Public procurement can contribute significantly to achieving sustainable development. The Dutch government has indicated that sustainable procurement is one of its priorities and has developed and installed a Sustainable Public Procurement Programme (SPPP). This essay reviews the current programme and assesses its actual contribution to sustainable development. Specific questions are raised with respect to both the set up and the content of the current decision criteria for supplier selection and contract provisions. This article argues that, so far, the focus on minimum requirements, the strict distinction between environmental and social criteria and the absence of specific long-term ambitions and a systems perspective have limited the actual contribution of the Dutch SPPP to sustainable development. Finally, ongoing discussions by involved stakeholders, with respect to suggested adjustments to the programme, are reviewed and linked to the assessment presented here. It is concluded that these discussions reflect promising trains of thought for the future of the Dutch SPPP.
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Public procurement can contribute significantly to achieving sustainable development. The Dutch government has indicated that sustainable procurement is one of its priorities and has developed and installed a Sustainable Public Procurement Programme (SPPP). This essay reviews the current programme and assesses its actual contribution to sustainable development. Specific questions are raised with respect to both the set up and the content of the current decision criteria for supplier selection and contract provisions. This article argues that, so far, the focus on minimum requirements, the strict distinction between environmental and social criteria and the absence of specific long-term ambitions and a systems perspective have limited the actual contribution of the Dutch SPPP to sustainable development. Finally, ongoing discussions by involved stakeholders, with respect to suggested adjustments to the programme, are reviewed and linked to the assessment presented here. It is concluded that these discussions reflect promising trains of thought for the future of the Dutch SPPP.
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The Dutch government, in alignment with the Paris climate agreement, has expressed the ambition to reduce CO 2 emissions in the Netherlands by 49% in 2030 compared to 1990. As freight transport is recognized as a serious CO 2 emitter, this sector is confronted with a substantial part of the target. For cities, the reduction of the urban freight transport emissions is, next to the CO 2 reduction, also important to improve the air quality. Dutch municipalities take an active role in coordination, facilitation and acceleration of the emission reduction processes, not only via regulation but also by using their public procurement power. This paper describes the City of Rotterdam's experiences from the EU Horizon 2020 BuyZET project. This project was launched in November 2016 and includes the cities of Rotterdam, Oslo and Copenhagen. The project aims at understanding and optimising the impact of public procurement activities on transport patterns and emissions in cities as well as to find innovative and sustainable delivery solutions for goods and services-related transport in order to reduce emissions.
MULTIFILE
The COVID19 pandemic highlighted the vulnerability in supply chain networks in the healthcare sector and the tremendous waste problem of disposable healthcare products, such as isolation gowns. Single-use disposable isolation gowns cause great ecological impact. Reusable gowns can potentially reduce climate impacts and improve the resilience of healthcare systems by ensuring a steady supply in times of high demand. However, scaling reusable, circular isolation gowns in healthcare organizations is not straightforward. It is impeded by economic barriers – such as servicing costs for each use – and logistic and hygiene barriers, as processes for transport, storage and safety need to be (re)designed. Healthcare professionals (e.g. purchasing managers) lack complete information about social, economic and ecological costs, the true cost of products, to make informed circular purchasing decisions. Additionally, the residual value of materials recovered from circular products is overlooked and should be factored into purchasing decisions. To facilitate the transition to circular procurement in healthcare, purchasing managers need more fine-grained, dynamic information on true costs. Our RAAK Publiek proposal (MODLI) addresses a problem that purchasing managers face – making purchasing decisions that factor in social, economic and ecological costs and future benefits from recovered materials. Building on an existing consortium that developed a reusable and recyclable isolation gown, we design and develop an open-source decision-support tool to inform circular procurement in healthcare organizations and simulate various purchasing options of non-circular and circular products, including products from circular cascades. Circular procurement is considered a key driver in the transition to a circular economy as it contributes to closing energy and material loops and minimizes negative impacts and waste throughout entire product lifecycles. MODLI aims to support circular procurement policies in healthcare organizations by providing dynamic information for circular procurement decision making.
De doelstelling van dit project is om Nederlandse sociale MKB-bedrijven te helpen bij het verkrijgen van (meer/betere) opdrachten in aanbestedingstrajecten, juist op basis van de social impact die deze bedrijven maken (impact op de samenleving, bijvoorbeeld door de arbeidsparticipatie van mensen met een afstand tot de arbeidsmarkt te stimuleren). Tegelijkertijd beogen we aanbestedende diensten te helpen social impact beter mee te nemen als positieve factor in aanbestedingen. We gaan een vergelijking maken tussen Nederland en België, waar een aparte rechtsvorm voor sociale ondernemingen bestaat (i.t.t. in NL), en dezelfde Europese aanbestedingsrichtlijn geldt. We willen vooral meer inzicht krijgen in de manier waarop sociale ondernemingen in beide landen hun social impact gebruiken om (meer/betere) opdrachten te krijgen; en de manier waarop aanbestedende diensten in beide landen social impact in opdrachtverstrekking en voorkeursbeleid voor sociale ondernemingen verwerken. Naast dossieronderzoek gaan we interviews houden met sociale ondernemingen, aanbestedende diensten en adviesbureaus op het terrein van aanbesteden en social impact. Bij de uitvoering van het onderzoek worden studenten van de opleidingen HBO Rechten en SJD ingezet, in het kader van de minor Bedrijfsjurist en afstuderen. De opgedane kennis wordt o.a. ingebracht bij de (door)ontwikkeling van de Innovatiewerkplaats ‘Krachtig MKB’. Deze postdoc aanvraag wordt ingediend vanuit het Marian van Os Centrum voor Ondernemerschap (MvOCvO) van de Hanzehogeschool Groningen (HG) en sluit aan bij eerder onderzoek van dit centrum. Ondernemerschap is één van de drie speerpunten van de HG. Sociaal Ondernemerschap is als thema in de Roadmap en de onderzoeksvisie van het MvOCvO opgenomen; het sluit aan bij de HBO-onderzoeksagenda Onderzoek met impact en bovendien draagt het bij aan de belangrijkste doelstellingen van de Noordelijke Innovatie Agenda. Van de 14 lectoraten binnen het MvOCvO zijn er zes direct betrokken bij het thema sociaal ondernemerschap, als mede-penvoerder van een projectaanvraag, of als kennispartner.