Book contents
- Regulating Transnational Sustainability Regimes
- Regulating Transnational Sustainability Regimes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Features, Typologies and Effects of Voluntary Sustainability Standards
- 2 Public Authority and Voluntary Sustainability Standards
- 3 Voluntary Sustainability Standards Under EU Competition Law
- 4 Voluntary Sustainability Standards and EU Market Regulation
- 5 Attribution and Expected Conduct of WTO Members Towards Voluntary Sustainability Standards
- 6 Transposing Technical Barriers to Trade Agreement Meta-rules to Voluntary Sustainability Standards
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Voluntary Sustainability Standards Under EU Competition Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 May 2022
- Regulating Transnational Sustainability Regimes
- Regulating Transnational Sustainability Regimes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Features, Typologies and Effects of Voluntary Sustainability Standards
- 2 Public Authority and Voluntary Sustainability Standards
- 3 Voluntary Sustainability Standards Under EU Competition Law
- 4 Voluntary Sustainability Standards and EU Market Regulation
- 5 Attribution and Expected Conduct of WTO Members Towards Voluntary Sustainability Standards
- 6 Transposing Technical Barriers to Trade Agreement Meta-rules to Voluntary Sustainability Standards
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Chapter 3 studies VSS under EU competition rules. While in the debate on competition law and sustainability it is often argued in favour of a larger space for private sustainability initiatives, the chapter studies the possibility of using competition rules to tackle the implications of VSS especially on prices and market access. The chapter focuses on the Commission Guidance on Horizontal Agreements, under which standard-setting in line with procedural requirements is seen as pro-competitive. By employing empirical research on the market impact of VSS and economic literature, the chapter argues that VSS can result in restrictions to competition and it questions whether a hands-off competition treatment of VSS is warranted. This finding is assessed against the current approach for balancing pro- and anti-competitive effects of agreements as applied by the Commission. The chapter then suggests a possible approach under Art. 101 TFEU for a thorough scrutiny of economic and non-economic effects of VSS. Chapter 3 also studies VSS under rules for dominant undertakings and considers whether recognition of VSS at the national level would exclude the application of competition rules.
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- Information
- Regulating Transnational Sustainability Regimes , pp. 101 - 149Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022