Download Sonnino

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Local Food and Sustainable
City-Regions: The Potential
of Public Procurement
Dr. Roberta Sonnino
School of City and Regional Planning
Cardiff University
Searching for Sustainable
Development: The Power of the
Public Sector

Public procurement as the sleeping giant of
economic development policy
– in the EU, the public procurement spend amounts
to ca. 16% of the gross domestic product
– In the UK, the public sector spends some £ 150
billion/year, or around 13% of its GDP

Significant opportunity to promote socially
and environmentally friendly products and
services – concept of sustainable
procurement
Sustainable public procurement
Bringing together the business and the policy arms of
government is what sustainable procurement is about. It
is about how the government’ s immense buying power
can be used to make rapid progress towards its own
goals on sustainable development. […] Sustainable
procurement – in short using procurement to support
wider social, economic and environmental objectives in
ways that offer real long-term benefits, is how the public
sector should be spending taxpayers money (Neville
Simms, UK Sustainable Procurement Task Force, 2006)
Sustainable Public Procurement:
The Potential of Local Food

Food re-localization as a necessary (but
not per se sufficient) aspect of sustainable
public procurement systems
– Environmental benefits
– Multiplier effect on the local economy
– Shared commitment to the objectives of
sustainability
Re-localizing the Public Food
Systems: The Barriers
Cost-cutting culture – “best value” wrongly
interpreted as “low cost”
 Wrong perception that food re-localization
is not allowed by the EU legislation. In
fact:

– Article 6 of the Treaty of the European Union
(1997) requires the integration of
environmental and social objectives into all
EU’s policies
– Article 26 of the 2004 Public Sector Directive
Re-localizing the Public Food
Systems: The Opportunities
If it is set out in a non-discriminatory way, there’s
no doubt whatsoever that you can use as your
technical specification that all foodstuff must be
organic, full stop. […] It is legitimate to say “we
want foodstuff that is not older than”, it’s a
legitimate idea…If that means in practice that it
will have to be locally-grown, so be it! It remains
a legitimate criterion, but it is not a legitimate
criterion if you say that it has to be produced
within 10 kilometres from the school. Interview at
DG INTERNAL MARKET, 2006
Re-localizing the Public Food
Systems: The Benefits

The County of East
Ayrshire (Scotland)
has re-localized its
school food chain
– Products broken into 9
lots to attract local
producers
– Innovative award criteria
based on quality, rather
than price
Re-localizing the Public Food
Systems: The Benefits
Multiplier effect of £ 160,000/12 schools
on local economy
 Local sourcing has helped the Council to
save almost £ 100,000 in environmental
costs -- food miles, packaging waste
 Increased citizens’ satisfaction with the
service
 Social Return on Investment Index of 6.19

Re-localizing the Public Food
Systems: The Benefits

The City of Rome (Italy)
has also partly relocalized its enormous
school food system
through creative
procurement:
– Emphasis on PDO/PGI
products
– Products from “biodedicated” food chains
– “Guaranteed freshness”
Re-localizing the Public Food
Systems: The Benefits

In 2009:
–
–
–
–
–
67.5% of the food
was organic
44% of the food
came from ‘biodedicated’ food
chains
26% of the food was
local
14% of the food was
Fair Trade
2% of the food came
from social
cooperatives
Re-localizing the Public Food
Systems: Some Conclusions

Municipal governments as food chain innovators
– food security as a matter of production and access

Need to establish mechanisms that:
– facilitate the diffusion of knowledge (good practice is
a bad traveller)
– scale up and protect urban food strategies to create
sustainable city-regions - regions that are
characterised by reciprocal and synergistic relations
between urban, peri-urban and rural areas