CCTV Procurement Guide for PSUs & Government
A practitioner's guide to procuring CCTV systems in the public sector — covering GFR-compliant tender specifications, the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) approach with Net Present Value (NPV) evaluation, AMC structuring to prevent gaming, technical evaluation frameworks, and common procurement pitfalls drawn from decades of experience managing security across government buildings.
Contents
ToggleProcuring a CCTV system for a PSU or government building is fundamentally different from a private purchase. The process must comply with the General Financial Rules (GFR 2017), Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) guidelines, the Public Procurement Order (PPO), and — since 2025 — mandatory BIS and STQC ER:01 certification requirements. Getting any of these wrong can result in tender cancellation, vigilance inquiries, procurement of non-compliant equipment, or — most commonly — a system that delivers poor service for years because the procurement evaluation focused solely on the lowest capital cost while ignoring the true lifecycle cost.
This guide addresses the most persistent and damaging procurement problems, with particular focus on the AMC gaming problem and the NPV-based Total Cost of Ownership evaluation that prevents it.
1. The CCTV Procurement Process — Step by Step
Step 1 — Need Assessment
Define the security objectives, conduct a site survey, determine camera count and types, estimate storage and retention requirements, and identify integration needs. Prepare a Detailed Project Report (DPR) with estimated cost.
Step 2 — Technical Specifications
Draft vendor-neutral technical specifications using generic parameters (resolution, compression, PoE standard, ONVIF, STQC ER:01). Include mandatory compliance requirements (BIS, STQC, PPO). No brand names.
Step 3 — Tender Document
Prepare the Notice Inviting Tender (NIT), Instructions to Bidders, Bill of Quantities (BOQ), General and Special Conditions of Contract, AMC terms, SLA requirements, and evaluation criteria (including NPV methodology).
Step 4 — Tender Publication
Publish on CPPP (Central Public Procurement Portal), GeM (if applicable), and organisation website. Allow adequate bid preparation time (minimum 3 weeks for advertised tenders as per GFR).
Step 5 — Technical Evaluation
Open technical bids first. Evaluate compliance with mandatory requirements (BIS, STQC, technical specs). Score technical parameters. Disqualify non-compliant bids. Only technically qualified bidders proceed to financial evaluation.
Step 6 — Financial Evaluation (NPV)
Open financial bids only for technically qualified bidders. Calculate Total Cost of Ownership using NPV method (capital cost + AMC over contract period). Award to L1 on NPV basis — not on capital cost alone.
2. Drafting Technical Specifications
The CVC-Compliant Approach
CVC guidelines are clear: tender specifications must describe what the equipment should do — not which brand should supply it. Specifications that effectively describe a single manufacturer's product (even without naming the brand) are called "tailor-made specifications" and invite vigilance scrutiny. The correct approach is to specify performance requirements using industry-standard parameters.
Essential Specification Parameters for CCTV Tenders
| Component | Key Specification Parameters | Mandatory Compliance |
|---|---|---|
| IP Cameras | Resolution (minimum 4MP), compression (H.265 minimum), frame rate (15 fps minimum), PoE (802.3af/at), WDR (120dB minimum), IR range, IP rating (IP66/IP67 outdoor), ONVIF Profile S & G | BIS IS 13252, STQC ER:01, PPO local content |
| PTZ Cameras | Resolution, optical zoom (minimum 25×), pan/tilt range, preset positions, auto-tracking capability, PoE+ (802.3at minimum) | BIS, STQC ER:01 |
| ANPR Cameras | Capture speed, plate recognition accuracy (>95%), character height pixels, supported plate formats, database capacity, barrier integration | BIS, STQC ER:01 |
| PoE Switches | Port count, PoE budget (watts), PoE standard, uplink speed, managed/Layer 2+, VLAN, QoS, IGMP snooping | BIS (if applicable) |
| Recording Server | CPU, RAM, NIC speed (10GbE), RAID support, OS, simultaneous recording channels, throughput (MB/s) | — |
| Storage | Total usable capacity (TB) after RAID, RAID level (6 minimum), drive type (surveillance-grade), hot spare, expansion capability | — |
| VMS Software | Open-platform (ONVIF), concurrent camera licences, user roles, analytics support, mobile client, evidence export, health monitoring | — |
| Structured Cabling | Cat6/Cat6A, TIA/EIA-568 certification testing, fibre type (OM3/OM4/OS2), patch panel, cable tray/conduit | — |
3. Two Methods of Financial Evaluation — Capital Cost vs Total Cost of Ownership
The choice of financial evaluation method fundamentally determines what kind of bids an organisation receives, and consequently, the quality of service it gets over the life of the CCTV system. There are two approaches: the traditional capital-cost-only method and the recommended Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) method.
