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Southeast Asia Regional Program on Combating Marine Plastics (SEA-MaP): Regional Platform for Knowledge and Partnerships (Q1 2026 - Q1 2027) - Management and operation - Incl. policy dialogue & workshops; imp. of the Regional Training Program; imp. of Sustainability Strategy & Platform Handover

Last update: 10 days ago Last update: Apr 8, 2026

Details

Location:Indonesia
Indonesia
Category:Consulting services
Status:Open
Sectors:Environment & Climate, Pollution & Waste Management (incl. treatment), Organizational development
Languages:English
Funding Agency:
Eligibility:Organisation
Budget:N/A
Date posted: Apr 8, 2026

Attachments 1

Associated Awards

Project cycle timeline

STAGES
EARLY INTELLIGENCE
PROCUREMENT
IMPLEMENTATION
Cancelled
Status
Programming
Formulation
Approval
Forecast
Open
Closed
Shortlisted
Awarded
Evaluation

Associated tenders 1

Status

Date

Quick summary

AI generated
Objectives: Ensure uninterrupted operation of SEA‑MaP’s Regional Platform for Knowledge & Partnerships on ...
Eligibility criteria: Eligible applicants are consulting firms able to deliver the services in Indonesia (Jakarta-based coordination; travel as justified) under a World Bank CQS selection for ASEAN SEA‑MaP (P175659). Submissions must be in English. Firms must demonstrate:...

Description

NOTICE AT-A-GLANCE Project ID: P175659 Project Title: Southeast Asia Regional Program on Combating Marine Plastics (SEA-MaP) Country: East Asia and Pacific Notice No: OP00436944 Notice Type: Request for Expression of Interest Notice Status: Published Borr
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tender Background

About the Funding Agency

The World Bank (USA) is part of an international financial agency that makes loans and grants to governments in low- and middle-income countries to fund capital projects. The United States was a driving force behind the founding of the World Bank in 1944 and it is still the World Bank's largest shareholder today.

The United States contributes to tackling critical international development concerns through the World Bank Group and has a long history of generously supporting the objectives of the World Bank Group and has been a champion of the International Development Association (IDA) which provides low-interest loans and grants to the world's poorest countries. The key U.S. priorities at the World Bank include a multilateral health and economic response to COVID-19, debt sustainability and transparency, promoting governance and fighting corruption, ending energy poverty and supporting a strong emphasis on accountability, transparency and development impact.

About the Sectors

Environment & Climate

Focuses on protecting natural ecosystems, promoting sustainable resource management, enhancing climate resilience, and mitigating the impacts of climate change through conservation, adaptation, and low-carbon initiatives.


Key areas:
  • Environmental protection and conservation
  • Natural resource and ecosystem management
  • Climate change and environmental resilience

Pollution & Waste Management (incl. treatment)

Includes initiatives aimed at reducing environmental pollution and improving the collection, treatment, and disposal of waste.


Key areas:
  • Pollution prevention and environmental protection
  • Solid and liquid waste management
  • Recycling and waste treatment solutions
  • Environmental clean-up and remediation projects

Locations

Indonesia

Indonesia is pursuing broad infrastructure expansion in transport, energy, power grids and urban services to support its goal of becoming a high-income economy by 2045. Major reforms and blended finance packages backed by institutions like the World Bank seek to strengthen electricity networks, expand access to clean energy and enhance financial and digital infrastructure. The government is also promoting private sector participation through public–private partnerships, streamlined project facilitation and innovative financing mechanisms to bridge a large funding gap. Despite strong long-term growth prospects, geographic dispersion, financing constraints and regulatory complexity remain challenges to realising the full potential of infrastructure investment.

Nr. of tenders: 22466
Nr. of grants: 3308
Nr. of donors: 600
Nr. of jobs: 121
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