Green public procurement (GPP) is a powerful tool to achieve environmental objectives by means of the incorporation of green requirements into public sector purchasing contracts. Public authorities, by promoting “green” purchases, incentivise environmentally beneficial outcomes and foster market innovation as well as the transformation towards a sustainable economy model. \nIn order to “green” the market, it is essential for producers to be able to make certifiable and credible green claims about their products and for customers to know what to ask for. While the EU Ecolabel policy can provide environmental references or standards for the former, the EU GPP policy can provide for the latter. \nThe EU GPP recommendations placed in this document are based on the EU Ecolabel criteria and intend to provide authorities with guidance on how to use ecolabels, and in particular the EU Ecolabel, in the procurement process. This report aims to bring these two policies together in order to find synergies between the supply-side EU Ecolabel policy and the demand-side EU GPP policy – specifically for the procurement of absorbent hygiene products such as baby diapers, sanitary towels, panty liners, tampons, nursing pads, or incontinence products. \nIn addition to a brief introduction to the EU Ecolabel policy, to the EU GPP policy and to procurement procedures as a whole, research is presented to support JRC recommendations to public procurers about exactly what green criteria to set when trying to procure environmentally friendly absorbent hygiene products. \nThe recommended environmental criteria are categorised into the five most appropriate areas (addressed in detail in 9 technical specifications and 10 award criteria) based on their link to the subject matter of the procurement, ease of verification (in cases where there is no EU Ecolabel) and relevance to the environmental impact., as follows:\n1.\tFluff pulp sourcing and manufacturing (referring to the impacts associated with upstream processes for cellulose fibre sourcing and processing, i.e., emissions and energy consumption);\n2.\tMan-made cellulose fibre sourcing and manufacturing (referring to impacts associated with upstream processes for cellulose fibre sourcing and processing i.e., emissions and viscose process efficiency);\n3.\tCotton and other cellulose seed fibre sourcing and manufacturing (referring to the impacts associated with upstream processes for cotton fibre sourcing and processing i.e., bleaching);\n4.\tMaterial efficiency in the production of the final product (in terms of the impact associated with material recovery in the core process);\n5.\tPackaging (referring to the impact associated with materials circularity and resource efficiency in the downstream processes i.e., packaging recyclability and minimum content of recycled material). \nWhere relevant, further information about the why the criteria are relevant and what other ISO 14024 type I ecolabels may be considered as equivalent is provided.
Authors
KOWALSKA Malgorzata Agata, PEREZ CAMACHO Maria, FARACA Giorgia, WOLF Oliver
Related Organizations
- Other identifiers
- EUR 32033,OP KJ-NA-32-033-EN-N (online)
- Pages
- 83
- Published in
- Belgium
- Rights Holder
- https://ec.europa.eu/info/legal-notice_en#copyright-notice
Table of Contents
- 1 Introduction 9
- 1.1 The procurement process and types of procedure 11
- 1.2 Types of procurement criteria 12
- 1.3 Use of EU Ecolabel criteria in public procurement 13
- 2 Product-specific information 15
- 2.1 Scope and definition 15
- Main definitions 15
- Common Procurement Vocabulary (CPV) codes 16
- 2.2 Market analysis 18
- Total sold production value and volume in the EU in 2022 18
- Search of Tender Electronic Daily (TED) for relevant procurement tenders 24
- Availability of EU Ecolabel products on the market 26
- 2.3 Environmental hotspots 28
- 3 Identification of EU Ecolabel-based criteria for the public procurement of absorbent hygiene products. 34
- 3.1 Screening exercise: part 1 – EU Ecolabel 34
- 3.2 Screening exercise: part 2 – other ISO 14024 Type I ecolabels 35
- 3.3 General considerations about verification via ecolabels 37
- 3.4 Recommended EU GPP criteria for the public procurement of absorbent hygiene products. 38
- Fluff Pulp 39
- Man-made cellulose fibre 49
- Cotton and other natural cellulosic seed fibres 53
- Production process 55
- Packaging 56
- 4 Conclusions 61
- References 62
- List of abbreviations and definitions 65
- List of figures 66
- List of tables 67
- Annexes 68
- Annex 1. Explanations of screening of EU Ecolabel criteria for suitability of use in EU GPP criteria 68
- Annex 2. Indicative information on verifying the EU GPP recommendation for absorbent hygiene products using selected ISO 14024 type I ecolabels 72