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New Exclusion Grounds in Latvian Procurements: Fair Play?

New Exclusion Grounds in Latvian Procurements: Fair Play?

Issue 9.12
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As of January 1, 2023, new rules regulating exclusion grounds will be applicable in Latvian procurements. This comes after the Latvian Competition Council discovered a bid-rigging scheme in the construction sector involving almost all of the largest Latvian construction companies. Notably, the period of exclusion will be extended, and the commencement date will be brought forward.

The current rules only allow for the exclusion of candidates and bidders – due to participation in a horizontal cartel – for one year, once the decision of the Competition Council establishing such a cartel has become final. However, investigations by the Competition Council may take up to two years, and the process before the courts may last up to four years or more. Therefore, companies being investigated for participation in a cartel or challenging a decision of the Competition Council in court can still participate in procurements. 

Under the new rules, the exclusion due to infringements of the Competition Act will be possible if: 

First, bid rigging signs are detected in the procurement by the contracting entity and a confirmatory opinion of the Competition Council is received. Such an exclusion only applies with respect to that particular procurement; 

Second, the company has been found guilty of a horizontal cartel by a decision of the Competition Council. This exclusion applies for three years from the date when the decision of the Competition Council is notified to the company, irrespective of whether the decision is appealed; 

Third, the company has either (1) been found guilty of a horizontal cartel or (2) has been made liable for the payment of a fine for a horizontal cartel by a decision of the Competition Council. The exclusion applies for three years from the date when the respective decision has become final.

Contracting entities will also be allowed to require, in their tender rules, the exclusion due to “grave professional misconduct which renders the company’s ability to fulfill the contract in good faith questionable.” In such cases, an exclusion due to other breaches of the Competition Act (e.g., prohibited vertical agreements) might be possible as well, and it would apply for three years from the date when the decision of the Competition Council is notified to the company, irrespective of whether the decision is appealed in court. 

In this way, the exclusion grounds related to competition law infringements will be greatly expanded. Paradoxically, insufficient competition may arise, in a cartelized sector, following an infringement decision, unless the self-cleaning procedure is used efficiently. The potential interplay between exclusion grounds under the second and third points raises questions about the compatibility of the Latvian rules with Directive 2014/24/EU and Directive 2014/25/EU. 

According to the CJEU (see case C-124/17), the period of exclusion should not exceed three years from the date of the relevant event, which is the decision of the competent authority finding the infringement. The Latvian Procurement Office suggests that a company can be excluded for one and the same infringement under both the second and third points, i.e., during and after a judicial review of the infringement decision. In practice, this may mean that a company can be excluded from procurements for a period of up to six years – due to one and the same infringement – which is likely to be challenged by the affected undertakings as incompatible with EU law. 

By Sandija Novicka, Partner and Head of Public Procurement, Cobalt

This article was originally published in Issue 9.12 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here

 

Cobalt at a Glance

COBALT is a closely integrated alliance of top-tier law offices across the Baltics, uniting more than 250 attorneys and support staff. During 25 years of experience, we have become a strategic partner to our clients in handling both daily matters and complex large–scale transactions and disputes.

The firm’s broad spectrum of expertise and established position as the market leader gives a comprehensive basis for providing full-service business law advice.

Top international and regional businesses, financial institutions, state and local governments, and the region’s most promising start-ups are among our clients. We offer leading-edge solutions in key industry sectors: Consumer Products, Trade & Distribution, Real Estate & Construction, Pharmaceuticals & Healthcare, Energy & Utilities, Communications, Media & Technologies, Financial Services, Transport & Logistics.

COBALT has been named Baltic Law Firm of the Year 7 times receiving Chambers Europe, IFLR, The Lawyer and Mergermarket awards, and we are regularly listed amongst the top-performing M&A legal advisors in the Bloomberg, Refinitiv and Mergermarket deal tables. Recognized as the No.1 Lithuanian law firm in the Prospera Law Firm Review 2021 and No. 1 law firm in Latvia in 2022, 2020, 2019, and 2018 client satisfaction surveys. We were recognized as a Baltic-wide Law Firm of the Year at the 2022 Chambers Europe Awards ceremony and named the Baltic States Tax Firm of the Year and Pro Bono Firm of the Year at the annual ITR EMEA Tax Awards 2021 ceremony. 

More information on COBALT can be found at www.cobalt.legal.