The European Commission adopted today Guidelines on how to design sustainability agreements in the field of agriculture (‘Guidelines') using a novel exclusion from EU competition rules introduced by the recently reformed Common Agricultural Policy (‘CAP').
The new Guidelines
Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (‘TFEU') generally prohibits agreements between companies that restrict competition, such as those between competitors that lead to higher prices or lower quantities. However, Article 210a of Regulation 1308/2013 establishing a common organisation of the markets in agricultural products (‘CMO Regulation') excludes certain restrictive agreements in the agricultural sector from that prohibition, when those agreements are indispensable to achieve sustainability standards going beyond the mandatory EU or national rules.
The new Guidelines aim at clarifying how operators active in the agri-food sector can design joint sustainability initiatives in line with Article 210a. In particular they:
The Guidelines will enter into force following their publication in the Official Journal of the European Union. Operators that have sustainability agreements already in place are invited to align them with the Commission's Guidelines. Operators may request an opinion from the Commission on their compatibility with EU competition rules as of 8 December 2023.
Background
In the context of the Common Agricultural Policy reform for 2023-2027, the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union adopted in 2021 a new exclusion from competition rules for agricultural products.
The new exclusion is contained in Regulation 2021/2117, which introduced Article 210a of the CMO Regulation. This provision states that agreements aimed at achieving a set of sustainability objectives by applying standards higher than what is mandatory under EU and/or national laws are allowed, provided that any restrictions of competition that result from such agreements are indispensable for the achievement of those objectives.
The European Parliament and the Council of the European Union asked the European Commission to issue Guidelines on the application of this exclusion.
On 28 February 2022, the Commission launched a call for evidence and a public consultation inviting stakeholders to share their experience with agreements aimed at achieving sustainability objectives in the agri-food supply chains. In January 2023, the Commission published a first draft of the Guidelines for consultation and in June 2023 it organised a conference to further discuss the main issues outlined in the consultation.
For More Information
For more information, see the dedicated webpage of DG Competition and the dedicated webpage of DG Agriculture and rural development.