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Municipal and public sector contracts - self-managing from award to delivery

Public sector agreements carry complex obligations, multi-party accountability, and strict audit requirements. Hunit makes them self-managing — from contract award through to service delivery and renewal.

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Public sector contracts are among the most scrutinised agreements in any economy. Municipalities, regional authorities, and government agencies must demonstrate not just that obligations were defined - but that they were met, on time, by the right parties, with a complete record to prove it. Today, that burden falls on spreadsheets, email chains, and manual reporting cycles that were never designed for the task.

Hunit changes the infrastructure. When a public contract becomes an Agentic Contract, obligations route automatically to the responsible parties, deadlines trigger without manual intervention, and every action - every approval, submission, and confirmation - is recorded in a legally certain, tamper-proof audit trail. Compliance is not assumed at year-end. It is evidenced continuously, from day one.

For municipalities managing procurement, service delivery, and supplier performance, this means replacing fragmented oversight with a single live record of contractual performance. For citizens and oversight bodies, it means accountability that is built into the agreement - not bolted on after the fact.

The EU Digital Product Passport regulation adds a further dimension: as physical assets - vehicles, infrastructure, equipment — become subject to digital lifecycle records, the contract that governs their procurement, maintenance, and end-of-life becomes the natural home for that data. Hunit embeds this directly, turning regulatory compliance into a feature of the agreement rather than a separate reporting burden.

Hunit works with municipal technology partners and standards bodies to distribute Agentic Contracts into entire sectors at once — making adoption straightforward for individual municipalities without requiring them to build or procure anything from scratch. One standard, one integration, every municipality.

The public sector does not need more software. It needs agreements that do what they say.

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