Contracts in the agri-food supply chain within the framework of the new Common Agricultural Policy

Se pretende examinar las medidas previstas en el Derecho de la UE verificando como y en que modo se afronta la problematica que la reforma de la PAC del 2003 primero, y del 2013 despues, han comportado para los productos agricolas. Las reformas han modificado radicalmente el cuadro de acciones de PAC, sustancialmente eliminando la forma de gestion del Mercado realizando ulteriores reducciones en el importe de las ayudas acopladas en favor de un improvisado paso a un sistema fundado en pagos directos, en gran parte desacoplados de la produccion. Como resultado, los productos agricolas se han encontrado expuestos a una competencia a escala mundial sin una proteccion real.

As for the second pillar, the new regulation4 continues to provide a sort of menu of measures adoptable by Member States, which are called upon to co-finance expenditure through specific rural development plans to be adopted on a regional or national level.
In general terms, the legislation confirms a policy already enshrined in EU law since 2003, aimed at regulating an agriculture that enjoyed very little protection and was largely left at the mercy of market dynamics.H owever, farmers benefiting from the various support measures are now asked not only to increase their competitiveness and efficiency, but also to engage in a series of practices deemed virtuous from an environmental perspective, aimed at minimizing the impact of production activities on the environment.This has inevitably meant higher costs and greater burdens (in addition to a more extensive activity of verification and control) and reduced farm productivity.
As mentioned, the recent Regulation (EU) No. 1308/ 2013 contains the current rules governing the common organisation of the market in agricultural products, which replaces those laid down in Regulation (EC) No. 1234/ 2007.In light of the title given to this paper, it is not necessary -nor would it be possible -to cover the entirety of the body of the text, consisting in 232 articles and 14 annexes: what is of relevance here is to assess how the European legislator intended to address the substantial removal of the protection originally offered to producers by the CMO, given that the dismantling of the basic framework of the CMO (including price support and export refunds) has necessarily entailed introducing new instruments to protect agricultural producers: in the absence of any protection measure, they would be unable to survive in a particularly competitive world context in which European agriculture is at a disadvantage.
In fact, due to the peculiarities of the agricultural market and of the producers involved, there is a marked -and structural -assymetry of bargaining power between those who place agricultural products on the market and those who intend later to sell or process them5 .Precisely for this reason, the particular characteristics of the agricultural sector imply (or rather, impose, if the aim is to maintain an active primary sector spread across the territory) a need for a differentiated treatment in law -based on a series of protective measures -for farmers as compared to other business categories.
The action of the European Community in the agricultural sector, since the original outlining of principles and objectives in the Treaty of Rome, has been characterised by elements of a special, if not exceptional, nature.These are still present in the current TFEU, as demonstrated by the provision for a veritable sector «policy» to be implemented on a Community level (CAP), as well as the presence of an agricultural market that is still today (albeit to a lesser extent than in the past) managed and supervised at a central level, rather than being left to its own devices (see Article 40 TFEU) and a potential exemption of the Also (but not only) with an eye to implementing in advance the anticipated further developments of the agreement on agriculture reached within the W.T.O., the Community thus radically modified the framework of its agricultural policy.It reformed the guidelines of the CAP in 2003 (mainly with Regulation No. 1782/ 03), substantially eliminating the (already reduced) forms of market management and making further substantial cuts in the amount of coupled support in favour of an almost sudden (and improvised) switch to a system of direct payments to farmers, largely decoupled from production, as a means of supporting the income of agricultural producers7 .
As a result, the latter suddenly found themselves exposed and forced to operate not on a European scale but rather in a global market, and what is more without any forms of protection.Producers could no longer count on the artificial isolation -ensured by a CAP that been left unchanged since its inception in the early 1960s -of the European market from the world market8 .The economic and cultural leap that the newly defined CAP implied for farmers was enormous and above all took place with a minimal transition period, as well as in the absence, for the most part, of adequate education and information about the new rules9 .
It is thus not surprising that just a few years after the reformed CAP entered into force, the supply-side weaknesses that had always been inherent to agricultural markets were exacerbated.Given the lack of any price stabilisation mechanism (though such mechanisms are envisaged by Article 39 TFEU, whose contents have never been amended since the original EEC treaty10 ), over this brief period European producers had to cope for the first time with the high volatility of the prices of many agricultural commodities.The European market had been subject to price volatility in the past, but thanks to the protection provided by the CAP, it had had no real impact for European producers, who could count on the protection provided by levies on imports and the generous price policy managed by the Community.Therefore, as early as 2007, the European agricultural market felt the repercussions of a series of strong fluctuations in global prices of many agricultural commodities, ascribable to several factors: the increase in the world demand for food, the use of some crops for non-food purposes, trade restrictions and adverse climatic events that on various occasions affected states that were major producers of certain products, causing drastic declines in harvests which in turn led almost immediately to price surges in the European market 11 .
At the same time, the removal of import barriers -transformed from variable levies into fixed duties, with a parallel reduction in the respective amounts -implied exposing farmers to a competition from non-European producers that had been practically unknown in the past 12 .These «new» factors have therefore aggravated the fragility of the agricultural sector, especially in the trade relations with counterparty buyers, which represent the necessary outlet for farm products and do not suffer from the effects of small size, unlike a large part of agricultural enterprises; purchasing companies, in fact, are generally significantly larger than farms.In addition, they were already accustomed to having to confront competitors on the European market, not being able to rely on a set of special protective regulations such as those applied for farmers.
It is thus by now clear that at present -taking account of the choices made within the framework of EU law, which seem no longer reversible, at least in the short term -we are witnessing a situation that can be defined as a veritable emergency, given that under EU policies farmers are supposed to compete on the market like any other economic operator.H owever, an attempt (at least) should be made to attenuate the excessive inequality of bargaining power presently existing between the supply and demand sides in respect of agricultural products 13 .
In other words, whereas in the past, by virtue of the strong protection guaranteed to farmers by the price policy and market control mechanisms, means of protection operating on a contractual level could be considered of secondary importance, the disappearance of the former has inevitably resulted in the need (assuming, of course, that maintaining a significant European agricultural production is deemed a strategic objective) to reinforce the latter, so as to preserve an essential balance between the two players in the agricultural market.
In this paper, therefore, attention will be focused on the measures provided for under new EU regulations in an attempt to address the problems just highlighted.
In this regard, two main lines of action can be seen in the EU's intervention in the agricultural products market: i) the first is founded on the formation of agricultural and interbranch associations (POs and IOs), and on the possible compulsory extension of their decisions to non-members as well; accordingly, the new legislative text includes some nonminor innovations that are substantially designed to increase the tasks of private associations with the aim of strengthening the supply side of the food and agricultural products sector; ii) the second is centred upon the possible introduction -at the initiative of Member States, within the framework of legislation conceived at the Union level -of written contracts between farmers and first purchasers of agricultural products.
If we take a closer look, we will see that the European legislator has also devised a third form of intervention, albeit only for certain production sectors.The aim is to reinforce the contractual position of farmers by empowering POs to engage in contractual negotiations with counterparties so as to conclude framework agreements that each member can later make reference to when negotiating contracts individually, so as to try to overcome the weaknesses of the sectors concerned.This marked attention to the role of private associations and the contractual relations between the players in the market for agricultural products appears, moreover, to be an almost necessary outcome of the events that have affected the agricultural sector at the level of law following the latest reforms.
The protection of agricultural producers is thus no longer -or not only -provided by instruments of public law, though these are present and take on a central role in the system.It progressively also involves reliance on contractual arrangements of a different nature and raison d'être, but which in any case are designed to furnish support to farmers, objectively the weakest party within the agricultural market.
Whether we are talking about horizontal or interbranch associations or the ruleslargely inadequate, as we shall see better -governing contracts for the first purchase of agricultural products, or contractual negotiations conducted by such organisations, it is always a question of contractual models: for the formation of associations, in the case of POs or IOs, and for trade purposes in the case of contracts with first purchasers of products or negotiations conducted by POs.
These are thus the types of contracts involving agricultural producers and which at present are of most interest to legal scholars: in other words, the new delivery contracts of the agricultural and food products market, which have taken the place, in terms both of importance and problems, of the «old» agricultural leases, i.e. those whereby agricultural producers procured their main means of production, such as land or animals14 .
Given the availability of farmland and the modest percentage of the population employed in agriculture, at least in the old EU Member States, the tensions between owners leasing out property and the tenants have substantially disappeared, as there no longer exists a demand for land such as to induce landlords to engage in abusive behaviour vis-àvis those who used to be the weaker parties in the relationship since they needed a piece of land to farm15 .
The scope of inquiry having thus been defined, we shall now consider, in order, the provisions of EU Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 concerning agricultural and interbranch associations; the rules concerning the possible formalisation of contracts concluded with first purchasers of agricultural products; and the legislation concerning the power of POs to engage in contractual negotiations.

