Sustainable procurement

UNDP’s approach to sustainable procurement for health products

In close collaboration with governments, United Nations agencies, international organizations, manufacturers, freight forwarders and partners, UNDP is adopting incremental measures and models in its health procurement practices to minimize environmental impact and to incorporate economic and social sustainability. Key partnerships and priority programme areas are outlined below.

UNDP sustainable procurement in the health sector programme

UNDP hosts the secretariat and participates in the United Nations Informal Interagency Task Team on Sustainable Procurement in the Health Sector (SPHS). The taskforce brings together seven United Nations agencies (UNDP, United Nations Environment Programme – UNEP, United Nations Children’s Fund – UNICEF, United Nations Population Fund – UNFPA, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees – UNHCR, United Nations Office for Project Services – UNOPS, World Health Organization – WHO) and three multilateral health financing institutions (Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance – Gavi, Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria – Global Fund, Unitaid). The annual cumulative purchasing power of the taskforce for health products is around $5 billion, which gives opportunities to influence and pilot business models for improving environmental, social and economic sustainability. With increased health spending during the pandemic, this figure has risen two-fold in the last 2 years.

UNDP’s Sustainable Health Procurement programme strives to promote sustainable production and consumption practices by ensuring products and services purchased have the lowest environmental impact and contribute towards positive social results. The UNDP approach to sustainable health procurement also leads towards considerable cost benefits and resource efficiencies in health procurement.

UNDP is committed to sustainable procurement as a gradual approach through working in partnership with manufacturers and other partners and by strategically leveraging the health procurement architecture as a market mechanism for change. This will foster a market transition towards more sustainable production, procurement and consumption practices for health products. Among many others, UNDP has organized five Global manufacturers fora in five different regions (Philippines 2018, Tanzania 2019, Saud Arabia 2020, Colombia 2021 and United Kingdom 2022). The Global manufacturers forum has become a popular event for policy makers, manufacturers, academia, CSOs and suppliers of health commodities and equipment to gather and share expectations, lessons and feedback.

In 2020, UNDP launched the  Sustainable Health Procurement Guidance Note, as part of the Sustainable Health in Procurement Project, and has been developing different approaches to include sustainability in its health procurement practices. The main strategy comprise: optimizing medicines packaging; reducing CO2 emissions by optimizing health product procurement transport scenarios; and influencing suppliers in long-term agreements with UNDP to introduce sustainability in their business models through the monitoring and review of sustainability criteria. These sustainability approaches to procurement are carried out closely with national counterparts; the work at the country level serves as a basis for countries to start embedding sustainable practices in their own procurement activities.

Additionally, UNDP worked with Healthcare Without Harm to develop and launch the chemicals of concern to health and environment guidance document. This document includes a list of chemicals of concern to human health and the environment. The list is based on systematic evidence reviews from authoritative sources, which identify chemical and material hazards of concern that are carcinogenic, mutagenic, endocrine disrupting and reproductive hazards (health hazards) and bio- accumulative and persistent to the environment and/or listed in International Environ­mental instruments (Conventions)

Pharmaceutical packaging optimization

Key Resources

Health Care Without Harm This is the second in a series of research and policy papers that Health Care Without Harm and Arup have produced together to identify a set...
AUTHOR: Health Care Without Harm
Language: English
File Format: Link
Global Forum, , Health Care Without Harm, United Nations Development Programme
AUTHOR: aving Lives Sustainably | Health Care Without Harm | UNDP
Language: English
File Format: Link
AUTHOR: Saving Lives Sustainably | SPHS
Language: English
File Format: Link
Health Care Without Harm, UNDP
AUTHOR: Health Care Without Harm | UNDP
Language: English
File Format: Link
AUTHOR: UNDP
Language: English
File Format: Link
The Global Fund
AUTHOR: The Global Fund
Language: English
File Format: PDF
United Nations Development Programme, Green Procurement Index Health UNDP has developed a guide for procurement practitioners to monitor and evaluate compliance with international conventions for environmental safeguarding.
AUTHOR: United Nations Development Programme, Green Procurement Index Health 
Language: English
File Format: Link
United Nations Development Programme, Health Care Without Harm, Green Procurement Index HealthAs part of the engagement on sustainable health procurement, UNDP has developed a questionnaire on environmental practices of suppliers....
AUTHOR: United Nations Development Programme, Health Care Without Harm, Green Procurement Index Health
File Format: PDF