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Draft Business Waste Strategy PDF - london.gov.uk - Greater ...

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Making waste work in London The Mayor’s <strong>Draft</strong> <strong>Business</strong> <strong>Waste</strong> Management <strong>Strategy</strong> Mayor of London 115<br />

By adopting the policy, the GLA group is making it clear that public<br />

bodies are able to pursue sustainability objectives through their<br />

procurement practices, without compromising their compliance with<br />

legislation. In working together, the GLA group is benefiting from<br />

knowledge gained across the group and has been able to devise a<br />

comprehensive set of best practice that everyone can learn from.<br />

The GLA group spends around £4 billion each year on procurement and<br />

the Mayor is committed to responsible procurement and the direct socioeconomic<br />

and environmental benefits it can have on London’s businesses,<br />

workers and environment. By jointly applying the policy the group can<br />

make a bigger impact for London.<br />

Source: <strong>Greater</strong> London Authority Procurement Team<br />

5.32 Green procurement has a number of elements including specifying<br />

and buying products and services that:<br />

■ prevent waste and are reusable or recyclable<br />

■ are energy efficient<br />

■ are from renewable sources, for example, energy<br />

■ are sourced locally, in order to minimise transport and associated<br />

impacts and support market development within London, creating<br />

employment and skill opportunities<br />

■ are transported by the most sustainable mode<br />

■ incorporate recycled materials, which reduces the demand for virgin<br />

materials and can reduce energy demand in manufacture).<br />

5.33 While there is strong support for green public procurement, there<br />

is also increasing demand from both the <strong>gov</strong>ernment and the public<br />

to deliver greater efficiency in public services. Research 255 has shown<br />

that green procurement has been encouraged through legislation<br />

but that ’momentum was lost following the Gershon review’ of public<br />

sector efficiency 256 .<br />

5.34 It is possible, however, for the public sector to fulfil its commitment<br />

to sustainable procurement and be more efficient. The Sustainable<br />

Procurement Taskforce has stated that ’sustainable procurement, as part<br />

of an improved procurement process… will reduce, rather than add to,<br />

public spending in both the short and long run’ 257 . One way is for the<br />

public sector bodies to work together to broker competitive deals, for<br />

example, in the way the GLA group is jointly applying its responsible<br />

procurement policy.

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