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Tajikistan: Independent Administrator for EITI Report

Request for proposals

Closing date

Description

The EITI in Tajikistan (PBO-EITI) is seeking proposals for program to prepare and publish an EITI report for the Republic of Tajikistan for 2019, 2020 and 2021 fiscal years. 

PBO-EITI seeks a competent and credible firm, free from conflicts of interest, to provide Independent Administrator services in accordance with the EITI Standard. The objective of the assignment is to support the MSG in strengthening disclosures in accordance with the EITI Standard, provide an assessment of the comprehensiveness and reliability of the disclosures, and support the MSG in agreeing recommendations for strengthening government systems and natural resource governance.

The Independent Administrator is expected to:

  • Produce a scoping study to inform the MSG’s decision on the scope of the 2019, 2020 and 2021 EITI Report.
  • Produce an EITI Report and associated data files for 2019-2021 in accordance with the EITI Standard, and section 3, below.
  • Provide advice to accountable government agencies and companies on filling out the necessary forms for information disclosure.
  • Perform any additional tasks and work needed by the National Council as part of this process.

Application instructions

Proposals should be submitted by e-mail to hr@fsvc.org no later than 18:00 TJT on 25 November 2022.

Email submissions must include the following subject line: “Proposal – FSVC Tajikistan EITI”

Proposals should be in line with the requirements outlined in the Terms of Reference (ToR) provided on this page.

For more information: PBO-EITI website

About EITI

We believe that a country’s natural resources belong to its citizens. Our mission is to promote understanding of natural resource management, strengthen public and corporate governance and accountability, and provide the data to inform policymaking and multi-stakeholder dialogue in the extractive sector. By becoming a member of the Extractives Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), countries commit to disclose information along the extractive industry value chain – from how extraction rights are awarded, to how revenues make their way through government and how they benefit the public. Through participation in the EITI, more than 50 countries have agreed to a common set of rules governing what has to be disclosed and when – the EITI Standard. In each country that has joined the EITI, a multi-stakeholder group, composed of government, companies and civil society, supports implementation of the EITI Standard.