Request for Applications for Market Actors to Increase the Availability and Affordability of Quality Compost in the Karongi Rubavu and Bugesera Districts at Cultivating New Frontiers in Agriculture (CNFA)
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Section 1 – General Information

Solicitation Type:

Request for Applications (RFA)

RFA Number:

CNFA-HW-RFA-004-11-2024 

Grant Purpose/ Title:

Request for Applications for market actors to increase the availability and affordability of quality compost in the Karongi Rubavu and Bugesera districts.

Granting Party:

From: Cultivating New Frontiers in Agriculture (CNFA)

For: USAID

Under: Feed the Future Rwanda Hinga Wunguke Activity, No. 72069623CA00001

Release Date:

12 November , 2024

Point of Contact for Question and Application Submission:

Name:

Title:

Email:

Jean Pierre Murekezi

Extension Advisor

coinvestmentfund@cnfarwanda.org with copy  to jmurekezi@cnfarwanda.org

Questions:

Questions Deadline: November 30,  2024 at 5:00 CAT

Instructions: Questions must be submitted in writing via application e-mail; phone calls will not be accepted. Only CNFA’s written answers will be considered official and carry weight in the solicitation and subsequent evaluation. Verbal information received from CNFA or any other entity should not be considered an official response to any questions.  

Application Submission:

Application Deadline: December 21,  2024 at 5:00 CAT

Applications received after the specified deadline will be considered late and will be considered only at the discretion of CNFA.

Via:

☒ Email

☐ Hard copy

☐ Email or Hard copy

Language: Applications will be accepted in English.

Instructions:

Applications will only be accepted in the format provided in this solicitation. Applicants are additionally instructed to:

  • Include the RFA number in the email subject line.
  • Provide registration documentation for the organization in Rwanda.
  • Request a confirmation of receipt to ensure the submission was received.

Terms and Conditions:

  • Applicants understand by submitting a response to this RFA that submission does not constitute an award or commitment on the part of CNFA, the Hinga Wunguke, or USAID.
  • USAID is not party to this solicitation. Any and all communications regarding this solicitation will be conducted with CNFA, not USAID.
  • CNFA will not pay for costs incurred in the preparation and submission of an application.
  • CNFA reserves the right to accept or reject any or all applications received and/or issue amendments revising RFA terms before or after application receipt.
  • Applicants will be informed in writing of the decision made regarding their application.

Language:

Response to this CNFA-HW-RFA-004-11-2024 will be accepted in English

Attachments:

The following Attachments are included and hereby incorporated as part of this RFA:

  • Attachment A – Grant Application
  • Attachment B – Activity Budget (Excel)

Section 2 – Program Description

2.1. Introduction: Hinga Wunguke is a five-year Activity of USAID in Rwanda and implemented by Cultivating New Frontiers in Agriculture (CNFA). CNFA is an international agricultural development organization that specializes in the design and implementation of sustainable, enterprise-based agricultural initiatives. Using a market systems development (MSD) approach, Hinga Wunguke aims to increase incomes and improve nutritional outcomes by sustainably increasing agricultural productivity and strengthening domestic consumption of and markets for nutritious agricultural products. Hinga Wunguke is designed to achieve four complementary objectives: (1) sustainably increase agriculture productivity, (2) increase farmer and agribusiness access to finance, (3) improve market and nutrition outcomes for producers, and (4) strengthen the enabling environment to foster market-driven agriculture.

2.2. Co-Investment Fund (CIF) Purpose:

The Co-Investment Fund (CIF) is a matching grant facility dedicated to co-investing with private-sector partners in new or existing business models and technologies, expand existing models to new markets or products, and support achievement of Hinga Wunguke objectives with prioritization of the inclusion of women, youth and persons with disabilities (PWDs).  The CIF is used to leverage private sector investment and formalize partnerships with market actors to inclusively strengthen food market systems in the Hinga Wunguke target districts.

Awards resulting from the CIF will represent a partnership between CNFA and CIF grant recipients. Applicants will be required to match investments from their own businesses, or own funding source, to ensure ownership and sustainability of new business activities or innovations introduced through the grant mechanism. Hinga Wunguke recognizes that some co-investment partners may need capacity building support or technical assistance to carry out these activities. Applicants are encouraged to specify their needs for technical assistance and/or training in their application, which will be considered for approval and funding on a case-by-case basis.  

Target Value Chains and districts: Hinga Wunguke is looking for partners with sustainable business models to increase the availability and affordability of quality compost focusing on the Karongi, Rubavu and Bugesera districts. Applicants should target farmer customers or suppliers of raw material from the following value chains: maize, Irish potatoes, orange-fleshed sweet potatoes (OFSP), beans (all varieties), soybeans, tomato, carrots, passion fruit, avocado, mango, and peas (dry and green peas).

