14th December 2022
With less than a month to go until the UK’s long-anticipated subsidy control regime comes into force on 4 January 2023, both public authorities and potential recipients of public sector assistance should familiarise themselves with the new rules that will apply to such support.
While the subsidy control regime allows public authorities a certain degree of flexibility to design appropriate subsidies, a number of constraints remain on their ability to do so. There are also certain procedural requirements with which any authority granting subsidies will need to comply.
Failure to comply with the subsidy control rules could result in the subsidy being challenged by an interested third party and an eventual re-payment order, so it is important that the new rules are understood and followed.
In this article, Walker Morris’ Competition and Infrastructure & Energy specialists, Sarah Ward and Adam Bertram, explain the new rules and offer practical insight for public authorities and potential recipients of public sector support. For more detailed information, or for tailored advice on any aspect of subsidy control, please contact Sarah or Adam, who will be very happy to help.
From 1 January 2021, the EU state aid rules ceased to apply to funding and support measures granted to businesses by UK public authorities, save where a measure affected trade in goods (and/or wholesale electricity) between Northern Ireland and the EU. Since then, the subsidy control provisions of the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement (the TCA) have applied. For further details of the relevant provisions of the TCA, see our previous article.
The Subsidy Control Act 2022 (the Act) will apply to subsidies where a public authority makes a binding commitment to grant the subsidy on or after 4 January 2023. It will apply to subsidy schemes where the scheme’s rules are formally confirmed and put into operation by the public authority on or after that date.
A “subsidy” is defined as financial assistance which is given directly or indirectly from public resources by a public authority, and which:
This definition is essentially the same as under the current regime. The only difference is the final element, which captures measures which have, or are capable of having, an effect on competition or investment within the UK (rather than solely measures which are capable of having an effect on trade and investment between the UK and third countries). This introduces a new dimension to the subsidy control regime, namely a desire to protect the UK internal market and, for example, to avoid ‘subsidy races’ between different areas. It is likely to be a relatively easy threshold to satisfy (particularly compared to the state aid rules, which require an effect on trade between Member States).
The Act will not apply to subsidies granted by the Houses of Parliament, the Scottish Parliament, the Welsh Assembly or the Northern Irish Assembly. It will only apply where the assistance in question is conferred on an enterprise – i.e. a person engaged in an economic activity that entails offering goods or services on a market.
Most of the subsidy control requirements will not apply to so-called Minimal Financial Assistance (MFA) if the total amount of MFA and Services of Public Economic Interest Assistance (SPEIA) (explained below) given to the receiving enterprise within the applicable period (i.e. the elapsed part of the current financial year and the two financial years previously) does not exceed £315,000. This threshold is higher than the de minimis threshold of €200,000 under the EU state aid rules.
Most of the subsidy control requirements also will not apply to SPEIA if the total amount of SPEIA and MFA given to the enterprise within the applicable period does not exceed £725,000. SPEIA is assistance granted for the provision of Services of Public Economic Interest (SPEI) – i.e. services which are provided for the benefit of the public and which would not be provided, or would not be provided on the terms required, by an enterprise under normal market conditions. The concept is similar to Services of General Economic Interest under the EU state aid rules, and may include services such as social housing or public transport services in rural areas. SPEIA must be limited to what is necessary to deliver the SPEI, taking into account a reasonable profit, and must meet certain procedural requirements so that it is deemed to have been given “in a transparent manner”.
Where a subsidy falls under either of the exemptions above, it will not have to be assessed against the seven subsidy control principles outlined below (or, where appropriate, the energy and environment principles). Details of the subsidy will only have to be uploaded to the UK subsidy database (explained below) if it is worth £100,000 or more. However, public authorities must exchange certain paperwork with the intended recipient in order to benefit from either exemption. An enterprise must also keep records, for at least three years, of any MFA or SPEIA it receives.
Exemptions from most of the subsidy control requirements will also exist for other types of subsidy or scheme such as, for example, those granted to compensate damage caused by a natural disaster.
In common with both the EU state aid regime and the current TCA regime, the Act will prohibit certain types of subsidy or subsidy scheme (including, for example, unlimited guarantees, subsidies dependent on export performance or those contingent on the use of domestically produced goods or services). It will allow certain others only when particular conditions are met (for example, subsidies which are conditional on the recipient relocating and subsidies for restructuring an ailing or insolvent business).
