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Smart metering procurement in Greece has entered a decisive phase. The country’s multi‑billion‑euro programme to replace conventional electricity meters with advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) is now running alongside two major procurement‑law reforms, Law 5218/2025 and Law 5290/2026, that reshape how contracting authorities draft tenders, evaluate bids and handle challenges. For in‑house counsel at distribution network operators, EPC contractors bidding on installation lots, meter manufacturers preparing technical annexes, and external advisers defending or attacking procurement decisions, mastering the intersection of sector‑specific requirements and the updated public procurement energy framework in Greece is no longer optional. This guide delivers a step‑by‑step playbook covering the full tender lifecycle, from specification drafting and bid preparation through contract execution and fast‑response litigation.
Greece’s public procurement framework operates within the architecture of EU Directive 2014/24/EU, which sets the overarching principles of equal treatment, transparency and proportionality for all member‑state procurements above specified thresholds. Greek legislators have historically transposed these rules through successive national laws, and the 2025–2026 legislative cycle brought two significant instruments directly relevant to smart metering tender activity in Greece.
Law 5218/2025, published in the Government Gazette (FEK), introduced procedural modernisation measures that affect how contracting authorities manage the tender pipeline. Key changes include updated financial thresholds aligned with the latest EU Commission revisions, mandatory use of the national electronic procurement system (ESIDIS) for all above‑threshold procedures, and tightened documentary requirements for economic‑operator eligibility. Law 5290/2026, also published in the FEK, went further by reforming evaluation and award criteria. Industry observers expect the combined effect of both laws to be a measurable shift toward more structured, auditable and sustainability‑conscious procurement decisions, particularly in technically complex sectors such as energy metering.
| Law / Directive | Reference | Key Procurement Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Law 5218/2025 (Greece) | Published in FEK, 2025 | Modernised procedural thresholds; mandated fully electronic submissions via ESIDIS; tightened eligibility documentation requirements. |
| Law 5290/2026 (Greece) | Published in FEK, 2026 | Updated award‑evaluation criteria; introduced mandatory sustainability weighting; strengthened digital submission audit trail rules. |
| Directive 2014/24/EU | EUR‑Lex | Sets the EU‑wide procurement framework: principles of equal treatment, transparency, proportionality; defines above‑threshold procedures and remedies architecture. |
Under Law 5290/2026, contracting authorities procuring technically complex goods and services, including smart meters and associated meter‑data‑management (MDM) systems, must now use a multi‑criteria evaluation model rather than relying solely on lowest price. The practical implications for electricity distribution procurement are significant:
Since Law 5218/2025, all above‑threshold procurements, which smart metering tenders invariably exceed, must be conducted electronically through ESIDIS. Bidders should ensure that technical annexes (often containing large CAD files, testing certificates and encryption‑key documentation) comply with the platform’s file‑format and size restrictions. Early engagement with the ESIDIS helpdesk is advisable, as upload failures close to the submission deadline have historically been treated as non‑compliant bids rather than excusable delays.
Greece’s smart‑metering ambitions are anchored in the HEDNO national rollout programme, one of the largest AMI deployments in south‑eastern Europe. HEDNO, as the country’s sole electricity distribution network operator, is the primary contracting authority for meter procurement, installation services and the associated MDM platform. The programme has secured co‑financing from the European Investment Bank (EIB), as documented on the EIB’s project page for the Greece smart‑metering initiative.
The scale of the programme creates a supply chain that spans multiple vendor categories: meter hardware manufacturers (typically European or Asian OEMs), communications‑module suppliers (RF mesh, PLC, cellular), systems integrators for MDM and head‑end software, and EPC contractors handling physical installation across Greece’s distribution network. Each category faces distinct procurement requirements, and smart metering tender documents in Greece typically structure lots to separate hardware supply from installation and integration services.
| Entity | Role | Typical Procurement Scope |
|---|---|---|
| HEDNO (ΔΕΔΔΗΕ) | Primary contracting authority, sole DSO | Meter hardware, MDM systems, installation & communications infrastructure |
| Municipalities / Regional Authorities | Secondary procurers, pilot or complementary projects | Localised smart‑grid pilots, energy‑management platforms |
| RAE (Regulatory Authority for Energy) | Sector regulator, sets technical and licensing standards | Does not procure directly; issues binding technical guidelines that shape tender specifications |
As of July 13, 2026, HEDNO’s programme is in a phased rollout, with early procurement lots already awarded and subsequent lots in various stages of tendering and evaluation. The EIB‑financed tranches follow the EIB’s own procurement guidelines in addition to Greek national law, requiring dual compliance from bidders. Organisations considering entry into starting a business in Greece specifically to serve this programme should factor in these parallel compliance requirements from the outset.
| Procurement Stream | Estimated Volume | Status (as of July 13, 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Smart meter hardware, Phase 1 | Initial lots (hundreds of thousands of units) | Awarded; delivery and installation under way |
| Smart meter hardware, Subsequent phases | Multi‑million unit programme target | Tender preparation and pre‑qualification in progress |
| MDM platform & communications infrastructure | National‑scale system | Active procurement; integration with meter hardware lots required |
The electricity distribution procurement lifecycle for smart‑metering projects follows a structured sequence: needs assessment and scope definition, technical‑specification drafting, tender publication, bid submission and evaluation, award, contract execution and post‑award performance management. Each stage presents distinct legal and commercial risks that practitioners must address proactively.
Technical specifications are the single most litigated element in smart metering procurement across Greece and the wider EU. The most common failure points, and the easiest to prevent, arise from the following patterns:
Smart meter technical specifications in Greece should be drafted with direct reference to RAE’s binding technical guidelines, which establish minimum functional requirements for metering equipment connected to the distribution network.
Under the Law 5290/2026 procurement framework, contracting authorities must disclose the evaluation methodology and sub‑criteria weightings in the tender notice. For smart‑metering tenders, the most effective models combine technical‑quality scoring with life‑cycle cost analysis (LCCA), rather than simple purchase‑price comparison. A well‑designed matrix typically allocates weight across four pillars: technical compliance and innovation, lifecycle cost (including maintenance, firmware updates and eventual decommissioning), sustainability and GPP criteria, and delivery/installation capability.
The European Commission’s GPP guidance provides voluntary criteria for electrical and electronic equipment that can be adapted directly to smart meter tenders. Practical scoring examples for green public procurement in Greece include awarding additional points for meters with standby power consumption below a specified threshold, for the use of halogen‑free flame retardants in housing materials, and for documented take‑back and recycling programmes at end of life. Contracting authorities should cite the Commission’s GPP criteria toolkit explicitly in tender documents to anchor sustainability scores in an objective, non‑discriminatory framework.
Winning a smart metering tender in Greece requires more than competitive pricing. Bids are frequently disqualified on procedural or documentary grounds before the evaluation committee reaches the technical envelope. The following playbook addresses the most common de‑selection traps and provides a structured checklist for bid preparation.
The technical annex is where most bids succeed or fail. Bidders should ensure their submission includes the following elements, each cross‑referenced to the tender’s technical‑specification numbering:
Bidders should structure their commercial proposals around milestone‑based payment schedules tied to verifiable deliverables, factory acceptance testing (FAT), site acceptance testing (SAT), and system integration testing (SIT). Performance bonds should be calibrated to the value of each milestone tranche rather than a flat percentage of the total contract value, which can unnecessarily inflate bonding costs for phased rollouts. Warranty terms should distinguish between hardware defects (typically warranted for the meter’s expected operational life) and software/firmware issues (covered through a separately priced maintenance agreement).
