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London's regional government sets benchmark for fair procurement

11 February 2008

This press released was originally issued by the Mayor of London's press office at the Greater London Authority.

Mayor of London Ken Livingstone today published the first review of progress in delivering the Greater London Authority Group's Responsible Procurement policy - which ensures securing social and environmental goals in London are included in criteria for buying decisions.

This highlights progress in guaranteeing London gets the maximum benefit from the way in which the Group makes its £3bn plus annual purchases of goods and services.

The Mayor's policy is a crucial tool in delivering his overriding aim for London to become an exemplary, sustainable, inclusive and fair city and for all Londoners to benefit from the  Capital's prosperity.

Adopted in 2006, the policy sets standards in the way the Group procures its goods and services.

Priorities

Designed to complement central government's commitment that the UK will help lead the European Union in integrating social and environmental priorities into procurement, the policy sets the benchmark for London businesses, public and private, to follow.

The report outlines the policy, sets out what has been delivered in the first year of implementation with specific case studies, explains how the Group supports its suppliers in understanding and responding to the policy, and summarises how the Group plans to take Responsible Procurement forward.

While various elements of responsible procurement have been previously promoted by other organisations, the Group's approach is believed to be the most comprehensive adopted by a major public authority.

Since adoption key achievements include:

The Mayor of London said: "We've seen some real progress within the Group in implementing Responsible Procurement over the last twelve months, from recycling improvements to London Living's Wage, the East London Line, the Green Procurement Code and the LDA's new online toolkit for smaller businesses.

"All these achievements demonstrate how seriously we take Responsible Procurement.

"As a world-class city, it is only right that we lead the way on making sure London buys its goods and services responsibly, and encourages other buyers and suppliers to follow, so that all communities fully benefit from our Capital's prosperity."


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