Denmark has launched a cluster of five tenders covering military footwear, marking a broad renewal of the armed forces’ boot systems.
The structure shows how the Danish Ministry of Defence Acquisition and Logistics Organisation (DALO) is breaking a core equipment category into parallel tracks to manage risk, supply and specialisation.
AdvertisementThe tenders - published simultaneously in the EU’s TED database - cover combat boots, patrol boots, desert boots, cold weather boots and combat safety boots. Each runs as a separate procurement procedure, but all sit under the same overall programme.
Together, they point to a total potential framework value exceeding 2 billion kroner, based on the maximum ceilings disclosed in the notices.
AdvertisementThe largest element is the combat boot tender at an estimated 200 million kroner, with a ceiling of 800 million kroner. Patrol boots follow at 150 million kroner estimated and 600 million kroner maximum.
The remaining three, desert, cold weather and combat safety boots, range between 60-65 million kroner in estimated value, each with ceilings between 240-260 million kroner.
AdvertisementThe tenders share identical timelines and procurement structure. All are run by DALO, use negotiated procedures, and carry a seven-year duration. The competitions will be decided on price, weighted 30 percent and quality of the product, weighted 70 percent.
The use of framework ceilings - often four times higher than estimated values - introduces significant volume uncertainty. DALO explicitly links this to fluctuating operational needs, including deployments and mission profiles.
AdvertisementFor suppliers, this creates both upside and risk. Winning a framework agreement secures access, not guaranteed volume. At the same time, the scale of the ceilings makes these among the more commercially attractive soft-equipment contracts currently in Northern Europe.
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