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THE EUROPEAN PUBLIC PROCUREMENT POLICY NEW PROCEDURES AND INSTRUMENTS

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Title: THE EUROPEAN PUBLIC PROCUREMENT POLICY NEW PROCEDURES AND INSTRUMENTS


1
THE EUROPEAN PUBLIC PROCUREMENT POLICYNEW
PROCEDURES AND INSTRUMENTS
  • Christian SERVENAY
  • and Olivier MOREAU

2
Overall Presentation of the two New Directives
  • Directive 2004/18 Public sector
  • Directive 2004/17 Utilities
  • (water, energy, transport, postal services)

3
Some historical references
  • A lengthy development from the 70s to the 90s
    from individual and specific directives to broad
    consolidated texts
  • A new impulse from 1995 to 2000 Single
    Market Review, Green Paper,Communication,
    Proposals

4
The Aim of the Public Procurement Directives
  • to ensure the application of basic principles
  • - free movement of persons, goods and capital,
  • - freedom of establishment and to provide
    services
  • - non-discrimination on grounds of nationality,
  • - equality of treatment.

5
The main features of the Directives
  • Some important limits
  • - a specific scope,
  • - key provisions aiming only at coordination,
  • - need of national implementing measures.

6
Objectives of the changes introduced by the New
Directives
  • - to simplify the existing legislation,
  • - to modernise traditional rules,
  • - to provide for more flexible solutions.

7
Main changes introduced by both directives
  • Simplification measures
  • - only two directives
  • public sector 1 instead of 4.
  • utilities 1 instead of 2.
  • - less thresholds, expressed in euros
  • - a new structure with a logical presentation.

8
Main changes introduced by both directives
  • Modernisation through the use of electronic
    means
  • - Main advantages reduction of time, of
    transaction costs, of bureaucracy less risk of
    corruption.
  • - Key problem to ensure non discrimination and
    respect equality of treatment.

9
USE OF ELECTRONIC MEANS
  • Binding provisions to regulate the use of
    electronic means
  • - similar level of acceptance of paper
    documentation and electronic data,
  • - detailed requirements for the presentation and
    reception of applications and bids,
  • - specific conditions to develop market places
    (under the responsibility of purchasers).

10
USE OF ELECTRONIC MEANS
  • Provisions relating to means of communication
  • - contracting authorities choice,
  • - generally available and interoperable,
  • - not restrictive of access,
  • - ensure integrity of data and confidentiality of
    tenders (and requests).

11
USE OF ELECTRONIC MEANS
  • Five progressive steps in the use of electronic
    means
  • - transmission of notices
  • - delivery of tender documents,
  • - reception of applications and bids,
  • - electronic auctions,
  • - dynamic purchasing systems.

12
First Step
  • TO TRANSMIT THE CONTRACT NOTICES TO THE OJEU
  • CONDITIONS THE MEANS MUST BE GENERALLY
    AVAILABLE AND INTEROPERABLE WITH THE
    COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY PRODUCTS IN GENERAL USE
  • ADVANTAGE POSSIBILITY TO REDUCE THE TIME-LIMITS
    FOR RECEIPT OF TENDERS AND REQUESTS TO
    PARTICIPATE

13
Second Step
  • TO TRANSMIT THE TENDER DOCUMENTATION (AS WELL ANY
    ADDITIONAL DOCUMENT)
  • CONDITIONS UNRESTRICTED AND FULL ACCESS TO THE
    CONTRACT DOCUMENT FROM THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF
    THE NOTICE BY GENERALLY AVAILABLE AND
    INTEROPERABLE MEANS OF COMMUNICATION (SEE
    TRANSMISSION OF NOTICES)
  • ADVANTAGE POSSIBILITY TO REDUCE THE TIME-LIMIT
    FOR RECEIPT OF TENDERS

14
Third Step
  • TO ALLOW ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION AND RECEIPT OF
    REQUESTS TO PARTICIPATE AND TENDERS
  • CONDITIONS INTEGRITY OF DATA,
  • CONFIDENTIALITY OF
    REQUESTS AND
  • TENDERS,
  • AVAILABILITY OF
    TECHNICAL INFORMATION REGARDING OF
    ELECTRONIC CONNECTION.
  • ADVANTAGE POSSIBILITY TO REDUCE THE
    TIME-LIMITS
  • FOR
    RECEIPT OF TENDERS.

