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Guidance
on EC Directive 93/36/EEC:
Guidance
12
Public
Supply Contracts, as amended by EC Directive 97/52/EC
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Virtually
every contract let by Government is subject to EC Legislation. This
Directive was implemented into UK Law by the Public Supply Contracts
Regulations 1995.
The application of the threshold set out for supply contracts from
Public Bodies subject to the EC and GATT Agreement (primarily Central
Government Departments), is £93,896 and for non-GATT bodies
(primarily Local Government Bodies), the figure is £144,456.
Supply contracts of less than these levels may be exempted from
the competition process as provided under this Directive.
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Article
1
For the purpose of this Directive: 'public supply contracts'
are contracts for pecuniary interest concluded in writing
involving the purchase, lease and rental or hire purchase,
with or without option to buy, of products between a supplier
and a public authority. The delivery of such products may
in addition include siting and installation operations.
Procedures Available
'Open Procedures' - All interested suppliers may submit
tenders; 'Restricted Procedures' - Only those suppliers
invited by the contracting authorities may submit tenders;
'Negotiated Procedures' - Contracting authorities may consult
suppliers of their choice and negotiate the terms of the
contract with one or more of them.
Article
2
This
Directive does not apply to:
-
contracts valued at under the above-stated thresholds;
- supply
contracts which are declared secret or the execution
of which must be accompanied by special security measures
in accordance with the laws, regulations or administrative
provisions in force in the Member States concerned or
when the protection of the basic interests of the Member
State's security so requires.
Article
3
Without prejudice to Articles 2, 4 and 5(1), the Directive
applies to all products to which Article 1 relates, including
those covered by contracts awarded by contracting authorities
in the field of defence, except as stated in
Article
4
This Directive does not apply to public supply contracts
governed by different procedural rules and awarded:
-
in pursuance of an international agreement concluded
in conformity with the Treaty, between a Member
State and one or more non-member countries and
covering supplies intended for the joint implementation
or exploitation of a project by the signatory
States; all agreements shall be communicated to
the Commission, which may consult the Advisory
Committee for Public Contracts set up by Decision
71/306/EEC;
- to
undertakings in a Member State or a non-member country
in pursuance of an international agreement relating
to the stationing of troops;
- pursuant
to the particular Procedure of an international organisation.
Valuation
<Top>
Article
5
The Directive applies to public supply contracts provided
that the estimated value net of VAT is not less than
£144,456 (unless covered by GATT - when the
figure is £93,896).
- In
the case of contracts for the lease, rental or hire-purchase
of products, the basis for calculating the estimated
contract value shall be:
- in
the case of fixed-term contracts, where the term
is 12 months or less the total contract value for
its duration, or, where the term exceeds 12 months,
its total value including the estimated residual
value;
- in
the case of contracts for an indefinite period or
in cases where there is doubt as to the duration
of the contracts the monthly value multiplied by
48.
- In
the case of regular contracts or of contracts which
are to be renewed within a given time, the estimated
contract value shall be established on the basis of:
- either
the actual aggregate value of similar contracts
concluded over the previous fiscal year or 12 months,
adjusted where possible for anticipated changes
in quantity or value over the 12 months following
the initial contract;
- or
the estimated aggregate value during the 12 months
following the first delivery or during the term
of the contract, where this is greater than 12 months.
The selection of the valuation method must not be
used with the intention of avoiding the application
of this Directive.
- If
a proposed procurement of supplies of the same type
may lead to contracts being awarded at the same time
in separate parts, the estimated value of the total
sum of these parts must be taken as the basis for the
application of Article 5, paragraph 1.
- In
the case where a proposed procurement specifies option
clauses, the basis for calculating the estimated contract
value shall be the highest possible total of the purchase,
lease, rental, or hire-purchase permissible, inclusive
of the option clauses.
- No
procurement requirement for a given quantity of supplies
may be split up with the intention of avoiding the application
of this Directive.
