Commission Decision
of 6 July 2010
on State aid C 34/08 (ex N 170/08) which Germany is planning to implement in favour of Deutsche Solar AG
(notified under document C(2010) 4489)
(Only the German text is authentic)
(Text with EEA relevance)
(2011/4/EU)
THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to the Treaty on European Union and to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular the first subparagraph of Article 108(2) of the latter,
Having regard to the Agreement on the European Economic Area, and in particular Article 62(1)(a) thereof,
Whereas:
On 27 February 2008 and on 25 June 2008, a meeting took place between the Commission services and the German authorities. The Commission requested additional information by letter of 28 May 2008 and sent an information letter on 10 June 2008. The additional information was provided by Germany by letter of 16 June 2008.
By letter dated 16 July 2008, with reference C(2008) 3507 final, the Commission informed Germany that it had decided to initiate the procedure laid down in Article 108(2) TFEU in respect of the aid.
By letters dated 7 August (A/16575) and 26 September (A/19789) 2008, the German authorities asked a delay to submit their comments. The Commission received the comments from the German authorities on 31 October (A/22972) and 2 December (A/25961) 2008. The Commission received no comments from third parties.
By letters dated 7 April (A/8226), 29 May (A/13120), 4 (A/25461) and 17 (A/26433) December 2009, and 12 January (A/550), 26 April (A/7045), 14 May (A/8206), and 10 June (A/9628) 2010, the German authorities submitted additional information to the Commission.
On 12 October 2009, a meeting took place between the Commission services and the German authorities as well as the investor in Berlin.
The aid project aims at promoting regional development. The investment is to take place in eastern Germany, namely Freiberg in the land Saxony, an assisted area pursuant to Article 107(3)(a) TFEU.
The German authorities intend to provide regional investment aid to Deutsche Solar AG (hereinafter DS) for the setting-up of a plant to produce solar wafers. The total eligible costs of the notified investment amount to EUR 350 million in nominal value.
Further to the notified investment in Freiberg East, DS already has two other production plants located in Freiberg, Sachsen (one in the industrial park Freiberg South and one in the industrial park Freiberg Saxonia). The three sites are located within 5-6 km distance from each other. In 2007, DS had a turnover of EUR 318 million. In 2008, DS had 770 employees. Other 100 % subsidiaries of SW group located in Freiberg are Deutsche Cell GmbH (production of solar cells), Solar Factory GmbH (production of solar modules), Sunicon AG (recycling of silicon), SolarWorld Innovations GmbH (R & D), and SolarWorld Solicium GmbH (production of silicon). SW also holds 49 % in the Freiberg based JSSi GmbH (production of silicon), a joint venture with Evonik Degussa GmbH.
The project started on 18 December 2007. The investment project should be finalised in 2010 and full production will be reached by end of 2010.
With the new project, DS intends to create at least 130 direct jobs and the same number of indirect jobs in a region with high unemployment rates.
At the time of the notification, Germany informed the Commission on aid to be granted for another DS investment (project P3 in Freiberg South) started almost simultaneously with the notified project (on 1 September 2007), for the extension of its existing solar wafer plant from 350 to 500 MWp. Eligible costs of this project amount to EUR 49 million (nominal value). The German authorities intended to grant regional aid amounting to EUR 14 million (nominal value) for this investment. The aid for this project was however withdrawn and Germany informed the Commission after the opening of the formal investigation that no aid was paid out or would be granted for this project.
The aid for the notified project Freiberg East is to be granted under existing aid schemes in the form of two instruments: a direct grant and an investment premium.
(EUR) | ||||
2008 | 2009 | 2010 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eligible costs | 136 000 000 | 164 000 000 | 50 000 000 | 350 000 000 |
(EUR) | |
Source | Amount |
---|---|
Own resources | […]10 |
Grant under GA scheme and IZ schemes | 45 395 000 |
Bank loan (not covered by public guarantee) | […] |
Total | 350 000 000 |
The beneficiary applied for aid for the notified project on 17 August 2007. By letter dated 22 August 2007, the German authorities informed the beneficiary that the project was eligible for aid. Germany committed to not grant the aid before approval by the Commission and to respect the maximum aid approved.
