Source: http://procurement-law.de/germany/act-against-restraints-of-competition/
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 14:26:31+00:00

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(1) Public contracts and concessions are awarded through competition and transparent procedures. The principles of cost-effectiveness and proportionality shall be upheld in the process.
(2) The participants in a procurement procedure (award procedure) shall be treated equally unless discrimination is expressly required or permitted under this Act.
(3) In making the award, aspects of quality and innovation as well as social and environmental aspects shall be considered in accordance with this Part.
(4) The interests of small and medium-sized undertakings shall primarily be taken into account in public procurement procedures. Contracts shall be divided into individual lots (partial lots) and awarded separately according to the type or area of specialisation (trade-specific lots). Several partial or trade-specific lots may be awarded collectively if this is required for economic or technical reasons. If an undertaking that is not a public contracting authority or sector contracting entity is entrusted with the realisation or execution of a public assignment, it shall be obliged by the public contracting authority or sector contracting entity, so far as it subcontracts to third parties, to proceed according to sentences 1 to 3.
(5) For sending, receiving, forwarding and storing data in a procurement procedure, contracting authorities and undertakings shall, in principle, use electronic means in accordance with the ordinances issued under § 113.
(6) Undertakings shall have a right to have the provisions concerning the procurement procedure complied with.
Contracting authorities within the meaning of this Part are public contracting authorities within the meaning of § 99, sector contracting entities within the meaning of § 100 and concession grantors within the meaning of § 101.
natural or legal persons under private law as well as legal persons under public law, so far as they do not fall under no. 2, in cases where they receive funds for civil engineering projects, for building hospitals, sports, leisure or recreational facilities, school, university or administrative buildings or for related services and design contests from entities falling under nos 1 to 3, and where these funds are used to finance more than 50% of these projects.
b) public contracting authorities under § 99 nos. 1 through 3 can individually or jointly exercise a controlling influence on these persons.
(2) Special or exclusive rights within the meaning of paragraph 1 no. 2 a) are rights which result in reserving the performance of this activity to one or more undertakings while considerably diminishing the eventuality that this activity will be performed by other undertakings. Rights are not special or exclusive rights in this sense if they were conferred based on a procedure under the provisions of this Part or based on another procedure for which adequate notice was given and which is founded on objective criteria.
can appoint more than half of the members of the administrative, management or supervisory board of the undertaking.
sector contracting entities under § 100(1) no. 1 that carry out a sector activity under § 102(2) through (6) and award a concession for the purpose of carrying out this activity.
sector contracting entities under § 100(1) no. 2 that carry out a sector activity under § 102(2) through (6) and award a concession for the purpose of carrying out this activity.
(2) § 100(2) and (3) shall apply mutatis mutandis.
the supply of drinking water to such networks.
Sector activities also include activities under sentence 1 that are associated with hydraulic engineering projects, irrigation or land drainage, provided that the volume of water to be used for the supply of drinking water represents more than 20% of the total volume of water made available by such projects or irrigation or drainage installations, or are associated with the disposal or treatment of sewage. The supply, by a sector contracting entity under § 100(1) no. 2, of drinking water to fixed networks which provide a service to the public shall not be considered to be a sector activity where the production of drinking water by the contracting entity concerned takes place because the consumption thereof is necessary for carrying out an activity that is not a sector activity under paragraphs 1 to 4, and the supply to the public network depends only on that contracting entity’s own consumption and has not exceeded 30% of that contracting entity’s total production of drinking water, on the basis of the average for the preceding three years, including the current year.
b) the supply depends only on the sector contracting entity’s own consumption and has not exceeded 30% of that sector contracting entity’s total production of energy, on the basis of the average for the preceding three years, including the current year.
b) the supply is aimed only at the economic exploitation of such production and amounts to not more than 20% of that sector contracting entity’s turnover on the basis of the average for the preceding three years, including the current year.
(4) Sector activities in the field of transport services are the provision or operation of networks intended to provide a service to the public in the field of transport by railway, automated systems, tramway, trolley bus, bus or cable; a network shall be considered to exist where the service is provided under operating conditions laid down by a competent authority, such as conditions on the routes to be served, the capacity to be made available or the frequency of the service.
(5) Sector activities in the field of ports and airports are activities relating to the exploitation of a geographical area for the purpose of the provision of airports and maritime or inland ports or other terminal facilities to carriers by air, sea or inland waterway.
exploring for, or extracting, coal or other solid fuels.
(7) For the purposes of paragraphs 1 through 3, the term ‘supply’ covers generation and production as well as wholesale and retail sale. The production of gas falls within the scope of paragraph 6.
(1) Public contracts are contracts for pecuniary interest concluded between public contracting authorities or sector contracting entities and undertakings for the procurement of services whose subject matter is the delivery of goods, the execution of works or the provision of services.
(2) Supply contracts are contracts for the procurement of goods involving in particular a purchase or hire purchase or leasing, or a lease with or without a purchase option. The contracts may also include ancillary services.
of a work for the public contracting authority or the sector contracting entity which is the result of civil engineering or building construction work and is to fulfil a commercial or technical function.
A works contract also exists when a third party produces a work in accordance with the requirements specified by the public contracting authority or the sector contracting entity, the work is of direct economic benefit to the contracting authority or entity and the authority or entity has a decisive influence on the type and design of the work.
(4) Service contracts are contracts for the performance of services that are not covered by paragraphs 2 and 3.
(5) Framework agreements are agreements between one or more public contracting authorities or sector contracting entities and one or more undertakings, the purpose of which is to establish the terms governing public contracts to be awarded during a given period, in particular with regard to price. Unless otherwise specified, the same provisions as for the award of corresponding public contracts apply to the award of framework agreements.
(6) Design contests are award procedures that are intended to enable the contracting authority to acquire a plan or design on the basis of a comparative evaluation by a jury with or without the award of prizes.
works and services specifically for military purposes or works and services awarded under a classified contract.
(2) Military equipment is any equipment that is designed specifically for military purposes or adjusted to suit military purposes and destined to be used as a weapon, ammunition or war material.
which requires or contains classified information within the meaning of no. 1.
with the provision and management of services other than the execution of works referred to in no. 1 (‘services concessions’), the consideration for which consists either solely in the right to exploit the services or in that right together with payment.
the concessionaire is really exposed to the vagaries of the market, such that any potential estimated losses incurred by the concessionaire are not negligible.
The operating risk may consist of either a demand risk or a supply risk.
(1) This Part applies to the award of public contracts and concessions as well as the organisation of design contests with a contract value, exclusive of value-added tax, that reaches or exceeds the thresholds established in each case. § 114(2) shall remain unaffected.
for concessions from Article 8 of Directive 2014/23/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 February 2014 on the award of concession contracts (OJ L 94 of 28/3/2014, p. 1), as amended.
(3) The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy shall announce the applicable thresholds without delay in the Federal Gazette after they have been published in the Official Journal of the European Union.
civil defence, civil protection, and danger prevention services that are provided by non-profit organisations or associations, and that are covered by Common Procurement Vocabulary (CPV) codes 75250000-3, 75251000-0, 75251100-1, 75251110-4, 75251120-7, 75252000-7, 75222000-8, 98113100-9 and 85143000-3 except patient transport ambulance services; non-profit organisations or associations covered by these numbers are the aid agencies recognised as civil and disaster protection organisations under federal or Land law.
that fall within the scope of Article 346(1)(b) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.
there is no direct private capital participation in the legal person with the exception of non-controlling and non-blocking forms of private capital participation that are required by national legislative provisions and that do not exert a decisive influence on the controlled legal person.
(2) The exercise of control within the meaning of paragraph 1 no. 1 is presumed when the public contracting authority exercises a decisive influence over the strategic objectives and significant decisions of the legal person. Control may also be exercised by another legal person which is itself controlled in the same way by the public contracting authority.
(3) Paragraph 1 also applies to the award of public contracts by a controlled legal person, which is at the same time a public contracting authority within the meaning of § 99 nos. 1 to 3, to the controlling public contracting authority or to another legal person controlled by that public contracting authority. It is required that there be no direct private capital participation in the legal person being awarded the public contract. Paragraph 1 no. 3 second half sentence shall apply mutatis mutandis.
there is no direct private capital participation in the legal person; paragraph 1 no. 3 second half sentence shall apply mutatis mutandis.
the legal person does not pursue any interests that are contrary to those of the public contracting authorities.
(7) For the determination of the percentage under paragraph 1 no. 2, paragraph 4 no. 2 and paragraph 6 no. 3, the average total turnover or an appropriate activity-based measure for the three years preceding the public contract award shall be taken into consideration. An appropriate activity-based measure is, for example, costs incurred by the legal person or the public contracting authority for this period with respect to supplies, works and services. Where turnover, or an appropriate alternative activity-based measure such as costs, is either not available for the preceding three years or no longer meaningful, it shall be sufficient to show, particularly by means of business projections, that the measurement of activity is credible.
(8) Paragraphs 1 to 7 shall apply mutatis mutandis to sector contracting entities within the meaning of § 100(1) no. 1 for the award of public contracts and to concession grantors within the meaning of § 101(1) nos. 1 and 2 for the award of concessions.
in accordance with procurement rules provided by an international organisation or international financing institution, where the public contracts and design contests concerned are to be fully financed by that organisation or institution; in the case of public contracts and design contests co-financed for the most part by an international organisation or international financing institution, the parties shall agree on applicable procurement procedures.
(2) § 145 no. 7 shall be applied for public contracts relating to defence or security and § 150 no. 7 for concessions in the fields of defence and security.
(1) Public contracts having different types of procurement, such as supplies, works or services, as their subject matter shall be awarded in accordance with the provisions with which the principal subject matter of the contract is associated. The same applies to the award of concessions having both works and services as their subject matter.
is determined according to which of the estimated values of the respective supplies or services is highest.
(1) If the various parts of a public contract that are each covered by different legal regimes can be objectively divided, separate contracts may be awarded for each part or a whole contract may be awarded.
(2) If separate contracts are awarded, each individual contract shall be awarded according to the provisions that are applicable to its characteristics.
the provisions of this Part are to be applied where part of the contract is covered by the provisions of this Part and another part of the contract is covered by provisions outside of this Part; this shall apply irrespective of the value of the part that would be covered by other provisions outside of this Part and irrespective of their legal regime.
the contract shall be awarded in accordance with the provisions with which the principal subject matter is associated; if the contract contains elements of a services concession and a supply contract, the principal subject matter shall be determined according to which of the estimated values of the respective services or supplies is higher.
the contract may be awarded without application of the provisions of this Part or pursuant to the provisions on the award of public contracts relating to defence or security where the contract contains elements to which § 107(2) nos 1 or 2 apply.
(5) The decision to award a whole contract or separate contracts may not be made for the purpose of excluding the contract award from the provisions on the award of public contracts and concessions.
(6) Paragraphs 1 and 2, paragraph 3 nos. 1 and 2 and paragraphs 4 and 5 shall apply mutatis mutandis to the award of concessions.
(1) If a public contract covers several activities of which one activity constitutes a sector activity within the meaning of § 102, separate contracts may be awarded for the purposes of each individual activity or a whole contract may be awarded.
(3) If a whole contract is awarded, that contract is covered by the provisions that apply to the activity for which the contract is primarily intended. If the contract is intended both for a sector activity within the meaning of § 102 and an activity that includes defence or security aspects, § 111(3) nos. 1 and 2 shall apply mutatis mutandis.
(4) The decision to award a whole contract or separate contracts may not be made for the purpose of excluding the contract award from the provisions of this Part.
the provisions on the award of public contracts by sector contracting entities if the contract is intended both for a sector activity within the meaning of § 102 and for an activity that would fall neither within the scope of the provisions on the award of concessions nor within the scope of the provisions on the award of public contracts by public contracting authorities.
the provisions on the award of concessions by their grantors within the meaning of § 101(1) no. 1 if one of the activities for which the concession is intended is covered by those provisions and the other activity by the provisions on the award of concessions by their grantors within the meaning of § 101(1) no. 1 or § 101(1) no. 3.
the provisions on the award of concessions if one of the activities for which the concession is intended is covered by those provisions and the other activity is covered neither by the provisions on the award of public contracts by sector contracting entities nor by the provisions on the award of public contracts by public contracting authorities.
the conditions under which sector contracting entities, concession grantors or contracting authorities under the Federal Mining Act [Bundesberggesetz] may be exempted from the obligation to apply the provisions of this Part, and to define the procedure to be followed in this respect, including the necessary investigatory powers of the Bundeskartellamt and the particulars of the costs to be charged; measures of clemency may be provided for.
The ordinances must be communicated to the Bundestag. The communication shall occur before the communication to the Bundesrat. The ordinances may be amended or refused by resolution of the Bundestag. The resolution of the Bundestag shall be communicated to the Federal Government. If the Bundestag has not dealt with the ordinance within three sitting weeks of receipt thereof, the unchanged ordinances shall be communicated to the Bundesrat.
(1) By 15 February 2017 and by 15 February every three years thereafter, the supreme federal authorities and the Länder shall make a written report in their respective area of responsibility to the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy concerning the application of the provisions of this Part and ordinances issued based on § 113.
(2) Contracting authorities within the meaning of § 98 shall transmit to the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy data on public contracts within the meaning of § 103(1) and on concessions within the meaning of § 105 for the acquisition of comprehensive data in public procurement. For public contracts within the meaning of § 103(1) and for concessions within the meaning of § 105 above the applicable thresholds, the data to be transmitted shall at most comprise data included in the tender notices on awarded public contracts and concessions. For public contracts by public contracting authorities within the meaning of § 99 under the applicable thresholds and above the de minimis thresholds to be set by the ordinance in accordance with sentence 4, the data to be transmitted shall comprise data on the type and quantity of the performance and on the value of the successful tender. The Federal Government shall be empowered to regulate, through ordinances with the consent of the Bundesrat, the particulars of the data transmission, including the scope of the data to be transmitted and the time the corresponding obligations come into force.
This chapter shall be applied to the award of public contracts and the organisation of design contests by public contracting authorities.
b) the service is wholly remunerated by the contracting authority.
services awarded to a public contracting authority under § 99 nos. 1 to 3 that has an exclusive statutory or regulatory right to render the services.
(2) Nor shall this Part apply to public contracts and design contests for the principal purpose of permitting the public contracting authority to provide or exploit public communications networks or to provide to the public one or more electronic communications services.
where the public contracting authority awards a public contract or organises a design contest in accordance with procurement rules provided by an international organisation or international financing institution and that public contract or design contest is financed wholly through that organisation or institution. In the case of co-financing for the most part by an international organisation or international financing institution the parties shall agree on applicable procurement procedures.
(1) Public contracting authorities may reserve the right to participate in public procurement procedures to workshops for persons with disabilities and undertakings whose main aim is the social and professional integration of disabled or disadvantaged persons or may provide for such public contracts to be performed in the context of sheltered employment programmes.
(2) It is required that at least 30% of the employees of those workshops or undertakings are disabled or disadvantaged workers.
(1) Public contracts shall be awarded in open procedures, restricted procedures, negotiated procedures, competitive dialogue or innovation partnerships.
(2) Contracting authorities may freely choose between the open procedure and the restricted procedure, which always requires competitive tendering. The other types of procedures are only available to the extent permitted by this Act.
(3) The open procedure is a procedure in which the contracting authority publicly invites an unlimited number of undertakings to submit tenders.
(4) The restricted procedure is a procedure in which the public contracting authority, after a previous public invitation to participate, selects a limited number of undertakings in accordance with objective, transparent and non-discriminatory criteria (competitive tender) and invites these to submit tenders.
(5) The negotiated procedure is a procedure in which the public contracting authority, with or without competitive tender, approaches selected undertakings in order to negotiate on the tenders with one or more of those undertakings.
(6) The competitive dialogue is a procedure for awarding public contracts with the objective of identifying and determining the means that best satisfy the needs of the public contracting authority. After a competitive tender, the public contracting authority shall open a dialogue with the selected undertakings to discuss all aspects of the contract award.
(7) The innovation partnership is a procedure for developing innovative supplies, works or services which are not yet available on the market and for acquisition of the services that result therefrom. After a competitive tender, the public contracting authority negotiates in several phases with the selected undertakings on the initial and subsequent tenders.
(1) A dynamic purchasing system is a short-term, exclusively electronic procedure for the procurement of performances that are generally available on the market, for which the characteristics that are generally available on the market satisfy the requirements of the public contracting authority.
(2) An electronic auction is a repetitive electronic procedure for determining the most economically advantageous tender. Each electronic auction is preceded by a complete initial evaluation of all tenders.
(3) An electronic catalogue is a list of the supplies, works and services to be procured, which is prepared in an electronic format based on the tender specifications. It can be utilised particularly for concluding framework agreements and can include illustrations, price information and product descriptions.
(4) A central purchasing body is a public contracting authority that, on an ongoing basis, purchases supplies and services, awards public contracts or concludes framework agreements (centralised purchasing activities). Public contracting authorities may procure supplies and services from central purchasing bodies or award contracts for supplies, works and services through central purchasing bodies. Public contracts for carrying out central purchasing activities may be awarded to a central purchasing body without conducting a procurement procedure in accordance with the provisions of this Part. Services contracts of this type can also include consulting and support services for the preparation or execution of procurement procedures. Parts 1 to 3 shall remain unaffected.
(1) The subject matter of the contract shall be described as clearly and comprehensively as possible in the tender specifications so that the description is understandable in the same way for all undertakings and so that the tenders can be compared with each other. The tender specifications shall include the functional and performance requirements or a description of the task to be addressed, knowledge of which is required to prepare the tender, as well as the circumstances and conditions for provision of the performance.
(2) For all procurement which is intended for use by natural persons, the accessibility criteria for persons with disabilities or the design for all users shall be taken into account when preparing the tender specifications, except in properly justified cases.
(3) The tender specifications shall be enclosed with the procurement documents.
(1) Public contracts shall be awarded to skilled, efficient (eligible) undertakings that have not been excluded under §§ 123 or 124.
(3) Proof of eligibility and the absence of grounds for exclusion under §§ 123 and 124 may be provided, entirely or in part, through participation in prequalification systems.
(4) Selection criteria must be related and proportionate to the subject matter of the contract. They shall appear in the contract notice, the prior information notice or the invitation to confirm interest.
§§ 232 and 233 of the German Criminal Code (human trafficking) or § 233a of the German Criminal Code (assisting in human trafficking).
(2) A conviction or the issuance of an administrative fine under the comparable provisions of other countries are the equivalent of a conviction or the issuance of an administrative fine within the meaning of paragraph 1.
(3) The conduct of a person convicted by final judgement shall be imputable to an undertaking if that person has acted as the responsible person for the management of the undertaking; this also includes supervision of management or the exercise in another manner of control in a managerial position.
the public contracting authorities can prove the breach of an obligation under no. 1 in another suitable manner.
Sentence 1 shall not apply if the undertaking has fulfilled its obligations by making the payment or committing to pay the taxes, charges and social security contributions, including interest, fines for late payment and penalties.
(5) An exclusion under paragraph 1 may be disregarded if this is imperative for compelling reasons of the public interest. An exclusion under paragraph 4 sentence 1 may be disregarded if this is imperative for compelling reasons of the public interest or if an exclusion would be obviously disproportionate.
c) has negligently or intentionally provided misleading information that may have a material influence on the decision of the public contracting authority concerning the award decision, or has undertaken to provide such information.
(2) § 21 of the Posted Workers Act [Arbeitnehmer-Entsendegesetz], § 98c of the Residence Act [Aufenthaltsgesetz], § 19 of the Minimum Wage Act [Mindestlohngesetz] and § 21 of the Control of Unreported Employment Act [Schwarzarbeitsbekämpfungsgesetz] shall remain unaffected.
has taken concrete technical, organisational and personnel measures that are appropriate to prevent further criminal offences or misconduct.
123(4) sentence 2 shall remain unaffected.
(2) The self-cleansing measures taken by the undertakings shall be evaluated by the public contracting authorities, taking into account the gravity and particular circumstances of the criminal offence or misconduct. If the public contracting authorities consider the self-cleansing measures by the undertaking to be insufficient, they shall provide the undertaking with justification for the decision.
if a ground for exclusion exists under § 124, it may be excluded from participation in procurement procedures for up to three years following the event at issue.
(1) The contract shall be awarded to the most economically advantageous tender. The basis for this is an evaluation by the public contracting authority concerning whether and to what extent the tender meets the specified award criteria. The most economically advantageous tender is determined according to the best price-quality ratio. Apart from the price or costs, to determine this, qualitative, environmental or social aspects may also be taken into account.
(2) Binding rules on pricing shall be observed in determining the most economically advantageous tender.
(3) The award criteria must be related to the subject matter of the contract. This relationship shall also be assumed when an award criterion refers to processes relating to the production, provision or disposal of the performance, to trading with the performance or to another stage in the life cycle of the performance, even when such factors do not affect material qualities of the subject matter of the contract.
(4) The award criteria must be specified and defined in a manner that ensures the possibility of effective competition, that the contract cannot be awarded arbitrarily and that it is possible to conduct an effective review on whether and to what extent the tenders meet the award criteria. If public contracting authorities allow variant tenders, they shall define the award criteria in such a way as to apply both to main tenders and variant tenders.
(5) The award criteria and their weighting must be specified in the contract notice or the procurement documents.
(1) In performing the public contract, undertakings must comply with all legal obligations applicable to them, in particular the obligation to pay taxes, charges and social security contributions, to comply with occupational health and safety rules and to grant employees at least those minimum working conditions, including the minimum wage, mandated for the respective performance under the Minimum Wage Act [Mindestlohngesetz], under a collective agreement declared to be universally applicable under the Collective Agreements Act [Tarifvertragsgesetz] with the effects of the Posted Workers Act, or under an ordinance issued under § 7, § 7a or § 11 of the Posted Workers Act or under § 3a of the Personnel Leasing Act [Arbeitnehmerüberlassungsgesetz].
(2) Public contracting authorities may, in addition, set special conditions for the performance of a contract (contract performance conditions), provided that they are related to the subject matter of the contract in accordance with § 127(3). The contract performance conditions must arise from the contract notice or the procurement documents. They may in particular include economic, innovation-related, environmental, social or employment-related considerations or the protection of information confidentiality.
Contract performance conditions which the public contracting authority is mandated to prescribe for the commissioned undertaking may only be specified based on a federal or Land statue.
(1) When awarding public contracts for social and other specific services within the meaning of Annex XIV of Directive 2014/24/EU, public contracting authorities may freely choose between the open procedure, the restricted procedure, the negotiated procedure with competitive tender, the competitive dialogue and the innovation partnership. A negotiated procedure without competitive tender is only available to the extent permitted by this Act.
(2) In deviation from § 132(3), it is permissible to modify a public contract for social and other specific services within the meaning of Annex XIV of Directive 2014/24/EU without conducting a new procurement procedure when the value of the modification amounts to no more than 20% of the original contract value.
(1) When awarding public contracts for passenger transport services by rail, public contracting authorities may freely choose between the open and the restricted procedure, the negotiated procedure with competitive tender, the competitive dialogue and the innovation partnership. A negotiated procedure without competitive tender is only available to the extent permitted by this Act.
(2) Article 5(2) of Regulation (EC) No. 1370/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council dated 23 October 2007 on public passenger transport services by rail and by road and repealing Council Regulations (EEC) Nos. 1191/69 and 1107/70 of the Council (OJ L 315 of 3/12/2007, p. 1) shall be applied in place of § 108(1). Article 5(5) and Article 7(2) of Regulation (EC) No. 1370/2007 shall remain unaffected.
(3) Public contracting authorities that award public contracts within the meaning of paragraph 1 shall require pursuant to Article 4(5) of Regulation (EC) No. 1370/2007 that where there is a change of operator of passenger transport services, the selected operator shall take on the employees who were employed by the previous operator to provide those transport services and grant them the rights to which they would have been entitled if there had been a transfer pursuant to § 613a of the German Civil Code [Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch]. In the event that a public contracting authority should demand that employees be taken on within the meaning of sentence 1, such demand shall be limited to those employees who are actually required for provision of the transport services being transferred. The public contracting authority shall provide provisions to exclude an improper adaptation of provisions under the collective agreement to the detriment of the new operator between the publication of the contract notice and the takeover of the operation. If requested by the public contracting authority, the previous operator is obliged to provide all information required for this.
a new contractor replaces the contractor in cases other than those provided for in paragraph 2 no. 4.
c) based on the fact that the public contracting authority itself assumes the main contractor’s obligations towards its subcontractors.
In the cases referred to in nos 2 and 3, the price may not be increased by more than 50% of the value of the original contract. Where there are several successive modifications of the contract, this limitation applies to the value of each individual modification, provided that the modifications were not made with the aim to circumvent the provisions of this Part.
does not amount to more than 10% of the original contract value in the case of contracts for supplies and services and not more than 15% in the case of works contracts.
Where there are several successive modifications, the total value of the modifications is applicable.
(4) Where the contract includes an indexation clause, the higher price shall be the reference value for calculating the value under paragraph 2 sentences 2 and 3 and paragraph 3.
(5) Modifications under paragraph 2 nos. 2 and 3 shall be published in the Official Journal of the European Union.
the public contract should not have been awarded to the contractor in view of a serious infringement of the obligations under the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union or under the provisions of this Part that has been established by the Court of Justice of the European Union in a procedure pursuant to Article 258 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.
(2) If a public contract is terminated pursuant to paragraph 1, the contractor may demand a corresponding part of the remuneration for its previous efforts. In the case of paragraph 1 no. 2, the contractor is not entitled to remuneration to the extent that its previous efforts are of no interest to the public contracting authority as a result of the termination.
(3) The right to demand damages is not excluded by the termination.
(1) Public contracting authorities shall inform the unsuccessful tenderers in writing and without delay of the name of the successful undertaking, the reasons for the rejection of their tenders and of the earliest date of the conclusion of the contract. This shall also apply to candidates who were not informed of the rejection of their tenders before notification of the decision on the award was sent to the successful tenderers.