Award
Procedure<Top>
Article
6
In awarding public supply contracts the contracting authorities
must apply the Procedures defined in Article 1 (a), (b)
and (c) in the cases set out below:
- The
contracting authorities may award their supply contracts
by Negotiated Procedure in the case of irregular tenders
in response to an Open or Restricted Procedure or in the
case of tenders which are unacceptable under national
provisions that are in accordance with provisions, in
so far as the original terms for the contract are not
substantially altered. The contracting authorities in
these cases must publish a tender notice unless they include
in such Negotiated Procedures all the enterprises satisfying
the criteria of Articles 20 to 24 which, during the prior
Open or Restricted Procedure, have submitted tenders in
accordance with the formal requirements of the tendering
Procedure.
- The
contracting authorities may award their supply contracts
by Negotiated Procedure without prior publication of a
tender notice, in the following cases:
- in
the absence of tenders or appropriate tenders in response
to an Open or Restricted Procedure insofar as the
original terms of the contract are not substantially
altered and provided that a report is communicated
to the Commission;
- when
the products involved are manufactured purely for
the purpose of research, experiment, study or development.
This provision does not extend to quantity production
to establish commercial viability or to recover research
and development costs;
- when,
for technical or artistic reasons, or for reasons
connected with protection of exclusive rights, the
products supplied may be manufactured or delivered
only by a particular supplier;
- in
so far as is strictly necessary when, for reasons
of extreme urgency brought about by events unforeseeable
by the contracting authorities in question, the time
limit laid down for the Open, Restricted or Negotiated
Procedures cannot be kept. The circumstances invoked
to justify extreme urgency must not in any event be
attributable to the contracting authorities;
- for
additional deliveries by the original supplier which
are intended either as a partial replacement of normal
supplies or installations or as the extension of existing
supplies or installations where a change of supplier
would oblige the contracting authority to acquire
material having different technical characteristics
which would result in incompatibility or disproportionate
technical difficulties in operation and maintenance.
The length of such contracts as well as that of recurrent
contracts may, as a general rule, not exceed three
years.
- In
all other cases, the contracting authorities must award
their supply contracts by the Open Procedure or by the
Restricted Procedure.
Rights
to Information <Top>
Article 7
- The
contracting authority shall, within 15 days of the date
on which the request is received, inform any eliminated
candidate or tenderer of the reasons for rejection of
his application or his tender and any tenderer who has
made an admissible tender of the characteristics and relative
advantages of the tender selected as well as the name
of the successful tenderer.
However, contracting authorities may decide that certain
information on the contract award, referred to in the
preceding subparagraph, shall be withheld where release
of such information would impede law enforcement or otherwise
be contrary to the public interest or would prejudice
the legitimate commercial interests of particular undertakings,
public or private, or might prejudice fair competition
between suppliers.
- Contracting
authorities shall promptly inform candidates and tenderers
of the decisions taken on contract awards, including the
reasons why they have decided not to award a contract
for which there has been an invitation to tender or to
start the Procedure again, and shall do so in writing
if requested. They shall also inform the Office of Official
Publications of the European Communities of such decisions.
- For
each contract awarded the contracting authorities must
draw up a written report which shall include at least
the following:
- the
name and address of the contracting authority, the
subject and value of the contract;
- the
names of the candidates or tenderers admitted and
the reasons for their selection;
- the
names of the candidates or tenderers rejected and
the reasons for their rejection;
- the
name of the successful tenderer and the reasons for
his tender having been selected and, if known, any
share of the contract the successful tenderer may
intend to sub-contract to a third party;
- for
Negotiated Procedures, the circumstances referred
to in Article 6 which justify the use of these Procedures.
Technical Specifications <Top>
Article 8
- The
technical specifications must be given in the general
or contractual documents relating to each contract.
- Without
prejudice to the legally binding national technical rules,
in so far as these are compatible with Community law,
the technical specifications mentioned shall be defined
by the contracting authorities by reference to national
standards implementing European standards, or by reference
to European technical approvals or by reference to common
technical specifications.
