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Functional Areas
- Principal Recipient Start-Up
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Legal Framework
- Overview
- Project Document
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The Grant Agreement
- UNDP-Global Fund Grant Regulations
- Grant Confirmation
- Grant Confirmation: Face Sheet
- Grant Confirmation: Conditions
- Grant Confirmation: Conditions Precedent (CP)
- Grant Confirmation: Special Conditions (SCs)
- Grant Confirmation: Schedule 1, Integrated Grant Description
- Grant Confirmation: Schedule 1, Performance Framework
- Grant Confirmation: Schedule 1, Summary Budget
- Implementation Letters and Performance Letters
- Agreements with Sub-recipients
- Agreements with Sub-sub-recipients
- Signing Legal Agreements and Requests for Disbursement
- Language of the Grant Agreement and other Legal Instruments
- Amending Legal Agreements
- Other Legal and Implementation Considerations
- Legal Framework for Other UNDP Support Roles
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Health Product Management
- Overview - Health Product Management
- UNDP Quality Assurance Policy
- Product Selection
- Quantification and Forecasting
- Supply Planning of Health Products
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Sourcing and regulatory aspects
- Global Health Procurement Center (GHPC)
- Development of List of Health Products
- Development of the Health Procurement Action Plan (HPAP)
- Health Procurement Architecture
- Local Procurement of health products
- Procurement of Pharmaceutical Products
- Procurement of non-pharmaceutical Health Products
- Other Elements of the UNDP Procurement Architecture
- Submission of GHPC CO Procurement Request Form
- Guidance on donations of health products
- International freight, transit requirements and use of INCOTERMS
- Inspection and Receipt
- Storage
- Inventory Management
- Distribution
- Quality monitoring of health products
- Waste management
- Rational use
- Pharmacovigilance
- Risk Management for PSM of health products
- Compliance with the Global Fund requirements
- UNDP Health PSM Roster
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Financial Management
- Overview
- Grant-Making and Signing
- Grant Implementation
- Sub-recipient Management
- Grant Reporting
- Grant Closure
- CCM Funding
- Import duties and VAT / sales tax
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Monitoring and Evaluation
- Overview
- Differentiation Approach
- Monitoring and Evaluation Components of Funding Request
- Monitoring and Evaluation Components of Grant Making
- M&E Components of Grant Implementation
- Sub-Recipient Management
- Grant Reporting
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Capacity development and transition, strengthening systems for health
- Overview
- Interim Principal Recipient of Global Fund Grants
- A Strategic Approach to Capacity Development
- Resilience and Sustainability
- Legal and Policy Enabling Environment
- Functional Capacities
- Capacity Development and Transition
- Transition
- Capacity Development Objectives and Transition Milestones
- Capacity Development Results - Evidence From Country Experiences
- Capacity development and Transition Planning Process
- Capacity Development and Transition - Lessons Learned
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Risk Management
- Overview
- Introduction to Risk Management
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Risk Management in the Global Fund
- Global Fund Risk Management Framework
- Local Fund Agent
- Challenging Operating Environment (COE) Policy
- Additional Safeguard Policy
- Global Fund Risk Management Requirements for PRs
- Global Fund Risk Management Requirements During Funding Request
- Global Fund Review of Risk Management During Grant Implementation
- Risk management in UNDP
- Risk Management in UNDP-managed Global Fund projects
- UNDP Risk Management Process
- Risk management in crisis settings
- Audit and Investigations
- Human rights, key populations and gender
- Human resources
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Grant closure
- Overview
- Terminology and Scenarios for Grant Closure Process
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Steps of Grant Closure Process
- 1. Global Fund Notification Letter 'Guidance on Grant Closure'
- 2. Preparation and Submission of Grant Close-Out Plan and Budget
- 3. Global Fund Approval of Grant Close-Out Plan
- 4. Implementation of Close-Out Plan and Completion of Final Global Fund Requirements (Grant Closure Period)
- 5. Operational Closure of Project
- 6. Financial Closure of Project
- 7. Documentation of Grant Closure with Global Fund Grant Closure Letter
1. Global Fund Notification Letter 'Guidance on Grant Closure'
The Global Fund sends out a Notification Letter entitled ‘Guidance for Grant Closure’ during the last year (according to the Global Fund, approximately second quarter of the final year) of programme implementation, notifying the Country Office (CO) of the Programme (Grant) Ending Date, the requirements for Grant Closure and due dates for submission of a Grant Close-Out Plan with relevant supporting documents.

