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Sustainable Timber Action in Europe. Training for Small Medium Enterprises (SMEs). Module 3: Sustainable Public Procurement. Training of SMEs operators Place, date. Power of public procurement Public authorities in EU spend approx. €2 trillion per year – equivalent to 19% of EU GDP
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Sustainable Timber Action in Europe Training for Small Medium Enterprises (SMEs) Module 3: Sustainable Public Procurement Training of SMEs operators Place, date
Power of public procurement • Public authorities in EU spend approx. €2 trillion per year – equivalent to 19% of EU GDP • Huge range of spend areas – from paper to huge infrastructure projects • 5 – 15% market share for most goods and services – in certain areas much higher • Huge potential to drive the development of sustainable solutions
Group exercise • “Sustainable public procurement is a key enabling instrument for countries that want to make the transition towards a green economy” – Achim Steiner, UNEP Executive Director at Rio+20 But what is sustainable public procurement (SPP)?
What is sustainable public procurement (SPP)? • A process whereby public authorities take into consideration in their procurement activities the environmental, social and economic impacts of products, services or works throughout their life cycle • Life cycle: • Extraction/harvesting of raw materials • Processing of materials & assembly of product • Transportation of materials and product • Consumption of product during use (energy, water etc.) • Disposal of final product
SPP examples • Buying energy efficient computers, meeting the Energy Star requirement • Demanding catering companies serve organic food and fair trade coffee • Setting strict energy performance standards for new buildings and major renovations • Using service providers who employ disadvantaged people • Buying green electricity, produced by renewable sources
Does it work? A small selection... • City of Vienna: saved €44.4 million and over 100,000 tones of CO2 emissions between 2004 and 2007 through its EcoBuy (Ökokauf) programme • City of Barcelona: in 2010 spent €43 million on green products and €92 million on “greened” services (e.g. lighting, fountain maintenance) • City of Rome: 69% of the 144,000 meals served by the city each day contain organic food • Town of Venelles, France (Pop. 8,100): A majority of cleaning products purchased are eco-labelled and fully biodegradable
“Ecobuy Vienna” • Success factors: • Starting point (policy): Climate Protection Programme (“KliP Wien“) • Collaboration between different municipal departments: Finance, Environment, Construction • Strong marketing (videoclip, games in schools, awareness raising) • Systematic stakeholder involvement (180 municipal employees involved in development of product criteria) • Binding decree at top administration level to make “Ecobuy Vienna” criteria mandatory for procurers Source: www.oekokauf.wien.at
Success: WG Food • In 2009: • 30% in public hospitals • 12% in schools • 18% in elderly homes • 51% in public kindergartens
Overall success From 2004-2007: • 44,4 Millionen Euro (ca. 17 million EUR/year) • 103,000 t CO2 (ca. 30,000t/year)
What can SPP achieve? • Major reductions in CO2 emissions – Passive construction, highly-efficient lighting, IT equipment • Development of new environmental technologies & new ways of carrying out services • Improvements in air & water quality, reduce waste generation – low emission vehicles, bio-based products • Save money – meet your needs more efficiently. Consider the real costs over the life cycle • Socialbenefits – Creating skills, training and employment opportunities, encouraging fair and equal opportunities for all, supporting SMEs and social enterprises
What is happening at the European level? • Revision of EU Procurement Directives • EU GPP Communication • EU GPP support: GPP criteria, Buying Green Handbook, Helpdesk and news-alerts • EU GPP obligations: Clean Vehicles Directive, Energy Star Regulation, and EPBD Directive
Revision of EU Procurement Directives • Directives 2004/17/EC & 2004/18/EC which regulate how public and semi-public bodies must carry out procurement, are currently under revision • EC published proposals in December 2011. Main aims: • to improve the efficiency of current procedures • to allow for greater strategic use of public procurement to further environmental, social and industrial/innovation policies • Now put forward for adoption by the Parliament and Council
Revision of EU Procurement Directives Main proposed changes relevant for SPP: • Increased scope for contracts to be reserved for enterprises employing disabled or disadvantaged workers (Article 17); • Explicit recognition that technical specifications may include reference to the production process or any other stage of the life-cycle for all types of contract (Article 40); • Possibility to refer to specific environmental or social labels in technical specifications (Article 41); • Ability to invoke non-compliance with EU or international social and environmental law as grounds for refusal to award a contract to a tenderer (Article 54.2);
Revision of EU Procurement Directives Main proposed changes relevant for SPP (cont.): • Ability to exclude a candidate from a competition on the basis of violations of EU or international environmental or social obligations (Article 55.3(a)); • Explicit recognition that life-cycle costing (LCC), including external environmental costs, may be an award criterion and introduction of rules regarding the calculation of LCC (Article 67); • Recognition (as in the current Directive) that contract conditions may include social and environmental requirements (Article 70)
EU GPP Communication Communication “Public procurement for a better environment” (COM (2008) 400) • Indicative target of 50% Green Public Procurement (GPP) across EU by 2010 • Outlines the key tools to boost GPP across the EU: • Common GPP criteria • Use of life-cycle costing (LCC) • Provision of clearer legal guidance on how to implement GPP • 19 product and services currently covered – available in all EU languages • Accompanied by a technical background document indicating how they were developed
What help is available? • European Commission: Buying Green! Handbook, second edition 2011: http://ec.europa.eu/environment/gpp/buying_handbook_en.htm • European GPP criteria for 19 product and service groups http://ec.europa.eu/environment/gpp/eu_gpp_criteria_en.htm • Procura+ Manual – A guide to cost effective sustainable public procurement:http://www.procuraplus.org/en/about-procura/procura-manual/
ICLEI’s help • The Procura+ Campaign: an initiative designed to help support public authorities across Europe in implementing sustainable procurement – and help promote their achievements. http://www.procuraplus.org • Training: ICLEI carries out sustainable procurement training activities across Europe, including an extensive training programme for the German Environment Agency
From timber procurement to Sustainable (Green) Public Procurement of wood products... a quick view at EU level
GPP policies for wood products • GPP criteria for some wood products GPP for timber products in EU countries (1/3) Source: Oliver, 2009; Nielsen, 2011
GPP for timber products in EU countries (2/3) Source: FFI, 2009; Nielsen, 2011
GPP for timber products in EU countries (3/3) Source: FFI, 2009; Nielsen, 2011
PP an tropical timber Tropical Timber consumption of EU countries • 5-10% of all primary tropical timber in the world (excluding secondary processed timber) is imported by EU countries • The average of government purchasing of tropical timber is in the range of 5-20% :France 25%Germany 5%Belgium 10%UK 15%. Source: IDH 2012
Sustainable Public Procurement: What‘s the potential in thiscountry?