GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT

Despite the construction industry's detrimental effects on environmental sustainability, the concept of green procurement (GP) is still relatively new in the developing world. The barriers hindering GP adoption need detailed investigation as studies in the context of developing countries are st...

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Main Authors: Yap, Jeffrey Boon Hui, Teh, Yu Han, Loo, Siaw Chuing, Shavarebi, Kamran, Zamharira, Binti Sulaiman
Format: Article
Published: Vilnius Gediminas Technical University 2024
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/47127/
https://doi.org/10.3846/jcem.2024.21873
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spelling my.um.eprints.471272024-11-28T05:19:30Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/47127/ GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT Yap, Jeffrey Boon Hui Teh, Yu Han Loo, Siaw Chuing Shavarebi, Kamran Zamharira, Binti Sulaiman TH Building construction Despite the construction industry's detrimental effects on environmental sustainability, the concept of green procurement (GP) is still relatively new in the developing world. The barriers hindering GP adoption need detailed investigation as studies in the context of developing countries are still limited and the underlying dimensions remain a known-unknown. This study appraised the critical barriers to GP adoption in the Malaysian construction industry. Twenty (20) barriers were identified from the detailed literature review and a field survey was conducted with 150 professionals. The ranking analysis results indicated the top five barriers are: high initial cost; lack of expertise and regulations; lack of government regulations; lack of top management commitment and lack of awareness among construction stakeholders. A factor analysis further identified five major underlying dimensions. The study showed that both government and organisational commitments are crucial in promoting GP adoption. This study adds to incremental knowledge in GP literature by analysing the critical barriers and the associated underlying dimensions to GP adoption in a developing country, which could help practitioners and policymakers in evaluating the organisation's or industry's readiness to adopt GP practices along with devising apt measures to mitigate the barriers to shift to sustainable and environmentally friendly construction. Vilnius Gediminas Technical University 2024 Article PeerReviewed Yap, Jeffrey Boon Hui and Teh, Yu Han and Loo, Siaw Chuing and Shavarebi, Kamran and Zamharira, Binti Sulaiman (2024) GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT. Journal of Civil Engineering and Management, 30 (7). pp. 632-645. ISSN 1392-3730, DOI https://doi.org/10.3846/jcem.2024.21873 <https://doi.org/10.3846/jcem.2024.21873>. https://doi.org/10.3846/jcem.2024.21873 10.3846/jcem.2024.21873
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic TH Building construction
spellingShingle TH Building construction
Yap, Jeffrey Boon Hui
Teh, Yu Han
Loo, Siaw Chuing
Shavarebi, Kamran
Zamharira, Binti Sulaiman
GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT
description Despite the construction industry's detrimental effects on environmental sustainability, the concept of green procurement (GP) is still relatively new in the developing world. The barriers hindering GP adoption need detailed investigation as studies in the context of developing countries are still limited and the underlying dimensions remain a known-unknown. This study appraised the critical barriers to GP adoption in the Malaysian construction industry. Twenty (20) barriers were identified from the detailed literature review and a field survey was conducted with 150 professionals. The ranking analysis results indicated the top five barriers are: high initial cost; lack of expertise and regulations; lack of government regulations; lack of top management commitment and lack of awareness among construction stakeholders. A factor analysis further identified five major underlying dimensions. The study showed that both government and organisational commitments are crucial in promoting GP adoption. This study adds to incremental knowledge in GP literature by analysing the critical barriers and the associated underlying dimensions to GP adoption in a developing country, which could help practitioners and policymakers in evaluating the organisation's or industry's readiness to adopt GP practices along with devising apt measures to mitigate the barriers to shift to sustainable and environmentally friendly construction.
format Article
author Yap, Jeffrey Boon Hui
Teh, Yu Han
Loo, Siaw Chuing
Shavarebi, Kamran
Zamharira, Binti Sulaiman
author_facet Yap, Jeffrey Boon Hui
Teh, Yu Han
Loo, Siaw Chuing
Shavarebi, Kamran
Zamharira, Binti Sulaiman
author_sort Yap, Jeffrey Boon Hui
title GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT
title_short GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT
title_full GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT
title_fullStr GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT
title_full_unstemmed GREEN PROCUREMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY: UNFOLDING NEW UNDERLYING BARRIERS FOR A DEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXT
title_sort green procurement in the construction industry: unfolding new underlying barriers for a developing country context
publisher Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
publishDate 2024
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/47127/
https://doi.org/10.3846/jcem.2024.21873
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score 13.223943