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UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

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Page 1: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015

Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Page 2: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Agency response to June AdCom recommendations

• Strategic approach to external relations and communications• Targeted work-plans and targeted marketing tools for each

donor country• Diversification of donor base• Joint exploration with TDs towards establishing new donor

relationships• Emphasis on multi-year agreements with donors• Priority to the General Fund• Establishment of the Private Partnership Unit• Acknowledgment of the role of Representative Offices

Page 3: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Strategic Framework

Page 4: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

PAST TRENDSUNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015

Page 5: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Trigger points for donors are dominated by longer-term trends, and punctuated by crises

After 2nd Intifada Geneva conference formalizes a new commitment by donors

Arab Spring

Nahr al-Bared conflict

Gaza war

?

Dis-engagement

Page 6: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

The average growth rate in GF funding 2000-2010 was equivalent to annual rate of 7.2% compound

Traditional donors share has fallen slightly:

Page 7: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Overall UNRWA is highly dependent on Traditional Donors, but this dependency is slowly reducing

Page 8: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Arab donors have contributed a significant share of UNRWA’s funding, in particular to EA and Projects

Page 9: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

PROGRESS IN RESOURCE MOBILIZATION

UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015

Page 10: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

UNRWA has successfully increased funding from Arab donors

While Arab ODA has typically represented between 1.2% and 4.7% of global ODA flows, UNRWA’s overall financing (GF + Projects + Emergency Appeals) is financed to a greater extent by Arab donors – between 1.7% and 10% of UNRWA funding has been from Arab sources.

Page 11: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Spanish National Committee

Over the last 5 years the National Committee has provided €11.2 million in total contributions. 96% of these contributions are derived from Spanish Regional government funds, and the remaining 4% (a total of €473 thousand) were raised from private sources.

Page 12: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

… and has shown a very high, and increasing return on investment.

Page 13: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

FUNDING NEEDSUNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015

Page 14: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Increases in GF requirements will lead to an increase in funding requirements to a base of $995 million in 2015.

Page 15: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

SOURCES OF FUNDINGUNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015

Page 16: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

• Traditional Donors will continue to increase funding, but at a significantly lower rate. Given ODA outlook, GF contributions are expected to grow by no more than 2-4% and overall contributions by around 3% a year

Traditional Donors

• UNRWA has decreased its overall dependency on the Traditional Donors from 92% in 2000 to 87% in 2010. In the same time period OECD DAC countries also decreased their share of global ODA from 98% to 95%

• UNRWA has been successful in raising Emergency Appeal funding from outside the Traditional Donor group: during 2009 a relatively modest 74% of contributions came from traditional donors. Globally 95% of humanitarian funding comes from OECD DAC countries

• While the USA’s total contributions to UNRWA have increase by 10.7% per year on average, the US increased total ODA by an average of 13% a year

• Similarly the EU grew ODA by an average of 12%, while contributions to UNRWA grew at the somewhat slower rate of 10.1% per year

• Several of UNRWA’s largest Traditional Donors – such as Sweden, Norway, Netherlands and Denmark are above their target 0.7% ODA/GNI ratio

Page 17: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Non traditional donors

• Dominated by a group of countries that have consistently grown their share of total contributions through donations to the General Fund. They have not contributed significantly to the Emergency Appeals.

• One of the major contributors to this group, Luxembourg, is already above its target ODA / GNA ratio and could be subject to limitations or growth in ODA as a whole.

• This group includes Eastern European countries and several others, who are underperforming as donors and offer the opportunity to diversify the source of income.

• Non-Traditional partners should be managed to increase their growth through diversifying contributions to more donors – while maintaining and growing the current key contributors in this group

Page 18: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Arab donors• Arab donors account for 1% to 5% of global ODA. They typically account for a higher share of UNRWA total funding, especially in crises.• Preference for larger projects and in particular infrastructure programs• A relatively modest share of 2-3% of the GF, but the trend is positive•Saudi Arabia is a dominant force in ODA and Humanitarian Aid, representing 50-94% of aid flows, and an important regional opinion leader

• Given past trends, it is reasonable to expect an increase in the relative contribution of Arab donors toward the GF, while targeting at least a maintenance of their share of Emergency Appeal and Projects

Page 19: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Development Aid from ‘Emerging Markets’• Emerging markets are rapidly increasing aid levels• EM represented 3.7% of total ODA in 2009 but only 0.3% of total

contributions to UNRWA• EM represented 1.2% of global Humanitarian Aid in 2010, whereas

UNRWA received no EA funding from these countries

• Emerging Markets could be developed to provide around 1% of GF, which is a ten-fold increase in nominal levels compared to today

• The full potential of Emerging Markets will only be reflected in the following strategy period

Page 20: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Private Partnerships

• Until recently private sources of funding (philanthropic foundations, corporations, NGOs, HNWIs, individual giving) have not constituted a priority for the Agency

• Private sources presently account for less than 0.1% of GF funding• Study performed of other UN agencies shows that private sources are

increasingly important in securing additional income• Work of the Spanish national committee exemplifies the opportunities

within this field

• Provided investments are made, contributions from private sources can increase substantially and are expected to account for 2% of GF funding in 2015

Page 21: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

RESOURCE MOBILIZATION STRATEGY

UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015

Page 22: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Resource Mobilization Priorities

• In order to promote aid effectiveness and avoid a proliferation of projects, donors are encouraged to give un-earmarked funds.

• Responding to a range of donor priorities UNRWA seeks to maximize the resources available to the Agency by fully utilizing opportunities arising from a variety of donor instruments and bilateral budget lines.

• UNRWA directs its RM efforts first and foremost towards the General Fund. Donors are encouraged to enter into multi-year agreements in order to increase income predictability and reduce recurrent fund raising costs.

• When mobilizing humanitarian funding UNRWA seeks to ensure that minimum needs are met across fields with emergency programs.

• Large reconstruction programs require a targeted RM approach. Efforts are made to secure funding to meet minimum annual operational requirements.

• Discrete projects outside of larger reconstruction programs are funded as opportunities arise, provided they meet quality standards set by the Agency.

Page 23: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Base case requirements for 2012-2015

Page 24: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Base case funding projections for 2012-15

• Rising to $995 million in 2015• Traditional donors account for a declining share of total contributions• This is equivalent to 2% annual growth for the Traditional Donors• The rise in Arab donor contributions is mainly focused on high-visibility

projects such as Gaza reconstruction

Page 25: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

General Fund in Base case ($m) to 2015 • Rising to $660m in 2015, declining share of Traditional Donors

from 89% to 84%• This is equivalent to 3.6% annual growth for the Traditional

Donors between 2011 and 2015 • 40% of income growth will come from diversified donor base.

Page 26: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Strategic Framework

Page 27: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Deepen the partnership with Traditional Donors

Page 28: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Diversify donor base

Page 29: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

Develop Agency capacity to mobilize resources and manage donor relations

Page 30: UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015 Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011

DISCUSSION

UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy 2012-2015