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Global Fund Board approves an additional $234 million in country grants
GFO Issue 338

Global Fund Board approves an additional $234 million in country grants

Author:

David Garmaise

Article Type:
News

Article Number: 2

Approximately 208 country grants have now been approved in the 2017ā€“2019 funding cycle

ABSTRACT In its latest round of grant approvals, the Global Fund Board approved 13 country grants worth $234.2 million. This was the ninth batch of approvals from the 2017-2019 allocations. Domestic commitments to the programs represented by the approved grants amounted to $902.5 million.

On 28 May 2018, the Global Fund Board approved 13 country grants worth $234.2 million. This includes $7.4 million in matching funds. The Board also approved $6.2Ā million in matching funds requests for grants from two countries for which regular funding had already been approved.

This was the ninth batch of approvals from the 2017ā€“2019 allocations. The Board was acting on the recommendations of the Technical Review Panel (TRP) and the Grant Approvals Committee (GAC). Interventions totaling $41.3 million were added to the Unfunded Quality Demand (UQD) Register. Domestic commitments to the programs represented by the approved grants amounted to $902.5 million.

See Tables 1 and 2 for details.

Table 1: Grants approved from the 2017-2019 allocations ā€“ā€“ Ninth batch ($US)

Applicant Comp. Grant name Principal recipient Amount
approved
UQD Domestic commitment
Angola HIV AGO-H-UNDP UNDP 23,110,399 10,866,918 87,391,605
Malaria AGO-M-MOH Ministry of Health 13,470,603 1,404,612 119,513,010
AGO-M-WVI World Vision Intl. 8,529,397
Costa Rica HIV CRI-H-HIVOS HIVOS 2,120,098 953,034 225,200,000
Gambia Malaria GMB-M-MOH Ministry of Health 13,895,813 NIL 3,736,273
Kyrgyzstan TB/HIV KGZ-C-UNDP UNDP 20,959,824 NIL 40,128,221
Sierra Leone Malaria SLE-M-CRS Catholic Relief Serv. 5,313,275 NIL 8,874,796
TB/M/HS SLE-Z-MOHS Min. of Health & Sanit. 60,511,376 NIL
Swaziland TB/HIV SWZā€”C-CANGO CANGO 6,307,769 27,461,869 160,580,000
SWZ-C-NERCHA NERCHA 40,417,023
Turkmenistan TB TKN-T-UNDP UNDP 3,956,665 440,383 38,915,457
Uzbekistan HIV UZB-H-RAC Rep. C. to Fight AIDS 16,567,919 124,824 86,079,939
TB UZB-T-RDC Rep. DOTS Center 19,000,831 NIL 132,047,341
Totals 234,160,992 41,251,640 902,466,642

Notes:

  1. Amounts approved shown are upper ceilings.
    1. The domestic commitments shown are for the disease programs and exclude RSSH.
    2. The amount shown for UQD for AGO-H-UNDP covers both HIV and TB.

As is customary, the approved funding is subject to availability of funding and will be committed in annual tranches.

Table 2: Matching funds awarded for country grants previously approved ($US)

Applicant Comp. Grant name Principal recipient Amount
approved($)
Strategic priority areas
Congo DR Malaria COD-M-HOH Ministry of Health 2,975,025 RSSH: Data systems; data generation; data use
CĆ“te dā€™Ivoire Malaria CIV-M-MOH Ministry of Health 3,121,076 RSSH: Data systems; data generation; data use
Total 6,196,111

Note: For grants denominated in euros, a conversion rate of 1 euro = 1.1675 US dollars was used.

 

More to come

So far in the 2017-2019 funding cycle, approximately 208 country grants have been approved by the Board. The grants derive from the funding requests submitted by applicants. Many funding requests produce multiple grants. It can take up to a year for the funding requests to work their way through the review and grant-making processes before the grants are submitted to the Board for approval.

For 2017ā€“2019, six windows were established for applicants to submit their funding requests. The first three windows were in 2017; there are three additional windows in 2018. The deadlines for Windows 4 and 5 have already occurred. Window 4 (deadline: 7 February) generated 26 requests. For Window 5 (deadline: 30 April), there were 33 submissions.