II. POs and IOs in the new regulation on the common organisation of markets in agricultural products (CMO).
The  The tasks attributed to POs26 include concentration of supply through direct marketing of members' products; adjusting production to demand in terms of quantity and quality; drawing up standard contracts for the delivery of agricultural products; carrying out research activity geared toward innovation; improving the orientation of production; and restricting the use of animal health or plant protection products.A complete list of the objectives pursued by POs is given in Article 152 of the regulation, which specifies that they need not all be necessarily implemented, it being sufficient that at least one of them is included among their activities27 .
In addition to the provisions of a general character, the regulation lays down specific rules for POs operating in certain sectors.Under Article 160, which concerns POs in the fruit and vegetables sector, the statutes of such organisations must require members to market the entirety of their production through the PO itself and the scope of the activities that the POs are call upon to carry out is narrowed.
Compared to the former Regulation 1234/ 07, therefore, the new legislation considerably broadens the range of activities that POs may concretely engage in; however, the list of activities is not necessarily binding for every recognised PO, since the provision clearly states that a PO can be constituted and recognised even if it carries out only one of the activities specified.H owever, as a result the very notion of a PO loses much of its meaning, given that organisations conducting activities having a very different scope and impact -with the exception of POs in the fruit and vegetables sector, which have always played a role of particular importance in the target market concerned -are lumped together under the same designation: an organisation that directly markets the production of its members, acting as trading partners of purchasers, may be considered a PO, but so can one that limits itself to providing technical support in the implementation of environmentally friendly cultivation practices and production techniques, or overseeing the management of by-products and waste (as mentioned, for example, in Article 152(1) c), items v) and vii)).Once again, therefore, the EU regulation serves merely as a broad regulatory framework, leaving individual Member States the option of choosing the solution they deem better suited to their purposes and to the players involved.
Article 153 provides that the statutes of a PO must require its members to apply the rules adopted by the organisation in regard to production, marketing and environmental protection; be members, except in certain cases, of only one PO for each product; provide the information requested by the PO for statistical purposes; and pay the financial contributions resolved on by the PO.The statutes must further establish penalties for those who infringe the rules adopted by the organisation or fail to pay the contributions due; be organised in such a way as to ensure that the PO is managed in accordance with democratic principles; and contain rules on the admission of new members and the minimum period of membership, which may not be less than one year.The recognition of POs, as provided for under Article 154, is conditional upon the PO being a legal entity and its fulfilment not only of the requirements concerning the activities to be carried out and the contents of the statutes, but also of those regarding the minimum number of members or minimum volume of marketable production, to be established by each Member State; it must also provide adequate assurances that it can carry out its activities properly.In relation to recognition, Article 154(4) assigns several tasks to Member States, including that of adopting measures to grant recognition within a well-defined time limit, carry out checks on recognised POs and apply adequate penalties in the event of verified non-compliancewithdrawing recognition in the most serious cases -and informing the Commission yearly of the decisions to grant, refuse or withdraw recognition taken in the previous year.
As far as IOs are concerned, it may be noted first of all that the rules are more systematic and clearer than in the former regulation: in truth, a legislative framework of a general character is defined along with provisions of a special nature dedicated to IOs in certain production sectors.The general provisions include the requirement that an organisation's activities must embrace at least one of the objectives listed in Article 157(1)(c): these include improving knowledge and the transparency of production and the market, recording of public market prices, providing information for adjusting production, seeking ways to restrict the use of animal health products, and improving food safety and animal health and welfare28 .Among the special provisions, it is worth mentioning Article 162, which reiterates (given that the powers concerned were already granted under Article 123(1) of Regulation No. 1234/ 07) that IOs in the tobacco sector and olive oil and table olives sector may have further tasks in addition to those of a regulatory nature ordinarily envisaged for such organisations, such as concentrating supply and marketing the products of members, adapting production and processing to market requirements, and promoting the rationalisation and improvement of production and processing.
Articles 158 and 163 regard the recognition of IOs; the former lays down general rules, while the latter is dedicated specifically to IOs in the milk and milk products sector: among the requirements set forth, it is worth mentioning the fact that they must not engage in production, processing or marketing of the product29 , with the exception, already noted, of IOs operating in the tobacco and olive oil and table olives sectors.In this case as well, specific tasks are entrusted to Member States; these are wholly similar to the ones established in relation to the recognition of POs.

A novelty of no little importance is the provision granting Member States the option of extending, at the request of the PO or IO concerned, and for a limited period of time, certain rules set by the organisation and the provision concerning compulsory contributions, set forth in arts 164 et seq. of the new regulation. This applies for recognised
POs and IOs in any sector (as well as for recognised associations of POs), provided that they are sufficiently representative in a given geographical area; more specifically, the regulation uses the expression «economic area», defining it -solely for the purposes of the procedure concerned -as a «geographical zone made up of adjoining or neighbouring production regions in which production and marketing conditions are homogeneous»30 .The requirement of being sufficiently representative is considered to be met if a PO accounts for 50% of producers in the economic area31 and, in the case of other organisations or associations, if it accounts for a percentage of the volume of production, trade or processing in the economic area equal to at least 2/ 3, or 60% in the cases of POs in the fruit and vegetables sector.Finally, Article 164(4) contains a precise indication of the rules for which compulsory extension may be requested; in principle, such rules must not cause damage to other operators and cannot be incompatible with EU law or the law of the Member State concerned; in regard to anti-competitive practices, the extension must not produce any of the effects described in Article 210(4) of the same regulation (in particular, the aforementioned provision establishes that agreements, decisions and practices will be considered incompatible with EU law if they may lead to the partitioning of markets within the Union in any form; may create distortions of competition which are not essential to achieving the objectives of the CAP; entail fixing prices or quotas; may create discrimination or eliminate competition in relation to a substantial portion of the products in question).Tied to the extension of rules is the option granted to Member States to establishafter carrying out the necessary consultations with all stakeholders -that economic operators who benefit from the activities relating to the rules in question must pay the organisation which adopted the rules all or part of the financial contributions paid by its members «to the extent that such contributions are intended to cover costs directly incurred as a result of pursuing the activities in question» (as stated in Article 165).
As noted, this is not a complete novelty, since the provisions of the former Regulation No. 1234/ 07 -specifically, Articles 125f and 125l -envisaged this possibility, respectively for POs and IOs, though only in the fruit and vegetables sector: according to the current rules, however, this possibility is offered to organisations operating in any production sector, provided that they are recognised organisations considered duly representative as described above.This is consistent with the declared need to strengthen the role of POs and IOs.
It is of course necessary to verify the concrete application of these provisions, which are characterized by numerous conditions and requirements, as is moreover justified by the LUIGI RUSSO REDUR 13 / 2015 sensitive nature of the subject, since it implies that rules approved by private organisations will be binding for third parties 32 .
Besides a general rationalisation of the rules for organisations or associations involving only or also agricultural producers, and a general broadening of the activities they may engage in, the new legislative text in any case introduces (or rather, expands) some innovative solutions, which are added to the provisions governing associations, and consistently aim to achieve a more effective protection of the weak party in the contractual relationship.They will be discussed in the following section.

