2013/198/EU: Commission Decision of 27 June 2012 on the State aid SA.28356 (C 37/... (32013D0198)
EU - Rechtsakte: 08 Competition policy

COMMISSION DECISION

of 27 June 2012

on the State aid SA.28356 (C 37/09, ex N 226/09) — Habidite Alonsotegi

(notified under document C(2012) 4194)

(Only the Spanish text is authentic)

(Text with EEA relevance)

(2013/198/EU)

THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular the first subparagraph of Article 108(2) thereof(1),
Having regard to the Agreement on the European Economic Area, and in particular Article 62(1)(a) thereof,
Having regard to the Decision by which the Commission decided to initiate the procedure laid down in Article 108(2) of the Treaty, in respect of the aid C 37/09 (ex N 226/09)(2),
Having called on interested parties to submit their comments pursuant to the provisions cited above, and having regard to their comments,
Whereas:

I.   

PROCEDURE

(1) On 15 April 2009 the Spanish authorities notified for legal certainty purposes two contracts, concluded on 15 December 2006, between BIZKAILUR S.A. (hereinafter "BIZKAILUR") and the Diputación Foral de Bizkaia (hereinafter "the Diputación"), on the one hand, and on the other hand, by the private undertakings Habidite Technologies País Vasco S.A. (hereinafter "Habidite"), Grupo Empresarial AFER S.L. (hereinafter "the AFER group") and the Habidite group.
(2) On 2 December 2009 the Commission opened a formal investigation procedure pursuant to Article 108(2) of the Treaty with regard to the notified contracts (hereinafter: "the opening Decision")(3). The opening Decision was published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
on 12 March 2010(4).
(3) The Spanish authorities did not submit comments on the opening Decision. Habidite commented on the opening Decision by letter of 9 April 2010. These comments were transmitted to the Spanish authorities by letter of 15 April 2010, who replied by letter of 12 May 2010. No other third parties commented on the opening Decision.
(4) On 6 September 2010 Habidite requested access to the file documents originating from the Spanish authorities under Regulation (EC) 1049/2001(5). The Commission consulted the Spanish authorities on this request on 10 September 2010. The Spanish authorities replied on 13 September that they did not object to granting access to the requested documents to Habidite. The requested documents were transmitted to Habidite on 7 October 2010.
(5) The Commission requested additional information from the Spanish authorities by letters of 28 June 2010 – to which the Spanish authorities replied on 26 July 2010, and 8 December 2010 – to which the Spanish authorities replied on 14 January 2011.
(6) Habidite submitted additional comments and information on: 27 July 2010 – to which the Spanish authorities replied on 3 November 2011; 6 April 2011 (registered on 13 April 2011) – to which the Spanish authorities replied on 30 May 2011 (registered on 6 June 2011); and 7 July 2011. The Commission services met on 3 February 2011 in Brussels with representatives of Habidite, at the latter’s request.

II.   

BACKGROUND OF THE CASE

(7) The two contracts which are the subject of this Decision were concluded on 15 December 2006 between BIZKAILUR and the Diputación, on the one side, and on the other side, Habidite, the AFER group and the Habidite group.
(8) BIZKAILUR was a company 100 % owned by the Diputación whose social object was the purchase and adaptation of land for promoting industrial and social housing projects in the province of Bizkaia. As of June 2010 BIZKAILUR was merged, together with other public companies with similar scope of activity, into the current AZPIEGITURAK S.A.U., also 100 % owned by the Diputación, and which continues the same line of activities(6).
(9) Habidite, together with other linked companies in the Habidite group, is part of the private AFER group, headquartered in Ortuella, Bizkaia(7). At the date of the notification, the AFER group comprised a total of 13 companies(8) active in the construction and adjacent sectors. All companies in the AFER group were at the time majority-owned and controlled by […](9). According to the Diputación and Habidite, neither Habidite nor the AFER group constituted firms in difficulty within the meaning of Points 9, 10 and 11 of the
Community Guidelines on state aid for rescuing and restructuring firms in difficulty
(10) (hereinafter "the R&R Guidelines") at the time when the two notified contracts were concluded.
(10) The notified contracts were concluded to support a new investment project to be carried out by Habidite: the establishment of a factory of construction modules (hereinafter "the Habidite factory") in Alonsotegi, a village in the Gran Bilbao administrative area (
comarca
). On the date when the notified contracts were concluded, the Gran Bilbao
comarca
was deemed to be a region assisted under Article 107(3)(c) of the Treaty(11). The Habidite factory should have created 1 100 new jobs in this assisted area.
(11) The new factory would have produced the so-called "Habidite modules", i.e. prefabricated construction modules to be used for the direct assembly of homes/buildings. The Habidite modules were to be produced with a line assembly technology similar to the one used in the car manufacturing industry, and thereafter be transported and directly assembled at their future location. The product was considered to be innovative, not only because of the singular production technology involved, but also due to savings in time and resources in the assembly of the final product (buildings and homes), and to the use of materials allowing energy savings. The company had applied for several patents in relation to this product(12).
(12) According to information provided by the Diputación, the costs of this investment project in Alonsotegi were estimated at the time of signature of the two notified contracts at EUR 55 million, as follows:

Land

EUR 4,8 million

Industrial building

EUR 22,5 million

Land adaptation (urbanización)

EUR 4,04 million

Installations

EUR 24,0 million

Total

EUR 55,34 million

(13) The annual production of the projected Habidite factory was estimated to be of 3 500 houses during the initial years of the functioning of the factory, and 4 500 houses once full production capacity would have been reached.
(14) In order to understand the context in which the notified contracts were concluded on 15 December 2006, it is necessary to shortly describe the legal framework in which social housing is provided in the
País Vasco
(hereinafter "the Basque Country").
(15) Average real estate prices were higher in this autonomous community (
comunidad autónoma
) than in the rest of Spain before the beginning of the crisis in 2008, and continue to remain higher up to the date of this Decision. The Basque authorities seek to ensure access to housing to the more disadvantaged categories of citizens by providing social housing under the protected regime (
viviendas protegidas
) and under the semi-protected regime (
viviendas tasadas
). The nature of each of these two categories of social housing is explained below.
(16) The
Ley 2/2006 del suelo y de urbanismo
(13) (hereinafter "Regional Law 2/2006") established that:
(a) 40 % of the urban land qualified for construction shall be destined to protected (
viviendas protegídas
) and semi-protected regime houses (
viviendas tasadas
), in proportion of 20 % for each (Article 80.2. of the Regional Law 2/2006);
(b) from the extra-urban land qualified for construction, 55 % shall be reserved for protected regime housing (
viviendas protegídas
) and 20 % for semi-protected regime housing (
viviendas tasadas
) (Article 80.3. of the Regional Law 2/2006).
(17) Houses under the semi-protected regime housing (
viviendas tasadas
) belong to an intermediary category between social protection housing and houses sold freely in the market. The prices for semi-protected houses (
viviendas tasadas
) are limited by Regional Law 2/2006 to maximum 1,7 of the maximum prices for equivalent houses sold in fully-protected regime (
viviendas protegídas
). The maximum prices for the latter category in the province of Bizkaia are established on the basis of the
Orden
(Order) of 1.8.2004 of the Housing and Social Affairs Department(14), which established an initial regulated price that was to be thereafter indexed annually on the basis of the
ĺndice de Precios al Consumo
(Consumption Price Index) (IPC) determined by the
Instituto Nacional de Estadística
(Spanish National Institute of Statistics).
(18) According to the Diputacíon, in 2006, when the notified contracts were concluded, the resulting maximum prices for protected housing (
viviendas protegídas
) were the following:
— EUR 1 351,86/sqm for municipalities listed in Annex I of the Order of 1.8.2004;
— EUR 1 307,94/sqm for municipalities listed in Annex II to the Order of 1.8.2004;
— EUR 1 181,54/sqm for other municipalities;
— EUR 472,40/sqm for the annexes (garage/box etc.).
The prices for the
viviendas tasadas
were topped to a maximum 1,7 of the above-indicated prices.
(19) The Diputación informs that, when BIZKAILUR concluded with Habidite the notified contracts, the former was acting within the framework of
Ley 7/1985 de 2 de abril del 1985 reguladora de las Bases del Régimen Local
(Law 7/1985)(15), which gives to the municipalities the autonomy to administrate matters of local interest, including the provision of social housing (Art. 25). Based on Article 109.2 of the
Real Decreto 1372/1986
(Royal Decree 1372/1986) and on Article 79 of Law 7/1985 (in its consolidated version), the municipalities transfer to BIZKAILUR, be it free of charge or against a price, assets which are necessary for carrying out social housing objectives. At the time when the notified contracts were concluded, on 15 December 2006), the social housing objectives were defined in a Plan adopted by the Diputación in 2004 on the provision of social housing in this province during the period 2004-2007 – the
Plan Foral de actuación en materia de vivienda 2004-2007
(hereinafter “the Plan Foral”). According to the Diputación, the Plan Foral foresaw that BIZKAILUR would have provided over the period 2004-2007 a total of 3 000 homes in protected regime.
(20) Under the first contract - identified in the opening Decision as "Measure 1", hereinafter referred to as "the Land Contract" - the Diputación and BIZKAILUR undertake that the latter would have purchased and adapted for industrial use a surface totalling 101 430 sqm (81 600 sqm for the industrial plant, 5 300 sqm for offices and 14 300 sqm for industrial annexes) in the industrial area of Montealegre in Alonsotegi, within 24 months from the date of signature of the contract (Part Two, Article 1(ii) of the contract). BIZKAILUR would have transferred ownership of the adapted land surface to Habidite within 12 months from the date of signature of the contract (Part Two, Article 1(iii) of the contract), "free of any charge, expense or contribution", for a price equal to "the effective costs incurred by BIZKAILUR for its purchase" (Part Two, Article 1(vi) of the contract). This price would have been paid by Habidite within 7 years from the date of the transfer of ownership, in 4 equal instalments (of 25 % each), to be paid at the end the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th year (Part Two, Article 1(vii) of the contract).
(21) Under the second contract – identified in the opening Decision as "
Measure 2
", hereinafter referred to as "the Houses Contract" - the Diputación, be it directly or through BIZKAILUR, would have purchased from Habidite a total of 1 500 homes, of which 750 with a surface of less than 75 sqm. The Diputación or BIZKAILUR would have ordered the 1 500 homes between May 2007 and end of June 2010, so as to allow the delivery of the total number of 1 500 homes by May 2011.
(22) The contracted homes would have been built on land placed at the disposal of Habidite by BIZKAILUR, and then sold under the semi-protected regime (as
viviendas tasadas
), be it directly by the Diputación or BIZKAILUR, be it by Habidite itself, in respecting the maximum pricing provisions applicable (see recitals (14) to (19)). When the contracted homes were to be sold by the Diputación or BIZKAILUR, Habidite would not have acquired property of the land on which the houses were to be built. In such cases, it task would have been exclusively to build the homes.
(23) The Contract also allowed, on an exceptional basis, that for some of the contracted homes, Habidite or the AFER group could also have acted as promoters (Article A(f) of the Houses Contract). In such exceptional cases, Habidite or AFER would have first received ownership of the land necessary for the construction of the homes, then would have carried out the construction works, and finally, would have sold themselves the houses under the semi-protected regime (as
viviendas tasadas
). In such cases, Habidite or AFER would have only retained the stipulated price for the homes, as indicated below, while the part of the price corresponding to the land would have been transferred to the Diputación and/or BIZKAILUR.
(24) According to Article A(e) of the Houses Contract, the price to be obtained by Habidite for the 1 500 homes was as follows:
(a) homes over 75 sqm: 83 % of the price applied by BIZKAILUR for the living surface, plus 100 % of the price obtained for the annexes (garage, storage box);
(b) homes under 75 sqm: 83,30 % of the price obtained by BIZKAILUR for the living surface, plus 100 % of the price obtained for the annexes (garage, storage box, etc.)
(25) BIZKAILUR would thus have retained the rest of 17 %, or 16,70 % respectively, of the price obtained for the houses (except for the annexes – garage, storage box, etc. - where the entire sale price would have been for Habidite).
(26) In an example provided by the Diputación, for a house of 75 sqm to be sold under the semi-protected regime in 2006, Habidite would have obtained: EUR 143 060,58 (83 % of 75 sqm × EUR 1,351 × 1,7), plus EUR 28 107,6 for the annexes (100 % of 35 sqm × EUR 472,4), from the total price of EUR 200 459,5 at which BIZKAILUR would have sold the home under the semi-protected regime (as
viviendas tasadas
).
(27) According to Article A(g) of the Houses Contract, on an exceptional basis, part of the 1 500 homes contracted from Habidite could have been sold by the Diputación or BIZKAILUR at market price, in which case Habidite would have obtained the same percentages of the sale price as stipulated at Article A(e) – as indicated in recital (24).
(28) The Diputación and BIZKAILUR did not carry out a public tender before concluding the Houses Contract with Habidite.
(29) The Habidite project was eventually
de facto
abandoned. According to the Diputación, the main reason was that BIZKAILUR would have incurred higher-than-initially-estimated costs for the purchase and adaptation to industrial use of the land plot where the Habidite factory would have been set.
(30) The Diputación had informed(16) that from May 2007 until April 2008 BIZKAILUR had bought 205 487,73 sqm of land for this project, for which it had paid a total of EUR 4,7 million. According to the Diputación, the purchase of an additional 95 000 sqm was necessary, for which an additional cost of EUR 2,6 million was estimated. As to the costs for adapting the land for industrial use, in March 2009 they were estimated to be EUR 28,5 million.
(31) The ownership of the land already acquired by BIZKAILUR in view of this project has not been transferred to Habidite.

