Introduction to sustainable timber procurement
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Transcript Introduction to sustainable timber procurement
Sustainable Timber Action in Europe
Training for Public Authorities
Module 3: Introduction to Sustainable
Timber Procurement
STA – EU Trainings: Raising awareness for Public Authorities
(Place & Date)
Sustainable Public Procurement
How to implement it
strategically and
successfully?
Strategic approach 360°
The Procura+ Milestone approach
Umsetzungsinstrumente
ICLEIs milestone approach
Preparation
Target setting
Realistic targets, e.g. share of 20% fair trade within 1 year
Clear and quantifiable targets
Develop action plan
Plan activities and assign responsabilities
Implement action plan
Baseline inventory, definition of product groups
Procurement, training, communication, dialogue with suppliers
Monitor progress and report results
Review targets and start a new phase
Political target setting
Targets:
• Clear and quantifiable targets
• Ambitious but realistic
• For one department or the whole organisation
Examples:
• Until 2016: 50% of all food in schools is from
organic agriculture
• From 2013: 100% sustainable timber criteria for all
tenders for public benches, floors and playgrounds
Good practice 360°
“Ecobuy Vienna”
Success factors:
•
Starting point (policy): Climate Protection Programme (“KliP Wien“)
•
Collaboration between different municipal departments: Finance, Environment,
Construction
•
Strong marketing (videoclip, games in schools, awareness raising)
•
Systematic stakeholder involvement (180 municipal employees involved in
development of product criteria)
•
Binding decree at top administration level to make “Ecobuy Vienna” criteria
mandatory for procurers
Source: www.oekokauf.wien.at
Organigram
Work structure & criteria
1 Steering committee & 3 Consultative Committees (Legal; Public Relations;
Organisational)
Product-specific Working Groups (WG):
•
WG1 Lighting
•
WG16 Events
•
WG2 Disinfection
•
WG17 Paints and varnishes
•
WG3 Printing, stationery and office supply
•
WG18 Fire extinguishers
•
WG4 ITC (e.g. computers) and household appliances
•
WG19 Furniture
•
WG5 Fleet (car pool)
•
WG20 Textiles
•
WG6 Building Services
•
WG21 Disposal/Waste Services
•
WG7 COnstruction works
•
•
WG8 Interior works
WG22 construction and environmental
logistics
•
WG9 Food
•
WG23 Nanotechnology
•
WG10 Cleaning products
•
WG24 Kindergartens
•
WG11 Civil & underground engineering
•
WG25 Green and open spaces
•
WG12 Water
•
WG25 Gardening Products
•
WG13 Winter Service
•
WG14 Prevention (PVC-free; less paper)
•
WG15 Planning/design
Good Practice: Cognac
• Through the “Moabi Exoerience” in 2005 a new understanding of
timber procurement developed in Cognac
• The compliance with FSC and PEFC criteria is now mandatory for all
timber products, including construction
• In addition the “Timber Week” has been set up along
with other informational campaigns
• Early market engagement included all suppliers in
the search for alternative timber products
• The City of Cognac saved 5% in comparison with
spending on timber in the previous years
Good practice: Barcelona
• Strategic local Agenda 21: Environmental and social criteria have to be
considered in all tenders
• All timber used for urban furniture must be from proven legal sources
and sustainable forest management
• Qualitative preference is given for products which carry a more timber
demanding label
• The programme “+sustainable City Council” provides information and
training for citizens and public servants
Good practice: Bremen
• Since 2007 implementation of SPP
through landmark project in all divisions
• Comprehensively certified timber products,
specifically CoC, are still rare on the
market and products may come from a
number of different suppliers but Bremen
keeps good contacts with them and
encourages them to become CoC certified
• The City of Bremen adopted their own
labour guidelines (BremKern) which are
modelled after the ILO core criteria
Sustainable Public Procurement:
What‘s the potential in Romania?
© cdep.ro