III. (continued): possible formalisation through written contracts for the delivery of products falling within the scope of the CMO
Article 168 of the new regulation lays down rules concerning «contractual relations» (as the heading states), and is likewise applicable to all of the sectors covered by the CMO, with the sole exception of the milk and milk products sector 33 and sugar sector 34 ; the exception, however, is only apparent because similar rules are defined for them in other articles.State decided that such contracts must be in written form, the conditions set out in the regulation were in any case intended solely as a means of enhancing the transparency of the contract, as the legislative provision did not mean to impose any substantive requirements or compel compliance therewith.On the contrary, it expressly stated that the parties would be free to negotiate all elements of the contract, except where a minimum duration of six months has been provided for; in this case there was no possibility of derogation for the processor were to avail itself of that option, the contract38 (written) would have to comprise a series of relevant elements -listed in paragraph 2 of the same article -making up overall provisions of the contract.These include: duration (which could also be indefinite), methods of collecting or delivering the milk and the terms of payment, the volumes agreed on under the contract, the price payable, which had to be set out expressly or calculated accordingly, it being understood that the contract would necessarily be concluded in advance of the delivery39 .As noted, the provision (in paragraph 4) had taken care to specify that the content of the contract was freely negotiable40 .

The provision is not new, given that
With the reform of 2013, therefore, these rules, originally meant to be applied only in the dairy sector, came to apply more generally in all production sectors embraced by the CMO; however, their concrete implementation is once again left up to the Member States.After establishing that the delivery of any of the products covered by the CMO to a processor or distributor must be covered by a written contract (or that first purchasers must make a written offer), Member States will be obliged to extend formal constraints also to the clauses specified in paragraphs 4 and 6 of the same article, though the latter specifies that the content of the contract41 shall always be freely negotiable, notwithstanding the option granted to Member States of establishing a minimum duration of at least six months.
In particular, if a Member State opts to make it compulsory to put such contracts (or offers for a contract) in writing, it must require that they be concluded in advance of delivery and specify the price to be paid to the farmer, which can be fixed and established in the contract, or calculated on the basis of factors likewise set out in the written contract, the quantity and quality of the products to be delivered, the timing of the deliveries, the raw milk that is provided for under a contract for the delivery of milk concluded in violation of the obligation to formalise it in writing or the requirements as to it minimum contents; this provision that is hardly compatible with the principle of the free movement of goods within the European market, given that the constraints imposed on the contract regard all negotiated agreements involving a delivery of raw milk in Spanish territory (Art.10 of the R.D.).duration of the contract (definite or indefinite), termination clauses, if any, payment periods and procedures, arrangements for collecting and delivering products and the rules applicable in the event of force majeure.In any case, it is a list of clauses that goes beyond those that are essential for the existence and validity of a contractual agreement: listed alongside essential elements, such as the subject matter of the contract, there are provisions that, despite being of relevance within the overall framework of the contract, are not required in order for the latter to be valid.
As appears evident from the clarification that the elements contained in the contract (or offer) are freely negotiated between the parties, the main purpose of the article is to enhance (solely) the transparency of contractual provisions (at least the main ones within the framework of the contract); this is meant especially to ensure that the farmer, considered the weaker party of the relationship, will be able not only to have adequate information in advance (of the deliveries of the product) concerning the contractual content, but also to rely on a formalisation of the same, thereby avoiding, to the extent possible, potential unfair behaviour on the part of the purchaser42 .Where contracts are concluded only verbally, the latter can better exploit his position of strength, by modifying the terms as needed or applying new conditions retroactively, knowing that the agricultural producer will have difficulty in reconstructing the original content of the contractual conditions for the difficulties in providing supporting evidence in the case of a verbal contract.
In reality, some minimal requirements for the compliance of contracts are provided for in Article 168, where Member States that have decided to introduce formal constraints for the contracts in question are granted the option of establishing a mandatory minimum duration of at least six months.The mandatory nature of this constraint is only relative and is solely to the advantage of the producer, since the latter must always be granted the right to refuse the minimum duration established by the Member State.
As regards the rule in question, it should be observed that, by leaving every decision concerning its application up to the Member States -assuming in the meanwhile that it is indeed applicable because the Member State autonomously decided to make written contracts for the delivery of products covered by the CMO compulsory -it is liable to be applied in a patchwork manner across the EU.Such a situation can certainly not be considered conducive to the proper functioning of the internal market; one need only consider that where written contracts are made compulsory, the obligation will apply for all contracts involving agricultural products whose delivery will take place in the Member State concerned, even if one of the parties is of a different nationality.It is thus clear, for example, that a same purchaser who concludes business transactions with agricultural producers operating in a number of different Member States, receiving the products he purchases in the territory of those States, may find himself subject to different contractual rules precisely because of a provision of EU law.H ence it is not difficult to imagine that, in the absence of a strong harmonised framework, stronger enterprises may attempt to elude the regulatory provisions of a neo-formalist type by contracting with producers operating in Member States that have not implemented the EU provisions, or else by stipulating that the product to which the contract relates be delivered to a location outside the territory of the State or States that have introduced the rule on written contracts.Therefore, the provision contained in paragraph 7 of Article 168, whereby Member States must in any case ensure that the rules they implement on the basis of the latter do not impair the proper functioning of the internal market, appears to be nothing more than a merely formal statement, given that it is the very structure of the provision itself which enables a non-uniform application across the territory of the EU 43 .
Ultimately, the legislation in question achieves a sort of optional harmonisation of very limited scope as it establishes only that the requirement of formalisation in writing, if and to the extent determined by each Member State in a wholly autonomous manner, must also extend to the main provisions of a contract in order to increase the level of awareness of the weak party in respect of the contractual terms and conditions, and that the contract, to be drawn up in writing, must necessarily be concluded prior to the delivery or deliveries of the product; the parties are free to decide on the concrete terms of the contractual relationship, with the sole exception -again left up to the discretion of each Member State -being the possible introduction of a minimum duration as a mandatory condition for the purchaser 44 .REDUR 13 / 2015 not required in order for the contract to be valid and that the rule does not apply in cases in which the payment of the price takes place at the time of delivery del product 55 ; ii) contain a series of minimum elements, namely, an identification of the parties; subject matter of the contract; price agreed on, fixed or anchored to elements that must be objective, verifiable, not manipulable and expressly mentioned in the text of the contract; terms of payment; method of delivery of the products; rights and obligations of the parties; sensitive information; duration of the contract, and the conditions for its renewal or amendment; and effects of the termination of the contractual relationship 56 .The Spanish legislator, like his Italian counterpart before him, provides for pecuniary administrative penalties in the event of failure to fulfil the obligations with respect to the written form and minimum content, such penalties being proportionate to the seriousness of the breach 57 .

The provisions of Regulation
Finally, as regards the French experience, the previously mentioned law on the modernisation of agriculture and fisheries (Law no.2010-874) had already amended some provisions of the Rural Code by introducing the possibility of concluding written contracts for the delivery of agricultural products, once this obligation had been provided for under an approved interbranch agreement or a decree of the Council of State; in such a case, the written contracts had to be in conformity with the standard supply chain contracts made compulsory by decree or as a result of approval or extension of the validity of an interbranch agreement.In this case as well, failure to comply with the obligation to draw up contracts in writing is punishable by means of a pecuniary administrative penalty (see As mentioned previously, the new regulation, in articles 169, 170 and 171, grants some POs (or their associations) -and in particular those operating in the olive oil and beef sectors, as well as those representing producers of the arable crops listed in Article 171 (and milk and milk products sector under Article 14959 ) the power to engage in «contractual negotiations» (as per the heading of the cited articles). 55see Art. 8 of the law. 56As provided in Art. 9 of the law, under the heading of «contractual conditions».In this case as well, the rules are substantially similar to those introduced with Regulation (EU) No. 261/ 12 specifically for the milk sector60 , despite the shortcomings already clearly noted61 .Moreover, the issues that had previously been raised with regard to the rules governing contractual negotiations in the milk and milk products sector were left completely unresolved62 .
Under the aforementioned provisions, the POs in the sectors considered (or their associations: see paragraph 3 of the articles in question) that pursue such aims as concentration of supply, placing on the market of the products produced by its members, or optimisation of production costs, can «negotiate», on behalf of members, in relation to all or part of their production, the content of future contracts for the delivery of their respective products.The articles in question make this power subject to the condition that the negotiating activity leads to an integration of activities and that as a result it is probable that significant improvements will be made in the efficiency of the system, so that such activity of the POs contributes to attaining the objectives of the CAP as per Article 39 TFEU.
The negotiations can take place whether or not the ownership of the agricultural products considered is transferred by the farmer members to the PO, and whether or not the price that is negotiated is the same as for the joint production of all members of the PO or only part of them (as per points (a) and (b) of paragraph 2 of the articles in question).
The negotiations cannot regard volumes of products exceeding the percentages established for each product in the articles concerned (see paragraph 2 (c)); however, according to paragraph 5, if the negotiations are such as to exclude competition or undermine attainment of the objectives of Article 39 TFEU, irrespective of whether the thresholds are exceeded, the national competition authority (or the Commission, if the negotiations involve more than one Member State) may, based on the concrete circumstance, decide that the negotiations must be reopened or cannot take place.

