82_FR_28998 82 FR 28877 - United States v. General Electric Co., et al., Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement

82 FR 28877 - United States v. General Electric Co., et al., Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 121 (June 26, 2017)

Page Range28877-28886
FR Document2017-13327

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 121 (Monday, June 26, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 121 (Monday, June 26, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28877-28886]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-13327]


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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE

Antitrust Division


United States v. General Electric Co., et al., Proposed Final 
Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement

    Notice is hereby given pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and 
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(b)-(h), that a proposed Final Judgment, 
Stipulation and Competitive Impact Statement have been filed with the 
United States District Court for the District of Columbia in United 
States of America v. General Electric Co., et al., Civil Action No. 
1:17-cv-1146. On June 12, 2017, the United States filed a Complaint 
alleging that the proposed acquisition by General Electric Co. of Baker 
Hughes Incorporated, would violate Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 
U.S.C. 18. The proposed Final Judgment, filed the same time as the 
Complaint, requires General Electric Co. to sell its GE Water & Process 
Technologies business, including certain tangible and intangible 
assets, to one or more acquirers approved by the United States.
    Copies of the Complaint, proposed Final Judgment, and Competitive 
Impact Statement are available for inspection at the Department of 
Justice's Web site at http://www.justice.gov/atr and at the Office of 
the Clerk of the United States District Court for the District of 
Columbia. Copies of these materials may be obtained from the Antitrust 
Division upon request and payment of the copying fee set by Department 
of Justice regulations.
    Public comment is invited within 60 days of the date of this 
notice. Such comments, including the name of the submitter, and 
responses thereto, will be posted on the Antitrust Division's Web site, 
filed with the Court, and, under certain circumstances, published in 
the Federal Register. Comments should be directed to Kathleen S. 
O'Neill, Chief, Transportation, Energy & Agriculture Section, Antitrust 
Division, Department of Justice, 450 Fifth Street NW., Suite 8000, 
Washington, DC 20530.

Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement.

United States District Court for the District of Columbia

    United States of America, U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust 
Division, 450 5th Street NW., Suite 8000, Washington DC 20001, 
Plaintiff, v. General Electric Co., 41 Farnsworth Street, Boston MA 
02210, and Baker Hughes Incorporated, 2929 Allen Parkway, Suite 
2100, Houston TX 77019, Defendants.

Case No.: 1:17-cv-01146
Judge: Beryl A. Howell

COMPLAINT

    The United States of America, acting under the direction of the 
Attorney General of the United States, brings this civil action to 
enjoin the acquisition of Baker Hughes Incorporated (``Baker Hughes'') 
by General Electric Co. (``GE'') and to obtain other equitable relief. 
The United States alleges as follows:

I. NATURE OF THE ACTION

    1. GE's acquisition of Baker Hughes would combine two of the 
leading providers of refinery process chemicals and services in the 
United States. Refineries process crude oil and natural gas extracted 
from wells (``hydrocarbons'') into finished products like gasoline. To 
perform this process, refineries rely on a variety of special 
chemicals, collectively known as refinery process chemicals, to remove 
salts, solids, metals, and other impurities from the hydrocarbons and 
to prevent corrosion and damage to refinery equipment. Refineries rely 
on process chemical and service providers to evaluate the specific 
hydrocarbons flowing into their refineries and to formulate and apply 
customized

[[Page 28878]]

chemical solutions to ensure the safe and efficient processing of those 
hydrocarbons. To develop the chemical solutions needed to address 
current and future challenges, these service providers maintain 
dedicated research and development facilities.
    2. Failures can be costly. If the refinery process chemical and 
service provider selects the wrong chemicals or fails to provide 
adequate and timely service, the result may be millions of dollars in 
lost production or damage to the refinery's equipment. For these 
reasons, oil and gas refiners choose a provider based on a number of 
factors that include not just pricing but the provider's experience, 
ability to offer timely and high-quality service, and research and 
development capabilities.
    3. GE and Baker Hughes vigorously compete to win the business of 
oil and gas refiners. If the transaction is allowed to proceed, this 
competition will be lost, and the merged firm will control over 50% of 
the market, leading to higher prices, reduced service quality, and 
diminished innovation.
    4. Accordingly, as alleged more specifically below, the 
acquisition, if consummated, would likely substantially lessen 
competition in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 
Sec.  18, and should be enjoined.

II. DEFENDANTS AND THE TRANSACTION

    5. Defendant GE is a New York corporation headquartered in Boston, 
Massachusetts. GE is a large, diversified corporation that, among other 
lines of business, supplies the oil and gas industry with refinery 
process chemicals and services through its GE Water & Process 
Technologies business unit. GE generated $16 billion in revenues from 
oil- and gas-related products and services in 2015.
    6. Defendant Baker Hughes is a Delaware corporation headquartered 
in Houston, Texas. Baker Hughes supplies the oil and gas industry with 
refinery process chemicals and services through its Downstream 
Chemicals business, which is part of Baker Hughes's Chemicals and 
Industrial Services organization. Baker Hughes's 2015 revenues were 
$15.7 billion.
    7. Pursuant to a Transaction Agreement and Plan of Merger dated 
October 30, 2016 (``Transaction''), GE will acquire Baker Hughes.

III. JURISDICTION AND VENUE

    8. The United States brings this action pursuant to Section 15 of 
the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to prevent and restrain 
Defendants from violating Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
    9. Defendants provide refinery process chemicals and services in 
the flow of interstate commerce, and their provision of refinery 
process chemicals and services substantially affects interstate 
commerce. The Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action 
pursuant to Section 15 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 25, and 28 U.S.C. 
1331, 1337(a), and 1345.
    10. Defendants have consented to venue and personal jurisdiction in 
the District of Columbia for the purpose of this matter. Venue is 
therefore proper in this district under Section 12 of the Clayton Act, 
15 U.S.C. 22 and 28 U.S.C. 1391(b) and (c).

IV. RELEVANT MARKET

    11. The provision of refinery process chemicals and services is a 
relevant product market and line of commerce under Section 7 of the 
Clayton Act. Oil and gas refiners have no reasonable substitutes for 
refinery process chemicals and services. Because oil and gas refiners 
have no reasonable alternatives to refinery process chemicals and 
services, few, if any, would substitute to other products in response 
to a price increase.
    12. Oil and gas refiners choose from those suppliers that have 
service staff and support infrastructure in their local area. GE and 
Baker Hughes have such infrastructure and compete with one another for 
customers in local areas throughout the United States. One well-
accepted methodology for assessing whether a group of products and 
services sold in a particular area constitutes a relevant market under 
the Clayton Act is to ask whether a hypothetical monopolist over all 
the products sold in the area would raise prices for a non-transitory 
period by a small but significant amount, or whether enough customers 
would switch to other products or services or purchase outside the area 
such that the price increase would be unprofitable. Fed. Trade Comm'n & 
U.S. Dep't of Justice Horizontal Merger Guidelines (2010). A 
hypothetical monopolist of refinery process chemicals and services in 
the United States likely would impose at least a small but significant 
price increase because few if any customers would substitute to 
purchasing other products or to purchasing outside the United States. 
Therefore, the provision of refinery process chemicals and services in 
the United States is a relevant market under Section 7 of the Clayton 
Act.

V. LIKELY ANTICOMPETITIVE EFFECTS

    13. The relevant market is highly concentrated and would become 
more concentrated as a result of the Transaction. GE's share of the 
refinery process chemicals and services market in the United States is 
approximately 20% while Baker Hughes's is approximately 35%.
    14. Concentration in relevant markets is typically measured by the 
Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (``HHI'').\1\ Market concentration is one 
useful indicator of the likely competitive effects of a merger. The 
more concentrated a market and the more a transaction would increase 
concentration in a market, the more likely it is that a transaction 
would result in a meaningful reduction in competition. Markets in which 
the HHI is above 2,500 points are considered highly concentrated. 
Transactions that increase the HHI by more than 200 points in highly 
concentrated markets are presumed likely to enhance market power.
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    \1\ See U.S. Dep't of Justice and Federal Trade Commission, 
Horizontal Merger Guidelines Sec.  5.3 (2010), available at http://www.justice.gov/atr/public/guidelines/hmg-2010.html. The HHI is 
calculated by squaring the market share of each firm competing in 
the market and then summing the resulting numbers. For example, for 
a market consisting of four firms with shares of 30, 30, 20, and 20 
percent, the HHI is 2,600 (30\2\ + 30\2\ + 20\2\ + 20\2\ = 2,600). 
The HHI takes into account the relative size distribution of the 
firms in a market. It approaches zero when a market is occupied by a 
large number of firms of relatively equal size and reaches its 
maximum of 10,000 points when a market is controlled by a single 
firm. The HHI increases both as the number of firms in the market 
decreases and as the disparity in size between those firms 
increases.
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    15. The refinery process chemicals and services market in the 
United States currently is highly concentrated, with an HHI over 2,900. 
The Transaction would increase the HHI by about 1,450, rendering the 
Transaction presumptively anticompetitive. Fed. Trade Comm'n & U.S. 
Dep't of Justice Horizontal Merger Guidelines (2010).
    16. Defendants are two of a few firms that have the technical 
capabilities and expertise to provide refinery process chemicals and 
services in the United States. Defendants vigorously compete on price, 
service quality, and product development, and customers have benefitted 
from this competition.
    17. The Transaction would eliminate the competition between 
Defendants to provide refinery process chemicals and services in the 
United States. After the Transaction, GE would gain the incentive and 
ability to raise its bid prices significantly above competitive levels, 
reduce its investment in research

[[Page 28879]]

and development, and provide lower levels of service.

VI. ABSENCE OF COUNTERVAILING FACTORS

    18. Entry by a new provider of refinery process chemicals and 
services or expansion of existing marginal providers would not be 
timely, likely, and sufficient to prevent the substantial lessening of 
competition caused by the elimination of Baker Hughes as an independent 
competitor.
    19. Successful entry into the provision of refinery process 
chemicals and services in the United States is difficult, costly, and 
time consuming. An entrant would need to develop local infrastructure, 
a full line of chemicals designed for refineries, and a track record of 
successfully treating the products processed by refineries. Because of 
the significant investment oil and gas refiners make in acquiring 
hydrocarbons to process and the high costs of any problem or delay, 
refinery oil and gas refiners are unlikely to switch away from 
established providers, making it difficult for new refinery process 
chemical and service providers to enter the market.
    20. Defendants cannot demonstrate cognizable and merger-specific 
efficiencies that would be sufficient to offset the Transaction's 
anticompetitive effects.

VII. VIOLATION ALLEGED

    21. The effect of the Transaction, if consummated, would likely be 
to lessen substantially competition for refinery process chemicals and 
services in the United States in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton 
Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec.  18. Unless restrained, the Transaction would 
likely have the following effects, among others:
    (a) Competition in the market for refinery process chemicals and 
services in the United States would be substantially lessened;
    (b) prices for refinery process chemicals and services in the 
United States would increase;
    (c) the quality of refinery process chemicals and services in the 
United States would decrease; and
    (d) innovation in the refinery process chemicals and services 
market in the United States would diminish.

VIII. REQUESTED RELIEF

    22. The United States requests that this Court:
    (a) Adjudge GE's proposed acquisition of Baker Hughes to violate 
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec.  18;
    (b) Permanently enjoin and restrain Defendants from consummating 
the proposed acquisition by GE of Baker Hughes or from entering into or 
carrying out any contract, agreement, plan, or understanding, the 
effect of which would be to combine GE and Baker Hughes;
    (c) Award the United States its costs for this action; and
    (d) Award the United States such other and further relief as the 
Court deems just and proper.

Dated: June 12, 2017

Respectfully submitted,

FOR PLAINTIFF UNITED STATES:

/s/--------------------------------------------------------------------
Andrew C. Finch,
Acting Assistant Attorney General

/s/--------------------------------------------------------------------
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement

/s/--------------------------------------------------------------------
Kathleen S. O'Neill,
Chief, Transportation, Energy & Agriculture Section

/s/--------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert Lepore,
Assistant Chief, Transportation, Energy & Agriculture Section

/s/--------------------------------------------------------------------
Tracy Fisher
Tracey Chambers
Jeremy Evans (DC Bar # 478097)
Chinita Sinkler
Trial Attorneys

U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Transportation, 
Energy & Agriculture Section, 450 5th Street NW., Suite 8000, 
Washington, DC 20530, (202) 616-1650, [email protected].

United States District Court District of Columbia

    United States of America, Plaintiff, v. General Electric Co. and 
Baker Hughes Incorporated, Defendants.

Case No.: 1:17-cv-01146
Judge: Beryl A. Howell

FINAL JUDGMENT

    Whereas, Plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Complaint 
on June 12, 2017, the United States and Defendants, General Electric 
Co. and Baker Hughes Incorporated, by their respective attorneys, have 
consented to the entry of this Final Judgment without trial or 
adjudication of any issue of fact or law and without this Final 
Judgment constituting any evidence against or admission by any party 
regarding any issue of fact or law;
    And whereas, Defendants agree to be bound by the provisions of this 
Final Judgment pending its approval by the Court;
    And whereas, the essence of this Final Judgment is the prompt and 
certain divestiture of certain rights or assets by Defendants to assure 
that competition is not substantially lessened;
    And whereas, the United States requires Defendants to make certain 
divestitures for the purpose of remedying the loss of competition 
alleged in the Complaint;
    And whereas, Defendants have represented to the United States that 
the divestitures required below can and will be made and that 
Defendants will later raise no claim of hardship or difficulty as 
grounds for asking the Court to modify any of the divestiture 
provisions contained below;
    Now therefore, before any testimony is taken, without trial or 
adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the 
parties, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed:

I. Jurisdiction

    This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of and each of 
the parties to this action. The Complaint states a claim upon which 
relief may be granted against Defendants under Section 7 of the Clayton 
Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. 18).

II. Definitions

    As used in this Final Judgment:
    A. ``Acquirer'' means Suez or another entity to whom Defendants 
divest any of the Divestiture Assets or with whom Defendants have 
entered into definitive contracts to sell any of the Divestiture 
Assets.
    B. ``GE'' means defendant General Electric Co., a New York 
corporation with its headquarters in Boston, Massachusetts, its 
successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, 
affiliates, partnerships and joint ventures, and their directors, 
officers, managers, agents, and employees.
    C. ``Baker Hughes'' means defendant Baker Hughes Incorporated, a 
Delaware corporation with its headquarters in Houston, Texas, its 
successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, 
affiliates, partnerships and joint ventures, and their directors, 
officers, managers, agents, and employees.
    D. ``Suez'' means SUEZ, a French soci[eacute]t[eacute] anonyme with 
its headquarters in Paris, France, its successors and assigns, and its 
subsidiaries, divisions, groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint 
ventures, and their directors, officers, managers, agents, and 
employees. Suez is the proposed purchaser of the Divestiture Assets as 
identified by GE.
    E. ``GE Water & Process Technologies'' means the GE Water & Process 
Technologies business unit of GE as it operated prior to the filing of 
the Complaint in this matter, including but not limited to the entities 
listed in the Appendix.