III.   

THE OPENING DECISION

(32) In the opening Decision of 2 December 2009(17), the Commission considered that both the Land Contract and the Houses Contract seemed to involve state aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty. Also, the aid did not appear to be compatible with the Treaty under any of the relevant state aid rules.
(33) In relation to the Land Contract, the Commission preliminarily concluded that the terms for the repayment of by the beneficiary of the land purchase and adaptation were similar to an interest-free loan, thus conferring to Habidite an advantage that it would not have been able to obtain on the market.
(34) In relation to the Houses Contract, the opening Decision noted that the price to be paid by BIZKAILUR for the 1 500 houses did not seem to be market-conform, as the beneficiary had estimated in its own business plan that the average price to be obtained from BIZKAILUR would have been of EUR 2 012,19/sqm, whereas the average price estimated to be obtained on the market would have been EUR 1 762,6/sqm.
(35) The Commission also noted a series of indications of an advantage to Habidite in the light of the judgment of the Court in
P&O Ferries
(18): a) the Houses Contract had not been concluded through public tender; b) the need for providing social housing was neither claimed nor demonstrated by the Diputación Foral de Bizkaia and BIZKAILUR; and c) the Houses Contract allowed for the possibility that part of the 1 500 homes purchased from Habidite be sold on the market. It also noted that that the purchase of a large part of the new factory's production in the first years of its functioning reduced the risks that are normally associated with a new investment project. Concerning the criterion of use of state resources and imputability to the State, the Decision pointed out in relation to potential aid involved in both contracts that BIZKAILUR is a company fully owned and controlled by the public authorities which performs tasks attributed by the State. With respect to selectivity, it was noted that the contracts clearly benefitted exclusively to Habidite and the AFER group. On distortion of competition and affectation of intra-Union trade, it was underlined that Habidite operates in the construction sector, where competition is very intense, and where aid to one company might harm companies from other Member States.
(36) In the opening Decision expressed doubts as regards the compatibility of the aid potentially involved in the notified contracts with the Treaty under the compatibility criteria laid down in the
Commission Guidelines on National Regional Aid for 2007-2013
(19), the
Commission Regulation (EC) No 800/2008 of 6 August 2008 declaring certain categories of aid compatible with the common market in application of Articles 87 and 88 of the Treaty
(20), and the
Temporary Framework for State aid measures to support access to finance in the current financial and economic crisis
(21).

IV.   

COMMENTS RECEIVED FROM THE SPANISH AUTHORITIES

(37) The Spanish authorities did not comment on the opening Decision (see recital 6 above), but provided additional information in answer to requests addressed by the Commission following the opening Decision, and also replied to some of the arguments put forward by Habidite. These replies and additional information are summarised in recitals (48) to (54).

V.   

COMMENTS RECEIVED FROM THIRD PARTIES

(38) As indicated in recitals (3) and (6), Habidite commented on the opening Decision on 9 April 2010, and provided additional information and comments on 27 July 2010, 6 April 2011 and 7 July 2011. With these submissions, Habidite on the one hand informed of relevant factual elements which were not known to the Commission at the time of the opening Decision, and on the other hand, brought forward arguments to contest the existence of aid in the notified contracts. These arguments and the additional factual information presented by Habidite are summarised recitals (39) to (47).
(39) First, Habidite informed that a third contract was concluded on the same date with the Land and Houses Contracts (15 December 2006). With this third contract (hereinafter “the Training Aid Contract”) the Diputación engaged to provide to Habidite training aid for the 1 100 new hires at the Habidite factory. In particular, the Diputación committed to cover training expenses for the1 100 employees, while Habidite committed on its side to preserve the 1 100 new jobs for at least 5 years. This contract was also
de facto
suspended due to the failure of the Habidite project (see recitals (29) to (31)).
(40) Second, Habidite provided documentation showing that the Habidite project was granted, by Decision of the
Gobierno Vasco
(the Basque government) of 30 December 2008, a regional aid totalling EUR 6 million, in application of the block-exempted regional aid scheme XR 175/2007(22).
(41) Third, Habidite informed that, following the suspension of the Habidite project, it filed, by letters of 6 February 2009 and 17 September 2009, administrative complaints for non-compliance by the Diputación and BIZKAILUR with the obligations assumed under the three contracts. Habidite also informed that it intended to pursue its claims before the competent Spanish court.
(42) Habidite argues that the Land and Houses Contracts do not fulfil the cumulative criteria for being qualified as involving state aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty.
(43) In respect of the elements of the notion of state aid other than the advantage element Habidite has presented the following arguments, common to both notified contracts:
(a) The two contracts do not involve a transfer of state resources because, to the extent that they involve market-conform operations, they do not involve a loss of public resources (according to the judgment of the Court in
PreussenElektra
(23)).
(b) The selectivity criterion should not be assumed to be met by the Houses Contract only because the contract was not concluded following public tender. Under the
Real Decreto Legislativo
No. 781/1986
de 18 de abril, por el que se aprueba el texto refundido de las disposiciones legales vigentes en materia de Régimen Local
(24) and Article 31 of
Directive 2004/18/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 31 March 2004 on public procurement
(25), such contracts can also be concluded directly, i.e. without public tender, when justified by the technical nature of the project or for protecting exclusivity rights.
(c) The unique nature of the Habidite prefabricated modules, in terms of the product characteristics and assembly technology, exclude the possibility of distortion of competition or affectation of trade between the Member States. In cases N-09084
Ristretto Group/Williams Scottsman
and N-04059
TDR Capital/Agelco
the Spanish competition authority defined the relevant market as “production, sale and rental of modular houses”. According to this definition, the uniqueness of the Habidite modules implies that it does not have any direct competitors who might be harmed by the two contracts. Moreover, in the Commission’s Decision in case M2473
Finnforest/Moelven Industrier
(26) it was established that the market for modular buildings is local or regional, because transport costs exclude the feasibility of competition from larger distances. The Habidite prices were at any rate very competitive, given the technological characteristics of the product.
(44) Habidite also put forward specific detailed arguments to contest that any of the two notified contracts would have conferred on it an advantage.
(45) In respect of the Houses Contract, Habidite argues in essence that it could not have derived any advantage because the stipulated sales prices were not above, but actually below market levels. In particular:
(a) The prices to be obtained by Habidite under the Houses Contract were by definition under market levels, considering that the houses would have been sold by BIZKAILUR at the regulated, below-market, levels of price established by law for houses to be sold under the semi-protected regime (
viviendas tasadas
) – see recitals (14) to (19).
(b) The average price to be obtained by BIZKAILUR for the homes constructed by Habidite, of EUR 2 010,19/sqm, was comparable to the average prices that BIZKAILUR was paying at the time under similar contracts for the construction of homes to be sold under the protected and semi-protected regime. For example, according to Habidite, in 2007 BIZKAILUR paid for the construction of social houses in Lemoiz EUR 2 277/sqm, in Ziérbana EUR 1 964/sqm, and in Areatza EUR 2 021/sqm. In 2007, the average price of houses sold as
viviendas tasadas
in four municipalities of Bizkaia was of EUR 1 808,69 EUR/sqm for houses of 84 sqm(27).
(c) At any rate, Habidite would have obtained only 83 %, and respectively 83,30 % of this average price of EUR 2 010,19/sqm (for houses of less than 75 sqm) on the basis of the Houses Contract – see recitals (24) to (25). In this respect, the opening Decision had erroneously noted that EUR 2 010,19/sqm was the price to be obtained by Habidite itself under this contract.
(d) The average price to be obtained by BIZKAILUR for the homes constructed by Habidite was well below price levels for equivalent housing sold freely on the market in the province. In 2007 the average price on the market in the province of Bizkaia was of EUR 2 921,9/sqm(28).
(46) In relation to the Land Contract, Habidite argues that it would not have derived any advantage because, according to its understanding, it would have had to repay to BIZKAILUR not only the actual costs incurred for the purchase and adaptation of the land, as stipulated in the contract, but also the financing costs incurred in relation to this operation.
(47) Furthermore, Habidite contests the costs estimated by the Diputación for the purchase and adaptation of the land. According to the Land Contract, BIZKAILUR had to purchase only 101 403 sqm for this project, and not 205 000 sqm, as the Diputación indicated. Furthermore, the costs for adapting 254 785 sqm of land to industrial use, which the Diputación claims to be of EUR 28,5 million, were erroneous. These costs seemed to correspond rather to costs that were incurred by the Diputación for a different project, namely the construction of the Kadagua highway, segment Kastrexana Arbuio-Sodupe. Habidite also argues that the land purchased for the Habidite project has been used illegally for depositing waste, as established also by a national court ruling (judgment no 148/2010 of 1 September 2010 of the first instance court of Barakaldo.