LUIGI RUSSO REDUR 13 / 2015
As noted, the aforementioned provisions raise numerous questions63 .Firstly, it is not clear why the provisions make the power to engage in negotiations conditional on the fact that the POs in the sectors concerned already pursue the aim of concentrating the supply of their members, placing on the market of the products received from the latter.It is difficult to understand the purpose and usefulness of giving such contract negotiating powers to POs that already carry out activities of direct marketing, selling the aggregate production of their members directly to purchasers and thus acting as the sole contractual counterparty of the latter.From an abstract perspective, the POs in sectors in which contractual negotiations are an option can decide to directly concentrate production, selling the products of members in their own name and on their own behalf after receiving them; or else they can decide to limit themselves only to indirect concentration activities, negotiating, precisely, on behalf of their members, the best contractual conditions to be subsequently applied to contracts concluded on an individual basis.
H owever, it seems difficult to imagine that a same PO can engage both in an activity of direct marketing and an activity of only negotiating on behalf of its members: direct marketing activity requires the presence of an organisation and facilities of a certain size, which could not be justified in the case of a mixed -as it were -activity not entirely dedicated to direct marketing, as the investments necessary for that purpose would not be amortised.
The reference to such tasks as concentration of supply and placing members' products on the market should probably be interpreted in a broad sense, i.e. the aim is to grant the power of carrying out contractual negotiations to POs whose statutes envisage the option of concentrating supply, which can take place in two ways: directly, so that the PO is the seller and operates in its own name and on its own behalf, having procured the products made available by its members; or only indirectly, through the conclusion of framework agreements, i.e. contracts that do not entail a transfer of ownership, but rather whose purpose is to establish terms and conditions that will be binding for purchasers, and from which members may benefit, as negotiations conducted by a PO on behalf of all its members can undoubtedly lead to more favourable terms than negotiations carried out by a single producer.Moreover, as was observed earlier, the negotiating power is subject to a series of limitations that do not apply in the case of direct marketing.In addition to the restrictions regarding the maximum market percentages that can be covered by negotiations in the sectors considered 67 , the rules require, as has already been mentioned, that the contractual negotiations lead to an integration of activities and that this integration is likely to generate significant gains in efficiency 68 .Based on a reading of the provisions, in truth, it does not appear to be sufficient, for the POs concerned, to carry out negotiations, a quid pluris being required on the part of the same, since they have to carry out at least one of the following activities: joint distribution, joint promotion (solely for the live cattle and arable crop sectors), joint organising of quality control, joint use of equipment or storage facilities, joint management of waste directly related to the production of olive oil or live cattle, joint procurement of inputs and joint processing of olive oil 69 .

In either case, empowering
A useful tool for interpreting the provisions in question might come from the guidelines that the Commission is drafting for the purpose of providing specific indications to the producers involved, particularly as regards defining the requirements laid down by the provisions themselves with respect to the integration of activities and significant improvements in efficiency that should ensue from the negotiations; at present, a simple draft version of such guidelines is available 70 ; it has been published to enable public consultation on this topic, while the final version is expected to come out at the end of 2015.
H owever, a reading of the draft reveals that the subject of contractual negotiations is far from having received any actual clarification, since the guidelines provided do not seem to distinguish clearly between the two cases described above, namely, direct concentration of supply and indirect concentration of supply, the latter taking place through the conclusion of framework agreements or collective agreements negotiated by POs.On the contrary, as already highlighted by legal scholars who have examined it 71 , the draft sometimes seems to confuse the two cases or treat them as one and the same thing: we need only consider, for example, that in paragraph (4) of the introduction it is acknowledged that articles 169 to 171 authorise POs in the sectors concerned to negotiate, «on behalf» of their members, contracts for the supply of the products in question; further 66 Cf.CHAUVE, PARERA, RENCKENS, Agriculture, food and Competition law: moving the borders, cit., 310; the authors point out that through the agreements in question, POs sell «on behalf» of member producers, provided that the organisations engage in other joint activities connected to selling activity: «in practice this means that, when farmers wish to negotiate contract terms collectively via POs to gain bargaining power, they are obliged to integrate other activities in order to respond to market challenges in a pro-competitive manner».H owever, shortly afterward the same authors observe that the new legislation has introduced the concept of efficiency as a prerequisite for enabling «horizontal agreements between farmers»: in the case in question, however, it is not a matter of horizontal agreements among agricultural producers, but rather vertical agreements concluded between POs, on the one hand, and purchasers on the other.13) it is specified that POs, for the purposes of EU competition law, can be considered as associations of undertakings and as an undertaking in their own right, if and to the extent that they conduct, on their own behalf, an economic activity, i.e. an activity involving the supply of goods or services in a given market.In this manner the Commission acknowledges to be fully aware of the possible double role that POs can play in the market, since they can operate as associations and thus negotiate on behalf of their members, or else operate as businesses, marketing the products contributed by their members.Consistently with this notion, paragraph (24) states: «Articles 169, 170 and 171 of the CMO Regulation thus concern any agreements or decisions or practices taken by the PO when negotiating contracts for supply on behalf of its members».

