BETA

Procedure completed



2013/2921(RSP) EU cooperation agreements on competition policy enforcement – the way forward
RoleCommitteeRapporteurShadows
Lead ECON CUTAŞ George Sabin (S&D) FERBER Markus (EPP), TORVALDS Nils (ALDE), LAMBERTS Philippe (Verts/ALE), EPPINK Derk Jan (ECR), KLUTE Jürgen (GUE/NGL)
Lead committee dossier: ECON/7/14398
Legal Basis RoP 115-p5

Activites

  • 2014/02/05 Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
    • T7-0079/2014
  • 2014/02/04 Debate in Parliament

Documents

  • Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
  • Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T7-0079/2014

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

activities/1/docs/0
url
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=24123&l=en
type
Results of vote in Parliament
title
Results of vote in Parliament
activities/1/docs/1/text
  • The European Parliament adopted a resolution tabled by the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs on EU cooperation agreements on competition policy enforcement - the way forward.

    It welcomed the proposed agreement between the EU and the Swiss Confederation concerning cooperation on the application of their competition laws (‘the agreement’), and hoped that the prosecution of international cartels and punishment for cross-border offences of a serious nature would be more effective under this agreement and would also reduce duplication of the work of the competition authorities in taking decisions on similar cases.

    Parliament regarded the main new provision introduced by this kind of ‘second-generation agreement’, i.e. the possibility of exchanging confidential information between the Commission and the Swiss Competition Commission, as a positive step. This agreement could be considered a model for future bilateral cooperation agreements in the area of competition enforcement where there was a high degree of similarity between the parties as regards their substantive competition rules, investigative powers and applicable sanctions. Members felt that the EU should adopt a general framework establishing a minimum common and consistent basis for any future negotiations on competition enforcement cooperation, leaving to the Commission, however, a margin for manoeuvre to allow for more ambitious achievements on a case-by-case basis.

    Members regretted, however, that the agreement did not establish binding obligations as regards cooperation and leaves a broad margin for discretion, in particular by virtue of the reference to ‘important interests’, which could be invoked by either party as a justification for not complying with a request made by the other party. They called on the Commission and the Swiss authorities to cooperate sincerely and on EU national competition authorities and the Swiss Competition Commission to cooperate reciprocally.

    Parliament underlined the need for the following:

    ·        the establishment of safe mechanisms for the use and transmission of confidential information;

    ·        the attractiveness of leniency programmes and settlement procedures, taking into account the general principle governing the exchange of confidential information enshrined in this agreement;

    ·        protecting documents relating to leniency applications or settlement procedures, in particular from potential future disclosure in the context of civil or criminal proceedings;

    ·        studying a coherent approach to appeals against final decisions in both jurisdictions;

    ·        Member States and their national competition authorities to cooperate fully with the Commission in order to ensure the effective implementation of this agreement.

    Parliament called on the Commission to:

    ·        submit a comprehensive institutional agreement between Switzerland and the EU guaranteeing the uniform interpretation, monitoring and application of their bilateral agreements;

    ·        actively promote competition enforcement cooperation at international level, mainly in multilateral fora such as the World Trade Organisation (WTO), the International Competition Network (ICN) and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD);

    ·        explore the possibility of opening similar negotiations with the countries with whom a first-generation agreement already exists, as well as with other important international actors and emerging economies such as China or India, in the case where a sufficient degree of similarity between the parties to the agreement as regards their substantive competition rules, investigative powers and applicable sanctions is present;

    ·        regularly inform and update Parliament on all the types of activities in which it engages in the field of international cooperation, whether they be multilateral or bilateral initiatives of different kinds (formal agreements, MoUs, etc.), well in advance of the final outcome, with particular regard at present to the ongoing negotiations on the bilateral agreement with Canada.

    Parliament asked that the latter types of activities be included in the annual work programme presented by the Commissioner for Competition to Parliament and that the commissioner regularly inform the chair of the responsible parliamentary committee by letter of the evolution of international cooperation on competition enforcement.

activities/1/docs/1/url
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2014-0079
activities/1/type
Old
Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
New
Results of vote in Parliament
committees/0/rapporteur/0/mepref
Old
4de184030fb8127435bdbcf1
New
4f1ac75cb819f25efd000080
committees/0/shadows/0/group
Old
EPP
New
PPE
committees/0/shadows/0/mepref
Old
4de1849e0fb8127435bdbdcb
New
4f1ac7eeb819f25efd0000b9
committees/0/shadows/2/mepref
Old
4de1865d0fb8127435bdc04d
New
4f1ad22ab819f2759500000c
committees/0/shadows/3/mepref
Old
4de184830fb8127435bdbda4
New
4f1ac7c9b819f25efd0000ac
committees/0/shadows/4/mepref
Old
4de186050fb8127435bdbfca
New
4f1ac9a2b819f25efd000147
procedure/legal_basis/0
Old
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 115-p5
New
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 128-p5
procedure/title
Old
EU cooperation agreements on competition policy enforcement – the way forward
New
Resolution on EU cooperation agreements on competition policy enforcement - the way forward
activities/0/docs
  • url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20140204&type=CRE type: Debate in Parliament title: Debate in Parliament
activities/1/docs
  • type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading title: T7-0079/2014
activities/1/type
Old
Vote in plenary scheduled
New
Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
procedure/stage_reached
Old
Awaiting Parliament 1st reading / single reading / budget 1st stage
New
Procedure completed
activities/0/type
Old
Debate in plenary scheduled
New
Debate in Parliament
activities
  • date: 2014-02-04T00:00:00 body: EP type: Debate in plenary scheduled
  • date: 2014-02-05T00:00:00 body: EP type: Vote in plenary scheduled
committees
  • body: EP shadows: group: EPP name: FERBER Markus group: ALDE name: TORVALDS Nils group: Verts/ALE name: LAMBERTS Philippe group: ECR name: EPPINK Derk Jan group: GUE/NGL name: KLUTE Jürgen responsible: True committee: ECON date: 2012-09-11T00:00:00 committee_full: Economic and Monetary Affairs rapporteur: group: S&D name: CUTAŞ George Sabin
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/competition/ title: Competition commissioner: ALMUNIA Joaquín
procedure
dossier_of_the_committee
ECON/7/14398
reference
2013/2921(RSP)
title
EU cooperation agreements on competition policy enforcement – the way forward
legal_basis
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 115-p5
stage_reached
Awaiting Parliament 1st reading / single reading / budget 1st stage
subtype
Debate or resolution on oral questions
type
RSP - Resolutions on topical subjects
subject
6.20.03 Bilateral economic and trade agreements and relations