Procura+
Awards
2022 PROCURA+ AWARDS
In the 2022 edition of the Procura+ Awards, public authorities could submit an application in three different categories:
- Sustainable Procurement of the Year: This category will reward procurements which integrate aspects of sustainability, including environmental, economic, circular and social elements. It aims to showcase procurements which include a strategic and therefore holistic approach to implementing public procurement.
- Innovation Procurement of the Year: This category will reward those procurements which use innovative approaches in their purchasing practices, as well as those that foster innovation by purchasing cutting-edge products, services and works and see the public authority as a launch customer, driving sustainable development.
- Procurement Initiative of the Year: This category will focus on outstanding public procurement initiatives, such as programmes, policies, actions, guidance and tools that contribute towards strategic, sustainable, circular and innovation procurement
The applications were assessed by a jury of experienced public procurement experts and policy makers:
- Erika Bozzay, Senior Policy Adviser at the Infrastructure and Public Procurement Division, OECD
- Jorge Laguna-Celis, Director of UNEP's One Planet Network
- Mark Hidson, Global Director of ICLEI's Sustainable Procurement Centre
- Jorge Conesa, Managing Director of the Fair Trade Advocacy Office (FTAO
2022 WINNERS & FINALISTS
Winner: CITY OF MALMÖ, SWEDEN
Circular Signs and Navigation
The City of Malmö has been applying a circular approach to procurement over the past couple of years. Through the Circular PP project, it has piloted the procurement of “non-new furniture” for its city hall. The city has now replicated this circular approach to road and navigation signs. These include both signs that are used in public buildings and on streets. The municipality aims to reuse these signs as much as possible. If that is not possible, then the signs are sent back for reuse or redesign to the supplier. Recycling is considered as the last resort option. For each square meter of reused aluminium, 56 kilos of Co2 are saved. For this tender, Malmö developed three circular criteria. First, to promote reuse within the municipality, the tenderer had to have experience with stocking products for a customer. Second, to encourage reuse by the supplier, the tenderer had to have experience with reusing products that the customer no longer used. Third, to close the loop, the tenderer had to have optimal recycling processes for different materials (plastics, aluminium, glass, and electronics). Out of 5 bidders, one company met all three circular criteria. The selected supplier has been producing signs designed for multiple use-cycles. This supplier has won a national sign award called “Svenska skyltpriset” for a sign made of reused material. Through this tender, the City of Malmö encouraged the supplier to adopt new circular business practices, scale their circular systems, and design innovative products with better materials.
Finalist: CITY OF QUIMPER, FRANCE
Railway station renovation project
The municipality of Quimper is located in Brittany in northwestern France. When it was decided that the railway station had to be renovated, the municipality decided to use a circular economy approach. This renovation project aimed to reuse on-site as many materials as possible, as well as use reclaimed materials from other sites. This was the first pilot project of its kind in the region. The municipality collaborated with the cooperative design practice ROTOR to identify and integrate reclaimed and reused materials into the Railway-Park project's outdoor facilities and roadways. Through this site study, they identified various materials such as natural stones, cobblestones, and wooden elements that could be reused. To avoid cutting them, 16 trees were transplanted and reused in another community project. On-site material reuse provides many benefits. It avoids emissions from the transport of materials, as well as preserves the embodied carbon and energy of these construction materials. The tender specified which elements of the site were to be reused, but allowed flexibility regarding the non-essential characteristics of the materials. This flexibility has allowed the reuse sector to supply materials based on the availability of reclaimed materials. The project also led to local economic development, as it encouraged suppliers to provide locally-sourced materials. The lessons learned from this pilot will help other similar projects in the region adopt a more circular approach.