- In
the absence of European standards, European technical
approvals or common technical specifications, the technical
specifications:
- shall
be defined by reference to the national technical
specifications recognised as complying with the basic
requirements listed in the Community Directives on
technical harmonisation, in accordance with the Procedures
laid down in those Directives, and in particular in
accordance with the Procedures laid down in Directive
89/106/EEC;
- may
be defined by reference to national technical specifications
relating to design and method of calculation and execution
of works and use of materials;
- may
be defined by reference to other documents. In this
case, it is appropriate to make reference in order
of preference to:shall
be defined by reference to the national technical
specifications recognised as complying with the basic
requirements listed in the Community Directives on
technical harmonisation, in accordance with the Procedures
laid down in those Directives, and in particular in
accordance with the Procedures laid down in Directive
89/106/EEC;
- national
standards implementing international standards
accepted by the country of the contracting authority;
- other
national standards and national technical approvals
of the country of the contracting authority;
- any
other standard.
- Unless
such specifications are justified by the subject of the
contract, Member States shall prohibit the introduction
into the contractual clauses relating to a given contract
of technical specifications which mention goods of specific
make or source or of a particular process and which therefore
favour or eliminate certain suppliers or products. In
particular, the indication of trade marks, patents, or
types of a specific origin or production shall be prohibited.
However, if such indication is accompanied by the words
'or equivalent' it shall be authorised in cases where
the contracting authorities are unable to give a description
of the subject of the contract using specifications which
are sufficiently precise and fully intelligible to all
parties concerned.
Article
9
The contracting authorities are required to make known,
as soon as possible after the beginning of their budgetary
year, by means of an indicative notice, the total procurement
by product area which they envisage awarding during the
subsequent
12 months where the total estimated value is equal to or
greater than £584,901.
Time
Limits - Open Procedure <Top>
Article
10
- In
Open Procedures, the time limit for the receipt of tenders,
fixed by the contracting authorities, shall not be less
than 52 days from the date of dispatch of the notice.
- The
time limit for receipt of tenders laid down in paragraph
1 may be replaced by a period sufficiently long to
permit responsive tendering, which, as a general rule,
shall be not less than 36 days and in any case not
less than 22 days, from the date on which the contract
notice was dispatched, if the contracting authorities
have sent the indicative notice provided for in Article
9 (1), drafted in accordance with the model in Annex
IV A (Prior Information) to the Official Journal of
the European Communities within a minimum of 52 days
and a maximum of 12 months before the date on which
the contract notice provided for in Article 9 (2)
was dispatched to the Official Journal of the European
Communities, provided that the indicative notice contained,
in addition, at least as much of the information referred
to in the model notice in Annex IV B
(Open Procedure) as was available at the time of publication
of the notice.
- Provided
requested in good time, the contract documents and supporting
documents must be sent to the suppliers by the contracting
authorities or competent departments within six days of
receiving their application.
- Provided
requested in good time, additional information relating
to the contract documents will be supplied by the contracting
authorities not later than 6 days before the final date
fixed for receipt of tenders.
- Where
the contract documents, supporting documents or additional
information are too bulky to be supplied within the time
limits laid down in paragraph 2 or 3 or where tenders
can be made only after a visit to the site or after on-the-spot
inspection of the documents supporting the contract documents,
the time limit laid down in paragraph 1 must be extended
accordingly.
Restricted
and Negotiated Procedures <Top>
Article
11
- In
Restricted Procedures and Negotiated Procedures as described
in Article 6 (2), the time limit for receipt of requests
to participate fixed by the contracting authorities shall
not be less than 37 days from the date of dispatch of
the notice.
- The
contracting authorities must simultaneously and in writing
invite the selected candidates to submit their tenders.
The letter of invitation must be accompanied by the contract
documents and supporting documents. These to include at
least the following information:
- where
appropriate, the address of the service from which
the contract documents and supporting documents can
be requested and the final date for making such a
request; also the amount and terms of payment of any
sum to be paid for such documents;
- the
final date for receipt of tenders, the address to
which they must be sent and the language or languages
in which they must be drawn up;
- a
reference to the contract notice published;
- an
indication of any documents to be annexed, either
to support the verifiable statements furnished by
the candidate, or to conditions as those laid down
in Article 22 and 23;
- the
criteria for the award of the contract if these are
not given in the notice.
