SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Funding Opportunity Description
Authority: The QSP is authorized under Section 5(f) of the
CCC Charter Act, 15 U.S.C. 714c(f).
Purpose: The QSP is designed to encourage the development and
expansion of export markets for U.S. agricultural commodities by assisting U.S.
entities in providing commodity samples to potential foreign importers to
promote a better understanding and appreciation for the high quality of U.S.
agricultural commodities.
QSP participants will be responsible for procuring (or
arranging for the procurement of) commodity samples, exporting the samples, and
providing the technical assistance necessary to facilitate successful use of the
samples by importers. Participants that are funded under this announcement may
seek reimbursement for the sample purchase price and the costs of transporting
the samples domestically to the port of export and then to the foreign port, or
point, of entry. Transportation costs from the foreign port, or point, of entry
to the final destination will not be eligible for reimbursement. CCC will not
reimburse the costs incidental to purchasing and transporting samples, for
example, inspection or documentation fees. Although providing technical
assistance is required for all projects, CCC will not reimburse the costs of
providing technical assistance. A QSP participant will be reimbursed after CCC
reviews its reimbursement claim and determines that the claim is complete.
General Scope of QSP Projects: QSP projects are the
activities undertaken by a QSP participant to provide an appropriate sample of a
U.S. agricultural commodity to a foreign importer, or a group of foreign
importers, in a given market. The purpose of the project is to provide
information to an appropriate target audience regarding the attributes,
characteristics, and proper use of the U.S. commodity. A QSP project addresses a
single market/commodity combination.
As a general matter, QSP projects should conform to the
following guidelines:
Projects should benefit the represented U.S. industry and not
a specific company or brand;
Projects should develop a new market for a U.S. product,
promote a new U.S. product, or promote a new use for a U.S. product, rather than
promote the substitution of one established U.S. product for another;
Sample commodities provided under a QSP project must be in
sufficient supply and available on a commercial basis;
The QSP project must either subject the commodity sample to
further processing or substantial transformation in the importing country, or
the sample must be used in technical seminars designed to demonstrate to an
appropriate target audience the proper preparation or use of the sample in the
creation of an end product;
Samples provided in a QSP project shall not be directly used
as part of a retail promotion or supplied directly to consumers. However, the
end product, that is, the product resulting from further processing, substantial
transformation, or a technical seminar, may be provided to end-use consumers to
demonstrate to importers consumer preference for that end product; and,
Samples shall be in quantities less than a typical commercial
sale and limited to the amount sufficient to achieve the project goal (e.g., not
more than a full commercial mill run in the destination country).
QSP projects shall target foreign importers and target
audiences who:
Have not previously purchased the U.S. commodity which will
be transported under the QSP;
Are unfamiliar with the variety, quality attribute, or
end-use characteristic of the U.S. commodity which will be transported under the
QSP;
Have been unsuccessful in previous attempts to import,
process, and market the U.S. commodity which will be transported under the QSP
(e.g., because of improper specification, blending, or formulation; or sanitary
or phytosanitary issues);
Are interested in testing or demonstrating the benefits of
the U.S. commodity which will be transported under the QSP; or
Need technical assistance in processing or using the U.S.
commodity that will be transported under the QSP.
II. Award Information
Under this announcement, the number of projects per
participant will not be limited. However,
individual projects will be limited to $75,000
of QSP reimbursement. Projects comprised of
technical preparation seminars, that is,
projects that do not include further processing
or substantial transformation, will be limited
to $15,000 of QSP reimbursement as these
projects require smaller samples. Financial
assistance will be made available on a
reimbursement basis; that is, cash advances will
not be made available to any QSP participant.
All proposals will be reviewed against the evaluation
criteria contained herein and funds will be
awarded on a competitive basis. Funding for
successful proposals will be provided through
specific
agreements. These agreements will incorporate
the proposal as approved by FAS. FAS must
approve in advance any subsequent changes to the
project.
III. Eligibility
Information
1. Eligible Applicants. Any United States private or government
entity with a demonstrated role or interest in
exporting U.S. agricultural commodities may
apply to the program. Government
organizations consist of federal, state, and
local agencies. Private organizations include
non-profit trade associations, universities,
agricultural cooperatives, state regional trade
groups, and profit-
making entities.