2.3. RFA Purpose: This RFA seeks grant applicants to co-invest with Hinga Wunguke in increasing the availability and affordability of good quality compost in the Karongi, Rubavu, and Bugesera districts to improve soil health and productivity in those districts. Compost is one of the key inputs to improve soil health by enhancing its structure, boosting nutrient content, and promoting microbial activity. This leads to better water retention, reduced erosion, and higher crop yields, increasing agricultural productivity. Additionally, compost reduces the need for chemical inputs, making farming more sustainable. By improving soil's moisture-holding capacity, compost helps farmers better cope with droughts and erratic rainfall, thus enhancing resilience to climate change. It fosters healthier ecosystems, enabling farmers to maintain productivity despite changing environmental conditions.

Illustrative activities eligible for funding under this RFA include:

  • Production of compost using organic wastes from households and markets as an alternative source of raw materials to reduce reliance on grass from forests and fields.
  • Establishing sorting/collection points for organic municipal wastes as raw materials to produce quality compost
  • Supporting existing compost businesses to improve their product and expand their market
  • Technologies with innovations that improve the quality of compost, reduce production cycle  and increase affordability of compost.
  • Compost processing equipment and materials to speed up the decomposition process.

Partnerships awarded under this partnership are expected to contribute to the following Hinga Wunguke indicators :

  • Number of individuals participating in USG food security programs
  • Number of hectares under improved management practices or technologies
  • Number of individuals in the agriculture system who have applied improved management practices or technologies with USG assistance
  • Value of sales of quality inputs, services, and technologies promoted by market actors as a result of USG assistance
  • Value of new private sector investment leveraged by the USG to support food security and nutrition.

CNFA expects grants awarded under this RFA to meet the following parameters:

Estimated Value:

up to $50,000 per grantee (approx. 67.4 million RWF)

Anticipated Period of Performance:

18 months of partnership per each successful grantee

Minimum Grantee Leverage Contribution

40%

Target Geographic Location:

Karongi, Rubavu and Bugesera districts (Required)

Must be reaching farmer customers in these districts. Business may be located elsewhere but serving farmer customers in the targeted districts.

Applicants must target farmer customers growing the following value chains:

Maize, Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes (orange fleshed and other varieties), beans (all varieties), soybeans, tomato, carrots, passion fruit, avocado, mango, and peas (dry and green peas).

Target Recipients:

Youth and women-led companies, SMEs, agricultural cooperatives, private companies.

 2.4. Award Mechanism: CNFA anticipates awarding In-kind and Fixed-amount Award-type grants to selected applicants. Other grant mechanisms may be considered depending on the results of a specific applicant’s application, pre-award assessment, and site visit, as applicable. Award mechanism(s) are defined as:

  • In-Kind Grant: CNFA acts as the direct payer of grant costs and is responsible for the procurement of all goods and/or services stipulated in the grant budget. Funds are not provided directly to the grantee. All expenses must adhere to CNFA Procurement Policy and USAID regulations. The grantee will work closely with CNFA to plan procurement needs to support grant achievement.
  • Fixed Amount Award: Intended to reduce administrative burden and record-keeping requirements for the grantee, grant payments are based on completion of milestones (activities) that demonstrate performance for results. Goals and activities must be measurable, and there must be adequate cost, historical, or pricing data available to establish an award value. Real property cannot be purchased (i.e. land, land improvements, structures, and appurtenances thereto – excluding moveable machinery and equipment).

Section 3 – Applicant Eligibility

3.1. Eligibility Requirements: To be considered eligible for grant receipt, applicants must meet the following eligibility criteria:   

Category

Requirement

Administrative

  • Submit an application, with all supporting annexes, in the format required in Section 1.
  • Be one of the following types of entities: Private companies, agricultural cooperatives.
  • Be legally registered in Rwanda.
  • Have, or be willing to obtain, a Unique Entity Identifier (UEI).

Programmatic

  •  Be located within or directly target beneficiaries within the geographic locations of the Karongi, Rubavu, and Bugesera districts.
  • Propose objectives aligned with the project objective and grant program purpose.
  • Impact a significant number of beneficiaries, including targeting farmer customers growing the following crops: maize, Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes (orange fleshed and other varieties), beans (all varieties), soybeans, tomato, carrots, passion fruit, avocado, mango, and peas (dry and green peas)
  • Willingness to share data related to the grant with CNFA.
  • Comply with USAID environmental standards, including environmental screening and establishment of environmental mitigation and monitoring plan for the anticipated grants activities if the activities have a potential adverse environmental impact.
  • Comply with the Government of Rwanda's environmental standards, including using compost-making standards from the Rwanda Standard Board, obtaining an operation license from the Rwanda Utilities Regulatory Authority, and environmental impact assessment from the Rwanda Development Board.