- In
Restricted Procedures, the time limit for receipt of tenders
fixed by the contracting authorities may not be less than
40 days from the date of dispatch of the written invitation.
- The
time limit for receipt of tenders laid down in paragraph
3 may be reduced to 26 days if the contracting authorities
have sent the indicative notice provided for in Article
9 (1), drafted in accordance with the model in Annex
IV A
(Prior Information), to the Official Journal of the
European Communities within a minimum of 52 days and
a maximum of 12 months before the date on which the
contract provided for in Article 9 (2) was dispatched
to the Official Journal of the European Communities,
provided that the indicative notice contained, in
addition, at least as much of the information referred
to in the model in
Annex IV C (Restricted Procedure), or, where applicable,
Annex IV D (Negotiated Procedure) as was available
at the time of publication of the notice.
- Requests
to participate in Procedures for the award of contracts
may be made by letter, by telegram, telex, telefax or
by telephone. If by one of the last four, they must be
confirmed by letter dispatched before the end of the period
laid down.
- Provided
it has been requested in good time, additional information
relating to the contract documents must be supplied by
the contracting authorities not later than six days before
the final date for receipt of tenders.
- Where
tenders can be made only after a visit to the site or
after on-the-spot inspection of the documents supporting
the contract documents, the time limit laid down in paragraph
3 above shall be extended accordingly.
Urgency
<Top>
Article
12
- In
cases where urgency renders impracticable the time limits
laid down in
Article 11, the contracting authorities may fix the following
time limits:
- a
time limit for the receipt of requests to participate
which shall not be less than 15 days from the date
of dispatch of the notice;
- a
time limit for the receipt of tenders which shall
not be less than 10 days from the date of the invitation
to tender.
- Provided
it has been requested in good time, additional information
relating to the contract documents must be supplied by
the contracting authorities not less than four days before
the final date fixed for the receipt of tenders.
- Requests
for participation in contracts and invitations to tender
must be made by the most rapid means of communication
possible. When requests to participate are made by telegram,
telex, telefax or telephone, they must be confirmed by
letter dispatched before the expiry of the relevant time
limit.
Article 15
The contracting authorities must respect fully the confidential
nature of any information furnished by the suppliers.
Tenders shall be submitted in writing, directly or by mail.
Member States may authorise the submission of tenders by
any other means making it possible to ensure:
- that
each tender contains all the information necessary for
its evaluation;
- that
the confidentiality of tenders is maintained pending their
evaluation;
- that,
where necessary, for reasons of legal proof, such tenders
are confirmed as soon as possible in writing or by dispatch
of a certified copy;
- that
tenders are opened after the time limit for their submission
has expired.
Variants
<Top>
Article
16
- Where
the criterion for the award of the contract is that of
the most economically advantageous tender, contracting
authorities may take account of variants which are submitted
by a tenderer and meet the minimum specifications required
by the contracting authorities.
The contracting authorities must state in the contract
documents the minimum specifications to be respected by
the variants and any specific requirements for their presentation.
They must indicate in the tender notice if variants are
not permitted.
Contracting authorities may not reject the submission
of a variant on the sole grounds that is has been drawn
up with technical specifications defined by reference
to national standards transposing European standards,
to European technical approvals or to common technical
specifications, or by reference to national technical
specifications.
- Contracting
authorities which have been admitted variants pursuant
to paragraph 1 may not reject a variant on the sole grounds
that it would lead, if successful, to a service contract
rather than a public supply contract within the meaning
of this Directive.
Sub-Contracting
<Top>
Article
17
In the contract documents, the contracting authority may
ask the tenderer to indicate in his tender any share of
the contract he may intend to sub-contract to third parties.
This indication shall be without prejudice to the question
of the principal supplier's liability.
Group
Bids <Top>
Article
18
Tenders may be submitted by groups of suppliers. These groups
may not be required to assume a specific legal form in order
to submit the tender; however, the group selected may be
required to do so when it has been awarded the contract,
to the extent that this change is necessary for the satisfactory
performance of the contract.
