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Shell Loan Agreement for Lubrication Bay Equipment. [1995] IECA 455 (19th December, 1995)
Competition
Authority Decision of 19 December 1995 relating to a proceeding under Section 4
of the Competition Act 1991.
Notification
No. CA/65/93 - Shell Loan Agreement for Lubrication Bay Equipment.
Decision
No. 455
Introduction
1. Notification
was made to the Competition Authority on 30 November 1993 of the standard form
loan agreement for lubrication bay equipment by Irish Shell Ltd (Shell) with a
request for a certificate under
Section 4(4) of the
Competition Act, 1991, or,
in the event of a refusal by the Competition Authority to issue a certificate,
a licence under
Section 4(2).
The
Facts
(a)
Subject of the notification
2. This
notification relates to the standard form agreement concerning the loan of
lubrication bay equipment by Shell to certain resellers of lubricating oils.
(b)
The parties involved
3. Shell
is an Irish registered company engaged in the import, supply and distribution
of various petroleum products. Its ultimate parent companies are Royal Dutch
Petroleum Company and the Shell Transport and Trading Company Ltd. The Shell
retail motor fuel network consists of a number of company-owned outlets and a
number of dealer-owned outlets operating under the Shell brand. In addition,
lubricating products are supplied to a number of other outlets, and to other
customers.
4. The
buyers are garages, workshops, car rental depots, industrial sites and other
locations which are involved in operations requiring the product, e.g. the
servicing of cars. Shell stated that a significant number of outlets had the
supplier's equipment.
(c)
The product
5. The
product with which the notified agreement is concerned consists of lubricants,
that is any oil based product which is used for the lubricating of a motor
vehicle. While lubricating oils are to some extent interchangeable, the
product is usually differentiated as follows:
(a) top
engine oils;
(b) other
multigrades;
(c) monogrades;
and
(d) two-stroke
oils.
Top
engine oils appear to be the largest category of sales.
(d)
The market
6. The
characteristics of the market are described at length in the Authority's
decision in respect of similar Burmah Castrol agreements. (Decision No. 361,
paras 6 to 12).
7. Since
outlets retailing lubricants are located throughout the State, the appropriate
geographical market in this case is the State.
(e)
The notified agreement
8. The
standard agreement is between Shell and the ´user'. Shell agrees to
provide and deliver specified items of lubrication bay equipment, of a stated
value, and to make a contribution towards the installation charges; the user
agrees to pay a contribution towards the installation costs (clause 1). For as
long as the agreement remains in effect, the user agrees to confine purchases
of automotive lubricants to be stocked in or dispensed through the equipment to
brands marketed by Shell, and to place orders in as large quantities as
possible and to give notice when delivery is required (clause 2). The
equipment remains the property of Shell, who are allowed to put nameplates on
it, but it will be maintained by the user, except that labour charges will be
borne by Shell when carried out by its appointed agents, for a specified number
of years or to the date of earlier termination (clause 3). Upon expiry or
earlier termination, the user must return the equipment to Shell, or if this is
not possible on earlier termination, the user must pay to Shell one tenth of
the sum expended by Shell for each unexpired year of the agreement (clause 3).
The equipment may be inspected by Shell (clause 4). Shell may terminate the
agreement in specified circumstances (clause 9). The user may also terminate
the agreement on giving not less than three months' notice, and he has the
option to either return the equipment or purchase it at a price calculated in
accordance with clause 3 (clause 10). Shell stated that the agreement was
normally for a period of ten years.
(f)
Views of Shell
9. In
its initial submission, Shell stated that it believed that there were 50 to 60
sellers of lubricants on the Irish market, with 16 or so leading sellers. Some
of the highest market shares were held by those companies outside the broader
motor fuel sector, and the motor fuel companies had relatively small shares.
