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17 July 2003
Weekly
Update
(12-18
July 2003)
Oil-for-Food
Supplies Worth $1.9 billion
Prioritized
for Early Delivery to Iraq
Multi
million dollar contracts for heavy equipment and spare parts for
Iraq’s oil and electricity sectors have been prioritized
for
immediate delivery following consultations this month with the
Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), Iraqi representatives and UN
agencies.
The
contracts, chosen from the Oil-for-Food Programme’s humanitarian
pipeline are fully funded from pre-war oil sales and include items
urgently needed for the rehabilitation of Iraq’s infrastructure.
Regular
weekly meetings of UN and Iraqi experts and CPA advisors have so far
produced a list of 1,419 contracts with items totaling $1.95
billion,
including
the oil sector ($1.038 billion); electricity ($794 million); water
and sanitation ($54 million); Youth and Sports ($19.4 million);
Labor and Social Affairs ($11 million). Prioritized contracts
listed
by sector and country of origin will be posted on the OIP website.
Adoption
of resolution 1483 by the UN Security Council on 22 May opened the
door to a close working relationship between the parties to move
urgently needed items from the Programme pipeline of fully funded
contracts totaling some $10 billion. Delivery of these items into
the country was interrupted by war on 20 March and resumed only
partially with the adoption of resolution 1472 on 28 March giving
authority to the Secretary General to prioritize the shipping of
emergency humanitarian supplies
only.
Resolution 1483 expanded the menu of deliverable items from food,
medicines and health, water and sanitation supplies to include goods
and supplies deemed by all parties to have “relative utility”
based on post-war assessments of immediate and longer term
reconstruction needs.
The
dimensions of this month’s list, with more items and sectors to
follow, indicates the importance given to immediate needs in the
electricity and oil sectors. The lists of contracts in each sector
represent more than 70 per cent of the total approved and funded
contracts contained in the Oil-for-Food pipeline for these sectors.
The
relevant UN agencies and programmes will begin to work directly with
suppliers concerned with the prioritized contracts to expedite
shipments once locations have been identified
for
their delivery.
Emergency
Deliveries
Deliveries
under resolution 1472 now total $452 million of the $1.4 billion
worth of prioritized contracts contained in the
pipeline. Most are in the food ($381 million), electricity ($47
million) and health ($13 million) sectors.
Local
Procurement
A
concerted effort is being made to encourage and expand local
procurement as the most expeditious and cost effective way of
providing the required goods and services.
Local procurement would also help to jump-start the economy
and provide opportunities for gainful employment for the Iraqi
people.
Local procurement
under resolution 1472, funded from the Iraq escrow account,
so far includes: 1.25 million tons of wheat by the World Food
Programme (WFP) at an estimated cost of $152.4 million; and 500,000
tons of barley worth $35.4 million by the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO). Another
FAO project for the local procurement of wheat and barley seeds
valued at $860,210 was approved this week.
Additional information is available from the website
of the Office of the Iraq Programme. For further information
please contact Ian Steele email: steelei@un.org
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