The European Commission has fined three automotive starter battery manufacturers, Exide, FET (including its predecessor Elettra) and Rombat, as well as the trade association EUROBAT, a total of around €72 million for participating in a long-running cartel concerning automotive starter batteries, together with Clarios (formerly JC Autobatterie), in breach of EU antitrust rules. This cartel restricted competition and may have led to higher prices for the manufacturing of cars and trucks in Europe.
Clarios was not fined, as it revealed the cartel to the Commission under the leniency programme. In parallel, the Commission has closed proceedings against automotive starter battery manufacturer Banner and the service provider Kellen.
The infringement
The Commission's investigation revealed that, for more than 12 years, the four manufacturers, Clarios, Exide, FET and Rombat, together with EUROBAT, entered into anticompetitive agreements and engaged in concerted practices related to the sale of automotive starter batteries to automotive original equipment manufacturers ("OEMs") in the European Economic Area ("EEA"). Automotive starter batteries are primarily used in vehicles powered by combustion engines, such as passenger cars or trucks. Lead is the most important input material and cost factor for these batteries, and battery producers pay a premium to suppliers to procure lead with the necessary quality.
The Commission found that the four manufacturers, helped by the trade association EUROBAT, agreed to create and publish premiums calculated based on their purchasing price of lead (the so-called EUROBAT premiums) in the industry publication Metal Bulletin. They also agreed to use such premiums in the price negotiations with their respective OEM customers, e.g. manufacturers of cars and trucks, to ensure that the resulting surcharge was kept at a level higher than it would have been without such agreement.
In general, a surcharge is a legitimate tool suppliers use to reflect changes in raw material costs in product prices, allowing them to transfer this cost risk to the customers. However, it is clearly illegal for suppliers to secretly coordinate to introduce and use such a surcharge as an industry-wide standard.
The following table details the duration of each company's involvement in the infringement:
| Company | Duration | Number of years |
| Clarios | 1 July 2005 - 26 September 2017 | 12,23 |
| FET (including its predecessor Elettra) | 1 July 2005 - 31 December 2017 | 12,5 |
| Rombat | 1 July 2005 - 31 December 2017 | 12,5 |
| Exide | 1 July 2005 - 31 December 2017 | 12,5 |
| EUROBAT | 1 July 2005 - 31 December 2017 | 12,5 |
Today's decision concludes that the conduct of the four automotive starter battery manufacturers and EUROBAT constitutes a single and continuous infringement, amounting to an infringement by object under Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union ('TFEU') and Article 53 of the EEA Agreement, which prohibit agreements and other restrictive business practices that may affect trade and prevent or restrict competition within the Single Market.
Fines
The fines were set on the basis of the Commission's 2006 Guidelines on fines .
In setting the level of the fine, the Commission considered various elements, including the average of the manufacturers' EEA annual value of sales of automotive starter batteries to OEMs producing automotive vehicles and to their service network of authorized repairers. It also took into account the duration, the serious nature of the infringement, as well as its geographic scope, and the market shares of the companies concerned on the EEA market.
Clarios (including its parent companies Johnson Controls International PLC and Johnson Controls, Inc.) cooperated with the Commission under the leniency programme ( 2006 Leniency Notice ) and therefore received full immunity for revealing the cartel to the Commission. FET (including one of its parent companies Resonac) and Rombat (including its parent company Metair) cooperated with the Commission under the leniency programme and received a fine reduction of 50% and 30% respectively.
The fine imposed on Dofin, which for some time was the parent company of Elettra, is capped to €0 as the company is currently not economically active and has no turnover. The fine imposed on EUROBAT for its facilitating role is set at €125,000 as a lump sum. Fining EUROBAT in addition to its members sends an important signal that trade associations need to make sure they do not facilitate conduct or contacts between their members that infringe competition rules.
Several companies submitted a claim for inability to pay under point 35 of the Commission's 2006 Guidelines on fines . The Commission carefully and objectively assessed each applicant's financial situation and granted a reduction of the fine to one of the companies concerned. In addition, the Commission in its discretion granted several companies the possibility to pay their fine in a number of pre-set annual instalments.
The breakdown of the fines imposed on each company is as follows:
| Company | Fine |
| Clarios | €0 |
| FET | €6.11 million |
|
€5.366 million |
| Elettra (FET's predecessor) | €15.594 million |
|
€0 |
| Rombat | €20.218 million |
|
€11.557 million |
| Exide | €30 million |
| EUROBAT | €125,000 |
Background
Automotive starter batteries provide an electric current to the starting motor, which starts the engine in cars powered by traditional combustion engines. They also supply power to the electrical equipment of cars.
In all types of automotive starter batteries, lead is the most important input material and cost factor. To be suitable for use in automotive starter batteries, lead must be purer and have certain additives as compared to the lead commonly traded on the London Metal Exchange. Automotive starter battery manufacturers pay a premium to their lead suppliers for the procurement of lead with these qualities.
The case concerns automotive starter batteries sold to car producers in the EEA for use (i) in new cars; and (ii) as replacements (but only if sold via the car producers' service network of authorised repairers).
The Commission's investigation started on 26 September 2017 following an application under the Commission's 2006 Leniency Notice submitted by Johnson Controls International PLC, including its subsidiary Clarios (formerly JC Autobatterie). Resonac (and its subsidiary FET) as well as Metair (and its subsidiary Rombat) submitted leniency applications after the Commission had sent requests for information.
On 30 November 2023, the Commission opened formal proceedings and sent a Statement of Objections ('SO') to five automotive starter battery manufacturers, EUROBAT and the service provider Kellen. Responses to the SO were received between March and April 2024. Following the assessment of the SO responses and the oral hearing, the Commission has decided to close proceedings against the automotive starter battery manufacturer Banner and the service provider Kellen.
Article 101 TFEU and Article 53 of the EEA Agreement prohibit agreements and other restrictive business practices that may affect trade and prevent or restrict competition within the Single Market. The implementation of Article 101 TFEU is defined in Regulation 1/2003 .
Fines imposed on companies found in breach of EU antitrust rules are paid into the general EU budget. These proceeds are not earmarked for particular expenses, but Member States' contributions to the EU budget for the following year are reduced accordingly. The fines therefore help to finance the EU and reduce the burden for taxpayers.