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Back to Basics: Public procurement law

Since the Procurement Act 2023 received royal assent in October last year, there has been a lot of discussion around what impact it will have on public procurement law. The new Act only comes into force in October 2024 and the current regime will apply to all procurements started before then. So what exactly is public procurement law, who is affected by it and what does it require?

What is procurement law?

Public procurement law regulates the spending of public money. The current legislation is EU-derived but wholly retained in national law. Outside of defence procurement, there are three sets of regulations governing procurement in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Each set governs a different area of procurement but reflects the same overarching principles. These are:

  1. The Public Contracts Regulations 2015, which apply to procurement of goods, services and works by the public sector.
  2. The Utilities Contracts Regulations 2016, which apply to procurements by utilities.
  3. The Concession Contracts Regulations 2016, which apply to procurements of concessions for works and services. Concessions involve the transfer of some of the income risk to the supplier providing the service, for instance the outsourcing of leisure centres or projects such as the Mersey Gateway Bridge, where the contractor will recoup the project cost through tolls as well as local authority payments.

For the purposes of this article, we largely focus on the 2015 regulations, as they govern most procurements.

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