Financial

  • Meet minimum leverage requirements identified in Section 2.3
  • Implement Rwandan Accounting Standards.
  • Be prepared to undertake an independent financial review or audit, as requested
  • Maintain business, financial, and technical records – either manually or electronically
  • Be committed to adhering to high ethical business standards, including transparency in business dealings and record keeping.

Compliance

  • Adhere to high ethical business standards, including transparency in business dealings and record-keeping
  • Complete and pass a site-visit and pre-award assessment, as applicable
  • Agree to and sign applicable certifications, such as but not limited to the Certifications Regarding Lobbying; Terrorist Financing; Prohibition on Assistance to Drug Traffickers; Certification of the Recipient; etc.
  • Agree to the terms and conditions of required US Government Regulations, such as 2 CFR 200, Standard and Required as Applicable Provisions for Non-US NGOs, and others as applicable
  • Certify the applicant and its principals are not debarred, suspended, or proposed for exclusion from receipt of USG funds
  • Must be willing to obtain a USG Unique Entity Identification (UEI) number prior to grant award signature.

3.2. Ineligible Applicants: The following entities are ineligible for grant funds:  

  • Government Ministry, Agency, or another public agency
  • Entities with a conflict of interest or appearance of a conflict of interest with CNFA, Hinga Wunguke, USAID, or CNFA’s implementing partners (USDA Food for Progress (FFPr)
  • Entities with key staff who are direct relatives (spouse, child, parent, sibling) of CNFA, Hinga Wunguke staff, USAID staff, or CNFA’s implementing partners’ staff FFPr
  • Entities or members that appear on the US Department of Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) and Blocked Persons list, the UN Security Council consolidated list, or in the System for Award Management (SAM) database
  • Entities or members engaged in any activities related to Trafficking in Persons
  • Entities or members engaged, transacting with, or providing resources to individuals or organizations associated with terrorism
  • Entities that have been debarred, suspended, or otherwise considered ineligible for an award by the US Government

3.3. Unallowable Costs: Applicants may not use grant funds for any of the following:  

  • Private ceremonies, parties, celebrations, or “representation” expenses 
  • Purchases or activities deemed unnecessary to accomplish grant purposes, including any applicant headquarters’ expenses that are not directly linked to the implementation of the proposed project
  • Previous obligations and/or bad debts
  • Fines and/or penalties
  • Creation of endowments
  • Indirect costs – such as overhead or indirect fringe – unless the applicant has documented proof of such rates through audits, USG-issued NICRA, or is claiming the de minimis rate 
  • Any other costs unallowable per the applicable Cost Principles
  • While not unallowable, applicants are discouraged from including restricted goods in their application(s) unless they are critical to the accomplishment of grant objectives, which include: agricultural commodities, motor vehicles, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, used equipment, or fertilizers. Purchase of these goods requires additional approvals from USAID before they may be procured.
  • Ineligible goods, including military equipment; surveillance equipment; police or law enforcement equipment; abortion equipment and services; weather modification equipment; luxury goods; and gambling equipment.
  • Construction, defined as construction, alteration, or repair (including dredging and excavation) of buildings, structures, or other real property, including – without limitation – improvements, renovation, alteration, and refurbishment. Construction includes, without limitation, roads, power plants, buildings, bridges, water treatment facilities, and vertical structures. It does not include the emplacement and removal of prefabricated structures and humanitarian structures designed and constructed to be readily moved, erected, disassembled, stored, and reused (i.e. relocatable building) unless the emplacement and removal requires site preparation work that meets the definition of construction.

Section 4 – Application Evaluation 

4.1. Evaluation Criteria: All applications submitted in response to this solicitation will be evaluated in accordance with the following criteria:   

Criteria

Description

Points

Business Model – Will/skill and Sustainability

  • Has incentives to implement the proposed model.
  • Has the capacity (skill) to implement the proposed model (demonstrated by prior business experience).
  • The extent to which the proposed business model can become financially viable over time without relying on external support. How will target groups continue to be served even beyond the partnership timeline?
  • Proposing an environmentally friendly and rapid composting technology.
  • Producing a high-quality compost at a moderately affordable price.  
  • Having prior experience in compost making industry as a business in Rwanda.
  • Demonstrated technical knowledge of the business opportunity in the proposed solution and potential management capacity to implement the business model.