2. Cost Sharing. Although a minimum level of cost share
contribution is not required under the program,
FAS does consider the applicant's willingness to
contribute resources, including cash and
goods and services of the U.S. industry and
foreign third parties, when determining which
proposals are approved for funding.
IV. Application and
Submission Information
1. Address to Request Application Package. Organizations can
submit applications to the FAS through the
Unified Export Strategy (UES) application
Internet Web site. Applicants also have the
option of submitting electronic versions in the
UES format (along with two paper copies) of
their applications to the FAS on diskette.
However, the UES format is not required.
Applicants planning to use the UES Internet-based system must
contact the FAS Marketing Operations Staff on
(202) 720-4327 to obtain site access information
including a user ID and password. The UES
Internet-based application, including a Help
file containing step-by-step instructions for
its use, may be found at the following URL
address:
http://www.fas.usda.gov/cooperators.html.
Applicants who choose to submit applications on diskette can
obtain a UES application format by contacting
the Marketing Operations Staff, phone: (202)
720-4327, fax: (202) 720-9361, e-mail:
mosadmin@fas.usda.gov.
2. Content and Form of Application Submission. To be
considered for the QSP, an applicant must submit
to the FAS information detailed in this notice.
In addition, in accordance with the Office of
Management and Budget's issuance of a final
policy (68 FR 38402) regarding the need to
identify entities that are receiving government
awards, all applicants must submit a Dun and
Bradstreet Data Universal Numbering System
(DUNS) number. An applicant may request a DUNS
number at no cost by calling the dedicated
toll-free DUNS number request line at
1-866-705-5711. Incomplete applications and
applications which do not otherwise conform to
this announcement will not be accepted for
review.
Applicants to the QSP are not required to submit proposals in
any specific format; however, FAS recommends
that proposals contain, at a minimum, the
following:
(a) Organizational information, including:
Organization's name, address, Chief Executive Officer (or
designee), Federal Tax Identification Number
(TIN), and DUNS number;
Type of organization;
Name, telephone number, fax number, and e-mail address of the
primary contact person;
A description of the organization and its membership;
A description of the organization's prior export promotion
experience; and
A description of the organization's experience in
implementing an appropriate trade/technical
assistance component;
(b) Market information, including:
An assessment of the market;
A long-term strategy in the market; and
U.S. export value/volume and market share (historic and
goals) for 2002-2007;
(c) Project information, including:
A brief project title;
Amount of funding requested;
A brief description of the specific market development trade
constraint or opportunity to be addressed by the
project, performance measures for the years
2006-2008 which will be used to
measure the effectiveness of the project, a
benchmark performance measure for 2005, the
viability of long term sales to this market, the
goals of the project, and the expected benefits
to the represented industry;
A description of the activities planned to address the
constraint or opportunity, including how the
sample will be used in the end-use performance
trial, the attributes of the sample to be
demonstrated and its end-use benefit, and
details of the trade/technical servicing
component (including who will provide and who
will fund this component);
A sample description (i.e., commodity, quantity, quality,
type, and grade), including a justification for
selecting a sample with such characteristics
(this justification should explain in detail why
the project could not be effective with a
smaller sample);
An itemized list of all estimated costs associated with the
project for which reimbursement will be sought;
and
The importer's role in the project regarding handling and
processing the commodity sample; and
(d) Information indicating all funding sources and amounts to
be contributed by each entity that will
supplement implementation of the proposed
project. This may include the organization that
submitted the proposal, private industry
entities, host governments, foreign third
parties, CCC, FAS, or other Federal agencies.
Contributed resources may include cash or goods
and services.
3. Submission Dates and Times. All applications must be
received by 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, March
13, 2006. Applications received after this date
will be considered only if funds are still
available.
4. Funding Restrictions. Proposals which request more than
$75,000 of CCC funding for individual projects
will not be considered. Projects comprised of
technical preparation seminars will be limited
to $15,000 in QSP funding. CCC will not
reimburse expenditures made prior to approval of
a proposal or unreasonable expenditures.
