Legal Compliance100/100
The notice outlines an open procedure for a concession contract, referencing relevant regulations and DfT extensions. However, the explicit absence of mandatory exclusion grounds in this public notice is a significant omission. The statement regarding other contracting authorities benefiting needs clearer definition in the full tender.
•No mandatory exclusion grounds explicitly stated in the notice.
•Ambiguity regarding 'other contracting authorities' benefiting from the contract.
Clarity40/100
The description of the trial, its history, and the concession model with its financial disclaimer is clear. Eligibility and technical requirements are generally understandable, though some are phrased as outcomes rather than prerequisites. The overall intent is well communicated.
•One eligibility requirement ('Be one of two successful e-scooter operators awarded a contract') is an outcome, not a prerequisite, leading to confusion.
Completeness83/100
As a market alert, it provides basic information. However, the complete absence of attached documents, detailed evaluation criteria, specific technical specifications (e.g., for e-scooters beyond 'specialist vehicles'), and detailed operational requirements makes it significantly incomplete for potential bidders to fully prepare. The lack of explicit mandatory exclusion grounds further contributes to incompleteness.
•No tender documents attached or referenced for detailed content.
•Missing specific evaluation criteria.
Fairness60/100
The restriction to awarding contracts to only two operators significantly limits competition. The requirement to 'Demonstrate experience or understanding of operating within the framework of the London E-Scooter Trial' could potentially favor incumbent operators, creating a barrier for new market entrants, although 'understanding' offers some flexibility. The concession model requires substantial financial stability, which might disadvantage smaller firms.
•Limiting the award to only two e-scooter operators restricts competition.
•Requirement for 'experience or understanding of operating within the framework of the London E-Scooter Trial' may disadvantage new entrants.
Practicality40/100
The timeline for contract commencement (September 2026) appears practical given the notice date. The requirement to integrate with multiple authorities (TfL, London Councils, boroughs) is operationally complex but necessary for a city-wide service. The scale of the trial (7 million trips) indicates a need for robust operational capacity, which is a practical consideration.
Data Consistency100/100
A critical inconsistency exists between the submission deadline time specified in the 'Timeline' section and the 'Submission Requirements' section.
•Inconsistent submission deadline time: '2026-04-24 22:59:59' in Timeline vs. '2026-04-24 00:00:00' in Submission Requirements.
Sustainability0/100
The notice lacks any explicit mention of green procurement, social criteria, or innovation focus. For an e-scooter service, there are significant opportunities to incorporate environmental considerations (e.g., battery life, charging, recycling), social aspects (e.g., accessibility, safety standards), and technological innovation, which are currently overlooked.
•Absence of green procurement criteria.
•Lack of social criteria.