|
Implementation
of resolution 1472 (2003)
UPDATE
21 April 2003
1.
Priority list.
Following further contacts with suppliers of potential
priority contracts and analysis of their responses, the list of
priority contracts has been further revised. The list currently
contains 266 contracts, down from the original 526 contracts.
Please note that the list contains both contracts (160) with
goods that can definitely be shipped by 12 May 2003, as well as some
(96) for which contacts with suppliers are still ongoing. Please
also note that balances referred to in Table 1 include values of all
undelivered quantities and not only the values of goods that can be
shipped by 12 May 2003, as in many cases only partial delivery of
outstanding quantities would be possible before the end of the
45-day period mandated under resolution 1472 (2003). Details for
goods positively identified as ‘shippable’ by 12 May 2003 are
provided separately in paragraph 2 below.
The
priority list will continue to be updated based on responses from
the suppliers. Concerned UN agencies and programmes will continue to
review responses as well as their own requirements. During the past
week, WFP added to as well as deleted a number of contracts from the
priority list. In addition, UNDP added 17 new contracts to the list
as possible priorities and has started contact with suppliers to
establish how soon the goods can be shipped. Table 1 below
summarizes priority contracts (confirmed and still under
consideration) as at 21 April 2003. The detailed priority list will
be forwarded to the members of the Security Council electronically.
Table 1 – Summary of priority contracts (as
at 21 April 2003)
AGENCY
|
Total
Contracts
|
Contract
Value (in US$)
|
Delivered
(in US$)
|
Balance
(in US$)
|
WFP
|
44
|
731,110,647.99
|
166,922,204.82
|
564,188,443.17
|
UNDP
|
44
|
638,672,749.75
|
272,400,934.85
|
366,271,814.90
|
UNICEF-Education
|
2
|
1,971,419.89
|
1,680,350.35
|
291,069.54
|
UNICEF-Health
|
0
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
UNICEF-Watsan
|
16
|
37,700,586.72
|
4,960,567.97
|
32,740,018.75
|
FAO
|
64
|
220,528,825.02
|
91,956,983.15
|
128,571,841.87
|
WHO
|
96
|
163,677,797.47
|
100,508,966.81
|
62,855,607.61
|
UNHCR
|
0
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
TOTAL
|
266
|
1,793,662,026.84
|
638,430,007.95
|
1,154,918,795.84
|
2.
Goods to be shipped by 12 May 2003.
Based on the responses
received from suppliers, it was established that, out of 266
contracts considered as priority, goods under 160 contracts
valued at $454.6 million could be shipped within the 45-day period.
This represents an increase from 137 contracts with goods valued at
$395 million reported last week. Most of the goods are in food
($236.4 million), electricity ($119.3 million) and health ($53.1
million) sectors. Table 2 in paragraph 3 shows the breakdown per UN
agency and programme. It should also be noted that in many cases
goods ‘shippable’ by 12 May 2003 do not represent the full
remaining balance of a contract; instead, these are often partial
shipments available prior to 12 May 2003. Only these values are
included in the above figure of $454.6 million and only these would
be subject to amendments to be negotiated by the UN agencies.
3.
Transit goods vs. new shipments.
Based on available
information, the majority of goods that could be shipped by 12 May
2003 appears to be priority goods already in transit and
subsequently adopted by the UN agencies for delivery to alternative
locations. The incomplete information, based on the inputs of two
out of the five agencies involved, indicates that 97 per cent of the
goods to be subject to paragraph 4 of resolution 1472 (2003) are
in-transit goods – 100 per cent for WFP and about 90 per cent for
UNDP (see Table 2 for currently
available details). The
emerging outcome is not entirely unexpected – responses to UN
agencies on priority goods not yet shipped indicate that suppliers
would be able to ship goods in 21 - 210 days, subject to issuance of
letter of credit. The average number of days required by suppliers
to start shipping the goods was 45 from the date of issuance of
letter of credit, where the issuance is still pending. This average
indicates that many suppliers have also been trying to fit their
deliveries into the mandated 45-day period, often not aware that the
period must cover not only shipping of the goods, but also all
contractual changes, and issuance of approval and letter of credit,
where applicable.
Naturally,
the tentative shipping times reported for cases where suppliers hold
valid letter of credit were much shorter, ranging from 7 - 35 days,
as opposed to 21 - 210 days reported for cases where no letter of
credit had been issued. The tentative shipping times reported by the
contacted suppliers are, in general, shorter for food items but
longer for items such as medicines and electricity equipment that
require longer production lead times. If the reported tentative
shipping times are compared with a 45-day period mandated for
shipping of the goods under resolution 1472 (2003), it becomes clear
why a number of contracts initially considered as priorities had to
be removed from the list once the details of possible shipping
schedule were established through direct contacts with suppliers.
In
summary, the 45-day deadline remains the main reason for a limited
number of contracts to be ultimately considered and processed under
paragraph 4 of resolution 1472 (2003), especially when it comes to
un-funded contracts and/or contracts with no letter of credit issued
that are eligible for prioritization under 1472 (2003), but could
not meet all the requirements during the 45-day period, to include
amendment negotiations and actual shipping of the goods.
Table 2 – Priority goods
that can be shipped by 12 May 2003 (as at 21 April 2003)
UN
agency
|
TOTAL
|
In
transit
|
Not
in transit
|
#
|
US$
|
#
|
US$
|
#
|
US$
|
WFP
|
38
|
$236,366,898
|
38
|
$236,366,898
|
0
|
0
|
WHO
|
70
|
$53,065,870
|
-
|
N/A*
|
-
|
N/A*
|
FAO**
|
16
|
$27,820,906
|
-
|
N/A*
|
-
|
N/A*
|
UNICEF
|
13
|
$18,005,155
|
-
|
N/A*
|
-
|
N/A*
|
UNDP
|
23
|
$119,326,777
|
15
|
$108,918,955
|
9
|
$10,407,822
|
TOTAL
|
160
|
$454,585,607
|
53*
|
$345,285,853
|
9*
|
$10,407,822*
|
* UN agency did not provide breakdown of transit and
non-transit goods (incomplete data)
** Data as of 14/04/03. UN agency did not provide 21/04/03
update
4.