Method 1 — Capital-Cost-Only Evaluation
In this traditional approach, L1 is determined solely on the basis of the quoted capital cost (equipment, installation, and commissioning). The AMC charges quoted by bidders are not factored into the financial comparison at all. The AMC is treated as a separate, future engagement.
Limitation of This Approach
When AMC charges are excluded from the financial comparison, there is no mechanism to evaluate the total lifecycle cost of the system. Different bidders may structure their pricing very differently — some may quote a moderate capital cost with a reasonable AMC, while others may absorb future AMC costs within the capital price and quote very low or negligible AMC. Since the AMC is not part of the L1 calculation, the financial comparison does not capture these differences, and the organisation cannot assess which bid offers the best value over the entire contract period.
Moreover, when AMC charges are negligible or token, the financial incentive for the contractor to deliver quality maintenance service during the AMC years is naturally reduced. The organisation may end up paying more in the form of a higher capital cost upfront, while receiving inadequate maintenance service later — leading to premature equipment degradation and a shorter effective system life.
Method 2 — Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Evaluation (Recommended)
The TCO approach evaluates bidders on the combined cost of capital expenditure and AMC over the entire contract period. This gives a complete picture of what the organisation will spend over the life of the system and ensures that both the capital cost and the ongoing service commitment are factored into the L1 determination.
Since AMC payments occur in the future, they must be converted to their present-day equivalent using the Net Present Value (NPV) methodology — which discounts future payments at an appropriate rate. The Manual for Procurement of Goods, 2024 (Section 8.5) specifically recognises NPV as the appropriate methodology for such evaluations.
The Minimum Notional AMC Provision
To ensure that the TCO evaluation reflects a realistic maintenance commitment, the tender document should specify a minimum notional AMC rate of 4–5% of the quoted capital cost per annum for the purpose of financial comparison. During the NPV calculation, if any bidder has quoted an AMC rate below this minimum threshold, the minimum notional rate is used in the TCO calculation instead of the quoted rate. However, actual AMC payments are made based on the bidder's quoted rate only.
This provision ensures that the financial comparison accounts for a reasonable maintenance cost regardless of how individual bidders choose to structure their pricing. It creates a level playing field where all bids are evaluated on a comparable basis.
4. TCO with NPV — The Evaluation Procedure
The NPV Formula
Where r = discount rate (to be specified in the tender document)
With the minimum notional AMC rule (e.g., 5% of capital cost):
If quoted AMC < 5% of capital cost → use 5% of capital cost for TCO calculation
If quoted AMC ≥ 5% of capital cost → use the quoted AMC for TCO calculation
Critical Parameters That Must Be Specified in the Tender Document
| Parameter | What to Specify | Why It Affects L1 Ranking |
|---|---|---|
| Discount Rate (r) | Typically 8–10%, based on the prevailing government borrowing rate or as per organisational policy | A higher discount rate reduces the present value of future AMC payments, giving relatively more weight to capital cost. A lower discount rate gives more weight to AMC. Different rates can change L1/L2 positions. |
| AMC Period (years) | Clearly state the total contract period and which years are warranty (free) and which are paid AMC. Example: "Year 1 warranty, Years 2–5 comprehensive AMC." | A longer AMC period increases the weight of AMC in the TCO. With a 3-year AMC, capital cost dominates. With a 7-year AMC, the AMC component becomes more significant. This directly affects relative rankings. |
| Minimum Notional AMC Rate | State the percentage (e.g., 5% of quoted capital cost) and clarify it is for comparison only — actual payments per quoted rates | This rate determines how bids with low AMC quotes are normalised. Without it, the TCO calculation may not adequately reflect maintenance costs. |
| AMC Escalation (if any) | State whether AMC rates are fixed for the entire period or escalate annually (e.g., 5% annual escalation) | Escalation changes the NPV calculation for later years, affecting rankings of bidders with different capital/AMC ratios. |
Worked Example — Comparing Both Evaluation Methods
Consider two bids for a 64-camera CCTV system. The tender specifies: 5-year contract (Year 1 warranty free, Years 2–5 comprehensive AMC), discount rate 10%, minimum notional AMC 5% of capital cost.
