Volunteers are employees who are prepared to travel to the four corners of the world to put their experience and skills at the service of others.
A Veoliaforce volunteer is a Veolia employee who, during his or her working hours, goes on a mission on behalf of the Veolia Foundation. Previously trained in humanitarian emergencies and the use of intervention equipment designed by the Foundation, they may be in the field for several weeks or provide their expertise remotely. They leave at the request of international humanitarian organisations after a disaster or to improve the living conditions of the most disadvantaged on a long-term basis. They provide expertise in one of the Group's core businesses: Water, Energy, Waste;
The Foundation coordinates and pays for logistics and travel expenses; Veoliaforce volunteers continue to be paid as if they were working in their usual job.
What about ERUs? Veoliaforce volunteers can be made available to the French Red Cross, a long-standing partner of the Veolia Foundation, to join its Emergency Response Teams (ERU). Illustration after the September 2023 earthquake in Morocco.
Become a Veoliaforce volunteer?
Employees of the Veolia Group can apply to be included among the Veoliaforce volunteers of the Veolia Foundation by following this link (access reserved for Group employees):
For which missions?
Since its creation in 2004, the Veolia Foundation has carried out nearly 250 expert missions, both on development projects and in humanitarian emergencies. Illustrations in Pakistan, Haiti, Lebanon, Bangladesh, Myanmar...
Veoliaforce volunteers's stories
Philippe Deparday: "There's so much poverty in these camps that you inevitably want to help."
"There's so much poverty in these camps that you inevitably want to help."
40 km south of Beirut, on the outskirts of the Lebanese city of Saida, lies one of the largest Palestinian refugee camps: Ein El Hilweh. 45,000 people have been living there for years. But as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict drags on, and the influx of refugees continues, other camps have sprung up around this official camp, which has been built "on solid ground" and equipped with infrastructure.
In these informal settlements, living conditions are far from satisfactory, in terms of housing quality, infrastructure and sanitation.
Mission: to help the NGO Première Urgence
To make up for these many shortcomings, the NGO Première Urgence has been working since March 2005 in one of them, Sikke, which is home to 368 families, or 1,712 people. The main objective is to eliminate the environmental and health risks associated with the uncontrolled discharge of hundreds of cubic meters of wastewater. To achieve this, the NGO relies on the expertise of Lebanese and international professionals.
Philippe Deparday, center manager at SADE DRIF Sud, was assigned by Veoliaforce to help the NGO Première Urgence. He spent a week in South Lebanon in February 2008 to validate some of the choices that had been made for the future wastewater network. He was able to verify on site the data he had previously received (housing layout, topography, access for construction machinery, road conditions, existing networks, etc.), update the preliminary designs for the future sewerage and stormwater networks, and work with the local design office.