(2) A contract may be concluded at the earliest 15 calendar days after the information pursuant to paragraph 1 has been sent. If the information is sent electronically or by fax, the standstill period shall be reduced to 10 calendar days. The standstill period shall begin on the day after which the contracting authority despatches the information; the date of receipt by the tenderer and candidate in question shall be irrelevant.
(3) The obligation to inform the tendering parties shall not apply in cases in which negotiated procedures without competitive tender are justified on grounds of extreme urgency. In the case of contracts relating to defence or security, public contracting authorities may decide to refrain from disclosing certain information on the contract award or the conclusion of a framework agreement if the disclosure impedes law enforcement, is contrary to the public interest, particularly defence or security interests, harms legitimate commercial interests or undertakings or might prejudice fair competition between them.
and this violation has been established in review proceedings.
(2) Ineffectiveness pursuant to paragraph 1 can only be established if this is claimed in review proceedings within 30 calendar days after the public contracting authority informs the affected candidates and tenderers concerning the conclusion of the contract, but at the latest six months after conclusion of the contract. If the contracting authority has published the award of the contract in the Official Journal of the European Union, the time limit for claiming ineffectiveness shall end 30 calendar days after publication of the notice of the award in the Official Journal of the European Union.
the contract was not concluded before the expiry of a period of at least 10 calendar days from the day of publication of that announcement.
The announcement according to sentence 1 no. 2 must include the name and contact data of the public contracting authority, the description of the contract subject matter, the justification for the decision of the contracting authority to award the contract without prior publication of an announcement in the Official Journal of the European Union, and the name and contact data of the undertaking that is to be awarded the contract.
This subchapter shall apply to the award of public contracts and the organisation of design contests by sector contracting entities for the purpose of conducting a sector activity.
b) other undertakings are free to sell or lease the subject matter of the contract under the same conditions as the relevant sector contracting entity.
the carrying out of sector activities outside the territory of the European Union, where the contract is awarded in a way that does not involve the actual use of a network or facility within the European Union.
that are granted by a joint venture, formed exclusively by several sector contracting entities to carry out a sector activity, to an undertaking that is associated with one of these sector contracting entities.
c) in conjunction with the contracting entity is, by virtue of the ownership structures, financial participation or rules governing said undertaking, subject to the controlling influence under § 100(3) of another undertaking.
(3) Paragraph 1 shall apply to contracts relating to supplies, works or services, if taking into account all supplies, works or services provided by the affiliated undertaking in the preceding three years in the European Union, at least 80% of the overall average turnover achieved by said undertaking in the particular sector derives from the provision of supplies, works or services for the sector contracting entity or other undertakings with which it is affiliated.
(4) If the same or similar supplies, works or services are provided by more than one undertaking affiliated and economically aligned with the sector contracting entity, the percentage figures shall be calculated in accordance with paragraph 3, taking into account the total turnover achieved by these affiliated undertakings from the provision of the relevant supplies, works or services.
(5) If no turnover figures are available for the three preceding years, it shall be sufficient for the undertaking to show, by means of business activity projections for example, that the turnover target required under paragraph 3 can be credibly achieved.
the instrument setting up the joint venture stipulates that the sector contracting entities forming the joint venture will be part of the joint venture for at least the same period.
(1) This Part shall not apply to public contracts awarded for the purpose of conducting a sector activity if the sector activity is directly exposed to competition on unrestricted markets. The same applies to design contests organised in connection with the sector activity.
(2) The Bundeskartellamt charges costs (fees and disbursements) to cover the administrative expenses involved in the preparation of expert opinions and observations made based on the ordinance issued under § 113 sentence 2 no. 8. § 80(1) sentence 3 and (2) sentence 1, sentence 2 no. 1, sentence 3 and 4, (5) sentence 1 and (6) sentence 1 no. 2, sentence 2 and 3 shall apply accordingly. § 63(1) and (4) shall apply mutatis mutandis to the possibility of filing an appeal against the cost decision.
(1) Sector contracting entities may freely choose between the open procedure, the restricted procedure, the negotiated procedure with competitive tender and the competitive dialogue.
(2) The negotiated procedure without competitive tender and the innovation partnership are only available to the extent permitted by this Act.
§ 132(2) sentence 2 and 3 shall not apply.
(1) In the award of contracts relating to supplies, works or services exceeding the contract thresholds under § 106(2) no. 2, sector contracting entities that are entitled under the German Federal Mining Act to explore for or extract oil, gas, coal or other solid fuels, must observe the principles of non-discrimination and competitive procurement in the award of contracts for the exploration for or extraction of oil, gas, coal or other solid fuels. In particular, they must provide adequate information to undertakings that could be interested in such a contract and apply objective criteria in the award of the contract. Sentence 1 and 2 shall not apply to the award of contracts for the purchase of energy or fuels for the production of energy.
