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Procurement / GeM

GeM tender checklist for SWM equipment: a step-by-step buyer guide

If you're a ULB engineer or a state procurement officer floating a GeM bid for organic waste composters, balers, shredders or a small MSW line, this checklist is meant to save you a couple of bid-cycle false starts. We've pulled it together from being on both sides of the table β€” as a bidder responding to GeM tenders and as a vendor sitting in pre-bid clarification meetings.

1. Pick the right product code

GeM uses GFR-aligned product codes. For SWM equipment, the most relevant ones are:

  • 90131500 β€” Solid Waste Management Equipment (the most commonly used catch-all code)
  • 70150000 β€” Cleaning Equipment and Supplies (for ancillary items like trolleys, bins)
  • 40140000 β€” Pumps and Compressors (when the BOQ includes large blowers)

Most OWC, baler, shredder and small MSW-line items map to 90131500. If you publish under the wrong code, vendors registered for the right code won't even see your bid in their dashboard.

2. Decide bid type and minimum technical eligibility

GeM allows three main bid types:

  • Direct Purchase (under β‚Ή25,000 per item) β€” quick, no bidding
  • Bid Mode (β‚Ή25,000 – β‚Ή50 lakh) β€” formal bidding with TER
  • Reverse Auction (above β‚Ή50 lakh, configurable) β€” real-time price drop

For SWM plant equipment, Bid Mode with a Technical Evaluation Report (TER) is the safest. Reverse Auction tempts you with lower prices but has a real risk of attracting a low bidder who can't actually execute.

For Minimum Technical Eligibility, the typical conditions worth requiring:

  • Manufacturer registered with NSIC / MSME / GST
  • BIS / ISO certification (where applicable to the item)
  • Past supply experience: at least 2 similar contracts in the last 3 years (relax this for startups under the GeM startup exemption)
  • Annual financial turnover β‰₯ 1Γ— contract value (or relax for startups/MSEs)
  • After-sales service network in the bidder's state β€” or commitment to engineer-on-site within a defined SLA

3. Use the MSE price-preference clause

This is the under-utilised lever in GeM tenders. Under GFR Rule 153 and the Public Procurement Policy for MSEs:

  • A bidder registered as an MSE (Micro or Small Enterprise) who quotes within L1+15% can match the L1 price.
  • Up to 25% of the total contract value is reserved for MSE bidders.
  • 4% reservation specifically for MSEs owned by SC/ST entrepreneurs; 3% for women-led MSEs.

For ULBs, this is structurally helpful β€” it ensures the consideration set isn't reduced to two large EPC players. For MSE bidders (KWTPL, for example), it's the single biggest pricing lever on GeM.

If you don't include MSE preference language in your TER, you're inadvertently shutting out a category of bidders who often offer better service and faster delivery than the big firms.

4. Frame the BOQ correctly

The single most common mistake we see in ULB GeM tenders is a BOQ that under-specifies. The result: low bids that look attractive but cause execution headaches.

Specify these for every line item:

  • Material of construction (MOC) β€” e.g., "SS 304 contact parts" not just "stainless steel"
  • Power input β€” e.g., "3-phase, 415V"
  • Throughput / capacity in clear units (kg/day, kg/hr, TPD)
  • IP rating for control panels (IP54 minimum for outdoor SWM)
  • Warranty (1-year comprehensive, with 24–48 hr engineer response SLA)
  • Country of origin for major sub-components (motors, PLC, drives)

Don't specify:

  • Brand names of sub-components unless statutorily required (creates legal exposure)
  • Proprietary dimensions that match only one OEM's product (will be challenged in pre-bid)

5. Include rate-justification line items

For ULB tenders above β‚Ή25 lakh, GeM allows you to require a separate rate-justification dossier from each bidder. Use it. Ask for:

  • Material cost breakdown (raw material + bought-out components + fabrication)
  • Indicative manufacturing lead time
  • Site-readiness checklist the ULB needs to provide
  • Spare-parts pricing for the next 5 years (this catches "loss-leader" bidders)