below, in paragraph (
Against this initial background, a reading of the rest of the draft arouses a number of doubts as to the scope the Commission wishes to attribute to the provisions in question: paragraph (27) states that the purpose of the specific articles concerned is to be achieved through «POs effectively concentrating supply and placing products on the market and, as a consequence [my emphasis], negotiating supply contracts on behalf of their members»; similarly, in paragraph 58) one reads that the POs concerned must «pursue at least one of the following objectives of concentrating supply, placing on the market of the products produced by its members; and optimising of production costs»72 .Moreover, the Italian text includes references to contracts concluded a nome (literally, «in the name») of members and per conto («on behalf») of members, with the expressions used apparently interchangeably.
H owever, the Commission made no effort to provide any indications as to how the conducting of contractual negotiations on behalf of members can coexist with pursuit of the objectives of concentrating supply and placing members' products on the market, where the PO acts in its own name and on its own behalf.Not only: notwithstanding the fact that, as we have seen, in paragraph (58) the draft guidelines acknowledge that in order to be able to engage in negotiations the POs must pursue at least one of the specified objectives (concentrating supply, placing on the market of the products produced by its members, and optimising of production costs), in the very next paragraph the Commission clarifies that, in actual fact, a PO that pursues solely the objective of optimising production costs will not be entitled to engage in contractual negotiations: this may very well go beyond the intended meaning of the provisions concerned, which do not seem to support such an affirmation.Therefore, it is in some respects paradoxical that the Commission's guidelines, which are supposed to guide operators and ensure a uniform, correct interpretation of the regulatory provisions, contain a series of ambiguous affirmations, such as to raise doubts about the scope of the new legislation 73 : it is thus to be hoped that following the period of public consultation, the final document will be more intelligible and, above all, clearly define the differentiations that exist between the activity of direct marketing carried out by POs in accordance with regulatory provisions and the activity of negotiation conducted by the same organisations.
Among the provisions that are difficult to interpret, we may also include paragraph 2(a) of Articles 169, 170 and 17174 , according to which negotiations by the PO may take place whether or not there is a transfer of ownership of the agricultural products by members to the PO: the rule, therefore, is that contractual negotiations can also be carried out by a PO after it has acquired ownership of the products received from member producers.H owever, it is not clear why a PO that has become owner of the products to be marketed should only engage in a pre-contractual negotiating activity (or conclude a framework contract) rather than directly marketing the product it is now owner of to purchasers75 .Furthermore, the legislation does not contain any provision as to which effects the outcome of the negotiations will have for the parties; this aspect concerns not so much the members of the PO -since the fact of belonging to the association in itself implies compliance with what the latter has committed to -as the contractual counterparties, given that the scope of application of a framework contract resulting from negotiations conducted by the PO on behalf of members cannot but be limited solely to the undertaking or undertakings involved during the negotiation stage76 .There is no indication, in fact, as to the consequences of a deviation of an individual contract from the provisions of the collective agreement or the possible remedies available to the affected party.
In short, the rather muddled -to put it mildly -nature of the provisions considered clearly suggests that they are a product of compromise.Among other things, the receptiveness of the EU legislator to the idea of contractual negotiations being carried out by organisations and associations of agricultural producers touches a raw nerve in EU legislation, in particular as it seems in contradiction with the rule -dating back to 1962 and left untouched even after the reform of 2013 -whereby such organisations may not establish identical prices binding for their members.
As will be amply discussed in the section that follows, there is no doubt that the contractual negotiations carried out by POs can also establish the subsequent selling prices and that, as a consequence, the legislation in question has for the first time expressly addressed what has been referred to, precisely, as the «taboo» issue of prices 77 .Therefore, the ensuing result, with all its contradictions and ambiguities, should not be surprising.Numerous indications of such contradictions have come not only from the different European institutions involved in the legislative procedure, but also -and above all -among the different levels or departments of the same.H ere there is a clear reference to the ever enduring conflict within the Commission between the Directorate-General called upon to apply and oversee the enforcement of competition rules and the Directorate-General responsible for planning initiatives with the framework of the CAP.
The result of this internal dialectic is there for everyone to see: provisions containing references that are uncertain or confused to say in the least and which risk undermining their actual effectiveness.As has often been the case with other legislative provisions, articles 169 to 171, together with article 149 for the dairy sector, are likely to represent only a first -and inadequate -approach to subject matter.They will hopefully receive full implementation over time, once the initial disconcertment and scepticism have been overcome.We must therefore hope that the EU legislator will go back to review the provisions in question as soon as possible, so as to more precisely clarify their scope and content, attenuating the precautions provided for and in any case extending their application to all sectors of the CMO.

V. Antitrust rules in Regulation (EU) No. 1308/ 2013 and their inadequacy for the purposes of protecting agricultural producers vis-à-vis the market.
A report dealing with contracts, including collective contracts, in the agricultural and food product supply chain cannot neglect to include some brief considerations concerning the relationship between the rules governing supply contracts and agricultural associations and EU competition law, in particular as regards the specific antitrust provisions applicable to the agricultural sector following the reform of 2013.H owever, the third pre-existing exception related to agreements falling within the framework of a national market organisation was finally formally removed, given that such organisations have no longer existed for some time, having been replaced by the European market organisation.

