
Publication
Asia M&A trends: Future outlook
Whilst global M&A rose in deal value terms in 2024, both deal values and volumes fell in most parts of Asia.
Australia | Publication | 2月 2025
As businesses weigh up the wide range of options available to help them achieve their sustainability goals, the ACCC has published guidance on how competitors can work together to make better, faster progress in that space.
To understand the relevance of competition law to the achievement of sustainability goals, it must be acknowledged that disincentives exist for business to take meaningful steps towards sustainability, such as:
Potential upsides of sustainability are hard to quantify when a company is ‘going it alone’; this can manifest in companies seeking to understand approaches taken by peers, or to work together on industry-wide initiatives.
However, well-intentioned collaborations amongst competitors to further environmental and sustainability goals can fall foul of prohibitions against cartel conduct and other anti-competitive arrangements. Both in Australia and around the world, collaborations often involve some harmonisation or coordination of activity, thereby softening competition. For example, imposing criteria for supply chains to meet sustainability targets, establishing buying groups or imposing industry recycling levies.
Competition is a key driver of both innovation and cost reduction, and competition law is a vital tool for protecting the competitive process. Australian competition laws do so by prohibiting (among other things):
These prohibitions can present an obstacle to some forms of sustainability collaborations in Australia. However, where there is a genuine rationale to collaborate, particularly where no restraints are involved, many collaborations can be managed in a way that does not raise competition law risks. Where this is not possible, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) is very willing to engage to assess if they can be approved through its authorisation process.
At the end of 2024, the ACCC published guidance1 on ‘Sustainability collaborations and Australian competition law’. The guidance formalises the ACCC’s recognition of the clear need for urgent action targeting environmental sustainability (although it notes that the same principles would apply to other sustainability collaborations, such as modern slavery) and that competition law should not be seen as an immovable obstacle for collaboration on sustainability that can have a public benefit. The ACCC uses ”sustainability collaborations” to mean any discussions, agreements or other practices amongst business which are aimed at preventing, reducing or mitigating the adverse impact that economic activities have on the environment.
The ACCC’s guidance clarifies the application of competition law to sustainability collaborations – identifying ‘low-risk’ collaborations where participants can proceed without regulator engagement, as well as those that are higher risk and require engagement with the ACCC through its authorisation process. The guidance also contains information to assist businesses to more strongly advocate for authorisation of ‘high risk’ collaborations.
Where sustainability collaborations have the following characteristics, they are unlikely to raise competition law risks:
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There is no restriction on the customers or suppliers that participants may deal with. |
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Participants can pool and share information and evidence about suppliers’ sustainability credentials, so long as there is no restriction on how each participant deals with suppliers that fall short. |
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Non-binding industry targets are set and it is up to each participant to independently decide how they will meet those targets. |
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The collaboration does not involve the sharing of confidential and commercially sensitive information between participants. |
Sustainability collaborations which take the form of any of these practices are unlikely to have the effect of interfering with or damaging the competitive process in a meaningful way. If any collaborations were to go beyond these types of matters then ACCC authorisation may be required. It is advisable to set appropriate ‘guardrails’ from the outset, to ensure that a collaboration stays within the permissible areas of activity and does not unintentionally stray into higher risk areas.
The ACCC’s guidance outlines certain ‘high risk’ areas of potential collaboration. These include where the collaboration involves agreeing on the prices that will be charged or paid by participants, the markets participants will operate in, the customers or suppliers participants will deal with, participants’ supply of an output or purchase of an input, or the way in which participants will respond to a tender. If any of these areas are affected by a collaboration, there is a high risk of cartel conduct. Cartel conduct is prohibited outright, irrespective of its effect on competition. Such collaboration generally cannot occur without authorisation and so advice should be sought before any coordination or sharing of sensitive information begins.
The ACCC guidance provides the following examples of collaborations that are likely to raise cartel conduct risks:
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Businesses that ordinarily compete to acquire a certain input, agreeing to only buy the input from suppliers that meet particular sustainability criteria. |
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Suppliers agreeing to charge a levy on the sale of their products to customers, in order to fund an industry recycling scheme for their products at the end of life. |
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Rival manufacturers agreeing to use a new technology in their production process and to stop using older technology that emits more pollution. |
With that said, these types of collaborations may well be permissible if they are likely to result in meaningful public benefits that outweigh anti-competitive downsides, but will need to rely on other exemption pathways.
