TY - GEN
T1 - Drivers and Barriers to Green Public Procurement in Quebec
T2 - Canadian Society of Civil Engineering Annual Conference, CSCE 2024
AU - Jobidon, Gabriel
AU - Pellerin, Antoine
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Canadian Society for Civil Engineering 2026.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Procurement is a key process in construction project management, but Canada suffers from a gap in knowledge regarding sustainable procurement. Previous research has found that the Canadian construction industry is lacking in terms of sustainable procurement initiatives (Ruparathna and Hewage in Journal of Cleaner Production 109:305–314, 2015). The present paper focuses on green public procurement practices in Quebec and asks the question, « How do public buyers appropriate the green public procurement framework?» Three research tools were used in the present study: namely, an analysis of Quebec and Canada’s green public procurement framework, a semi-structured interview process with eight different public bodies, and a questionnaire survey. The results show that even though some importance is given to government regulations for sustainable procurement, it does not act as a main driver and sometimes can represent a barrier when these regulations are not properly understood or implemented. Lack of clarity of the normative framework, prohibitive cost of sustainable procurement, whether real or perceived, availability of resources, and organizational culture were identified by respondents as barriers to green public procurement.
AB - Procurement is a key process in construction project management, but Canada suffers from a gap in knowledge regarding sustainable procurement. Previous research has found that the Canadian construction industry is lacking in terms of sustainable procurement initiatives (Ruparathna and Hewage in Journal of Cleaner Production 109:305–314, 2015). The present paper focuses on green public procurement practices in Quebec and asks the question, « How do public buyers appropriate the green public procurement framework?» Three research tools were used in the present study: namely, an analysis of Quebec and Canada’s green public procurement framework, a semi-structured interview process with eight different public bodies, and a questionnaire survey. The results show that even though some importance is given to government regulations for sustainable procurement, it does not act as a main driver and sometimes can represent a barrier when these regulations are not properly understood or implemented. Lack of clarity of the normative framework, prohibitive cost of sustainable procurement, whether real or perceived, availability of resources, and organizational culture were identified by respondents as barriers to green public procurement.
KW - Green public procurement
KW - Laws and regulations
KW - Public contracts
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105029585648
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-031-97701-5_18
DO - 10.1007/978-3-031-97701-5_18
M3 - Contribution to conference proceedings
AN - SCOPUS:105029585648
SN - 9783031977008
T3 - Lecture Notes in Civil Engineering
SP - 251
EP - 263
BT - Proceedings of the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering Annual Conference 2024, Volume 2 - Engineering Management
A2 - Zangeneh, Pouya
A2 - Sadeghpour, Farnaz
A2 - Robinson, Clare
PB - Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
Y2 - 5 June 2024 through 7 June 2024
ER -