Introducing Ardal - Procurement with purpose
Ardal is the brand name for Cardiff Council’s Procurement Team, we manage an award-winning service to Cardiff, Monmouthshire, Torfaen and the Vale of Glamorgan. Through our collaborative working, we offer the most competitive frameworks to provide the most socially responsible and economical contract awards - to manage our award-winning South East Wales regional procurement frameworks—SEWSCAP, SEWH, and SEWTAPS.
Together, we're setting a new standard for public sector procurement — one that delivers value, transparency, and community benefit.
What We Do
Empowering communities through smarter, fairer procurement
At Ardal, we champion socially responsible procurement. Our goal is to maximise the positive economic, social, environmental, and cultural impact of every project we support—both through our regional frameworks and through our wider partnerships.
We help public sector organisations make informed, impactful purchasing decisions that go beyond value for money—delivering real, lasting benefits to communities across South East and Mid Wales.
Why We Do It
Using procurement to build a better future
We believe procurement is one of the most powerful tools we have to shape sustainable and resilient communities. Ardal is driven by a strong ambition to:
- Tackle inequality and exclusion
- Promote fair work and ethical business
- Support local supply chains and economies
- Protect the environment and reduce carbon impact
- Improve well-being for current and future generations
These priorities guide everything we do.
How We Do It
Aligning ambition with action and policy
To turn ambition into impact, we align our procurement activity with key Welsh legislation and policy. These include:
- The Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015, which places a duty on public bodies to improve the social, economic, environmental, and cultural well-being of Wales.
- The Social Partnership and Public Procurement (Wales) Act, which ensures that procurement plays a key role in achieving these well-being goals through fair and socially responsible practices.
We’ve built our strategy to respond to this legislation, ensuring that every procurement decision supports a wider public purpose.
Why Partnership Matters
Collaborating for greater impact
The challenges we face—from climate change to inequality—cannot be tackled alone. That’s why we’re committed to working in partnership across the region.
New legislation, including the Procurement Act 2023 and Procurement (Wales) Regulations 2024, brings significant change to how public procurement is managed. These changes demand more transparency, greater accountability, and a stronger focus on outcomes.
By working in close collaboration with our public sector partners, we are better placed to:
- Meet new legislative requirements
- Drive innovation and efficiency
- Share knowledge and expertise
- Deliver improved well-being outcomes for our communities
Together, we are building a more sustainable, inclusive, and forward-looking Wales—one procurement at a time.
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Contributing to being carbon neutral by 2030
We know that typically 80% of a Local Authorities carbon footprint comes from the supplies, services, and works it purchases.
All of our partners have declared a climate emergency and put in place strategies and plans to become carbon neutral by 2030.
We aim to support this by:
- Understanding the carbon footprint of the Council’s purchased goods, services and works to ensure our carbon reduction activity is targeted where it can have the biggest impact.
- Working with our elected members, staff, partners, and contractors to ensure that carbon reduction is fully embedded in our decision-making processes throughout the procurement cycle and low carbon solutions are implemented where appropriate.
- Collaborating with, and learning from organisations across the public, private and third sector to encourage and accelerate the transition to low carbon solutions.
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Making procurement spend more accessible to local small businesses and the third sector
Our partners recognise the economic, social, environmental, and cultural value that can be generated by spending money with local businesses, in particular small, micro and individuals and the third sector including voluntary, community and social enterprise (VCSE).
We aim to support this by:
- Increasing the availability and visibility of opportunities for small businesses and the third sector to supply the Council.
- Making it easier for small businesses and the third sector to do business with us by standardising and simplifying our requirements, processes, and systems.
- Working with partners to develop the capability and capacity of small businesses and the third sector to secure public sector contracts.
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Improving fair work and safeguarding practices adopted by suppliers
All of our partners have signed up to the Code of Practice Ethical Employment in Supply Chains which seeks to tackle modern slavery, human rights abuses, blacklisting, false self-employment, unfair use of umbrella schemes and zero hours contracts.
