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Consultant to support Opening Extractives in Indonesia

Request for Proposals

Closing date

Description

The Opening Extractives Programme (OE) - a programme launched by the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) and Open Ownership to enhance beneficial ownership transparency -  is seeking a consultant, based in Indonesia, to support the OE team in implementing beneficial ownership transparency commitments under the OE Programme in Indonesia. The consultant must be a reputable individual with a proven reputation, perceived by the EITI International Secretariat, as well as the EITI Indonesia, to be credible, trustworthy, experienced and technically competent. Proposals should be submitted in English following the guidance noted below. 

Application instructions

A consultant should submit:

• A Technical Proposal, following this template.

• A Financial Proposal must be presented in USD, clearly indicating a lump sum financial proposal of all costs associated, with applicable taxes. The daily rate for the consultant fees should be clearly indicated. The consultant does not need to include any costs related to specific activities indicated in this TOR (travel, event costs, etc.). These costs will be covered separately by the programme. The Financial Proposal should be sent as a password protected PDF file – financial proposals submitted without the password will be considered non-responsive. The passwords should not be sent. The passwords will be requested following the assessment of the technical proposals.

Proposals must be delivered by email to [email protected] by close of Monday 27 February 2023.

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.