| Component | Bidder A | Bidder B |
|---|---|---|
| Capital Cost (quoted) | ₹78,00,000 | ₹83,00,000 |
| Year 2–5 AMC (quoted per year) | ₹3,90,000 (5% of capital) | ₹1,000 (token amount) |
| Total undiscounted outgo over 5 years | ₹78L + ₹15.6L = ₹93.6 lakhs | ₹83L + ₹0.04L = ₹83.04 lakhs |
Evaluation using Method 1 (Capital Cost Only)
L1 determination based on capital cost alone:
- Bidder A: ₹78,00,000 — L1
- Bidder B: ₹83,00,000 — L2
Bidder A is selected. However, if the evaluation were based on total undiscounted outgo (a variation sometimes used), Bidder B at ₹83.04 lakhs would appear cheaper than Bidder A at ₹93.6 lakhs — potentially reversing the selection. This inconsistency highlights why a structured TCO/NPV methodology is essential.
Evaluation using Method 2 (TCO with NPV and Minimum Notional AMC)
Since Bidder B's quoted AMC (₹1,000/year) is far below 5% of his capital cost (5% × ₹83L = ₹4,15,000), the notional minimum of ₹4,15,000/year is used for his NPV calculation. Bidder A's quoted AMC (₹3,90,000) meets the 5% threshold, so his actual quoted rate is used.
| Year | Bidder A (AMC) | Discount Factor @10% | Bidder A PV | Bidder B (Notional AMC) | Bidder B PV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 0 (Capital) | ₹78,00,000 | 1.000 | ₹78,00,000 | ₹83,00,000 | ₹83,00,000 |
| Year 1 (Warranty) | ₹0 | 0.909 | ₹0 | ₹0 | ₹0 |
| Year 2 | ₹3,90,000 | 0.826 | ₹3,22,200 | ₹4,15,000 | ₹3,42,800 |
| Year 3 | ₹3,90,000 | 0.751 | ₹2,92,900 | ₹4,15,000 | ₹3,11,700 |
| Year 4 | ₹3,90,000 | 0.683 | ₹2,66,400 | ₹4,15,000 | ₹2,83,400 |
| Year 5 | ₹3,90,000 | 0.621 | ₹2,42,200 | ₹4,15,000 | ₹2,57,700 |
| TCO (NPV) | ₹89,23,700 | ₹94,95,600 |
Note: Bidder B's notional AMC of ₹4,15,000/year is calculated as 5% of his own quoted capital cost of ₹83 lakhs. A higher capital cost attracts a proportionally higher notional AMC. Actual AMC payment to Bidder B remains ₹1,000/year as quoted.
Result: Bidder A is L1 on TCO (₹89.24 lakhs vs ₹94.96 lakhs). The TCO method produces a ranking that reflects the true lifecycle cost, including a realistic provision for maintenance. The organisation benefits from selecting a bidder whose pricing structure supports genuine AMC service delivery.