In particular, as regards
Once again, it is established (third subparagraph of Article 209(1)) that the whole of paragraph 1 will not apply to agreements, decisions and practices which entail an obligation to charge identical prices or have the effect of excluding competition: consequently, agreements that lead to such effects are to be considered in any case prohibited 88 .
It is difficult to understand the persistent prohibition (also in the new regulation) concerning prices, which continues to apply both for the agreements and decisions of farmers or farmers associations and the agreements necessary for the attainment of the objectives of the CAP; it is also seemingly not compatible with the power granted to POs in certain sectors to conduct contractual negotiations, which could result in a price being set for subsequent sales transactions.It thus appears necessary to coordinate the provisions of Article 209 with those dealing with contractual negotiations conducted by POs, interpreting them to mean that it is prohibited to conclude binding agreements giving rise to an obligation to charge identical prices, with the exception of the specific cases for which the same regulation attributes bargaining powers to the POs (and with the exception of the cases in which the POs -or, 89 Which, on the subject of the bargaining power of POs in the beef and veal and olive oil sectors and for producers of some arable crops, provides that the purpose of such negotiations is to establish, albeit subject to quantitative limits, the terms of (subsequent) delivery contracts, including prices.Recital 128 affirms likewise in regard to the milk and milk products sector, specifying that in order to ensure a fair standard of living for dairy farmers, their bargaining power needs to be strengthened; in order to achieve this objective, POs should be allowed, in accordance with Art.42 and Art.43 TFEU, to negotiate the contract terms, including price, for some or all of their members' production, subject to quantitative limits so as to maintain effective competition in the market. 90As rightly pointed out by JANNARELLI, in «L'associazionismo dei produttori agricoli ed il tabù dei prezzi agricoli nella disciplina europea della concorrenza», cit., 190, the prohibition against agreements that may oblige members to charge identical prices presupposes that POs only have regulating functions, since direct marketing of the products contributed by members -also envisaged for several production sectors under EU legislation -is incompatible with such a prohibition, whether it takes the form of marketing undertaken by the organisation on behalf of its members, or the organisation itself operates on behalf of its members.where possible, the IOs 92 -directly sell, in their own name and on their own behalf, the products they receive from members) 93 .
The other aspect considered in this paper, namely, the written contract as an instrument for combating the inequalities between agricultural producers and purchasers in terms of information and bargaining power, does not seem to assume relevance for the purpose of applying antitrust legislation.The latter enters into play, for example, in order to prevent horizontal agreements among purchasers, as well as in the above-described cases regarding agreements among agricultural producers or supply chain agreements; to prevent abuses of dominant position, where the potential exists; and to control concentrations between undertakings that intend to expand their size and thereby gain undue strength in the market.The inequality of bargaining power and the possible abuses by the party with greater power (whenever -as in the majority of cases -the latter does not have a dominant position in the market) are not generally taken into consideration by European competition law 94 .
As we have seen, the protection of the weak contracting party against possible abusive behaviours of the counterparty is substantially left up to the Member States, given that, at least as regards business-to-business relations, EU law only ventured a first timid approach with Regulation (EU) No. 261/ 12 in relation to formal written contracts with first purchasers of milk and milk products, later extending that solution to all sectors of the CMO with Article 168 of regulation (EU) No. 1308/ 2013 95 .
Lacking any direct intervention on the part of EU law, this aspect is thus substantially left up the Member States, some of which, as we saw previously, have taken initiatives in this regard, exploiting the possibility of being able to address abusive conduct through regulatory provisions, even where the individual or entity that engages in such behaviour does not hold a dominant position.A prime example in this respect is the legislation, present in some Member States, which is designed to repress abuse of 92 Art.210 addresses the agreements and concerted practices of recognised IOs. 93In this regard, see recital 131, according to which POs and their associations can play useful roles in concentrating supply, improving marketing and adjusting production to demand, optimising production costs and stabilising producer prices. 94It is a well-established opinion that the aspects related to contracts concluded between parties with unequal bargaining power are not normally relevant for EU antitrust law, which rather focuses on situations of so-called buyer power: the latter is considered to exist if and to what extent a market is so concentrated «that a particular buyer has not only power over a particular supplier but over suppliers in general» (as stated in par.73 of the Report on competition law enforcement and market monitoring activities by European competition authorities in the food sector, issued by the ECN -European Competition Network, May 2012; on this point see also the Commission working document Competition in the food supply chain, accompanying the Communication A better functioning food supply chain in Europe, in http:/ / ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/ publicatyions/ publication16065_en.pdf, as well as, among others, CHAUVE, PARERA, RENCKENS, Agriculture, Food and Competition law: moving the borders, cit., 306, in which the authors distinguish between situations in which there is an unequal bargaining power between the parties to a contract and those concerning cases of buyer power, since only the latter constitute, as a rule, cases that are relevant for competition law, where «buyer power normally concerns situations in which the power of a buyer can affect the whole market» (pág.311). 95In reality, some provisions, despite being fragmentary and inadequate, can be used in an attempt to combat the phenomenon; for example, those concerning late payments in commercial transactions and those aimed at protecting not only consumers, but competitors as well, against deceptive and comparative advertising.economic dependence96 .Recital (9) of Regulation (EC) No. 1/ 200397 is very clear on this point, as it states explicitly that «this Regulation … does not preclude Member States from implementing on their territory national legislation, which protects other legitimate interests provided that such legislation is compatible with general principles and other provisions of Community law» ; by way of example, the recital mentions legislation that «prohibits or imposes sanctions on acts of unfair trading practice, be they unilateral or contractual … irrespective of the actual or presumed effects of such acts on competition on the market.This is particularly the case of legislation which prohibits undertakings from imposing on their trading partners, obtaining or attempting to obtain from them terms and conditions that are unjustified, disproportionate or without consideration»98 .
H owever, as pointed out by the Commission itself, though on the one hand the rules established by a number of Member States in this regard highlight how widespread the problem is, not being confined within one or more Member States, but rather common to all undertakings operating throughout EU territory, on the other hand they lack uniformity 99 -nor could it be otherwise, in the absence of any harmonising legislationboth as far as the identification of abusive conducts is concerned and with respect to penalties.It would thus certainly not be inappropriate to address the issue within the framework of EU law, also because, as pointed out previously, the present situation implies a patchwork of national provisions which inevitably affect transnational contractual relations as well, not to mention the proper functioning of the internal market 100 .
With specific reference to the agri-food sector, a few reservations, however, should be expressed in respect of the affirmation made by antitrust law specialists that unfair or abusive practices regarding individual contractual relations and resulting from the inequality between the parties in terms of bargaining power are irrelevant for the purposes of competition legislation.That is because such cases, notwithstanding the presence of LUIGI RUSSO REDUR 13 / 2015 aspects that are pathological in some respects, allegedly do not affect the structure of the market as a whole, being limited to the single contractual relationship concerned, which involves parties -businesses in this case -having different bargaining power.
Yet in the case of relations in the agricultural and food supply chain, the existence of a marked difference in bargaining power cannot be considered an isolated phenomenon, limited to a number of specific contractual relations or characterising only a few specific businesses.On the contrary, the situation in question has relevance at a system level, as it concerns a whole set of contracts between sellers, on the one hand, and purchasers, on the other.Therefore, although from a theoretical perspective the distinction between aspects tied to unequal bargaining power and buyer power101 is clear and precise, if we examine the contractual relations among businesses operating in the agricultural and food products supply chain as a whole, we can easily understand that the distinction becomes fuzzy, to the point of disappearing, since the undisputed greater bargaining power of purchasers in general implies -if and to the extent that it enables abusive or unfair practices -a serious risk of undermining the proper functioning not only of individual contractual relationships, but of the entire market.Unexpected and/ or retroactive modifications of contract terms and conditions, abrupt withdrawals devoid of any real justification and penalising price policies not only impose a severe burden on a business that falls victim to them, but, if they occur on a large scale, they can induce sellers to make fewer investments in the absence of adequate certainty about the profit they can expect.This means less product innovation and less choice for consumers; furthermore, it has been clearly shown that although the greater bargaining power of distribution or processing companies means lower prices for suppliers, it does not always imply that the benefits obtained by the stronger contracting party will trickle down to consumers.Therefore, although it is undoubtedly correct to say that the agricultural market cannot be considered devoid of rules when it comes to the protection of competition, and that oversight is required to ensure the proper application both of antitrust law in general and the exceptions provided for the agricultural sector, it is likewise indisputable that the attention of the Commission, and particularly of Directorate-General for Competition, cannot not focus only on the anti-competitive implications of the activity of organisations of agricultural producers or interbranch organisations, or on the contractual negotiations conducted by POs, where -with many ambiguities and uncertainties -the EU legislator has established numerous requirements and conditions that must be met in order for such negotiations to be considered legitimate.The Commission should rather start asking itself whether the aspects concerning bargaining power in the agricultural and food products sector, given their systemic nature, might not actually have a relevant bearing on the concerns tied to buyer power, one of the central aspects of EU competition law102 .
solutions previously envisaged for the milk and milk products sector alone to all sectors of the CMO 18 .Further strengthening the role of POs and IOs thus appears to be a sort of necessary choice for the EU legislator, given the hope that the aggregation achieved through such organisations will serve to reduce the existing gap in economic power between the parties in the market for agricultural products.Concerningthis point it should be noted first of all that the new legislative text reiterates the power of Member States to recognise, in all sectors of the CMO, both POs (Article 152) and IOs (Article 157 et seq.) 19 , though with greater clarity and emphasis 20 than in the legislation previously in force.Moreover, the regulatory framework is defined in a manner that is undoubtedly simpler and more orderly than before; on this point Regulation No. 1234/ 2007 suffered from the effects of a multitude of subsequent legislative acts that expanded the provisions dealing with POs and IOs.Suffice it to say that Chapter II -dedicated precisely to such organisations -of Title II (rules applicable to marketing and production) of Regulation 1234/ 2007 was originally composed of only six articles (122 to 127), whereas at the time of its repeal it consisted of no fewer than 25 articles.The result was a patchwork of provisions that in a large part of cases were sector-specific, in contradiction with the concept of a single CMO: one need only consider that Chapter II, dedicated to POs and IOs, as well as Section I, containing the general principles, and Section II on IOs in the tobacco sector were progressively supplemented with Section Ib, related to said organisations in the fruit and vegetables sector (Articles 125b to 125n) 21 , Section Ic, dedicated to POs and IOs in the wine sector (composed solely of article 125o) 22 and Section IIb, on POs and IOs in the milk and milk products sector (articles 126b to 126e) 23 .The present regulation likewise differentiates among production sectors in some respects; however, the sector-specific provisions are clearly «confined» in a special Section 24 , simplifying their interpretation.The obligatory recognition of POs and IOs only for certain sectors has been maintained: as for POs, under Article 159 of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013, 18 The CMO in the fishery and aquaculture products, governed by Regulation (EU) No. 1379/ 2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2013 on the common organisation of the markets in fishery and aquaculture products, amending Council Regulations (EC) No. 1184/ 2006 and (EC) No. 1224/ 2009 and repealing Council Regulation (EC) No. 104/ 2000, in OJEU L 354/ 13, lends importance to the role of the POs, so much so that Art.1(2) establishes that the CMO in question «shall be comprised of the following elements: a) professional organisations; b) marketing standards; c) consumer information; d) competition rules; e) market intelligence».
Regulation (EU) No. n. 261/ 2012 35 grantedsolely for the milk and milk products sector 36 -Member States the power to impose obligations related to the content and form of contracts for the delivery of raw milk, by introducing Article 185f into Regulation (EC) No. 1234/ 07.This article was dedicated, precisely, to contractual relations in that sector.It specified, however, that even if a Member

