November
2014
Board of Directors
Representative of the
Border States
Public member who is a
resident of the border
region
Mandate Scope
BASIC SECTORS
Water pollution
Wastewater treatment
Water conservation
Municipal solid waste
Industrial and hazardous waste
Recycling and waste reduction
JURISDICTION
100 km north
(population 13.9
million) and 300 km
south (population
26.1 million) of the
international
boundary.
The BECC/NADBank
region covers 30% of
Mexicos territory and
contains 18% of the
countrys population.
EXPANDED SECTORS
Air quality
Clean and efficient energy
Public transportation
Municipal planning and development
International border crossings
Energy transmission / distribution of
energy
Production of goods / services to
enhance or protect the environment, if
the project provides a net
environmental benefit to the region
Other infrastructure designed to
minimize future negative environmental 4
Sections
I. Certification
II. Technical Assistance
III.Results: Outputs and
Impact
IV.Climate Change
V. Technical Publications
6
Certification Criteria
General
Human Health and
Environment
Technical Feasibility
Financial Feasibility
Public Participation
Sustainable Development
Project Development Cycle
Execute
Project scoping Environmental Technical/Legal
Criteria
compliance
Financial
authorization Financial due
Preliminary
evaluation
diligence
Agreements
Land and
engineering
Results
estimates
Formal credit
Procurement of
ROW
Technology
Technical
Review
proposal
Construction/
acquisition
selection
Committee
Credit committee
Supervision
Design
Site/resource
30-day comment
Implementation
assessment
period
Financial planning
Board review and
decision
Validation of
inputs/
outputs
Evaluation of
results
achievements
Reporting
Feedback
loop
California,
113
Projects
in
113
Projects
in BECC Technical
26
Arizona,
Assistance
USA
Projects
20
USA
$ 1,229.93 Projects
New
dollars)
$$ 3.302
billion
Texas,
Mexico,
3.302
billion (million
$ 359.16
Baja
72 Communities in Mexico
56
10 Projects
California,
Projects
$ 68.49
$16.30
34
$
1,643.92
Projects
93 Communities in USA
$ 1,574.01Sonora, Chihuahua Coahuila,
,
$29.48
5 Projects
29
28
$ 162.99
PDAP/BECC Tech.
Projects
Projects
Nuevo
Assistance from 1995 to
$ 640.43 $ 512.90
Leon,
2014 = $45.79
8 Projects
Approx. 85% of these
126
Tamaulipas
126 Projects
Projects in
in Mxico
Mxico $ 759.28
funding2012
have resulted
in
,
Border
and 2020
$$ 4.907
4.907 billion
billion
21
implemented or in-progress
Programs
Projects
(million
dollars)
projects.
$ 1,250.26
Certified projects
238
Total investment (million dollars)
$8,208
NADB financing* (millions dollars)
$2,340
Benefited population (million)
17.5
Projects
financed by NADB*
197
*Only active contracts, including grants
2005-2014: $10.80
257 projects
NADB Technical
Assistance
(million dollars)
24 Energy
Inputs / Outcomes
N
EE
D
RE
21 Drinking Water Treatment Plants and 39 Drinking Water
S
Distribution Systems
UL
T
61 Wastewater Treatment Plants and 95 Wastewater
Systems
23Collection
Water Conservation
Projects
12
Sections
I. Certification
II. Technical Assistance
III.Results: Outputs and
Impact
IV.Climate Change
V. Technical Publications
13
13
15
Over the past two years, BECC and NADB have begun to
coordinate their TA programs, including jointly funding several
studies.
Both institutions have successfully implemented TA programs
aimed at developing high quality environmental infrastructure
projects and promoting capacity-building for project sponsors
and other stakeholders. Eligibility requirements for both
16
Partnerships
Ongoing CoFunding
Activities:
Management
Coordination
Transparency
18
Organization
19
Key Accomplishments
20
21
No. of tires by
EPA /BECC
(B2012)
City
No. of tires by
SEMARNAT and
other funds
Total Tires
Removed
Cd. Juarez,
Chihuahua
925,606
1,154,394
2,080,000
Mexicali, Baja
California
300,000
900,000
1,200,000
200,000
200,000
P. Negras, Coahuila
150,000
150,000
22,000
22,000
300,000
300,000
Reynosa, Tamaulipas
300,000
300,000
200,000
Matamoros,
Tamaulipas
150,000
73,000
Laredo, Texas
10,000
TOTAL
73,000
73,000
1,980,606
22,000
10,000
10,000
2,054,394
4,035,000
22
23
Sections
I. Certification
II. Technical Assistance
III.Results: Outputs and
Impact
IV.Climate Change
V. Technical Publications
24
24
Four perspectives
36 Objectives (2014)
102 Initiatives and actions
Vision, mission, goals
and objectives
Four pillars - internal
operational programs
Impact
Assessment
Results
Measurements
Balanced Score-Card
Results Measurements
Framework
Results Project
chain cycle
Certification
Inputs
Results
Measurements
construction
Activities & Outputs
Operation
Outcomes
Close-Out
Process
1-yr
operation
Impacts
Impact
Assessment
26
27
New WWT
28.0 MGD
WWT Improvements
47.0 MGD
Total
75.0 MGD
BECC/NADB participation in 50% of
total existing WWTP capacity
Las Arenitas, San Antonio de los
Buenos, Zaragoza, Tecate and La
Morita
Objectives
Increase
access to
sustainable
potable water
service
1:
2:
3:
4:
Outputs
Outcomes
Number of
Water
households with
Project Certification
*:
distribution
Compliance with certification criteria and access
financing.
newto NADB
access
to the
infrastructure
water distribution
built or
system
improved (e.g.
