National Project Manager; National Technical Specialist

The Government of Vietnam, through the Ministry of Construction (MOC), has been implementing the Project entitled “Energy Efficiency Improvement in Commercial and High-Rise Residential Buildings in Viet Nam” funded by GEF/UNDP with main overall targets to reduce intensity of GHG emissions from the building sector in Vietnam.

The project objective is to improve the energy utilization performance of commercial and high-rise residential buildings in Ho Chi Minh and Hanoi through implementation of three components:

  1. Improvement and Enforcement of Energy Efficiency Building Code;
  2. Building Market Development Support Initiatives, and;
  3. Building EE Technology Applications and Replications.

Each component comprises a number of complementary activities designed to remove barriers to the stringent enforcement of the revised EEBC, and to the greater uptake of building energy efficiency technologies, systems, and practices in commercial and residential buildings. By EOP, the GEF investment will have catalysed direct GHG emission reduction of about 37,680 tCO2e. The cumulative direct reduction in GHG emissions over the lifetime of the project is envisioned to be 236,382 tCO2e.

The Project is now recruiting 02 positions:

  1. National Project Manager
  2. National Technical Specialist

Applications must reach the above address no later than 4 p.m., October 25, 2016.

Acknowledgements will only be sent to short-listed applicants.

Applications will not be returned to applicants.

Address for applications:

Project Office: The Project Management Unit of Energy Efficiency Improvement in Commercial and High-Rise Residential Buildings in Viet Nam
The Project Management Unit of Energy Efficiency Improvement in Commercial and High-Rise Residential Buildings in Viet Nam
37 Le Dai Hanh, Hai Ba Trung, Ha Noi
Tel/Fax:(+84.4) 3633.1750
Email: [email protected]

Job Details
Organisation Name: 
EECB Project Management Unit - MOC
Location: 
Hanoi
Application Deadline: 
Tue, 2016-10-25