VI.   

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND REPLIES TO HABIDITE’S COMMENTS RECEIVED FROM THE SPANISH AUTHORITIES

(48) In reply to the Commission's questions, the Diputación confirmed that the Habidite project was suspended and the contractual obligations assumed vis-à-vis Habidite under the Land and Houses Contracts had not been performed.
(49) With respect to the Training Aid Contract (see recital (39) above), the Diputación draws attention to the fact that its commitment to provide training aid for the 1 100 employees of the Habidite factory was, according to Art.10 of the contract, conditional upon compliance with the relevant legislation, including therefore implicitly an eventual notification to the Commission or clearance under the applicable state aid rules. The Diputación confirms that the training aid in question was not disbursed.
(50) When inquired about the relationship between the notified contracts and the regional aid granted in 2008 by the Basque government, and whether both sets of measures concern the same investment project, the Diputación does not exclude that the investment project might be the same one, but draws attention to the fact that this does not necessarily mean that the eligible investment costs taken into account in 2008 by the regional government for the EUR 6 million aid are the same eligible costs of the project as it stood in 2006, when the notified contracts were signed. On this subject, the Diputación refers to the information provided by the Basque government and by Habidite.
(51) On the issue of the repayment due by Habidite under the Land Contract, and in particular, on Habidite’s argument that it interpreted its repayment obligations to include the financing costs related to the land purchase and adaptation, the Diputación points to the actual wording in the Land Contract. Article 1(vi) of the Land contract reads as follows: “The price to be paid by [Habidite] is equivalent to the effective cost assumed by BIZKAILUR S.A. […] for the purchase of the land described at […]” (emphasis added).
(52) Finally, according to the information available to the Diputación, Habidite and the AFER group as such did not qualify as firms in difficulty within the meaning of Points 9, 10 and 11 of the R&R Guidelines at the time when the two notified contracts were concluded.
(53) In its turn, the Basque government provided information on the regional aid of EUR 6 million granted to Habidite on 30 December 2008, including the eligible expenditure that was taken into account for the granting of this aid. The categories of eligible expenditures are detailed in the Table below:

Total investment (EUR million)

90,42

R&D expenses

13,71

Eligible expenses, of which:

76,71

IT

2,85

Land

5,5

Buildings

34,76

Technical equipment

19,14

Machinery

11,94

Other installations

0,737

IT equipment

0,965

Excess land and buildings

3,9

Total eligible expenses

72,8

Aid granted

6

(54) This aid has not been disbursed. Pursuant to Point 65 of the
Community Guidelines on National Regional Aid 2007-2013
(29), the Spanish authorities submitted to the Commission on 19 February 2009 the information sheet for aid granted to non-notifiable large investment projects under an authorised regional aid scheme(30).

VII.   

ASSESSMENT

(55) This Decision does not address (a) the Training Aid Contract concluded by the Diputación and Habidite on 15 December 2006 and (b) the regional aid of EUR 6 million granted to the Habidite group by the Basque government on 30 December 2008, for the reasons explained below.
(56) With respect to the Training Aid Contract concluded by the Diputación and Habidite on the same date as the notified contracts (see recitals (39) and (49)), the Commission notes that this measure has not been notified by the Spanish authorities, and was not covered by the opening Decision. According to an established practice(31), state aid is considered to be granted at the moment when there is a legally-binding, non-conditional commitment for its disbursement. Article 10 in the Training Aid Contract (see recital (49)) makes the commitment to disburse the training aid conditional upon compliance with the relevant legislation, including Union's state aid rules. It follows that the commitment to disburse training aid stipulated by this contract cannot be qualified as being non-conditional at the moment of conclusion of the contract. Furthermore, the Spanish authorities confirmed that the training aid foreseen by this contract has not been disbursed. At any rate, as the Habidite project in Alonsotegi did not materialise, this aid is unlikely to be disbursed in the future.
(57) This Decision does not address either the regional aid of EUR 6 million granted by the Basque government to Habidite on 30 December 2008 (see recitals (40) and (50)). However, it should be pointed out that the two notified contracts covered by this Decision as well as the regional aid granted in 2008 all refer to the same investment project, i.e. the setup of a Habidite modules factory in Alonsotegi. This assertion was not specifically contested by the Basque government or the Diputación (see in this sense recital (50)).
(58) Pursuant to Point 66 of the
Community Guidelines on National Regional Aid 2007-2013
(32), the Spanish authorities must ensure compliance with the provisions on cumulation of aid applicable to the 2008 regional aid grant.
(59) In addition, it must be recalled that, according to information provided by the Diputación (see recital (30)), the purchase of the land necessary for this investment project has started in May 2007, and several plots of land were successively purchased to this end until April 2008. Therefore the project has already started to be implemented in May 2007. Pursuant to Point 38 of the
Community Guidelines on National Regional Aid
2007-2013(33), in order to ensure that regional aid produces an incentive effect on the investment, aid may only be granted under aid schemes if the beneficiary has submitted an application for aid and the competent authorities have subsequently confirmed in writing, before the start of the work on the project, that it meets in principle the conditions of eligibility laid down in the scheme.
(60) Prior to assessing existence of aid and its compatibility with the Treaty the Commission must determine the applicable state aid rules
rationae temporis
.
(61) The Land and Houses Contracts were signed on 15 December 2006, but they were notified to the Commission for review only in April 2009. As already indicated in recital (56) above, according to an established practice(34), state aid is considered to be granted at the moment when there is a legally-binding, non-conditional commitment for its disbursement. In the case of the two notified contracts, such a legally-binding, non-conditional commitment was taken on 15 December 2006, when the Diputación and BIZKAILUR signed the two notified contracts. Therefore any aid involved in the two contracts is unlawful, since it was granted in breach of the notification obligation stipulated at Article 108(3) of the Treaty.
(62) According to the
CELF/SIDE
jurisprudence(35), any posterior notification or declaration of compatibility does not remove the unlawful character of aid granted in breach of the notification or stand-still obligation. As indicated in the
Commission notice on the determination of the applicable rules for the assessment of unlawful State aid
(36), the rules applicable to unlawful aid are those that were in force at the moment when the aid was granted – in the present case, on 15 December 2006. These principles are also confirmed by Points 63 and 105 of the
Community Guidelines on National Regional Aid 2007-2013
(37). The Commission shall therefore rely on the state aid rules in force on 15 December 2006, when the two notified contracts were signed, for assessing both existence of aid and compatibility.

VII.1.   

Existence of aid

(63) In order to ascertain whether the measures under scrutiny involve State aid, the Commission has to assess whether they fulfil the cumulative conditions of Article 107(1) of the Treaty. That provision states that "[s]ave as otherwise provided in the Treaties, any aid granted by Member State or through State resources in any form whatsoever which distorts or threatens to distort competition by favouring certain undertakings or the production of certain goods shall, in so far as it affects trade between Member States, be incompatible with the internal market". These cumulative criteria shall be examined in turn for each of the two notified contracts below.