Number of new
distribution
connections to
lines, storage,
the water
pumping)
distribution
system
Close-Out
Impact
Increase in number of
households connected
Increase in number of
households connected
with plumbing inside
house
Increase in number of
households using piped
water for drinking
purposes
Increase in compliance
with drinking water
quality standards in the
distribution system
Increase in the reliability
of the distribution
system
Reduction in the
percentage of water loss
via leaks
29
IA Case Studies
Wastewater projects in the Valle de
Juarez, Chihuahua for 5 communities
(Dr. Porfirio Parra, Guadalupe,
Praxedis G. Guerrero, Col.
Esperanza, and El Porvenir)
Statistics
278 survey questionnaires applied in 10 communities (160 applied in
5 communities with BECC/NADB projects)
36 interviews with local officers (in synthesis process)
79 samples collected to determine 27 physical-chemical and 6
microbiological parameters (2,607 lab analysis performed)
31
200
8
200
9
201
2
80%
70%
60%
70.0%
69.8%
67.6%
64.4%
69.0%
66.3%
52.5%
50%
40%
30%
84.5%
83.4%
45.9%
37.6%39.0%
33.8%
28.3%
41.0%
35.3%
37.1%
26.7%
20%
10%
0%
Remarks:
The number of
agriculture workers
increased in the last 2
years
The % of households
connected to the
sewer, households
with plumbing inside,
and continuity of
service are
maintained, despite
the population
increase.
The % of households
giving additional
treatment to the
drinking water
continued to fall
steadily.
32
50
45
43
40
2009
35
2014
30
25
20
15
13
Improper handling of
the well detected
10
5
0
8
5
3
0
2
0
33
Descriptor
60%
63%
0%
33%
55%
47%
30%
25%
100%
25%
9%
33%
Public Water
Source
Vinton Village
Estates
Vinton Hills
Subdivision
Hillside Water
Works
El Paso Water
Utilities
Arsenic
TDS
average of average of
ALL
ALL
samples
samples
(ppb)
(ppm)
9.55
666
5.01
897
10.9
794
6.63
497
IA study completed
Final report released on May
2014
34
35
Sections
I. Certification
II. Technical Assistance
III.Results: Outputs and
Impact
IV.Climate Change
V. Technical Publications
36
36
Publicaciones
37
15.6
37.0
38
a
So
no
r
ila
1st phase
concluded in
2011
2nd phase on
hold
1st phase
concluded
in 2011
2nd phase
in progress,
to be
concluded
in July 2015
as
lip
au
m
Ta
u
ah
Co
a
hu
fo
i
l
Ca a
ua
ih
Ch
1st phase
concluded in
2011
2nd phase in
progress, to be
concluded ina
j
i
December
Ba2014
rn
1st phase
concluded in
September
2014
2nd phase
scheduled for
2015
1st phase
in
progress,
to be
concluded
in March
2015
40
Energy Audits
Completed - 5 energy audits
41
PRESENTED BY:
-MDBConsultingEngineers,LLC
ComisindeEnergadeBajaCalifornia
ComisinEstataldeAguadeBajaCaliforniaandtheWaterUtilitiesofEnsenada,Playasde
Rosarito,Tijuana,TecateandMexicali
OBJETIVE
Identify opportunities to develop local technical capacity, improve
energy efficiency and water conservation, consider the implementation
of renewable energy systems for self-generation and quantify the GHG
emission reduction potential, as well as the savings resulting from the
recommended projects. The program will be executed in 60 months.
42
Source: www.nrel.gov
43
44
Sections
I. Certification
II. Technical Assistance
III.Results: Outputs and
Impact
IV.Climate Change
V. Technical Publications
45
45
Technical Publications
46
46
Drinkin
g Water
Sewer
Wastewa
ter
Treatme
nt
42.81
56.51
85.70
185.02
Sonora
58
23.12
22.91
156.14
202.17
Chihuah
ua
46
23.60
24.85
105.03
153.48
Coahuila
35
23.34
37.35
198.28
258.97
Nuevo
Leon
50
46.93
33.28
14.01
94.22
Tamauli
pas
30
35.95
77.91
98.91
212.77
TOTALS
224
195.74
252.81
658.07
$1,106.63
MD
State
Baja
Californi
a
# of
Municipali
ties
Total
48
49
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
BECC
Border Environment
Cooperation Commission
Blvd. Toms Fernndez 8069
Cd. Jurez, Chihuahua, 32470
Mxico
Tel: (656) 688.4600
Fax: (656) 625.6180
www.cocef.org
62