×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Thursday
05
Mar 2026
weather symbol
Athens 17°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> Economy

The Mondelez case and the €337.5 million fine – Greece and 7 countries call for a “brake” on Geographical Restrictions

8 countries submit joint proposal to today's EU Competitiveness Council - What the multinational responds to protothema.gr

Newsroom May 24 08:24

The hefty €337.5 million fine imposed yesterday by the Commission on Mondelez International for obstructing cross-border trade between Member States in violation of EU competition rules seems to be the straw that broke the camel’s back!

According to reports, Greece and seven other EU countries (the Netherlands, Belgium, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Belgium, Croatia, the Czech Republic and Slovakia) will today argue together at the EU Competitiveness Council, which is meeting in Brussels, to make the necessary interventions in EU law in order to tighten the conditions or even abolish the “Geographical Supply Restrictions” measure.

On this basis, the eight countries have already drafted a specific proposal for an approach to the issue, asking the Commission and the other EU Member States to agree to prohibit discrimination in B2B transactions between businesses on the basis of their place of establishment.

It is noted that “Geographic Restrictions” are prohibited through EU competition law, provided there is ex post evidence that there was an abuse of a dominant position. However, this requires a lengthy and extensive case-by-case investigation (product market and company-by-company investigation). The burden of proof is primarily on the customer, e.g. the retailer.

If the rules are adapted to prohibit unfair practices in B2B relationships that discriminate against a retailer on the basis of his place of establishment, as requested by the eight countries, then the issue of “geographical restrictions” can be addressed in advance and the burden of proof can be shifted from the customer, e.g. the retailer, to the producer or wholesaler.

They also suggest that solutions should be sought using digital technology, perhaps through QR codes, to overcome the obstacle of translating the ingredients that must appear on the packaging in each language of the country where the product is marketed.

The move comes exactly one week after Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis wrote a letter to Commission President Ms Ursula von der Leyen asking for specific interventions in EU law to ensure equal treatment and consumer protection from the “cap” that multinational companies place on prices, especially in countries with oligopolistic characteristics.

The ‘8’ consider that the ‘Geographical Restrictions’ measure, while originally introduced to protect investment and prevent unfair competition from one country to another, has ultimately contributed to the creation of a distorted situation which in turn is becoming a major plague amidst high inflation. With this, multinationals try and succeed in maintaining different prices for their products from one country to another, putting a ‘hat’ on the smaller economies in particular and where there is insufficient competition. This “hat” was calculated in a study by the Commission in 2020, before the inflationary tsunami that sent consumer goods prices soaring, concluding that it exceeds 14 billion euros a year!

And a recent study by the University of Leiden in the Netherlands, authored by EU Competition Law Professor Ben van Rompuy, concludes that geographical supply restrictions are a hidden factor in boosting inflation in key products!

The issue will apparently be dealt with by the next European Council to be set up after the European elections.

The Mondelez case

Yesterday the Commission accused Mondelez International of illegally putting up barriers for traders to sell its products between EU member states between 2015 and 2019. In fact, 22 examples were cited where Mondelez was found to have participated in anti-competitive agreements or concerted practices.

In one case, the multinational was accused of withdrawing chocolate bars from the Netherlands to prevent them from being resold in Belgium, where they were sold at higher prices.

The company was also accused by the Commission of refusing to supply a wholesaler in Germany in order to prevent the resale of chocolate bar products in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria and Romania, “where prices were higher”.

What a Mondelez spokesman tells protothema.gr

In a statement to protothema.gr, the Mondelez Group clarifies that “the decision relates to earlier, isolated incidents, most of which either no longer existed or had been remedied long before the Commission’s investigation started. Many of these incidents related to business transactions with brokers which were occasionally carried out as individual sales, as well as transactions by small distributors operating in EU markets where Mondelēz is not present or does not market the relevant products’.

See Also

Mitsotakis from Chios: Political stability is the stake of the European elections

>Related articles

Research: Yet, we are a country of property owners (not renters)

Mass exodus of the ultra-wealthy from Dubai by private jet, paying hundreds of thousands of dollars

Natural Gas jumps 20% as prices “soar” in Europe due to Middle East war

It clarifies that for the fine ‘an accounting provision has already been made and therefore we will not need to take further measures to finance it. This issue is not indicative of what we stand for as a company and in no way reflects our long-standing practice of investing in a strong culture of compliance with the applicable regulatory and legislative framework across all our activities…”

At the same time, company circles clarify with certainty that in no way is the Greek market involved in this case.

It is noted that in previous years there have been two other similar cases of multinationals for which the General Secretariat of the Greek Government has been informed. The Commission’s Competition Directorate of the European Commission had also submitted fierce fines. The first, in 2019, concerned brewer AB InBev and the second, in 2021, concerned Valve, owner of the video game distribution platform “Steam”, and five video game developers (PC, Bandai Namco, Capcom, Focus Home, Koch Media and ZeniMax).

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#economy#fine#mondelez
> More Economy

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Ankara reacts to Patriots in Karpathos: “The Dodecanese are under demilitarization,” says Turkish Foreign Ministry

March 5, 2026

Repatriation flight for Greeks from Dubai today with Aegean – What applies to flights in the UAE

March 5, 2026

The war zone, Cyprus, K.M. and the opposition, the poison and Zoitsa’s dress, EYDAP’s awakening, the golden freight rates

March 5, 2026

The meadow with 400,000 crocuses welcoming spring in a spectacular Way

March 5, 2026

Delacroix’s iconic painting on the Greek War of Independence to be displayed in Greece

March 5, 2026

Greece repatriates 162 citizens from the Middle East over the regional crisis

March 5, 2026

Greek court confirms Golden Dawn was a criminal organization

March 5, 2026

Study reveals prehistoric europeans had surprisingly complex cooking traditions

March 5, 2026
All News

> Politics

Ankara reacts to Patriots in Karpathos: “The Dodecanese are under demilitarization,” says Turkish Foreign Ministry

The Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement following recent developments regarding the “demilitarization status” of the Aegean islands, in response to the transfer of Patriot missiles to Karpathos

March 5, 2026

Greece repatriates 162 citizens from the Middle East over the regional crisis

March 5, 2026

Dendias: Greece is protected, we have increased security measures, not only in Crete

March 4, 2026

Italian frigate mission to Cyprus on the table at emergency meeting convened by Meloni

March 4, 2026

Mitsotakis: Greece is present with force wherever national duty calls; the mission in Cyprus is defensive and peaceful (updated)

March 4, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα