cabinet authorization. Following the authorization from the cabinet, the loan agreement is signed by ADB's President and the Representative of the Government.

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Loan Effectiveness

The loan takes effect once certain conditions are met. This is also known as loan effectiveness.

Generally, the conditions are limited to the legal requirements such as legal opinion, cross-effectiveness of cofinancing, and execution of subsidiary loan agreements. The requirements and deadline for loan effectiveness are stipulated in the loan agreement.

ADB's legal counsel and Project Officer review if the conditions are met, after which the loan is formally declared effective. Normally, loan documents allow 90 days for the loan agreement to become effective.

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4. Implementation

ADB-assisted projects are implemented by the executing agency according to the agreed schedule and procedures. A project administration memorandum sets out the project's implementation agreements and details.

Project consultants are recruited as needed to assist the Government. For example, in an infrastructure project, the detailed engineering design and bidding documents are prepared, machinery and equipment are procured, and civil works are constructed and installed.

The preparatory work for construction which may take 6 -12 months or longer, includes

  • recruiting consultants
  • preparing tender documents and detailed designs
  • procuring equipment
  • selecting contractors for construction

These activities are encouraged to be completed prior to loan negotiation - except signing of contracts - to minimize any start-up delays in project implementation. As such, ADB promotes advance procurement action - recognizing that preparing tender documents, and establishing a project implementing unit with key staff are important part of the project readiness activities. Advance recruitment of consultants for loan projects is a normal procedure and does not require advance approval from the Management.

ADB's project divisions review the physical implementation progress as well as monitor achievement of development objectives in close coordination with the borrower and the executing agencies. ADB disburses the loan for approved expenditures, as provided in the loan agreement.

Implementation time generally ranges from two to five years but depends on the type and nature of the project. ADB's review missions assess the progress of project implementation by visiting it at least twice a year throughout the implementation period.

If a project has significant environmental or social issues, ADB will often require the borrower to submit regular monitoring reports, in addition to progress reports. Information on the project's implementation progress and status of development objectives and loan covenants is added to the project information document during this implementation phase.

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5. Evaluation

After the project facilities and technical assistance activities are completed, ADB prepares a project completion report or technical assistance completion report to document the implementation experience. These reports are prepared within 12 - 24 months of the completion of the project.

Evaluation has changed with ADB. Early work concentrated on input-output relationships in projects, using economic analysis, but evolved to cover the entire results chain of inputs, outputs, outcomes, and impacts.

The focus of evaluation studies has shifted from the project to the country, informed by sector and thematic assessments as well as by evaluations of ADB's business processes. The full mix of lending and nonlending services that make up country assistance programs has now become the dominant preoccupation of evaluation, with priority attention to relevance, efficiency, effectiveness, and sustainability.