Abstract

The present research paper analyses the EU general and mandatory sectoral legal framework on public procurement, arguing for its inhibiting effect on the EU-wide uptake of green public procurement. It explores de jure and de facto barriers to green public procurement, motivated by the need for a change in the business world towards more sustainable practices through preferably mandatory legal changes of EU corporate law. As the public procurement represents a strong nudge for a qualitative change in private market demand, accounting for a minimum of 12% of the national gross domestic product, it should become environmentally sustainable itself and guide markets through the qualitative and quantitative changes on the demand side. Given the complexity of the current legal framework and the novelty of the approach to public procurement as a strategic tool for the achievement of sustainable production and consumption, a better defined and clear legislative approach is called for, possibly in a mandatory form, clarifying the obligation of public procurers to account for sustainability in their practices, especially as regards incorporating environmental concerns in their purchasing activities. In its current form, the EU legislative public procurement framework entails a seemingly permissive attitude towards green public procurement, hampered in practice by the existing legal institutes in the field, which hamper the strategic use of public procurement and thereby its influence on sustainability on the private markets.

Highlights

  • In 2050, we live well, within the planet’s ecological limits

  • While this stage allows for a variety of options, a Green public procurement (GPP)-unskilled public official might find it overwhelming to determine the exact sustainability criteria that may translate into economic surplus under the life-cycle costing method of awarding a tender

  • Reaching beyond the legal framework of Public Procurement Directives, accounting for Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) case-based limitations to environmentally conditioned public procurement practices, arguments have been presented for a simplification and modification of the existing EU public procurement legal framework, culminating in a proposal for a more mandatory approach to GPP

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Summary

Preliminary Remarks on the Focus on EU-Level Legal Framework

It could be argued that the uptake of GPP could be better tackled by legislating at the national, regional, or even local level. While the EU Member States can and should further their GPP efforts in public procurement processes outside the scope of EU public procurement rules, the transformation of public procurement legal frameworks towards sustainability occurred only in isolated cases at the local, regional, and sometimes national level. This calls for a focus on EU legal rules on the matter and their possible influence on the EU Member States’ legislation and practices on the matter. While national, regional, and local rules can be argued to have a more direct effect on local public procurers, those rules need to lead to coordinated sustainable outcomes, preferably in all 28 EU Member States, to represent a strong enough nudge for the private market towards sustainable business solutions

Legal Authority—EU Green Procurement Policy
The Legal Uncertainty of EU Green Public Procurement
The Inherent Legal Risks of the General EU Legal Framework
The Way Forward
Conclusions
Findings
78. Project GPP 2020
Full Text
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