For collaborations likely to raise cartel risks, key regulatory pathways available include:
The guidance also notes that the ACCC is open to creating new class exemptions in this area, where there is a compelling case for a new category of collaboration to which a class exemption could be applied. However, this process would take considerable time and would be subject to approval by parliament.
A business planning to engage in conduct that may be considered a high-risk collaboration may apply to the ACCC to authorise the conduct. Authorisation is a public process involving stakeholder consultation, although businesses can request to keep some information confidential. In making its determination, the ACCC must weigh the public benefits of the proposed conduct against the likely public detriments, which include anti-competitive detriments. Any interested party may make a submission for consideration by the ACCC.
The guidance provides these key ‘tips’ for businesses seeking authorisation:
The guidance even commits the ACCC to providing a level of input that has not historically been available as part of this process – the ACCC is prepared to review a draft authorisation application and provide feedback on potential areas of concern and indicate where more information or justification may be needed. This option is likely to be of significant utility, although it may impact timelines.
One of the issues facing proponents seeking authorisation for high-risk collaborations to date has been uncertainty about the weight the ACCC will give to sustainability goals in assessing whether or not to grant an authorisation. Nonetheless, the ACCC has previously granted authorisation for arrangements that involve sustainability-related public benefits including industry or product stewardship, recycling initiatives, reductions in plastic, reductions in greenhouse gas emissions or supporting the transition to renewable energy. Further, the guidance makes clear that the ACCC “[accepts] that a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions is a public benefit of considerable weight.” This should provide confidence to businesses seeking a way to legitimately work together to help Australia reach its emissions reduction targets or other environmental goals.
The guidance acknowledges the lengthy authorisation process can take up to six months. This has historically made it a relatively unattractive option for businesses seeking to act quickly. The guidance confirms what has been happening in practice for some time; the ACCC will streamline the process where there do not appear to be significant detriments associated with the conduct, and/or the application deals with subject matter or an industry with which the ACCC has previous experience. In this situation, the ACCC will consult publicly after its draft determination, but not before. Where applicable, this approach will trim months from the usual authorisation timeline. For example, a recent authorisation granted to the Business Renewables Buying Group to pool their electricity demand and conduct a joint procurement process for renewable energy was obtained in only two months.
Interim authorisation is also an option where applicants wish to move more quickly. This allows parties to engage in the proposed conduct while the ACCC considers the substantive application for authorisation. Decisions about interim authorisations are generally made within just 28 days of request (and sometimes, within an even shorter period).
Proponents will also be assisted by articulating public benefits arguments in a compelling way, which could reduce clearing time by some weeks or months. The ACCC’s guidance indicates this can be done by:
Another example of authorisation for sustainability purposes is the ACCC’s interim authorisation2 on 18 July 2024 for the major supermarkets to continue their collaboration to recycle stockpiled soft plastics and continue with the in-store collection program. While the substantive authorisation process is still underway, the ACCC noted the importance of the interim authorisation to “keep the stockpiles out of landfills and… enable the supermarkets to process the stockpiles with the requisite sense of urgency, without any disruption.”
It is pleasing to see the ACCC is seeking to confirm its practice in approaching sustainability initiatives and other enterprises that further Australia’s achievement of its sustainability goals.
The ACCC’s guidance confirms that it sees these initiatives in a similar way to regulators in other countries,3 many of whom have analogous guidance intended to “ensure that competition law does not impede legitimate collaboration between businesses that is necessary for the promotion or protection of environmental sustainability”.4 For example:
This Guidance follows a similar format to the ACCC’s guidance, setting out examples of non-problematic cases, and providing guidance on borderline cases. Unlike the ACCC guidance, however, the CMA Guidance expressly notes that agreements to “do something jointly which none of the parties could do individually” are unlikely to create restrictive effects in breach of competition law. Since this is generally the aim of sustainability collaborations, this statement could have broad implications in the UK.
The final guidance liberates businesses working together on low-risk collaborations, particularly in the small to medium business sector. For larger businesses seeking to implement innovative, complex collaborations and joint schemes, perhaps with multiple investors, obtaining expert competition law advice early in the process, on a case-by-case basis, and early ACCC engagement where appropriate, will remain vital.
Publication
Whilst global M&A rose in deal value terms in 2024, both deal values and volumes fell in most parts of Asia.
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