Our Procurement Pipeline has been updated for October 2021. UKAEA aims to be open and transparent by providing medium-term plans and longer-term visibility of forthcoming procurement opportunities, enabling the supply chain to make informed decisions to tender for work. The procurement pipeline will be reviewed and updated quarterly, and procurement contact details are provided for each activity, with an aim of promoting meaningful engagement with interested parties who wish to engage in tender activity. All tender activity will be managed in accordance with UKAEA procurement policies and procedures.
Our next edition will be published in January 2021. Look out on our Procurement Page and our supplier mailing list to be notified when this is available.
If you have any feedback on what you would like to see included or improved in our Procurement Pipeline, please let us know using this Feedback Form or by getting in contact with us. Your feedback is important to ensure that we are sharing information that is relevant and useful to your organisations.
Over the last two years, communication and transparency has become increasingly important. We previously conducted COVID-19 dashboards to analyse the impact of the pandemic on the supply chain and identify areas that need support in the peaks of the crises.
We are now looking to continue analysing how the supply base is responding now the economy is recovering whilst also starting to understand the supply chain capabilities and social value impacts through our procurements. This will be an increasing level of focus for the organisation and therefore we would be greatly appreciative of your cooperation in the following questionnaire. Moreover, this will help develop our social value policy in the future so that it can best address the issues that we find within the supply network.
Consequently, this questionnaire is anonymised so please answer as accurately as possible. We will analyse the data and share via an anonymous dashboard.
If you have any queries, please contact us at supplychain@ukaea.uk. Thank you in advance for your response.
Export control is legislation that regulates the export of goods, software and technology. Typically, legislation regulates the export of controlled items and requires exporters to apply for a license to a local government department, which will assess the desired exports and either grant or deny a license. A wide range of goods have been subject to export control, including goods with a military potential, cryptography, currency, and precious stones or metals. Some countries prohibit the export of uranium, endangered animals, national artefacts, and goods in short supply in the country, such as medicines.
The UK Strategic Export Control Lists form the basis of determining whether any products, software or technology that you intend to export are 'controlled' and therefore require an export licence. ECJU (Export Control Joint Unit) is the UK government's regulatory authority for export licensing of strategic goods.