Procurement Act 2023

Prospective

62Debarment listU.K.
This section has no associated Explanatory Notes

(1)Subsection (3) applies where a Minister of the Crown—

(a)has conducted an investigation under section 60 or considered the findings of such an investigation conducted by the Welsh Ministers or a Northern Ireland department, and

(b)is satisfied that the supplier is, by virtue of the application of a relevant exclusion ground, an excluded or excludable supplier.

(2)Subsection (3) also applies where a Minister of the Crown has made a determination as mentioned in paragraph 43 of Schedule 6 in relation to a supplier (mandatory exclusion ground for failing to cooperate with investigation).

(3)The Minister may enter the supplier’s name on a list kept by a Minister of the Crown for the purposes of this section and, as part of that entry, must include the relevant debarment information.

(4)In this section, the “relevant debarment information” means—

(a)the exclusion ground to which the entry relates;

(b)whether the exclusion ground is mandatory or discretionary;

(c)in the case of an entry made on the basis of paragraph 35 of Schedule 6 (threat to national security), a description of the contracts in relation to which the supplier is to be an excluded supplier;

(d)the date on which the Minister expects the exclusion ground to cease to apply (see paragraph 44 of Schedule 6 and paragraph 15 of Schedule 7).

(5)Before entering a supplier’s name on the debarment list, the Minister must give notice to the supplier setting out—

(a)the decision to do so,

(b)an explanation of the supplier’s rights under sections 63 to 65, and

(c)any other information specified in regulations under section 95.

(6)The Minister may not enter a supplier’s name on the debarment list before the end of the period of eight working days beginning with the day on which the Minister gives notice to the supplier in accordance with subsection (5) (the “debarment standstill period”).

(7)The Minister may not enter a supplier’s name on the debarment list if—

(a)during the debarment standstill period—

(i)proceedings under section 63(1) (interim relief) are commenced, and

(ii)the Minister is notified of that fact, and

(b)the proceedings have not been determined, discontinued or otherwise disposed of.

(8)A Minister of the Crown—

(a)must keep the debarment list under review,

(b)may remove an entry from the debarment list,

(c)in the case of an entry added on the basis of paragraph 35 of Schedule 6 (threat to national security), may revise an entry to remove a description of contracts, and

(d)may revise a date indicated under subsection (4)(d).

(9)If a Minister of the Crown voluntarily removes or revises an entry in connection with proceedings under section 65 (debarment decisions: appeals), a Minister of the Crown may reinstate the entry only after the proceedings have been determined, discontinued or otherwise disposed of.

(10)A Minister of the Crown must—

(a)remove an entry if the Minister is satisfied that the supplier is not an excluded or excludable supplier by virtue of the ground stated in the entry;

(b)in the case of an entry added on the basis of paragraph 35 of Schedule 6 (threat to national security), revise the entry to remove a description of contracts if the Minister is satisfied the exclusion ground in that paragraph does not apply in relation to contracts of that description.

(11)A Minister of the Crown must publish the debarment list (including any amended list).

(12)A Minister of the Crown must consult the Welsh Ministers and the Northern Ireland department that the Minister considers most appropriate before—

(a)entering a supplier’s name on the debarment list, or

(b)removing or revising an entry pursuant to an application under section 64.

(13)In this section, “relevant exclusion ground” has the meaning given by section 59.

Commencement Information

I1S. 62 not in force at Royal Assent, see s. 127(2)