Practice Pointer
The CO should not wait for the Global Fund Notification Letter to start preparing for grant closure.
For planning purposes, the CO should be aware that:
- All programme activities stop at Programme Ending Date. Under specific circumstances there is the potential to negotiate with the Global Fund on the orderly completion of activities following the Programme Ending Date (for example, construction activities, procurement completed the final quarter with delivery to be conducted after Programme Ending Date)..
- Grant Closure activities in the Closure Budget are to be paid from the grant budget, as there are no additional funds from the Global Fund to support them. Therefore, the CO must plan to ensure that Disbursement Requests include funds to cover any Grant Closure activities.
- All Global Fund grants undergoing closure must refund all grant funds remaining after the Grant Closure Date (include any unspent funds at the CO, Sub-Recipient (SR) and advances to SRs) to the Global Fund. The refund should be made once the Global Fund finalizes verification of Financial Closure Report and issues a letter/email requesting refund of unspent balance. (For further details, refer to Global Fund Approval of Grant Close-Out Plan below).
If the Country Coordinating Mechanism (CCM) and CO recognize that any treatment activities started under the life of the grant cannot be continued after the Programme (Grant) Ending Date due to lack of funding, the CCM can apply for ‘Continuity of Services’. This is the Global Fund funding channel for funding for essential treatment services after the Programme Ending Date, and it should only be explored if the CCM and the CO cannot find any alternative funding for these treatment activities that were started under the closing Global Fund grant.

When a grant is coming to an end and a national entity is expected to take over core activities, it is important that UNDP plays an active role in ensuring that the national entity takes ownership at an early stage. UNDP may need to assist the national entity to understand and, therefore, fulfil its role. For example, in one closing UNDP malaria grant, the government was to provide Artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) from the day after the Programme (Grant) Ending Date; however, no quantification exercise had been undertaken, so UNDP worked with the government to complete the quantification exercise and negotiate with UNITAID to ensure supplies of ACT after the Programme Ending Date.
The Global Fund Notification Letter will provide details of the Grant Close-Out Plan and Budget requirements, including information relating to health products, cash and non-cash assets and the estimated cash balance as at the Programme Ending Date.
In short, a Close-Out Plan and Budget should outline how the CO will close out the grant and how much all closure activities will cost. It is intended to guide the CO to wind down the programme activities in an ethical and organized manner.
Recommended time for submission of Grant Close-Out Plan and Budget by Grant Reporting and Disbursement Schedule
Grant Reporting and Disbursement Schedule | Recommended Time for Submission of Grant Close-Out Plan and Budget |
Annual Reporting/Disbursement Requests (every 12 months) | With Final Progress Update/Disbursement Request (approximately 10.5 months before Programme Ending Date) |
Semi-Annual Reporting (every 6 months) | With Final Progress Update (45 days after the Reporting Period, therefore approximately 4.5 months before Programme Ending Date) |
Since Grant Closure activities are to be paid for from the grant budget and that the CO cannot request further disbursements following the Programme Ending Date, it is important that the final Disbursement Request takes into account the Grant Work Plan and Budget as well as the Grant Close-Out Plan and Budget to ensure that the final disbursement is sufficient to cover all impending expenditures for the remaining life of the grant and the Grant Closure Period. In this respect, the CO is required to ensure alignment of all related financial documents for consistency.
Per the Global Fund Operational Policy Note (OPN) on Grant Closure (available in the Global Fund Operational Policy Manual), supplementary funding decision may be processed for the following cases:
- there is insufficient commitment under the initial funding decision to support grant activities for the Principal Recipient (PR) or third parties; and
- to disburse for closure activities, after the grant end date, as long as the Implementation Letter approving the grant closure plan and budget, and/or Final Payment Letter has been signed by the PR.
The Guidance for Grant Closure Letter includes three attachments: (1) general Global Fund principles for Grant Closure, (2) requirements for the preparation of the Grant Close-Out Plan and Reports (including suggested formats for listings of health products, non-cash assets, estimated cash balance), and (3) application guidelines for Continuity of Services. This letter will be copied to the CCM, Local Fund Agent (LFA) and the UNDP Global Fund Partnership and Health Systems Team (GFPHST). Please find here two examples of supporting documents submitted for closure in Djibouti (2023) and Sao Tome and Principe (2022).
Additional guidance to support this area of work are also available through resources listed below: