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Scientific Article details

Title EU antitrust in support of the Green Deal. Why better is not good enough
ID_Doc 63271
Authors Loozen, E
Title EU antitrust in support of the Green Deal. Why better is not good enough
Year 2024
Published Journal Of Antitrust Enforcement, 12, 1
DOI 10.1093/jaenfo/jnad005
Abstract The European Union (EU) Commission proposes to 'green up' its enforcement of Article 101(3) TFEU to allow producers to collectively overcome so-called first mover disadvantages that would result from inefficient market regulation. The Commission's reboot focuses on the last three exemption conditions. First, the consumer benefit condition is customized to use collective consumer benefits to determine whether consumers receive a 'fair share' of the benefits established under the efficiency condition. Here, the Commission bypasses the Dutch proposition to also take account of non-consumer benefits when investigating whether consumers are compensated for anticompetitive harm. Second, the indispensability condition is tasked to filter out greenwashing. Third, the residual competition condition is trusted to allow private collective action insofar it does not eliminate competition on price and/or innovation. Discussing both EU and Dutch proposals, this article finds that greening up Article 101(3) brings competition policy outside the limiting principles that define objective and effective competition enforcement in terms of voluntary exchange.
Author Keywords Competition policy; Sustainability; Consumer sovereignty; Cartel; Regulation; Institutional design
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
EID WOS:000958379400001
WoS Category Law
Research Area Government & Law
PDF https://academic.oup.com/antitrust/advance-article-pdf/doi/10.1093/jaenfo/jnad005/49629217/jnad005.pdf
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