20 points

Shared Goal and Values

  • Alignment of the proposed partnership activity with Hinga Wunguke goals and objectives cited in Section 1, including the inclusion of women, youth, and people with disabilities as owners, managers, employees, and/or customers; and addresses cross-cutting themes such as gender equity and social inclusion, climate change, and environmental sustainability.
  • Alignment of the proposed business model with the following technical areas: a) using organic municipal waste; b) adding volcanic ash in composting materials as an additive, and; c) making compost under shed (infrastructure).

25 points

Budget

  • Proposes a budget within the allocated grant size.
  • Proposes a reasonable budget and understanding of the market cost in comparison with the proposed impact.
  • Proposed costs are allowable, allocable & reasonable.
  • Demonstrated organizational and financial capacity of the applicant to meet the demands of implementing the proposed partnership activity, including the ability to contribute an appropriate co-investment.

15 points

Leverage Contribution

 

The applicant proposes an appropriate amount of cost share/leverage that they can be held accountable for. Higher grantee co-investment will be favored if considered reasonable and achievable, especially from applicants that exceed the 40% minimum required contribution.

10 points

Implementation Plan

The applicant demonstrates a well-thought-out implementation plan with sufficient and realistic detail, including a sustainability and scalability plan of the proposed business solution.  

15 points

 

Expected impact

Envisions shared goals and impact contributing to the Hinga Wunguke indicators outlined under Section 2.3. “RFA Purpose.”

15 points

Total 

100

4.2. Evaluation and Pre-Selection:

Members of the Hinga Wunguke Grant Technical Evaluation  Committee will evaluate applications in accordance with the above selection criteria. Hinga Wunguke will notify successful applicants if their application is considered acceptable. Hinga Wunguke may contact unsuccessful applicants if time and resources allow.

If the application is considered acceptable for pre-selection, CNFA will contact the applicant to engage in further discussions. A decision to engage in a more in-depth and specific discussion following initial selection is not a commitment to funding; it is simply a decision to move forward in the collaborative and joint effort to develop an impactful grant project.

  • If discussions do not – inHinga Wunguke’s sole opinion – result in the development of a grant activity worthy of further pursuit, CNFA will inform the applicant that it is no longer interested in advancing the grant application.

If the discussions result in a promising design and concept, CNFAwill inform the applicant of that determination. Pre-selected applicants will be required to complete additional due diligence checks, which may include but are not limited to:

  • Pre-Award Assessment: to assess the operational, administrative, financial, and governance structures of the applicant
  • Environmental Assessment: to assess the impact on the environment based on the application received
  • Site Visit: to verify the information asserted in the application
  • Vetting: to ensure the applicant and its principals are not excluded from receipt of funding

If the due diligence uncovers no major issues, CNFA will provide the necessary instructions, technical requirements, and the next steps of grant award.   

Section 5 – Authority and Governing Regulations

Any grant awards by Hinga Wunguke under this Solicitation are made under the authority of the US Foreign Affairs Act and USAID’s Automated Directive System (ADS) Chapter 303, “Grants and Cooperative Agreements to Non-Governmental Organizations,” and 2 CFR 200. Grants administered by CNFA will adhere to the terms of the applicable USAID Standard and Required as Applicable Provisions, as well as the Hinga Wunguke grants procedures. Hinga Wunguke is required to ensure that all applicants receiving USAID grant funds comply with the requirements found in these regulations, as applicable to the respective terms and conditions of individual grant awards.

Applicants are made aware that USAID retains the right, at all times, to terminate, in whole or in part, the Hinga Wunguke ’s grant-making authorities or any grants in progress. 

ATTACHMENT A – GRANT APPLICATION FORM

 General Information  

Submission of this grant application is FREE OF CHARGE. Applicants are solely responsible for submitting applications. Hinga Wunguke will not reimburse expenses associated with the preparation and submission of application materials. CNFA and USAID reserve the right to decline any application received. Incomplete applications will not be considered for evaluation.

PART 1 – APPLICANT CERTIFICATION

The following letter must be placed on letterhead and completed/signed/stamped by a representative authorized to sign on behalf of the applicant:   

To: Hinga Wunguke Co-Investment Fund Team 

Kimihurura, former RPF secretariat on KG 28 Avenue No. 7, Kigali, Rwanda/Partnership and Investment Manager  

Reference: CNFA-HW-RFA-004-011-2024

Job Info
Job Category: Tenders in Rwanda
Job Type: Full-time
Deadline of this Job: Wednesday, November 27 2024
Duty Station: Kigali
Posted: 13-11-2024
No of Jobs: 1
Start Publishing: 13-11-2024
Stop Publishing (Put date of 2030): 13-11-2066
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