Mon, May 21, 2012
Text Size
Banner
Banner
Tuesday, 07 February 2012 09:03

Scottish procurement review to address construction sector concerns

The Scottish Government is developing plans to commission a root and branch review of construction procurement across the public sector, with the aim of giving small and medium sized companies a bigger share of Scotland’s annual public sector spend of over £2 billion on construction related contracts.

Alex Neil, Scotland’s Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure and Capital Investment has outlined his intention to further reform public procurement to improve Scottish businesses’ access to contract opportunities.

Mr Neil said:

"I have spent a lot of time in recent months engaging with businesses and others who have concerns about public procurement.

"The Scottish Government has done a great deal to improve the way the procurement system operates in Scotland, but clearly there is still room for significant further improvement, both in relation to efficiency and the extent to which Scottish businesses are able to access contract opportunities.

"We have already announced our intention to introduce a Sustainable Procurement Bill during the life of this Parliament and that the Bill will seek to ensure that major public contracts deliver training and employment opportunities through the inclusion of Community Benefit Clauses. Having listened to business concerns about procurement I can announce that the Bill will also seek to ensure that all public bodies in Scotland adopt transparent, streamlined and standardised procurement processes that are friendly to Scottish businesses.

"Many of the issues that have been raised with me have related to the construction sector. This sector is facing particular challenges in the current economic climate and many of the improvements we have introduced to public procurement have had limited impact as our work on improving practice has been focused largely on goods and services rather than construction .

"Against this background, I believe the time is right to commission a root and branch review of construction procurement across the public sector, with a view to tackling industry concerns and ensuring that procurement practices deliver best value for Scotland’s economy.

"We will work up detailed proposals for the review and I will make a further announcement on this shortly."

High quality construction firms have gone out of business

Liz Cameron, Chief Executive of the Scottish Chambers of Commerce and a leading advocate for change within public sector procurement welcomed the focus on the construction sector, commenting that there had been major downsizing with many high quality construction companies going out of business with the loss of highly skilled jobs.

The Sustainable Procurement Bill will ensure that:

  • contract opportunities are advertised or awarded through Public Contracts Scotland – helping Scottish businesses find and win contracts;
  • public bodies adopt transparent, streamlined and standardised procurement processes that are friendly to Scottish businesses; and
  • that Scottish firms have the right to access information about all contract award decisions and to challenge them if they believe the decision is unfair.

 The review will set out to help ensure that the construction sector, including industry and its public sector clients:

  • achieves efficiency improvements through opportunities for collaboration where appropriate;
  • raises its performance through improvements to capability, procurement practice and project assurance;
  • is able to identify and quickly adopt emerging best practice and that practices are standardised wherever possible;
  • adopts good practice in relation to sustainability, including life cycle costing and reduced carbon and energy consumption;
  • manages common/major contractors and projects effectively;
  • makes best use of available construction procurement/project skills; and
  • makes best use of new and emerging innovations in techniques, technology and materials (eg Building Information Modelling).

 

Product Showcase

  • LEADING ECONOMIST TO STRENGTHEN ACWA’s PPP DRIVE

    A99_L_FernandezLeading Spanish economist Luis Fernandez has joined environmental solutions provider ACWA Emirates as Chief Officer Concessions for the MENA region to provide in-depth support for the company’s drive into the public-private partnership (PPP) sector.

  • Watson-Marlow OEM pumps help meet rising demand for chlorine monitors

    A specialist manufacturer of water quality measurement and monitoring systems is using peristaltic pump technology from Watson-Marlow Pumps GroupOEM_Water_photo for use in chlorine monitoring equipment after similar pumps were found less reliable. 

     

  • HYDRO VORTEX DROP™ SHAFT KEY TO UNDERSEA SEWAGE ACCESS

    The_Hydro-Drop_Shaft_during_installation_at_Swansea_WaterfrontWelsh Water’s challenge to upgrade the sewage infrastructure within the £multi-million brownfield Swansea Waterfront re-development was facilitated with an innovative Hydro Vortex Drop™ shaft solution from Hydro International.

Advertise with Waterbriefing

WaterBriefing is the UK’s leading online daily dedicated news and intelligence service for business professionals in the water sector – covering both UK and international issues. Advertise with us for an unrivalled opportunity to place your message in front of key influencers, decision makers and purchasers.

Find out more

About Waterbriefing

Water Briefing is an information service, delivering daily news, company data and product information straight to the desks of purchasers, users and specifiers of equipment and services in the UK water and wastewater industry.


Find out more