VII.1.1   

Measure 1: Land Contract

(64) One of the criteria for determining whether a given measure involves state aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty is that State resources should be put at use, be it through disbursement of state resources or as revenue forgone by the State. Furthermore, according to an established jurisprudence(38), the resources of public or private undertakings on which the public authorities can exercise, be it directly or indirectly, a controlling influence, also qualify as State resources, to the extent that these resources remain under public control and therefore available to the competent public authorities. On this aspect, the Commission notes the following in recitals (65) and (66).
(65) First, the Land Contract was concluded by the Diputación and BIZKAILUR together. The contract contains several clear indications that, within the framework of this contract, BIZKAILUR was acting as ‧the arm‧ of the Diputación. The Land Contract was signed, on behalf of the Diputación and BIZKAILUR, by the
Diputado General
(Chairman) of the Diputación. Point 2 of the Preamble to the Land Contract stipulates that the Diputación, as 100 % owner of BIZKAILUR, pursues, among its public policy objectives, the promotion of new and innovative investment projects, job creation, and the facilitation of access to social housing for the citizens of the province of Bizkaia. Point 5 of the Preamble to the Land Contract stipulates that the contract is concluded in order to pursue, either directly or through public companies such as BIZKAILUR, the achievement of the economic and social policy objectives mentioned at Point 2 of the Preamble.
(66) Second, the resources to be deployed by BIZKAILUR for performing its obligations to purchase and adapt to industrial use the land for the setup of the Habidite factory in Alonsotegi were under the control of the Diputación. As of 1999 onwards BIZKAILUR had been 100 % owned and controlled by the Diputación(39). The following “organic” and “structural” indicators established by the
Stardust Marine
jurisprudence(40) for determining whether BIZKAILUR's actions within the ambit of the Land Contract were imputable to the State are met:
(a) the scope of BIZKAILUR's actions within the framework of the Land Contract were defined by the Diputación;
(b) for the purposes of this contract, BIZKAILUR was explicitly acting on behalf of the Diputación;
(c) the specific nature of BIZKAILUR’s activities, which were targeted exclusively at attaining public policy objectives, show that this undertaking was not a regular market operator competing on market terms.
(67) In the light of the indicators in recitals (65) and (66), the criterion of use of State resources and imputability to the State is found to be met in the case of the Land Contract.
(68) The Commission examined the terms and conditions for the repayment of the land to be facilitated by the Diputación and BIZKAILUR for the Habidite project in Alonsotegi, as established in Part Two, Article 1, recitals (vi) and (vii) of the Land Contract (see also recital (20) above), and on this basis observes the following in recitals (69) to (83).
(69) Under Part Two, Article 1(vi) of the Land Contract, the price to be paid by Habidite for the land purchased and adapted for industrial use by BIZKAILUR was the "effective cost assumed by BIZKAILUR […] for the purchase of the land […]". Habidite argued (see recital (46)) that, in its interpretation, this would have also included financing costs. Yet such an interpretation cannot be accepted. The reference to the “effective costs incurred for the purchase of the land” is sufficiently clear so as not to require further interpretation: it covers only the price effectively paid by BIZKAILUR for purchasing the land.
(70) It must therefore be concluded that, first, this wording clearly excludes the effective costs incurred by BIZKAILUR for adapting the land to industrial use.
(71) Second, the repayment facilities stipulated in Part Two, Article 1(vii) of the Land Contract, i.e. four years of "grace period", fractioning of the successive four yearly repayment instalments as 25 % of the price effectively paid by BIZKAILUR for the land purchase, are in practice equivalent to an interest-free loan. The wording of Article 1(vii) of the Land Contract cannot be interpreted to also include the financing costs for an equivalent loan, i.e. the interests that would have been charged to Habidite for a similar loan by a market creditor. Indeed, it is doubtful that a private operator in a situation similar to BIZKAILUR would have accepted not to charge to Habidite the costs for the adaptation of the land, and furthermore, that it would have agreed to a “grace period” of 4 years for the repayment of the price paid for the land purchase, and a full repayment within 7 years from the date of transfer of ownership over the land to Habidite, without charging any interest for this financing.
(72) In the light of the findings in recitals (69) to (71) it must be concluded that Habidite would have derived from the Land Contract an advantage that could not have been obtained in normal market conditions. The advantage consists of the following two components:
(a) the interests forgone for a loan amounting to the total costs incurred by BIZKAILUR for the purchase of the land according to this contract - a loan with a duration of 7 years, a grace period of 4 years and 4 equal annual repayment instalments (of 25 % of the reimbursed sum each); and
(b) the costs that BIZKAILUR would have incurred for the adaptation to industrial use of the parcel of land totalling at least 101 403 sqm necessary for this project, as stipulated in Article 1(ii) of the Land Contract (i.e. at least 81 600 sqm for the factory, 5 300 sqm for offices and annexes, and 14 300 sqm for industrial use).
(73) With respect to the first component, i.e. the interests forgone in respect of the repayment of the price for the land purchase, the Commission estimates that those would have amounted to a net grant equivalent (NGE) of 13,21 % of the price paid for the land purchase by BIZKAILUR. This NGE was calculated as indicated in recitals (74) to (77).
(74) In a first step, the interest rate applicable to a similar loan was identified on the basis of the reference rate applicable in Spain in December 2006, of 4,36 %, as reported in the
Commission’s Reference Rate Communication
(41).
(75) In a second step, based on the
Commission notice on the method for setting the reference and discount rates
of 1997(42) (hereinafter "the 1997 Commission Notice" - which was in force at the time when the Land Contract was concluded) no top-up needs to be added to this reference rate so as to reflect the credit risk profile of Habidite. Under the 1997 Commission Notice, reference rates were considered to reflect the average level of interest rates charged in the various Member States on medium- and long-term loans (five to ten years) backed by normal security. This general principle was not specifically modified by the
Commission Regulation (EC) No 794/2004
(43). In the absence of direct information on the credit risk rating of Habidite or the AFER group at the time, the Commission considers that it can be assumed that Habidite qualified at the time as a normal company with normal collateralisation. Indeed, both the Diputación and Habidite agreed in considering that Habidite and the AFER group did not qualify as firms in difficulty within the meaning of Points 9, 10 and 11 of the R&R Guidelines at the time (see recital (52) above).
(76) In a third step, the gross grant equivalent of the aid involved in this repayment arrangement was adjusted to take into account the corporate tax that should have been paid by the recipient, which at the time in Spain was of 35 %.
(77) Based on the elements in recitals (74) to (76), the resulting NGE for this subsidised loan is indicated in the Table below:

Loan amount

100 %

Duration of loan

7 years

Grace period for repayment

4 years

Reference rate

4,36 %

Margin/top-up

0

Total interest rate applicable

4,36 %

Gross grant equivalent of the aid

20,33 %

Corporate tax

35 %

Net grant equivalent (after tax)

13,21 %

(78) The Commission also notes that the effective cost for the acquisition of the land for this project, which is the basis on which NGE should be applied in order to determine the aid amount, is disputed between the parties. As indicated at recital (30) above, the Diputación claims that until September 2009 BIZKAILUR had paid EUR 4,7 million to purchase 205 000 sqm of land, and it estimated that another EUR 2,6 million would have been needed to purchase the remaining 95 000 sqm necessary for this project. Habidite, on the other hand, claims that BIZKAILUR did not have to purchase such a large surface for this project, as the Land Contract stipulated a total of only 101 403 sqm (see recital (47) above).
(79) In relation to this dispute, the Commission notes first that, according to the specific wording of Article 1(ii) of the Land Contract, the surface for the project should have been of “at least”101 403 sqm in total. Second, the Commission cannot take an informed view on this subject based on the information provided by the parties in the course of the formal investigation procedure. However, as the aid in the Land Contract has not been disbursed, and there is no need to order recovery, the issue of the exact price that should have been reimbursed by Habidite for the land purchase can be left open. For the purposes of this Decision it is sufficient to define the aid element arising from the repayment terms established in the Land Contract.
(80) This aid component is thereby defined as 13,21 % of the costs to be reimbursed to BIZKAILUR for the purchase of the land necessary for the Habidite project, under the terms of Part Two, Article 1(ii) of the Land Contract. The amount thus determined corresponds to the interests forgone by BIZKAILUR, and which would have been charged by a market operator, for a loan with a duration of 7 years, a grace period of 4 years, and for 4 equal annual repayment instalments (of 25 % of the reimbursed sum each). The basis for calculating this aid component is the effective cost that should have been incurred by BIZKAILUR for the purchase of the land stipulated in Part Two, Article 1(ii) of the Land Contract.
(81) Similar considerations must be made in respect to the other aid component in the Land Contract, i.e. the costs for adapting the land for industrial use – which, according to the Land Contract did not have to be repaid to BIZKAILUR (see in this sense recitals (69) and (70)). Here again, the parties disagree on the amounts. According to the Diputación, in March 2009 these costs were estimated at EUR 28,5 million (see recital (30)). Habidite, however, considers that this estimate is inflated (see recital (47)), partly because BIZKAILUR purchased more land than what was required under the Land Contract for this project, and partly because it has used the part of the land already purchased for the project for other purposes, e.g. waste deposits.
(82) Once again, considering that the aid has not been disbursed, and there is no need for recovery, it is sufficient for the purposes of this Decision to define this aid component in the Land Contract: it consists of the total costs that would have been incurred by BIZKAILUR for adapting to industrial use the parcel for the project – under the terms of Part Two, Article 1(iii) of the Land Contract-, costs which, according to the wording of Part Two, Article 1(vi) of the Land Contract, did not have to be reimbursed by Habidite to BIZKAILUR.
(83) The Commission also concludes that the advantage identified at recitals (68) to (77), consisting of two components, as identified at recitals (80) and (82), must be considered selective, insofar as it would have been conferred, on the basis of the Land Contract, to one specific beneficiary, namely Habidite and the AFER group to which it belongs.
(84) As indicated in recital (43), Habidite argues that the notified contracts do not distort competition, because: (a) the relevant market is restricted to “production, sale and rental of prefabricated modules”, and (b) the unique characteristics of the Habidite prefabricated modules imply that the company has no competitors.
(85) The Commission cannot accept the arguments put forward by Habidite. Even if the Habidite prefabricated modules could be considered a singular product because of their characteristics, in the present case, the relevant product market must be defined in a broader sense, as being the market for the construction and sale of houses in general – including both houses sold on the free market, and houses sold on the regulated segment of the market (social housing).
(86) As Habidite itself argues, the prices of the houses to be sold to BIZKAILUR can be benchmarked against the prices of houses sold on the free market, or of those eventually sold in protected or semi-protected regime. The fact that BIZKAILUR also contracted with constructors other than Habidite other houses to be sold under the semi-protected regime, demonstrates that other constructors were at the time indeed in competition with Habidite for providing to BIZKAILUR houses to be sold in protected and semi-protected regime.
(87) Furthermore, in the Business Plan submitted to the Basque government in support of its application for the 2008 regional aid (dated November 2008, at pp. 10-12), Habidite indicated itself that it would have been in competition with constructors of traditional houses on several Spanish regional markets on which it intended to sell its products (including in particular the Basque Country, Navarra, Cantabria, La Rioja, Madrid and Catalonia, but also other Spanish
comunidades autónomas
to a lesser extent). It estimated its overall resulting market share on the Spanish market (free market plus social housing projects) to increase from 0,4 % in 2011 to 1 % for the period 2012-2016. For the year 2011, for example, Habidite estimated that the total number of houses to be sold on the entire Spanish market would have been of approximately 320 000 houses, of which, with a production of 1 403 houses in 2011, it would have covered a market share of 0,4 %. Regarding the market in the Basque Country in particular, Habidite estimated a market share of 0,5 % in 2011 and up to 2,8 % as of 2014 onwards, assuming that the total yearly demand for housing in this region would have been of 8 000 houses for the period 2011-2016.
(88) According to an established jurisprudence, aid is to be considered as distorting competition insofar as it strengthens the financial position and opportunities of the recipient company with respect to those of competitors not receiving aid(44). In the light of this principle and the above considerations, it must be concluded that the aid given to Habidite and the AFER group through the Land Contract would have had distortive effects on competition, because it would have allowed Habidite to reduce investment costs that normally are borne by the company itself, and thereby to derive a competitive edge vis-à-vis actual and potential competitors.
(89) Similar to the discussion in recitals (84) to (87), the argument made by Habidite that the relevant geographic market is only local or regional when it comes to prefabricated houses in particular, because of the costs associated with the transportation of the prefabricates, cannot be accepted. Due to the geographic vicinity of the Basque Country to other Member States and its closeness to the sea, the additional transportation costs would probably not be decisive for eliminating potential competitors of Habidite in this
comunidad autónoma
. Conversely, transportation costs might not represent an obstacle for Habidite to compete for the construction of homes in close Member States.
(90) According to the same line of jurisprudence as cited in recital (88), when state aid strengthens the financial position of a company compared with others competing in intra-Union trade, the latter must be regarded as impaired by the aid. Aid may be of such kind as to affect intra-Union trade even if the recipient undertaking does not participate itself in cross-border activities(45).
(91) On the basis of the considerations at recitals (89) and (90), the Commission concludes that the aid involved in the Land Contract would have been likely to affect trade between the Member States.

