SISOCS is a tool created by Executive Decree PCM 02-2015 in which the institutions that make up the Productive Infrastructure Cabinet and other Central Government institutions are obliged to progressively disclose information relevant to the life cycle of public infrastructure projects to comply with the CoST Infrastructure Data Standard. Their OCDS publication includes Public-Private Partnership Projects.
A contracting process has several stages: tendering, awarding, contracting and implementation. You can learn about the contracting stages in this tutorial.
Parties
Count of parties:
180
Planning
Count of planning activities:
22
Tenders
Count of tenders:
12
Count of tenderers:
0
Count of tender items:
27
Awards
Count of awards:
27
Count of suppliers:
0
Count of award items:
0
Contracts
Count of contracts:
27
Count of contract items:
0
Count of transactions:
5
Documents
Count of documents:
1,056
Milestones
Count of milestones:
212
Amendments
Count of amendments:
0
The OCDS for PPPs extension is used to disclose public-private partnership projects.
Data quality
The dataset has quality issues to take into account, notably:
All the releases use the “tender” tag, however only the following sections were included in the data: Planning, Pre-qualification and Public Authority
Comparing the information available from the SISOCs front-end, to the data published in OCDS, it appears that many fields have not been mapped, and only a limited set of information is currently published in OCDS format.
The compiled release sections of the OCDS records in the dataset do not include all the information from the individual releases for each contracting process.
Last reviewed: May 2018
Access data
This OCDS dataset is available for download in JSON, Excel or CSV format. You can download the data for contracting processes in a specific year or for all time.
JSON
Each contracting process is represented as one line of JSON text in the .jsonl file.
The .jsonl file is compressed using Gzip. Windows users need 7-Zip, WinRAR or WinZip to decompress the .gz file.