{"id":31343,"date":"2026-02-24T11:07:46","date_gmt":"2026-02-24T10:07:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/planbleu.org\/?post_type=offre-emploi-liste&p=31343"},"modified":"2026-02-24T12:32:05","modified_gmt":"2026-02-24T11:32:05","slug":"mediterranean-forest-water-assessment-consultancy","status":"publish","type":"offre-emploi-liste","link":"https:\/\/planbleu.org\/en\/offre-emploi-liste\/mediterranean-forest-water-assessment-consultancy\/","title":{"rendered":"Terms Of Reference Assessment of the Mediterranean water-forest (Wa-Fo) interface, its challenges and adaptation solutions – main challenges and adaptation solutions assessment"},"content":{"rendered":"

About Plan Bleu:<\/b><\/h3>\n

This consultation is published by Plan Bleu, French association founded in 1977, Regional Activity Center of the Mediterranean Action Plan (MAP), based in Marseille, France. The MAP is one of the main components of the Regional Seas Programme of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). It has a legal instrument: the Barcelona Convention and relies on seven regional activity centres (\u201cRACs\u201d) responsible in particular for promoting the implementation of the various protocols attached to the convention. Plan Bleu is one of the seven centres mandated by the twenty-two Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention, including the European Union . Plan Bleu acts as an observatory of the environment and sustainable development in the Mediterranean, and conducts thematic, systemic and prospective analyses to enlighten decision-makers of the region on the environmental risks and the challenges of sustainable development.<\/span><\/p>\n

Right after its creation, Plan Bleu was mandated to provide a Mediterranean foresight exercise on water resource evolution. Plan Bleu’s vision on water issues aims to be holistic and aligned with the Barcelona Convention, the Mediterranean Strategy for Sustainable Development, and the Sustainable Development Goals. Water functions as a cornerstone linking economic, environmental, social, and governance issues. Thus, through these different thematic pillars, Plan Bleu advances on these central questions in a Mediterranean basin increasingly impacted by extreme climate events marked by strong seasonality (torrential rains, floods, repeated drought periods, etc.). To this end, Plan Bleu provides various studies covering: sectoral aspects, water risk analyses, prospective studies on water resources, digital tools to monitor the quantitative and qualitative state of the resource through its observatory, as well as socio-economic analyses. In 2025, Plan Bleu has focused on non-conventional water resources, particularly desalination, an adaptation solution addressing water shortages but still controversial, notably regarding its socio-economic and environmental impacts. A scoping study on the Mediterranean water cycle has been realized. This umbrella study provides a systemic vision of the Mediterranean water challenges and potential adaptation solutions to advance on. With this desk study work, Plan Bleu settled its ambitions for advancing and promoting sustainable water management for the upcoming years.<\/span><\/p>\n

Plan Bleu’s vision on water issues aims to be systemic and aligned with the Barcelona Convention, the Mediterranean Strategy for Sustainable Development, and the International Sustainable Development Goals. Water is actually a cornerstone that touches on economic, environmental, sociological, and governance issues. Thus, through these different thematic pillars, Plan Bleu advances on these central questions in a Mediterranean basin increasingly impacted by extreme climate events marked by strong seasonality (torrential rains, floods, repeated drought periods, etc.). To this end, Plan Bleu provides various studies covering: sectoral aspects, water risk analyses, prospective studies on water resources, digital tools to monitor the quantitative and qualitative state of the resource through its observatory, as well as socio-economic analyses.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

About waters and forests \u2013 background and context:<\/b><\/p>\n

Rationale<\/b><\/p>\n

The Mediterranean basin is one of the global water stress hotspots and faces mounting pressure from climate change and growing demand. Surrounded by 21 countries with over 500 million people, this climate change hotspot faces unprecedented water challenges that demand immediate and coordinated actions. Since the pre-industrial period (1850), atmospheric surface temperatures have risen by 1.45\u00b0C on average, while renewable water resources are projected to decrease by 15-35% by century\u2019s end (2080-2099). The unbalanced reality is significant: northern Mediterranean countries possess 67-74% of regional water resources, while southern nations like Egypt struggle with as little as 589 m\u00b3 per capita annually, well below the water scarcity threshold (1000 m\u00b3\/an\/capita).<\/span><\/p>\n

A clear relationship exists between the Mediterranean water cycle and Mediterranean forests. Forests play major roles in water transfers to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration processes, facilitate water infiltration via root networks, reduce flooding events, and ensure soil conservation by limiting erosion.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

Conversely, the functioning, structure and resilience of Mediterranean forests are highly dependent on water availability and on the dynamics of the large-scale water cycle. Changes in precipitation patterns, rising temperatures, increased evapotranspiration demand and the growing frequency of extreme events associated with climate change directly affect forest health, productivity and regeneration capacity. Droughts, wildfires and land degradation processes are both drivers and consequences of altered forest\u2013water interactions.<\/span><\/p>\n

Forests and woodlands cover approximately 28% of the Mediterranean region (FAO, 2025). These natural assets are under increasing pressure and growing exposure to climate change impacts, including droughts, wildfires, and land degradation, with 80 million hectares identified as vulnerable. Beyond climate challenges, Mediterranean population growth and associated activities intensify forest loss and degradation (<\/span>Plan Bleu, 2020 State of the Environment and Development<\/span><\/a>). In this context, the disruption of forest\u2013water feedback loops risks amplifying water scarcity, ecosystem degradation and climate vulnerability at the regional scale.<\/span><\/p>\n

This consultancy therefore aims to deliver a holistic analysis of forest\u2013water interactions in the Mediterranean, explicitly examining how forests influence the large water cycle and how changes in the water cycle, under climate change, in turn affect forest dynamics. By framing Mediterranean forests as nature-based solutions that both depend on and reinforce hydrological processes, the study seeks to support more integrated decision-making in forest management, water governance and climate adaptation strategies.<\/span><\/p>\n

Tasks description<\/b><\/h3>\n

Scope of the work<\/b><\/p>\n

The analysis will cover all 21 Mediterranean countries: Albania, Algeria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Cyprus, Egypt, France, Greece, Israel, Italy, Lebanon, Libya, Malta, Monaco, Montenegro, Morocco, Slovenia, Spain, Syria, Tunisia, and T\u00fcrkiye.<\/span><\/p>\n

Rather than relying solely on national-level analyses, candidates are invited to <\/span>propose and justify the most relevant geographical scale(s) for analysing forest\u2013water interactions in the Mediterranean context<\/b>, for instance through sub-regional groupings, bioclimatic zones or other coherent spatial frameworks.<\/span><\/p>\n

A <\/span>particular focus on Morocco and Tunisia is expected<\/b>. The study will serve as an \u201cumbrella\u201d analysis feeding into other 2026\u20132027 Plan Bleu thematic activities on forest management practices for climate change adaptation in both countries.<\/span><\/p>\n

Within this consultation we encourage <\/span>multi geographical scale assessments<\/b>. This will allow in-depth analysis at more local levels for potential territories identified as priority areas of intervention.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

Specific objectives<\/b><\/p>\n

This study aims specifically to :\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n