Germany initially notified regional aid amounting to EUR 48 million (nominal value) for the DS investment project in Freiberg East. The Commission however initiated the formal investigation against this aid based on doubts that the notified project should be considered a single investment project (point 60 of the RAG) with a previous aided project in Freiberg South, and that hence the notified aid intensity would exceed the maximum allowable (applying the scaling down mechanism of point 67 of the RAG).
within 2 months of granting the aid, a copy of the signed aid contract between the granting authority and the beneficiary,
on a five-yearly basis, starting from the approval of the aid by the Commission, an intermediary report (including information on the aid amounts being paid, on the execution of the aid contract and on any other investment projects started at the same establishment/plant),
within 6 months after payment of the last tranche of the aid, based on the notified payment schedule, a detailed final report.
The Commission, in its decision to initiate the formal investigation procedure in the present case, noted that it had doubts on the compatibility of the aid with the internal market based on Article 107(3)(a) TFEU and with the RAG.
According to point 60 of the RAG, in order to prevent that a large investment project is being artificially divided into sub-projects in order to escape the provisions of these guidelines, an investment project will be considered to be a ‘single investment project’ when the initial investment is undertaken in a period of 3 years by one or more companies and consists of fixed assets combined in an economically indivisible way.
To asses whether an initial investment is economically indivisible, the RAG stipulates in its footnote 55 that the Commission will take into account the technical, functional and strategic links and the immediate geographical proximity.
In case the notified project would constitute a single investment project with project P3 in Freiberg South, the scaling down mechanism of point 67 of the RAG would have to be applied to the combined eligible costs of the two projects, and the notified aid together with the aid to be granted for the project P3 would exceed the maximum allowable, and the excess would be incompatible with Article 107(3)(a) TFEU.
In its decision to initiate the formal investigation procedure, the Commission noted that the distance of only about 5 km between the location of the notified project (Freiberg East) and the previous project P3 (Freiberg South) could be regarded as immediate geographical proximity. The Commission further noted the presence of certain functional and technical links between the two investments, as well as rather strong strategic links. On this basis, the Commission raised doubts against Germany’s view that the notified project did not constitute a single investment project (in the meaning of point 60 and footnote 55 of the RAG) with the project P3 in Freiberg South, and invited third parties to comment on the indivisibility of the two DS investment projects in Freiberg.
In its decision to initiate the formal investigation procedure, the Commission also assessed the compatibility with the general provisions of the RAG and with the specific rules for aid to large investment projects in point 68(a) and (b) of the RAG, concluding that the notified measure was in compliance with them.
The Commission received no observations from third parties.
In its initial comments submitted to the Commission (on 31 October and 2 December 2008), Germany expressed the view that the criteria (geographical proximity, technical, functional and strategic links) specified in point 60 and footnote 55 of the RAG are not suitable to determine whether two investment projects should be considered ‘economically indivisible’, because these factors do not allow to clarify the circumstances in which a project can be considered to be economically viable without the other project. Germany further argued that to interpret the legal concept of ‘economic indivisibility’ the sole decisive factor is whether one project is economically feasible without the other.
Germany further considered that the Commission’s argument that there is some kind of functional and technical links between the projects in Freiberg East and South is not sufficient to establish that they are economically indivisible. Germany concluded that the Commission’s grounds for initiating the formal investigation procedure were therefore based on a misuse of the discretionary power of the Commission accorded to it under Article 107(3) TFEU, which resulted in a disproportionate decision against the beneficiary of the aid.
Moreover, Germany stated that the application of the criterion ‘geographical proximity’ is inappropriate for the purpose of preventing subsidy increases, since not all language versions of footnote 55 of the RAG include the requirement that the investment sites be in ‘immediate’ geographical proximity to one another (e.g. the French version does not specify ‘immediate’ but only ‘geographical proximity’). Germany argued that the criteria in footnote 55 do therefore not form a uniform legal framework for the regulation of subsidy spirals.
In view of the above, Germany concluded that the DS projects in Freiberg South and Freiberg East were not economically indivisible and were not to be considered to form a single investment project in the meaning of point 60 and footnote 55 of the RAG. According to Germany, the notified aid for the Freiberg East investment was therefore not to be reduced applying the scaling down mechanism to the combined eligible investment costs of the DS projects in Freiberg South and East.
