Green acquisition gap analysis of the United States Air Force Operational Contracting Organizations

Authors
DeLancey, Amanda L.
Ramsey, Andrew J.
Harris, Caitlin E.
Advisors
Kidalov, Max
Yoder, Cory
Second Readers
Subjects
Affirmative Procurement
CMP
Contract Management Process
Contracting
Energy
Environment
Environmental
EO 13514
Executive Order 13514
GAGA model
Green
Green Acquisition Gap Analysis model
Green Procurement
Mandatory Pillars for Integrative Success
MPIS
Operational Contracting
Plan
Procurement
Purchasing
Sustainability
Sustainable
Date of Issue
2011-12
Date
Publisher
Monterey, CA; Naval Postgraduate School
Language
Abstract
In this thesis, we explore the goals and requirements of green procurement in order to assess the Air Force's degree of success with incorporating the Defenses (DoD's) Green Procurement Program (GPP) into its procurement process. This thesis provides an outline of the federal policies and guidance regarding green procurement, including Executive Order 13514 (2009) and relevant parts of the Federal Acquisition Regulations. We examine the Air Force's progress towards a more environmentally friendly process, measured by the metrics set forth in the DoD GPP. To evaluate these metrics, we conducted an analysis to determine if the Air Force is implementing environmental considerations to the maximum extent practical. This analysis relied on the use of the Green Acquisition Gap Analysis (GAGA) model, which is a unique framework that we developed. The GAGA model fuses the personnel, platform, and protocol pillars of the Mandatory Pillars for Integrative Success (Yoder, 2010) framework with the Contract Management Process framework, which dissects the six segments of the contracting process: procurement planning, solicitation planning, the solicitation, source selection, contract administration, and contract closeout or termination (Rendon, 2007). Further, in order to document best practices for Air Force-wide dissemination, we identified the leading Air Force installations through our extensive research and collaboration with key leadership.
Type
Thesis
Description
MBA Professional Report
Department
Identifiers
NPS Report Number
Sponsors
Funding
Format
xviii, 141 p. ; 28 cm.
Citation
Distribution Statement
Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
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