Bureau Fights to Safeguard Contract Integrity for FIFA 26

Competition Bureau Canada

GATINEAU (Québec), Competition Bureau

The Competition Bureau has launched a new reporting tool to help the public and business community report potential collusive agreements between competitors related to the FIFA World Cup 26. The new tool will help the Bureau identify this type of illegal agreement between competitors bidding on contracts linked to the 2026 tournament, which Canada will jointly host with the United States and Mexico.

The Bureau urges anyone with information regarding bidders who are entering into collusive agreements, to win contracts linked to the World Cup, to report it using the reporting tool.

Collusion undermines fair competition, threatens the integrity of markets and increases the cost and risk of doing business.

Collusion can take many forms, such as competitors agreeing to:

  • Fix the price of a product or service (price-fixing)
  • Rig the outcome of a bidding process (bid-rigging)
  • Not compete with each other (non-compete)
  • Fix wages (wage-fixing)
  • Refrain from hiring each other's employees (no-poaching)

To proactively deter and detect collusion, the Competition Bureau is working with the host cities of Toronto and Vancouver, and recognizes their commitment to fair and transparent public procurement processes while entering into contracts for the World Cup.

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