[[Page 28880]]

    F. ``Divestiture Assets'' means all the assets of GE Water & 
Process Technologies, including:
    1. All tangible assets that comprise the GE Water & Process 
Technologies business, including but not limited to all worldwide 
manufacturing plants; service centers; labs; warehouse and distribution 
facilities; offices; the global headquarters located in Trevose, 
Pennsylvania; all global research and development facilities; 
manufacturing equipment; tooling and fixed assets; personal property; 
inventory; office furniture; materials; supplies; other property; all 
licenses, permits and authorizations issued by any governmental 
organization relating to GE Water & Process Technologies; assignment 
and/or transfer of all contracts, agreements (including supply 
agreements), leases, commitments, certifications, and understandings 
exclusively relating to GE Water & Process Technologies; all customer 
lists, contracts, accounts, credit records; all other business and 
administrative records; and all other assets used exclusively by GE 
Water & Process Technologies;
    2. The following intangible assets:
    (a) all intangible assets owned, licensed, controlled, or used 
primarily by the GE Water & Process Technologies business, including 
but not limited to all patents, licenses and sublicenses, intellectual 
property, copyrights, trademarks, trade names, service marks, service 
names (excluding any trademark, trade name, service mark, or service 
name containing the GE monogram or the names ``GE'' or ``General 
Electric''), technical information, computer software and related 
documentation, know-how, trade secrets, drawings, blueprints, designs, 
design protocols, specifications for materials, specifications for 
parts and devices, safety procedures for the handling of materials and 
substances, quality assurance and control procedures, design tools and 
simulation capability, all manuals and technical information provided 
by GE Water & Process Technologies to its own employees, customers, 
suppliers, agents, or licensees, and all research data concerning 
historic and current research and development efforts relating to the 
Divestiture Assets, including but not limited to designs of experiments 
and the results of successful and unsuccessful designs and experiments; 
and
    (b) a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free license to all 
intellectual property, including but not limited to all patents, 
copyrights, trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names, and 
trade secrets owned by GE or that GE has the right to license and used 
by the GE Water & Process Technologies business at any time during the 
period that the GE Water & Process Technologies business has been owned 
by GE. Such license (except for any license for trademarks, trade 
names, service marks, and service names containing the names ``GE'' or 
``General Electric'') shall be perpetual and shall grant the Acquirer 
the right to make, have made, use, sell or offer for sale, copy, create 
derivative works, modify, improve, display, perform, and enhance the 
licensed intangible assets. Any improvements or modifications to these 
intangible assets developed by the Acquirer shall be owned solely by 
that Acquirer.

III. Applicability

    A. This Final Judgment applies to GE and Baker Hughes, as defined 
above, and all other persons in active concert or participation with 
any of them who receive actual notice of this Final Judgment by 
personal service or otherwise.
    B. If, prior to complying with Section IV and Section V of this 
Final Judgment, Defendants sell or otherwise dispose of all or 
substantially all of their assets or of lesser business units that 
include the Divestiture Assets, they shall require the purchaser to be 
bound by the provisions of this Final Judgment. Defendants need not 
obtain such an agreement from the acquirers of the assets divested 
pursuant to this Final Judgment.

IV. Divestitures

    A. Defendants are ordered and directed, within 90 calendar days 
after the signing of the Hold Separate Stipulation and Order in this 
matter, or five (5) calendar days after notice of the entry of the 
Final Judgment by the Court, whichever is later, to divest the 
Divestiture Assets in a manner consistent with this Final Judgment to 
an Acquirer acceptable to the United States, in its sole discretion. 
The United States, in its sole discretion, may agree to one or more 
extensions of this time period, not to exceed 90 calendar days in 
total, and shall notify the Court in such circumstances. Defendants 
agree to use their best efforts to divest the Divestiture Assets as 
expeditiously as possible.
    B. In the event Defendants are divesting the Divestiture Assets to 
an Acquirer other than Suez, Defendants shall promptly make known, by 
usual and customary means, the availability of the Divestiture Assets 
to be divested.
    C. Defendants shall inform any person making an inquiry regarding a 
possible purchase of the Divestiture Assets that they are being 
divested pursuant to this Final Judgment and provide that person with a 
copy of this Final Judgment.
    D. In accomplishing the divestiture ordered by this Final Judgment, 
Defendants shall offer to furnish to all prospective Acquirers, subject 
to customary confidentiality assurances, all information and documents 
relating to the Divestiture Assets customarily provided in a due 
diligence process except such information or documents subject to the 
attorney-client privileges or work-product doctrine. Defendants shall 
make available such information to the United States at the same time 
that such information is made available to any other person.
    E. Defendants shall provide the Acquirer and the United States 
information relating to the personnel employed by the Divestiture 
Assets to enable the Acquirer(s) to make offers of employment. 
Defendants will not interfere with any negotiations by the Acquirer(s) 
to employ any defendant employee whose primary responsibility is 
related to the production, operation, development or sale of products 
and services by GE Water & Process Technologies.
    F. Defendants shall permit the prospective Acquirer of the 
Divestiture Assets to have reasonable access to personnel and to make 
inspections of the physical facilities of GE Water & Process 
Technologies; access to any and all environmental, zoning, and other 
permit documents and information; and access to any and all financial, 
operational, or other documents and information customarily provided as 
part of a due diligence process.
    G. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer that each asset will be 
operational on the date of sale.
    H. Defendants shall not take any action that will impede in any way 
the permitting, operation, or divestiture of the Divestiture Assets.
    I. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer (1) that there are no 
material defects in the environmental, zoning or other permits 
pertaining to the operation of each asset and (2) that, following the 
sale of the Divestiture Assets, Defendants will not undertake, directly 
or indirectly, any challenges to the environmental, zoning, or other 
permits relating to the operation of the Divestiture Assets.
    J. Unless the United States otherwise consents in writing, the 
divestiture pursuant to Section IV, or by a Divestiture Trustee 
appointed pursuant to Section V, of this Final Judgment, shall include 
the entire Divestiture Assets and shall be accomplished in

[[Page 28881]]

such a way as to satisfy the United States, in its sole discretion, 
that the Divestiture Assets can and will be used by the Acquirer(s) as 
part of a viable, ongoing business providing refinery process chemicals 
and services. The divestitures, whether pursuant to Section IV or 
Section V of this Final Judgment,

    (1) shall be made to an Acquirer that, in the United States' 
sole judgment, has the intent and capability (including the 
necessary managerial, operational, technical and financial 
capability) of competing effectively in the provision of refinery 
process chemicals and services; and
    (2) shall be accomplished so as to satisfy the United States, in 
its sole discretion, that none of the terms of any agreement between 
an Acquirer and Defendants give Defendants the ability unreasonably 
to raise the Acquirer's costs, to lower the Acquirer's efficiency, 
or otherwise to interfere in the ability of the Acquirer to compete 
effectively.

    Any questions that arise concerning whether particular assets are 
appropriately considered Divestiture Assets subject to Section IV shall 
be resolved by the United States, in its sole discretion, consistent 
with the terms of this Final Judgment.

V. Appointment of Divestiture Trustee

    A. If Defendants have not divested the Divestiture Assets within 
the time period specified in Section IV.A, Defendants shall notify the 
United States of that fact in writing. Upon application of the United 
States, the Court shall appoint a Divestiture Trustee selected by the 
United States and approved by the Court to effect the divestiture of 
the Divestiture Assets.
    B. After the appointment of a Divestiture Trustee becomes 
effective, only the Divestiture Trustee shall have the right to sell 
the Divestiture Assets. The Divestiture Trustee shall have the power 
and authority to accomplish the divestiture to an Acquirer(s) 
acceptable to the United States at such price and on such terms as are 
then obtainable upon reasonable effort by the Divestiture Trustee, 
subject to the provisions of Sections IV, V, and VI of this Final 
Judgment, and shall have such other powers as this Court deems 
appropriate. Subject to Section V.D of this Final Judgment, the 
Divestiture Trustee may hire at the cost and expense of Defendants any 
investment bankers, attorneys, or other agents, who shall be solely 
accountable to the Divestiture Trustee, reasonably necessary in the 
Divestiture Trustee's judgment to assist in the divestiture. Any such 
investment bankers, attorneys, or other agents shall serve on such 
terms and conditions as the United States approves including 
confidentiality requirements and conflict of interest certifications.
    C. Defendants shall not object to a sale by the Divestiture Trustee 
on any ground other than the Divestiture Trustee's malfeasance. Any 
such objections by Defendants must be conveyed in writing to the United 
States and the Divestiture Trustee within ten (10) calendar days after 
the Divestiture Trustee has provided the notice required under Section 
VI.
    D. The Divestiture Trustee shall serve at the cost and expense of 
Defendants pursuant to a written agreement, on such terms and 
conditions as the United States approves including confidentiality 
requirements and conflict of interest certifications. The Divestiture 
Trustee shall account for all monies derived from the sale of the 
assets sold by the Divestiture Trustee and all costs and expenses so 
incurred. After approval by the Court of the Divestiture Trustee's 
accounting, including fees for its services yet unpaid and those of any 
professionals and agents retained by the Divestiture Trustee, all 
remaining money shall be paid to Defendants and the trust shall then be 
terminated. The compensation of the Divestiture Trustee and any 
professionals and agents retained by the Divestiture Trustee shall be 
reasonable in light of the value of the Divestiture Assets and based on 
a fee arrangement providing the Divestiture Trustee with an incentive 
based on the price and terms of the divestiture and the speed with 
which it is accomplished, but timeliness is paramount. If the 
Divestiture Trustee and Defendants are unable to reach agreement on the 
Divestiture Trustee's or any agents' or consultants' compensation or 
other terms and conditions of engagement within 14 calendar days of 
appointment of the Divestiture Trustee, the United States may, in its 
sole discretion, take appropriate action, including making a 
recommendation to the Court. The Divestiture Trustee shall, within 
three (3) business days of hiring any other professionals or agents, 
provide written notice of such hiring and the rate of compensation to 
Defendants and the United States.
    E. Defendants shall use their best efforts to assist the 
Divestiture Trustee in accomplishing the required divestiture. The 
Divestiture Trustee and any consultants, accountants, attorneys, and 
other agents retained by the Divestiture Trustee shall have full and 
complete access to the personnel, books, records, and facilities of the 
business to be divested, and Defendants shall develop financial and 
other information relevant to such business as the Divestiture Trustee 
may reasonably request, subject to reasonable protection for trade 
secret or other confidential research, development, or commercial 
information or any applicable privileges. Defendants shall take no 
action to interfere with or to impede the Divestiture Trustee's 
accomplishment of the divestiture.
    F. After its appointment, the Divestiture Trustee shall file 
monthly reports with the United States and, as appropriate, the Court 
setting forth the Divestiture Trustee's efforts to accomplish the 
divestiture ordered under this Final Judgment. To the extent such 
reports contain information that the Divestiture Trustee deems 
confidential, such reports shall not be filed in the public docket of 
the Court. Such reports shall include the name, address, and telephone 
number of each person who, during the preceding month, made an offer to 
acquire, expressed an interest in acquiring, entered into negotiations 
to acquire, or was contacted or made an inquiry about acquiring, any 
interest in the Divestiture Assets, and shall describe in detail each 
contact with any such person. The Divestiture Trustee shall maintain 
full records of all efforts made to divest the Divestiture Assets.
    G. If the Divestiture Trustee has not accomplished the divestiture 
ordered under this Final Judgment within six months after its 
appointment, the Divestiture Trustee shall promptly file with the Court 
a report setting forth (1) the Divestiture Trustee's efforts to 
accomplish the required divestiture, (2) the reasons, in the 
Divestiture Trustee's judgment, why the required divestiture has not 
been accomplished, and (3) the Divestiture Trustee's recommendations. 
To the extent such reports contains information that the Divestiture 
Trustee deems confidential, such reports shall not be filed in the 
public docket of the Court. The Divestiture Trustee shall at the same 
time furnish such report to the United States which shall have the 
right to make additional recommendations consistent with the purpose of 
the trust. The Court thereafter shall enter such orders as it shall 
deem appropriate to carry out the purpose of the Final Judgment, which 
may, if necessary, include extending the trust and the term of the 
Divestiture Trustee's appointment by a period requested by the United 
States.
    H. If the United States determines that the Divestiture Trustee has 
ceased to act or failed to act diligently or in a reasonably cost-
effective manner, it may recommend the Court appoint a substitute 
Divestiture Trustee.

[[Page 28882]]

VI. Notice of Proposed Divestiture

    A. In the event Defendants are divesting the Divestiture Assets to 
an Acquirer other than Suez, within two (2) business days following 
execution of a definitive divestiture agreement, Defendants or the 
Divestiture Trustee, whichever is then responsible for effecting the 
divestiture required herein, shall notify the United States of any 
proposed divestiture required by Section IV or Section V of this Final 
Judgment. If the Divestiture Trustee is responsible, it shall similarly 
notify Defendants. The notice shall set forth the details of the 
proposed divestiture and list the name, address, and telephone number 
of each person not previously identified who offered or expressed an 
interest in or desire to acquire any ownership interest in the 
Divestiture Assets, together with full details of the same.
    B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of receipt by the United 
States of such notice, the United States may request from Defendants, 
the proposed Acquirer(s), any other third party, or the Divestiture 
Trustee, if applicable, additional information concerning the proposed 
divestiture, the proposed Acquirer(s), and any other potential 
Acquirer. Defendants and the Divestiture Trustee shall furnish any 
additional information requested within fifteen (15) calendar days of 
the receipt of the request, unless the parties shall otherwise agree.
    C. Within thirty (30) calendar days after receipt of the notice or 
within twenty (20) calendar days after the United States has been 
provided the additional information requested from Defendants, the 
proposed Acquirer(s), any third party, and the Divestiture Trustee, 
whichever is later, the United States shall provide written notice to 
Defendants and the Divestiture Trustee, if there is one, stating 
whether or not it objects to the proposed divestiture. If the United 
States provides written notice that it does not object, the divestiture 
may be consummated, subject only to Defendants' limited right to object 
to the sale under Section V.C of this Final Judgment. Absent written 
notice that the United States does not object to the proposed 
Acquirer(s) or upon objection by the United States, a divestiture 
proposed under Section IV or Section V shall not be consummated. Upon 
objection by Defendants under Section V.C, a divestiture proposed under 
Section V shall not be consummated unless approved by the Court.

VII. Financing

    Defendants shall not finance all or any part of any purchase made 
pursuant to Section IV or Section V of this Final Judgment.

VIII. Hold Separate

    Until the divestiture required by this Final Judgment has been 
accomplished, Defendants shall take all steps necessary to comply with 
the Hold Separate Stipulation and Order entered by this Court. 
Defendants shall take no action that would jeopardize the divestiture 
ordered by this Court.

IX. Affidavits

    A. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the Complaint 
in this matter, and every thirty (30) calendar days thereafter until 
the divestiture has been completed under Section IV or Section V, 
Defendants shall deliver to the United States an affidavit as to the 
fact and manner of its compliance with Section IV or Section V of this 
Final Judgment. In the event Defendants are divesting the Divestiture 
Assets to an Acquirer other than Suez, each such affidavit shall 
include the name, address, and telephone number of each person who, 
during the preceding thirty (30) calendar days, made an offer to 
acquire, expressed an interest in acquiring, entered into negotiations 
to acquire, or was contacted or made an inquiry about acquiring, any 
interest in the Divestiture Assets, and shall describe in detail each 
contact with any such person during that period. In the event 
Defendants are divesting the Divestiture Assets to an Acquirer other 
than Suez, each such affidavit shall also include a description of the 
efforts Defendants have taken to solicit buyers for the Divestiture 
Assets, and to provide required information to prospective Acquirers, 
including the limitations, if any, on such information. Assuming the 
information set forth in the affidavit is true and complete, any 
objection by the United States to information provided by Defendants, 
including limitation on information, shall be made within fourteen (14) 
calendar days of receipt of such affidavit.
    B. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the Complaint 
in this matter, Defendants shall deliver to the United States an 
affidavit that describes in reasonable detail all actions Defendants 
have taken and all steps Defendants have implemented on an ongoing 
basis to comply with Section VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendants 
shall deliver to the United States an affidavit describing any changes 
to the efforts and actions outlined in Defendants' earlier affidavits 
filed pursuant to this section within fifteen (15) calendar days after 
the change is implemented.
    C. Defendants shall keep all records of all efforts made to 
preserve and divest the Divestiture Assets until one year after such 
divestiture has been completed.

X. Compliance Inspection

    A. For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with this 
Final Judgment, or of any related orders such as any Hold Separate 
Stipulation and Order, or of determining whether the Final Judgment 
should be modified or vacated, and subject to any legally recognized 
privilege, from time to time authorized representatives of the United 
States Department of Justice, including consultants and other persons 
retained by the United States, shall, upon written request of an 
authorized representative of the Assistant Attorney General in charge 
of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice to Defendants, be 
permitted:

    (1) access during Defendants' office hours to inspect and copy, 
or at the option of the United States, to require Defendants to 
provide hard copy or electronic copies of, all books, ledgers, 
accounts, records, data, and documents in the possession, custody, 
or control of Defendants, relating to any matters contained in this 
Final Judgment; and
    (2) to interview, either informally or on the record, 
Defendants' officers, employees, or agents, who may have their 
individual counsel present, regarding such matters. The interviews 
shall be subject to the reasonable convenience of the interviewee 
and without restraint or interference by Defendants.

