Mission and objectivesUNICEF is dedicated to advancing the rights of every child, everywhere, focusing its programs, advocacy, and operations on this core mission. The organization’s Equity Strategy is at the heart of its commitment, aiming to rectify disparities by prioritizing the most disadvantaged and excluded children and families. This strategy translates the commitment to children's rights into action, as outlined by the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and is essential for fostering sustainable growth and stability within nations.
ContextWithin its new Country Programme Document (CPD) for Ukraine, UNICEF has positioned Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) as a core outcome area to ensure that children and young people live and develop in a safe, sustainable and resilient environment, with equitable access to affordable and safely managed WASH services. This outcome aligns with the Water Strategy of Ukraine until 2050 and supports UNICEF’s broader contribution to humanitarian response, early recovery and longer-term system strengthening in a conflict- and climate-affected context. WASH interventions underpin and enable progress across other programme areas, including health, education, child protection and social services, by safeguarding public health, dignity and environmental sustainability for children and their families. UNICEF Ukraine’s WASH programme takes a dual humanitarian–development approach, addressing urgent needs through the provision of critical supplies, emergency repairs and essential equipment, while simultaneously supporting recovery and resilience of national and local WASH systems. Working with the Ministry for Communities, Territories and Infrastructure Development, the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Natural Resources, local authorities and service providers, the programme focuses on strengthening governance, service delivery capacity and system sustainability in line with the principles of building back better and greener. UNICEF prioritises gender-responsive, inclusive and child-friendly WASH services, promotes improved drinking water and wastewater quality from public health, energy and cost-efficiency perspectives, and advances climate-resilient and innovative technical and governance solutions. Through WASH in schools, healthcare facilities and social institutions, the programme also provides critical cross-cutting support to other programme outcomes, ensuring that children can safely access essential services even in contexts of ongoing shock and disruption. UNICEF Ukraine is expanding its emergency WASH early recovery interventions in conflict-affected oblasts, with a particular focus on restoring essential water, heating, and sanitation services for households, health care facilities (HCFs), and schools. Through various financing and other donor modalities, UNICEF supports municipal water and heating utilities (Vodokanals and District Heating Companies), hromadas, and essential public service providers to implement rapid repairs, critical infrastructure upgrades, and scalable models for resilient service delivery. To strengthen technical oversight, improve data quality, and enhance field-level progress verification (PV), UNICEF seeks a Senior WASH Field Engineer to lead site assessments and develop projects with partners, monitor works, generate high-quality Programmatic Visits (PV)/photo documentation packages, and support partner performance management. The role will also support relationship-building with new hromadas, promote scalable WASH service delivery models, and ensure technical harmonisation across UNICEF sectors (including ADAP, HCFs, and schools).
Task Description1. Support programme development and planning through field Assessments, Technical Monitoring & Progress Verification • Conduct rapid technical assessments of damaged or priority WASH infrastructure across hromadas, VKs, DHCs, schools, and HCFs and support in the development and preparation of project documentation. • Lead monitoring missions to project sites, verifying progress, assessing quality, and documenting gaps. • Produce high-quality Progress Verification (PV) packages, including geo-tagged photos, field notes, engineering observations, and status summaries. • Validate installation, commissioning, and utilisation of UNICEF-procured equipment and materials. • Ensure PV documentation meets KfW, UNICEF HACT and audit requirements. 2. Support to Partner Performance & KPI Tracking • Follow up with partners (VKs, DHCs, municipal departments) on KPI achievement, including reliability, efficiency, service coverage, and readiness indicators. • Identify performance issues and escalate technical risks to UNICEF WASH management. • Support development of simple, scalable tools for utilities to self-report progress. 3. Scalable Models, Knowledge Management & Analysis • Identify scalable WASH service delivery models emerging from KfW work (e.g., solar systems, energy efficiencies etc). • Document lessons learned, success factors, and replicability conditions. • Contribute to technical briefs, case studies, and donor communication materials. • Support in the development of effective knowledge management tools and systems. 4. Engagement with New Hromadas & Multi-Sector Integration • Build and maintain strong working relationships with new hromadas seeking WASH recovery support. • Conduct joint assessments with local authorities to identify needs, prioritise interventions, and prepare pre-feasibility notes. • Ensure technical integration of WASH interventions across UNICEF sectors (ADAP, HCFs, Education), aligning designs and equipment with facility requirements. • Map opportunities for linking utility repair projects with community-level resilience planning. 5. Coordination & Reporting • Coordinate field missions with UNICEF WASH team, Supply, Programme sections, and security colleagues. • Participate in oblast-level WASH coordination or technical meetings as needed. • Prepare concise engineering field reports, risk flags, and recommendations for decision-making. • Ensure that all PV, assessment, and monitoring work complies with UNICEF safety and safeguarding standards. • Apply UNICEF’s risk management and quality-assurance processes, particularly for donor-funded infrastructure
Competencies and values- Care - Respect - integrity - Trust - Accountability and sustainability
Living conditions and remarksAs it is a national UN Volunteer's assignment, the UN volunteer shall organize his/her accommodation by themselves. Entitlements of National UN Volunteer Expert >> USD 2076 The contract lasts for the period indicated in the vacancy with the possibility of extensions subject to availability of funding, operational necessity, and satisfactory performance. However, there is no expectation of renewal of the assignment. This is a full-time contract. Allowances: • Volunteer Living Allowance (VLA): A Volunteer Living Allowance (VLA) USD 2076 (equivalent in UAH) is provided monthly to cover housing, utilities, and normal cost of living expenses. This includes Well-Being Differentials for the period while the ICSC applies hardship classification to duty stations in Ukraine as “E”. • USD 400 entry lump sum, one-time payment. Medical and life insurance: • Medical insurance: The UN Volunteer and eligible PFU dependents will receive UNV-provided medical insurance coverage. Coverage for UN Volunteers begins from the Commencement of Service and normally ceases one month after the last day of the UN Volunteer Contract date. • Life Insurance: UN Volunteers are covered by life insurance for the duration of the UN Volunteer assignment. If a UN Volunteer dies during the UN Volunteer assignment, the eligible designated beneficiaries will be entitled to receive a life insurance lump sum. Leave entitlements: • Annual leave: UN Volunteers accrue an entitlement to 2.5 days of Annual Leave per completed month of the UN Volunteer assignment. Unused accrued Annual Leave up to a maximum of 30 days is carried over in case of a contract extension within the same UN Volunteer assignment. Unused accrued Annual Leave may not be carried over in case of reassignment or a new assignment. • Learning leave: Subject to supervisor approval and exigencies of service, UN Volunteers may request up to ten working days of Learning Leave per consecutive 12 months of the UN Volunteer assignment, starting with the Commencement of Service date, provided the Learning Leave is used within the contract period. • Certified Sick Leave: UN Volunteers are entitled to up to 30 days of certified sick leave based on a 12-month cycle. This amount is reset every 12-month cycle. • Uncertified Sick Leave: UN Volunteers receive seven days of uncertified sick leave working days in a calendar year. This amount will be reset at the established interval period.