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What influences adoption of green award criteria in a public contract? An empirical analysis of 2018 european public procurement contract award notices

Yu, Chunling ; Morotomi, Toru and Yu, Haiping (2020) In Sustainability (Switzerland) 12(3).
Abstract

Green public procurement (GPP) is a policy tool aiming to achieve environmental protection and resource reservation via public procurement. After decades of adaptation, what promotes and hinders its uptake in public contracting remains diffcult to discern. This research explores factors that influence the adoption of green award criteria, covering features of procurement procedures, purchasers, tenderers, and the business sectors through empirical analysis of Probit regression combined with a fixed term method. The data is contract award notices (CAN) from 33 countries in Europe in 2018. Our findings suggest that framework agreements, the medical products sector, the health and social services sector, and the business services sector... (More)

Green public procurement (GPP) is a policy tool aiming to achieve environmental protection and resource reservation via public procurement. After decades of adaptation, what promotes and hinders its uptake in public contracting remains diffcult to discern. This research explores factors that influence the adoption of green award criteria, covering features of procurement procedures, purchasers, tenderers, and the business sectors through empirical analysis of Probit regression combined with a fixed term method. The data is contract award notices (CAN) from 33 countries in Europe in 2018. Our findings suggest that framework agreements, the medical products sector, the health and social services sector, and the business services sector are negatively correlated with whether a contract is green. On the other hand, the contract value, Government Procurement Agreement (GPA)coverage, joint procurement, competitive dialogue, negotiation with competition (with a call for competition), restricted procedure, transport equipment sector, and food sector can positively correlate with green contracts, or these factors increase the possibility of a contract being green. Explicit explanations on these relations are provided. This research identifies factors relating with and influencing the application of green award criteria in public contracts, which would inform public sectors on effcient resources allocation in terms of increasing green public procurement performance.

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type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Environmental economics and policy, European union, Fixed effects regression, GPA, Green public procurement, Probit regression
in
Sustainability (Switzerland)
volume
12
issue
3
article number
1261
publisher
MDPI AG
external identifiers
  • scopus:85081209738
ISSN
2071-1050
DOI
10.3390/su12031261
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
de7d60f2-459d-46fd-b087-8ade8f3c141e
date added to LUP
2020-04-07 14:45:51
date last changed
2022-04-18 21:29:36
@article{de7d60f2-459d-46fd-b087-8ade8f3c141e,
  abstract     = {{<p>Green public procurement (GPP) is a policy tool aiming to achieve environmental protection and resource reservation via public procurement. After decades of adaptation, what promotes and hinders its uptake in public contracting remains diffcult to discern. This research explores factors that influence the adoption of green award criteria, covering features of procurement procedures, purchasers, tenderers, and the business sectors through empirical analysis of Probit regression combined with a fixed term method. The data is contract award notices (CAN) from 33 countries in Europe in 2018. Our findings suggest that framework agreements, the medical products sector, the health and social services sector, and the business services sector are negatively correlated with whether a contract is green. On the other hand, the contract value, Government Procurement Agreement (GPA)coverage, joint procurement, competitive dialogue, negotiation with competition (with a call for competition), restricted procedure, transport equipment sector, and food sector can positively correlate with green contracts, or these factors increase the possibility of a contract being green. Explicit explanations on these relations are provided. This research identifies factors relating with and influencing the application of green award criteria in public contracts, which would inform public sectors on effcient resources allocation in terms of increasing green public procurement performance.</p>}},
  author       = {{Yu, Chunling and Morotomi, Toru and Yu, Haiping}},
  issn         = {{2071-1050}},
  keywords     = {{Environmental economics and policy; European union; Fixed effects regression; GPA; Green public procurement; Probit regression}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{02}},
  number       = {{3}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  series       = {{Sustainability (Switzerland)}},
  title        = {{What influences adoption of green award criteria in a public contract? An empirical analysis of 2018 european public procurement contract award notices}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12031261}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/su12031261}},
  volume       = {{12}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}