It estimated that there were about 1,500 outlets using this type of product,
with estimated sales in 1992 of 5 million litres and a value of £5m at
wholesale prices. Shell maintained that there were no substantial barriers to
suppliers entering the market. There was no need to establish brand
recognition because many motorists did not know which brand of lubricant was
used by garages. The product could be imported easily or sourced locally, and
the equipment could be sourced locally. Many brands of oil, while not
identical, were interchangeable. The equipment could be supplied by others,
and was interchangeable between brands of oil. Shell stated that it was hoped
that the user would use its products in the equipment as much as possible. In
practice, products of other companies could be and were being used.
10. In
support of its request for a certificate, Shell stated that the agreement
facilitated the establishment of more competition in the relevant market by
allowing outlets to have access to relatively expensive equipment. There was
no guarantee that its products would be used, and Shell had never withdrawn the
equipment from a user who had not used the applicant's products. Shell claimed
that the provision of the equipment did not tie-in the user with its products,
but, somewhat perversely, it encouraged entry by other companies which might
decide against spending money on the provision of equipment, and concentrate
solely on the supply of the products. It believed that the agreement did not
appreciably affect trade in the State.
11. In
support of its request for a licence, Shell stated that, insofar as it provided
for the supply of the product at the sites for a period of years, the agreement
contributed to the continuous distribution of the product and enhanced
distribution in the market as a whole. The equipment was expensive, but the
agreement allowed for its dissemination in the market generally. Provision of
the equipment saved the user a great deal of money, and facilitated the
operation of many small businesses in the State. Shell maintained that the EC
had been developing a policy on small and medium-sized enterprises generally
´and thus it would be innocuous if the EC's or Ireland' s competition
policy was harsh on such businesses.' The Authority should be anxious to
ensure that its application of the competition rules did not unduly restrict
the development and maintenance of an Irish small and medium-sized business
sector. In respect of the restriction on use of the equipment, Shell
maintained that it would appear inequitable for it to provide equipment to the
user and then for the users to be able to store products from competitors.
Shell submitted that the requirements imposed were not indispensable given the
nature of the agreement. A licence was sought for the duration of the
agreement and for a period of five years. If the Authority only granted a
licence for the duration of the agreement then the agreement would never
actually work in practice because Shell would only conclude agreements after
the licence had been issued.
(g)
Subsequent developments
12. Following
the decisions relating to Burmah Castrol lubricating oil equipment agreements
(Decisions Nos. 361, 380 and 407), the Authority wrote to Shell that it
proposed to take a similar view regarding the notified Shell agreement. It
stated that, should the agreement be amended so that it had a maximum duration
of five years, the Authority would be able to grant a licence to the amended
agreement. On 31 October 1995, Shell submitted a proposed amended agreement,
in which the duration of the agreement, in clause 3, would be five years.
Clause 3 was also to be amended to provide that, where it was not possible to
return the equipment on earlier termination, the user had to pay Shell one
fifth of the sum expended by Shell for each unexpired year of the agreement.
Shell submitted an amended agreement made with Murphy & Gunn Ltd of
Tallaght, Co Dublin, dated 22 November 1995, and stated that it was in the
process of concluding similar agreements with other users.
Assessment
(a)
Applicability of Section 4(1)
13.
Section
4(1) of the
Competition Act, 1991, prohibits and renders void all agreements
between undertakings which have as their object or effect the prevention,
restriction or distortion of competition in trade in any goods or services in
the State or in any part of the State.
The
undertakings
14. Shell
and the resellers who are party to the notified standard agreement are all
engaged in the supply and distribution of lubricating oils for gain, among
other activities, and they are therefore ´undertakings' within the meaning
of
Section 3(1) of
the Act. The notified agreement is an agreement between
undertakings. The relevant product market is that of lubricating oils for
resale, and particularly that part which is supplied to garages, workshops,
etc. The relevant geographical market is the State.
