Greening the Street-Level Procurer: Challenges in the Strongly Decentralized Swedish System
Journal article, 2016

This article investigates the every-day street-level practice of green public procurement (GPP) in Sweden, a country with one of the most decentralized systems of public administration within the European Union (EU). The street-level procurement officers in Swedish local and regional government are in charge of purchases estimated to represent between 10% and 15% of Sweden’s GDP. This article examines the constraining and enabling factors behind the individual procurement officer’s choice of green procurement in textiles and clothing through a combination of qualitative interviews and a review of documentary sources. The analysis shows that while indirect support through European and national soft regulation and policy advice is imperative for “greening” procurement, the direct factors which influence the local outcome of GPP comprises factors on the local level: political commitment and environmental knowledge, the organizational structure of local government and the local interpretation of the regulatory framework. This study shows that a decentralized structure has possibilities of furthering ambitions of buying green if there are committed politicians and public officials, an optimal level of internal centralisation and an external support structure of knowledge and enabling rules. © 2015, Springer Science+Business Media New York.

Capability

Decentralization

Sweden

Commitment

Green public procurement

Compliance

Author

Patrik Hall

Malmö university

Karl Löfgren

Victoria University of Wellington

Gregory Peters

Chalmers, Energy and Environment, Environmental Systems Analysis

Chemical Environmental Science

Journal of Consumer Policy

0168-7034 (ISSN) 15730700 (eISSN)

Vol. 39 4 467-483

Roots

Basic sciences

Subject Categories

Environmental Biotechnology

DOI

10.1007/s10603-015-9282-8

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8/9/2024 2