45 .
No. 1308/ 2013 say nothing in regard to the consequences of a failure to fulfil the written contract obligation established by a Member State or to include the minimum information required by the regulation in the text of the contract, or of a violation of the minimum duration imposed on the purchaser: therefore, the application of penalties is also left to the discretion of Member States.The result is a further fragmentation of legislation, since the latter can establish remedies or penalties that may differ considerably in entity, as well as vary in nature (e.g.civil versus administrative sanctions) It is worth observing, moreover, that even before the introduction of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 several European countries 46 had already approved legislation with substantially 43 Pursuant to the same paragraph 7, Member States are also required to notify the Commission about any measure adopted under Article 168. 44In the Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, Tackling unfair trading practices in the business-to-business food supply chain, issued on 15.7.2014,COM (2014) 472, it is reported that 96% of respondents to an EU-wide survey among suppliers in the food supply chain affirmed that they had been subject to at least one form of unfair trading practice.Despite this, there is nothing in the aforesaid Communication to suggest, at least for the time being, that the Commission intends to promote a legislative initiative on a European level to combat the abuse of bargaining power in business-to-business dealings, though the Commission acknowledges the extreme diversity of the approaches adopted by some Member States in dealing with the issue, noting that «where [national] regulations do exist, they differ in terms of the nature, level and legal form of protection provided against UTPs». 45In certain respects it is surprising that the regulation contains no provision for penalties, since the Commission has on various occasions addressed the topic of unfair trading practices in the food supply chain, as well as the regulatory fragmentation in this area.Essentially, all decisions are left to the discretion of the individual Member States, including those regarding sanctions, which differ from State to State, resulting in a «high degree of divergence in terms of the level, nature and legal form of protection provided against UTPs at the national level», which implies a fragmentation of the single market: see, for example, Green Paper of the European Commission on Unfair Trading Practices in the Business-to-Business Food and Non-Food Supply Chain in Europe, issued on 31.1.2013,COM (2013) 37. 46 And not only: even in the United States, for example, some first timid steps are being made in this direction: see SIRSI, I contratti del mercato agro-alimentare: l'esperienza USA, in Riv.dir.alim., n. 1/ 2013, 40 ff.analogous content: these include Italy, with Article 62 of Law Decree no. 1 of 2012 47 ; Spain, with Law no.12/ 2013 concerning the food supply chain 48 ; and France, with a law on modernisation of agriculture and fisheries issued on 27 July 2010 49 .As regards Italy, pursuant to Article 62, Law Decree no. 1 of 2012 (converted, with amendments, into Law no.27 of 2012), the contracts concluded between agricultural producers and processors or distributors for the delivery of the agricultural products listed in annex I TFEU (as well as food products as per Regulation (EC) No. 178/ 2002 50 , again in business-to-business contracts) were already required to be in written form and have a minimum content in terms of the contractual provisions set out therein; this regulatory requirement was backed by administrative penalties.H owever, if we take a closer look, the scopes of application of the two pieces of legislation do not coincide completely, since Article 168 (together with Articles 125 and 148) is intended to apply only for the products subject to Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 (and specified in Article 1 of the same regulation), whereas Article 62 of the Italian Law Decree -as amended by the implementing ministerial decree 51 -extends the scope of application to deliveries of all the agricultural products listed in Annex to the TFEU, as well as the food products specified in Regulation (EC) No. 178/ 2002: suffice it to say that Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 does not apply to fishery and aquaculture products, which are included, by contrast, in Annex I, and that the range of food products defined by Regulation 178/ 2002 is much broader than the one governed by the provisions of Regulation (EU) No. n. 1308/ 2013.Moreover, Italian legislation does not appear to be particularly clear as to whether the rules apply only to supply contracts that will remain in force for a given period of time, or also apply to contracts without a duration.Nor does it specify whether the written contract must be concluded in advance of the delivery or deliveries of the product.The domestic law contains no indications regarding the inclusion of termination clauses among the written contractual provisions, or, more generally speaking, cases in which a contract REDUR 13 / 2015 may be cancelled (despite the fact that provisions concerning the possible withdrawal from a contract are of fundamental importance for the party in a disadvantaged position) or the provisions applicable in the event of force majeure, which are instead provided under the EU regulation.It should also be pointed out that Article 62 does not intervene directly in respect of the contract's compliance with formal requirements; it is only concerned with the transparency of the elements that must be formalised in writing, despite containing a number of references to the requirement that the contract for the delivery of agricultural or food products be «fair»52  .By contrast, Italian legislation implementing the provisions of Article 185f, Regulation (EC) No. 1234/ 07 53 and, at a later time Article 148, Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 54 , concerning the formalisation in writing of contracts for the delivery of raw milk, on the one hand defers -as regards the obligation to use written contracts -to the provisions of Article 62 of Law Decree no. 1 of 2012 as the highest ranking legislation to be applied in generalised fashion to all contracts for the delivery of agricultural products listed in Annex I to the TFEU; but on the other hand, it adds that such contracts must be concluded in advance of delivery and contain all of the elements specified in the referenced EU legislation and that the minimum duration of the contracts in question is now twelve months, unless the supplier refuses this duration.The Spanish law similarly seems to have a vaster scope of application than Article 168 of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013; in fact, it applies to all trade relations among food supply chain operators engaged in the production, distribution and processing of food productsnot only of the agricultural products covered by the single CMO.In other respects, however, the Spanish law seems to narrow the scope of application compared to EU provisions, since Title II of the law -which contains rules concerning the form and minimum content of contracts -is applicable solely to contracts that set delivery prices above € 2.500 and contain at least one of the following elements: a) one of the parties is an SME, and the counterparty is not; b) in the event of delivery of non-processed agricultural products, one of the parties is a farmer or fisherman or an association of farmers or fishermen and the counterparty is not; c) one of the two parties is in a position of economic dependence on the other, i.e. a situation in which the dependent enterprise, in relation to the product to which the contract relates, earned at least 30% of its overall revenue from the other party in the previous year.Under the aforesaid law such contracts must: i) be concluded in writing prior to start-up of the deliveries provided for thereunder, it being specified, however, that the written form is 52 See the last part of paragraph 1, whereby contracts must be based on principles of transparency, correctness, proportionality and correspondence between the goods supplied and the consideration received, as well as paragraph 2, which prohibits, in principle, some behaviours deemed substantially abusive or unfair.As regards unfair trading practices, it may be noted that Art. 7 of Law Decree no. 1 of 2012, converted into Law no.27 of 2012, extended the scope of applicability of the relevant rules to embrace -though not in their totalityunfair trading practices between a professional and micro enterprises (as defined in Commission Recommendation 2003/ 361/ EC of 6 May 2003), with a consequent amendment of articles 18 et seq. of the Consumer Code (Legislative Decree no.205 of 2006): for a discussion of the resulting problems, see DE CRISTOFARO, «Pratiche commerciali scorrette e 'microimprese'», in Le nuove leggi civ.comm., 2015.While Ministerial Decree no.15164 of 2012 implementing Art.185f of Regulation (EC) No. 1234/ 07 established a minimum duration of six months, the subsequent law 91/ 2015 increased the duration to twelve months, a period deemed to be more in line with farmers' demands for protection; however, in this case as well, the latter may waive the minimum duration provided that they do so in writing.Art. 2 of Law no.91/ 2015 establishes in any case that the provisions set forth in Art.148 of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 are applicable to contracts for the delivery of raw milk, including, therefore, the requirement that the contracts be concluded in advance of the delivery and contain all the contractual elements listed therein.

57
Cf. Art.23 et seq. of the law. 58Loi d'avenir pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et la foret; see the Dossier published in Revue de droit rural, 2/ 2015, 15 ff..The law was also intended to adapt French legal framework to the regulatory changes resulting from the 2013 reform of the CAP.
POs to engage in contractual negotiations 64 seems a quid minus compared to the possibility, already provided for under European legislation, of directly marketing the products of members, thereby achieving what is no less than a concentration of supply 65 : in fact, negotiations carried out by a producer organisation can be considered only an indirect concentration of supply, which is undertaken directly by individual agricultural producers with the counterparties on the basis of negotiations previously conducted by the representative organisation 66 .