The
agreement
15. The
main feature of the Shell lubrication bay equipment loan agreement is that, for
as long as the agreement remains in effect, the user agrees to confine
purchases of automotive lubricants to be stocked in or dispensed through the
equipment to brands marketed by Shell, and that the usual duration of the
agreement was ten years.
16. The
equipment which is the subject of the agreement is owned by Shell, is loaned to
the user, and may be reclaimed by Shell in certain circumstances. Since the
equipment is owned by Shell, it has a significant proprietorial interest in the
equipment. The Authority quite clearly accepts that
Section 4(1) does not call
into question the existence of the property right. The exercise of a property
right, however may be anti-competitive in nature, and may therefore fall within
the scope of the activity prohibited by
Section 4(1).
17. The
essential feature of the arrangements under review is that Shell loans
equipment to another party, in return for which the latter agrees to use the
equipment exclusively for Shell products. There can be no general presumption
under the
Competition Act either in favour or against exclusive use of
equipment obligations, and each case must be examined on its merits in the
light of the prevailing economic circumstances. An obligation on a reseller to
use equipment supplied by the supplier only for the storage and sale of the
supplier's goods would not, in the view of the Authority,
per
se
offend against
Section 4(1), unless it had the effect of ensuring that only the
goods of that supplier could be sold by the reseller. The use of equipment for
the goods of a competitor results in the latter getting a ´free ride' in,
and a competitive advantage from, the use of equipment for which the competitor
did not pay. If exclusive use of the equipment, however, meant, in a
particular set of circumstances, that the goods of only one supplier could be
handled by the reseller, this would amount to exclusive purchasing. The
reseller could not purchase competing goods from other suppliers, nor could
competitors sell to that reseller.
18. In
the present case, the requirement that the equipment only be used for the
dispensing of Shell products, while it means that it cannot be used for the
products of competitors, does not necessarily have the object or effect that
the user of the equipment must purchase lubricating oils exclusively from
Shell. While in many workshops there would be space for the installation of
equipment for storing and dispensing the oil of one or more competitors,
equally, in many instances there would not. What space there is may be better
used for other commercial purposes. The existing equipment may be geared to
the outlet's total requirements, and it cannot be expected that sales of
lubricants would increase if additional equipment were installed. While
workshops could return the equipment, they face strong disincentives to doing
so. It would be possible to stock the products of competitors which are
supplied in small containers, but this might not provide effective competition
to oil from dispensing equipment, since it would be less convenient and would
be more costly. In these circumstances, the Authority considers that the
exclusive use of equipment requirement would in many cases represent an
exclusive purchasing requirement. While a single agreement of this type would
have no impact on competition in the relevant market, a network of such
agreements, as in this case, added to a network of similar agreements made by
at least one other oil supplier (Burmah Castrol), would restrict competition to
some degree. The standard agreement to supply equipment provided it is used
exclusively for Shell lubricants, therefore, offends against
Section 4(1).
(b)
Applicability of Section 4(2)
19. Under
Section 4(2), the Competition Authority may grant a licence in the case of any
agreement or category of agreements which, ´having regard to all relevant
market conditions, contributes to improving the production of goods or
provision of services or to promoting technical or economic progress, while
allowing consumers a fair share of the resulting benefit and which does not -
(i) impose
on the undertakings concerned terms which are not indispensable to the
attainment of those objectives;
(ii) afford
undertakings the possibility of eliminating competition in respect of a
substantial part of the products or services in question'.
20. In
the opinion of the Authority, the equipment loan agreement as notified did not
fulfil the conditions necessary for the grant of a licence under
Section 4(2)
of
the Act. The amended agreement, involving a reduction in the duration of
the agreement from ten years to five, does, in the Authority's view, satisfy
the conditions of
Section 4(2).