15
Fourth Step
  • TO ORGANIZE ELECTRONIC REVERSE AUCTIONS (ERA)
  • ERAs are possible only if contract specifications
    can be established with precision,
  • ERAs must be announced in the contract notice,
  • ERAs must be based on price or features that are
    quantifiable and can be expressed in figures or
    percentages,
  • Any relevant information concerning the technical
    specifications of connection and the electronic
    auction process must be available.

16
Fifth Step
  • TO SET UP A DYNAMIC PURCHASING SYSTEM
  • A completely electronic process
  • For commonly used purchases
  • For a limited duration
  • Open throughout its validity to any economic
  • operator
  • Which satisfies the selection criteria And
    has submitted an indicative tender that
  • complies with the specifications.

17
Main changes introduced by Directive 2004/18
  • Flexibility
  • Central Purchasing Bodies
  • Framework Agreements
  • Competitive Dialogue
  • Environmental and social issues

18
CENTRAL PURCHASING BODIES
  • Two possibilities
  • - the body acquires supplies or services
    intended for contracting authorities
  • -or it awards contracts and framework
    contracts to which contracting authorities refer.

19
CENTRAL PURCHASING BODIES
  • Advantages just one procedure (less time and
    cost) transfer of administrative burden
    competition at higher level (larger choice, best
    quality) greater quantity (better price) bigger
    contracts (security of supply).
  • Problems centralisation, lack of experience of
    public authorities, limited autonomy in choice,
    reduced access of SMEs.

20
FRAMEWORK AGREEMENTS
  • Agreements
  • - between one or more contracting authorities
    and one or more economic operators
  • - aiming at establishing the main terms, but not
    all,
  • - of contracts to be awarded during a given
    period,
  • - in particular with regard to price and, when
    appropriate, the quantity envisaged.

21
FRAMEWORK AGREEMENTS
  • Advantages just one procedure (less time and
    cost) competition at higher level (larger
    choice, best quality) greater quantity (better
    price) bigger contracts and and share of risks
    (security of supply) flexibility (adaptation to
    markets technical and financial evolution)
    possibility to buy products as the need appears
    and possibility to re-open competition in order
    to award orders or contracts
  • Problems bigger contracts, some centralisation,
    risk of captive contracts, more complicated for
    contracting authorities, reduced access of SMEs.

22
FRAMEWORK AGREEMENTS WITH SEVERAL OPERATORS
  • MINIMUM 3 ECONOMIC OPERATORS
  • IF ALL THE TERMS ARE LAID DOWN IN THE FRAMEWORK
    AGREEMENT, CONTRACTS MAY BE AWARDED BY
    APPLICATION OF THESE TERMS WITHOUT REOPENING
    COMPETITION
  • IF NOT,
  • OBLIGATION FOR EACH CONTRACT TO CONSULT THE
    ECONOMIC OPERATORS CAPABLE TO PERFORM THE
    CONTRACT
  • TIME-LIMIT LONG ENOUGH TO ALLOW TENDERS TO
    BE SUBMITTED
  • CONFIDENTIALITY OF THESE TENDERS UNTIL THE
    TIME-LIMIT HAS EXPIRED
  • CONTRACT AWARDED TO THE TENDERER WHO HAS
    SUBMITTED THE BEST TENDER ON THE BASIS OF THE
    CRITERIA SET OUT IN THE FRAMEWORK AGREEMENT.

