Capturing transitional changes in GHG fluxes following peat restoration
Estimated value
—
Awarded value
£200k
Suppliers
1
Lots
1
Published
26 Nov 2025
Description
There is approximately 1,420,000 hectares of peat in England, with deep peat accounting for approximately 680,000 hectares. However, the majority of our deep peat is degraded, damaged and dried out, with only 13% of deep peat remaining in a near natural state. As a result, peatlands in England emit approximately 8 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent per year, about 2% of England's total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. There is an urgent need to re-wet peatlands to abate these GHG emissions to meet our net zero targets. In Carbon Budget 7, the Climate Change Committee recommends that by 2040, peatland restoration should represent over 50% of the emissions savings in land use, and 17% of the savings in the agriculture and land use sector. Peatland restoration targets have been set in the 2023 Environmental Improvement Plan (EIP), with an aim to restore 280,000 hectares by 2050. When peat is restored or re-wet, it moves fro
Scope
- Reference
- C30264
- Commercial tool
- Standalone contract
- Contract dates
- 13 Nov 2025 to 30 Nov 2027
- CPV classifications
- 73200000
- Contract locations
- London, United Kingdom
- Particular suitability
- Small and medium-sized enterprises (SME)Voluntary, community and social enterprises (VCSE)
Award criteria
Criteria the buyer will use to evaluate bids.
| Name | Description | Type | Weighting |
|---|---|---|---|
| Technical | Quality | quality | 70.00% |
| Commercial | Price | price | 30.00% |
Participation
Conditions suppliers must meet to bid.
Please see Bidder Pack Part Two
Submission & procedure
- Procedure
- Open procedure
Award details
Awarded supplier(s), contract period and value as published in the award notice.
Awarded value
£200k
Award date
26 Nov 2025
Contract start
08 Dec 2025
Contract end
31 Mar 2028