16.Selection criteria:
The following selection criteria will be applied to tenderers. In the case of tenders submitted by a consortium, these selection criteria will be applied to the consortium as a whole unless specified otherwise. The selection criteria will not be applied to natural persons and single-member companies when they are subcontractors:
1) Economic and financial capacity of tenderer (based on i. a. item 3 of the tender form for a supply contract). In the case of the tenderer being a public body, equivalent information should be provided. The reference period which will be taken into account will be the last 3 years for which accounts have been closed.
The selection criteria for each tenderer are as follows:
— will not be economically dependent on the contracting authority in the event that the contract is awarded to it, and
— has sufficient financial stability to handle the proposed contract.
Legal persons:
• The average annual turnover of the tenderer must exceed the annualised maximum budget of the contract.
The maximum annualised budget is the maximum annual budget for the contract during the implementation period. In this case, since the implementation period is 6 months, the annualised budget will be 200 % of the total contract value.
• Current ratio (current assets/current liabilities) in the last year for which accounts have been closed must be at least 1. In the case of a consortium this criterion must be fulfilled by each member.
Natural persons:
• The average annual turnover of the tenderer must exceed the annualised maximum budget of the contract.
The maximum annualised budget is the maximum annual budget for the contract during the implementation period. In this case, since the implementation period is 6 months, the annualised budget will be 200 % of the total contract value.
• Current ratio (current assets/current liabilities) in the last year for which accounts have been closed must be at least 1. In the case of a consortium this criterion must be fulfilled by each member.
2) Professional capacity of tenderer (based on i. a. items 4 and 5 of the tender form for a supply contract). The reference period which will be taken into account will be the last 3 years from the submission deadline.
Legal persons:
• Number of permanent staff should be a minimum of 6 for each lot, of which at least 3 were permanent during the past year.
• Certification: it should be certified by a relevant recognised accreditation institution: ISO 9001 or equivalent.
• Environmental certification: should be compliant with ISO 14001.
Natural persons:
• Number of permanent staff should be a minimum of 6 for each lot, of which at least 3 were permanent the past year.
• Must have a professional certificate appropriate to this contract certified by a relevant recognised accreditation institution: ISO 9001 and 14001 or equivalent.
3) Technical capacity of tenderer (based on i. a. items 5 and 6 of the tender form for a supply contract). The reference period which will be taken into account will be the last 3 years from the submission deadline.
Legal persons:
• The tenderer has successfully implemented at least 1 contract with a budget at least equivalent to the one s/he is tendering for, in the supply, delivery and unloading of electricity distribution materials/equipment, which was implemented during the last 3 years up to the submission deadline outside their home country.
Natural persons:
• The tenderer has successfully implemented at least 1 contract with a budget at least equivalent to the one s/he is tendering for, in the supply, delivery and unloading of electricity distribution materials/equipment, which was implemented during the last 3 years up to the submission deadline outside their home country.
This means that the contract the tenderer refers to, could have been started or completed at any time during the indicated period but it does not necessarily have to be started and completed during that period, nor implemented during the entire period. Tenderers are allowed to refer either to projects completed within the reference period (although started earlier) or to projects not yet completed. In the first case the project will be considered in its whole if proper evidence of performance is provided (statement or certificate from the entity which awarded the contract, final acceptance). In the case of projects still ongoing only the portion satisfactorily completed during the reference period will be taken into consideration. This portion will have to be supported by documentary evidence (similarly to projects completed) also detailing its value.
Capacity-providing entities:
An economic operator may, where appropriate and for a particular contract, rely on the capacities of other entities, regardless of the legal nature of the links which it has with them. Some examples of when it may not be considered appropriate by the contracting authority are when the tenders rely in majority on the capacities of other entities or when they rely on key criteria. If the tender relies on other entities it must prove to the contracting authority that it will have at its disposal the resources necessary for performance of the contract, for example by producing an undertaking on the part of those entities to place those resources at its disposal. Such entities, for instance the parent company of the economic operator, must respect the same rules of eligibility and notably that of nationality, as the economic operator. Furthermore, the data for this third entity for the relevant selection criterion should be included in the tender in a separate document. Proof of the capacity will also have to be furnished when requested by the contracting authority.
With regard to technical and professional criteria, a tenderer may only rely on the capacities of other entities where the latter will perform the tasks for which these capacities are required.
With regard to economic and financial criteria, the entities upon whose capacity the tenderer relies, become jointly and severally liable for the performance of the contract.