    B. Upon the written request of an authorized representative of the 
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division, 
Defendants shall submit written reports or response to written 
interrogatories, under oath if requested, relating to any of the 
matters contained in this Final Judgment as may be requested.
    C. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in 
this section shall be divulged by the United States to any person other 
than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the United 
States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the United 
States is a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the 
purpose of securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or as 
otherwise required by law.
    D. If at the time information or documents are furnished by 
Defendants to the United States, Defendants represent and identify in 
writing the

[[Page 28883]]

material in any such information or documents to which a claim of 
protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(1)(g) of the Federal Rules 
of Civil Procedure, and Defendants mark each pertinent page of such 
material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule 26(c)(1)(g) of 
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United States shall 
give Defendants ten (10) calendar days notice prior to divulging such 
material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand jury proceeding).

XI. No Reacquisition

    Defendants may not reacquire any part of the Divestiture Assets 
during the term of this Final Judgment.

XII. Retention of Jurisdiction

    This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final 
Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and 
directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or construe 
this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to enforce 
compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.

XIII. Expiration of Final Judgment

    Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall 
expire ten years from the date of its entry.

XIV. Public Interest Determination

    Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties 
have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and 
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16, including making copies available to the 
public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement, and 
any comments thereon and the United States' responses to comments. 
Based upon the record before the Court, which includes the Competitive 
Impact Statement and any comments and response to comments filed with 
the Court, entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest.

Date:------------------------------------------------------------------
[Court approval subject to procedures of Antitrust Procedures and 
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16]

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
United States District Judge

Appendix

GE Betz, Inc. (US)
Chemical Water Treatment Investments SRL (Argentina)
GE Betz (UK)
GE Betz Ireland Limited (Ireland)
GE Betz South Africa Pty Ltd (South Africa)
GE Betz Pty Limited (Australia) and GE Betz Pty Limited (New Zealand 
Branch)
GE Infrastructure (Shanghai) Co. Ltd. (China)
GE Ionics Hamma Holdings (IRE) Ltd (Ireland)
GE Power Controls Portugal Unipessoal LDA (Portugal)
GE Water & Process Technologies (Wuxi) Co. Ltd. (China)
GE Water & Process Technologies Asia Pte. Ltd. (Singapore)
GE Water & Process Technologies Austria GmbH (Austria)
GE Water & Process Technologies BVBA (Belgium)
GE Water & Process Technologies France SAS (France)
GE Water & Process Technologies GmbH (Germany)
GE Water & Process Technologies Hungary KFT (Hungary)
GE Water & Process Technologies Mexico, S. de R.L de C.V. (Mexico)
GE Water & Process Technologies Middle East FZE (Dubai)
GE Water & Process Technologies Netherlands BV (NL)
General Electric Water & Process Technologies Caribbean Holdings BV 
(Netherlands Antilles)
Ionics Iberica S.L.U. (Spain)
Water & Process Technologies SRL (Argentina)
Zenon Services Limited (Virgin Islands)
Zenon Systems Manufacturing and Services Limited Liability Company 
(Hungary)

United States District Court

for The District of Columbia

    United States of America, Plaintiff, v. General Electric Co. and 
Baker Hughes Incorporated, Defendants.

Case No.: 1:17-cv-01146
Judge: Beryl A. Howell

COMPETITIVE IMPACT STATEMENT

    Plaintiff United States of America (``United States''), pursuant to 
Section 2(b) of the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act (``APPA'' or 
``Tunney Act''), 15 U.S.C. 16(b)-(h), files this Competitive Impact 
Statement relating to the proposed Final Judgment submitted for entry 
in this civil antitrust proceeding.

I. NATURE AND PURPOSE OF THE PROCEEDING

    Defendant General Electric Co. (``GE'') and Defendant Baker Hughes 
Incorporated (``Baker Hughes'') entered into a Transaction Agreement 
and Plan of Merger dated October 30, 2016 (``Transaction''). GE and 
Baker Hughes are two of the leading providers of refinery process 
chemicals and services used by oil and gas refineries to remove 
impurities from the oil and gas and to prevent damage to refinery 
equipment.
    The United States filed a civil antitrust Complaint on June 12, 
2017 seeking to enjoin the Transaction. The Complaint alleges that the 
likely effect of the Transaction would be to lessen competition 
substantially for refinery process chemicals and services in the United 
States in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18, 
resulting in higher prices, reduced service quality, and diminished 
innovation.
    At the same time the Complaint was filed, the United States also 
filed a proposed Final Judgment and a Hold Separate Stipulation and 
Order (``Hold Separate'') that are designed to eliminate the 
anticompetitive effects of the Transaction. Under the proposed Final 
Judgment, which is explained more fully below, GE is required to divest 
its GE Water & Process Technologies business unit. Under the terms of 
the Hold Separate, GE will take certain steps during the pendency of 
the ordered divestiture to ensure that GE Water & Process Technologies 
is operated as a competitively independent, economically viable, and 
ongoing business concern.
    The United States and Defendants have stipulated that the proposed 
Final Judgment may be entered after compliance with the APPA. Entry of 
the proposed Final Judgment would terminate this action, except that 
the Court would retain jurisdiction to construe, modify, or enforce the 
provisions of the proposed Final Judgment and to punish violations 
thereof.

II. DESCRIPTION OF THE EVENTS GIVING RISE TO ALLEGED VIOLATION

A. The Defendants and the Proposed Transaction

    GE is a New York corporation headquartered in Boston, 
Massachusetts. GE is a large, diversified corporation that, among other 
lines of business, supplies the oil supplies the oil and gas industry 
through a number of business units, including GE Water & Process 
Technologies, a standalone business unit that sells refinery process 
chemicals and services. GE earned $16 billion in revenues from its oil 
and gas businesses in 2015.
    Baker Hughes is a Delaware corporation headquartered in Houston, 
Texas, with extensive operations in the oil and gas industry, including 
selling refinery process chemicals and services. Baker Hughes earned 
$15.7 billion in revenues in 2015.
    The Transaction, as initially agreed to by Defendants, would lessen 
competition substantially.

B. The Competitive Effects of the Transaction on Refinery Process 
Chemicals and Services in the United States

    The Complaint alleges that the provision of refinery process 
chemicals

[[Page 28884]]

and services is a line of commerce and a relevant market within the 
meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act. Refineries process crude oil 
and natural gas extracted from wells (``hydrocarbons'') into finished 
products like gasoline. Refineries rely on a variety of special 
chemicals, collectively known as refinery process chemicals, to remove 
salts, solids, metals, and other impurities from the hydrocarbons and 
to prevent corrosion and damage to refinery equipment. Refineries rely 
on process chemical and service providers to evaluate the specific 
hydrocarbons flowing into their refineries and to formulate and apply 
customized chemical solutions to ensure the safe and efficient 
processing of those hydrocarbons. To develop the chemical solutions 
needed to address current and future challenges, these service 
providers maintain dedicated research and development facilities. 
Although refinery process chemicals and services represent just a 
fraction of an oil and gas refiner's overall cost of processing 
hydrocarbons, using the wrong chemicals can cost a refiner millions in 
lost production or compromised equipment. As a result, oil and gas 
refineries are unlikely to stop using refinery process chemicals or 
switch to other products in response to a small but significant and 
non-transitory increase in price.
    Oil and gas refiners choose from those suppliers that have service 
staff and support infrastructure in their local area. GE and Baker 
Hughes have such infrastructure, and compete with one another for 
customers, in areas throughout the United States. A hypothetical 
monopolist of refinery process chemicals and services in the United 
States likely would impose at least a small but significant price 
increase because few if any customers would substitute to purchasing 
other products or to purchasing outside the United States. Therefore, 
the United States is a relevant geographic market under Section 7 of 
the Clayton Act for the provision of refinery process chemicals and 
services.
    The market for the provision of refinery process chemicals and 
services in the United States is highly concentrated and would become 
more concentrated as a result of the proposed transaction. A combined 
GE and Baker Hughes would control over 50% of the market for refinery 
process chemicals and services in the United States. The Transaction 
would eliminate significant head-to-head competition between GE and 
Baker Hughes and give the merged firm the incentive and ability to 
raise its prices above competitive levels, reduce its investment in 
research and development, and provide lower levels of service.
    Entry by new refinery process chemical and service providers or 
expansion by existing providers would not be timely, likely, and 
sufficient to prevent the substantial lessening of competition caused 
by the Transaction. Successful entry into the refinery process 
chemicals and services business is difficult, costly, and time 
consuming. In addition to local infrastructure, a new refinery process 
chemicals and services provider would have to develop a portfolio of 
production chemicals and hire experienced staff. In addition, because 
of the significant investment oil and gas refiners make in 
infrastructure and the high costs of any problem or delay, refiners 
disfavor using new providers and typically only switch providers if 
their existing provider performs poorly over a long period of time. As 
a result, it is difficult and time consuming for a new provider to 
enter the market, develop a track record of successful work, and grow 
its business.

III. EXPLANATION OF THE PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT

    The divestiture requirement of the proposed Final Judgment will 
eliminate the anticompetitive effects of the proposed transaction by 
establishing GE Water & Process Technologies as an independent and 
economically viable competitor in refinery process chemicals and 
services. The sale of GE Water & Process Technologies will provide the 
buyer of the divestiture assets with the necessary assets to maintain a 
significant presence in the United States and remain an effective 
competitor.

A. The Divestiture Package

    To ensure continued vigorous competition, the proposed Final 
Judgment requires the divestiture of all of the tangible and intangible 
assets of GE Water & Process Technologies that are currently used to 
serve customers. Under the proposed Final Judgment, the tangible assets 
of GE Water & Process Technologies that must be divested include 
worldwide manufacturing plants, service centers, labs, warehouse and 
distribution facilities, and offices, including the business's global 
headquarters located in Trevose, Pennsylvania. The transfer will also 
include all six global research and development facilities. This will 
ensure that the acquirer of the divestiture assets has the 
infrastructure necessary to continue providing refinery process 
chemicals and services to refiners and compete for opportunities.
    The proposed Final Judgment also requires the transfer and 
licensing of intangible assets, such as intellectual property rights, 
sufficient to allow the buyer to be an effective competitor. GE must 
fully divest the complete portfolio of intellectual property used 
primarily by GE Water & Process Technologies. GE will keep intellectual 
property used primarily by other GE business units in addition to GE 
Water & Process Technologies, but will grant the buyer of the 
divestiture assets a perpetual, royalty-free license for the use of 
such technology.

B. Procedures

    The proposed Final Judgment requires Defendants to sell the 
divestiture package within 90 days after the Court signs the Hold 
Separate in this matter, subject to one or more extensions up to a 
total of 90 days by the United States. The proposed Final Judgment 
contemplates the sale of the divestiture assets to SUEZ, a French 
soci[eacute]t[eacute] anonyme, which GE has identified as the proposed 
buyer of the divestiture assets. Suez provides water and wastewater 
treatment and waste management systems to customers throughout the 
world, and serves a range of industrial customers and municipalities in 
the United States. The proposed Final Judgment also provides for a 
process to sell the divestiture assets to an alternative acquirer in 
the event that the proposed sale to Suez is not completed.
    The assets must be divested in such a way as to satisfy the United 
States in its sole discretion that the operations can and will be 
operated by the purchaser as a viable, ongoing business that can 
compete effectively to provide refinery process chemicals and services. 
Defendants must take all reasonable steps necessary to accomplish the 
divestiture quickly and shall cooperate with prospective purchasers.
    In the event that Defendants do not accomplish the divestiture 
within the prescribed period, the proposed Final Judgment provides that 
upon application by the United States, the Court will appoint a trustee 
selected by the United States to effect the divestiture. If a trustee 
is appointed, the proposed Final Judgment provides that Defendants will 
pay all of the trustee's costs and expenses. The trustee will have the 
authority to divest the divestiture assets to an acquirer acceptable to 
the United States. The trustee's commission will be structured so as to 
provide an incentive for the trustee based on the price obtained and 
the speed with which the divestiture is accomplished. After his or her

[[Page 28885]]

appointment becomes effective, the trustee will file monthly reports 
with the Court and the United States setting forth his or her efforts 
to accomplish the divestiture. At the end of six (6) months, if the 
divestiture has not been accomplished, the trustee and the United 
States will make recommendations to the Court, which shall enter such 
orders as appropriate, in order to carry out the purpose of the trust, 
including extending the trust or the term of the trustee's appointment. 
The divestiture provisions of the proposed Final Judgment will 
eliminate the anticompetitive effects of the acquisition in the 
provision of refinery process chemicals and services in the United 
States.

IV. REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO POTENTIAL PRIVATE LITIGANTS

    Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 15, provides that any 
person who has been injured as a result of conduct prohibited by the 
antitrust laws may bring suit in federal court to recover three times 
the damages the person has suffered, as well as costs and reasonable 
attorneys' fees. Entry of the proposed Final Judgment will neither 
impair nor assist the bringing of any private antitrust damage action. 
Under the provisions of Section 5(a) of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 
16(a), the proposed Final Judgment has no prima facie effect in any 
subsequent private lawsuit that may be brought against Defendants.

V. PROCEDURES AVAILABLE FOR MODIFICATION OF THE PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT

    The United States and Defendants have stipulated that the proposed 
Final Judgment may be entered by the Court after compliance with the 
provisions of the APPA, provided that the United States has not 
withdrawn its consent. The APPA conditions entry upon the Court's 
determination that the proposed Final Judgment is in the public 
interest.
    The APPA provides a period of at least sixty (60) days preceding 
the effective date of the proposed Final Judgment within which any 
person may submit to the United States written comments regarding the 
proposed Final Judgment. Any person who wishes to comment should do so 
within sixty (60) days of the date of publication of this Competitive 
Impact Statement in the Federal Register, or the last date of 
publication in a newspaper of the summary of this Competitive Impact 
Statement, whichever is later. All comments received during this period 
will be considered by the United States Department of Justice, which 
remains free to withdraw its consent to the proposed Final Judgment at 
any time prior to the Court's entry of judgment. The comments and the 
response of the United States will be filed with the Court. In 
addition, comments will be posted on the U.S. Department of Justice, 
Antitrust Division's internet Web site and, under certain 
circumstances, published in the Federal Register.
    Written comments should be submitted by mail to:

Kathleen S. O'Neill, Chief, Transportation, Energy & Agriculture 
Section, Antitrust Division, United States Department of Justice, 450 
5th Street NW., Suite 8000, Washington, DC 20530

The proposed Final Judgment provides that the Court retains 
jurisdiction over this action, and the parties may apply to the Court 
for any order necessary or appropriate for the modification, 
interpretation, or enforcement of the Final Judgment.

VI. ALTERNATIVES TO THE PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT

    The United States considered, as an alternative to the proposed 
Final Judgment, a full trial on the merits against Defendants. The 
United States could have continued the litigation and sought 
preliminary and permanent injunctions against the Transaction proposed 
by Defendants. The United States is satisfied, however, that the 
divestiture of assets described in the proposed Final Judgment will 
preserve competition for the provision of refinery process and water 
treatment chemicals and services in the United States. Thus, the 
proposed Final Judgment would achieve all or substantially all of the 
relief the United States would have obtained through litigation but 
avoids the time, expense, and uncertainty of a full trial on the merits 
of the Complaint.

VII. STANDARD OF REVIEW UNDER THE APPA FOR THE PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT

    The Clayton Act, as amended by the APPA, requires that proposed 
consent judgments in antitrust cases brought by the United States be 
subject to a sixty-day comment period, after which the court shall 
determine whether entry of the proposed Final Judgment ``is in the 
public interest.'' 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1). In making that determination, 
the court, in accordance with the statute as amended in 2004, is 
required to consider:
    (A) the competitive impact of such judgment, including termination 
of alleged violations, provisions for enforcement and modification, 
duration of relief sought, anticipated effects of alternative remedies 
actually considered, whether its terms are ambiguous, and any other 
competitive considerations bearing upon the adequacy of such judgment 
that the court deems necessary to a determination of whether the 
consent judgment is in the public interest; and
    (B) the impact of entry of such judgment upon competition in the 
relevant market or markets, upon the public generally and individuals 
alleging specific injury from the violations set forth in the complaint 
including consideration of the public benefit, if any, to be derived 
from a determination of the issues at trial.