VII.1.2   

Measure 2: Houses Contract

(92) The considerations made at recitals (64) to (67), (84) to (88) and (89) to (90) on the criteria of use of State resources and imputability of the State, distortion of competition and affectation of intra-Union trade in the definition of state aid are also applicable,
mutatis mutandis
, to the Houses Contract. Consequently, in recitals (93) to (96), only the criterion of selective advantage shall be examined.
(93) As explained in recital (45), Habidite argues that the Houses Contract did not convey to it any advantage, because, in essence, the prices to be paid by BIZKAILUR for the 1 500 homes to be constructed by Habidite under this contract were actually below market levels.
(94) In particular, Habidite first argues that the 1 500 houses which were to be delivered by Habidite under this contract would have been sold by BIZKAILUR under the semi-protected regime (as
viviendas tasadas
), at a maximum price limited by the applicable regional law to 1,7 of the price established by the Basque government's Order of 1.8.2004, as successively indexed on the basis of the Consumption Price Index (IPC) determined by the Spanish National Institute of Statistics (see in this sense recitals (17) and (18)). The average price to be thus obtained by BIZKAILUR for the 1 500 houses was of EUR 2 010,19/sqm, which is below the average price for houses sold freely on the market in the province of Bizkaia in 2007, of EUR 2 921,9/sqm. Furthermore, Habidite would have obtained only 83 %, and respectively 83,30 % (in the case of the 750 houses under 75 sqm) of the EUR 2 010,19/sqm which were obtained by BIZKAILUR itself from the sale of these houses under the semi-protected regime.
(95) Second, Habidite argues that the price that it would have obtained from BIZKAILUR under the Houses Contract for the 1 500 houses was comparable to the prices obtained by other construction companies which had concluded similar contracts with BIZKAILUR in that period (examples are indicated in recital (45)).
(96) Finally, Habidite also argued that, under Legislative Decree 78/1986 and Article 31 of Directive 2004/18/EC of the
European Parliament and the Council of 31 March 2004 on public procurement
(46), such contracts can also be concluded directly, i.e. without public tender, when justified by the technical nature of the project or for protecting exclusivity rights.
(97) Having assessed the information and arguments provided by Habidite, the Commission has the following observations to make in recitals (98) to (107).
(98) First, it should be noted that the information concerning average prices obtained by other construction companies which had concluded similar contracts with BIZKAILUR relies exclusively on press publications. The Commission did not receive direct information on this aspect from the Diputación – for example, in the form of copies of similar contracts concluded by BIZKAILUR with other construction companies. At any rate, the price estimates provided by both Habidite and the Diputación refer to the years 2006 and 2007, whereas, according to Article A(c) in the Houses Contract and to the Business Plan of Habidite as made publicly-available in 2009, the 1 500 houses would have been delivered to BIZKAILUR over the period 2009-2011.
(99) Even if it were to be accepted that the prices to be obtained by Habidite from BIZKAILUR for the 1 500 houses on the basis of this contract were comparable with those obtained by other construction companies from BIZKAILUR on the basis of similar contracts, and were at any rate under the prices observable on the free market for such houses, this argument is not sufficient to enable the Commission to conclude that Habidite did not derive an advantage from this contract. As also noted in the opening Decision(47), the advantage derived by Habidite from this contract consists mainly in the fact that the contract secured the sale of an important part of its initial production, thus considerably reducing the risks inherently associated with a new investment project, which are by definition even higher at the launch of a new product, such as the Habidite modules were.
(100) It is commonly known that competition on the Spanish construction market was at the time, and continues to be, very intense. The fact that BIZKAILUR contracted 1 500 homes from Habidite should confer from this perspective a not-so-negligible advantage to Habidite vis-à-vis its competitors, even if only demand for the construction of houses to be sold under the protected and semi-protected regime were to be considered.
(101) The fact that, as the Diputación informs, according to the Plan Foral (see recital (19)) BIZKAILUR was supposed to provide a total of 3 000 houses to be sold under the protected regime over the period 2004-2007, is a good indication that the number of houses contracted from Habidite was not negligible at all. It is true that the Plan Foral covers the period 2004 to 2007, whereas the 1 500 homes contracted with BIZKAILUR by Habidite were foreseen to be delivered over the period 2009 to 2011 (according to the company's Business Plan in the version made public in 2009). It is nevertheless an indication of the total number of houses that BIZKAILUR was intending to sell under the protected regime at the time when the Houses Contract was concluded.
(102) This element needs to be assessed in light of the ratio of houses contracted by the Diputación and BIZKAILUR from the estimated total output of Habidite for the relevant period. According to the Business Plan made public in 2009, Habidite estimated that in 2009 its entire production of 433 houses would have been purchased exclusively by BIZKAILUR. In 2010, BIZKAILUR would have purchased 670 houses, whereas the total production of Habidite would have been of 1 113 houses. In 2011, BIZKAILUR would have purchased 342 houses, whereas the total production of Habidite would have been of 3 151 houses. This is an indication that, at the time when the Houses Contract was concluded, Habidite itself estimated that the Diputación and BIZKAILUR would have purchased a notable part of the production during the first 2 productive years of the Habdite factory in Alonsotegi (2009 and 2010). This supports the conclusion that, indeed, the Houses Contract considerably reduced the risks inherently associated with a new investment project, and particular with the launch of a new product on the market (the Habidite modules).
(103) A further indication that Habidite would have been alleviated through this contract of a considerable part of the risk associated with selling its product on the market stems from Habidite's own Business Plan (dated November 2008) as submitted in view of obtaining the 2008 regional aid. In this Business Plan, Habidite estimated the total demand for houses to be sold on the regulated market in the entire Basque Country for the years 2011-2016 at approximately 8 000 houses per year. The same Business Plan mentions that Habidite intended to sell with priority on the regulated segment of the market (social housing), both in the Basque Country and in other regions of Spain. In particular, in 2011 Habidite foresaw that it would have sold on the regulated market in Spain a total of 289 houses, from a total production of 1 403 houses in the same year. This shows that, after the end of the Houses Contract (as the 1 500 houses ordered by the Diputación and BIZKAILUR were to be delivered by May 2011 at the latest), the share of houses Habidite was hoping to sell on the regulated market from its total annual production, i.e. 289 houses from a total production of 1 403 houses, compared much lower than the same ratio in the first three years of functioning of the Habidite plant in Alonsotegi, which were covered by the Houses Contract.
(104) Another relevant aspect is the actual demand for social housing in the province of Bizkaia that was covered by BIZKAILUR through the Houses Contract. Neither the Diputación nor Habidite produced specific evidence regarding the actual demand for social housing that was to be covered by BIZKAILUR by means of the Houses Contract concluded with Habidite on the given terms. As already mentioned in recital (98), the 1 500 houses stipulated by this contract were estimated to be delivered during the period 2009-2011. Moreover, the Diputación did not argue that the contract was concluded with a view to providing a service of general economic interest such as social housing. Also to be noted that the Houses Contract was not concluded following a public tender - whereas, according to the information provided by Habidite itself when referring to similar contracts concluded by BIZKAILUR with other construction companies, it seems that BIZKAILUR should have normally tendered such a contract.
(105) From this perspective, the argument made by Habidite (see recital (96)) that the special technical nature of this project allowed for direct contracting, without a public tender, cannot be accepted. First, the provisions invoked by Habidite do not address situations such as the present one, where the special nature of the project consisted in introducing a new product on the market. The object of the Houses Contract was the purchase of houses to be then sold under the semi-protected regime for the disadvantaged citizens. The technology used for building such houses is irrelevant, and homes constructed with prefabricated modules were in direct competition with homes constructed through traditional methods. Second, in a report of January 2009(48), the
Tribunal Vasco de Cuentas Públicas
(the Basque Court of Auditors) expressed doubts on the legality of the Land and Houses Contracts in a context where it drew attention to public contracts concluded in breach of the principles of transparency and competitive tendering.
(106) According to the
P&O Ferries
jurisprudence(49), the mere fact that a public authority purchases good on market pricing terms is not sufficient in itself in order to conclude that the transaction is market-conform, if the State did not have an actual need for those good, particularly where such goods were contracted without a public tender. In the present case, the absence of information concerning the actual demand for BIZKAILUR to sell the 1 500 contracted houses under the semi-protected regime over the period 2009-2011, coupled with the absence of a public tender, are indications that the transaction was not concluded on market terms.
(107) In the light of the considerations made at recitals (97) to (106), the Commission concludes that the Houses Contract cannot be considered to be a normal market operation. Instead, the contract does confer an advantage to Habidite and the AFER group, by alleviating it of the risk of having to sell its output on market terms, in direct competition with other constructors. The aid element is hereby defined as the profit that would have been obtained by Habidite from the sale of the 1 500 homes to the Diputación and BIZKAILUR under the terms of the Houses Contract, namely, the difference between the price to be obtained from BIZKAILUR from the sale of the 1 500 houses under the pricing terms stipulated by Article A(e) of the Houses Contract the Houses Contract and Habidite's production costs for the 1 500 houses. The advantage is selective, being conferred under the Houses Contract specifically to Habidite and the AFER group.

