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Best practice procurement

This Net Zero Go guide provides a review of steps that should be carried out to ensure successful procurement of products or services for local energy projects.

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This Net Zero Go guide provides a review of steps that should be carried out to ensure successful procurement of products or services for local energy projects.

Internal guidelines on the processes to be followed and documentation to be collected are usually provided by the procurement team of an organisation. Please consider the information provided below only as general best practices.

What is procurement in a local authority?

Procurement is the process of acquiring goods, works, and services from third parties. In other words, it covers everything from paperclips to major infrastructure schemes.

The process includes options appraisal (the ‘make or buy’ decision). In major projects this is a key stage. Councillors and those with delegated authority will often be called upon to consider a range of options set out in a ‘business case’ and to decide which option will be pursued.

The aim is to:

Achieve the best value for money: In the HM Treasury publication Managing Public Money, value for money is defined in the following way: ‘securing the best mix of quality and effectiveness for the least outlay over the period of use of the goods or services bought. It is not about simply minimising upfront prices.’

Consider social value: The Local Services (Social Value) Act 2012 requires councils to consider the social, economic, and environmental impact of contracts and how they can best benefit the local community.

Ensure the quality of procurement decisions: Consider, as appropriate, the quality and all of the costs that will be incurred by the council throughout the life of the asset or contract period, not simply the initial prices.

Employ good contract management: Good contract management will ensure that effective key performance indicators have been set at the commencement of the contract and that compliance and contract scope is effectively managed throughout the life of the contract, thus ensuring contracted costs are managed.

Every council adopts contract standing orders (sometimes called ‘contract procedure rules’). These are the council’s own procurement rules. Naturally, councillors and officers need to understand and work within those rules. These form part of a broader set of arrangements the council makes locally for procurement and project management, including measures to prevent fraud and corruption, which elected members and officers need to understand.

In local government, as in the rest of the public sector, procurement must be carried out in compliance with UK procurement regulations and other legal requirements.

How is ‘commissioning’ different?

Commissioning is usually about securing services (rather than acquisition of goods or works). The commissioning model has its origins in health and social care, but the approach has been introduced into many other service areas too, notably children’s services. Recently, some councils have adopted it as the model for the whole council (the ‘commissioning council’).

The best way to think of it is that commissioning is a cycle of activities that includes procurement.

Procurement process

Best practice procurement process should follow a clear set of step that ensure that the best procurement route is chosen and the right people are involved.

Engagement with your procurement team.

Your procurement team has a very important role in delivering your project.

Understanding the role that they play and their objectives is vital when engaging in a productive relationship.

Engagement with your procurement team.

Assess the market.

Before developing a business case, it is crucial for a local authority to assess the market.

This consists of conducting early market engagement, to gain a good overview of the current state of the technology or service that will be procured, important trends, and factors driving the cost. The ultimate scope of this assessment is to become an “intelligent customer”. There are several activities that can be carried out to assess the market.

Assess the market.

Assess your internal capability.

Experience required to manage and run a procurement in most cases will be provided by your organisation’s procurement team.

However, there are likely to be a number of activities you will need to support the procurement team with. This includes writing a tender specification and evaluating the tenders. Both of these activities are likely to need technical expertise on decarbonisation technologies and solutions so your team can ensure that what potential installers are proposing are sound and deliverable options and the benefits being set out are credible.

Assess your internal capability.

Pre-procurement activities.

Before embarking on your procurement journey, you will need to be clear about what your need.

This is from your capability analysis and your project deliverables and how those may be deliverable by your organisation.

Pre-procurement activities.

Procurement options appraisal.

There is a range of options available to procure the products or services for your project.

You need to understand each of the options and how they match your requirements.

Procurement options appraisal.

Prepare your tender documents.

A tender (also known as an invitation to tender or ITT) is a written request sent out to potential suppliers allowing them to submit an invitation to bid to deliver specific goods or services.

The application asks for company information for the buyer, alongside typically a pricing and quality element which is then evaluated, and a preferred supplier selected. 

Prepare your tender documents.

Run the tendering process.

Under the 2023 rules, the familiar EU process options (Open, Restricted, Competitive Dialogue, etc.) have been streamlined.

Now you generally decide between: Open Procedure and Competitive Flexible Procedure.

Both procedures must ultimately result in awarding to the “most advantageous tender” – i.e. the best overall bid according to your stated award criteria​. The difference lies in how you get to that point (single step vs multiple steps).

Run the tendering process.

Manage the contract.

Contract management is the process of managing contract creation, execution, and analysis to maximise operational and financial performance at an organisation, all while reducing financial and delivery risk.  

Manage the contract.

Closure of contract and lessons learned.

Lessons learned is a useful means of sharing information from previous programmes and projects with others.

Lessons are usually presented in the form of recommendations on the way forward or highlighting where potential improvements or modifications could be applied.

Closure of contract and lessons learned.

Useful resources

Procurement Act 2023

Procurement strategy

Other useful resources