Until now, the words “climate change” and “competition law” weren’t often used in the same sentence. But this is all set to change. Companies are recognising the need to pro-actively address ESG (environmental, social and governance) issues. And environmental protections are playing an important role as part of a wider political strategy to promote and achieve broader social policy goals. The question on many people’s lips is: is competition law a major obstacle to achieving sustainability objectives and, if so, how do we fix it?
Can you agree sustainability standards without breaking the rules?
Competition law and environmental issues can collide when companies quite rightly want to collaborate to make their businesses more sustainable; e.g. by discussing how best to reduce plastic and other packaging; whether to switch from suppliers who don’t comply with environmental standards; or how to comply with stricter emissions standards.
The perils of the efficiency defence
Broadly speaking, most competition regimes prohibit agreements which harm competition, but exempt them when they produce efficiency gains which outweigh that harm (the so-called “efficiency defence”).
Lots of sustainability agreements will fall outside of the competition rules altogether. For others, it may be possible to invoke the efficiency defence where the environmental benefits outweigh any anti-competitive effects. But this relies on the “non-economic” benefits of the agreement being given enough weight by enforcers, and – since individual exemption from competition rules is generally unavailable – also relies on parties taking that risk (ideally based on robust legal advice).
Executive Vice-President Vestager, for one, has pointed out recently that it is possible to avoid breaking the rules – and indeed EC officials have invited companies to discuss sustainability projects with them.
But the risk of competition enforcement may have prevented many agreements getting off the ground. Take for example the potential Brazilian competition challenge against the longstanding “Amazon soybean moratorium” – a commitment by trading firms not to buy soybeans from parts of the Amazon rainforest cleared after 2008.
Or the cautionary tale of the US DOJ's probe into emissions collusion by carmakers. Disputing the accusation that the DOJ’s decision to investigate was politically motivated, Assistant AG Delrahim stated that “[a]nti-competitive agreements among competitors – regardless of the purported beneficial goal – are outlawed because they reduce the incentives for companies to compete vigorously, which in turn can raise prices, reduce innovation and ultimately harm consumers.” When agreements are pursued as criminal or hardcore violations of competition law, this implies that there is no real room to balance non-economic factors.
While Chinese competition law provides for a possible exemption in general terms for restrictive agreements that help promote social benefits such as energy saving, environmental protection or disaster relief, there is no further practical guidance based on legislation or case law. The Draft Amendment to China’s anti-monopoly law (AML) issued this month also raises the bar for qualifying for an exemption for alleged monopoly agreements: in line with international best practice, parties who seek to argue that their agreement should be exempted on efficiency grounds will need to show that the efficiencies are “indispensable” to the sustainability goal pursued.
But as climate change issues move up the political agenda – see for example the EC’s Green Deal which aims to cut the block’s greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050 – we expect that political pressure will result in environmental and sustainability factors carrying more weight in the authorities’ balancing of competitive harm against efficiencies. This chimes with recent findings suggesting that the notion of “consumer welfare” (which competition law is fundamentally designed to protect) has been expanded to include other factors like environmental impact. With some creative thinking and careful planning, companies looking to cooperate on sustainability issues should be able to without breaking the competition rules.
Time for a clear exemption from the rules?
The EC is currently inviting comments (until 12 February 2020) on its evaluation of the Horizontal Block Exemption Regulations (BER) – due to expire in 2022. These carve out certain categories of agreements between competitors from the EU competition rules.
Seeing this as an opportunity for policy change, many have called urgently for greater consideration of environmental issues, as well as clarity on when cooperation to tackle them will be deemed okay (or not).
Absent any standalone BER or paper on the EC’s enforcement priorities in this area, the position that the EC takes in the revised guidelines – and whether it decides to explicitly allow for cooperation around sustainability – will be an important gauge of how seriously it plans to take these issues as part of its future enforcement agenda.