Non-priority goods in transit. The Office of Iraq Programme (OIP) has contacted a number of suppliers
of non-priority contracts who initially reported goods in transit
and sought further information, to include a proof of shipping on or
before 17 March 2003, in order to process these goods under
paragraph 4 (g) of the resolution.
Of 364 contracts initially included in the transit
non-priority list, contacts have been made in 310 cases, with
contacts pending for the rest. These contacts and further review of
available paperwork revealed that almost 50 per cent of non-priority
goods/contracts (151 out of 310) initially reported to OIP by
suppliers to be in transit turned out not be in transit at all. The
UN agencies contacting suppliers for priority goods in transit
apparently found the same, albeit on a smaller scale. As a result of
these exchanges, the total number of contracts and the value
believed to be in transit have now been considerably reduced in
comparison to the original estimates. Summary of contracts in
transit is provided in Table 3 and a detailed list will be provided
to the members of the 661 Committee electronically.
Table 3 – contracts in
transit as at 21 March 2003
|
No.
of contracts
|
Total
value of line items
|
Total
value already delivered
|
Total
value in ballance*
|
Total
of contracts considered to be in transit
|
268
|
$1,628.6M
|
$609.6M
|
$1,019M*
|
Transit
goods/contracts adopted by the UN agencies
|
82
|
$954M
|
$428.6M
|
$524.5M*
|
Transit
goods/contracts NOT adopted by the UN agencies
|
186
|
$674.6M
|
$181M
|
$493.6M*
|
* Please note that the values
indicate total for goods yet to be delivered and not the value of
goods that may be shipped by 12 May 2003. Only partial shipments of
the balance goods are possible by 12/05/03 in many cases.
OIP
will continue to collect responses from the suppliers of
non-priority goods in transit and process them to the extent
possible.
5.
Processing of amendments on priority goods in
transit. So
far, the Office of Iraq Programme has received and processed six
such amendments. All six were submitted by WFP and involve contracts
for wheat, sugar and rice. The total value of the contracts was
reduced by $31.91 million as the result of the amendments, mainly
due to the change in transport and insurance costs to the suppliers
but also through reduction of quantities to be delivered in some
cases. The net cost to the escrow account, however, will ultimately
have to include storing of the goods to be received in alternative
locations and transport of these goods to Iraq.
6.
Alternative delivery locations. There
were no new authentications of goods delivered to alternative
locations under the Programme since the arrival of 50,000 tons of
wheat to Kuwait last week. Apart from presence in the ports in
Turkey, Syria and Jordan, a team of 10 UN Independent Inspection
Agents (Cotecna) has established presence in Kuwait.
Cotecna staff briefly visited their offices in Umm Qasr and
found furniture and office equipment completely looted, cabling,
light fittings and power outlets either stolen or damaged and the
office files in disarray.
7.
Information to suppliers.
A new notice for
suppliers, to include updated priority and transit goods lists, was
posted on OIP website on Thursday, 17 April 2003. The notice
primarily advised suppliers of priority contracts with goods that
can be shipped within 45-day timeframe and those with goods in
transit on actions being taken. The notice further informed the
suppliers of other goods that any further action on such goods
would be subject to decisions by the Security Council. At
this point, very little new information can be made available to
suppliers of non-transit and non-priority goods by OIP although the
number of queries on such goods addressed to OIP has increased
dramatically over the past several weeks. Further updates will
follow shortly.
8.
Applications for emergency supplies outside
the Programme. Paragraph
7 of resolution 1472 (2003) provides for fast-track approval of
contracts for emergency supplies outside the Programme, which remain
subject to sanctions provision. The number of such applications has
increased further and stands at 128 applications as at 21 April 2003
or 22 more than reported last week.
Most of the applications (84) have been submitted by the UN
agencies and programmes and other international organizations, to
include UNICEF (60), WFP (15), ICRC (12) and WHO (6). The remaining
44 have been submitted by various permanent missions on behalf of
NGOs to include USA (10), France
(6), UK (6) and Belgium (5).
9.
Processing of applications under the Goods Review List (GRL).
The
influx of new applications under the Programme has been considerable
after 17 March 2003 – total of 698 applications worth over $1.5
billion have been received and registered by the Office of Iraq
Programme since then. Last week, OIP received 76 new applications,
most of them (61) under the ESB (59 per cent) account.
This was for the first time in weeks that the number of new
applications was below the weekly average, perhaps an indication of
a huge influx gradually subsiding.
Table
4 contains details of applications in various stages of processing
by OIP and UNMOVIC/IAEA as at 21 April 2003. These applications will
retain their current status until further notice.
Table
4 – 59% account applications in processing (21/04/03)
Processing
status
|
#
|
US$
value
|
OIP
Review
|
230
|
$739.1M
|
Non-compliant/
Inactive
|
347
|
$2,596.9M
|
UNMOVIC/IAEA
Review
|
118
|
$497.4M
|
GRL
Non-compliant
|
867
|
$2,489M
|
GRL
Notice
|
25
|
$94.1M
|
GRL
Processing
|
140
|
$636.7M
|
TOTAL
|
1,740
|
$7,053.2M
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Other
Implementation Updates
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