The Procurement Regulations 2024
Juli Lau, Nicola Sumner and Shyann Sheehy outline some key provisions from the Procurement Regulations 2024.
On 22 May 2024 the Procurement Regulations 2024 (the ‘2024 Regulations’) were made, but the majority of the provisions do not come into force until the Procurement Act 2023 (the ‘2023 Act’) substantively commences. This is necessarily the case because the 2024 Regulations implement various aspects and details from the 2023 Act, including the content of procurement notices and how the Central Digital Platform will operate.
Drafts of the 2024 Regulations were originally consulted on in 2023, as we previously explored here. Since the consultation concluded, the two draft statutory instruments published for consultation have been combined into one statutory instrument, the 2024 Regulations.
Now that both the 2023 Act and 2024 Regulations are made, we have the main pieces of the procurement reform ‘jigsaw’ in place. At the time of writing, Cabinet Office is still briefing that they are continuing their plan for ‘go live’ on 28 October 2024 but we note that there are still some pieces of the promised jigsaw missing, and it is not yet clear if Cabinet Office will be able to progress as they had previously indicated due to the pre-election period restrictions. For example, we have not yet seen the promised further statutory instrument on transition, consequences, and commencement, nor how the missing detail from the 2023 consultations on calculations for vertical and horizontal arrangements and utilities are to be addressed. The full suite of guidance has also not yet been published. No doubt, we will all be watching carefully over the next few days to see if further updates and clarity can be provided.
In the meantime, we set out below a brief overview of some key provisions from the 2024 Regulations:
Notices
Once the 2023 Act comes into force, all notices will be required to be published on the Central Digital Platform. The 2024 Regulations provide the detail on what the notices will need to include – in some cases adding to, and in other cases supplementing the relevant notice provisions in the 2023 Act. This provides the legislative basis for, and an insight to, the fields that will need to be populated in the notices on the Central Digital Platform.
By way of reminder, the procurement notices to be published under the 2023 Act are set out in the diagram below. Note that the list below includes those notices that are optional and those that are only mandatory in certain circumstances (e.g. where triggered by contract values). The 2024 Regulations also list the detail to be included in Assessment Summaries to be provided to tenderers prior to the publication of Contract Award Notices.
Light touch contracts, central government authorities and works
The 2024 Regulations also outline other provisions which will supplement the 2023 Act, including regulation 42 and Schedule 1 which explain what constitutes a ‘light touch service’ for the purposes of s9 of the 2023 Act. The procurement of light touch services is exempt from certain requirements under the 2023 Act. Additionally, the 2024 Regulations set out which of these services may be reserved so that contracting authorities can require that only a qualifying public service mutual bid for these contracts.
Regulation 43 further disapplies the 2023 Act in relation to procurements by the NHS in England and instead applies the Health Care Services (Provider Selection Regime) Regulations 2023.
The 2024 Regulations set out which CPV codes will be used to identify each of these light touch services. These remain as the codes used within the Common Procurement Vocabulary (as adopted by Regulation (EC) No 2195/2002 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 5 November 2002 on the Common Procurement Vocabulary).
Regulation 44 defines the term “central government authority” as used in paragraph 5(1) of Schedule 1 of the 2023 Act (relating to the financial thresholds for procurements covered by the 2023 Act), by reference to the list of entities in Schedule 2 of the 2024 Regulations.
Similarly, regulation 45 defines the term “works” for the purpose of paragraph 5(1) of Schedule 1 to the 2023 Act, by reference to the list of CPV codes set out in Schedule 3 of the 2024 Regulations.
We advise contracting authorities and utilities on all manner of issues relating to public procurement and our experts are on hand to guide you through the intricacies of the procurement reforms and to advise on any other procurement related issues.
Juli Lau is a Partner, Nicola Sumner is a Partner and Shyann Sheehy is a Paralegal at Sharpe Pritchard LLP.
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This video is for general awareness only and does not constitute legal or professional advice. The law may have changed since this page was first published. If you would like further advice and assistance in relation to any issue raised in this article, please contact us by telephone or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.