Partners: PTB – Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt

Region: Palestinian Territories

Date: 12.01.2026 – 09.04.2026

A robust Quality Infrastructure (QI) system, covering metrology, standardization, accreditation, conformity assessment and market surveillance, helps countries improve product and service quality, reduce technical risks, and enable market access. In the Palestinian Territories, work on QI takes place in a fragile, conflict‑affected environment, where heightened insecurity and severe restrictions can disrupt mobility, market access and public service delivery. The appraisal therefore focused on how strengthening QI can make a tangible, near-to-medium term contribution to resilience and socio‑economic development, and how it can lay foundations for the country’s future development rather than being a purely technocratic exercise.

A central part of the assignment was to identify those sectors that are particularly critical under current conditions and where better QI services would have the highest leverage. Drawing on existing QI diagnostics and additional partner consultations, the appraisal confirmed that the energy sector, in particular photovoltaic (PV) and energy efficiency, is a structural backbone for socio‑economic development in the Palestinian Territories. High energy costs and the importance of decentralised energy supply mean that the quality, safety and performance of PV systems and energy efficiency measures directly affect households, businesses and public institutions. At the same time, metrology, testing and other QI services for the energy sector are still underdeveloped, with significant gaps in calibration and testing services and in the availability of relevant standards and technical guidance.

Ferdinand Consultants supported PTB by leading the appraisal mission and working closely with the PTB project team and Palestinian partners to update the project outline and sharpen the project focus. Our team prepared and led interviews with existing and potential partners, facilitated the discussions on how to update outputs and indicators, and translated the jointly agreed direction into an updated impact matrix and a formal change proposal for BMZ.

Our contribution combined mission delivery with concrete improvements to the project design.

What we delivered:

Appraisal mission leadership, including preparation and facilitation of interviews with existing and potential partners.

Structured partner dialogue to agree, together with PTB and Palestinian counterparts, how to update the project outline, outputs and indicators.

Sector prioritisation to sharpen the project focus, identifying PV and energy efficiency as a priority area given its relevance for socio‑economic development and the potential contribution of QI.

An updated impact matrix, developed in close collaboration with the PTB project team, integrating the agreed changes into a coherent and measurable results logic.

A BMZ-compliant change proposal, drafted from the appraisal findings and finalised in close coordination with PTB.

What changed in the project as a result (outcome-oriented design improvements):

Strong system-wide governance focus, sharpening coordination and strategic steering of the national QI system and advancing the pathway for the National Quality Policy implementation plan.

Outcome-oriented indicators, better capturing demonstrable progress and capability gains among both providers and users of QI services.

A sectoral deepening on PV and energy efficiency as an additional component, creating a structured interface between energy-sector actors and QI institutions to align standards and services with practical sector needs. This includes targeted exchange formats between QI and energy stakeholders, the preparation of energy‑related standards for integration into the national system, and the systematic linkage of identified sector needs to metrology and other QI service development.

Building on existing QI diagnostics and partner consultation, Ferdinand Consultants led the appraisal process that enabled PTB and Palestinian counterparts to agree and formalise a revised project design for the next implementation phase – one that explicitly responds to the current fragile context while positioning QI as a critical enabler of the Palestinian Territories’ future socio‑economic development.