Performance Audit Report No.17 (2012–13)
Chapter 2 Design and Implementation of the Energy Efficiency Information
Grants Program
Introduction
2.1
The Energy Efficiency Information Grants (EEIG) program is a $40 million
competitive merit-based grants program. It was designed to provide funding to
industry associations and non-profit organisations to work with small and
medium size business enterprises and community organisations to provide information
about the smartest ways to use energy, empowering them to make informed
decisions about energy efficiency. The program was introduced as part of the
Government’s Clean Energy Future Plan.[1]
2.2
The Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency (DCCEE) was
responsible for the administration of the EEIG program during the audit period.[2]
As part of Machinery of Government changes announced in March 2013, the DCCEE
was abolished and its energy efficiency functions transferred to the Department
of Resources, Energy and Tourism (RET). RET now has responsibility for the
continuing administration of the program.
2.3
The program’s first funding round was opened to applications on
13 February 2012 and closed on 16 March 2012.[3]
2.4
Following eligibility assessment by the DCCEE, an independent program
advisory committee (PAC) was responsible for assessing each of the 188 eligible
applications against three merit criteria, and allocating a merit ranking to
each. The department recommended to the Minister for Climate Change and Energy
Efficiency the 28 applications that were put forward by the PAC as being the
most meritorious, each of which was approved for funding by the Minister in
May 2012. The total value of the projects approved in the first round was approximately
$20 million.[4]
2.5
A second EEIG funding round was opened to applications on 30 October 2012,
with a closing date of 20 December 2013.[5] At the time of writing,
the successful applicants had not been publicly announced. According to the
department’s website, applicants were due to be notified of the second round
outcome in May 2013.[6]
Audit objective and scope
2.6
The objective of the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO)’s audit was
to assess the effectiveness of the design and implementation of the EEIG
program. The focus of the audit was the preparation for, and conduct of, the program’s
first funding round.
2.7
The audit examined the program against relevant policy and legislative
requirements for the expenditure of public money and the grants administration
framework (including the Commonwealth Grant Guidelines).[7]
Audit conclusion
2.8
The audit report concluded that the DCCEE ‘was well resourced to design
and implement the EEIG, and the design of the program was effective’, but there
were ‘significant shortcomings in the conduct of the assessment process for
applications’.[8]
2.9
The ANAO found that program governance arrangements and a range of
internal documentation to support the administration of the program were
developed, and a robust set of program guidelines were published. The
department also planned a sound approach to undertaking application eligibility
checks, assessing the merit of eligible applications and ranking them for the
Minister’s consideration.[9]
2.10
However, the audit found that the merit assessment process ‘departed in
important respects from that outlined in the program guidelines, and inadequate
records were made and retained to demonstrate that each application was
assessed in accordance with the published eligibility and merit criteria’.[10]
The main shortcomings outlined in the report were that:
n most eligible
applications were allocated to one of four merit categories, with each of the
28 applications allocated to the highest merit category (termed ‘outstanding’) then
placed into one of six ranking bands (in case the Minister did not wish to
approve all 28 ‘outstanding’ applications). Neither process was foreshadowed by
the program guidelines. In addition, the allocation of the 28 ‘outstanding’
applications to a ranking band used a process that did not relate to the score
each application had achieved in terms of the published merit criteria;
n DCCEE destroyed
records made by each PAC member of the assessment of each eligible application
against the three published merit criteria, notwithstanding that the
contractual arrangements specified that these were official records and that
DCCEE had made no arrangements to otherwise record the scoring by PAC members.
The minutes of the PAC meetings were also too brief to provide any insight into
the merit assessment and scoring of each eligible application; and
n fortunately for
DCCEE, one PAC member made and retained his own electronic record of some of
the scoring results but there is no record, official or otherwise, as to how each
of the 28 recommended (and approved) applications had been assessed and
scored against the three published merit criteria.[11]
2.11
The DCCEE advised the ANAO that it had confidence in the PAC, had
followed probity advice, and had ‘no reason to believe that the successful
projects were not the most competitive against the merit criteria’. However, the
ANAO concluded that it was ‘not possible to be satisfied that the most
meritorious eligible applications … were recommended to the Minister for
approval’.[12]
Audit recommendations
2.12
Noting that a second EEIG funding round was underway, the audit report
made four recommendations, as shown in Table 2.1.