15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1)(A) & (B). In considering these statutory factors, 
the court's inquiry is necessarily a limited one as the government is 
entitled to ``broad discretion to settle with the defendant within the 
reaches of the public interest.'' United States v. Microsoft Corp., 56 
F.3d 1448, 1461 (D.C. Cir. 1995); see generally United States v. SBC 
Commc'ns, Inc., 489 F. Supp. 2d 1 (D.D.C. 2007) (assessing public 
interest standard under the Tunney Act); United States v, U.S. Airways 
Group, Inc., 38 F. Supp. 3d 69, 75 (D.D.C. 2014) (noting the court has 
broad discretion of the adequacy of the relief at issue); United States 
v. InBev N.V./S.A., No. 08-1965 (JR), 2009-2 Trade Cas. (CCH) ] 76,736, 
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *3, (D.D.C. Aug. 11, 2009) (noting that 
the court's review of a consent judgment is limited and only inquires 
``into whether the government's determination that the proposed 
remedies will cure the antitrust violations alleged in the complaint 
was reasonable, and whether the mechanism to enforce the final judgment 
are clear and manageable.'').\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ The 2004 amendments substituted ``shall'' for ``may'' in 
directing relevant factors for court to consider and amended the 
list of factors to focus on competitive considerations and to 
address potentially ambiguous judgment terms. Compare 15 U.S.C. 
16(e) (2004), with 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1) (2006); see also SBC Commc'ns, 
489 F. Supp. 2d at 11 (concluding that the 2004 amendments 
``effected minimal changes'' to Tunney Act review).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia 
Circuit has held, under the APPA a court considers, among other things, 
the relationship between the remedy secured and the specific 
allegations set forth in the government's complaint, whether the decree 
is sufficiently clear, whether enforcement mechanisms are sufficient, 
and whether the decree may positively harm third parties. See 
Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1458-62. With respect to the adequacy of the 
relief secured by the decree, a court may not ``engage in an

[[Page 28886]]

unrestricted evaluation of what relief would best serve the public.'' 
United States v. BNS, Inc., 858 F.2d 456, 462 (9th Cir. 1988) (quoting 
United States v. Bechtel Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th Cir. 1981)); see 
also Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1460-62; United States v. Alcoa, Inc., 152 
F. Supp. 2d 37, 40 (D.D.C. 2001); InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
at *3. Courts have held that:

[t]he balancing of competing social and political interests affected 
by a proposed antitrust consent decree must be left, in the first 
instance, to the discretion of the Attorney General. The court's 
role in protecting the public interest is one of insuring that the 
government has not breached its duty to the public in consenting to 
the decree. The court is required to determine not whether a 
particular decree is the one that will best serve society, but 
whether the settlement is ``within the reaches of the public 
interest.'' More elaborate requirements might undermine the 
effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by consent decree.

Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).\3\ In 
determining whether a proposed settlement is in the public interest, a 
district court ``must accord deference to the government's predictions 
about the efficacy of its remedies, and may not require that the 
remedies perfectly match the alleged violations.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. 
Supp. 2d at 17; see also U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 75 (noting 
that a court should not reject the proposed remedies because it 
believes others are preferable); Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (noting the 
need for courts to be ``deferential to the government's predictions as 
to the effect of the proposed remedies''); United States v. Archer-
Daniels-Midland Co., 272 F. Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003) (noting that 
the court should grant due respect to the United States' prediction as 
to the effect of proposed remedies, its perception of the market 
structure, and its views of the nature of the case).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ Cf. BNS, 858 F.2d at 464 (holding that the court's 
``ultimate authority under the [APPA] is limited to approving or 
disapproving the consent decree''); United States v. Gillette Co., 
406 F. Supp. 713, 716 (D. Mass. 1975) (noting that, in this way, the 
court is constrained to ``look at the overall picture not 
hypercritically, nor with a microscope, but with an artist's 
reducing glass''). See generally Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 
(discussing whether ``the remedies [obtained in the decree are] so 
inconsonant with the allegations charged as to fall outside of the 
`reaches of the public interest' '').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Courts have greater flexibility in approving proposed consent 
decrees than in crafting their own decrees following a finding of 
liability in a litigated matter. ``[A] proposed decree must be approved 
even if it falls short of the remedy the court would impose on its own, 
as long as it falls within the range of acceptability or is `within the 
reaches of public interest.' '' United States v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 
552 F. Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C. 1982) (citations omitted) (quoting United 
States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp. 713, 716 (D. Mass. 1975)), aff'd 
sub nom. Maryland v. United States, 460 U.S. 1001 (1983); see also U.S. 
Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 74 (noting that room must be made for the 
government to grant concessions in the negotiation process for 
settlements (citing Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461); United States v. Alcan 
Aluminum Ltd., 605 F. Supp. 619, 622 (W.D. Ky. 1985) (approving the 
consent decree even though the court would have imposed a greater 
remedy). To meet this standard, the United States ``need only provide a 
factual basis for concluding that the settlements are reasonably 
adequate remedies for the alleged harms.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 
2d at 17.
    Moreover, the court's role under the APPA is limited to reviewing 
the remedy in relationship to the violations that the United States has 
alleged in its Complaint, and does not authorize the court to 
``construct [its] own hypothetical case and then evaluate the decree 
against that case.'' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1459; see also U.S. Airways, 
38 F. Supp. 3d at 74 (noting that the court must simply determine 
whether there is a factual foundation for the government's decisions 
such that its conclusions regarding the proposed settlements are 
reasonable; InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *20 (``the `public 
interest' is not to be measured by comparing the violations alleged in 
the complaint against those the court believes could have, or even 
should have, been alleged''). Because the ``court's authority to review 
the decree depends entirely on the government's exercising its 
prosecutorial discretion by bringing a case in the first place,'' it 
follows that ``the court is only authorized to review the decree 
itself,'' and not to ``effectively redraft the complaint'' to inquire 
into other matters that the United States did not pursue. Microsoft, 56 
F.3d at 1459-60. As this Court recently confirmed in SBC 
Communications, courts ``cannot look beyond the complaint in making the 
public interest determination unless the complaint is drafted so 
narrowly as to make a mockery of judicial power.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. 
Supp. 2d at 15.
    In its 2004 amendments, Congress made clear its intent to preserve 
the practical benefits of utilizing consent decrees in antitrust 
enforcement, adding the unambiguous instruction that ``[n]othing in 
this section shall be construed to require the court to conduct an 
evidentiary hearing or to require the court to permit anyone to 
intervene.'' 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(2); see also U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d 
at 75 (indicating that a court is not required to hold an evidentiary 
hearing or to permit intervenors as part of its review under the Tunney 
Act). The language wrote into the statute what Congress intended when 
it enacted the Tunney Act in 1974, as Senator Tunney explained: ``[t]he 
court is nowhere compelled to go to trial or to engage in extended 
proceedings which might have the effect of vitiating the benefits of 
prompt and less costly settlement through the consent decree process.'' 
119 Cong. Rec. 24,598 (1973) (statement of Sen. Tunney). Rather, the 
procedure for the public interest determination is left to the 
discretion of the court, with the recognition that the court's ``scope 
of review remains sharply proscribed by precedent and the nature of 
Tunney Act proceedings.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11.\4\ A 
court can make its public interest determination based on the 
competitive impact statement and response to public comments alone. 
U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 75.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ See United States v. Enova Corp., 107 F. Supp. 2d 10, 17 
(D.D.C. 2000) (noting that the ``Tunney Act expressly allows the 
court to make its public interest determination on the basis of the 
competitive impact statement and response to comments alone''); 
United States v. Mid-Am. Dairymen, Inc., No. 73-CV-681-W-1, 1977-1 
Trade Cas. (CCH) ] 61,508, at 71,980, *22 (W.D. Mo. 1977) (``Absent 
a showing of corrupt failure of the government to discharge its 
duty, the Court, in making its public interest finding, should . . . 
carefully consider the explanations of the government in the 
competitive impact statement and its responses to comments in order 
to determine whether those explanations are reasonable under the 
circumstances.''); S. Rep. No. 93-298, at 6 (1973) (``Where the 
public interest can be meaningfully evaluated simply on the basis of 
briefs and oral arguments, that is the approach that should be 
utilized.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

VIII. DETERMINATIVE DOCUMENTS

    There are no determinative materials or documents within the 
meaning of the APPA that were considered by the United States in 
formulating the proposed Final Judgment.

Dated: June 12, 2017

Respectfully submitted,

/s/--------------------------------------------------------------------
Tracy Fisher
Tracey Chambers
Jeremy Evans (DC Bar No. 478097)
Chinita Sinkler
Trial Attorneys
U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Transportation, 
Energy & Agriculture Section, 450 5th Street NW., Suite 8000, 
Washington DC 20530, Telephone: (202) 616-1650, 
[email protected].

[FR Doc. 2017-13327 Filed 6-23-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE P



                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices                                                 28877

                                                for the continued survival of C. scheeri                personal identifying information—may                   Statement are available for inspection at
                                                var. robustispina and its pollinators.                  be made publicly available at any time.                the Department of Justice’s Web site at
                                                  3. Population-based objective:                        While you can ask us in your comment                   http://www.justice.gov/atr and at the
                                                Conserve, protect, and restore existing                 to withhold your personal identifying                  Office of the Clerk of the United States
                                                and newly discovered C. scheeri var.                    information from public review, we                     District Court for the District of
                                                robustispina individuals and their                      cannot guarantee that we will be able to               Columbia. Copies of these materials may
                                                associated seedbanks needed for the                     do so.                                                 be obtained from the Antitrust Division
                                                continued survival of the taxon. The                      Comments and materials we receive                    upon request and payment of the
                                                population must be self-sustaining, of                  will be available, by appointment, for                 copying fee set by Department of Justice
                                                sufficient number to endure climatic                    public inspection during normal                        regulations.
                                                variation, stochastic events, and                       business hours at our office (see                         Public comment is invited within 60
                                                catastrophic losses, and must represent                 ADDRESSES).                                            days of the date of this notice. Such
                                                the full range of the species’ geographic                                                                      comments, including the name of the
                                                                                                        References Cited
                                                and genetic variability.                                                                                       submitter, and responses thereto, will be
                                                  The draft recovery plan focuses on                      A complete list of all references cited              posted on the Antitrust Division’s Web
                                                conserving and enhancing habitat                        herein is available upon request from                  site, filed with the Court, and, under
                                                quality, protecting the population,                     the Arizona Ecological Services Office                 certain circumstances, published in the
                                                managing threats, monitoring progress,                  (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).                 Federal Register. Comments should be
                                                and building partnerships to facilitate                 Authority                                              directed to Kathleen S. O’Neill, Chief,
                                                recovery. When the recovery of C.                                                                              Transportation, Energy & Agriculture
                                                scheeri var. robustispina approaches                      We developed our draft recovery plan
                                                                                                                                                               Section, Antitrust Division, Department
                                                these criteria, we will review the                      under the authority of section 4(f) of the
                                                                                                                                                               of Justice, 450 Fifth Street NW., Suite
                                                species’ status and consider                            Act, 16 U.S.C. 1533(f). We publish this
                                                                                                        notice under section 4(f) Endangered                   8000, Washington, DC 20530.
                                                downlisting, and, ultimately, removal
                                                from the List.                                          Species Act of 1973, as amended (16                    Patricia A. Brink,
                                                                                                        U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).                                  Director of Civil Enforcement.
                                                Request for Public Comments                               Dated: December 15, 2016.                            United States District Court for the
                                                   Section 4(f) of the Act requires us to               Benjamin N. Tuggle,                                    District of Columbia
                                                provide public notice and an                            Regional Director, Southwest Region, U.S.
                                                opportunity for public review and                       Fish and Wildlife Service.                               United States of America, U.S. Department
                                                comment during recovery plan                                                                                   of Justice, Antitrust Division, 450 5th Street
                                                                                                          Editorial Note: The Office of the Federal            NW., Suite 8000, Washington DC 20001,
                                                development. It is also our policy to
                                                                                                        Register received this document on June 21,            Plaintiff, v. General Electric Co., 41
                                                request peer review of recovery plans                   2017.                                                  Farnsworth Street, Boston MA 02210, and
                                                (July 1, 1994; 59 FR 34270). In an                                                                             Baker Hughes Incorporated, 2929 Allen
                                                                                                        [FR Doc. 2017–13309 Filed 6–23–17; 8:45 am]
                                                appendix to the approved recovery plan,                                                                        Parkway, Suite 2100, Houston TX 77019,
                                                                                                        BILLING CODE 4333–15–P
                                                we will summarize and respond to the                                                                           Defendants.
                                                issues raised by the public and peer                                                                           Case No.: 1:17–cv–01146
                                                reviewers. Substantive comments may                                                                            Judge: Beryl A. Howell
                                                or may not result in changes to the                     DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
                                                                                                                                                               COMPLAINT
                                                recovery plan; comments regarding
                                                                                                        Antitrust Division                                       The United States of America, acting
                                                recovery plan implementation will be
                                                forwarded as appropriate to Federal or                  United States v. General Electric Co.,                 under the direction of the Attorney
                                                other entities so that they can be taken                et al., Proposed Final Judgment and                    General of the United States, brings this
                                                into account during the course of                       Competitive Impact Statement                           civil action to enjoin the acquisition of
                                                implementing recovery actions.                                                                                 Baker Hughes Incorporated (‘‘Baker
                                                Responses to individual commenters                        Notice is hereby given pursuant to the               Hughes’’) by General Electric Co. (‘‘GE’’)
                                                will not be provided, but we will                       Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,                and to obtain other equitable relief. The
                                                provide a summary of how we                             15 U.S.C. 16(b)–(h), that a proposed                   United States alleges as follows:
                                                addressed substantive comments in an                    Final Judgment, Stipulation and
                                                                                                        Competitive Impact Statement have                      I. NATURE OF THE ACTION
                                                appendix to the approved recovery plan.
                                                   We invite written comments on the                    been filed with the United States                         1. GE’s acquisition of Baker Hughes
                                                draft recovery plan. In particular, we are              District Court for the District of                     would combine two of the leading
                                                interested in additional information                    Columbia in United States of America v.                providers of refinery process chemicals
                                                regarding the current threats to the                    General Electric Co., et al., Civil Action             and services in the United States.
                                                species and the costs associated with                   No. 1:17–cv–1146. On June 12, 2017, the                Refineries process crude oil and natural
                                                implementing the recommended                            United States filed a Complaint alleging               gas extracted from wells
                                                recovery actions.                                       that the proposed acquisition by General               (‘‘hydrocarbons’’) into finished products
                                                   Before we approve our final recovery                 Electric Co. of Baker Hughes                           like gasoline. To perform this process,
                                                plan, we will consider all comments we                  Incorporated, would violate Section 7 of               refineries rely on a variety of special
                                                receive by the date specified in DATES.                 the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18. The                     chemicals, collectively known as
                                                Methods of submitting comments are in                   proposed Final Judgment, filed the same                refinery process chemicals, to remove
                                                                                                                                                               salts, solids, metals, and other
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                                                ADDRESSES.                                              time as the Complaint, requires General
                                                                                                        Electric Co. to sell its GE Water &                    impurities from the hydrocarbons and to
                                                Public Availability of Comments                         Process Technologies business,                         prevent corrosion and damage to
                                                  Before including your address, phone                  including certain tangible and                         refinery equipment. Refineries rely on
                                                number, email address, or other                         intangible assets, to one or more                      process chemical and service providers
                                                personal identifying information in your                acquirers approved by the United States.               to evaluate the specific hydrocarbons
                                                comment, you should be aware that                         Copies of the Complaint, proposed                    flowing into their refineries and to
                                                your entire comment—including your                      Final Judgment, and Competitive Impact                 formulate and apply customized


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                                                28878                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices

                                                chemical solutions to ensure the safe                   violating Section 7 of the Clayton Act,                V. LIKELY ANTICOMPETITIVE
                                                and efficient processing of those                       15 U.S.C. 18.                                          EFFECTS
                                                hydrocarbons. To develop the chemical                      9. Defendants provide refinery                         13. The relevant market is highly
                                                solutions needed to address current and                 process chemicals and services in the                  concentrated and would become more
                                                future challenges, these service                        flow of interstate commerce, and their                 concentrated as a result of the
                                                providers maintain dedicated research                   provision of refinery process chemicals                Transaction. GE’s share of the refinery
                                                and development facilities.                             and services substantially affects                     process chemicals and services market
                                                   2. Failures can be costly. If the                    interstate commerce. The Court has                     in the United States is approximately
                                                refinery process chemical and service                   subject matter jurisdiction over this                  20% while Baker Hughes’s is
                                                provider selects the wrong chemicals or                 action pursuant to Section 15 of the                   approximately 35%.
                                                fails to provide adequate and timely                    Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 25, and 28 U.S.C.                  14. Concentration in relevant markets
                                                service, the result may be millions of                  1331, 1337(a), and 1345.                               is typically measured by the Herfindahl-
                                                dollars in lost production or damage to
                                                                                                           10. Defendants have consented to                    Hirschman Index (‘‘HHI’’).1 Market
                                                the refinery’s equipment. For these
                                                                                                        venue and personal jurisdiction in the                 concentration is one useful indicator of
                                                reasons, oil and gas refiners choose a
                                                                                                        District of Columbia for the purpose of                the likely competitive effects of a
                                                provider based on a number of factors
                                                                                                        this matter. Venue is therefore proper in              merger. The more concentrated a market
                                                that include not just pricing but the
                                                                                                        this district under Section 12 of the                  and the more a transaction would
                                                provider’s experience, ability to offer
                                                                                                        Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 22 and 28 U.S.C.                increase concentration in a market, the
                                                timely and high-quality service, and
                                                                                                        1391(b) and (c).                                       more likely it is that a transaction would
                                                research and development capabilities.
                                                   3. GE and Baker Hughes vigorously                                                                           result in a meaningful reduction in
                                                                                                        IV. RELEVANT MARKET                                    competition. Markets in which the HHI
                                                compete to win the business of oil and
                                                gas refiners. If the transaction is allowed                11. The provision of refinery process               is above 2,500 points are considered
                                                to proceed, this competition will be lost,              chemicals and services is a relevant                   highly concentrated. Transactions that
                                                and the merged firm will control over                   product market and line of commerce                    increase the HHI by more than 200
                                                50% of the market, leading to higher                    under Section 7 of the Clayton Act. Oil                points in highly concentrated markets
                                                prices, reduced service quality, and                    and gas refiners have no reasonable                    are presumed likely to enhance market
                                                diminished innovation.                                  substitutes for refinery process                       power.
                                                   4. Accordingly, as alleged more                      chemicals and services. Because oil and                   15. The refinery process chemicals
                                                specifically below, the acquisition, if                 gas refiners have no reasonable                        and services market in the United States
                                                consummated, would likely                               alternatives to refinery process                       currently is highly concentrated, with
                                                substantially lessen competition in                     chemicals and services, few, if any,                   an HHI over 2,900. The Transaction
                                                violation of Section 7 of the Clayton                   would substitute to other products in                  would increase the HHI by about 1,450,
                                                Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18, and should be                      response to a price increase.                          rendering the Transaction
                                                enjoined.                                                                                                      presumptively anticompetitive. Fed.
                                                                                                           12. Oil and gas refiners choose from                Trade Comm’n & U.S. Dep’t of Justice
                                                II. DEFENDANTS AND THE                                  those suppliers that have service staff                Horizontal Merger Guidelines (2010).
                                                TRANSACTION                                             and support infrastructure in their local                 16. Defendants are two of a few firms
                                                   5. Defendant GE is a New York                        area. GE and Baker Hughes have such                    that have the technical capabilities and
                                                corporation headquartered in Boston,                    infrastructure and compete with one                    expertise to provide refinery process
                                                Massachusetts. GE is a large, diversified               another for customers in local areas                   chemicals and services in the United
                                                corporation that, among other lines of                  throughout the United States. One well-                States. Defendants vigorously compete
                                                business, supplies the oil and gas                      accepted methodology for assessing                     on price, service quality, and product
                                                industry with refinery process                          whether a group of products and                        development, and customers have
                                                chemicals and services through its GE                   services sold in a particular area                     benefitted from this competition.
                                                Water & Process Technologies business                   constitutes a relevant market under the                   17. The Transaction would eliminate
                                                unit. GE generated $16 billion in                       Clayton Act is to ask whether a                        the competition between Defendants to
                                                revenues from oil- and gas-related                      hypothetical monopolist over all the                   provide refinery process chemicals and
                                                products and services in 2015.                          products sold in the area would raise                  services in the United States. After the
                                                   6. Defendant Baker Hughes is a                       prices for a non-transitory period by a                Transaction, GE would gain the
                                                Delaware corporation headquartered in                   small but significant amount, or                       incentive and ability to raise its bid
                                                Houston, Texas. Baker Hughes supplies                   whether enough customers would                         prices significantly above competitive
                                                the oil and gas industry with refinery                  switch to other products or services or                levels, reduce its investment in research
                                                process chemicals and services through                  purchase outside the area such that the
                                                its Downstream Chemicals business,                      price increase would be unprofitable.                     1 See U.S. Dep’t of Justice and Federal Trade

                                                which is part of Baker Hughes’s                         Fed. Trade Comm’n & U.S. Dep’t of                      Commission, Horizontal Merger Guidelines § 5.3
                                                Chemicals and Industrial Services                       Justice Horizontal Merger Guidelines                   (2010), available at http://www.justice.gov/atr/
                                                                                                        (2010). A hypothetical monopolist of                   public/guidelines/hmg-2010.html. The HHI is
                                                organization. Baker Hughes’s 2015                                                                              calculated by squaring the market share of each firm
                                                revenues were $15.7 billion.                            refinery process chemicals and services                competing in the market and then summing the
                                                   7. Pursuant to a Transaction                         in the United States likely would                      resulting numbers. For example, for a market
                                                Agreement and Plan of Merger dated                      impose at least a small but significant                consisting of four firms with shares of 30, 30, 20,
                                                                                                        price increase because few if any                      and 20 percent, the HHI is 2,600 (302 + 302 + 202
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                                                October 30, 2016 (‘‘Transaction’’), GE                                                                         + 202 = 2,600). The HHI takes into account the
                                                will acquire Baker Hughes.                              customers would substitute to                          relative size distribution of the firms in a market.
                                                                                                        purchasing other products or to                        It approaches zero when a market is occupied by
                                                III. JURISDICTION AND VENUE                             purchasing outside the United States.                  a large number of firms of relatively equal size and
                                                   8. The United States brings this action              Therefore, the provision of refinery                   reaches its maximum of 10,000 points when a
                                                                                                                                                               market is controlled by a single firm. The HHI
                                                pursuant to Section 15 of the Clayton                   process chemicals and services in the                  increases both as the number of firms in the market
                                                Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to                       United States is a relevant market under               decreases and as the disparity in size between those
                                                prevent and restrain Defendants from                    Section 7 of the Clayton Act.                          firms increases.



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                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices                                             28879

                                                and development, and provide lower                      proposed acquisition by GE of Baker  And whereas, the United States
                                                levels of service.                                                                        requires Defendants to make certain
                                                                                                        Hughes or from entering into or carrying
                                                                                                                                          divestitures for the purpose of
                                                                                                        out any contract, agreement, plan, or
                                                VI. ABSENCE OF COUNTERVAILING
                                                                                                        understanding, the effect of whichremedying the loss of competition
                                                FACTORS
                                                                                                        would be to combine GE and Baker  alleged in the Complaint;
                                                   18. Entry by a new provider of                       Hughes;                              And whereas, Defendants have
                                                refinery process chemicals and services                   (c) Award the United States its costs
                                                                                                                                          represented to the United States that the
                                                or expansion of existing marginal                       for this action; and              divestitures required below can and will
                                                providers would not be timely, likely,                    (d) Award the United States suchbe made and that Defendants will later
                                                and sufficient to prevent the substantial               other and further relief as the Court
                                                                                                                                          raise no claim of hardship or difficulty
                                                lessening of competition caused by the                  deems just and proper.            as grounds for asking the Court to
                                                elimination of Baker Hughes as an                       Dated: June 12, 2017              modify any of the divestiture provisions
                                                independent competitor.                                 Respectfully submitted,           contained below;
                                                   19. Successful entry into the                        FOR PLAINTIFF UNITED STATES:         Now therefore, before any testimony
                                                provision of refinery process chemicals                 /s/ lllllllllllllllllll is taken, without trial or adjudication of
                                                and services in the United States is                    Andrew C. Finch,                  any issue of fact or law, and upon
                                                difficult, costly, and time consuming.                  Acting Assistant Attorney General consent of the parties, it is ordered,
                                                An entrant would need to develop local                  /s/ lllllllllllllllllll adjudged and decreed:
                                                infrastructure, a full line of chemicals                Patricia A. Brink,
                                                designed for refineries, and a track                    Director of Civil Enforcement                          I. Jurisdiction
                                                record of successfully treating the                     /s/ lllllllllllllllllll                                  This Court has jurisdiction over the
                                                products processed by refineries.                       Kathleen S. O’Neill,                                   subject matter of and each of the parties
                                                Because of the significant investment oil               Chief, Transportation, Energy & Agriculture            to this action. The Complaint states a
                                                and gas refiners make in acquiring                      Section                                                claim upon which relief may be granted
                                                hydrocarbons to process and the high                    /s/ lllllllllllllllllll                                against Defendants under Section 7 of
                                                costs of any problem or delay, refinery                 Robert Lepore,                                         the Clayton Act, as amended (15 U.S.C.
                                                oil and gas refiners are unlikely to                    Assistant Chief, Transportation, Energy &
                                                                                                                                                               18).
                                                switch away from established providers,                 Agriculture Section
                                                making it difficult for new refinery                    /s/ lllllllllllllllllll                                II. Definitions
                                                process chemical and service providers                  Tracy Fisher
                                                                                                        Tracey Chambers
                                                                                                                                                                  As used in this Final Judgment:
                                                to enter the market.                                                                                              A. ‘‘Acquirer’’ means Suez or another
                                                                                                        Jeremy Evans (DC Bar # 478097)
                                                   20. Defendants cannot demonstrate                                                                           entity to whom Defendants divest any of
                                                                                                        Chinita Sinkler
                                                cognizable and merger-specific                          Trial Attorneys                                        the Divestiture Assets or with whom
                                                efficiencies that would be sufficient to                                                                       Defendants have entered into definitive
                                                                                                        U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust
                                                offset the Transaction’s anticompetitive                Division, Transportation, Energy &                     contracts to sell any of the Divestiture
                                                effects.                                                Agriculture Section, 450 5th Street NW.,               Assets.
                                                VII. VIOLATION ALLEGED                                  Suite 8000, Washington, DC 20530, (202)                   B. ‘‘GE’’ means defendant General
                                                                                                        616–1650, tracy.fisher@usdoj.gov.                      Electric Co., a New York corporation
                                                  21. The effect of the Transaction, if
                                                                                                        United States District Court District of               with its headquarters in Boston,
                                                consummated, would likely be to lessen
                                                                                                        Columbia                                               Massachusetts, its successors and
                                                substantially competition for refinery
                                                                                                                                                               assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions,
                                                process chemicals and services in the                     United States of America, Plaintiff, v.              groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint
                                                United States in violation of Section 7                 General Electric Co. and Baker Hughes
                                                                                                                                                               ventures, and their directors, officers,
                                                of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18.                     Incorporated, Defendants.
                                                                                                                                                               managers, agents, and employees.
                                                Unless restrained, the Transaction                      Case No.: 1:17–cv–01146
                                                                                                                                                                  C. ‘‘Baker Hughes’’ means defendant
                                                would likely have the following effects,                Judge: Beryl A. Howell
                                                                                                                                                               Baker Hughes Incorporated, a Delaware
                                                among others:                                           FINAL JUDGMENT
                                                  (a) Competition in the market for                                                                            corporation with its headquarters in
                                                refinery process chemicals and services                    Whereas, Plaintiff, United States of                Houston, Texas, its successors and
                                                in the United States would be                           America, filed its Complaint on June 12,               assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions,
                                                substantially lessened;                                 2017, the United States and Defendants,                groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint
                                                  (b) prices for refinery process                       General Electric Co. and Baker Hughes                  ventures, and their directors, officers,
                                                chemicals and services in the United                    Incorporated, by their respective                      managers, agents, and employees.
                                                States would increase;                                  attorneys, have consented to the entry of                 D. ‘‘Suez’’ means SUEZ, a French
                                                  (c) the quality of refinery process                   this Final Judgment without trial or                   société anonyme with its headquarters
                                                chemicals and services in the United                    adjudication of any issue of fact or law               in Paris, France, its successors and
                                                States would decrease; and                              and without this Final Judgment                        assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions,
                                                  (d) innovation in the refinery process                constituting any evidence against or                   groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint
                                                chemicals and services market in the                    admission by any party regarding any                   ventures, and their directors, officers,
                                                United States would diminish.                           issue of fact or law;                                  managers, agents, and employees. Suez
                                                                                                           And whereas, Defendants agree to be                 is the proposed purchaser of the
                                                VIII. REQUESTED RELIEF                                                                                         Divestiture Assets as identified by GE.
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                                                                                                        bound by the provisions of this Final
                                                  22. The United States requests that                   Judgment pending its approval by the                      E. ‘‘GE Water & Process Technologies’’
                                                this Court:                                             Court;                                                 means the GE Water & Process
                                                  (a) Adjudge GE’s proposed acquisition                    And whereas, the essence of this Final              Technologies business unit of GE as it
                                                of Baker Hughes to violate Section 7 of                 Judgment is the prompt and certain                     operated prior to the filing of the
                                                the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18;                        divestiture of certain rights or assets by             Complaint in this matter, including but
                                                  (b) Permanently enjoin and restrain                   Defendants to assure that competition is               not limited to the entities listed in the
                                                Defendants from consummating the                        not substantially lessened;                            Appendix.


