
Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes commented: “I will not tolerate dominant companies hindering competition or excluding other players from the market, as this harms innovation and consumers. Rebates and discounts cannot be used by a dominant company as part of a strategy to exclude actual and potential competitors.”
Tomra violated the competition rules of the EU Treaty by implementing an exclusionary strategy on five different national markets from 1998 to 2002. The practices condemned by the decision include agreements which (i) granted Tomra the status of an exclusive supplier of the machines, and (ii) imposed individualised quantity targets, or retroactive rebate schemes, the thresholds of which usually corresponded to the total or almost total machine requirements of its customers. All of these practices, as implemented by Tomra, aimed at restricting, and have restricted or seriously hindered, the ability of other machine suppliers to enter the market efficiently.
The Commission's investigation was triggered by a complaint from a German supplier of these machines, asking the Commission to investigate whether Tomra was abusing its dominant position, in particular through agreements concluded with several large retail companies thus preventing the German company's access to the market. Following this, Commission officials, assisted by national authorities, carried out inspections at the premises of the Tomra group. The inspections provided evidence that Tomra abused its dominant position by implementing a strategy to close off the market to actual and potential competitors.
This illegal conduct enabled Tomra to extend or artificially maintain its dominant position. The abuse was carried out intentionally and with awareness of the harm it was likely to cause to competition in the market.
The Commission considered the infringement to be a serious one: practices, such as those implemented by Tomra, have previously been condemned by the Commission and by the Community courts.
In setting the fine, the Commission took into account the gravity of the infringement and its duration, i.e. 5 years. The €24 million fine was imposed jointly and severally on the following subsidiaries of the Tomra group:
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