With its initial comments, Germany also submitted updated information on the investment projects undertaken by DS in Freiberg South and East within 3 years from the start of the notified project: previously to the project P3 (extension of solar wafer production capacity from 350 to 500 MWp) in Freiberg South, another project P2 (previous extension of solar wafer production capacity from 270 to 350 MWp) had been undertaken at the same site. Aid had also been granted (under existing aid schemes) to this project P2. Furthermore, Germany informed that the planned aid to project P3 would only be granted in the form of investment premium (based on the IZ scheme).
Subsequently to its initial comments, Germany at several stages submitted updated information on the investment projects undertaken or to be undertaken by the beneficiary group in Freiberg South within a period of 3 years from the start of the notified investment project.
Freiberg South (P2 – P3) | Freiberg East | Freiberg Saxonia | |
---|---|---|---|
Status | Previous projects P2 and P3, non-notifiable aid | Notified project | Future project |
Product | Solar wafers | Solar wafers | Solar modules |
Production capacity(in MWp) | From 270 to 350 (P2) From 350 to 500 (P3) | 500 | 300 |
Start of project | 1.6.2006 (P2) 1.9.2007 (P3) | 18.12.2007 | Summer/Autumn 2010 |
Eligible costs(EUR, nominal values) | 49 995 991 (P2) 49 000 000 (P3) | 350 000 000 | 72 500 000 |
Aid amount(EUR, nominal values) | 16 905 000 (P2) 013 (P3) | 45 395 00014 | ? |
The main changes to the initial notification concern the withdrawal of all aid to be granted for project P3 in Freiberg South, and the reduction of the aid to be granted for the notified project in Freiberg East. Germany also committed that no aid had been or would be paid out for project P3.
Germany informed the Commission in the course of the formal investigation that, even though it did not explicitly admit that the notified project in Freiberg East would form a single investment project in the meaning of point 60 and footnote 55 of the RAG together with the projects in Freiberg South, Germany would limit the total aid granted for the combined eligible costs (EUR 402 865 942 in discounted value) of the three projects P2, P3 and the notified project to the maximum allowable (EUR 55 749 652 in discounted value – 14,06 % GGE) in a ‘single investment project’ scenario.
Additionally, Germany also included information on a future large investment project SF III by SW group in Freiberg Saxonia (setting-up of a new plant for the production of solar modules), to be started within 3 years from the start of the notified project, and announced its intention to grant aid to this project. Germany committed to notify the aid for SF III separately and make it conditional to Commission approval.
In its decision to initiate the formal investigation procedure, the Commission concluded that the financial support to be granted by Germany to DS on the basis of existing regional aid schemes (GA scheme and IZ schemes) constitutes State aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) TFEU. The German authorities have not contested that conclusion.
By notifying the planned aid measure on 28 March 2008 before putting it into effect, Germany respected its obligations under Article 108(3) TFEU and the individual notification requirement expressed in Article 7(e) of the Block Exemption Regulation for regional aid.
Having established that the measure involves State aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) TFEU, it is necessary to consider whether the above mentioned measure can be found compatible with the internal market. As the measure relates to a regional investment aid, the Commission assessed it on the basis of the RAG, and, more specifically, the provisions of section 4.3 of the RAG relating to large investment projects.
In its decision to initiate the formal investigation procedure, the Commission indicated that the notified aid is to be granted on the basis of, and in conformity with, the provisions of block-exempted aid schemes which respect the general compatibility criteria of the RAG.
In particular, the project comprises an initial investment within the meaning of the RAG as it concerns the setting-up of a new establishment. The costs eligible for investment aid are defined in line with the RAG, and the rules on cumulation are respected.
Furthermore, the beneficiary has applied for aid, the German authorities confirmed in writing, before DS started work on the project, that the project was eligible for aid, and agreed to grant the aid subject to the Commission’s approval.
DS has the obligation to maintain the investment in the region for a minimum of 5 years after completion of the project.
DS provides a financial contribution of at least 25 % of the eligible costs in a form which is free of any public support.
According to point 60 of the RAG, in order to prevent that a large investment project is being artificially divided into sub-projects in order to escape the provisions of these guidelines, an investment project will be considered to be a ‘single investment project’ when the initial investment is undertaken in a period of 3 years by one or more companies and consists of fixed assets combined in an economically indivisible way.