67
Equal to 20% in the olive oil sector, 15% in the live cattle sector and 15% in respect of the arable crops listed in Art.171; as provided in Paragraph 2(c) of the articles considered. 68see Paragraph 1(2) of the articles considered. 69as per Paragraph 1(3) of the articles considered. 70Communication from the Commission, Guidelines on the application of the specific rules set out in articles 169, 170 and 171 of the CMO regulation for the olive oil, beef and veal and arable crops sectors, Draft 2015. 71see JANNARELLI, op.ult.cit.
the agricultural products covered by the CMO, the special rules (derogating from the general ones contained in the TFEU) designed to protect competition are contained in Part IV of Regulation (EU) No. 1308/ 2013 (Articles 206 to 218) 78 , as well as in Article 222, which, among the general provisions in Part V, falls within the «exceptional measures» defined in Chapter I.As a result, the Commission can declare the temporary non-application of Article 101(1) TFEU to some types of agreements and decisions of recognised POs, associations of POs, and IOs «during periods of severe imbalance in markets», provided that they do not impair the proper functioning of the internal market and are exclusively aimed at stabilising the affected sector.Therefore, it is necessary preliminarily to describe, albeit briefly, and to the extent that it is useful for the purposes of this paper, how the relevant legislation is presently structured; this summary analysis must be limited to the rules concerning behaviours of business undertakings; without considering, therefore, the rules concerning state aid, contained in Article 211 et seq. 79.It must also be noted that Part IV of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 is applicable to products falling within the scope of the CMO, whereas rules concerning the other remaining agricultural products are laid down in Regulation (EC) No. 1184/ 2006 80 .The latter was in turn recently amended following the adoption of Regulation (EU) No. 1379/ 2013 81 on the common organisation of the markets in fishery and aquaculture products: Article 1 of Regulation No. 1184/ 2006 now clarifies, in fact, its own non-applicability not only for the products covered by the single CMO, but also for those falling within the scope of Regulation No. 1379/ 2013 (i.e. the in fishery and aquaculture products listed in the annex to the Regulation itself, which lays down the pertinent competition rules in Article 40 et seq.).Reiterating what was already provided for in the former legislation, Article 206(1) of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 establishes that, in principle, article 101 et seq.TFEU shall apply to all agreements, decisions and practices referred to in Article 101(1) and Article 102 TFEU which relate to the production of, or trade in, agricultural products, unless otherwise provided in the Regulation itself.The following paragraphs provide for the establishment of close cooperation between the EU Commission and national competition authorities, and that Commission may publish guidelines to assist both the national authorities and undertakings in the sectors concerned.Articles 207 and 208 introduced broadly applicable definitions 82 , respectively, of «relevant market» and «dominant position», previously provided by the Commission 83 and case law of the Court of Justice 84 , whereas Article 209 (under the heading «Exceptions for the objectives of the CAP and farmers and their associations») represents the «heart» of the legislation, as it outlines a special regime for the agricultural sector, together with Article 210, dedicated to «agreements and concerted practices of recognised interbranch organisations».In particular, Article 209(1), echoing a solution that had been adopted since Regulation (EEC) No. 26/ 62, establishes the non-applicability of the prohibition under Article 101(1) TFEU to the agreements, decisions and concerted practices «necessary for the attainment of the objectives set out in Article 39 TFEU».The subjective qualification of the parties who conclude such agreements is irrelevant, so it is not necessary, for the purposes of the derogation, that they all be «agricultural» parties.What is relevant is whether the agreement, decision or concerted practice is essential for attaining the objectives of the CAP; this has been clearly affirmed on more than one occasion in the interpretations of the Court of Justice, which has always judged it necessary to demonstrate the whose admissibility is in question with respect to the pursuit of the objectives set out Article 39 TFEU 85 .As mentioned above, paragraph 1(2) affirms the non-applicability of Article 101(1) TFEU to agreements, decisions and concerted practices of farmers, farmers' associations, or POs recognised under Article 152, or associations of POs recognised under Article 156 86 , which concern the production or sale of agricultural products or the use of joint facilities for the storage, treatment or processing of agricultural products, unless the objectives of Article 39 TFEU are jeopardised.As regards this second specific case, the subjective qualification of the parties to the agreement, decision or concerted practice clearly takes on essential importance; again, the legislative provisions are in line with what has been established by Community law since Regulation (EEC) No. 26/ 62, with the introduction of an explicit reference to recognised POs and their associations as negotiating entities 87 .

85
Cf. Court of Justice, 15 May 1975, in case 71/ 74, Frubo; Id., 16 December 1975, Suiker Unie, in joined cases 40 to 48, 50, 54 to 56, 111, 113 and 114/ 73; Court of First Instance, 13 December 2006, in joined cases T-217 and 245/ 03, Fédération nationale de la coopération bétail et viande. 86The second subparagraph of Art.209(1) of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 expressly clarifies, unlike the previous legislation, that the exemption from the prohibition under Art.101 TFEU also applies for agreements, decisions and concerted practices of recognised POs or recognised associations of POs.H owever, even before this explicit wording, there was no doubt that even the previous legislation was applicable to the POs where this point was concerned; the same applies for the agreements, decisions and practices as per Art.2.1(2) of Regulation 1184/ 2006, though there is no express reference to POs (CANFORA, La disciplina della concorrenza nel diritto comunitario, in COSTATO, GERMANÒ, ROOK BASILE, Trattato di dir.agr., vol.3, Turin, 2011, 209 ff. 87Cf.JANNARELLI, «'Agricoltura e concorrenza' o 'concorrenza e agricoltura'?»,cit., 25; the author notes that the explicit mention of recognised POs as being among the entities that may conclude agreements and engage in concerted practices is also consistent with the fact that now POs can also have members who are not agricultural producers, provided that they do not control the organisation. 88The fact that the prohibition against fixing identical prices is starting to feel the impact of centrifugal forces, amplified by the opening of the market as a result of the new orientations underlying the CAP, clearly emerges with the «endives» issue in France: the Court of Appeal of Paris overturned the decision of the national competition authority, which had imposed penalties on a dozen or so producer associations judged guilty of entering into agreements that were against the law because essentially aimed at fixing minimum selling prices for products; the decision of the Court of Appeal was challenged, so the case is likely to be referred to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling: for a discussion on the whole issue and the legal arguments supporting the judgment on appeal, see DEL CONT, L'arret de la Cour d'Appel de Paris du 14 mai 2014, «l'affaire endives»: quels enseignements pour l'avenir de la «relation speciale» entre agriculture et concurrence?, in Riv.dir.agr., 2015, II, 83 ff.REDUR 13 / 2015 Moreover, there seems to be no doubt as to the fact that the negotiations conducted by POs can also define the prices of subsequent sales: besides considerations of a systematic and logical character, both recital 139 89 and paragraph 2(b) of article 149 articles 169 to 171, in which there is an express reference to a «negotiated price», imply the possibility of setting prices.In any case, the specific provision, contained expressis verbis in the new regulation, with respect to the setting of prices in the sectors in which POs are authorised to carry out contractual negotiations, necessarily implies a derogation from the general prohibition against charging identical prices which is established by the same regulation 90 .The reason lies also in the principle of speciality, as the special rule is destined to prevail over the general one.This is clarified by Article 206 of the regulation: after establishing the applicability of Article 101 et seq.TFEU, it reaffirms, precisely, the rules laid down by other provisions of the same regulation.H owever, it would not have been inappropriate to define this derogation with more clarity, especially as the negotiations for the adoption of the new text dragged on for two years, with the involvement of all institutions taking part in ordinary legislative procedures 91 .

91
It is worth noting that the agreements arising from the contractual negotiations carried out by POs in the sectors where this is allowed, irrespective of the aspect connected to the fixing of prices, could moreover not benefit from the derogation pursuant to the second subparagraph of Art.209(1), since such agreements also concern parties other than farmers; thus they should be considered as prohibited, as they do not fall within the scope of the so-called agricultural exception previously provided for under Art.176 of Regulation (EC) No. 1234/ 07 for products covered by the CMO and now by the second subparagraph of Art.209(1) of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013.Nor could the latter be invoked to legitimise agreements concluded as a result of contractual negotiations: in fact, though on the one hand the EU legislator specifies that contractual negotiations carried out by recognised POs in the sectors specified in articles 169, 170 and 171 of Regulation No. 1308/ 2013 are to be considered instrumental to attaining the objectives of the CAP, as described in Art.39 TFEU, once the requirements set out therein have been complied with, the same Art.209 clarifies that the derogation provided for agreements necessary for the attainment of the objectives of the CAP cannot be applied where the agreement, decision or practice implies the obligation of charging identical prices.