In the light of the renewed general interest for environmental issues resulting from the launch of the European Green Deal by President Von der Leyen, the article explores how the EU Commission could promote environmental considerations in the implementation of competition policy. More in detail, starting from the role currently played by environmental factors in the assessment of anticompetitive agreements, the article will consider whether Article 101 TFEU, as formulated - read in the light of the Commission’s decisional practice and of the ECJ’s case law - would support a broader interpretation according to which the importance of environment-related considerations would be increased, in line with the expectations of President Von der Leyen. for this purpose, the present analysis will be focused on the first and third paragraphs of Article 101 TFEU, both already used in the past by the Commission - although on the basis of a different legal reasoning - in order to support the relevance of policy considerations (including those environment-related) within competition assessment. The results of such analysis will show that there is enough room for a change in the approach of the Commission that could (and should) be followed at national level. If such approach is effectively adopted, the role played by environmental considerations in the implementation of competition policy could be immediately enhanced with no need to wait for the adoption of a specific legislative act (or, even worse, for a Treaty amendment).

The European Green Deal: shaping environmentally friendly policies under Article 101 TFEU / Pezza, Andrea. - In: MARKET AND COMPETITION LAW REVIEW. - ISSN 2184-0008. - 4:2(2020), pp. 139-167. [10.34632/mclawreview.2020.9521]

The European Green Deal: shaping environmentally friendly policies under Article 101 TFEU

Andrea Pezza
2020

Abstract

In the light of the renewed general interest for environmental issues resulting from the launch of the European Green Deal by President Von der Leyen, the article explores how the EU Commission could promote environmental considerations in the implementation of competition policy. More in detail, starting from the role currently played by environmental factors in the assessment of anticompetitive agreements, the article will consider whether Article 101 TFEU, as formulated - read in the light of the Commission’s decisional practice and of the ECJ’s case law - would support a broader interpretation according to which the importance of environment-related considerations would be increased, in line with the expectations of President Von der Leyen. for this purpose, the present analysis will be focused on the first and third paragraphs of Article 101 TFEU, both already used in the past by the Commission - although on the basis of a different legal reasoning - in order to support the relevance of policy considerations (including those environment-related) within competition assessment. The results of such analysis will show that there is enough room for a change in the approach of the Commission that could (and should) be followed at national level. If such approach is effectively adopted, the role played by environmental considerations in the implementation of competition policy could be immediately enhanced with no need to wait for the adoption of a specific legislative act (or, even worse, for a Treaty amendment).
2020
The European Green Deal: shaping environmentally friendly policies under Article 101 TFEU / Pezza, Andrea. - In: MARKET AND COMPETITION LAW REVIEW. - ISSN 2184-0008. - 4:2(2020), pp. 139-167. [10.34632/mclawreview.2020.9521]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/994574
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