5. Other Submission Requirements. All applications on
diskette (with two accompanying paper copies)
and any other form of application must be
received by 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, March
13, 2006, at one of the following addresses:
Hand Delivery (including FedEx, UPS, etc.): U.S. Department
of Agriculture, Foreign
Agricultural Service, Marketing Operations
Staff, 1250 Maryland Ave., SW., 4th Floor,
Washington, DC 20024.
U.S. Postal Delivery: U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Foreign Agricultural Service, Marketing
Operations Staff, STOP 1042, 1400 Independence
Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250-1042.
V. Application Review
Information
1. Criteria. FAS will use the following criteria in
evaluating proposals:
The ability of the organization to provide an experienced
staff with the requisite technical and trade
experience to execute the proposal;
The extent to which the proposal is targeted to a market in
which the United States is generally
competitive;
The potential for expanding commercial sales in the proposed
market;
The nature of the specific market constraint or opportunity
involved and how well it is addressed by the
proposal;
The extent to which the importer's contribution in terms of
handling and processing enhances the potential
outcome of the project;
The amount of reimbursement requested and the organization's
willingness to contribute resources, including
cash and goods and services of the U.S. industry
and foreign third parties; and
How well the proposed technical assistance component assures
that performance trials will effectively
demonstrate the intended end-use benefit.
Highest priority for funding under this announcement will be
given to meritorious proposals that target
countries that meet either of the following
criteria:
Per capita income less than $10,065 (the ceiling on upper
middle income economies as determined by the
World Bank [World Development Indicators
2005/2006]); and population greater than 1
million. Proposals may address suitable regional
groupings, for example, the islands of the
Caribbean Basin; or
U.S. market share of imports of the commodity identified in
the proposal of 10 percent or less.
2. Review and Selection Process. Proposals will be evaluated
by the applicable FAS commodity division. The
divisions will review each proposal against the
factors described above. The purpose of this
review is to identify meritorious proposals,
recommend an appropriate funding level for each
proposal based upon these factors, and submit
the proposals and funding recommendations to the
Deputy Administrator, Commodity and Marketing
Programs.
3. Anticipated Announcement Date. Announcements of funding
decisions for the QSP are anticipated during
June 2006.
VI. Award Administration
Information
1. Award Notices. The FAS will notify each applicant in
writing of the final disposition of its
application. The FAS will send an approval
letter and agreement to each approved applicant.
The approval letter and agreement will specify
the terms and conditions applicable to the
project, including the levels of QSP funding and
any cost-share contribution requirements.
2. Administrative and National Policy Requirements. The
agreements will incorporate the details of each
project as approved by FAS. Each agreement will
identify terms and conditions pursuant to which
CCC will reimburse certain costs of each
project. Agreements will also outline the
responsibilities of the participant, including,
but not limited to, procurement (or arranging
for procurement) of the commodity sample at a
fair market price, arranging for transportation
of the commodity sample within the time limit
specified in the agreement (organizations should
endeavor to ship commodities within 6 months of
effective date of agreement), compliance with
cargo preference requirements (shipment on
United States flag vessels, as required),
compliance with the Fly America Act requirements
(shipment on United States air carriers, as
required), timely and effective implementation
of technical assistance, and submission of a
written evaluation report within 90 days of
expiration of the agreement.
QSP agreements are subject to review and verification by the
FAS Compliance Review Staff. Upon request, a QSP
participant shall provide to CCC the original
documents which support the participant's
reimbursement claims. CCC may deny a claim for
reimbursement if the claim is not supported by
adequate documentation.
3. Reporting. A written evaluation report must be submitted
within 90 days of the expiration of each
participant's QSP agreement. Evaluation reports
should address all performance measures that
were presented in the proposal.
VII. Agency Contact(s)
For additional information and assistance, contact the
Marketing Operations Staff, Foreign Agricultural
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,
1400 Independence Ave., SW., STOP 1042,
Washington, DC 20250-1042, phone: (202)
720-4327, fax: (202) 720-9361, e-mail:
mosadmin@fas.usda.gov.
Signed at Washington, DC, on
December 8, 2005.
A. Ellen Terpstra,
Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service,
Vice President, Commodity Credit Corporation.