This document discusses how digital technologies like AI, blockchain, and IoT could potentially be used to foster more sustainable public procurement. It argues that building an enabling data architecture is essential but progress has been limited due to a lack of available data. While these technologies offer opportunities, their application to sustainable procurement is still speculative and challenges remain around data generation, complexity, and assessing environmental impacts. More research is needed on designing digital solutions and regulating their social and sustainability impacts over the long term.
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Digital technologies, public procurement and sustainability
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Digital technologies, public
procurement and sustainability
Some exploratory thoughts
Prof Albert Sanchez-Graells
Patrimonial Law Research Group Seminar
Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Barcelona, 7 November 2019
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Agenda
To reflect on the way in which
digitalisation can foster more sustainable
procurement, in the EU context
To stress the sine qua non importance of
building an enabling data architecture
To point at areas for further research
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Using procurement to…
This is a classical topic
There are important background issues of
regulatory transfer and substitution, as well
as some contradictions in the way market
mechanisms want to be exploited in areas of
market failure
But let’s not get hang up on that …
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Procurement and sustainability
Area of increasing policy-making attention, although progress
is much slower than would be necessary
Facilitating the inclusion of sustainability-related criteria in
procurement was one of the drivers for the 2014 new EU rules
Most problems are linked to implementation, not regulatory
design. Cost, complexity and institutional inertia are the main
obstacles
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Strategic procurement
European Commission, ‘Making Procurement
work in and for Europe’ COM(2017) 572 final
• Need to facilitate and to further uptake of
strategic procurement, including SPP
• Proposals mostly geared towards
guidance, standardized solutions &
sharing of best practices
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Massive disparities
Using regional eco- innovation as a
proxy, the EU’s landscape offers a really
mixed picture
This creates difficulties for policy
design and coordination, as
acknowledged by the Commission
Main interventions dependent on MS
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Digital technologies
Big data/ML/AI, blockchain and IoT are the
new ‘El Dorado’
These are all immature technologies and the
hype and level of investment (diversion)
they are receiving seem disproportionate
A (more) critical look at their potential seems
necessary, in particular in relation to public
sector use cases - cfr OECD (2019a)
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Procurement digitalisation
This is another strategic priority for the European Commission
Not only for procurement’s sake, but also in the context of the
wider strategy to create an AI-friendly regulatory environment and
to use procurement as a catalyst for innovations of broader
application – along lines of entrepreneurial State (Mazzucato, 2013)
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A vision for the future
Procurement X.0 “New technologies provide the
possibility to rethink fundamentally
the way public procurement, and
relevant parts of public
administrations, are organised.
There is a unique chance to
reshape the relevant systems and
achieve a digital transformation.”
European Commission,
COM(2017) 572 fin at 11
So far, eProcurement has largely
consisted in digitalising paper-
based processes
This is an enabler for the
deployment of more advanced
digital technologies
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But not much happening (yet?)
For all the talk about the potential of digital technologies in
procurement, experimentation seems very limited - eg OECD (2019b)
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Sustainable digital
procurement
The combined strategic goal / ideal would
be to harness the potential of digital
technologies to promote (more)
sustainable procurement
This is a difficult exercise, surrounded by
uncertainty, so the rest of this
presentation is all speculation
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Short functional overview of DTs
AI is particularly apt for the massive processing of data (big data),
as well as for the implementation of data-based ML solutions and the
automation of some tasks (robotic process automation, RPA)
Blockchain is apt for the implementation of tamper-resistant/evident
decentralised data management
IoT is apt to automate the generation of some data and (could be?) apt
to breach the virtual/real frontier through oracle-enabled robotics
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Data as the priority
No data, no fun – as recognised by
Commission in its push for more, better data
Difficulties in the generation of data
Initiatives to correct it for the future (OCDS,
eForms, eGoverment APIs, Open Data
Directive, B2G data sharing)
More needs to be done to generate
backward-looking databases
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What can AI do for SPP?
If/when data is available, there is scope for
• Sustainability-oriented (big) data analytics
• Development of sustainability screens/indexes
• ML-supported data analysis with sustainability goals
• Sustainability-oriented procurement planning
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What can AI do for SPP?
Where clear rules/policies are specified, there is scope for
• Compliance automation
• Recommender/expert systems
• Chatbot-enabled guidance
Could AI ever generate new sustainability policies?
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Blockchain…
what blockchain?
There are several different possible
configurations of DLTs/blockchains
– eg (Rauchs et al, 2019)
Public sector extremely unlikely to opt
for public & permissionless, at least not
without an additional layer (Alessie et al, 2019)
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What about blockchain?
Sustainable blockchain solutions (ie private
& permissioned, PoS) likely to present very
limited advantages for procurement
Technical solution cannot fix complexity, eg
• Tenders on a blockchain
• Smart (public) contracts
• Blockchain as an information exchange
platform (Mélon, 2019)
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Sustainable DT procurement:
an afterthought?
There are emerging guidelines on procurement of
some DTs, such as AI (UK, 2019) (WEF, 2019)
These are extremely technology-centric
Sustainability considerations may require eg an
earlier analysis of whether the life-cycle of existing
solutions warrants replacement
Pursuing technological development for its own
sake can have significant environmental impacts
that must be assessed
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Final thoughts
The main area of effort for policy-makers
should now be in creating an enabling data
architecture. Its regulation can focus
research in S/T
In the M/T research should be on the design
of DT-enabled solutions (for SPP) and their
regulation/ governance/ social impact
L/T there is too much uncertainty
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Further reading
Sanchez-Graells, A, “Data-driven procurement governance: two well-known elephant tales”
(2019) 24(4) Communications Law 157-170. https://ssrn.com/abstract=3440552.
Sanchez-Graells, A, “Some public procurement challenges in supporting and delivering
smart urban mobility: procurement data, discretion and expertise”, in M Finck, M Lamping,
V Moscon & H Richter (eds), Smart Urban Mobility – Law, Regulation, and Policy, MPI
Studies on Intellectual Property and Competition Law (Springer 2020) forthcoming.
https://ssrn.com/abstract=3452045.
Sanchez-Graells, A, “EU Public Procurement Policy and the Fourth Industrial Revolution:
Pushing and Pulling as One?”, Working Paper for the YEL Annual Conference 2019 ‘EU
Law in the era of the Fourth Industrial Revolution’. https://ssrn.com/abstract=3440554.