Our Early-Stage Researcher, Aura Iurascu (Hasselt University) published an open-access journal article titled ‘How Will the Adoption of Mandatory GPP Criteria Change the Game? Lessons from the Italian Experience’. The article was published in Vol. 18, Issue 1, 2023, of the European Procurement and Public Private Partnership Law Review (EPPPL). EPPPL is a peer-reviewed journal providing legal and policy developments in public procurement and public-private partnerships (PPP), with articles, case notes, and country reports.
With the 2003 Communication on Integrated Product Policy, the European Commission started focusing more on ‘greening’ Member States’ public procurement law, by encouraging the adoption of National Action Plans (NAPs). Subsequently, with the 2008 Communication, green public procurement (GPP) criteria were developed. Since then, the Commission has developed more than 20 standard GPP criteria, which are currently applied voluntarily. Recently, the EU Commission indicated that they are working on mandating GPP criteria and several legislative proposals are foreseeing the setup of mandatory EU GPP criteria for all Member States. Some domestic legislations have already introduced mandatory GPP criteria. In particular, the Italian legislator followed up the Commission’s initiative on NAPs, and adopted mandatory minimum environmental criteria (MECs) for 18 purchasing categories. This article aims to describe and compare the evolution of GPP criteria in the EU and Italy to illustrate and anticipate possible outcomes for the forthcoming mandatory GPP at the EU level. By doing so, the paper emphasises the prominent role played by the Italian Council of State in ensuring the mandatory minimum for environmental criteria in Italian law. Finally, it argues that the Italian approach, which uses the ineffectiveness of the contract as a general and well-established remedy, has proven successful in ensuring the enforcement of MECs.
The article is divided into three parts; the first part focuses on the evolution of the EU’s GPP criteria. The second part investigates the Italian adoption of minimum environmental criteria (MECs) in public procurement, compares them to the EU’s GPP criteria, and stresses the positive legislative evolution of MECs. In this context, the paper pays particular attention to the recent development of Italian case law, which puts sustainability and circular economy in the spotlight and analyzes the first declaration of the ineffectiveness of a public contract resulting from a flawed procedure lacking mandatory MECs. Finally, the third part concludes with the author’s remarks on the upcoming mandatory GPP criteria and their possible future developments.
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