In the first five windows combined, approximately 225 funding requests were received, of which 204 were from CCMs. The other 21 were from regional coordinating mechanisms or regional organizations.

The deadline for the final window for 2018 is 6 August, with the TRP review scheduled for 9ā€“21 September. As of 30 May 2018, the Secretariat forecast that it will receive 30 requests in Window 6, of which 12 will be from multi-country applicants.

Because of the time it takes for the review of the funding requests and for the grant-making process, it will be several months before any grants from the Window 4 and 5 funding requests are approved for funding. The grants that have just been approved (listed in Table 1 above) all originate from funding requests submitted in Windows 1 and 3.

Comments on individual funding requests

The report containing the recommendations from the TRP and the GAC included comments on some of the grants. Below, we provide a summary of some of these comments.

Angola

The HIV epidemic in Angola is generalized with high prevalence rates among key populations. The grant prioritized (a) interventions for key populations; and (b) treatment, care and support focused on the prevention of mother-to-child transmission.

Malaria remains a major public health threat in Angola and is the principal cause of morbidity and mortality. The grant will support the National Malaria Strategic Plan which aims to reduce malaria morbidity from 14% in 2016 to 6% by 2020; and to reduce mortality from 53.8% in 2016 to 21.4% by 2020. The Global Fund investments will focus on scaling up case management, including integrated community case management.

Although the Government of Angola has committed to comply with the co-financing requirements for 2017ā€“2019, the GAC said that the commitments are insufficient to cover the full need. ā€œThere are significant gaps in essential services,ā€ the GAC said, ā€œparticularly regarding the procurement of medications and health commodities.ā€

Given Angolaā€™s current macroeconomic and fiscal context, the GAC said, the Secretariat will monitor the risk of disruption to essential services for HIV and malaria. ā€œ[There are] critical gaps in the financing of national programs [which] could be exacerbated if domestic commitments do not materialize,ā€ the GAC noted.

The GAC said that while Angola continues its work to strengthen its national supply chain, the UNDP will remain the procurement agent for HIV and Wambo.org will continue to be used for procurement of malaria commodities.

Sierra Leone

The GAC reported that the domestic commitment for HIV, TB and malaria for 2018Ā­ā€“2020 is about $11.4 million (excluding human resource costs), which represents a 278% increase compared to 2014ā€“2016.

The civil society grant (SLE-M-CRS) will focus on advocacy, communication and social mobilization and is designed to support the malaria activities in the government grant (SLE-Z-MOHS) to enhance the uptake of prevention and treatment services. The GAC said that the community systemsā€™ response, through the use of community health workers, is one of the main priorities of the RSSH investments. The GAC added that an analysis of the community health workers strategy will be performed in the first year of implementation, leading to a revision of the community health component.

The construction of a warehouse, originally planned for existing 2014ā€“2016 grant, will be completed in the new grant instead.

Swaziland

Swazilandā€™s TB/HIV funding request included $8.6 for second- and third-line antiretrovirals (ARV) and drugs for opportunistic infections. However, as a result of Swazilandā€™s decision to adopt a generic fixed-dose combination of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, lamivudine and dolutegravir (TLD) as the first-line regimen for HIV treatment, significant savings from the national ARV budget were identified. These savings rendered the contributions from the government and PEPFAR sufficient to cover all ARV needs.

The $8.6 million in the funding request was therefore reallocated, as part of a $10.0 million investment, to cover significant gaps in the budget for procurement of diagnostic tests and laboratory reagents, and for program management.

The GAC noted that currency fluctuations represent a foreign exchange risk for the grant. The Secretariat will explore the use of multi-currency disbursements for Swaziland and will work with the principal recipients to mitigate against major losses, where possible. (See the recentĀ  GFO article on how the Global Fund manages currency fluctuations.)

Aidspan reported previously on the first batch of grant approvals for 2017-2019; the second batch; the third batch; the fourth batch; the fifth batch; the sixth batch; the seventh batch; and the eighth batch.

Most of the information for this article was taken from Board Document GF-B39-ER01 (Electronic Report to the Board: Report of the Secretariatā€™s Grant Approvals Committee, undated). This document is not available on the Global Fund website.

 

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