Table 2.1 ANAO recommendations, Audit Report No.17
2012–13
1.
|
In circumstances where an advisory panel or committee is
used to assess grant applicants and to provide funding recommendations, ANAO
recommends that the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency:
(a) develop program governance arrangements that inform
panel/committee members that they are formally operating under the
Commonwealth’s financial framework; and
(b) implement secretarial support arrangements that require
key assessment decisions and their basis to be minuted.
DCCEE response: Agreed
|
2.
|
To be able to demonstrate that grant program applicants were
treated equitably and in accordance with the published program guidelines,
ANAO recommends that the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency
maintain adequate records of its assessment of applications in terms of their
eligibility and compliance with other mandatory (or gateway) criteria.
DCCEE response: Agreed
|
3.
|
The ANAO recommends that the Department of Climate Change
and Energy Efficiency, in planning for the implementation of competitive,
applications‐based
grant programs, develop strategies to effectively manage the risk of funding
rounds being over‐subscribed
including, as appropriate, identifying in the program guidelines any
adjustments that may be made to the eligibility and/or merit assessment
approach where this situation arises.
DCCEE response: Agreed
|
4.
|
The ANAO recommends that, consistent with the transparency
and public accountability principles of grants administration outlined in the
Commonwealth Grant Guidelines, the Department of Climate Change and Energy
Efficiency ensures that the assessment and merit ranking of applications and
any significant changes as they proceed through the assessment process are
appropriately documented.
DCCEE response: Agreed
|
The Committee’s review
2.13
Representatives of the following organisations gave evidence at the
Committee’s public hearing on 19 June 2013:
n Australian National
Audit Office
n Department of
Resources, Energy and Tourism.
2.14
The Committee’s evidence covered the following issues:
n Resourcing of the
program
n Record-keeping
deficiencies
n Improvements in
second funding round.
Resourcing of the program
2.15
The EEIG program guidelines stated that the PAC would assess the
eligible applications against the three weighted merit criteria—‘project
effectiveness’, ‘project design and management’ and ‘value for money’—allocating
a merit ranking to each and advising the Minister, through the department, on
projects suitable for funding.[13]
2.16
The DCCEE’s planning was based on receiving an estimated 30 to 40
applications for funding. In fact, the department received 207 first round applications,
of which 188 were assessed to be eligible. The ANAO found that the ‘impact of
the high number of applications received … was particularly evident at the
merit assessment stage’ conducted by the PAC.[14]
2.17
The ANAO highlighted that the DCCEE had not developed strategies for how
it would respond to receiving significantly more applications than it
anticipated.[15] It observed that, given
the higher than expected number of applications, the time allotted for the
assessment of the EEIG applications was ‘insufficient’ in the context of the
resources available. It suggested that possible management strategies that
could have been employed included ‘increasing the resources allocated to the
merit assessment task and/or extending the planned timeframe’. The ANAO
recommended that, in planning future grants programs, the DCCEE develop
strategies to effectively manage the risk of funding rounds being
oversubscribed.[16]
2.18
In its response to the ANAO’s recommendation, the DCCEE advised that it would
ensure ‘sufficient resources are made available for secretariat support to the
PAC’.[17]
2.19
At the Committee’s public hearing, RET confirmed that, of the $40
million total funding for the program, approximately $6 million (or 15 per
cent) had been allocated to administration. When the Committee questioned why
the administration costs were this high, RET explained that:
It is a program that runs for three or four years. There are
some start-up costs in terms of assessing that program I think there were some
comments made by the auditors in terms of benchmarking that. But it is not just
a one-off. We have got to start this and we are actually managing this through.
So we will manage that series of projects over the life of the projects.[18]
2.20
Asked about the planned outcomes of the department’s use of the part of this
administration funding for ‘ongoing monitoring’, the department explained that
there were two elements to this work:
The first is the contract
monitoring [by] departmental staff, and most of the contracts have multiple
milestones over several years. We also have an independent evaluation which
looks at the influence of the program—if you like, the efficacy of the
information generated—and whether that has influenced behaviour in the
recipient businesses.[19]
2.21
Noting that the funding allocated to the department for administration
seemed relatively high, the Committee asked how the deficiencies reported by
the Auditor-General came about. The department identified the ‘resourcing of
the secretariat function of the merit assessment and the support of the merit
assessment committee’ as being one ‘specific element’ contributing to the
shortcomings. It noted that the department’s experience of allocating more time
and resources to those processes in the second funding round had ‘certainly led
to a better product in terms of records taken’.[20]
2.22
The department also confirmed for the Committee that there was no
involvement from the Minister’s office in the application assessment process,
aside from the initial approval of program guidelines and the final consideration
of the department’s recommendations for funding.[21]
Record-keeping deficiencies
2.23
The audit report documented a number of deficiencies in the records kept
by the DCCEE of decisions which informed its recommendations to the Minister.