Honorable mention: CITY OF TAMPERE, FINLAND
Yliopistonkatu (Yliopisto street) Circular Economy Public Procuremen
The City of Tampere decided to carry out the renovation of one of its main streets, Yliopistonkatu, using new public circular economy criteria as part of the Design&Build operating model. The criteria were developed by the city of Tampere, together with the KIEPPI Project, experts from the university, research programmes, the UUMA4 programme and companies. The city pioneered this approach, as it is the first time in Finland that this type of circular economy public procurement criteria are applied. As part of the procurement development, the chosen contractor had to write an environmental plan, to ensure that environmental criteria were really taken into account. Examples of criteria used in the procurement process are: recovered materials used % in the project, environmental plan of the tendering company, transportations trips (km) for building materials (no longer than 20km). The local company will reutilize at least 70% of the materials generated at the place of origin and of the surpluses generated in the contract outside the contract, using the remaining of the recycled materials outside the contract to up to 50%. A CO2 calculation about the renovation will be carried out during and after the project. This procurement example won a development price of the city of Tampere in 2021
Winner: MINISTRY OF ECONOMIC AFFAIRS AND CLIMATE POLICY, THE NETHERLANDS
IWR2021 | Workspace Hardware (WpHW)
The IWR2021 project, handled by one of the government-wide purchasing categories ‘Category ICT Workspace Central Government (IWR)’, includes in its scope all ICT hardware for the national offices and employees of the central government. It consists of five cohesive European tenders for displays, laptops & fixed ICT workstations, Android & accessories, iOS, MacOS, and iPadOS devices and workspace services. The most important core values for IWR are sustainability and circularity, which are applied to all the tenders in the category. IWR did a pre-market survey, entering into discussions with large manufacturers and vendors, which was then followed by a broad market consultation. Afterwards, they created an ambition web, which included sustainability, circular and CSR ambitions. The relevant sustainability aspects were translated into specific requirements and award criteria.
The IWR2021 is an extremely innovative project which has deeply challenged the market and set a new standard in the field, by applying many elements for the first time in ICT. Some of the most important innovations include: for the first time in an ICT tender, CO2 footprints were requested and a Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) calculation had to be carried out for all products. Other newly introduced elements were the use of Fairtrade Climate Standard to compensate for all the CO2 emitted by the delivered products, and waste compensation had to be done through TCO Certified Edge E-Waste Compensated. The tender also required the use of EcoVadis as an independent scorecard for both resellers and manufacturers, with a focus on environment, labour, human rights, ethics and sustainable procurement. All products purchased, excluding accessories, had to be TCO Certified, and repairability and the availability of spare parts had to be ensured for at least 3-5 years after the end of sale on the Dutch market. So far, the project has led to 17% CO2 reduction compared to 1990, 3,36Ktzon of CO2 has been compensated through Fairtrade Climate Standard credits, and a strong increase of EcoVadis scores of resellers from 3% to 34%
Finalist: CITY OF LISBON, PORTUGAL
Procurement Planning Platform (PPP)
In 2021, the City of Lisbon decided to develop a Procurement Planning Platform (PPP) as a backbone for a strategic sourcing approach towards sustainability and innovation. The PPP supports needs assessments, allowing the registration of annual needs for goods, works and services, identifying social, green and economic measures to consider in future tenders; it favours budget and procurement annual planning, also by identifying SDGs related to the PP initiatives. The platform sets sustainability targets at the PP Pre-tendering stage, it identifies sustainability key-procurement areas in Smart Open Lisbon Program and, finally, it creates an Annual PP Plan and provides data for monitoring it. The PPP follows an internal regulation that defines the mandatory steps concerning the process level, allowing all procurement units to register and categorise their purchasing needs. In 2022, the roll-out has started and the PPP is being used to register procurements for 2023 and upcoming years.