(2) The contracting entities under paragraph 1 shall inform the European Commission via the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy of the award of the contracts covered by this provision in accordance with Commission Decision 93/327/EEC of 13 May 1993 defining the conditions under which contracting entities exploiting geographical areas for the purpose of exploring for or extracting oil, gas, coal or other solid fuels must communicate to the Commission information relating to the contracts they award (OJ EU no. L 129, p. 25). They may be exempted from the obligation to apply this provision under the procedure stipulated by the ordinance issued in accordance with § 113 sentence 2 no. 8.
This subchapter shall be applied to the award of public contracts relating to defence or security by public contracting authorities and sector contracting entities.
c) applicable to an international organisation if such organisation effects procurements for its own purposes or if a Member State must award public contracts based on such rules.
When awarding public contracts relating to defence or security, public contracting authorities and sector contracting entities may freely choose between the restricted procedure and the negotiated procedure with competitive tender. The negotiated procedure without competitive tender and the competitive dialogue are only available to the extent permitted by this Act.
As for other matters, §§ 119, 120, 121(1) and (3) as well as §§ 122 through 135 shall apply for the award of public contracts relating to defence or security subject to the proviso that an undertaking under § 124(1) can also be excluded from participating in a procurement procedure if said undertaking does not possess the required trustworthiness to exclude risks to national security. Protected data sources may be used as proof that risks to national security cannot be excluded.
This subchapter shall be applied to the award of concessions by their grantors.
concessions with the main purpose of allowing the concession grantor under § 101(1) no. 1 to provide or exploit public communications networks or to provide to the public one or more electronic communications services.
concessions awarded in the field of air services on the basis of an operating licence issued within the meaning of Regulation (EC) No. 1008/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 September 2008 on common rules for the operation of air services in the Community (OJ L 293 of 31 October 2008, p. 3), or concessions relating to the transport of persons within the meaning of § 1 of the Passenger Transport Act [Personenbeförderungsgesetz].
c) applicable to an international organisation if such organisation effects procurements for its own purposes or if a Member State of the European Union must award contracts based on such rules.
Concession grantors shall declare their intention to award a concession. The obligation to publish notice of the intention to award a concession may only be waived to the extent permitted by this Act. As for other matters, concession grantors may organise the procedure for awarding concessions subject to the Ordinance, issued in connection with this Act, on the details of the procurement procedure.
(1) For the tender specifications, § 121(1) and (3) shall be applied accordingly.
(2) Concessions shall be awarded to eligible undertakings within the meaning of § 122.
(3) The award shall be made on the basis of objective criteria used to ensure that the tenders are assessed in competitive conditions and that an overall economic advantage can thus be identified for the concession grantor. The award criteria must be related to the subject matter of the concession and must not allow the grantor complete freedom of choice. They may comprise qualitative, environmental or social concerns. The award criteria must be accompanied by a description that allows the information submitted by the tenderers to be reviewed effectively and an evaluation to be carried out as to whether and the extent to which the tenders meet the award criteria.
(4) The provisions on contract performance under § 128 and on the mandatory contract performance conditions under § 129 shall apply mutatis mutandis.
For the procedure for awarding concessions relating to social and other specific services within the meaning of Annex IV of Directive 2014/23/EU, §§ 151 and 152 shall apply.
§ 140 relating to the award of concessions by grantors within the meaning of § 101(1) no. 2 and 3 for activities that are directly exposed to competition.

References: § 113
 § 99
 § 100
 § 101
 § 99
 § 100
 § 102
 § 100
 § 102
 § 100
 § 100
 § 114
 § 99
 § 100
 § 101
 § 145
 § 150
 § 107
 § 102
 § 102
 § 111
 § 102
 § 101
 § 101
 § 101
 § 113
 § 98
 § 103
 § 105
 § 103
 § 105
 § 99
 § 99
 § 233
 § 21
 § 98
 § 19
 § 21
 § 124
 § 7
 § 7
 § 11
 § 3
 § 127
 § 132
 § 108
 § 613
 § 100
 § 113
 § 80
 § 63

§ 132
 § 106
 § 113
 § 124
 § 101
 § 1
 § 121
 § 122
 § 128
 § 129

§ 140
 § 101