These deficiencies included that:
n Minutes of PAC
meetings contained insufficient detail relating to assessments of applications
and the presence or absence of members with conflict of interest declarations;[22]
n Decisions made by
departmental officials who conducted initial eligibility assessments were not
well-documented;[23]
n The scoring templates
used by PAC members to assess each eligible application were destroyed by the
department because they were seen as ‘rough working drafts’;[24]
and
n The department did
not seek to capture the final agreed PAC scores for each eligible application
against the merit criteria, or the resulting aggregate scores for the 28
applications that were categorised as ‘outstanding’.[25]
2.24
The ANAO summarised its findings in relation to record-keeping as
follows:
Some important records made by the PAC members of their
initial assessment and scoring of each application were destroyed by DCCEE, and
the department did not otherwise document the results of the merit assessment
process. Consequently, it is not possible to be satisfied that the published
merit criteria were applied in a consistent and robust manner, or for DCCEE to
demonstrate that the most meritorious applications were identified and
recommended to the Minister for approval.[26]
2.25
The audit report did not include details of how individual scoring
templates came to be destroyed by the department. However, at a Senate Estimates
hearing in February 2013, the ANAO stated that the destruction was carried out
by ‘the more junior staff’. It explained that when the PAC members returned
their copies of the applications to the department, the attached scoring sheets
had been destroyed along with the applications. The ANAO advised that, by
‘asking a lot of questions to the relevant people involved’, they were
satisfied that this destruction was a result of oversight rather than intent.
However, the ANAO also advised that this ‘unauthorised destruction of a record’
was a breach of the Archives Act.[27]
2.26
In the Committee’s public hearing, RET agreed unreservedly with the
ANAO’s recommendations and stated that record-keeping:
… has been recognised very clearly by the department as an
area that needs to be improved, and it has been improved in the subsequent
round.[28]
2.27
However, RET advised that it considered the destruction of the initial
assessment documents of panel members to be appropriate. The department outlined
that the decision had been made by a senior executive officer, based on advice
from the probity adviser and a working understanding of what would constitute
‘normal administrative practice’ under the Archives Act 1983. The
department added:
The advice that we had at the time from the probity adviser
and from our subsequent reading of what is known as normal administrative
practice under the Archives Act is that they were working notes. They were
working notes of committee members acting as individuals not of the committee
as a whole. In that sense, we still do not think that they were records under
the definition in the Archives Act.[29]
2.28
The ANAO did not agree with this assessment, stating that the panel
members’ contracts described the scoring template as an official record to be returned
to the department. The ANAO considered the destruction to be ‘quite a
significant matter’ due to the inadequacy of other documentation of the decisions
underpinning the final recommendations. The ANAO explained that:
When it comes to grant assessment processes it should be not
simply about recording what score is given to each application by the panel
members but about the reasoning behind that score so that there can be some
accountability and transparency around the basis on which panels provide
recommendations to departments and departments provide recommendations to
ministers so that we, auditors, parliament and other stakeholders can be
confident that the most meritorious applications were identified and assessed
on a basis consistent with the program guidelines.[30]
2.29
The ANAO added that it would expect to see this matter addressed in any
future audit of the program:
We would certainly suggest that if we were auditing the
second round and the department did not require something similar to these
templates to be completed in some fashion so that there is a record of what
each application was scored against each criteria and the reasoning for that,
we would be equally critical of the second round as we were of the first round.[31]
2.30
Responding to these comments, RET agreed that record-keeping should
fully justify the decisions made by advisory committees and that this had not
adequately occurred in the first round of the program. The department affirmed
that it had ‘absolutely’ changed its practices following the audit to improve
its records on the deliberations of the committee.[32]
Improvements to second funding round
2.31
During the public hearing, RET updated the Committee on the program’s
second funding round. It advised that 175 applications had been received, and
18 applications were successful.[33] In response to a
question on notice, the department noted that seven of the successful second
round applicants had also applied under the program’s first round.[34]
2.32
In a tabled opening statement, RET informed the Committee that ‘taking
the lessons from the first round into the administration of the second round of
the program has assisted the department to improve the program’s administration’.
