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Romanias Road to Accession - The Need for an Environmental Focus
As this report has already emphasised, compliance with the EU investment-heavy
requirements in the environment sector will pose an enormous financial burden for Romania,
the poorest of the CEE candidate countries. The burden will fall on the private sector as
well as on the public sector.
The best estimates to date for the public sector costs are those found in a 2001 study
by the Ministry of Public Administration (MPA). The MPA concerned about the demands
on local governments to provide services in accordance with EU standards undertook
the development of a Strategy as to how municipalities might rise to the challenge. The
Strategy109 consists of a short-term
strategy for 2001 2004, as well as a long term strategy until 2030. The year 2030
was selected as the date when Romania is likely to achieve the EU objectives set for
drinking water and urban wastewater treatment;110
however, Romania has requested transition periods of 2020 for these EU requirements.
The Strategy reports that 2030 was dictated by the limited possibilities of investment in
the sector, but this appears not to have been coordinated with Romanias team
negotiating the Chapter 21 requirements. The longer period set forth in the Strategy
suggests that Romania may well need transition periods longer than those requested.
The Strategy estimated that a total of 17.7 billion EUR would be required between 2002
and 2030 to rehabilitate the water and sewerage, urban heating and sanitation services.
This figure is divided between the different services as follows:
Water and sewerage in urban areas |
4.1 billion EUR |
Water and sewerage in rural areas |
5.4 billion EUR |
Centralised heating services |
6.8 billion EUR |
Sanitation (municipal waste management) |
1.3 billion EUR |
The following pie-chart shows the Strategys structure of fund granting allocated to
the various sectors:
The Structure of Fund Granting in Percentage

The strategy estimated that the yearly ratio of this investment would be spread as
follows:
2002 2017 |
942.9 MEUR per year |
2017 2022 |
403 MEUR per year |
2022 2030 |
193.6 MEUR per year |
The Strategy does not clarify whether these estimates of annual costs are only for
investments in infrastructure or whether they also include operating and maintenance
costs. If operating and maintenance costs are not included, the burden on Romanias
public sector would be significantly higher.
The MPA s Strategy stresses that the already constrained state budget cannot be
the primary provider of these investments, and suggests three ways of attracting
additional financing: (1) grants from the EU or other countries; (2) involvement of
private capital (i.e. public-private partnerships), and (3) loans from international
financial institutions (IFIs) or commercial bank credits for financing public services and
investments in local infrastructure.
The MPAs short-term strategy for the period 2002 2004 is to obtain the
942.9 MEUR from a variety of sources, as follows:
State (national) budget |
100.3 MEUR |
Local budgets |
90.3 MEUR |
EU and other grants |
551.7 MEUR |
Credits from international banks |
300.9 MEUR |
Private investment |
100.3 MEUR |
As this indicates, EU and bilateral grants remain the most important source of financing
(almost 50% of the total) for the public sector environmental infrastructure needed by
Romania, and predominantly the financing available through the ISPA programme. The table
on the next page shows the environmental infrastructure projects for which Romania will
receive significant ISPA grants during the first two years of ISPA financing (2000
2001).
During this initial ISPA period, Romania succeeded in putting enough viable projects
forward to receive its full allotment of ISPA financing for environmental infrastructure
projects. The first batch of projects put forward were already part of an EBRD effort to
extend credit to the larger Romanian municipalities for environmental infrastructure, and
considerable work on feasibility studies and financial analysis had already been done. But
the ISPA application process is technically demanding and complicated, requiring the
completion of full engineering feasibility studies and detailed financial analyses and it
was a major additional effort for the MEW to prepare adequate documentation for each
project to meet the EU requirements.
The DANCEE programme and other bilateral donors, including the US and Japan, were
needed to provide additional technical assistance (TA) at very short notice, to take the
existing information through the next stage of preparing the documentation for the ISPA
application. Danish consultants helped prepare the paperwork for the projects at Craiova,
Constanta, Arad and Piatra Neamt. Denmark also contributed co-financing for the Piatra
Neamt facility.
ISPA Grants for Environmental Infrastructure Projects in Romania (2000 2001)111
Project Name |
Total Cost of Project
(EUR) |
ISPA Grant (EUR) |
Drinking Water
pipes/plant |
Iasi: Upgrading of water & waste
system |
51,378,000 |
38,533,500 |
Drinking Supply and
Sewerage |
Pascani: Upgrading of water &
waste water system |
16,262,000 |
12,196,500 |
Targu Mures: rehabilitation of
drinking water supply |
27,909,400 |
20,932,050 |
Sewage
network/treatment plant |
Technical assistance for completion of
documentation |
1,810,000 |
1,357,500 |
Craiova: Rehabilitation of sewerage
network & wastewater |
70,378,000 |
52,783,500 |
Constanta: Sewerage & wastewater
treatment rehabilitation |
96,556,653 |
72,417,490 |
Timisoara: rehabilitation of
wastewater treatment technology |
48,080,000 |
34,136,800 |
Cluj: Rehabilitation &
modernisation of water supply |
46,755,800 |
35,066,850 |
Valea Jiului: Danutoni waste water
treatment plant extension |
9,680,000 |
7,260,000 |
Bralia: Integrated sewerage
development & wastewater |
59,877,400 |
44,908,050 |
Arad: Rehabilitation &
modification of sewerage network |
18,000,000 |
13,500,000 |
Foscani: Rehabilitation of the
sewerage network |
15,876,500 |
11,748,610 |
Oradea: Rehabilitation of the sewerage
network |
23,906,000 |
16,734,200 |
Waste management |
Piatra Neamt: waste management
programme |
13,846,000 |
10,384,500 |
As of October 2002, projects sufficient to meet Romanias ISPA allotment for 2002 had
not yet been agreed. Moreover, the process is not yet over even for the projects agreed in
2000-2001. Before the ISPA funds can actually be disbursed, the projects must be tendered
and contracted, in accordance with EU public procurement procedures. Romania has not yet
succeeded in getting any of its projects through this process, so that disbursement of
ISPA funds and actual construction of the infrastructure can begin. These difficulties
suggest a need for TA also in this area of project pipeline management.