23
COMPETITIVE DIALOGUE
  • For complex projects, contracting authorities may
    need to carry out something more flexible than
    the restricted procedure and more transparent
    than the negotiated one, in order to identify
    and define the means best suited to satisfy their
    needs.
  • Competitive dialogues apply when contracting
    authorities do not know what the market can offer
    as technical and/or financial or legal solutions.

24
HOW TO MANAGE A COMPETITIVE DIALOGUE ?
  • 1st Step Selection of candidates
  • (at least 3)
  • - publication of a notice in the OJEU,
  • - definition of the needs and requirements to be
    met in the notice or in a descriptive document,
  • - select candidates after their suitability has
    been checked.

25
HOW TO MANAGE A COMPETITIVE DIALOGUE ?
  • 2nd Step Dialogue with selected candidates
  • - candidates present their first proposals on
    the basis of the descriptive document,
  • - dialogue with each candidate on all aspects of
    its proposal and the solution proposed in order
    to allow the contracting authority to clarify,
  • - possibility to organize successive stages in
    order to reduce the number of solutions,
  • - when the solution or various solutions have
    been identified, participants are invited to
    present their final tenders.

26
HOW TO MANAGE A COMPETITIVE DIALOGUE ?
  • 3rd Step Award of the contract
  • The contracting authority chooses the most
    economically advantageous tender in accordance
    with the criteria mentioned in the notice,
  • Possibility of fine-tuning but no substantial
    change of the tender or the notice is allowed.

27
ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES
  • Problem May contracting authorities combine
    environmental or social requirements with public
    procurement rules (equal access of bidders and
    objectivity of procedures)?
  • For instance, are they allowed to buy  green
    buses  (less polluting) even if they are more
    expensive?

28
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
  • ART. 23 Possibility to include environmental
    characteristics into tender documents.
  • Technical specifications may be defined
  • by reference to national standards implementing
    EU standards
  • or in terms of performance or functional
    requirements if they are sufficiently precise to
    determine the subject of the contract
  • or partly by reference to one and the other.

29
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
  • Art 53 Environmental award criteria are allowed
    only if those criteria
  • - Are linked to the subject of the contract,
  • - Do not confer unrestricted freedom of choice
    on the contracting authority,
  • - Are expressely mentioned in the contract
    notice and tender documents,
  • - Comply with the fundamental principles of EU
    Law

30
SOCIAL ISSUES
  • Contracting authorities are allowed to lay down
    special conditions relating to the performance of
    the contract,
  • They may reserve the right to participate in
    award procedures to sheltered workshops whose
    more than 50 emplyees are people with
    disabilities.

31
CHANGES WHICH ARE SPECIFIC TO DIR. 2004/17
  • SCOPE OF APPLICATION OF DIR. 93/38
  • CONTRACTS AWARDED BY CONTRACTING AUTHORITIES OR
    PUBLIC COMPANIES WHICH PURSUE THEIR ACTIVITY IN
    THE DRINKING WATER, ENERGY, TRANSPORT OR
    TELECOMMUNICATION SECTORS,
  • OR BY OTHER ENTITIES (PRIVATE ENTITIES) HAVING
    ONE OF THESE ACTIVITIES AND OPERATING ON THE
    BASIS OF SPECIAL OR EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS GRANTED BY A
    PUBLIC AUTHORITY

32
CHANGES WHICH ARE SPECIFIC TO DIR. 2004/17
  • 1. EXCLUSION OF THE TELECOMMUNICATION SECTOR
  • Economic operators in this sector are now in
    competition and take their all decisions on an
    economical basis. No reason to submit them any
    longer to public procurement directives.
  • 2. INCLUSION OF POSTAL OPERATORS
  • Their activities are progressively submitted to
    competition and become commercial since 2000. As
    a result these operators are will enter into the
    scope of DIR. 2004/17 before 31-12-2008
    (depending on each member State).

33
CHANGES WHICH ARE SPECIFIC TO DIR. 2004/17
  • 3. A NEW DEFINITION OF SPECIAL OR EXCLUSIVE
    RIGHTS
  •  Special or exclusive rights  mean rights
    granted by a competent authority by way of any
    legislative, regulatory or administrative
    provision the effect of which is to limit the
    exercise of activities defined in Art. 3 to 7 to
    one or more entities, and which substantially
    affect the ability of other entities to carry out
    such activity.
  • 4. POSSIBILITY TO EXCLUDE AN ACTIVITY MENTIONED
    IN ART. 3 TO 7 IF IT IS DIRECTLY EXPOSED TO
    COMPETITION
  • Exclusion of contracts intended to enable an
    activity mentioned in Art. 3 to 7 if, in the
    member State concerned, the activity is directly
    exposed to competition on markets to which access
    is not restricted (Art 30-1)
  • Decision to be taken by the Commission according
    to a specific procedure.

34
A short reminder of the remedies provisions
  • Directive 89/665 remedies for contracting
    authorities (contracts covered by directive
    2004/18,
  • Directive 92/13 remedies in the utilities
    sectors (contracts covered by directive 2004/17).
  • Directive 2007/66 amending both previous
    directives

35
Main provisions of the remedies directives
  • The principle
  • Member States must ensure that decisions taken by
    contracting entities may be reviewed as quickly
    as possible on the grounds that such decisions
    have infringed the public procurement legislation

36
Main traditional provisions of the remedies
directives
  • Three possible measures
  • Interim measures including suspension of the
    procedure,
  • Setting aside of decisions taken unlawfully,
  • Damages granted to the person harmed by the
    infringement.

37
Main improvements of the new directive
  • Introduce and regulate a standstill period (cf.
    Alcatel case law (C-81/98)) 10/15 days period,
    some derogations.
  • Several legal clarifications availability,
    information of contracting authorities,
    suspension, time limits, ineffectiveness of
    contracts, ex ante transparency, alternative
    penalties.

38
Recent and future evolution
  • - some new legislative initiatives,
  • - several non binding documents,
  • - many studies and documents for reflection.

39
Future legislative initiatives
  • Three factors
  • - GPA revision,
  • - completion of the present scope of the
    directives (defence)
  • - adoption of specific implementing measures
    (list of entities, new CPV, new standard forms).

40
Adoption of non binding documents
  • Commission services will prepare
  • - a communication on Institutionalised Public
    Procurement (IPP),
  • - a Small Business Act in favour of SMEs.

41
Studies and documents for reflection
  • Commission services are developing
  • - several projects listed in the Action plan on
    e-procurement (development on e-catalogues,
    e-signatures, compliance verification,)
  • - evaluation studies of the Action plan,

42
Member States responsibility
  • Member States shall
  • - adopt full primary and secondary legislation
    implementing European texts, on time,
  • - prepare guidelines and operational tools,
  • - develop the capacity to manage an efficient and
    safe system of Public Procurement.

43
Candidate countries responsibility
  • Candidate countries are required to progressively
    align their legislation and set up a relevant
    administrative capacity.

44
Purchasers responsibility
  • Public Purchasers shall make use of all legal
    opportunities
  • - implement national regulations with the aim to
    get best value for money,
  • - use the allowed flexibility (reduction of
    deadlines, specific types of procedures,),
  • - take advantage of the new varied solutions
    offered (e-procurement facilities).

45
Purchasers responsibility
  • Public Purchasers have a specific role to play
  • - in providing and dissiminating some
    knowledge of legal provisions,
  • - in advising on best practices,
  • - in providing confidence among operators
    and institutions.

46
Economic operators role
  • All economic operators should contribute to the
    completion of the Internal Market
  • - to a fair and sound competition,
  • - to the reduction of public expenditures,
  • - to the quality of public services,
  • - to the improvement of productivity and the
    development of cross border trade.

47
Conclusions
  • What Commission services expect from you?
  • What Commission services could do for you?
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