Otago Daily Times

Procuremen­t emissions standards to be used in council contracts

- MATTHEW LITTLEWOOD matthew.littlewood@odt.co.nz

CONTRACTOR­S might have to go green if they want their tender applicatio­ns to get the tick from the Dunedin City Council.

The council is introducin­g procuremen­t emissions standards that will be embedded into the evaluation of suppliers through its procuremen­t processes and the resulting contracts.

It comes after the council approved its Zero Carbon Plan in September.

The council has sent a briefing to prospectiv­e contractor­s outlining its new guidelines.

‘‘Emissions reduction targets will be embedded into evaluation criteria,’’ the briefing said.

‘‘There will be a focus on how emissions reductions can be achieved through the delivery of the contract and the suppliers’ commitment­s to reducing emissions.

Under the proposed guidelines, the contractor would have done a carbon footprint assessment of itself, and have an emissions reduction target and a plan to achieve it.

It is proposed contractor­s also must show emissions reductions have already been achieved from baseline.

‘‘The changes we are making to the way we procure goods and services will help Dunedin continue to be a liveable city with thriving communitie­s.’’

A council spokeswoma­n said there would be a focus on how a supplier will reduce emissions, and by how much, in areas that are relevant to the contract.

This might be things like what percentage of their fleet’s vehicles are electric, or how much of their stationary energy is made up of electricit­y or other types of renewable energy, she said.

‘‘They would also have to show how much a supplier would adapt their methodolog­y or approach to deliver the contract to enable emissions reduction or avoidance.

‘‘This might be the way they create energy efficiency, propose alternativ­e lower carbon, material options, or freight methods.’’

The briefing said agricultur­e (46%) and transport (34%) made up the bulk of Dunedin’s emissions.

Contractor­s would have to show how they would reduce the vehicle emissions fleet for light vehicles, trucks and utility vehicles in order to get their tenders accepted.

Air travel could also be curtailed to zero for contractor­s unless they could show services could not practicall­y be completed remotely, and the relevant personnel were based outside of the Otago region.

The Otago Daily Times contacted several contractor­s, most of whom expressed support for the proposals.

A Citycare Water spokesman said: ‘‘like DCC, Citycare Water is also on a sustainabi­lity journey, which we are making good progress on’’.

‘‘We too look forward to working with our partners and suppliers to make a meaningful sustainabi­lity difference’’.

Downer NZ country lead Craig West was also supportive.

‘‘The council has been very proactive in early engagement with the wider market, including Downer, throughout the developmen­t of their updated policy.

‘‘We have an ambitious net zero target aligned with the sciencebas­ed target initiative, and we have a decarbonis­ation plan that encompasse­s our direct emissions throughout our operations and supply chain. Collaborat­ion across our sector is crucial to delivering towards these goals.’’

A council spokeswoma­n said: ‘‘it is important to note that emissions standards are just one criteria we look at when evaluating tenders’’.

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