For other types of subsidy or subsidy scheme, there will be two assessment routes: a ‘baseline route’ and a ‘streamlined route’.
Under the ‘baseline route’, a public authority will have to consider the subsidy control principles set out in Schedule 1 to the Act before deciding to give a subsidy or make a subsidy scheme. The seven principles (the Seven Principles) are:
The last of the Seven Principles has been added to the six principles set out in the TCA. Again reflecting a desire to protect the UK internal market, this provides that subsidies/schemes should be designed to achieve their specific policy objective while minimising any negative effects on competition or investment within the UK.
Guidance published by BEIS on 11 November 2022 (available here) (the BEIS Guidance) sets out a four-part framework to help public authorities ensure that a subsidy or scheme is consistent with the Seven Principles:
Where a subsidy or scheme has a specific policy objective relating to energy or the environment, it must also be assessed against a set of energy and environment principles. According to the BEIS Guidance, this would include subsidies to:
Where a subsidy is granted for the provision of SPEI, it must be consistent with the Seven Principles, save to the extent that the principles would obstruct the performance of the SPEI.
BEIS has published a template (available here) which it recommends public authorities use to document their evidence, analysis and conclusions for their assessment of a subsidy’s or a scheme’s compliance with the relevant principles.
Streamlined routes are a type of subsidy scheme that public authorities will be able to use for low-risk subsidies that align with the Government’s strategic priorities. They will offer pre-assessed routes for public authorities to award subsidies more quickly. For subsidies falling under a ‘streamlined route’, authorities will only need to demonstrate that they meet the compliance criteria and maximum thresholds for the route.
The Government has suggested that three streamlined routes will be available from 4 January 2023, relating to:
BEIS has published draft documents and guidance relating to each of these streamlined routes, so that public authorities and other stakeholders may familiarise themselves with them prior to final publication in January.
Public authorities will be required to refer “Subsidies and schemes of particular interest” (SSOPIs) to the Competition and Markets Authority (the CMA) for advice before they can be granted. SSOPIs include:
After the CMA’s Subsidy Advice Unit (the SAU) publishes its report into the SSOPI, the public authority will have to wait for a mandatory ‘cooling-off’ period of five working days before granting the subsidy. However, the advice provided by the SAU is non-binding and the SAU will have no powers to investigate suspected breaches of the Act, nor to prohibit or approve the grant of subsidies.
The granting authority or the Secretary of State will also have the option to refer “subsidies and schemes of interest” (SSOIs) to the CMA. SSOIs will include subsidies which are not SSOPIs but which are:
Again, the SAU’s report will be non-binding and, in the case of a SSOI, no ‘cooling-off’ period will apply. In fact, the public authority will be able to grant the SSOI before it receives the SAU’s report, if it so chooses.
For transparency purposes, a public authority will have to post certain details about the following types of subsidy and subsidy scheme on the Government’s subsidy database:
The BEIS Guidance sets out the information that has to be provided. This will generally have to be uploaded within three months of the decision to give the subsidy or make the subsidy scheme, and maintained for at least six years (or the duration of the subsidy scheme, if longer).
Interested parties will be able to challenge a standalone subsidy or subsidy scheme before the Competition Appeal Tribunal (the CAT). Interested parties may include:
The challenge must be made within one month of the subsidy being uploaded to the subsidy database; further information can also be requested.
In determining an application for review, the CAT will apply judicial review principles. If the CAT finds that the decision to award the subsidy or make the scheme was unlawful, it will be able to make various orders including:
Public authorities and businesses who receive, or are looking to receive, public support should welcome the fact that the subsidy control regime looks set to offer greater certainty than the rules currently in effect under the TCA. However, the new regime is wide-ranging and, in parts, multi-faceted. Walker Morris’ Competition and Infrastructure & Energy specialists have been closely monitoring the development of the UK’s new approach to subsidy control. We are expertly acquainted with the provisions of the Act, and well equipped to provide public authorities, or businesses looking for public support, with tailored advice and assistance on its legal and practical application, including ways to mitigate the risk of challenge.
For more information or advice on any aspect of subsidy control, please contact Sarah Ward, Adam Bertram or any member of Walker Morris’ Competition or Infrastructure & Energy teams.