The department advised that it had been able to implement all of the responses
to the audit findings that it had outlined, with the key actions being:
n More time for the
assessment process which allowed the Department to deal with the
over-subscription, while following processes as outlined in the program
guidelines.
n Both better
procedural guidance on the secretariat functions and further clarity in the
probity briefing on the role and responsibility of the Program Advisory
Committee members.
n Extra staff and
clearer procedural guidance on the taking of minutes of the deliberations of
the Program Advisory Committee ensured both enhanced transparency and ability
to provide feedback to applicants.[35]
2.33
At the public hearing, RET expanded on its implementation of the ANAO
recommendations with the following comments:
n The standard
operating procedures and the probity briefing to clarify the relationship with
the program advisory committee and to align with the Commonwealth financial frameworks
have been put in place, so there is now clarity in terms of the role of the
program advisory committee.
n We have made sure
that the merit assessment process includes assessment and commentary in
relation to each evaluation criterion and ensured that flows all the way
through the documentation, so the documentation is very thorough.
n A probity adviser now
sits on all the governance committees, so the program advisory committee, and
is there full-time and has been there full-time in the second round.
n ...we have updated our
standard operating procedures to ensure accurate and adequate record-keeping of
completeness and eligibility checks.
n ...we have ensured
that the guidelines provide clarity in relation to the processes around
eligibility and merit assessment.
n We have implemented
strategies to ensure that the volume of applications coming in could be catered
for in the process we have put in place.[36]
2.34
Reflecting on the broader lessons of the audit in relation to grants
program processes, the Auditor-General indicated that the ANAO’s audit coverage
was driven by the desire to ensure that all grant applicants are treated
equitably. He noted that ‘the pleasing thing about this audit is that the
department has not argued the toss at all on this matter and the matters of
substance here’.[37]
2.35
The Auditor-General added that the department had administered ‘aspects
of this program very well’, but that there were some problems particularly in
the assessment area. He voiced his concern that the public sector ‘do not learn
the lessons of the prior experience’ as quickly as desirable. However, he
expressed optimism that RET had ‘gained from this’ and flagged that the ANAO
would ‘continue to emphasise the importance of sound practices in this area’.[38]
Committee Comment
2.36
The Committee supports the ANAO’s findings and recommendations, and
agrees with its conclusion that, while aspects of the program were managed
well, there were significant administrative shortcomings in the assessment
phase.
2.37
It was concerning that the ANAO could not be satisfied that the most
meritorious applications had been recommended for approval. However, the Committee
is satisfied that the program’s shortcomings resulted from poor administrative
practices, rather than any malicious intent.
2.38
From the evidence received, it was clear that RET was well-resourced for
the program’s administration. However, the department did not internally
allocate enough time or resources to the assessment of applications in the
first funding round, significantly contributing to the program’s shortcomings.
2.39
There remains some level of disagreement between the department and the
ANAO in relation to whether the individual scoring sheets completed by advisory
committee members should be considered official records and formally retained
under the Archives Act. However, the Committee observed agreement from both
sides on the broader points that: it is essential for program records to document
the basis on which recommendations for funding are made; and this had not occurred
in the program’s first funding round.
2.40
The results of this audit contain valuable lessons for officials
involved in grants programs about the importance of conducting fair and
transparent decision-making processes that are supported by appropriate
record-keeping. The findings also highlight the importance of sound risk
management processes for early identification of strategies for dealing with
unexpected events—in this case, a much larger than expected number of
applications.
2.41
Encouragingly, the key lessons from the audit appear to have been
learned and applied by RET in the second funding round, with more time and
resources having been allocated to the assessment of applications. The
department has also pointed to a range of measures that it has put in place to
improve the integrity and transparency of the program, particularly in relation
to documentation.
2.42
The Committee accepts the department’s advice that it has improved its
practices, and expects that any future audits of this program, or similar RET
grants programs, will contain more positive findings. Any reoccurrence of
issues similar to those identified in this report should be viewed as very
concerning by the Auditor-General, the JCPAA, the broader Parliament and the
public.