Though the rules governing ISPA have recently been modified to allow smaller
municipalities to be eligible for ISPA funding (from 300,000 to 150,000 inhabitants), it
remains difficult for the smaller municipalities to apply for and successfully receive
funding. To remedy this, the MPA is in the process of establishing a Small and
Medium-sized Town Infrastructure Development Programme (SMTIDP), aimed at assisting 232
communities having populations of between 10 50,000, with a particular focus on
providing clean drinking water to small communities. SMTIPD will be funded 50% by PHARE
grant and from Romanian sources, and 50% from credit from the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and EIB. The 50% from PHARE and Roma-nian sources
will be split 75% PHARE, 25% Romania. The loans from EBRD & EIB will be paid back
through increased user charges. SMTIPD is to be a multiannual financing arrangement
operating from 2002 to 2010. In 2002, it will have 40 MEUR (15 MEUR from PHARE, 5 MEUR
from the Romanian government and 20 MEUR from International Financing Institutions).
One of the SMTIPD eligibility criteria is that the community must work in association
with other communities in the same river basin. There will be 60 EUR per person available,
so a town with 5000 persons will be eligible for 30,000 EUR under SMTIPD, for new
infrastructure or for refurbishment of old structures (e.g. replacement of delivery pipes
and refurbishment of pumps). The SMTIPD is a promising financial mechanism to support
Romanian municipalities in delivering safe drinking water, and may be a useful model for
other infrastructure needs, if additional donor and IFI funding can be secured.
Very small communities are eligible for assistance from the Rural Development
Programme. This is a five year programme which started in 2002 and with a total funding of
110 MEUR, largely financed by the World Bank (100 MEUR) and partly financed by Romania (10
MEUR) through in-kind contributions from municipalities.
To help Romania to meet its environmental investment challenge, an Environmental Fund
was established in 2001. A Government Decision approved the organisation of the
Environmental Fund, including 31 administrative positions. As of October 2002, three staff
persons are in place, and over 1.2 MEUR already collected from various fees and charges.112 Projects eligible for Environmental Fund
financing will include those aimed at control and reduction of air, water and soil
pollution, including the utilisation of clean technologies; natural resources protection;
management or recycling of waste; treatment and/or elimination of dangerous waste;
protection and conservation of biodiversity; education and awareness regarding the
environmental protection. Again, the funding that will be available through this mechanism
will be important, but not sufficient.
As section 2 has already described, according to the recent roadmap for Romania, EU
resources available will expand significantly between 2004 and 2006, and the extent of
such funding will be linked to absorptive capacity. But the significant assistance that
Romania has already required to prepare sufficient projects for the first two years of
ISPA indicates the difficulty that remains in meeting the technical requirements for
qualifying for ISPA funding. Romania is currently ill-prepared to take advantage of this
potential increase in funds.
Even if bilateral and other donors are prepared to support the additional technical
assistance that may be needed, the capacity of the MEW, MPA and the municipalities
themselves to absorb such assistance is still limited. Moreover, the EU Common Position on
Chapter 21: Regional Policy and Coordination of Structural Instruments, flags some
uncertainty on Romanias administrative capacity to implement Structural and Cohesion
Funds in the future.113 Romanias
financing challenge therefore includes the need not only to bring in the additional funds
from EU, bilateral, international and private sources, but to overcome the current limits
on its capacity to absorb such assistance.
109. |
"The Governments Strategy concerning the
Development of Local Public Services of Communal Husbandry", Government of Romania,
Ministry of Public Administration, Bucharest, 2001.
|
110. |
Ibid at page 4.
|
111. |
European Commission, Summary Information on the Third ISPA
Monitoring Committee Meetings, Romania, 23 24 April 2002, at page 74.
|
112. |
According to Law no. 293/2002 which finalised the legal
framework for the Environmental Fund, financing will come from: (a) a quota of 3% from the
incomes cashed by the economic operators which collect and capitalise ferrous and
non-ferrous wastes; (b) the cashed sums for pollutant emissions in the atmosphere which
affect the environmental factors; (c) the incomes cashed from the utilisation of new lands
recycling waste landfills; (d) a quota of 3% from the value of packaging commercialised by
the producers and the importers, except for those used for medicines; (e) a quota of 2%
from the value of dangerous chemicals traded by the producers and importers, except for
those used at medicines production; (f) a quota of 0,5% from the value of hazardous
chemicals traded by the producers and importers, utilised in agriculture; (g) a quota of
3% from the price of adjudgement of the wood bought from the National Woods Regia
and from other woods owners, legal or natural persons; (h) a quota of 1,5% from the cashed
value for trading tobacco finite products; (i) allocations from the state budget,
donations, grants, financial assistance from the part of natural and legal persons,
Romanian or foreign; (j) the sums cashed from the restitution of credits, interests, other
financial operations that use the financial sources of Environmental Fund; (k) financial
assistance from international organisms; (l) sums cashed from manifestations organised in
the benefit of Environmental Fund; (m) taxes cashed by the single bureaus when issuing the
environmental agreement/ authorisation for activities with a reduced impact.
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113. |
European Union Common Position CONF-RO 9/02. |
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