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Background:
UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), is the United Nations’ population and development agency that expands the possibilities for women and young people to fulfill their potential. The climate crisis is impacting all dimensions of demography and public health. The United Nations Population Fund emphasizes the linkage between population dynamics and climate change is essential for working on policies that address this issue through reproductive health and gender equality, including reproductive rights, while safeguarding the environment. As a result, UNFPA aims to support the governments and other partners in the design of people-centered climate change solutions and enabling communities to adapt by placing women and girls at the center of these efforts.
Rising global temperatures directly correlate with adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes, such as increased risks of preterm births, stillbirths and miscarriages. According to some research, a 1°C increase during the week preceding delivery was associated with a 6% increase in stillbirth risk during the warm season (May–September). This incidence translates to almost 4 additional stillbirths per 10,000 births for each 1°C increase[1]. Additional analysis shows a high correlation between climate change and male and female infertility increase[2][3][4]. Indirectly, climate-induced disasters disrupt access to essential health services, menstrual hygiene, and clean water.
Like the global pattern, Türkiye is increasingly vulnerable to the multi-faceted impacts of the climate crisis. As a Mediterranean basin country, it faces increasingly frequent and intense heatwaves, prolonged droughts, wildfires, and shifting agricultural patterns etc. According to the Turkish State Meteorological Services (TSMS), 2025 was one of the hottest years on record in Türkiye. With an average temperature of 15.1°C, it was 1.2°C above the 1991–2020 average, making it the fifth-hottest year in the past 55 years. Heat extremes were particularly pronounced in summer, with July 2025 becoming the hottest July on record and the summer season ranking as the second hottest over the same period. In 2025, Türkiye’s average temperature was higher than the global average.
UNFPA aims to provide robust evidence to decision makers on how climate change affects women’s health and fertility dynamics in Türkiye. The findings should inform policy and strategic planning, providing actionable insights to guide effective and impactful interventions. The objectives of the study are to reveal the impacts of extreme heat and climate stressors on reproductive health and fertility outcomes and/or evaluate the vulnerability of health service delivery systems and supply chains during climate-related changes or shocks.
[1] Ha S. et al (2017), “Ambient Temperature and Stillbirth: A Multi-Center Retrospective Cohort Study”,
[2] Qian Li et al (2023), “Ambient temperature and female infertility prevalence: an ecological study based on the 2019 global burden of disease study” , < https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11846354/>
[3] Gaskins A. J. et al (2021), “Impact of ambient temperature on ovarian reserve”, < https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8478715/>
[4] Qian Li et al (2025), “Temperature change and male infertility prevalence: an ecological study” < https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12070785/>
Job Purpose:
The purpose of this consultancy is to conduct National Climate Vulnerability Mapping of Health Service Delivery Systems, a geospatial analysis using Geographical Information System (GIS) data to assess the vulnerability of healthcare infrastructure to climate stressors (extreme heat, humidity etc), aimed at identifying high-risk hotspot areas in Turkiye, including policy recommendations.
To be considered a valid application, candidates must submit a CV together with a short proposal outlining the proposed research objectives and methodological framework, including a description of the intended data sources.
You would be responsible for:
During the consultancy period, the consultant is expected to analyze and provide a geospatial visualization of the threats posed by climate change to essential healthcare infrastructure. By correlating infrastructure coordinates with climate stressors recorded over the past 10–15 years, the assessment aims to establish statistically significant vulnerabilities and identify high-risk hotspot areas necessitating strategic adaptation (provinces or /regions) in Turkiye.
Primary variables: The core parameters of the analysis will include
The consultant is highly encouraged to propose additional relevant variables that could enhance the model of the analysis.
Methodological framework: Conduct a geospatial analysis to cross-reference climate stressors - such as extreme heat, drought, or floods - with health indicators and the location of health service provision units. This quantitative analysis aims to pinpoint statistically significant vulnerabilities and identify high-risk hotspot regions in Turkiye where reproductive health outcomes are most severely threatened.
Data source: Empirical data on the healthcare infrastructure, service capacity, and logistics will be acquired from the MoH, while environmental exposure metrics can be sourced from TSMS, the Ministry of Environment, Urbanization and Climate Change or AFAD. The inclusion of supplementary datasets pertinent to the study objectives is encouraged to ensure comprehensive analysis. The selected consultants are assumed full accountability for the acquisition and management of primary and secondary data required for the analysis.
Policy recommendations: Based on the findings derived from the quantitative analysis, the consultant shall formulate evidence-based policy recommendations aimed at facilitating effective interventions and strategic institutional responses.
How you can make a difference:
Since 1971, UNFPA in Türkiye has worked with government institutions, civil society organizations, municipalities, and the private sector to improve the well-being of women, young people, and vulnerable groups. Under its 8th Country Programme (2026–2030), UNFPA Türkiye focuses on strengthening demographic resilience and promoting women and family-friendly policies; advancing gender equality and women’s empowerment; promoting women’s health and safe motherhood; empowering young people and safeguarding their well-being; and advancing climate action led by women and youth.
In a world where fundamental human rights are at risk, we need principled and ethical staff, who embody these international norms and standards, and who will defend them courageously and with full conviction.
UNFPA is seeking candidates that transform, inspire and deliver high impact and sustained results; we need staff who are transparent, exceptional in how they manage the resources entrusted to them and who commit to deliver excellence in programme results.
The Position:
The consultant is expected to work from 20 July 2026 to 22 September 2026 and the consultancy will be home-based.
The consultant will submit a daily log including the details of working days and tasks along with the deliverables. The acceptance of services at the end of each completed deliverable will be certified through a Certification of Payment to be counter signed by both parties (IC and UNFPA).
The consultant will work under the direct supervision of UNFPA Programme Analyst, PD and will produce the following deliverables:
Deliverable 1: Submission of the inception report, 27 July 2026, 12% completion
The report gives high level details of the specific research objectives and methodological framework, incorporating a comprehensive overview of empirical data repositories and the way for data acquisition, as well as a weekly research time schedule for each analysis.
Deliverable 2: Submission of the preliminary report, 7 September 2026, 60% completion
The preliminary report will provide the analysis that is agreed in the inception report phase, including the policy recommendations.
Deliverable 3: Finalization of the report, 22 September 2026, 28% completion
Finalization of the report in line with the UNFPA feedback given to Preliminary Report
Qualifications and Experience:
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UNFPA Work Environment:
UNFPA provides a work environment that reflects the values of gender equality, diversity, integrity and healthy work-life balance. We are committed to ensuring gender parity in the organization and therefore encourage women to apply. UNFPA promotes equal opportunities in terms of appointment, training, compensation and selection for all regardless of personal characteristics and dimensions of diversity. Diversity, Equity and Inclusion is at the heart of UNFPA's workforce - click here to learn more.
Disclaimer:
UNFPA does not charge any application, processing, training, interviewing, testing or other fee in connection with the application or recruitment process and does not concern itself with information on applicants' bank accounts.
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