Waste in humanitarian Operations: Reduction and Minimisation

Food, Bioeconomy & Natural ResourcesHORIZON-CSAID: 101135392
EC Contribution
€14,997
Consortium Size
16 orgs
Start Year
2024
Summary

Waste in humanitarian Operations: Reduction and Minimisation (WORM)'s overall objective is designing guidelines and support actions for circular economy in the humanitarian sector. WORM focuses on two selected settings: field hospital deployments, and humanitarian livelihood programmes with a waste picking component. Across these settings, the project focuses on several cross-cutting focus areas: •the integration of bio-based technological innovation solutions in the humanitarian context, •using procurement as a gatekeeper for waste avoidance, and gateway to integrate innovative solutions, •improvements in waste management, and the use of less polluting waste treatment methods, •a specific focus on the sustainable livelihoods of waste pickers, and •policy development, advocacy and a heightened local awareness of improved waste management in the relevant local contexts.Following a multi-actor approach, WORM brings together medical humanitarian organisations and humanitarian organisations with livelihood programmes with innovation and supplier clusters, procurement service providers, logistics service providers, waste management service providers and academic partners. WORM seeks to involve a myriad of different stakeholders in data collection and policy development, including but not limited to, humanitarian actors positioned in the field during an operation, local waste management companies, start-ups focusing on bio-based solutions, policymakers (both local and global), and research institutions. WORM includes partners from low- and middle-income countries (esp. Kenya, Viet Nam) since humanitarian operations are often implemented in these contexts. WORM will focus on these contexts in their local awareness campaigns for improved waste management.

Consortium (16)

Project Results (22)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (4)
Bio-based products in humanitarian medical supply chains: supply market intelligence and life cycle assessment
EurOMA Conference 2025· 2025DOI
Virva Tuomala, Sarah Joseph
Integrating healthcare waste management in disaster risk reduction strategies
EurOMA Conference 2025· 2025DOI
Margot Rocheteau, Sarah Schiffling, Virva Tuomala , Pamela Steele
Humanitarian supply chains: challenging the system
The Supply Chain: A System in Crisis· 2024DOI
Gyöngyi Kovács, Graham Heaslip
Medical waste management: application of circular economy principles in a developing country context
NOFOMA Conference 2024· 2024DOI
Virva Tuomala, Sarah Schiffling
Deliverables (17)
Other Results (1)
Periodic Reporting for period 1 - WORM (Waste in humanitarian Operations: Reduction and Minimisation)