CN03 - Court of Justice delivers guidance on abuses of dominance through data transfers
04 July 2022
04 July 2022
On 12 May 2022, the European Court of Justice ("the Court") delivered a preliminary ruling on abuse of dominance through the exploitation of data. As the historic monopolist, ENEL had access to customer data which it used to strengthen its position.
Key takeaways
- ENEL prevented its competitors' access to valuable customer data that it collected as monopolist on the regulated market.
- Even though third parties offered similar customer data, by providing discriminatory data access ENEL did not compete on the merits.
- An abuse of dominance does not require proof of direct harm to consumers, nor proof of concrete effects on the market.
- The "as efficient competitor" test can be applied to non-price practices.
In the context of the liberalisation of the electricity market, the historic monopolist ENEL entrusted the supply of electricity on the free market to its subsidiary Enel Energia ("EE") and the management of the regulated regime to another subsidiary, Servizio Elettrico Nazionale ("SEN").
On 20 December 2018, the Italian Competition Authority imposed a fine of EUR 93 million on ENEL for discriminating against its competitors when collecting customer data and transferring this data from SEN to EE to send free market offers.
After a partially successful appeal in Italy, which reduced the fine to EUR 27.5 million, ENEL brought the case before the Italian Supreme Court. The Italian Supreme Court suspended the proceedings and asked the Court five questions on the interpretation of Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union ("TFEU").
Firstly, in relation to the demonstration of effects, the Court confirmed that it is not necessary to show:
Secondly, the Court held that the conduct should deviate from "competition on the merits" to constitute an abuse. Such anti-competitive conduct includes:
Thirdly, the Court confirmed well-established Article 102 TFEU principles:
This is a significant judgment in the application of Article 102 TFEU. This is the first time the Court has confirmed the AEC test is not only applicable to pricing abuses but applies by analogy to non-pricing abuses.
The Court also set out that demonstration of potential anticompetitive effects must be supplemented by evidence that the practice does not constitute competition on the merits.
Finally, given the discriminatory access granted by SEN to EE, the potential ability of competitors to access similar data by different means did not change the conclusion on the existence of an abuse in this case.
With thanks to Astrid Dorigny-Sicard of Ashurst for her contribution.
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