In order to effectively implement the program for the management of hyperpopulation of dogs, through electronic tender, the National Food Agency of Georgia implemented the procurement of appropriate equipment, including 435 pieces of dog-catching tools.
The National Food Agency of Georgia shared the details of the program on its official Facebook Page on April 15, 2026, Wednesday. According to the details provided by the Agency, it should be noted that the National Food Agency urges individual groups to refrain from targeted discreditation of the dog hyperpopulation management program.
Related to this tender, the agency announced a market research (MRS module MRS260013640) on March 6, 2026. Two companies took part in the price investigation process, one of them fixed the price of one Danish-made Daninject dog catcher tool 1400 GEL (total cost 609 000 GEL), the second one of the German-made Teledart Gmbh tool unit 1200 GEL (Total cost 522 000 GEL).
After finishing the price survey, the National Food Agency announced an electronic tender (NAT260005993), with an estimated purchase price of 436 800 GEL, on March 25. On April 14, the unified electronic system of procurement fixed an offer of 95,500 GEL ( LLC JG20.26).
Currently, the tender is in the selection-evaluation stage and has not finished yet. The winning company will be determined after studying in detail how much the applicant meets the requirements specified by the tender. Therefore, the information spread by individual groups regarding market research and creating a non-competitive environment, as if only one company participates in the tender, is deliberate misinformation.
Under the terms of the electronic tender, the first stage is to offer the lowest value. The complete number of companies participating in the tender can only be determined after the winning company has been identified and the contract has been signed.
The agency explained that the electronic tender was held transparently, with full compliance with the procedures stipulated by law, in a competitive environment. The agency once again urged the individual groups to refrain from spreading misinformation aimed at discrediting one of its major programs.