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                                                28880                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices

                                                   F. ‘‘Divestiture Assets’’ means all the              names, and trade secrets owned by GE                   purchase of the Divestiture Assets that
                                                assets of GE Water & Process                            or that GE has the right to license and                they are being divested pursuant to this
                                                Technologies, including:                                used by the GE Water & Process                         Final Judgment and provide that person
                                                   1. All tangible assets that comprise                 Technologies business at any time                      with a copy of this Final Judgment.
                                                the GE Water & Process Technologies                     during the period that the GE Water &                     D. In accomplishing the divestiture
                                                business, including but not limited to                  Process Technologies business has been                 ordered by this Final Judgment,
                                                all worldwide manufacturing plants;                     owned by GE. Such license (except for                  Defendants shall offer to furnish to all
                                                service centers; labs; warehouse and                    any license for trademarks, trade names,               prospective Acquirers, subject to
                                                distribution facilities; offices; the global            service marks, and service names                       customary confidentiality assurances,
                                                headquarters located in Trevose,                        containing the names ‘‘GE’’ or ‘‘General               all information and documents relating
                                                Pennsylvania; all global research and                   Electric’’) shall be perpetual and shall               to the Divestiture Assets customarily
                                                development facilities; manufacturing                   grant the Acquirer the right to make,                  provided in a due diligence process
                                                equipment; tooling and fixed assets;                    have made, use, sell or offer for sale,                except such information or documents
                                                personal property; inventory; office                    copy, create derivative works, modify,                 subject to the attorney-client privileges
                                                furniture; materials; supplies; other                   improve, display, perform, and enhance                 or work-product doctrine. Defendants
                                                property; all licenses, permits and                     the licensed intangible assets. Any                    shall make available such information to
                                                authorizations issued by any                            improvements or modifications to these                 the United States at the same time that
                                                governmental organization relating to                   intangible assets developed by the                     such information is made available to
                                                GE Water & Process Technologies;                        Acquirer shall be owned solely by that                 any other person.
                                                assignment and/or transfer of all                       Acquirer.                                                 E. Defendants shall provide the
                                                contracts, agreements (including supply                                                                        Acquirer and the United States
                                                agreements), leases, commitments,                       III. Applicability                                     information relating to the personnel
                                                certifications, and understandings                         A. This Final Judgment applies to GE                employed by the Divestiture Assets to
                                                exclusively relating to GE Water &                      and Baker Hughes, as defined above,                    enable the Acquirer(s) to make offers of
                                                Process Technologies; all customer lists,               and all other persons in active concert                employment. Defendants will not
                                                contracts, accounts, credit records; all                or participation with any of them who                  interfere with any negotiations by the
                                                other business and administrative                       receive actual notice of this Final                    Acquirer(s) to employ any defendant
                                                records; and all other assets used                      Judgment by personal service or                        employee whose primary responsibility
                                                exclusively by GE Water & Process                       otherwise.                                             is related to the production, operation,
                                                Technologies;                                              B. If, prior to complying with Section              development or sale of products and
                                                   2. The following intangible assets:                  IV and Section V of this Final Judgment,               services by GE Water & Process
                                                   (a) all intangible assets owned,                     Defendants sell or otherwise dispose of                Technologies.
                                                licensed, controlled, or used primarily                 all or substantially all of their assets or               F. Defendants shall permit the
                                                by the GE Water & Process Technologies                  of lesser business units that include the              prospective Acquirer of the Divestiture
                                                business, including but not limited to                  Divestiture Assets, they shall require the             Assets to have reasonable access to
                                                all patents, licenses and sublicenses,                  purchaser to be bound by the provisions                personnel and to make inspections of
                                                intellectual property, copyrights,                      of this Final Judgment. Defendants need                the physical facilities of GE Water &
                                                trademarks, trade names, service marks,                 not obtain such an agreement from the                  Process Technologies; access to any and
                                                service names (excluding any                            acquirers of the assets divested pursuant              all environmental, zoning, and other
                                                trademark, trade name, service mark, or                 to this Final Judgment.                                permit documents and information; and
                                                service name containing the GE                                                                                 access to any and all financial,
                                                monogram or the names ‘‘GE’’ or                         IV. Divestitures
                                                                                                                                                               operational, or other documents and
                                                ‘‘General Electric’’), technical                           A. Defendants are ordered and                       information customarily provided as
                                                information, computer software and                      directed, within 90 calendar days after                part of a due diligence process.
                                                related documentation, know-how,                        the signing of the Hold Separate                          G. Defendants shall warrant to the
                                                trade secrets, drawings, blueprints,                    Stipulation and Order in this matter, or               Acquirer that each asset will be
                                                designs, design protocols, specifications               five (5) calendar days after notice of the             operational on the date of sale.
                                                for materials, specifications for parts                 entry of the Final Judgment by the                        H. Defendants shall not take any
                                                and devices, safety procedures for the                  Court, whichever is later, to divest the               action that will impede in any way the
                                                handling of materials and substances,                   Divestiture Assets in a manner                         permitting, operation, or divestiture of
                                                quality assurance and control                           consistent with this Final Judgment to                 the Divestiture Assets.
                                                procedures, design tools and simulation                 an Acquirer acceptable to the United                      I. Defendants shall warrant to the
                                                capability, all manuals and technical                   States, in its sole discretion. The United             Acquirer (1) that there are no material
                                                information provided by GE Water &                      States, in its sole discretion, may agree              defects in the environmental, zoning or
                                                Process Technologies to its own                         to one or more extensions of this time                 other permits pertaining to the
                                                employees, customers, suppliers, agents,                period, not to exceed 90 calendar days                 operation of each asset and (2) that,
                                                or licensees, and all research data                     in total, and shall notify the Court in                following the sale of the Divestiture
                                                concerning historic and current research                such circumstances. Defendants agree to                Assets, Defendants will not undertake,
                                                and development efforts relating to the                 use their best efforts to divest the                   directly or indirectly, any challenges to
                                                Divestiture Assets, including but not                   Divestiture Assets as expeditiously as                 the environmental, zoning, or other
                                                limited to designs of experiments and                   possible.                                              permits relating to the operation of the
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                                                the results of successful and                              B. In the event Defendants are                      Divestiture Assets.
                                                unsuccessful designs and experiments;                   divesting the Divestiture Assets to an                    J. Unless the United States otherwise
                                                and                                                     Acquirer other than Suez, Defendants                   consents in writing, the divestiture
                                                   (b) a worldwide, non-exclusive,                      shall promptly make known, by usual                    pursuant to Section IV, or by a
                                                royalty-free license to all intellectual                and customary means, the availability of               Divestiture Trustee appointed pursuant
                                                property, including but not limited to                  the Divestiture Assets to be divested.                 to Section V, of this Final Judgment,
                                                all patents, copyrights, trademarks,                       C. Defendants shall inform any person               shall include the entire Divestiture
                                                trade names, service marks, service                     making an inquiry regarding a possible                 Assets and shall be accomplished in


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                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices                                             28881

                                                such a way as to satisfy the United                     approves including confidentiality                     relevant to such business as the
                                                States, in its sole discretion, that the                requirements and conflict of interest                  Divestiture Trustee may reasonably
                                                Divestiture Assets can and will be used                 certifications.                                        request, subject to reasonable protection
                                                by the Acquirer(s) as part of a viable,                    C. Defendants shall not object to a sale            for trade secret or other confidential
                                                ongoing business providing refinery                     by the Divestiture Trustee on any                      research, development, or commercial
                                                process chemicals and services. The                     ground other than the Divestiture                      information or any applicable
                                                divestitures, whether pursuant to                       Trustee’s malfeasance. Any such                        privileges. Defendants shall take no
                                                Section IV or Section V of this Final                   objections by Defendants must be                       action to interfere with or to impede the
                                                Judgment,                                               conveyed in writing to the United States               Divestiture Trustee’s accomplishment of
                                                                                                        and the Divestiture Trustee within ten                 the divestiture.
                                                   (1) shall be made to an Acquirer that, in
                                                the United States’ sole judgment, has the               (10) calendar days after the Divestiture                  F. After its appointment, the
                                                intent and capability (including the                    Trustee has provided the notice                        Divestiture Trustee shall file monthly
                                                necessary managerial, operational, technical            required under Section VI.                             reports with the United States and, as
                                                and financial capability) of competing                     D. The Divestiture Trustee shall serve              appropriate, the Court setting forth the
                                                effectively in the provision of refinery                at the cost and expense of Defendants                  Divestiture Trustee’s efforts to
                                                process chemicals and services; and                     pursuant to a written agreement, on                    accomplish the divestiture ordered
                                                   (2) shall be accomplished so as to satisfy           such terms and conditions as the United                under this Final Judgment. To the extent
                                                the United States, in its sole discretion, that         States approves including                              such reports contain information that
                                                none of the terms of any agreement between              confidentiality requirements and                       the Divestiture Trustee deems
                                                an Acquirer and Defendants give Defendants              conflict of interest certifications. The               confidential, such reports shall not be
                                                the ability unreasonably to raise the
                                                Acquirer’s costs, to lower the Acquirer’s
                                                                                                        Divestiture Trustee shall account for all              filed in the public docket of the Court.
                                                efficiency, or otherwise to interfere in the            monies derived from the sale of the                    Such reports shall include the name,
                                                ability of the Acquirer to compete effectively.         assets sold by the Divestiture Trustee                 address, and telephone number of each
                                                                                                        and all costs and expenses so incurred.                person who, during the preceding
                                                  Any questions that arise concerning                   After approval by the Court of the                     month, made an offer to acquire,
                                                whether particular assets are                           Divestiture Trustee’s accounting,                      expressed an interest in acquiring,
                                                appropriately considered Divestiture                    including fees for its services yet unpaid             entered into negotiations to acquire, or
                                                Assets subject to Section IV shall be                   and those of any professionals and                     was contacted or made an inquiry about
                                                resolved by the United States, in its sole              agents retained by the Divestiture                     acquiring, any interest in the Divestiture
                                                discretion, consistent with the terms of                Trustee, all remaining money shall be                  Assets, and shall describe in detail each
                                                this Final Judgment.                                    paid to Defendants and the trust shall                 contact with any such person. The
                                                V. Appointment of Divestiture Trustee                   then be terminated. The compensation                   Divestiture Trustee shall maintain full
                                                                                                        of the Divestiture Trustee and any                     records of all efforts made to divest the
                                                  A. If Defendants have not divested the                professionals and agents retained by the               Divestiture Assets.
                                                Divestiture Assets within the time                      Divestiture Trustee shall be reasonable                   G. If the Divestiture Trustee has not
                                                period specified in Section IV.A,                       in light of the value of the Divestiture               accomplished the divestiture ordered
                                                Defendants shall notify the United                      Assets and based on a fee arrangement                  under this Final Judgment within six
                                                States of that fact in writing. Upon                    providing the Divestiture Trustee with                 months after its appointment, the
                                                application of the United States, the                   an incentive based on the price and                    Divestiture Trustee shall promptly file
                                                Court shall appoint a Divestiture                       terms of the divestiture and the speed                 with the Court a report setting forth (1)
                                                Trustee selected by the United States                   with which it is accomplished, but                     the Divestiture Trustee’s efforts to
                                                and approved by the Court to effect the                 timeliness is paramount. If the                        accomplish the required divestiture, (2)
                                                divestiture of the Divestiture Assets.                  Divestiture Trustee and Defendants are                 the reasons, in the Divestiture Trustee’s
                                                  B. After the appointment of a                         unable to reach agreement on the                       judgment, why the required divestiture
                                                Divestiture Trustee becomes effective,                  Divestiture Trustee’s or any agents’ or                has not been accomplished, and (3) the
                                                only the Divestiture Trustee shall have                 consultants’ compensation or other                     Divestiture Trustee’s recommendations.
                                                the right to sell the Divestiture Assets.               terms and conditions of engagement                     To the extent such reports contains
                                                The Divestiture Trustee shall have the                  within 14 calendar days of appointment                 information that the Divestiture Trustee
                                                power and authority to accomplish the                   of the Divestiture Trustee, the United                 deems confidential, such reports shall
                                                divestiture to an Acquirer(s) acceptable                States may, in its sole discretion, take               not be filed in the public docket of the
                                                to the United States at such price and                  appropriate action, including making a                 Court. The Divestiture Trustee shall at
                                                on such terms as are then obtainable                    recommendation to the Court. The                       the same time furnish such report to the
                                                upon reasonable effort by the                           Divestiture Trustee shall, within three                United States which shall have the right
                                                Divestiture Trustee, subject to the                     (3) business days of hiring any other                  to make additional recommendations
                                                provisions of Sections IV, V, and VI of                 professionals or agents, provide written               consistent with the purpose of the trust.
                                                this Final Judgment, and shall have                     notice of such hiring and the rate of                  The Court thereafter shall enter such
                                                such other powers as this Court deems                   compensation to Defendants and the                     orders as it shall deem appropriate to
                                                appropriate. Subject to Section V.D of                  United States.                                         carry out the purpose of the Final
                                                this Final Judgment, the Divestiture                       E. Defendants shall use their best                  Judgment, which may, if necessary,
                                                Trustee may hire at the cost and                        efforts to assist the Divestiture Trustee              include extending the trust and the term
                                                expense of Defendants any investment                    in accomplishing the required                          of the Divestiture Trustee’s appointment
                                                bankers, attorneys, or other agents, who                divestiture. The Divestiture Trustee and
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                                                                                                                                                               by a period requested by the United
                                                shall be solely accountable to the                      any consultants, accountants, attorneys,               States.
                                                Divestiture Trustee, reasonably                         and other agents retained by the                          H. If the United States determines that
                                                necessary in the Divestiture Trustee’s                  Divestiture Trustee shall have full and                the Divestiture Trustee has ceased to act
                                                judgment to assist in the divestiture.                  complete access to the personnel, books,               or failed to act diligently or in a
                                                Any such investment bankers, attorneys,                 records, and facilities of the business to             reasonably cost-effective manner, it may
                                                or other agents shall serve on such terms               be divested, and Defendants shall                      recommend the Court appoint a
                                                and conditions as the United States                     develop financial and other information                substitute Divestiture Trustee.


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                                                28882                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices

                                                VI. Notice of Proposed Divestiture                      VII. Financing                                         efforts and actions outlined in
                                                                                                          Defendants shall not finance all or                  Defendants’ earlier affidavits filed
                                                   A. In the event Defendants are                                                                              pursuant to this section within fifteen
                                                divesting the Divestiture Assets to an                  any part of any purchase made pursuant
                                                                                                        to Section IV or Section V of this Final               (15) calendar days after the change is
                                                Acquirer other than Suez, within two (2)                                                                       implemented.
                                                business days following execution of a                  Judgment.
                                                                                                                                                                  C. Defendants shall keep all records of
                                                definitive divestiture agreement,                       VIII. Hold Separate                                    all efforts made to preserve and divest
                                                Defendants or the Divestiture Trustee,                                                                         the Divestiture Assets until one year
                                                                                                          Until the divestiture required by this
                                                whichever is then responsible for                       Final Judgment has been accomplished,                  after such divestiture has been
                                                effecting the divestiture required herein,              Defendants shall take all steps necessary              completed.
                                                shall notify the United States of any                   to comply with the Hold Separate
                                                proposed divestiture required by                                                                               X. Compliance Inspection
                                                                                                        Stipulation and Order entered by this
                                                Section IV or Section V of this Final                   Court. Defendants shall take no action                   A. For the purposes of determining or
                                                Judgment. If the Divestiture Trustee is                 that would jeopardize the divestiture                  securing compliance with this Final
                                                responsible, it shall similarly notify                  ordered by this Court.                                 Judgment, or of any related orders such
                                                Defendants. The notice shall set forth                                                                         as any Hold Separate Stipulation and
                                                the details of the proposed divestiture                 IX. Affidavits                                         Order, or of determining whether the
                                                and list the name, address, and                            A. Within twenty (20) calendar days                 Final Judgment should be modified or
                                                telephone number of each person not                     of the filing of the Complaint in this                 vacated, and subject to any legally
                                                previously identified who offered or                    matter, and every thirty (30) calendar                 recognized privilege, from time to time
                                                expressed an interest in or desire to                   days thereafter until the divestiture has              authorized representatives of the United
                                                acquire any ownership interest in the                   been completed under Section IV or                     States Department of Justice, including
                                                Divestiture Assets, together with full                  Section V, Defendants shall deliver to                 consultants and other persons retained
                                                details of the same.                                    the United States an affidavit as to the               by the United States, shall, upon written
                                                                                                        fact and manner of its compliance with                 request of an authorized representative
                                                   B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of                                                                     of the Assistant Attorney General in
                                                receipt by the United States of such                    Section IV or Section V of this Final
                                                                                                        Judgment. In the event Defendants are                  charge of the Antitrust Division, and on
                                                notice, the United States may request                                                                          reasonable notice to Defendants, be
                                                from Defendants, the proposed                           divesting the Divestiture Assets to an
                                                                                                        Acquirer other than Suez, each such                    permitted:
                                                Acquirer(s), any other third party, or the
                                                Divestiture Trustee, if applicable,                     affidavit shall include the name,                        (1) access during Defendants’ office hours
                                                                                                        address, and telephone number of each                  to inspect and copy, or at the option of the
                                                additional information concerning the
                                                                                                        person who, during the preceding thirty                United States, to require Defendants to
                                                proposed divestiture, the proposed                                                                             provide hard copy or electronic copies of, all
                                                Acquirer(s), and any other potential                    (30) calendar days, made an offer to
                                                                                                        acquire, expressed an interest in                      books, ledgers, accounts, records, data, and
                                                Acquirer. Defendants and the                                                                                   documents in the possession, custody, or
                                                Divestiture Trustee shall furnish any                   acquiring, entered into negotiations to                control of Defendants, relating to any matters
                                                additional information requested within                 acquire, or was contacted or made an                   contained in this Final Judgment; and
                                                fifteen (15) calendar days of the receipt               inquiry about acquiring, any interest in                 (2) to interview, either informally or on the
                                                of the request, unless the parties shall                the Divestiture Assets, and shall                      record, Defendants’ officers, employees, or
                                                otherwise agree.                                        describe in detail each contact with any               agents, who may have their individual
                                                                                                        such person during that period. In the                 counsel present, regarding such matters. The
                                                   C. Within thirty (30) calendar days                  event Defendants are divesting the                     interviews shall be subject to the reasonable
                                                after receipt of the notice or within                   Divestiture Assets to an Acquirer other                convenience of the interviewee and without
                                                twenty (20) calendar days after the                     than Suez, each such affidavit shall also              restraint or interference by Defendants.
                                                United States has been provided the                     include a description of the efforts                      B. Upon the written request of an
                                                additional information requested from                   Defendants have taken to solicit buyers                authorized representative of the
                                                Defendants, the proposed Acquirer(s),                   for the Divestiture Assets, and to                     Assistant Attorney General in charge of
                                                any third party, and the Divestiture                    provide required information to                        the Antitrust Division, Defendants shall
                                                Trustee, whichever is later, the United                 prospective Acquirers, including the                   submit written reports or response to
                                                States shall provide written notice to                  limitations, if any, on such information.              written interrogatories, under oath if
                                                Defendants and the Divestiture Trustee,                 Assuming the information set forth in                  requested, relating to any of the matters
                                                if there is one, stating whether or not it              the affidavit is true and complete, any                contained in this Final Judgment as may
                                                objects to the proposed divestiture. If                 objection by the United States to                      be requested.
                                                the United States provides written                      information provided by Defendants,                       C. No information or documents
                                                notice that it does not object, the                     including limitation on information,                   obtained by the means provided in this
                                                divestiture may be consummated,                         shall be made within fourteen (14)                     section shall be divulged by the United
                                                subject only to Defendants’ limited right               calendar days of receipt of such                       States to any person other than an
                                                to object to the sale under Section V.C                 affidavit.                                             authorized representative of the
                                                of this Final Judgment. Absent written                     B. Within twenty (20) calendar days                 executive branch of the United States,
                                                notice that the United States does not                  of the filing of the Complaint in this                 except in the course of legal proceedings
                                                object to the proposed Acquirer(s) or                   matter, Defendants shall deliver to the                to which the United States is a party
                                                upon objection by the United States, a                  United States an affidavit that describes              (including grand jury proceedings), or
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                                                divestiture proposed under Section IV                   in reasonable detail all actions                       for the purpose of securing compliance
                                                or Section V shall not be consummated.                  Defendants have taken and all steps                    with this Final Judgment, or as
                                                Upon objection by Defendants under                      Defendants have implemented on an                      otherwise required by law.
                                                Section V.C, a divestiture proposed                     ongoing basis to comply with Section                      D. If at the time information or
                                                under Section V shall not be                            VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendants                documents are furnished by Defendants
                                                consummated unless approved by the                      shall deliver to the United States an                  to the United States, Defendants
                                                Court.                                                  affidavit describing any changes to the                represent and identify in writing the