Tenders
Invited <Top>
Article
19
- In
Restricted and Negotiated Procedures the contracting authorities
must, on the basis of information given relating to the
supplier's personal position as well as to the information
and formalities necessary for the evaluation of the minimum
conditions of an economic and technical nature to be fulfilled
by him, select from among the candidates with the qualifications
required, by Articles 20 - 24, those whom they will invite
to submit a tender or to negotiate.
- Where
the contracting authorities award a contract by Restricted
Procedure, they may prescribe the range within which the
number of suppliers which they intend to invite will fall.
In this case the range shall be indicated in the contract
notice. The range shall be determined in the light of
the nature of the goods to be supplied. The range must
number at least 5 suppliers and may be up to 20. In any
event, the number of candidates invited to tender shall
be sufficient to ensure genuine competition.
- Where
the contracting authorities award a contract by Negotiated
Procedure as referred to in Article 6 (2), the number
of candidates admitted to negotiate may not be less than
three provided that there is a sufficient number of suitable
candidates.
Selection
Process <Top>
Article
20
- Any
supplier may be excluded from participation in the contract
who:
- is
bankrupt or is being wound up, whose affairs are being
administered by the court, who has entered into an
arrangement with creditors, who has suspended business
activities or who is in any analogous situation arising
from a similar Procedure under national laws and regulations;
- is
the subject of proceedings for a declaration of bankruptcy,
for an order for compulsory winding up or administration
by the court or for an arrangement with creditors
or of any other similar proceedings under national
laws and regulations;
- has
been convicted of an offence concerning his professional
conduct by a judgment which has the force of res judicata;
- has
been guilty of grave professional misconduct proven
by any means which the contracting authorities can
justify;
- has
not fulfilled obligations relating to the payment
of social security contributions in accordance with
the legal provisions of the country in which he is
established or with those of the country of the contracting
authority;
- has
not fulfilled obligations relating to the payment
of taxes in accordance with the legal provisions of
the country in which he is established or those of
the country of the contracting authority;
- if
guilty of serious misrepresentation in supply in the
information required under this Chapter.
- Where
the contracting authority requires of the supplier [sic]
proof that none of the cases quoted in (a), (b), (c),
(e) or (f) of paragraph 1 applies to him, it shall accept
as sufficient evidence:
o for points (a), (b) or (c), the production of an extract
from the 'judicial record' or, failing this, of an equivalent
document issued by a competent judicial or administrative
authority in the country of origin in the country whence
that person comes [sic] showing that these requirements
have been met;
or for points (e) or (f), a certificate issued by the
competent authority in the Member State concerned.
- Where
the country in question does not issue the documents or
certificates referred to in paragraph 2 or where these
do not cover all the cases quoted in (a), (b) and (c)
of paragraph 1, these may be replaced by a declaration
on oath or, in Member States where there is no provision
for declaration on oath, by a solemn declaration made
by the person concerned before a competent judicial or
administrative authority, a notary or a competent professional
or trade body, in the country of origin in the country
whence that person comes [sic].
- Member
States shall designate the authorities and bodies competent
to issue the documents, certificates or declarations referred
to in paragraphs 2 and 3.
Professional
Legislation <Top>
Article
21
Any supplier wishing to take part in a public supply contract
may be requested to prove his enrolment, as prescribed in
his country of establishment, in one of the professional
or trade registers or to provide a declaration on oath or
certificate. In the UK and Ireland, the supplier may be
requested to provide a certificate from the Registrar of
Companies or the Registrar of Friendly Societies, that he
is certified as incorporated or registered or, if he is
not so certified, a certificate stating that the person
concerned has declared on oath that he is engaged in the
profession in question in the country in which he is established
in a specific place under a given business name and under
a specific trading name.