| Document | Why Required | Where to Obtain |
|---|---|---|
| ESPD (European Single Procurement Document) | Mandatory self‑declaration of eligibility; replaces multiple certificates at submission stage | Generated via ESIDIS or the EU ESPD service |
| Interoperability test certificates | Proves technical compliance with open‑standard requirements; scored in evaluation | Accredited testing laboratories (e.g., KEMA, DNV) |
| Cybersecurity certification reports | Demonstrates device‑level security; increasingly mandatory under RAE guidelines | Certification bodies recognised under Common Criteria or IEC schemes |
| Financial statements (audited, 3 years) | Demonstrates economic standing; threshold set in tender notice | National commercial registry or auditor |
| GDPR compliance statement | Addresses data‑protection obligations for meter data collection and processing | Prepared by bidder’s DPO / legal team |
| Environmental LCA / RoHS declaration | Supports GPP scoring; required under sustainability evaluation criteria | Bidder’s product‑compliance department or accredited LCA provider |
Once a smart metering tender is awarded, the contract must translate procurement promises into enforceable obligations. For PPP smart metering structures, where the contractor finances, installs and may operate meters over a concession period, risk allocation is particularly critical. Even in conventional supply‑and‑install contracts, three clauses consistently determine whether the project succeeds or descends into dispute: acceptance testing, data ownership and cyber‑incident response.
Contracting authorities and bidders should approach risk allocation as a negotiation, not a formality. The recent changes to Greece’s property and regulatory framework illustrate the broader legislative trend toward more prescriptive contractual obligations in infrastructure projects. Smart‑metering contracts should follow suit with explicit, measurable performance standards.
The following clause summaries illustrate best‑practice drafting approaches. They are not model clauses and should be adapted to each project’s specific requirements with qualified legal advice.
Bid challenges in smart metering procurements in Greece tend to cluster around a small number of recurring grounds. Understanding these patterns allows both contracting authorities (to prevent challenges) and bidders (to mount or defend them) to act decisively within the compressed timelines that Greek procurement review imposes.
The most frequent grounds observed in energy‑sector procurement disputes include:
Greek procurement law provides for pre‑contractual review through administrative review bodies before the contract is signed. The timelines are tight: aggrieved bidders must generally file a review application within ten days of the act they are challenging. Failure to file within this window typically results in the application being dismissed as inadmissible, regardless of its substantive merits. Interim relief, a suspension of the procurement procedure pending review, is available but requires demonstrating both a prima facie case and urgency.
Once a contract is signed, remedies shift from injunctive relief to damages claims. Unsuccessful bidders may pursue actions before the administrative courts and, ultimately, the Council of State (Symvoulio tis Epikrateias). Foreign bidders unfamiliar with Greek administrative procedure should note that the Council of State applies strict standing and procedural requirements, personnel working on Greek projects may also need to navigate local administrative formalities such as obtaining police clearance in Greece or applying for a single permit.
| Remedy | Usual Timeline in Greece | Practical Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑contractual administrative review | Application within 10 days of contested act; decision typically within 20–30 days | Prepare draft review application in parallel with bid submission so it is ready to file immediately if needed. |
| Interim suspension (injunctive relief) | Can be granted within days of application; requires urgency showing | Demonstrate irreparable harm, e.g., contract signing would render review meaningless. |
| Administrative court action (post‑award damages) | Several months to first hearing; full proceedings may take one to two years | Preserve all documentary evidence of the procurement process at the time of filing. |
| Council of State (Symvoulio tis Epikrateias) appeal | Varies; can exceed 12 months for final judgment | Consider whether interim relief at the appellate level is available and justified. |
To support practitioners working on smart metering procurement in Greece, the following companion assets are available alongside this guide. These resources are designed to be adapted to individual projects and should not be used as substitutes for project‑specific legal advice.
The smart metering procurement landscape in Greece demands both technical depth and procedural precision. Whether you are a contracting authority designing the next tender lot or a bidder preparing a submission, the following actions should be prioritised:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nikolas Avgouleas at Fortsakis Diakopoulos & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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