Непал: Public Procurement Monitoring Office (PPMO)
The PPMO tracks information in the Public Procurement Transparency Initiative in Nepal (PPTIN) portal, which pulls data from Nepal’s e-GP system.
The PPMO tracks information in the Public Procurement Transparency Initiative in Nepal (PPTIN) portal, which pulls data from Nepal’s e-GP system.
Dhangadhi tracks information in the Infrastructure Management System (IMS).
The Ekiti State Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) publishes OCDS data through its purpose-built OCDS portal.
The Ebonyi state of Nigeria Law No. 012 of 2009 enacted by the Ebonyi State House of Assembly made provisions to establish the State Council on Public Procurement and the Bureau of Public Procurement as the regulatory authorities responsible for the monitoring and oversight of Public Procurement. Procurement data is published via their open contracting portal.
The Gombe State of Nigeria established the Due Process Office by Executive Order in January 2008. In December 2019 the Council on Public Procurement and Gombe State Public Procurement Bureau (Due Process Bureau) was passed into law via executive bill number GM/HA/06/01/05.
The Bureau of Public Procurement tracks information in the Nigeria Open Contracting Portal (NOCOPO).
Budeshi tracks information from over 90 Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) in Nigeria at the federal level.
The Cross River State Due Process and Price Intelligence Bureau (DPPIB) were formally established through the Cross River State Public Procurement Act No. 15 of 2011. The Bureau is responsible for the policies and regulations of public sector procurement across the state. Cross River State DPPIB publishes procurement processes on the Cross River State e-procurement platform
The Edo State Public Procurement Agency, otherwise known as “The Agency”, was established by virtue of the Edo State Public Procurement Agency Law 2012. The agency currently publishes OCDS via their Open Contracting Data Portal.
Abia State of Nigeria Law No. 5 of 2012 establishes the Abia State Council of Public Procurement and the Bureau of Public Procurement as the regulatory authorities responsible for the monitoring and oversight of Public Procurement. Procurement data is published via their open contracting portal.
The Anambra State Bureau of Public Procurement was established in 2011 through the Anambra State Public Procurement Law, 2011. They publish OCDS data for awarded contracts along with related information such as details of Procuring Entities and Ministry procurement plans on the Anambra e-GP OCDS Portal.
The Enugu State of Nigeria 2021, No. 9 law repeals and re-enacts the Enugu State Public Procurement Law No. 10, 2010, establishes the Enugu State Public Procurement Agency which takes on the responsibilities from the Due Process and Budget Monitoring Unit.
Procurement data is currently published via the open contracting portal of the Due Process and Budget Monitoring Unit.
The Osun Public Procurement Agency (OSPPA) tracks public procurement information in the Osun Government Electronic Procurement System.
La Oficina del Debido Proceso o Due Process Office (Oficina de Contrataciones Públicas) del Estado de Oyo fue creada por la Ley de Contratación Pública (2010) para garantizar la equidad, la competencia, la transparencia y la relación calidad-precio en el Gobierno del Estado de Oyo. Los datos de las contrataciones públicas se publican actualmente a través del Portal de Contrataciones Abiertas del Estado de Oyo.
The Plateau State Bureau of Public Procurement publishes its procurement data via their e-procurement portal. They have a dedicated section for OCDS downloads.
The Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy tracks public procurement information in TenderNed.
The OpenTender platform – run by the Government Transparency Institute – collects, transforms and publishes contracting data from 35 jurisdictions: 27 European Union (EU) member states, EU Institutions, Georgia, Iceland, North Macedonia, Norway, Serbia, Switzerland, and the UK. The data come from Tenders Electronic Daily (TED) and from national procurement portals.
The OpenTender platform – run by the Government Transparency Institute – collects, transforms and publishes contracting data from 35 jurisdictions: 27 European Union (EU) member states, EU Institutions, Georgia, Iceland, North Macedonia, Norway, Serbia, Switzerland, and the UK. The data come from Tenders Electronic Daily (TED) and from national procurement portals.