WHO is a specialized United Nations agency with a constitutional mandate as the Directing and Coordinating authority on international health work. Procurement is a critical function in support of the effective discharge of the WHO mandate. In order to fulfill its mandate and achieve its vision WHO must procure a significant volume of goods and services. As a public organization entrusted with donor funds and committed to supporting developing economies, the objective of procurement activities within the WHO is the timely acquisition of goods and services while addressing the following guiding principles;
The overall guiding objective for all WHO procurement is to obtain the best value for money for the Organization. 'Best value for money' is defined as the responsive offer that is the best combination of technical specifications, quality, and price. 'Best value for money' is the result of several factors, including quality, experience, the vendor’s reputation, life-cycle costs, benefits, and parameters that measure how well the good or service allows the organization to meet its social, environmental or other objectives.
The WHO procurement process must allow for transparent competition among prospective providers. All prospective providers must be treated equally. All individuals and entities directly or indirectly associated with the procurement function are responsible for protecting the integrity of the process and maintaining fairness, transparency, and equal treatment of all prospective providers. All potential vendors should be treated equally, and the process should feature clear evaluation criteria, unambiguous solicitation instructions, realistic requirements, and rules and procedures that are easy to understand
In order to promote transparency of the procurement process and accountability, WHO expects its providers to adhere to the principles, and meet the standards, set forth in the UN supplier code of conduct.
The objective of WHO’s competitive process is to provide all eligible prospective providers with timely and adequate notification of WHO’s requirements and an equal opportunity to tender for the required goods and services.
All procurement conduct and acquisitions must always be in the best interest, and consistent with the objectives and expected results, of WHO. Any business transactions must conform to the mandates and principles of WHO and the United Nations.
WHO subscribes to a "Green" procurement policy, WHO will seek to procure goods and services that lessen the burden on the environment in their production, use, and final disposal, whenever possible and economical.
WHO subscribes to a "Green" procurement policy, WHO will seek to procure goods and services that lessen the burden on the environment in their production, use and final disposal, whenever possible and economical.
Before finalizing the procurement of goods and/or services, the environmental concerns must be considered, including the following:
The applicable ecolabel ratings, including Energy Star, EU Ecolabel, etc. should be evaluated to determine how environmentally friendly the goods and/or services are.
The aim is to identify environmentally-friendly ("green") goods and services.
Supporting Nepal Medical Council for Integrating Competency-based Assessments for Medical Licensure Examination (Announcement | Request for Proposals | Terms of Reference)
Deadline: 16 June
**
Development of the Healthy Municipality Toolkit for Municipal Leaders in Nepal (Announcement | Request for Proposals | Terms of Reference)
Deadline: 23 June
**
Strengthening Deaddiction Services for Alcohol and Substance Use in Nepal (Announcement | Request for Proposals | Terms of Reference)
Deadline: 26 June
**
Air Purifiers (Request for Proposals | Product Specifications)
Deadline: 16 June