The Intel judgment and the extraterritorial application of EU competition
The Intel judgment and the
extraterritorial application of EU competition
Much has been already written about the CJEU’s rulings
in its recent Intel judgment (Case
C-413/14 P Intel v Commission II) regarding the legal test for vetting whether exclusivity
and loyalty rebate schemes breach competition. This post looks at Intel from a different viewpoint
focusing, instead, on the extraterritorial application of EU competition law. More
specifically, it considers the rulings made by the CJEU on the question whether
the Commission has asserted, in accordance with public international law, its
prescriptive jurisdiction on the agreement concluded by Intel with a non-EU computer
manufacturer, the Chinese firm Lenovo.
The legal background
Over the years, the EU courts and the European
Commission have developed and applied a number of legal tests to determine
whether EU competition rules could apply to non-EU firms, whose conducts may
harm competition in the internal market, without infringing public
international law. These tests are: i) the doctrine of implementation, ii) the
single economic doctrine and iii) the qualified effects doctrine.
i) The doctrine of implementation (Wood Pulp I, Cases 114/85 et al). The Commission
has jurisdiction on a firm that has implemented a given restrictive business
practice in the EU. As clarified by the General Court (GC) in Gencor, the criterion of implementation is
satisfied when a firm has made mere sales in the internal market in whatsoever
form.
ii) The single economic doctrine (Dyestuffs, Case 48/69). A non-EU parent
company that exercises decisive influence over its EU subsidiary is liable for
the competition breaches committed by the latter because the parent company and
its subsidiaries form a single economic entity.
iii) The qualified effects doctrine (Gencor, Case T-102/96). A conduct carried
by non-EU firms falls within the Commission regulatory when it has economic
effects within the internal market and such effects are immediate, substantial
and foreseeable.
The EU courts has since long accepted the doctrine of
implementation and the single economic doctrine as valid basis for the
extraterritorial application of EU competition law made by the Commission. On the
contrary, EU courts have been more cautious with regard to the doctrine of qualified
effects, though many times the Commission relied on it to review restrictive business
practices put in place by non-EU firms. Only recently, in the previous episode of
the Intel saga (Case T-286/09, Intel v
Commission I), the GC expressly considered the qualified effects doctrine as
a lawful basis for the extraterritorial application of EU competition law. Adjudicating
on the appeal filed against the infringement decision made by the Commission
against Intel, the GC ruled that the conduct of Intel was capable of having
immediate, substantial and foreseeable effects within the EEA. Eventually, the
GC took the view that the jurisdiction of the Commission on Intel’s restrictive
business practices was based not only on the qualified effects doctrine but
also on the implementation doctrine. Before Intel
v Commission II the CJEU declined to
recognize the doctrine of qualified effects as a ground for the extraterritorial
application of EU competition law in accordance with public international law.
The judgment of the CJEU
The issue of the extraterritorial application of EU
competition law was raised by Intel before the CJEU on appeal before the GC’s judgment
in Intel v Commission I. One of the
grounds of appeal submitted by Intel was that the GC wrongly accepted the
qualified effects doctrine as a ground for the Commission’ s jurisdiction.
In that regard, the CJEU pointed out that the fact a
firm that is party to an anticompetitive agreement is based in a non-EU country
does not prevent Article 101 TFEU from being applied to that firm. Then, and
more importantly, the CJEU observed that the doctrine of qualified effects purses
the same objective as the doctrine of implementation. Both of them intend to
prevent firms, which adopted outside the EU conducts that have anticompetitive
effects liable to have an impact on the EU market, from easily evading the EU
competition rules. Accordingly, the CJEU dismissed the Intel’s argument that
the qualified effects doctrine cannot serve as basis for the Commission to exert
its regulatory jurisdiction on non-EU firms.
Intel also argued that the GC wrongly established that
the agreements concluded by Intel and Lenovo would have foreseeable, immediate
and substantial effects in the EEA. To reply to this argument, the CJEU
considered whether the doctrine of qualified effects was correctly applied to
the above anticompetitive agreements. The CJEU began its analysis by reminding that,
under the qualified effects doctrine, the application of EU competition law is allowed
by public international law when it is foreseeable that the conducts under scrutiny
will have an immediate and substantial effect in the EU. It is then necessary
to consider the conduct of the firms in question as a whole to determine
whether the Commission has the power to apply to them EU competition law. In essence,
for there be the Commission’s jurisdiction on a conduct, it is necessary that
the effects produced by such conduct within the EU meet the criteria of foreseeability,
immediateness and substantiality. Agreeing with the GC, the CJEU took the view that
the agreements concluded by Intel with Lenovo satisfied all these criteria.
As for the foreseeability of effects, the CJEU clarified
that it is sufficient to consider the probable effects of the conduct on competition
for this criterion to be satisfied. question. Then, the CJEU pointed to the foreclosing
strategy pursued by Intel against its rival AMD. The Intel intent when entering
into the agreements with Lenovo was to impede any Lenovo notebook fitted with
an AMD CPU from being marketed in the internal market and the EEA. Therefore,
the GC was wright in finding that the conduct of Intel was capable of producing
an immediate effect in the EEA. Lastly, the CJEU stressed that it was
appropriate to look at the conduct of Lenovo as a whole to assess the
substantial nature of its effects on the EU and EEA markets. The CJEU reminded
that the Intel conduct was part of an overall exclusionary strategy aimed at
foreclosing AMD’s access to the most important sales channels. Not viewing this
comprehensive conduct as a whole would artificially fragment it into a raft of
separate forms of conduct. The risk in this case is that the conduct of Intel, which
is capable of affecting the competition structure of EEA markets, might escape the
Commission’s jurisdiction. Thus, the CJEU rejected the Intel’s argument that
the conduct in question would not have substantial effects in the EEA contrary
to what was held by the GC.
Conclusion
For the very first time in Intel v Commission II the CJEU expressly embraced the doctrine of
qualified effects as a lawful base, under public international law, for the
extraterritorial application of EU competition law. Incidentally, the CJEU
found that the doctrine of qualified effects was correctly applied to the
conduct of Intel that met all the criteria for the application of the doctrine.
In sum, in Intel v Commission II gave
a judiciary sanction to a methodology employed since long by the Commission to
exert its jurisdiction on cross-border restrictive business practices,
especially in the context of merger control.
Bearing in mind that the reach of
the doctrine of implementation is similar to that of the doctrine of qualified
effects, it can be argued that Intel v
Commission II, however, may not have far-reaching practical implications. Indeed,
most of the practices that are caught by the doctrine of implementation are
also caught by the doctrine of qualified effects, the only exception being
negative conducts. These conducts, such as agreements concluded outside the EU by
which the parties agree to not sell to EU consumers or not to purchase from EU
suppliers, are covered only by the doctrine of qualified effects. Accordingly, if
the Commission intends to investigate into whether such business practices breach
EU competition, it has to rely on the doctrine of qualified effects. In other
words, this appear to be the more likely scenario where the doctrine of
qualified effects should come into relevance.
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