Consultant – Industrial Feasibility for Tom Brown Reformulation
International Rescue Committee
Job Description
The International Rescue Committee (IRC) responds to the world's worst humanitarian crises, helping to restore health, safety, education, economic wellbeing, and power to people devastated by conflict and disaster. Founded in 1933 at the call of Albert Einstein, the IRC is one of the world's largest international humanitarian non-governmental organizations (INGO), at work in more than 40 countries and 29 U.S. cities helping people to survive, reclaim control of their future and strengthen their communities. A force for humanity, IRC employees deliver lasting impact by restoring safety, dignity and hope to millions. If you're a solutions-driven, passionate change-maker, come join us in positively impacting the lives of millions of people world-wide for a better future.
<4>Consultancy - Terms of Reference (TOR)4><4>Title: Consultant – Industrial Feasibility for Tom Brown Reformulation4>
Total number of Consultants: 1
Country Program: Nigeria
Proposed Dates: May - June, 2026
Duration: 2 months <4>Background of the project4>
IRC is exploring whether Tom Brown can be reformulated into a safer, more consistent, treatment-grade product for moderate acute malnutrition (MAM) in Northeast Nigeria. The goal is to define a product that remains locally familiar, affordable, and practical to prepare, while meeting stronger standards for nutrition, safety, quality, and production consistency.
<4>This consultancy focuses on the industrial feasibility side of the work, with explicit goals to:4>
The consultant will lead the definition of industrial feasibility constraints for reformulated Tom Brown and translate those constraints into practical decisions for formulation, production, and scale-up.
<4>Define industrial feasibility constraints and production pathway (Primary Deliverable)4>
Define the feasible production pathways for reformulated Tom Brown, including roasting, milling, blending, extrusion, or hybrid approaches.
Identify the key constraints that should shape formulation and production decisions, including machinery, batch size, throughput, process control, ingredient handling, oil content, aflatoxin risk, rancidity, moisture control, shelf stability, and production consistency.
Clarify which constraints are absolute red lines, which can be solved through adaptation, and which should be tested during prototype or pilot production.
Translate constraints into a usable feasibility framework
a. Produce a clear decision framework that helps IRC understand:
What can be produced locally now
What could be produced with modest adaptation
What would require larger investment or a different production partner
What is not feasible under current conditions
Key trade-offs between cost, manufacturability, stability, quality, and complexity
<4>The framework should be practical enough to guide formulation selection, partner engagement, and next-stage pilot planning.4>
<4>Assess local production pathways and facility types4>
Map the relevant local production economy, including hammer mills, processors, packaging actors, ingredient suppliers, and larger production partners.
Assess which facility types could plausibly support early formulation testing, pilot production, or larger-scale production.
Identify where IRC may be able to contract with existing local facilities, where technical upgrades would be required, and where production may need to ladder up to more capable partners.
Identify QA infrastructure gaps at each candidate facility against institutional procurement expectations (e.g., UNICEF Supply Division, WFP).
<4>Define equipment, process, and QA/QC requirements4>
Identify the machinery, process steps, utilities, labor, and facility conditions required to produce reformulated Tom Brown safely and consistently.
Define minimum QA/QC and food safety requirements for pilot production and scale-up, including examples such as raw material acceptance criteria, aflatoxin controls, moisture thresholds, heavy metal limits, microbiological testing, traceability, batch records, and finished product testing.
Identify where third-party lab testing, external QA support, or additional technical oversight would be required.
<4>Determine what procurement-grade evidence should be collected in prototype production4>
Define the raw material, in-process, finished product, and stability evidence to be collected during prototype production to support future supplier qualification (e.g., UNICEF SD, WFP).
Identify which evidence categories require accredited third-party testing and where in-house QA can suffice.
Initiate accelerated stability testing on prototype lots so the data is in motion, even if it cannot be completed within the consultancy window.
<4>Support formulation decisions4>
Work with the Nutrition Formulation Consultant to assess 3–4 candidate Tom Brown reformulations against production realities.
For each option, identify risks related to processing complexity, ingredient reliability, quality control, shelf stability, packaging, cost, consistency, and scalability.
Recommend practical changes to improve manufacturability while preserving the nutritional intent of the product.
Coordinate with the Nutrition Formulation Consultant through a joint kickoff and a mid-point sync.
Co-author a short Joint Reconciliation Note capturing where production realities and nutrition targets converged or diverged.
<4>Assess packaging, storage, cost, capacity, and scale4>
Define practical packaging and storage requirements for Northeast Nigeria conditions, including heat, humidity, rough transport, multi-handling, warehouse conditions, and shelf-life protection.
Develop a high-level view of production cost drivers, capacity constraints, bottlenecks, and scale-up requirements, including ingredients, premix where relevant, processing, packaging, testing, labor, storage, and likely facility adaptations.
<4>Deliverables:4>
Activity-based, linked to delivery of defined outputs, within an overall budget of x
<4>Requirements:4>
The consultant should bring:
All International Rescue Committee workers must adhere to the core values and principles outlined in IRC Way - Standards for Professional Conduct. Our Standards are Integrity, Service, Equality and Accountability. In accordance with these values, the IRC operates and enforces policies on Safeguarding, Conflicts of Interest, Fiscal Integrity, and Reporting Wrongdoing and Protection from Retaliation. IRC is committed to take all necessary preventive measures and create an environment where people feel safe, and to take all necessary actions and corrective measures when harm occurs. IRC builds teams of professionals who promote critical reflection, power sharing, debate, and objectivity to deliver the best possible services to our clients.
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