Overview
The CCAC Interinstitutional coordinator for the Super Pollutants Accelerator in Mexico will support the Government of Mexico with the coordination and participation of all competent actors and authorities engaged in super pollutant agenda goals and broader climate mitigation and air quality objectives.
Key Responsibilities
- Support the Government of Mexico with the coordination and participation of all competent actors and authorities thematically engaged in the goals of super pollutant agenda and its broader climate mitigation and air quality objectives.
- Ensure coherence, effective information flow, and strategic alignment across key super pollutant sectors.
- Facilitate collaboration across relevant line and sectoral ministries, such as through the coordination of a national interministerial mechanism, as well as with other key stakeholders.
- Engage with CCAC Hubs to enhance national action and cross-sectoral integration.
- Produce a detailed yearly workplan, monthly activity reports, and 3-monthly and 6-monthly in-depth progress reports against the KPI: “Inter-ministerial coordination mechanism on super pollutants is operational”.
Required Experience
- 6-8 years of experience in public policy and governmental coordination preferably in environment, climate and/or sustainable development is required.
- Strong understanding of Mexico’s environmental institutions and policies is required.
- A good understanding of short-lived climate pollutants, climate change and air pollution issues in Mexico is required.
- Ability to work effectively with diverse stakeholders and to collaborate with multidisciplinary team is required.
- Knowledge of the national policies in climate change mitigation and air pollution is required.
- Strong facilitation, diplomacy, and project management skills; experience with multi-stakeholder platforms is required.
- Demonstrated ability to navigate complex federal bureaucracies and build trust across diverse institutions is desired.
- Familiarity with CCAC, UNFCCC processes, and Mexico’s institutional landscape on climate change is desired.
Qualifications
• Advanced university degree (Master’s or equivalent) in public administration, environmental policy, international relations, or a related discipline. A first‑level university degree combined with two additional years of qualifying experience may be accepted in lieu of the advanced degree.