In the present case, the Commission opened the formal investigation based on doubts that the notified aid would exceed the maximum allowable if the project would form a single investment project with a previously subsidised project (P3) in Freiberg South. Project P3 is a follow-up project of P2 (both projects are related to subsequent extensions of the production capacity of an existing solar wafer plant from 270 to 350 MW and then from 350 to 500 MW), which is a classical example of a ‘single investment project’ scenario. Indeed, the investments are carried out within 3 years in immediate geographical proximity (within the same integrated production site of SW group in Freiberg South) and present clear technical (same product and production technology), functional (same raw material, common suppliers/customers, common services) and strategic (integrated capacity increase strategy addressing a same market) links.
In this case, Germany withdrew all aid to project P3 and amended the notification to reduce the aid intensity for the notified project in order to limit the total aid granted for the combined eligible costs of the notified project in Freiberg East and two previous projects (P2 and P3) in Freiberg South to the maximum allowable in a ‘single investment project’ scenario (covering all projects undertaken within 3 years). The Commission therefore does not need to further investigate and take a position on whether the notified project forms a single investment project with these previous projects.
As regards the calculation of the aid, Germany agreed that projects P3 and P2 will be taken into account for the calculation of the maximum aid intensity like in a ‘single investment project’ scenario between the notified project and previous projects.
As EUR 15 384 891 (discounted value) has already been granted (for P2), the maximum allowable aid for the notified project would be EUR 40 364 760 (discounted value), corresponding to an aid intensity of 12,97 % GGE. Since Germany committed to respect this maximum, it can be concluded that the scaling down rules under point 67 of the RAG are respected even in case the notified project would constitute a single investment project with previous subsidised projects within 3 years.
Since Germany committed to notify the aid for the mentioned future project SF III in Freiberg Saxonia separately and make it conditional to Commission approval, the Commission does not need to take a position in the present decision on whether the notified project forms a single investment project with the future project SF III.
The Commission’s decision to allow regional aid to large investment projects falling under point 68 of the RAG depends on the market shares of the beneficiary before and after the investment and on the capacity created by the investment. To carry out the relevant tests under point 68(a) and (b) of the RAG, the Commission has to establish appropriate product and geographic market definitions.
In its decision opening the formal investigation, the Commission noted that the product envisaged by the notified investment project is multi-crystalline silicon based solar wafers.
In line with point 69 of the RAG (where the project concerns an intermediate product and a significant part of the output is not sold on the market, the product concerned may be the downstream product), since the Commission could not exclude that the solar wafers produced in Freiberg East would not, at least partly, be used internally by the beneficiary group for further production into solar cells or solar modules, the Commission took the view, in its decision opening the formal investigation procedure, that the product concerned by the notified project was thus not only solar wafers but also solar cells and solar modules. The Commission further defined the relevant product markets for the assessment of point 68(a) of the RAG to be the markets for solar wafers, solar cells and solar modules, and defined the geographical market for the assessment as being worldwide.
In its decision to initiate the investigation procedure, the Commission calculated the beneficiary group market shares on all relevant markets before and after the investment (2006 to 2011), taking into account a worst case scenario that the market would not grow after 2010 (as the independent studies available did not provide a forecast for the years after 2010). Since based on these calculations, all market shares were below 20 % before the investment and below 15 % after the investment, the Commission noted that the market shares would not exceed 25 % and concluded that hence the notified aid was in line with point 68(a) of the RAG.
In its decision to initiate the investigation procedure, the Commission also concluded that since the Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of the apparent consumption for photovoltaic products in the EEA for the year 2001 to 2006 (35 %) was clearly above the CAGR of the European Economic Area’s GDP (1,97 %) for the same years, there should be no doubt that the CAGR of the apparent consumption in the EEA for the same years for the intermediate products would also be clearly above this 1,97 % even if there was no data available on these intermediate products in the EEA. The Commission consequently concluded that the notified aid was compatible with point 68(b) of the RAG.
During the formal investigation procedure there were no indications that could raise doubts on the above statements regarding the compatibility with point 68 of the RAG. Moreover, the analysis in the opening decision demonstrated that the SW group expected market shares on all relevant markets in 2011 were below 15 %, there is thus no risk that when recalculated based on more recent studies they would exceed 25 %.
In view of the above, the Commission confirms its conclusion taken in the decision to initiate the formal investigation that the notified aid is compatible with point 68 of the RAG.
Based on the above assessment, the Commission concludes that the notified aid measure is in line with the RAG and the regional aid map for Germany in force at the time of the notification,
HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION: