26% of Belgian public procurement included some considerations for sustainability. Public authorities offers a high potential for driving the circularity transition through government purchasing power.

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Title: Percentage of public procurement notices in Belgium that consider sustainability aspects.

Status: Signal

Coverage: Belgium, 2011-2016

Source: Grandia and Kruyen, 2017, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam.

(Note: Total percentage is over 100% because some procurement notices contain references to more than one sustainability aspect.)

EU level: The EU CE monitoring framework (CEMF) includes GPP to measure the share of public procurement procedures above the EU thresholds (in number and value), which include environmental elements. No data is currently available in the CEMF for this indicator.

National level: Data at country level exist, however some difficulties arise to identify and compare them. National-level data could be extracted from MS GPP websites or reports, using the list of organisations listed by the EC as a starting point. The data presented shows what information can be extracted at member state level, here in the case of Belgium. The metric depicts the results from an analysis of 144,749 public procurement notices produced between 2011 and 2016. Notably, 26% of these notices included some considerations for sustainability, including 2% with considerations specifically regarding circular economy.

Green public procurement (GPP) is about the purchase of goods, services and works that have a reduced environmental impact throughout their life cycle, by public authorities. Public authorities across the EU are major consumers, spending approximately 1.8 trillion euro annually (i.e., around 14% of the EU’s gross domestic product); as such, increasing the share of GPP could yield significant environmental benefits. GPP is an interesting financing indicator for circularity due to this high potential and due to the significant role that public authorities have in driving the circularity transition, alongside private actors and the general public.

Definition

This indicator measures the share of public procurement procedures including considerations for sustainability or circular economy more specifically, if data is available.

Methodology

Until data on GPP is reported in the CEMF, data collection would have to rest on the analysis of data collected and published by MS. However, data may be reported differently across MS (e.g., not for every year, using different levels of granularity). Data could be separately for each MS. MS reporting only on GPP (not CE-related GPP) may be discarded as the numbers for GPP as a whole are likely to be much higher than for CE-relevant GPP only.

Metadata

Units. Number and percentage of public procurement procedures.

Temporal coverage. 2011-2016.

Data sources:

  • Grandia & Kruyen, 2017, Sustainable procurement A big-data study into the level of sustainability of more than 140,000 published procurement contract notices by Belgian contracting authorities (Federaal Instituut voor Duurzame Ontwikkeling, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam, Radboud Universiteit).
  • European Commission, 2021, GPP National Action Plans.

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