Financial
Standing <Top>
Article
22
- Evidence
of the supplier's financial and economic standing may,
as a general rule, be furnished by one or more of the
following references:
- appropriate
statements from bankers;
- the
presentation of the supplier's balance-sheets or extracts
from the
balance-sheets, where publication of the balance-sheet
is required under the law of the country in which
the supplier is established;
- a
statement of the supplier's overall turnover and its
turnover in respect of the products to which the contract
relates for the three previous financial years.
- The
contracting authorities shall specify in the notice or
in the invitation to tender which reference or references
they have chosen and which references other than those
are to be produced.
- If,
for any valid reason, the supplier is unable to provide
the references requested by the contracting authority,
he may prove his economic and financial standing by any
other document which the contracting authority considers
appropriate.
Technical
Capacity <Top>
Article
23
- Evidence
of the supplier's technical capacity may be furnished
by one or more of the following means according to the
nature, quantity and purpose of the products to be supplied:
- a
list of the principal deliveries effected in the past
three years, with the sums, dates and recipients,
public or private, involved:
o where effected to public authorities, evidence to
be in the form of certificates issued or countersigned
by the competent authority;
o where effected to private purchasers, delivery to
be certified by the purchaser or, failing this, simply
declared by the supplier to have been effected.
- a
description of the supplier's technical facilities,
its measures for ensuring quality and its study and
research facilities;
- indication
of the technicians or technical bodies involved, whether
or not belonging directly to the supplier, especially
those responsible for quality control;
- samples,
description and/or photographs of the products to
be supplied, the authenticity of which must be certified
if the contracting authority so requests;
- samples,
description and/or photographs of the products to
be supplied, the authenticity of which must be certified
if the contracting authority so requests;
- The
contracting authority shall specify, in the notice or
in the invitation to tender, which references it wishes
to receive.
Article 24
The contracting authority may invite the suppliers to supplement
the certificates and documents submitted or to clarify them.
Use
of Lists <Top>
Article
25
- Member
States who have official lists of recognised suppliers
must adapt them to the provisions of the Directives.
- Suppliers
registered in the official lists may, for each contract,
submit to the contracting authority a certificate of registration
issued by the competent authority. This certificate shall
state the reference which enabled them to be registered
in the list and the classification given in that list.
- Certificated
registration in official lists of suppliers by the competent
bodies shall, for the contracting authorities of other
Member States, constitute a presumption of suitability
corresponding to the supplier's classification only as
regards
Article 20 (1) (a) to (d) and (g), Article 21, Article
22 (1) (b) (e) and
Article 23 (1) (a). Information which can be deduced from
registration in official lists may not be questioned.
- For
the registration of suppliers of other Member States in
an official list, no further proof or statements can be
required other than those requested of national suppliers
and, in any event, only those provided for under Articles
20 to 23.
Award
Criteria <Top>
Article
26
- The
criteria on which the contracting authority shall base
the award of contracts shall be:
- either
the lowest price only;
- or,
when the award is made to the most economically advantageous
tender, various criteria according to the contract
in question: e.g. price, delivery date, running costs,
cost-effectiveness, quality, aesthetic and functional
characteristics, technical merit, after-sales service
and technical assistance.
- In
the case referred to in point (b) of paragraph 1, the
contracting authority shall state in the contract documents
or in the contract notice all the criteria they intend
to apply to the award, where possible in descending order
of importance.
Low
Tenders <Top>
Article
27
If, for a given contract, tenders appear to be abnormally
low in relation to the goods to be supplied, the contracting
authority shall, before it may reject those tenders, request
in writing details of the constituent elements of the tender
which it considers relevant and shall verify those constituent
elements taking account of the explanations received.
The contracting authority may take into consideration explanations
relating to the economics of the manufacturing process,
or to the technical solutions chosen, or to the exceptionally
favourable conditions available to the tenderer for the
supply of the goods, or to the originality of the suppliers
[sic] proposed by the tenderer.
If the documents relating to the contract provide for its
award at the lowest price tendered, the contracting authority
must communicate to the Commission the rejection of tenders
which it considers to be too low.
All
information in this guidance is checked and believed to
be correct, but cannot be so guaranteed and the publishers
shall not be liable for any loss suffered directly or indirectly
as a result of its use.
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