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                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices                                            28883

                                                material in any such information or                     GE Power Controls Portugal Unipessoal LDA              of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18,
                                                documents to which a claim of                             (Portugal)                                           resulting in higher prices, reduced
                                                protection may be asserted under Rule                   GE Water & Process Technologies (Wuxi) Co.             service quality, and diminished
                                                                                                          Ltd. (China)
                                                26(c)(1)(g) of the Federal Rules of Civil                                                                      innovation.
                                                                                                        GE Water & Process Technologies Asia Pte.
                                                Procedure, and Defendants mark each                       Ltd. (Singapore)                                        At the same time the Complaint was
                                                pertinent page of such material,                        GE Water & Process Technologies Austria                filed, the United States also filed a
                                                ‘‘Subject to claim of protection under                    GmbH (Austria)                                       proposed Final Judgment and a Hold
                                                Rule 26(c)(1)(g) of the Federal Rules of                GE Water & Process Technologies BVBA                   Separate Stipulation and Order (‘‘Hold
                                                Civil Procedure,’’ then the United States                 (Belgium)                                            Separate’’) that are designed to
                                                shall give Defendants ten (10) calendar                 GE Water & Process Technologies France                 eliminate the anticompetitive effects of
                                                days notice prior to divulging such                       SAS (France)                                         the Transaction. Under the proposed
                                                                                                        GE Water & Process Technologies GmbH
                                                material in any legal proceeding (other                                                                        Final Judgment, which is explained
                                                                                                          (Germany)
                                                than a grand jury proceeding).                          GE Water & Process Technologies Hungary                more fully below, GE is required to
                                                                                                          KFT (Hungary)                                        divest its GE Water & Process
                                                XI. No Reacquisition
                                                                                                        GE Water & Process Technologies Mexico, S.             Technologies business unit. Under the
                                                  Defendants may not reacquire any                        de R.L de C.V. (Mexico)                              terms of the Hold Separate, GE will take
                                                part of the Divestiture Assets during the               GE Water & Process Technologies Middle                 certain steps during the pendency of the
                                                term of this Final Judgment.                              East FZE (Dubai)                                     ordered divestiture to ensure that GE
                                                                                                        GE Water & Process Technologies                        Water & Process Technologies is
                                                XII. Retention of Jurisdiction                            Netherlands BV (NL)
                                                                                                                                                               operated as a competitively
                                                   This Court retains jurisdiction to                   General Electric Water & Process
                                                                                                          Technologies Caribbean Holdings BV                   independent, economically viable, and
                                                enable any party to this Final Judgment                                                                        ongoing business concern.
                                                                                                          (Netherlands Antilles)
                                                to apply to this Court at any time for                  Ionics Iberica S.L.U. (Spain)                             The United States and Defendants
                                                further orders and directions as may be                 Water & Process Technologies SRL                       have stipulated that the proposed Final
                                                necessary or appropriate to carry out or                  (Argentina)                                          Judgment may be entered after
                                                construe this Final Judgment, to modify                 Zenon Services Limited (Virgin Islands)                compliance with the APPA. Entry of the
                                                any of its provisions, to enforce                       Zenon Systems Manufacturing and Services               proposed Final Judgment would
                                                compliance, and to punish violations of                   Limited Liability Company (Hungary)
                                                                                                                                                               terminate this action, except that the
                                                its provisions.                                         United States District Court                           Court would retain jurisdiction to
                                                XIII. Expiration of Final Judgment                                                                             construe, modify, or enforce the
                                                                                                        for The District of Columbia
                                                                                                                                                               provisions of the proposed Final
                                                  Unless this Court grants an extension,                  United States of America, Plaintiff, v.              Judgment and to punish violations
                                                this Final Judgment shall expire ten                    General Electric Co. and Baker Hughes                  thereof.
                                                years from the date of its entry.                       Incorporated, Defendants.
                                                                                                        Case No.: 1:17–cv–01146                                II. DESCRIPTION OF THE EVENTS
                                                XIV. Public Interest Determination                                                                             GIVING RISE TO ALLEGED
                                                                                                        Judge: Beryl A. Howell
                                                   Entry of this Final Judgment is in the                                                                      VIOLATION
                                                public interest. The parties have                       COMPETITIVE IMPACT STATEMENT
                                                                                                                                                               A. The Defendants and the Proposed
                                                complied with the requirements of the                      Plaintiff United States of America                  Transaction
                                                Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,                 (‘‘United States’’), pursuant to Section
                                                15 U.S.C. 16, including making copies                   2(b) of the Antitrust Procedures and                     GE is a New York corporation
                                                available to the public of this Final                   Penalties Act (‘‘APPA’’ or ‘‘Tunney                    headquartered in Boston,
                                                Judgment, the Competitive Impact                        Act’’), 15 U.S.C. 16(b)–(h), files this                Massachusetts. GE is a large, diversified
                                                Statement, and any comments thereon                     Competitive Impact Statement relating                  corporation that, among other lines of
                                                and the United States’ responses to                     to the proposed Final Judgment                         business, supplies the oil supplies the
                                                comments. Based upon the record                         submitted for entry in this civil antitrust            oil and gas industry through a number
                                                before the Court, which includes the                    proceeding.                                            of business units, including GE Water &
                                                Competitive Impact Statement and any                                                                           Process Technologies, a standalone
                                                                                              I. NATURE AND PURPOSE OF THE                                     business unit that sells refinery process
                                                comments and response to comments
                                                                                              PROCEEDING                                                       chemicals and services. GE earned $16
                                                filed with the Court, entry of this Final
                                                Judgment is in the public interest.              Defendant General Electric Co. (‘‘GE’’)                       billion in revenues from its oil and gas
                                                Date: llllllllllllllllll                      and  Defendant Baker Hughes                                      businesses in 2015.
                                                [Court approval subject to procedures of      Incorporated (‘‘Baker Hughes’’) entered                            Baker Hughes is a Delaware
                                                  Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15  into a Transaction Agreement and Plan                            corporation headquartered in Houston,
                                                  U.S.C. 16]                                  of Merger dated October 30, 2016                                 Texas, with extensive operations in the
                                                lllllllllllllllllllll (‘‘Transaction’’). GE and Baker Hughes                                                   oil and gas industry, including selling
                                                United States District Judge                  are two of the leading providers of                              refinery process chemicals and services.
                                                                                              refinery process chemicals and services                          Baker Hughes earned $15.7 billion in
                                                Appendix
                                                                                              used by oil and gas refineries to remove                         revenues in 2015.
                                                GE Betz, Inc. (US)                            impurities from the oil and gas and to                             The Transaction, as initially agreed to
                                                Chemical Water Treatment Investments SRL      prevent damage to refinery equipment.                            by Defendants, would lessen
                                                  (Argentina)                                    The United States filed a civil
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                                                                                                                                                               competition substantially.
                                                GE Betz (UK)                                  antitrust Complaint on June 12, 2017
                                                GE Betz Ireland Limited (Ireland)             seeking to enjoin the Transaction. The                           B. The Competitive Effects of the
                                                GE Betz South Africa Pty Ltd (South Africa)                                                                    Transaction on Refinery Process
                                                GE Betz Pty Limited (Australia) and GE Betz
                                                                                              Complaint alleges that the likely effect
                                                                                              of the Transaction would be to lessen                            Chemicals and Services in the United
                                                  Pty Limited (New Zealand Branch)                                                                             States
                                                GE Infrastructure (Shanghai) Co. Ltd. (China) competition substantially for refinery
                                                GE Ionics Hamma Holdings (IRE) Ltd            process chemicals and services in the                              The Complaint alleges that the
                                                  (Ireland)                                   United States in violation of Section 7                          provision of refinery process chemicals


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                                                28884                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices

                                                and services is a line of commerce and                  its investment in research and                           The proposed Final Judgment also
                                                a relevant market within the meaning of                 development, and provide lower levels                  requires the transfer and licensing of
                                                Section 7 of the Clayton Act. Refineries                of service.                                            intangible assets, such as intellectual
                                                process crude oil and natural gas                          Entry by new refinery process                       property rights, sufficient to allow the
                                                extracted from wells (‘‘hydrocarbons’’)                 chemical and service providers or                      buyer to be an effective competitor. GE
                                                into finished products like gasoline.                   expansion by existing providers would                  must fully divest the complete portfolio
                                                Refineries rely on a variety of special                 not be timely, likely, and sufficient to               of intellectual property used primarily
                                                chemicals, collectively known as                        prevent the substantial lessening of                   by GE Water & Process Technologies. GE
                                                refinery process chemicals, to remove                   competition caused by the Transaction.                 will keep intellectual property used
                                                salts, solids, metals, and other                        Successful entry into the refinery                     primarily by other GE business units in
                                                impurities from the hydrocarbons and to                 process chemicals and services business                addition to GE Water & Process
                                                prevent corrosion and damage to                         is difficult, costly, and time consuming.              Technologies, but will grant the buyer of
                                                refinery equipment. Refineries rely on                  In addition to local infrastructure, a new             the divestiture assets a perpetual,
                                                process chemical and service providers                  refinery process chemicals and services                royalty-free license for the use of such
                                                to evaluate the specific hydrocarbons                   provider would have to develop a                       technology.
                                                flowing into their refineries and to                    portfolio of production chemicals and
                                                                                                        hire experienced staff. In addition,                   B. Procedures
                                                formulate and apply customized
                                                chemical solutions to ensure the safe                   because of the significant investment oil                 The proposed Final Judgment requires
                                                and efficient processing of those                       and gas refiners make in infrastructure                Defendants to sell the divestiture
                                                hydrocarbons. To develop the chemical                   and the high costs of any problem or                   package within 90 days after the Court
                                                solutions needed to address current and                 delay, refiners disfavor using new                     signs the Hold Separate in this matter,
                                                future challenges, these service                        providers and typically only switch                    subject to one or more extensions up to
                                                providers maintain dedicated research                   providers if their existing provider                   a total of 90 days by the United States.
                                                and development facilities. Although                    performs poorly over a long period of                  The proposed Final Judgment
                                                refinery process chemicals and services                 time. As a result, it is difficult and time            contemplates the sale of the divestiture
                                                represent just a fraction of an oil and gas             consuming for a new provider to enter                  assets to SUEZ, a French société
                                                refiner’s overall cost of processing                    the market, develop a track record of                  anonyme, which GE has identified as
                                                hydrocarbons, using the wrong                           successful work, and grow its business.                the proposed buyer of the divestiture
                                                chemicals can cost a refiner millions in                                                                       assets. Suez provides water and
                                                                                                        III. EXPLANATION OF THE                                wastewater treatment and waste
                                                lost production or compromised                          PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT
                                                equipment. As a result, oil and gas                                                                            management systems to customers
                                                refineries are unlikely to stop using                      The divestiture requirement of the                  throughout the world, and serves a
                                                refinery process chemicals or switch to                 proposed Final Judgment will eliminate                 range of industrial customers and
                                                other products in response to a small                   the anticompetitive effects of the                     municipalities in the United States. The
                                                but significant and non-transitory                      proposed transaction by establishing GE                proposed Final Judgment also provides
                                                increase in price.                                      Water & Process Technologies as an                     for a process to sell the divestiture
                                                   Oil and gas refiners choose from those               independent and economically viable                    assets to an alternative acquirer in the
                                                suppliers that have service staff and                   competitor in refinery process                         event that the proposed sale to Suez is
                                                support infrastructure in their local                   chemicals and services. The sale of GE                 not completed.
                                                area. GE and Baker Hughes have such                     Water & Process Technologies will                         The assets must be divested in such
                                                infrastructure, and compete with one                    provide the buyer of the divestiture                   a way as to satisfy the United States in
                                                another for customers, in areas                         assets with the necessary assets to                    its sole discretion that the operations
                                                throughout the United States. A                         maintain a significant presence in the                 can and will be operated by the
                                                hypothetical monopolist of refinery                     United States and remain an effective                  purchaser as a viable, ongoing business
                                                process chemicals and services in the                   competitor.                                            that can compete effectively to provide
                                                United States likely would impose at                                                                           refinery process chemicals and services.
                                                                                                        A. The Divestiture Package                             Defendants must take all reasonable
                                                least a small but significant price
                                                increase because few if any customers                     To ensure continued vigorous                         steps necessary to accomplish the
                                                would substitute to purchasing other                    competition, the proposed Final                        divestiture quickly and shall cooperate
                                                products or to purchasing outside the                   Judgment requires the divestiture of all               with prospective purchasers.
                                                United States. Therefore, the United                    of the tangible and intangible assets of                  In the event that Defendants do not
                                                States is a relevant geographic market                  GE Water & Process Technologies that                   accomplish the divestiture within the
                                                under Section 7 of the Clayton Act for                  are currently used to serve customers.                 prescribed period, the proposed Final
                                                the provision of refinery process                       Under the proposed Final Judgment, the                 Judgment provides that upon
                                                chemicals and services.                                 tangible assets of GE Water & Process                  application by the United States, the
                                                   The market for the provision of                      Technologies that must be divested                     Court will appoint a trustee selected by
                                                refinery process chemicals and services                 include worldwide manufacturing                        the United States to effect the
                                                in the United States is highly                          plants, service centers, labs, warehouse               divestiture. If a trustee is appointed, the
                                                concentrated and would become more                      and distribution facilities, and offices,              proposed Final Judgment provides that
                                                concentrated as a result of the proposed                including the business’s global                        Defendants will pay all of the trustee’s
                                                transaction. A combined GE and Baker                    headquarters located in Trevose,                       costs and expenses. The trustee will
                                                                                                        Pennsylvania. The transfer will also                   have the authority to divest the
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                                                Hughes would control over 50% of the
                                                market for refinery process chemicals                   include all six global research and                    divestiture assets to an acquirer
                                                and services in the United States. The                  development facilities. This will ensure               acceptable to the United States. The
                                                Transaction would eliminate significant                 that the acquirer of the divestiture assets            trustee’s commission will be structured
                                                head-to-head competition between GE                     has the infrastructure necessary to                    so as to provide an incentive for the
                                                and Baker Hughes and give the merged                    continue providing refinery process                    trustee based on the price obtained and
                                                firm the incentive and ability to raise its             chemicals and services to refiners and                 the speed with which the divestiture is
                                                prices above competitive levels, reduce                 compete for opportunities.                             accomplished. After his or her


