Sustainable Public Procurement
What is public procurement? It is the purchase by governments and state-owned enterprises of goods, services and works.
However, public procurement decisions are still dominated by lowest price at the time of purchase rather than awarding contracts based on value-for-money across the life cycle of a solution. This is a missed opportunity for creating society-wide benefits and fostering the transition to sustainable and circular economies.
Governments spend on average between 12 and 30 per cent of their GDP for procuring goods, services and infrastructure. This enormous purchasing power needs to be reformed to ensure that the state is buying the most sustainable solutions to address today’s challenges. This is also highlighted by SDG Target 12.7. Procurement is a powerful tool for developing new markets, fostering innovation and transitioning from the ownership of goods and assets to a service economy, featuring distributed models of use and ownership.
Procurers need to take on a strategic role and adopt life cycle and systemic thinking when making procurement decisions. This holds particularly true for the procurement of infrastructure assets, which have long lifespans and lock in technologies, and thus have long-lasting social, economic and environmental impacts.
IISD provides policy advice, research and training to implement sustainable public procurement. We work closely with policy-makers, international donors, multilateral development banks and NGOs to design policies, programs and technical assistance that address a wide spectrum of topics. Some of our ongoing work and implemented projects are:
Using the Sustainable Asset Valuation (SAVi) to provide quantitative evidence on the multiple financial, economic, social and environmental gains that can be realized through sustainable public procurement.
We invite you to explore our work, including:
- Handbooks on Sustainable Public Procurement and capacity building for the Inter-American Network for Government Procurement
- Advice to municipal and provincial level governments in the Western Cape, South Africa on moving toward performance-based specifications in public procurement
- A three-year program on implementing Green Public Procurement in Bhutan
- Advice to the European Climate Foundation on the role of public procurement and innovation in the European Union for low-carbon infrastructure
- Research on the Role of Public Procurement in Deploying Sustainable Infrastructure
We also serve on several working groups and are engaged in a number of associations: OECD Leading Practitioners on Public Procurement, UNEP 10YFP Sustainable Public Procurement Programme – Working Group on Sustainable Infrastructure, UNCITRAL Working Groups on Procurement and PPPs, Green Public Procurement Expert Group of the European Commission´s Directorate-General for Environment, International Green Purchasing Network (IGPN), Inter-American Network on Government Procurement (INGP), Circular Economy Leadership Coalition, Innovation Procurement Working Group of the European Commission`s Directorate-General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs (DG GROW).
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Unsolicited Proposals in Infrastructure: A growing reality for governments, requiring robust management frameworks
Unsolicited proposals for infrastructure give rise to significant concerns related to transparency, quality and fair competition in public procurement.
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Ideas and Solutions to Address the USD 50 Trillion Infrastructure Deficit: A contribution to the 2015 G-20 Summit, Antalya, Turkey
The opportunity costs of not addressing the global infrastructure deficit are too high.According to Brodhead, Darling, and Mullin (2014), for every...
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How Green Public Procurement Contributes to Sustainable Development in China
Building on the results of the IISD Green Public Procurement (GPP) Model, consultations with stakeholders and an extensive literature review, this paper provides targeted recommendations addressing the development areas identified to improve GPP in China.
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Handbook for INGP Public Procurers / Manual para Agentes de Compras Públicas de las RICG
This handbook will guide government procurers on the design of procurement policies and preferential purchasing programs that will crowd-in SMEs, minority suppliers and women-owned enterprises.
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Currency Risk in Project Finance
In developing countries, international financing institutions (IFIs) often help finance key infrastructure projects, predominantly through hard currency loans.
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Risk Allocation in Public-Private Partnerships: Maximizing value for money
Optimal risk allocation is one of the key value for money (VFM) drivers in a public-private partnership (PPP) delivery model. In a conventional...
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Sharing Risk and Revenues from PPPs: Perspectives from current practice in the road sector
Accurately forecasting traffic demand is a key component in the planning process for a highway transportation project.Traffic levels are...
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Aligning Public and Private Interests in a Public-Private Partnership: Safeguarding the public interest while allowing private returns
Involving private parties in infrastructure projects—traditionally seen as “public goods” in economic theory—is not without controversy.Concerns...
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The Private Financing Component in Public-Private Partnerships
Many policy-makers and public-private partnership (PPP) practitioners view access to private financing as the main motivation for developing...
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Reshaping Efficiency: Discussing innovative financing models to drive energy efficiency in India
This report discusses the current situation of the energy efficiency sector in India, delves into some of the causes hindering the development of...
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