Procurement Laws definition
Procurement Laws means all the relevant procurement laws in the Republic of South Africa including, but not limited to, the Constitution, the PFMA, PAJA, the Procurement Act, practice notes and all other relevant laws and policies;
Procurement Laws means collectively: (a) the Punjab Procurement Regulatory Authority Act, 2009; and (b) the Punjab Procurement Rules, 2014; as may be amended, modified, supplemented, extended or re-enacted from time to time.
Procurement Laws mean, collectively, the Recipient’s Public Procurement ▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇, the Recipient’s Public Procurement Rules 2008 (as amended in August 2009), and the Recipient’s Public Procurement Act (1st Amendment) 2009.
Examples of Procurement Laws in a sentence
None of the Acquired Companies are, and none of the Acquired Companies (or any predecessors) have at any time since January 1, 2021 been, subject to or in violation of any requirement imposed by any of the Procurement Laws.
More Definitions of Procurement Laws
Procurement Laws means all Laws that apply to a Government Contract or a Government Bid, or that apply to activities relating to the seeking, obtaining and performing of a Government Contract or a Government Bid, including activities such as proposal development and submission, negotiations, change orders, accounting, terminations, claims and audits.
Procurement Laws include collectively the Recipient’s Public Procurement Regulations dated October 1, 2003, and the Recipient’s Public Procurement Act 2006.
Procurement Laws means collectively the Procurement Act and the Recipient’s Public Procurement Rules (as hereinafter defined).
Procurement Laws means the PA 2023, the PA 2024 and the PCR 2015
Procurement Laws means any Applicable Laws regulating procurement process and practices in the UK public sector, including: (a) the Public Contracts Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/102); (b) the Utilities Contracts Regulations 2016 (SI 2016/274); (c) Directive 2014/24/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council; and (d) the principles of transparency, non discrimination, equality of treatment, proportionality and mutual recognition in the TFEU; Project has the meaning given in the Conditional Grant Offer Letter;
Procurement Laws include collectively the Borrower’s Public Procurement Regulations dated October 1, 2003, and ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇’s Public Procurement Act of 2006;
Procurement Laws. The City must follow Texas procurement laws except where preempted by federal law. This includes compliance with Texas Local Government Code Chapter 252 (Purchasing and Contracting Authority of Municipalities) and other applicable statutes that require competitive bidding or proposals for municipal contracts. When federal funding imposes additional or stricter procurement requirements than state law, the City will follow the federal requirements, but where state law is stricter or specific (and not in conflict), those state requirements will also be observed. The Vendor shall ensure that its services and deliverables allow the City to remain in compliance with any relevant state procurement mandates (such as advertising, bonding, or HUB requirements) as notified by the City.