VII.1.3   

Preliminary conclusions

(108) On the basis of the considerations made at recitals (64) to (90) and (92) to (106) – and without prejudice to any further findings with regard to the compatibility with EU public procurement law - it must be concluded that both the Land Contract and the Houses Contract involve state aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty.
(109) In the case of the Land Contract, the state aid involved has two components:
(a) The interests forgone for a loan totalling the costs incurred by BIZKAILUR for the purchase of the land for the Habidite project, which would have been granted interest-free for a period of 7 years, with a grace period of 4 years. These forgone interests amount to an NGE of 13,41 % of the land purchase costs undertaken by BIZKAILUR on the basis of Part Two, Article 1(ii) of the Land Contract.
(b) The total costs that BIZKAILUR would have incurred for the adaptation to industrial use of the mentioned parcel of land, totalling at least 101 430 sqm, as stipulated in Part Two, Article 1(iii) of the Land Contract.
(110) In the case of the Houses Contract, the aid element consists of the profit that would have been obtained by Habidite from the sale of the 1 500 houses under this contract, namely, the difference between the price stipulated by Article A(e) of the Houses Contract for the 1 500 houses and the production costs incurred by Habidite in the production of the 1 500 houses.

VII.2.   

Compatibility

(111) In the opening Decision of 2 December 2009, the Commission doubted that the aid involved in the Land and Houses Contracts could have been considered compatible with the Treaty under the relevant rules applicable at the time of the assessment – referring in particular to the original
Temporary Framework
(50), the
2004 R&R Guidelines
, the
Community Guidelines on National Regional Aid 2007-2013
(51) and the 2008
General Block Exemption Regulation
(52).
(112) However, as indicated at recitals (60) to (62), the aid granted through the Land and Houses Contracts was unlawfully granted (i.e. prior to notification to the Commission) on 15 December 2006. Its compatibility must therefore be assessed on the basis of the state aid rules in force at the time when it was granted.
(113) Under this temporal perspective, the compatibility of the aid granted under the Land and Houses Contracts cannot be examined under the special rules applying in relation to the crisis, which were adopted and came into force later on.
(114) Also, according to the Diputación, Habidite and the AFER group did not qualify on 15 December 2006 as firms in difficulty within the meaning of Points 9, 10 and 11 of the 2004 R&R Guidelines. Therefore the latter were not eligible for rescue or restructuring aid at the time when the Land and Houses Contracts were concluded.
(115) The Land and Houses Contracts were concluded on 15 December 2006 to support a new investment project in Alonsotegi, a village situated within the Gran Bilbao
comarca
, which was at the time an assisted region under Article 107(3(c) of the Treaty(53). It therefore needs to be examined whether the aid granted under the Land and Houses Contract may have been compatible with the Treaty under the rules applicable to regional aid on 15 December 2006, namely: the 1998
Guidelines on National Regional Aid
(54) (hereinafter "the 1998 Guidelines") and the 2002
Multisectoral Framework on regional aid to large investment projects
(55) (hereinafter "the 2002 Framework"), and against the background of Article 107(3)(c) of the Treaty.
(116) In order to be found compatible with the internal market, regional investment aid must respect a series of standard compatibility criteria, which at the time when the Land Contract was concluded, on 15 December 2006, were laid down in the 1998 Guidelines. In particular, the aid had to be able to contribute to regional development and to support an initial investment project on which works have started only after the aid beneficiary introduced an application for aid (incentive effect), the investment project should have been financed by the beneficiary at least up to 25 %, and the investment project should have been maintained within the assisted region where it was located for at least five years. In addition, the eligible expenditure to be taken into account for the granting of the aid had to be limited to certain eligible costs, and the aid should not be combined with other aid so as to exceed the applicable regional aid ceiling.
(117) Under Point 2 of the 1998 Guidelines,
ad hoc
regional aid granted to a single firm or benefitting one single sector of activity was, as a general rule, not to be found compatible with the Treaty, as its distortive effects would in principle exceed its positive effects on regional development. Furthermore,
ad hoc
aid to firms in difficulty was prohibited.
(118) The aid granted to Habidite under the Land Contract was not notified by the Spanish authorities as being granted under an authorised regional aid scheme. This aid qualifies rather as an
ad hoc
measure benefitting only Habidite and the AFER group, and implicitly, only of benefit to the construction sector.
(119) However, under the same Point 2 of the 1998 Guidelines, such
ad hoc
aid benefiting one single sector and firm may exceptionally be declared compatible with the Treaty, if it can be demonstrated that it has a significant contribution to regional development, exceeding its distorting effects on intra-Union trade and competition. Although the Spanish authorities have not put forward arguments on this aspect, the Commission shall nevertheless examine of its own motion if the conditions for such derogation are met in the case of the aid granted through the Land Contract on the basis of information in its possession.
(120) The Land Contract was clearly intended to support a new investment project, i.e. the new Habidite factory in Alonsotegi. The project was estimated at the time to create 1 100 direct new jobs in an assisted area, and very likely also a non-negligible number of indirect jobs in the same region. This element should also be corroborated with the fact that, under the parallel Houses Contract, the new investment project would have also contributed to the achievement of regional policy objectives, namely the provision of social housing for disadvantaged citizens in the province of Bizkaia. Furthermore, neither Habidite nor the AFER group qualified as firms in difficulty within the meaning of Points 9, 10 and 11 of the R&R Guidelines at the time when the Land and Houses Contracts were signed (see recital (9)). The Commission therefore concludes that the conditions for the exception foreseen in the last paragraph of Point 2 in the 1998 Guidelines are met in the case of the Land Contract.
(121) Under Point 4.4. of the 1998 Guidelines, the notion of regional aid covers only aid for initial investment, which is defined as investment in fixed capital relating to the setting up of a new establishment, the extension of an existing establishment, or the starting up of an activity involving a fundamental change in the production process of an existing establishment. The aid granted under the Land Contract complies with this definition, because the aid was granted in support of the establishment of a new investment project in Alonsotegi.
(122) Under Point 4.5. of the 1998 Guidelines, aid for initial investment should be destined to cover exclusively
eligible investment costs,
and consequently, the maximum amount of regional aid is defined as a percentage of the eligible investment costs. According to Points 4.5. and 4.6. of the 1998 Guidelines, the category of ‧eligible costs‧ of a new investment project comprises land, buildings and plant/machinery, and also some categories of intangible investments (patents, licenses, know-how) up to a limit of 25 % of the standard base in the case of large firms.
(123) Therefore the eligible costs of the Habidite project in Alonsotegi, as of 15 December 2006, should be first determined.
(124) As the aid involved in the Land Contract was not granted on the basis of a prior application for aid, the beneficiary did not submit at the time the information that is pertinent for the identification of the eligible expenditure in a new investment project in regional aid cases. The information available to the Diputación on the subject of the eligible expenditure was indicated at recital (12) above, as follows:

Land

EUR 4,8 million

Industrial building

EUR 22,5 million

Land adaptation (urbanización)

EUR 4,04 million

Installations

EUR 24,0 million

Total

EUR 55,34 million

(125) The categories of expenditure thereby indicated can indeed be considered as ‧eligible expenditure‧ within the meaning of Point 4.5. of the 1998 Guidelines. Furthermore, as the aid involved in the Land Contract was linked directly to the purchase and adaptation to industrial use of the land for the new investment project, it also satisfies this requirement stemming from Point 4.5 of the 1998 Guidelines.
(126) Under Point 4.10. of the 1998 Guidelines, aid for initial investment should be made conditional on the maintenance of the investment in question for a minimum period of 5 years. While this condition is not specifically imposed on Habidite in the context of the Land Contract, it must nevertheless be noted that, in the context of the parallel Training Aid Contract (described at recital (39) above), also concluded on 15 December 2006 and in relation to the same investment project, Habidite had committed to maintain 1 100 jobs for a period of at least 5 years. The Commission therefore concludes that Point 4.10. of the 1998 Guidelines is also satisfied.
(127) In the absence of information regarding the estimated wage costs for the 1.100 employees of the Habidite factory in Alonsotegi, the Commission cannot perform a meaningful assessment of the eventual compatibility of the aid granted under the Land contract with Points 4.11. to 4.17. of the 1998 Guidelines on job creation. However, as long as the aid in the Land Contract would have been linked to the purchase of the land, which is an eligible expenditure, an assessment under Points 4.11. to 4.17. of the 1998 Guidelines is not necessary.
(128) Before the Land Contract was signed, the Habidite investment project had not previously received any other investment aid that should be taken into account for the purposes of assessing cumulative effects under Point 4.18. of the 1998 Guidelines.
(129) Point 4.2. of the 1998 Guidelines establishes that aid schemes must lay down that an application for aid must be submitted before work has started on the investment project. The purpose of this provision is to guarantee that regional aid is granted only where it has a verifiable incentive effect: should the works on a given project have started before the application for aid, the regional aid subsequently granted would evidently not have incentive effect, meaning, the project would have been likely carried out even in the absence of the aid.
(130) In relation to this point, it should be noted first that the Land Contract was an
ad hoc
measure, and not an aid granted under an approved scheme. Nonetheless, incentive effect is a general compatibility criterion under Article 107(3)(c) of the Treaty, which must at any rate be verified for the Land Contract. Although the Diputación did not claim incentive effect in relation to this measure, the Commission should nevertheless examine of its own motion compliance with this essential compatibility condition.
(131) The Commission considers that the incentive effect condition is met in the case of the aid involved in the Land Contract, for the following reasons. First, although the aid was not notified before the date of its granting (15 December 2006), the works related to the project had not started prior to the granting of the aid. Indeed, according to information provided by the Diputación, the purchase of the land necessary for the project, which can be considered the start of the work on this investment project, started only in May 2007, therefore at a date posterior to the signature of the Land Contract on 15 December 2006. Second, the fact that the Habidite project was not carried out after the suspension of the Land and Houses Contracts can be seen as a demonstration of the fact that the aid had incentive effect: the project was not carried out in the absence of the aid.
(132) Point 4.2. of the 1998 Guidelines also required that the beneficiary of the aid should have provided itself an aid-free own financial contribution to the project of at least 25 % of the eligible costs. This condition is also evidently complied with in the case of the aid involved in the Land Contract. The eligible costs declared by the Diputación for this project totalled EUR 55 million, and therefore Habidite should have financed from own resources at least 25 % of this amount, meaning at least EUR 13,75 million. The Commission considers that the aid element in the Land Contract, as identified in recital (109) above, could not have exceeded 75 % of the eligible costs, i.e. EUR 41,25 million, not even in a scenario where the total aid amount would have been considerably increased by accepting that the aid consisted of EUR 28,2 million of effective costs for the adaptation of the land to industrial use, plus EUR 0,98 million (i.e. 13,41 % of a total of EUR 7,3 million of costs for the land purchase, as estimated by the Diputación).
(133) Based on the considerations at recitals (116) to (132), the Commission concludes that the aid involved in the Land Contract satisfied the compatibility conditions of the 1998 Guidelines.
(134) The information on eligible investment costs indicated in recitals (12) and (124) also shows that the Habidite investment project qualified in December 2006 as a large investment project within the meaning of the 2002 Framework – the total eligible costs for this project exceeded EUR 50 million. Therefore the compatibility of the aid involved in the Land Contract must also be examined from the perspective of its compliance with the conditions of the 2002 Framework.
(135) The maximum aid intensity applicable in the Grand Bilbao
comarca
in December 2006, expressed as NGE, was of 20 %. Based on Point 21 of the 2002 Framework, and taking into account the eligible expenditure for the Habidite project as of 2006 as indicated in recital (12), the maximum aid intensity permissible for this project should have been scaled down as follows:

Eligible expenditure

Adjusted aid ceiling

Up to EUR 50 million

EUR 10 million (20 % - the regional ceiling - of EUR 50 million)

Between EUR 50 million and EUR 100 million

EUR 0,5 million (10 % - half of the regional ceiling - of EUR 5 million)

Part exceeding EUR 100 million

Total

EUR 10,5 million

(136) It follows that the aid involved in the Land Contract would have been compatible only up to the total amount of EUR 10,5 million, and incompatible for the part eventually exceeding EUR 10,5 million. Indeed, as indicated in recitals (78) to (82) and (109), the amount of aid involved in the Land Contract cannot be precisely quantified, given the dispute on the effective costs that should have been incurred by BIZKAILUR for performing its contractual obligations of purchasing and adapting to industrial use the land plot for the setup of the Habidite plant in Alonsotegi – a dispute on which the Commission is not in the position to take an informed final position.
(137) The first aid component would have represented 13,21 % of the effective costs incurred by BIZKAILUR for the purchase of the land. The Diputación claims that these effective costs would have amounted to a total of EUR 7,3 million, but Habidite considers this estimate to be excessive. It is also noted that, according to the information provided by the Diputación itself (see recital (12)), the costs for purchasing the land were, at a given moment, estimated at EUR 4,8 million. Finally, the costs estimated in November 2008 for the purchase of the land, as reported in Habidite's Business Plan submitted in its application for the 2008 regional aid, were of EUR 5,5 million.
(138) As to the second aid element, namely the totality of the effective costs incurred by BIZKAILUR for the adaptation to industrial use of the land plot in question, the Diputación estimated them at EUR 28,5 million in March 2009, but also informed that at a given moment these costs were estimated at only EUR 4,04 million (see recital (12)).
(139) To conclude, on the basis of the existent information, it cannot be excluded in full certainty that the aid involved in the Land Contract would not have exceeded the permissible amount for this project of EUR 10,5 million.
(140) Point 24 of the 2002 Framework establishes additional compatibility conditions for measures where the aid amount exceeds the maximum aid allowable for an investment of EUR 100 million in the same assisted region. In our case, based on Point 21 of the 2002 Framework, the maximum aid allowable for an investment of EUR 100 million in the Gran Bilbao
comarca
in December 2006 was of EUR 15 million (composed of EUR 10 million, representing 20 % of the first EUR 50 million, plus EUR 5 million, representing 10 % of the next EUR 50 million).
(141) As already explained at recitals (78) to (82), the total aid amount involved in the Land Contract cannot be precisely quantified on the basis of the information available. However, the Commission cannot exclude that the aid amount might have exceeded the ceiling of EUR 15 million. Under these circumstances, the Commission verified if the two additional conditions for the approval of such aid were complied with in the case of the Land Contract.
(142) The first condition is that the beneficiary of aid should not have exceeded 25 % of the sales of the product concerned before or after the investment. The second condition is that the capacity created by the investment project should not exceed 5 % of the market concerned. According to Point 24 of the 2002 Framework, the burden of proving that these conditions are met lies with the Member State concerned. In the case at hand, the Spanish authorities did not provide information allowing the Commission to verify if any of these two additional conditions were met.
(143) However, based on the market rate estimates provided by Habidite in November 2008 for obtaining the 2008 regional aid (see recital (87)), the company estimated its own share on the overall Spanish house construction market (free market and the social housing segment included) to be of [0,1-1,0]% in 2011, i.e. after the addition of the new production capacity by this investment project, and rising to [0,5-1,5]% from 2012 onwards. If only the Basque market were to be considered, the share of Habidite in 2011 on the free segment of the construction market would have been of [0,1-1,0]%, rising up to [2,0-3,0]% as of 2014 onwards.
(144) Given these estimates, which are not called into question by any other information available to the Commission, it can be assumed that Habidite would not have exceeded the market share and capacity ceilings laid down in Point 24 of the 2002 Framework in December 2006 in respect of the investment supported by the Land Contract.
(145) To conclude, the compatibility conditions of the 2002 Framework would have also been satisfied by the part of the aid involved in the Land Contract not exceeding the permissible amount of maximum EUR 10,5 million. The amount of aid eventually exceeding this ceiling would not have been compatible with the Treaty as not satisfying the compatibility conditions of the 1998 Guidelines and the 2002 Framework.
(146) As the aid has not been disbursed and recovery is not necessary, these conclusions on the compatibility of the aid involved in the Land Contract are sufficient for the purposes of this Decision.
(147) The Commission draws the competent Spanish authorities' attention to the fact that the aid involved in the Land Contract must be taken into account, for examining compliance with the rules on aid cumulation, for the 2008 regional aid granted by the Basque government for the same project. This is furthermore necessary considering that both the aid in the Land Contract and the 2008 regional aid covered eligible expenses related to the purchase and adaptation of the same land plot. It is again noted that works on this investment project started in May 2007, whereas the application for the 2008 regional aid was submitted in 2008.
(148) As indicated in recitals (93) to (107), the aid involved in the Houses Contract reduces the risks associated with the initial investment by securing sale of an important part of the initial production of the new plant, and also confers an advantage to Habidite by reference to other competitors from the fact of securing without a public tender a contract for the supply to public authorities of 1 500 homes to be sold under the semi-protected regime. The aid involved in the Houses contract was defined as the profit that Habidite would have derived from the purchase of the 1 500 houses by the Diputación and BIZKAILUR, namely the difference between the price at which the latter would have sold the houses and Habidite's own costs for producing those houses.
(149) Under the 1998 Guidelines, regional aid is linked to eligible costs. While it is true that Point 4.2. of the 1998 Guidelines does not limit the forms in which investment aid can be granted, it is also clear from Point 4.5. of the 1998 Guidelines and from the entire content of these Guidelines that investment aid must support eligible investment costs. Under Point 4.5. of the 1998 Guidelines, only costs for buying assets such as land, buildings and plant/machinery can be taken into account for the purpose of granting regional aid. Under Point 4.6. of the 1998 Guidelines, other costs, such as those for the acquisition of patents, licenses and know-how, can also be supported through regional aid.
(150) However, given its nature, the aid granted through the Houses Contract does not support such eligible expenses. Rather, the nature of this aid is to reduce the beneficiary's current operating expenses. Under Point 4.15. of the 1998 Guidelines, operating aid was as a general rule prohibited, and only exceptionally allowed in regions assisted under Article 107(a) of the Treaty. Yet the Habidite project was to be carried out in a region assisted under Article 107(3)(c) of the Treaty, and not under Article 107(3)(a) of the Treaty.
(151) The Commission therefore concludes that the aid involved in the Houses Contract qualified as operating aid, which pursuant to Point 4.15. of the 1998 Guidelines would not have been compatible with the Treaty.

VIII.   

CONCLUSION

(152) In the light of the above assessment at recitals (63) to (151) – and without prejudice to any further findings with regard to the compatibility with EU public procurement legislation - the Commission concludes that the Land Contract and the Houses Contract involve state aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty.
(153) In the case of the Land Contract, the aid has two components:
(a) The interests forgone for a loan totalling the costs incurred by BIZKAILUR for the purchase of the land for the Habidite project, which would have been granted interest-free for a period of 7 years, with a grace period of 4 years. These forgone interests amount to an NGE of 13,41 % of the land purchase costs undertaken by BIZKAILUR on the basis of Part Two, Article 1(ii) of the Land Contract.
(b) The total costs that BIZKAILUR would have incurred for the adaptation to industrial use of the mentioned parcel of land, totalling at least 101 430 sqm, as stipulated in Part Two, Article 1(iii) of the Land Contract.
(154) In the case of the Houses Contract, the aid element consists of the profit that would have been derived by Habidite and the AFER group from the sale of the 1 500 houses contracted by the Diputación and BIZKAILUR, meaning the difference between the price at which the latter would have sold the houses based on the provisions of the Houses Contract and the costs incurred by Habidite for constructing them.
(155) The information available does not enable the exact quantification of the aid amounts involved in the Land and Houses Contracts. However, the quantification of the aid is not necessary for the purposes of this Decision: the aid has not been disbursed, and it needs not be recovered.
(156) It is also underlined that the Land and Houses Contract involve unlawful aid. The aid involved in both contracts was granted on 15 December 2006, in breach of the Treaty obligation of prior notification. In the light of the
CELF/SIDE
jurisprudence(56), the posterior notification of the two contracts and the finding of partial compatibility of the aid involved in the Land Contract up to the permissible amount of EUR 10.5 million do not remove the unlawful character of the aid. The Commission requires the competent Spanish authorities to draw all the necessary legal consequences form the unlawful character of the aid involved in the Land and Houses Contract.
(157) The aid granted through the Land Contracts is compatible with the Treaty under the 1998 Guidelines and the 2002 Framework up to the permissible amount of EUR 10,5 million. The part of the aid granted under the Land Contracts eventually exceeding this permissible amount is incompatible with the Treaty.
(158) The aid granted through the Houses Contract constitutes operating aid, which is incompatible with the Treaty in its entirety under Point 4.15. of the 1998 Guidelines.
(159) The findings in the present Decision on existence of aid in the Land Contract are of relevance for the 2008 regional aid granted to the same investment project by the Basque government. It is noted that works for this investment project have started in May 2007, therefore prior to the application for the 2008 regional aid.
(160) The beneficiaries of the aid granted through the Land and Houses Contracts are Habidite Technologies País Vasco S.A. and the AFER group, which are both contracting parties in the Land and Houses Contracts, and are linked within the meaning of Article 3(2) and 3(3) of the Annex to the
Commission Recommendation of 6 May 2003 concerning the definition of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises
(57),
HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION:

Article 1

The two contracts notified by the Kingdom of Spain on 15 April 2009, concluded on 15 December 2006 between the Diputación Foral de Bizkaia and BIZKAILUR S.A., on the one hand, and Habidite Technologies País Vasco S.A. and the AFER group on the other hand, involve state aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty.

