Donor-Funded Tenders Explained: $280B/Year Market for Consultants + Contractors
If you've ever wondered what "donor-funded tenders" actually means — and why most consulting + construction firms know about World Bank but miss the other $235 billion — this guide explains the entire market in one read.
What is a donor-funded tender?
A donor-funded tender is a procurement opportunity where the financing comes from an international development bank or government aid agency, NOT from the country where the project happens.
For example, a road project in Tanzania might be:
- Funded by the World Bank (using IDA credit to the Tanzanian government)
- Implemented by the Tanzania Roads Authority
- Tendered openly to international consulting + construction firms
- Awarded under FIDIC contract conditions
The tender appears on the World Bank's procurement platform — not just on Tanzanian national procurement sites. This is why most local firms only see the local tenders, missing the bigger donor-funded ones for the same country.
The 7 major donor agencies you need to know
🏦 World Bank Group ($45B/yr)
Includes IBRD (loans to middle-income countries), IDA (grants/credits to poorest), IFC (private sector), MIGA (insurance). The biggest single source of donor-funded tenders globally. Uses FIDIC Pink Book for works, White Book for consultancy. Procurement platform: STEP.
🏦 Asian Development Bank ($28B/yr)
Funds projects across 49 countries in Asia-Pacific. Major sectors: transport, energy, urban. Procurement platform: ADB CMS.
🏦 EBRD ($18B/yr)
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Covers 38 countries in Central/Eastern Europe, Central Asia, MENA. Strong focus on energy transition and private sector. Procurement platform: ECEPP.
🏦 African Development Bank ($12B/yr)
Funds infrastructure and economic development across 54 African countries. Major focus: power, transport, agriculture, water. Procurement platform: SOMS.
🏦 AIIB ($9B/yr)
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank — newest major MDB. Funds infrastructure across Asia + globally. Focused on energy, transport, ICT, water.
🏦 EU TED + EuropeAid ($60B/yr combined)
EU TED publishes procurement notices for EU member states + EU-funded development projects in third countries. EuropeAid manages bilateral EU development funding.
🏦 Bilateral development agencies ($100B+ combined)
National aid agencies that fund their own portfolio of tenders worldwide:
- KfW (Germany) — energy, water, climate
- AFD (France) — Africa, MENA, francophone world
- GIZ (Germany) — technical assistance, capacity building
- USAID — global, programs vary by US administration
- JICA (Japan) — Asia, Africa, infrastructure
- SIDA (Sweden), DANIDA (Denmark), NORAD (Norway)
- DEG (Germany), AECID (Spain), AICS (Italy)
Why most firms miss 95% of these tenders
Here's the fundamental problem: each of those 20+ donors has its own procurement portal, in its own language, with its own bid format. They publish at different times. They use different keywords.
To monitor everything manually, you'd need to:
- Bookmark 20+ portals
- Translate notices from 6 languages
- Track different submission deadlines
- Map each tender to your firm's eligibility + capacity
- Decide which to pursue within hours of publication
It's a full-time job, and most firms don't have that capacity. So they monitor 1-3 portals and miss the other 17+.
How to start participating
Three steps:
- Register on each donor's procurement portal. Free, takes 30-60 minutes each. Required to bid.
- Set up search alerts matching your firm's sectors + geographies + contract sizes.
- Build a small business development team (or use a service like Tenderal) to monitor + filter daily opportunities.
How Tenderal helps
Tenderal aggregates all 20+ donor procurement portals into one English-language search. Filter by donor, sector, country, FIDIC contract type, value, and deadline. Free to browse.
Find Donor-Funded Tenders Now →About the author: Irakli Kvashilava consolidated 60 Georgian water utilities, served at Georgia's Prime Minister's Office Reforms Department, and founded Tenderal — a search engine for international donor-funded tenders.