- It evaluates the total lifecycle cost, not just the upfront cost — giving a complete financial picture
- The minimum notional AMC ensures that all bids are compared on a consistent, level playing field regardless of individual pricing structures
- The notional AMC percentage is applied to each bidder's own quoted capital cost — so a higher capital cost automatically attracts a higher notional AMC, making the mechanism self-balancing
- Actual AMC payments remain based on quoted rates — ensuring no bidder is forced to pay more than what they quoted
- Since the discount rate, AMC period, and notional AMC percentage are all pre-declared in the tender document, the evaluation is fully transparent and auditable
5. Structuring the AMC for Quality Service
Comprehensive AMC vs Non-Comprehensive AMC
| Type | What's Included | Recommended For |
|---|---|---|
| Comprehensive AMC | All preventive and corrective maintenance, all replacement parts (including cameras, HDDs, switches), all labour. Only excludes acts of God and vandalism. | PSU/Government buildings. Provides predictable annual costs and maximum service obligation on the contractor. |
| Non-Comprehensive AMC | Preventive maintenance and labour included. Replacement parts charged separately at agreed rates. | Only recommended when budget constraints make comprehensive AMC unaffordable. Creates uncertainty in annual costs. |
AMC Service Level Agreement (SLA) — Essential Clauses
| SLA Parameter | Recommended Requirement | Penalty for Non-Compliance |
|---|---|---|
| Response time | Within 4 hours of complaint logging (during business hours) | ₹500 per hour of delay beyond 4 hours |
| Resolution time | Within 24 hours for critical faults (server down, >10% cameras offline). Within 48 hours for non-critical faults. | ₹2,000 per day of delay beyond resolution deadline |
| System uptime | Minimum 97% uptime per quarter (cameras and recording) | Pro-rata AMC deduction for every 1% below 97% |
| Preventive maintenance | Quarterly PM visits with documented checklist (lens cleaning, firmware updates, drive health check, PoE verification, cable inspection) | ₹10,000 deduction per missed PM visit |
| Spare parts replacement | Failed equipment replaced with equivalent or better specification within 48 hours. Minimum 5% spare cameras and 10% spare HDDs kept on-site. | ₹1,000 per day per item beyond 48 hours |
| Reporting | Monthly health report submitted to facility manager showing uptime, faults, resolutions, pending items, and drive health status | ₹5,000 per missed report |
6. Mandatory Compliance Checklist for Tender Specifications
Every CCTV tender for a PSU or government organisation must include the following mandatory compliance requirements. These are non-negotiable — bids not meeting these should be disqualified during technical evaluation.
| # | Mandatory Requirement | Verification Method |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | BIS Registration — All cameras and NVRs must have valid BIS registration under IS 13252 (Part 1) / CRO | BIS certificate copy + verification on BIS portal |
| 2 | STQC ER:01 Certification — All IP cameras must be STQC-certified under IoTSCS | STQC certificate with model numbers, firmware hash, chipset details + verification on stqc.gov.in |
| 3 | PPO Compliance — Bidder must certify local content as per prevailing PPO requirements | Self-certification + supporting documentation as per PPO format |
| 4 | ONVIF Compliance — All cameras must support ONVIF Profile S (streaming) and Profile G (recording) | ONVIF conformance documentation or declaration |
| 5 | 3-Year Manufacturer Warranty — Minimum warranty period on all cameras, switches, and servers | Manufacturer's warranty letter on letterhead |
| 6 | Bidder Experience — Minimum 3 completed CCTV projects of similar scope (within last 5 years) | Completion certificates or work order copies |
| 7 | OEM Authorisation — Bidder must be an authorised partner of the proposed camera OEM | OEM authorisation letter specific to this tender |
| 8 | Financial Capacity — Annual turnover of at least 3× the estimated project cost in any of the last 3 financial years | Audited financial statements |
7. Technical Evaluation Framework
A well-designed technical evaluation separates compliant, capable bidders from those who merely meet minimum specifications on paper. The recommended approach uses a two-envelope system (technical bid + financial bid) with weighted technical scoring.
Recommended Technical Scoring Matrix
| Parameter | Max Score | Scoring Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Camera specifications | 25 | Resolution, low-light performance, WDR, AI analytics, build quality, IP rating. Higher scores for specifications exceeding minimum requirements. |
| Storage & server design | 15 | RAID level, drive type, redundancy, failover capability, server specification, scalability. |
| Network design | 15 | Switch quality, PoE budget adequacy, fibre backbone, VLAN design, cybersecurity measures. |
| VMS software | 15 | Open-platform, analytics capabilities, mobile access, evidence management, user interface quality. |
| Bidder experience & capability | 15 | Number and scale of completed projects, client references, technical team qualification, service infrastructure. |
| Compliance & certifications | 10 | BIS, STQC ER:01, ONVIF, ISO 9001, manufacturer certifications. Additional marks for ISO 27001 alignment. |
| AMC plan & methodology | 5 | PM schedule, spare parts management, escalation matrix, reporting framework, response team location. |
| Total | 100 | Minimum qualifying score: 70 out of 100 |
Only bidders scoring 70 or above on technical evaluation proceed to financial bid opening. Financial bids of technically disqualified bidders are returned unopened.