Article 2

The aid involved in the notified contracts is unlawful, as it was granted in breach of the prior notification obligation stemming from Article 108(3) of the Treaty.

Article 3

The aid involved in the Land Contract comprises:
(a) The interests forgone by the Diputación and BIZKAILUR for a loan totalling the effective costs for the purchase of the land, to be reimbursed after a grace period of four years in four equal annual instalments of 25 % each, interest-free. The NGE of such an interest-free loan would have been of 13,41 % of the effective costs incurred by BIZKAILUR for the purchase of the land for this project on the basis of Part Two, Article 1(ii) of the Land Contract.
(b) The total effective costs that BIZKAILUR would have incurred for the adaptation to industrial use of the land to be purchased for this project, totalling at least 101 430 sqm, as stipulated in Part Two, Article 1(iii) of the Land Contract.

Article 4

The aid involved in the Houses Contract consists of the profit that would have been derived by Habidite and the AFER group from the sale of the 1 500 houses ordered by the Diputación Foral de Bizkaia and BIZKAILUR S.A. under this contract. This profit is defined as the difference between the price obtained by Habidite from BIZKAILUR on the basis of Article A(e) of this contract and Habidite's own costs for the construction of the 1 500 houses.

Article 5

The aid involved in the Land contract is compatible with the Treaty under the 1998 Guidelines on National Regional Aid and the 2002 Multisectoral Framework on regional aid to large investment projects up to the permissible amount of EUR 10,5 million. Aid exceeding this ceiling is incompatible with the Treaty.

Article 6

The aid involved in the Houses Contract is incompatible with the Treaty under Point 4.15. of the 1998 Guidelines on National Regional Aid, since it constitutes operating aid.

Article 7

This Decision is addressed to the Kingdom of Spain.
Done at Brussels, 27 June 2012.
For the Commission
Joaquín
ALMUNIA
Vice-President
(1)  With effect from 1 December 2009, Articles 87 and 88 of the EC Treaty have become Articles 107 and 108, respectively, of the TFEU. The two sets of provisions are, in substance, identical. For the purposes of this Decision, references to Articles 107 and 108 of the TFEU should be understood as references to Articles 87 and 88, respectively, of the EC Treaty where appropriate.
(2)  Commission Decision C(2009)9310 final of 2 December 2009 (
OJ C 61, 12.3.2010, p. 6
).
(3)  See footnote 2.
(4)  See footnote 2.
(5)  Regulation No. 1049/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 30 May 2001 concerning public access to documents of the European Parliament, the Council and the Commission (
OJ L 145, 31.5.2001, p. 43
).
(6)  http://www.azpiegiturak.bizkaia.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=140&Itemid=185.
(7)  See http://www.grupoafer.com.
(8)  Not including the newly-founded Habidite Technologies Alonsotegi S.A., in relation to whose set-up the notified contracts were concluded.
(9)  Confidential information.
(10)  
OJ C 244, 1.10.2004, p. 2
.
(11)  See Commission Decision of 17.5.2000 concerning State Aid N 773/99 Spain, approving the regional aid map for Spain for the period 2000-2006. This Decision is available at http://ec.europa.eu/eu_law/state_aids/comp-1999/n773-99.pdf.
(12)  According to Habidite's Business Plan available at the time of conclusion of the notified contracts (not dated), a total of 56 patents were requested in relation to this product. The parties did not inform whether the requested patents were granted. Further information about the characteristics of the Habidite construction modules are available on the website of Habidite, at http://www.habidite.com/descripcion.html.
(13)  BOPV (Official Journal of the Basque Country) No. 2006/138, p. 15396.
(14)  BOPV No. 2004/160, p. 15872.
(15)  BOE (
Boletín Oficial del Estado
) No. 80, 3.4.1985, p. 8945.
(16)  Based on information submitted by the Diputación on 23 September 2009, prior to the opening of the formal investigation.
(17)  See footnote 2.
(18)  See Joined Cases T-116/01 and T-118/01
P&O European Ferries (Bizkaia) and Diputación Foral de Bizkaia v. Commission
[2003] ECR II-2957.
(19)  
OJ C 54, 4.3.2006, p. 13
.
(20)  
OJ L 214, 9.8.2008, p. 3
.
(21)  
OJ C 83 of 7.4.2009, p. 1
.
(22)  Published in the Official Bulletin of the Basque Country No. 194 of 8.10.2007.
(23)  Case C 379/1998
PreussenElektra
[2001] ECR I-2099.
(24)  B.O.E. 96 of 22.04.1986.
(25)  
OJ L 134, 30.4.2004, p. 114
.
(26)  
OJ C 239, 25.3.2001, p. 9
.
(27)  See www.behargintza.net/home2/Bizkaiamedia/Contenido_Noticia.asp?TNo_Codigo=0&Not-Codigo=1196&Tem_Codigo=7&Texto=plan%foral%20vivienda.
(28)  Information obtained by Habidite from the data published by the
Ministerio de Fomento
(Spanish Ministry of Development), available at www.fomento.gob.es/BE2/sedal/35101000.XLS.
(29)  
OJ C 54, 4.3.2006, p. 13
.
(30)  Case MF 12/2009 Habidite - Spain, pending at the date of the current Decision.
(31)  See for example Commission Decision on State aid C 19/2006
Javor Pivka Lesna Industrija d.d
.,
OJ L 29, 2.2.2008, p. 16
.
(32)  See footnote 18.
(33)  See footnote 18.
(34)  See for example Commission Decision on State aid C 19/2006
Javor Pivka Lesna Industrija d.d
.,
OJ L 29, 2.2.2008, p. 16
.
(35)  Case C-199/06
CELF/SIDE
[2008] ECR I-469.
(36)  
OJ C 119, 22.5.2002, p. 22
.
(37)  See footnote 18.
(38)  See e.g. Case C-278/00
Greece v. Commission
[2004] ECR I-3997 para. 50, C-482/99
France v Commission
[2002] ECR I-4397 and Joined Cases C-328/99 and C-399/00
Italy v Commission (SIM 2 Multimedia)
[2003] ECR I-4035, para. 33.
(39)  See http://www.azpiegiturak.bizkaia.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=397&Itemid=492
(40)  Case C-482/99
France v. Commission
[2002] ECR I-4397.
(41)  http://ec.europa.eu/competition/state_aid/legislation/reference_rates.html.
(42)  
OJ C 273, 9.9.1997, p. 3
.
(43)  
Commission Regulation (EC) No 794/2004 of 21 April 2004 implementing Council Regulation (EC) No 659/1999 laying down detailed rules for the application of Article 93 of the EC Treaty
(
OJ L 140, 30.4.2004, p. 1
). Indeed, the methodology for calculating reference and recovery rates was modified only in 2008, by introducing the top-ups/margins to be added to the reference rate so as to reflect the beneficiary’s risk profile and level of collateralisation – see Communication from the Commission on the revision of the method for setting the reference and discount rates (
OJ C 14 of 19.1.2008, p. 6
).
(44)  See e.g. Case 730/79
Phillip Morris Holland v. Commission
[1980] ECR 2671, para. 11 and Case C-259/85
France v. Commission
[1987] ECR 4393, para. 24.
(45)  See, e.g., Case C 102/87
France v Commission (SEB)
[1988] ECR-4067, and Case C-310/99
Italian Republic v. Commission
[2002] ECR I-289, at para. 85.
(46)  
OJ L 134, 30.4.2004, p. 114
.
(47)  See recital 32 of the opening Decision.
(48)  See http://legislacion.derecho.com/acuerdo-11-junio-2009-tribunal-vasco-de-cuentas-publicas-2231134.
(49)  See Joined Cases T-116/01 and T-118/
01 P&O European Ferries (Vizkaya) S.A. and Diputación Foral de Vizkaya v. Commission
[2003] ECR II-2957, recitals 109-139 in particular. The judgment was upheld regarding this part of the assessment by the ruling of the ECJ of 1 June 2006 on the appeal.
(50)  
Temporary Community Framework for state aid measures to support access to finance in the context of the current economic and financial crisis
(
OJ C 83, 7.4.2009, p. 1
).
(51)  
OJ C 54, 4.3.2006, p. 13
.
(52)  
Commission Regulation No. 800/2008 of 6 August 2008 declaring certain categories of aid compatible with the common market in application of Articles 87 and 88 of the Treaty
(
OJ L 214 of 9.8.2008, p. 3
).
(53)  See Commission Decision of 17.5.2000 in state aid case N 773/99 Spain – regional map for 2000-2006, text available at http://ec.europa.eu/eu_law/state_aids/comp-1999/n773-99.pdf.
(54)  
OJ C 74, 10.3.1998, p. 9
.
(55)  
OJ C 70, 19.3.2002, p. 8
.
(56)  See footnote 33.
(57)  
OJ L 124, 20.5.2003, p. 36
.
Markierungen
Leseansicht