Winner: CITY OF GHENT AND THE VEB, BELGIUM
Virtual Power Purchase Agreement for the delivery of locally produced solar power
The City of Ghent aims to reduce its CO2 emissions by 40% by 2030 and become climate-neutral by 2050. To achieve these goals, the city aims to use locally produced renewable energy in its public buildings. The City of Ghent and Vlaams Energiebedrijf – VEB (the Flemish Energy Company) set up a virtual power purchase agreement (PPA) for electricity from renewable energy with a citizen energy cooperative. This virtual PPA is a multi-year bilateral electricity contract which protects the city against volatility in electricity prices. The VEB is a governmental agency that acts as the central procurement office for energy efficient solutions for public entities. The VEB provides its energy expertise and helps the City achieve its climate objectives. The tender requires the delivery of at least 500 MWh of renewable energy per year. It also requires that the production facility where the electricity is generated is at least half owned by a citizen energy community and that residents of Ghent can participate in the community and invest in the project. The winning bidder, Beauvent, secured a 15 year contract with the City of Ghent. Beauvent will install 6,4 ha of solar panels on the rooftop of the Lemahieu Group warehouses, located 3 kilometers from the city hall. This will deliver the equivalent of the annual energy consumption of approximately 2,000 families, and help to meet 46% of the energy needs of the buildings used by the City of Ghent by 2024
Runner-up: CITY OF COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
Fossil and Emission free Non-Road Mobile Machinery (NRMM)
The initiative contributes to the CPH 2025 Climate Plan, which aims to make the city of Copenhagen carbon neutral by 2025. It targets their own fleet of NRMM, construction and civil works projects, market engagement and international participation in projects, aiming to increase market availability and public procurement of fossil fuel and/or emission free NRMM. The reduction potential identified is up to 75.000 CO2e tons per year, with the objective to reduce at least 30-40% before 2025. In their procurement documents they ask for optional/separate price for having their works done with fossil fuel and/or emission free NRMM and, starting from 1 January 2021, in all civil works projects concerning drainage and paving works, they ask for emission free machinery (electric) if below 2.5 tons, and use of HVO to execute other works. They, additionally, ask that data regarding consumption is documented, also in terms of sustainability. Their own fleet uses biofuels and they are working towards exchanging their fleet with emission free solutions by 2025. So far, they have seen good results from the market. There has been an additional price of 0-3% of construction sum but in all projects when fossil and/or emission free NRMM CO2 savings are between 85-100%, with additional benefits being the better work and pleasant environment, also for neighbours and bypassers.
Winner: CITY OF UTRECHT, THE NETHERLANDS
Catering from Utrecht, for everyone. Responsible, tasty and inviting
The city of Utrecht wanted to provide their citizens the most sustainable and circular food choice, which would also contribute to making the city 100% circular by 2050. It would help reduce the residual flows, bring maximum food loss down to 5%, use high-quality products, and improve and reduce the amount of packaging. It would also help make the city climate neutral by reducing CO2 emissions and energy consumption in business operations, by implementing at least 60% plant-based proteins, compared to the total amount, reducing animal protein, and using emission-free transport when possible. It would introduce a responsible production of raw materials and products, by implementing an environmental management system, transparency about social/environmental impact throughout the chain, and animal welfare criteria. This procurement has a very strong social angle, because it aims to be the most inclusive food choice, introducing a fixed minimum percentage of social return, providing the possibility to even the most vulnerable people to be trained and work, thanks to a partnership with the Sign Language Coffeebar, which trains the deaf and hard of hearing to become a barista, and local schools, which offer internship opportunities to students and refugees. A market consultation was key to shape and realize all their objectives, which involved a mix of large established caterers but also small and local initiatives. The tender has achieved impressive results so far: only 1.5% food loss in restaurants, 0% organic residual flow, plastic free catering, 30% less food waste compared to previous caterings. Organic residual waste is being converted into compost used in the city’s oyster mushroom plantations.
Runner-up: IRISH PRISON SERVICE
Irish Prison Service Mattress Recycling initiative
Every year, approximately 1,200 mattresses need to be removed from prisons across Ireland. Sending these mattresses to landfill has a significant environmental impact as synthetic foam and fibers and hazardous flame retardant chemicals can leach into drinking water. To divert these mattresses from landfill, the Irish Prison Service (IPS) conducted in 2021 a mini-tender process for the removal and recycling or repurposing of these discarded mattresses across all 12 of their prisons. The tender requirements also stated that the contractor should employ former offenders. Being employed greatly reduces the likelihood of former offenders returning to prison. This has a further added value of reducing the cost of detaining them in prison, while increasing money going into the exchequer through the payment of their taxes. This was the first time that the Department of Justice included a social clause in its contracts. The tender was published through the usual procurement mechanisms, and promoted on social media. Advertising the tender on social media helped to reach a greater number of businesses and social enterprises. As a result, two social enterprises were awarded the contract. Not only that both enterprises met the environmental criteria, they both have experience with employing former offenders and members of the Traveller community. The contract contributed to the continued full-time employment of four people that have gone through the prison system. The social enterprises are able to recycle up to 80% of the used mattress’ components. Many of the materials can be resold, thus contributing to a circular economy. This procurement is a win-win for the environment and people, while representing a cost saving for the Irish Prison Service.