1. Introduction. Public purchasing: a new, old policy tool
Christoph Erdmenger, Director, ICLEI Eco-Procurement Programme; Co-ordinator, RELIEF ProjectPart
1: Green purchasing in practice
2. Green purchasing in practice: experiences and new approaches from the pioneer countriesAmalia Ochoa, Vivien Fuehr and Dirk Guenther, ICLEI Eco-Procurement Programme and Eco-efficient Economy
3. Hurdles in green purchasing: method, findings and discussion of the hurdle analysisEdeltraud Guenther, Dresden University of Technology, Germany
4. The European legal regime on green public procurement: corresponding and conflicting aspects of environmental law and procurement law in the EURegine Barth and Almut Fischer, Environmental Law Division, OEko-Institut, Germany
5. Local experiences: green purchasing practices in six European citiesSimon Clement and Geraldine Plas, ICLEI Eco-Procurement Programme, and Christoph Erdmenger, Director, ICLEI Eco-Procurement Programme; Project Co-ordinator, RELIEF Project
6. Triggering innovationLuke Brander, Xander Olsthoorn and Frans Oosterhuis, Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, and Vivien Fuehr, ICLEI Eco-Procurement Programme and Eco-efficient Economy
Part 2: Quantifying environmental benefits
7. The financial power and environmental benefits of green purchasingChristoph Erdmenger, Director, ICLEI Eco-Procurement Programme; Project Co-ordinator, RELIEF Project
8. Methods for calculating the environmental benefits of 'green' productsAnders Schmidt and Jeppe Frydendal, dk-TEKNIK ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT, Denmark
9. Results of the European calculationRoger Pierrard, Institute of Public Finance and Infrastructure Policy, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Part 3: Advanced tools for analysing eco-procurement options
10. Researching the market conditions for green purchasingEdeltraud Guenther, Ines Klauke and Lilly Scheibe, Dresden University of Technology, Germany
11. Integrating environmental and economic costs and benefits: approaches to and experiences with modified cost-effectiveness analysis
Roger Pierrard, Institute of Public Finance and Infrastructure Policy, Vienna University of Technology, Austria, and Stephan Fassbender, JOANNEUM RESEARCH Institute of Technology and Regional Policy, Austria
Part 4: Pathways to implementation
12. Views from the green public procurement community
Luke Brander, Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, Vivien Fuehr, ICLEI Eco-Procurement Programme and Eco-efficient Economy, and Xander Olsthoorn, Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam
13. Green purchasing potential in Central Europe: the cases of the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland
Peter Szuppinger and Vilma Eri, Center for Environmental Studies, Budapest, Hungary
14. Conclusions. Green purchasing: a concept lagging far behind its potential
Christoph Erdmenger, Director, ICLEI Eco-Procurement Programme; Co-ordinator, RELIEF Project
Bibliography