8. Common Procurement Pitfalls
| Pitfall | Consequence | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Evaluating on capital cost alone | AMC gaming, poor service, premature system failure | NPV-based TCO evaluation with minimum notional AMC |
| Brand-specific specifications | CVC scrutiny, limited competition, vendor lock-in | Generic, performance-based specifications with ONVIF mandate |
| Ignoring STQC ER:01 requirement | Non-compliant cameras procured — may need replacement after April 2026 | Mandatory STQC certification as pre-qualification requirement |
| Under-specifying storage | Footage overwritten before retention period expires — regulatory non-compliance | Specify usable capacity after RAID, not raw capacity. Use the storage calculator. |
| No SLA in AMC terms | No measurable obligation on contractor. No basis for penalties. | Detailed SLA with response times, uptime targets, and enforceable penalties |
| Accepting "free" AMC | Contractor has zero incentive to service. System degrades. | Minimum notional AMC rate in NPV calculation |
| No Performance Bank Guarantee | No financial leverage over non-performing contractor during AMC period | 10% PBG on total AMC value, valid for entire AMC period |
| Splitting tender to avoid higher approvals | Violation of GFR Rule 160 (anti-splitting). Audit observation. | Single comprehensive tender for the complete CCTV system |
| Inadequate bid preparation time | Limited competition, poor bid quality, potential legal challenge | Minimum 3–4 weeks from NIT publication to bid submission deadline |
| Not testing cameras before acceptance | Non-performing cameras accepted. Costly disputes later. | Mandatory acceptance testing protocol: day + night image quality, PoE, analytics, recording verification |
9. Procurement Through GeM
The Government e-Marketplace (GeM) is mandatory for procurement of goods and services available on the platform, as per Rule 149 of GFR 2017. CCTV cameras, NVRs, and related equipment are available on GeM. Key considerations for CCTV procurement via GeM:
- Direct purchase: Up to ₹25,000 — any available seller. Up to ₹5,00,000 — lowest price among at least 3 different manufacturers.
- Bid/RA: Above ₹5,00,000 — through e-bidding or reverse auction on GeM. Custom specifications can be defined.
- STQC filter: Ensure the GeM specifications include STQC ER:01 certification as a mandatory filter to exclude non-compliant products.
- NPV evaluation: For procurements that include AMC, the bid evaluation on GeM should incorporate the NPV methodology described in this guide. This may require a custom bid structure.
- Limitations: Complex CCTV projects requiring site-specific design, structured cabling, custom network design, and integration may be better suited to a dedicated tender process rather than GeM catalogue purchase — particularly for installations above 32 cameras.
10. Post-Procurement — Installation & Acceptance
Installation Supervision
The organisation should appoint a technically competent officer (or engage an independent consultant) to supervise installation. Key supervision checkpoints include cable route compliance with approved drawings, proper termination and testing of every cable run (demand TIA/EIA-568 test reports), camera positioning matching the approved camera schedule, PoE verification on every port, recording verification for every channel (day and night), and analytics functionality testing.
Acceptance Testing Protocol
- Day test: Verify image quality, focus, field of view, and WDR performance for every camera during daylight hours
- Night test: Verify IR illumination, low-light performance, and image usability for every camera after dark
- Recording test: Verify continuous recording on all channels for at least 72 hours without frame drops
- Storage verification: Confirm that the calculated retention period is achievable — the system should show the expected oldest recording date after 72 hours of operation
- Analytics test: Verify each configured analytics rule (intrusion, line crossing, classification) under real-world conditions
- Remote access test: Verify mobile and desktop remote viewing from outside the building network
- Failover test: If a failover server is specified, simulate primary server failure and verify automatic takeover
- Documentation handover: Network topology diagram, IP address table, camera schedule, cable labels, switch configurations, passwords (sealed), as-built drawings, and user manuals
Need Help with CCTV Procurement?
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