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From:brendan.devlin@enron.com
To:paul.hennemeyer@enron.com
Subject:RE: Eu Liberalisation: Procedure and Substance of an Art 86(3)
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Date:Tue, 3 Jul 2001 08:26:00 -0700 (PDT)

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COMMENTS BELOW TO PAUL'S QUESTIONS.



From: Paul Hennemeyer/Enron@EUEnronXGate on 07/03/2001 09:51 AM GDT
To: Brendan Devlin/EU/Enron@Enron, Richard Shapiro/NA/Enron@Enron, Peter
Styles/LON/ECT@ECT, Paul Dawson/Enron@EUEnronXGate, Doug
Wood/Enron@EUEnronXGate
cc: Nailia Dindarova/LON/ECT@ECT

Subject: RE: Eu Liberalisation: Procedure and Substance of an Art 86(3)
Directive

Devlin

Thanks for the note. Very useful. A few questions for clarification:

1. Can the Directive do nothing about legal unbundling? As I understand it
this involves no change in ownership but just a requirement
that the owners of Company X spin off their network operations into a
different company - which they would still own.

NO; ANY CHANGE IN THE LEGAL STRUCTURE WOULD BE OUTSIDE THE SCOPE OF SUCH A
DIRECTIVE. EVEN IF ULTIMATE OWNERSHIP REMAINS UNCHANGED, FORCING A
STRUCTURAL CHANGE WOULD NOT BE POSSIBLE. MIND YOU, IT WAS UNTIL RECENTLY
THOUGHT THAT THE COMMISSION COULD NOT REQUIRE DIVESTMENTS IN THE CONTEXT OF A
MERGER REVIEW.

2. It seems that your statement that "only States can be addressed" opens up
the possibility that States could, following an 86-based Directive, undertake
a range of actions - including forcing a more level playing field by
requiring more unbundling and regulated TPA. Is this correct?

YES

3.What specific actions might be undertaken by the Commission as part of
86-based
Directive?


Thanks, Paul




-----Original Message-----
From: Devlin, Brendan
Sent: 02 July 2001 17:55
To: Shapiro, Richard; Styles, Peter; Hennemeyer, Paul; Dawson, Paul; Wood,
Doug
Cc: Dindarova, Nailia
Subject: Eu Liberalisation: Procedure and Substance of an Art 86(3) Directive

This e-mail is for background information so that we can have a clear view on
the prospects and content of an eventual Art 86(3) Directive.

The current European Commission's Directive is based on Art. 95 of the
Amsterdam Treaty; this is an harmonisation Directive, which means that it can
address any issue likely to impede cross-border flows of goods and services,
and can have positive effects (such as requirements to set up a regulator).
An Art 86(3) Directive, on the other hand, can only address concerns within
the context of Art 86: Art 86 stipulates that member States of the EU shall
not favour government owned entities or other entities, to whom public
service obligations (PSO) have been assigned, unless such favour is necesary
for that entity to carry out it's P.S.O.. Art 86(3) Directives are
prohibitive and preventative, rather than prescriptive.

In short, Art. 86 means that the competition rules apply to EdF, and if the
member state won't enforce a level field, the Commission will.

In procedural terms, Art. 86(3) Directives do not have to be passed by the
Council (member states) nor by the Parliament, though in practice the
Commission does not act unilaterally and seeks tacit cover. Thus, in the
Telecomms sector, when the member States found it too hard politically to
liberalise, they engineered an impasse in Council and invited sotto voce the
Commission to force them to do it. In effect, the Stockholm Council's
Conclusions are a similar coded request (the reference to competition rules
would include Art. 86). Once before the College of the Commission, an Art
86(3) directive has to be agreed by simple a majority vote of all
Commissioners (even if they are absent, so you need 11 positive votes). It
cannot be blocked by a single Commissioner. Even if France/Germany combine,
there would be 16 positive votes and four against.

What can an Art 86(3) Directive do?

-- Enforce accounts and management unbundling (not legal unbundling as that
entails change of ownership).
-- Abolish any exclusive rights that have an anti-competitive effect (such as
exclusive use of infrastructure, rights to import/export, interconnector
rights?).
-- Broadly speaking, force liberalisation in a utilities sector.

What an Art 86(3) Directive cannot do?

-- Force any legal person to do anything (companies, individuals etc). Only
States can be addressed.
-- Address positive regulatory issues (set tariffs, create regulators,
capacity upgrades, etc).

In Summary: An Art 86(3) directive would be different from the directive
already on the table; it would be more focussed and less general and would
provide remedies for identified anti-competitive activities.

Action: We should be in a position to place before the Commission an array
of anti-competitive actions that can be remedied by an Art. 86(3) Directive,
especially with regard to exclusive rights..

Brendan Devlin