The Social Partnership and Public Procurement (Wales) Act creates a framework to enhance the well-being of the people of Wales by improving public services through social partnership working, promoting fair work and socially responsible public procurement.
In addition, safeguarding vulnerable people is key priorities across all of our partners and we need to ensure our suppliers and contractors understand and accept that safeguarding children and adults at risk from harm is everybody’s responsibility.
We aim to support this by:
- Ensuring that tenderers and contractors are aware of our commitment to working with organisations that will support us to meet equality, fair work and safeguarding duties.
- Using our tendering process to ensure that our suppliers and contractors are committed to supporting us to deliver our equality, fair work and safeguarding duties.
- Working with our suppliers and contractors to ensure that they promote fair work practices and safeguarding within their organisation and supply chain.
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Increasing community benefits and social value delivered by suppliers
Community Benefits and Social Value are additional commitments made by tenderers during the tender process to deliver economic, social, environmental, and cultural value throughout the delivery of Council contracts. They typically focus on:
- Training and recruitment of economically inactive people
- Supply chain initiatives and Working with the 3rd Sector
- Educational initiatives
- Community and Cultural initiatives
- Environmental initiatives
Our partners recognise the opportunities they provide to tackle the inequality and poverty gap and provide much needed support to our communities and individuals.
We aim to support this by:
- Adopting a consistent approach to securing and managing delivery of community benefits and social value commitments which is understood by our partners and their suppliers and contractors
- Co-ordinating the community benefits and social value approach by working with Council services, our communities, partners and contractors to inform our priorities and facilitate their delivery
- Reporting on achievements, learning from failures, and promoting success
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Securing value for money and managing demand
Our partners have a combined annual procurement spend of over £1 billion. It is therefore important that they can demonstrate value for money through all stages of the procurement lifecycle.
Importantly our partners recognise that value for money needs to consider quality and whole life cost in respect of financial and wider environmental, social, economic, and cultural considerations, in particular carbon reduction and community benefits.
We aim to support this by:
- Improving visibility and awareness of where and how money is being spent.
- Embedding value for money and whole life cost considerations into the procurement lifecycle.
- Helping to improve the consistency and application of contract management.
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Ensuring legal compliance and robust transparent governance
Public procurement in Wales is subject to both UK and Welsh legislation. In addition, our partner’s will have their own constitutional governance arrangements, in particular Contract Standing Orders and Procurement Rules.
The legislative landscape is undergoing significant change with the new UK Procurement Bill and the Social Partnership and Public Procurement (Wales). The challenges and opportunities this presents will require us to improve our practice, processes, and systems.
We aim to support this by:
- Regularly reviewing and updating procurement documentation, processes, systems, and controls to ensure they reflect legislative changes, and, where practically possible, align across our partners.
- Providing education and training to Council officers involved in the procurement process.
- Ensuring we have adequate arrangements in place to manage performance and providing oversight and assurance to the Council’s leadership teams
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Promoting innovative and best-practice solutions
Our partners recognise that many of the challenges we face will not be addressed by maintaining the status quo and there is a need to challenge ourselves and our markets to deliver new products and ways of working which can help us to:
- Reduce carbon.
- Increase Community Benefits and Social Value delivery.
- Deliver better outcomes.
- Maintain or reduce cost to support the budget position.
- Improve services.
This means we need to plan better, challenge what we have always done, engage markets early, seek good practice from across the public, third and private sector and use the procurement process as means to drive the market to offer solutions which address specific problems, challenges, and outcomes.
We aim to support this by:
- Challenging existing procurement arrangements and delivery models and seeking relevant examples of market innovations and best practice.
- Encouraging outcome / problem-based procurement approach to stimulate creative and innovative solutions and engaging early with markets.
- Collaborating with Welsh Government, the Welsh Local Government Association (WLGA), Cardiff Capital Region and other public sector organisations to drive innovation and greater value and share good practice and develop insight.