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                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices                                                     28885

                                                appointment becomes effective, the                      proposed Final Judgment at any time                    alternative remedies actually
                                                trustee will file monthly reports with                  prior to the Court’s entry of judgment.                considered, whether its terms are
                                                the Court and the United States setting                 The comments and the response of the                   ambiguous, and any other competitive
                                                forth his or her efforts to accomplish the              United States will be filed with the                   considerations bearing upon the
                                                divestiture. At the end of six (6) months,              Court. In addition, comments will be                   adequacy of such judgment that the
                                                if the divestiture has not been                         posted on the U.S. Department of                       court deems necessary to a
                                                accomplished, the trustee and the                       Justice, Antitrust Division’s internet                 determination of whether the consent
                                                United States will make                                 Web site and, under certain                            judgment is in the public interest; and
                                                recommendations to the Court, which                     circumstances, published in the Federal                   (B) the impact of entry of such
                                                shall enter such orders as appropriate,                 Register.                                              judgment upon competition in the
                                                in order to carry out the purpose of the                  Written comments should be                           relevant market or markets, upon the
                                                trust, including extending the trust or                 submitted by mail to:                                  public generally and individuals
                                                the term of the trustee’s appointment.                  Kathleen S. O’Neill, Chief,                            alleging specific injury from the
                                                The divestiture provisions of the                       Transportation, Energy & Agriculture                   violations set forth in the complaint
                                                proposed Final Judgment will eliminate                  Section, Antitrust Division, United                    including consideration of the public
                                                the anticompetitive effects of the                      States Department of Justice, 450 5th                  benefit, if any, to be derived from a
                                                acquisition in the provision of refinery                Street NW., Suite 8000, Washington, DC                 determination of the issues at trial.
                                                process chemicals and services in the                   20530                                                  15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1)(A) & (B). In
                                                United States.                                                                                                 considering these statutory factors, the
                                                                                                        The proposed Final Judgment provides
                                                IV. REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO                                                                                      court’s inquiry is necessarily a limited
                                                                                                        that the Court retains jurisdiction over
                                                POTENTIAL PRIVATE LITIGANTS                                                                                    one as the government is entitled to
                                                                                                        this action, and the parties may apply to
                                                                                                                                                               ‘‘broad discretion to settle with the
                                                   Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15                     the Court for any order necessary or
                                                                                                                                                               defendant within the reaches of the
                                                U.S.C. 15, provides that any person who                 appropriate for the modification,
                                                                                                                                                               public interest.’’ United States v.
                                                has been injured as a result of conduct                 interpretation, or enforcement of the
                                                                                                                                                               Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461
                                                prohibited by the antitrust laws may                    Final Judgment.
                                                                                                                                                               (D.C. Cir. 1995); see generally United
                                                bring suit in federal court to recover                  VI. ALTERNATIVES TO THE                                States v. SBC Commc’ns, Inc., 489 F.
                                                three times the damages the person has                  PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT                                Supp. 2d 1 (D.D.C. 2007) (assessing
                                                suffered, as well as costs and reasonable                                                                      public interest standard under the
                                                attorneys’ fees. Entry of the proposed                     The United States considered, as an
                                                                                                        alternative to the proposed Final                      Tunney Act); United States v, U.S.
                                                Final Judgment will neither impair nor                                                                         Airways Group, Inc., 38 F. Supp. 3d 69,
                                                assist the bringing of any private                      Judgment, a full trial on the merits
                                                                                                        against Defendants. The United States                  75 (D.D.C. 2014) (noting the court has
                                                antitrust damage action. Under the                                                                             broad discretion of the adequacy of the
                                                provisions of Section 5(a) of the Clayton               could have continued the litigation and
                                                                                                        sought preliminary and permanent                       relief at issue); United States v. InBev
                                                Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(a), the proposed Final                                                                       N.V./S.A., No. 08–1965 (JR), 2009–2
                                                Judgment has no prima facie effect in                   injunctions against the Transaction
                                                                                                        proposed by Defendants. The United                     Trade Cas. (CCH) ¶ 76,736, 2009 U.S.
                                                any subsequent private lawsuit that may                                                                        Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *3, (D.D.C. Aug.
                                                be brought against Defendants.                          States is satisfied, however, that the
                                                                                                        divestiture of assets described in the                 11, 2009) (noting that the court’s review
                                                V. PROCEDURES AVAILABLE FOR                             proposed Final Judgment will preserve                  of a consent judgment is limited and
                                                MODIFICATION OF THE PROPOSED                            competition for the provision of refinery              only inquires ‘‘into whether the
                                                FINAL JUDGMENT                                          process and water treatment chemicals                  government’s determination that the
                                                   The United States and Defendants                     and services in the United States. Thus,               proposed remedies will cure the
                                                have stipulated that the proposed Final                 the proposed Final Judgment would                      antitrust violations alleged in the
                                                Judgment may be entered by the Court                    achieve all or substantially all of the                complaint was reasonable, and whether
                                                after compliance with the provisions of                 relief the United States would have                    the mechanism to enforce the final
                                                the APPA, provided that the United                      obtained through litigation but avoids                 judgment are clear and manageable.’’).2
                                                States has not withdrawn its consent.                   the time, expense, and uncertainty of a                   As the United States Court of Appeals
                                                The APPA conditions entry upon the                      full trial on the merits of the Complaint.             for the District of Columbia Circuit has
                                                Court’s determination that the proposed                                                                        held, under the APPA a court considers,
                                                                                                        VII. STANDARD OF REVIEW UNDER                          among other things, the relationship
                                                Final Judgment is in the public interest.
                                                   The APPA provides a period of at                     THE APPA FOR THE PROPOSED                              between the remedy secured and the
                                                least sixty (60) days preceding the                     FINAL JUDGMENT                                         specific allegations set forth in the
                                                effective date of the proposed Final                       The Clayton Act, as amended by the                  government’s complaint, whether the
                                                Judgment within which any person may                    APPA, requires that proposed consent                   decree is sufficiently clear, whether
                                                submit to the United States written                     judgments in antitrust cases brought by                enforcement mechanisms are sufficient,
                                                comments regarding the proposed Final                   the United States be subject to a sixty-               and whether the decree may positively
                                                Judgment. Any person who wishes to                      day comment period, after which the                    harm third parties. See Microsoft, 56
                                                comment should do so within sixty (60)                  court shall determine whether entry of                 F.3d at 1458–62. With respect to the
                                                days of the date of publication of this                 the proposed Final Judgment ‘‘is in the                adequacy of the relief secured by the
                                                Competitive Impact Statement in the                     public interest.’’ 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1). In              decree, a court may not ‘‘engage in an
                                                Federal Register, or the last date of                   making that determination, the court, in
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                                                                                                                                                                 2 The 2004 amendments substituted ‘‘shall’’ for
                                                publication in a newspaper of the                       accordance with the statute as amended                 ‘‘may’’ in directing relevant factors for court to
                                                summary of this Competitive Impact                      in 2004, is required to consider:                      consider and amended the list of factors to focus on
                                                Statement, whichever is later. All                         (A) the competitive impact of such                  competitive considerations and to address
                                                comments received during this period                    judgment, including termination of                     potentially ambiguous judgment terms. Compare 15
                                                                                                                                                               U.S.C. 16(e) (2004), with 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1) (2006);
                                                will be considered by the United States                 alleged violations, provisions for                     see also SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11
                                                Department of Justice, which remains                    enforcement and modification, duration                 (concluding that the 2004 amendments ‘‘effected
                                                free to withdraw its consent to the                     of relief sought, anticipated effects of               minimal changes’’ to Tunney Act review).



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                                                28886                           Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 121 / Monday, June 26, 2017 / Notices

                                                unrestricted evaluation of what relief                   range of acceptability or is ‘within the               require the court to permit anyone to
                                                would best serve the public.’’ United                    reaches of public interest.’ ’’ United                 intervene.’’ 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(2); see also
                                                States v. BNS, Inc., 858 F.2d 456, 462                   States v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 552 F.                  U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 75
                                                (9th Cir. 1988) (quoting United States v.                Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C. 1982) (citations                (indicating that a court is not required
                                                Bechtel Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th                    omitted) (quoting United States v.                     to hold an evidentiary hearing or to
                                                Cir. 1981)); see also Microsoft, 56 F.3d                 Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp. 713, 716 (D.                permit intervenors as part of its review
                                                at 1460–62; United States v. Alcoa, Inc.,                Mass. 1975)), aff’d sub nom. Maryland                  under the Tunney Act). The language
                                                152 F. Supp. 2d 37, 40 (D.D.C. 2001);                    v. United States, 460 U.S. 1001 (1983);                wrote into the statute what Congress
                                                InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at                   see also U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at               intended when it enacted the Tunney
                                                *3. Courts have held that:                               74 (noting that room must be made for                  Act in 1974, as Senator Tunney
                                                [t]he balancing of competing social and                  the government to grant concessions in                 explained: ‘‘[t]he court is nowhere
                                                political interests affected by a proposed               the negotiation process for settlements                compelled to go to trial or to engage in
                                                antitrust consent decree must be left, in the            (citing Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461);                   extended proceedings which might have
                                                first instance, to the discretion of the                 United States v. Alcan Aluminum Ltd.,                  the effect of vitiating the benefits of
                                                Attorney General. The court’s role in                    605 F. Supp. 619, 622 (W.D. Ky. 1985)                  prompt and less costly settlement
                                                protecting the public interest is one of                 (approving the consent decree even                     through the consent decree process.’’
                                                insuring that the government has not                     though the court would have imposed a
                                                breached its duty to the public in consenting                                                                   119 Cong. Rec. 24,598 (1973) (statement
                                                to the decree. The court is required to
                                                                                                         greater remedy). To meet this standard,                of Sen. Tunney). Rather, the procedure
                                                determine not whether a particular decree is             the United States ‘‘need only provide a                for the public interest determination is
                                                the one that will best serve society, but                factual basis for concluding that the                  left to the discretion of the court, with
                                                whether the settlement is ‘‘within the reaches           settlements are reasonably adequate                    the recognition that the court’s ‘‘scope
                                                of the public interest.’’ More elaborate                 remedies for the alleged harms.’’ SBC                  of review remains sharply proscribed by
                                                requirements might undermine the                         Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17.                       precedent and the nature of Tunney Act
                                                effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by                   Moreover, the court’s role under the
                                                consent decree.                                                                                                 proceedings.’’ SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
                                                                                                         APPA is limited to reviewing the                       Supp. 2d at 11.4 A court can make its
                                                Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis                       remedy in relationship to the violations               public interest determination based on
                                                added) (citations omitted).3 In                          that the United States has alleged in its              the competitive impact statement and
                                                determining whether a proposed                           Complaint, and does not authorize the                  response to public comments alone.
                                                settlement is in the public interest, a                  court to ‘‘construct [its] own                         U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 75.
                                                district court ‘‘must accord deference to                hypothetical case and then evaluate the
                                                the government’s predictions about the                   decree against that case.’’ Microsoft, 56              VIII. DETERMINATIVE DOCUMENTS
                                                efficacy of its remedies, and may not                    F.3d at 1459; see also U.S. Airways, 38                  There are no determinative materials
                                                require that the remedies perfectly                      F. Supp. 3d at 74 (noting that the court               or documents within the meaning of the
                                                match the alleged violations.’’ SBC                      must simply determine whether there is                 APPA that were considered by the
                                                Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17; see                     a factual foundation for the                           United States in formulating the
                                                also U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 75                  government’s decisions such that its                   proposed Final Judgment.
                                                (noting that a court should not reject the               conclusions regarding the proposed                     Dated: June 12, 2017
                                                proposed remedies because it believes                    settlements are reasonable; InBev, 2009                Respectfully submitted,
                                                others are preferable); Microsoft, 56 F.3d               U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *20 (‘‘the
                                                                                                                                                                /s/ lllllllllllllllllll
                                                at 1461 (noting the need for courts to be                ‘public interest’ is not to be measured by             Tracy Fisher
                                                ‘‘deferential to the government’s                        comparing the violations alleged in the                Tracey Chambers
                                                predictions as to the effect of the                      complaint against those the court                      Jeremy Evans (DC Bar No. 478097)
                                                proposed remedies’’); United States v.                   believes could have, or even should                    Chinita Sinkler
                                                Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., 272 F.                       have, been alleged’’). Because the                     Trial Attorneys
                                                Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003) (noting that                 ‘‘court’s authority to review the decree               U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust
                                                the court should grant due respect to the                depends entirely on the government’s                   Division, Transportation, Energy &
                                                                                                         exercising its prosecutorial discretion by             Agriculture Section, 450 5th Street NW.,
                                                United States’ prediction as to the effect                                                                      Suite 8000, Washington DC 20530,
                                                of proposed remedies, its perception of                  bringing a case in the first place,’’ it               Telephone: (202) 616–1650, tracy.fisher@
                                                the market structure, and its views of                   follows that ‘‘the court is only                       usdoj.gov.
                                                the nature of the case).                                 authorized to review the decree itself,’’
                                                                                                                                                                [FR Doc. 2017–13327 Filed 6–23–17; 8:45 am]
                                                   Courts have greater flexibility in                    and not to ‘‘effectively redraft the
                                                                                                                                                                BILLING CODE P
                                                approving proposed consent decrees                       complaint’’ to inquire into other matters
                                                than in crafting their own decrees                       that the United States did not pursue.                    4 See United States v. Enova Corp., 107 F. Supp.
                                                following a finding of liability in a                    Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1459–60. As this                 2d 10, 17 (D.D.C. 2000) (noting that the ‘‘Tunney
                                                litigated matter. ‘‘[A] proposed decree                  Court recently confirmed in SBC                        Act expressly allows the court to make its public
                                                must be approved even if it falls short                  Communications, courts ‘‘cannot look                   interest determination on the basis of the
                                                of the remedy the court would impose                     beyond the complaint in making the                     competitive impact statement and response to
                                                                                                                                                                comments alone’’); United States v. Mid-Am.
                                                on its own, as long as it falls within the               public interest determination unless the               Dairymen, Inc., No. 73–CV–681–W–1, 1977–1 Trade
                                                                                                         complaint is drafted so narrowly as to                 Cas. (CCH) ¶ 61,508, at 71,980, *22 (W.D. Mo. 1977)
                                                  3 Cf. BNS, 858 F.2d at 464 (holding that the           make a mockery of judicial power.’’ SBC                (‘‘Absent a showing of corrupt failure of the
                                                court’s ‘‘ultimate authority under the [APPA] is         Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 15.                       government to discharge its duty, the Court, in
                                                limited to approving or disapproving the consent                                                                making its public interest finding, should . . .
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                                                                                                            In its 2004 amendments, Congress
                                                decree’’); United States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp.                                                          carefully consider the explanations of the
                                                713, 716 (D. Mass. 1975) (noting that, in this way,
                                                                                                         made clear its intent to preserve the                  government in the competitive impact statement
                                                the court is constrained to ‘‘look at the overall        practical benefits of utilizing consent                and its responses to comments in order to
                                                picture not hypercritically, nor with a microscope,      decrees in antitrust enforcement, adding               determine whether those explanations are
                                                but with an artist’s reducing glass’’). See generally    the unambiguous instruction that                       reasonable under the circumstances.’’); S. Rep. No.
                                                Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (discussing whether ‘‘the                                                            93–298, at 6 (1973) (‘‘Where the public interest can
                                                remedies [obtained in the decree are] so
                                                                                                         ‘‘[n]othing in this section shall be                   be meaningfully evaluated simply on the basis of
                                                inconsonant with the allegations charged as to fall      construed to require the court to                      briefs and oral arguments, that is the approach that
                                                outside of the ‘reaches of the public interest’ ’’).     conduct an evidentiary hearing or to                   should be utilized.’’).



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Document Created: 2018-11-14 10:10:29
Document Modified: 2018-11-14 10:10:29
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
FR Citation82 FR 28877 

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