21. In
the case of the notified agreement, the Authority does not consider that there
are any benefits in the way of economies of bulk distribution from an equipment
exclusivity requirement, since the agreement relates to only a small proportion
of Shell's lubricants for resale and deliveries appear to be in relatively
small volumes. There would appear to be no, or only a minimal, reduction in
distribution costs which could be shared with consumers. The Authority accepts
that in some cases high quality equipment has been supplied, and that high
quality technical services are provided by Shell, which promote technical
progress, and that these benefit consumers. It is likely that the particular
equipment would not have been installed in the workshops unless exclusive use
of the equipment had been a requirement. Shell would have been unlikely to
provide equipment if it could have been used freely for competitive products.
In this respect, exclusive use for a period of time can be regarded as
indispensable to securing the benefits from the supply of the equipment, which
may be shared fairly with consumers.
22. The
agreement has a foreclosure effect against new suppliers, since it represents
exclusive purchasing. Because the agreement had a term of ten years, the
Authority considered that this presented the danger of long-term foreclosure of
the market to competitors' products. It applied in a large number of cases,
and could not be regarded as insignificant in its effects. An exclusive use
requirement for this length of time would afford the possibility of eliminating
competition in respect of a substantial part of the products in question, and
could not be regarded as indispensable. The notified agreement did not,
therefore, satisfy all the conditions of
Section 4(2).
23. Shell
has reduced the period of the agreement, and thus the term of exclusive use of
equipment, from ten years to five years. In addition, under clause 10, the
user is able at any time to terminate the agreement on giving not less than
three months' notice, and he must then return the equipment or purchase it at a
price calculated in accordance with clause 3. On giving the required notice
before the end of the term, therefore, the user has the option of returning the
equipment or of purchasing it at its discounted value. If the equipment is
retained by the user, it can be used for any lubricants of the workshop's
choosing. As in the case of the Burmah equipment loan agreements (Decision No.
407), the Authority considers therefore that, as the period of the exclusive
use of equipment requirement is limited to the period of the agreements, which
have a maximum duration of five years, and the user has an option to purchase
the equipment at any time, this does not afford the possibility of eliminating
competition to a substantial degree. Since all the conditions of
Section 4(2)
have been fulfilled, a licence can be granted for the agreement with Murphy
& Gunn Ltd, dated 22 November 1995.
The
Decision
24. Shell
and the users who are party to the standard form lubrication bay equipment loan
agreement are undertakings within the meaning of the
Competition Act. The
notified agreement is an agreement between undertakings, and it operates within
the State. The Authority considers that the notified agreement offended
against
Section 4(1) of the
Competition Act, and that it did not satisfy the
conditions set out in
Section 4(2) of
the Act. The Authority considers,
however, that the amended agreement with Murphy & Gunn Ltd, dated 22
November 1995, offends against
Section 4(1) of
the Act, but that it satisfies
the requirements of
Section 4(2), and it grants a licence to the amended
agreement and to other agreements which are amended in the same way. The
Authority considers that, given the five year duration of the agreements, the
licence should be granted for a period of ten years from the date when the
agreement was amended, to expire on 21 November 2005. The Authority does not
consider it necessary to attach any conditions to the licence.
The
Licence
25. The
Authority grants the following licence:
The
Competition Authority grants a licence under
Section 4(2) of the
Competition
Act, 1991 to the Irish Shell Ltd standard form lubrication bay equipment loan
agreement (notification no. CA/65/93) notified under
Section 7 on 30 November
1993, as amended by the agreement with Murphy & Gunn Ltd, dated 22 November
1995, on the grounds that, in the opinion of the Authority, all the conditions
of
Section 4(2) of the
Competition Act, 1991 have been fulfilled.
The
licence shall apply from 22 November 1995 to 21 November 2005.
The
licence shall also apply in respect of the Shell equipment loan agreement with
any other party where it has been amended to accord with the agreement with
Murphy & Gunn Ltd.
For
the Competition Authority
Patrick
M. Lyons
Chairman
19
December 1995
© 1995 Irish Competition Authority
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