6. Factor in delivery and commissioning timelines

A common bid-stage trap is to specify delivery in 30 days and discover six weeks later that no manufacturer can actually meet that. Realistic timelines for SWM equipment in 2026:

  • Standard composter (75–500 kg/d): 6–8 weeks ex-factory
  • Mid composter (500–1500 kg/d) + shredder + accessories: 8–12 weeks
  • 5–10 TPD MSW line equipment package: 12–16 weeks
  • Civil works on top: add 6–10 weeks
  • Site commissioning: 1–3 weeks after equipment arrival

Build penalty + bonus clauses tied to these realistic timelines, not to optimistic ones. Vendors will quote conservatively if your timelines are unrealistic, which raises your price.

7. AMC structure

For a 5-year AMC, three structures are commonly bid:

  • Fixed AMC β€” flat annual fee, defined response SLA, parts not included
  • Comprehensive AMC β€” flat annual fee, parts included, defined consumables
  • Pay-per-incident β€” ULB pays per visit + parts

For ULBs, Comprehensive AMC for the first 2 years + Fixed AMC for years 3–5 is the safest pattern. The first two years are when most issues surface; you want the manufacturer fully on the hook.

8. Pre-bid meeting checklist

Hold a virtual pre-bid meeting at least 7 days before bid close. Be ready to answer these questions, because every credible bidder will ask them:

  • Site readiness β€” what civil work is the ULB doing vs the bidder doing?
  • Power availability β€” is 3-phase, 415V available at site, and what's the existing connected load?
  • Approach road width and crane access for installation
  • Statutory clearances β€” who applies for CTE / CTO? (Usually ULB applies; bidder supports with documentation.)
  • Sample compost off-take β€” does the ULB have a buyer / internal use defined?

9. Common reasons GeM bids fail

We've seen these in actual ULB tenders:

  • Wrong product code β†’ no qualified bidders show up
  • Turnover criterion too high β†’ only 1–2 bidders qualify, no real competition
  • No MSE clause β†’ bid concentrated among 2–3 large firms
  • Civil work scope unclear β†’ bidder quotes high to cover risk, ULB overpays
  • Unrealistic delivery timeline β†’ only the over-promisers bid; the credible ones walk

10. The 5-minute checklist before publishing

  1. Product code: 90131500 βœ“
  2. Bid type: Bid Mode with TER βœ“
  3. MSE price preference clause: included βœ“
  4. MOC, power, IP rating, warranty, throughput: specified for every line βœ“
  5. Civil scope: clearly demarcated βœ“
  6. Rate-justification: required for items above β‚Ή10 L βœ“
  7. Delivery: realistic ex-factory + civil + commissioning βœ“
  8. AMC: 2-yr comprehensive + 3-yr fixed βœ“
  9. Pre-bid meeting: scheduled at least 7 days before close βœ“
  10. Statutory clearances: who-does-what mentioned βœ“

If you tick all 10, you'll get more credible bidders, better technical responses, and a lower-risk execution.

How KWTPL helps on the buyer side

If you're putting together a GeM SWM tender, send the draft TER to info@kelvinindia.in and we'll review the equipment specs and BOQ structure β€” at no charge, even if we don't end up bidding. We're an MSME + GeM-listed manufacturer of OWC machines, shredders and baling presses, with CSIR-CMERI tie-up, and we've answered enough pre-bid clarifications to spot the pitfalls before you publish.

Or use our project wizard β€” pick "ULB / Municipal Corporation" + "GeM Tender" and the configurator will surface the GeM-specific notes (product code, MSE price preference, scheme alignment) automatically.


Kelvin Water Technologies Pvt. Ltd. β€” GeM-listed manufacturer + supplier of organic waste composters, shredders and baling presses. NSIC Β· MSME Β· ISO Β· BIS Β· CSIR-CMERI. Plant: HSIIDC IMT Manesar.


Want a tailored quote or DPR review? Use the configurator β†’ or email info@kelvinindia.in.

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