Activities of Bernadette VERGNAUD related to 2011/0438(COD)
Plenary speeches (1)
Award of concession contracts - Public procurement - Procurement by entities operating in the water, energy, transport and postal services sectors (debate)
Amendments (4)
Amendment 242 #
Proposal for a directive
Recital 25
Recital 25
(25) Electronic means of communication are particularly well suited to support centralised purchasing practices and tools because of the possibility they offer to re- use and automatically process data and to minimise information and transaction costs. The use of such electronic means of communication should therefore, as a first step, be rendered compulsory for central purchasing bodies, while also facilitating converging practices across the Union. This should be followed by a general obligation to use electronic means of communication in all procurement procedures after a transition period of two years. So as to ensure continued legal certainty, this shall not affect existing arrangements at national level for publishing information on public procurement contracts for amounts below the thresholds set in this directive.
Amendment 436 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 10 – paragraph 1 – point d a (new)
Article 10 – paragraph 1 – point d a (new)
(da) transactions carried out by contracting authorities in order to raise money or capital;
Amendment 1300 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 69 a (new)
Article 69 a (new)
Amendment 1303 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 69 b (new)
Article 69 b (new)
Article 69b Relations with third countries as regards works, supplies and service contracts 1. Member States shall inform the Commission of any general difficulties, in law or in fact, encountered and reported by their undertakings in securing the award of works, supplies and service contracts in third countries. 2. The Commission shall report to the European Parliament and the Council periodically on the opening up of works, supplies and service contracts in third countries and on progress in negotiations with these countries on this subject, particularly within the framework of the WTO. 3. The Commission shall endeavour, by approaching the third country concerned, to remedy any situation where it finds, on the basis either of the reports referred to in paragraph 2 or of other information, that, in the context of the award of works, supplies and service contracts, a third country: (a) does not grant Union undertakings effective access comparable to that granted by the Union to undertakings from that third country; (b) does not grant Union undertakings national treatment or the same competitive opportunities as are available to national undertakings; or c) grants undertakings from other third countries more favourable treatment than Union undertakings. 4. Member States shall inform the Commission of any difficulties, in law or in fact, encountered and reported by their undertakings and which are due to the non-observance of the international labour law provisions listed in Annex XI when these undertakings have tried to secure the award of works, supplies and service contracts in third countries. 5. In the circumstances referred to in paragraphs 3 and 4, the Commission may at any time propose that the Council decide to suspend or restrict, over a period to be laid down in the decision, the award of works, supplies and service contracts to: (a) undertakings governed by the law of the third country in question; (b) undertakings affiliated to the undertakings specified in point (a) and having their registered office in the Union but having no direct and effective link with the economy of a Member State; (c) undertakings submitting tenders which have as their subject-matter services originating in the third country in question. The Council shall act, by qualified majority, as soon as possible. The Commission may propose these measures on its own initiative or at the request of a Member State. 6. This article shall be without prejudice to the commitments of the Union in relation to third countries ensuing from international agreements on public procurement, particularly within the framework of the WTO.