Archive for March, 2022

US companies should bring their boxing gloves to Europe’s courts | TheHill – The Hill

Overshadowed by other world events is the possibility that European courts help resolve differences between U.S. interests and the European Union on tech and antitrust policy. The dust is settling after the most recent round in the fight between Intel, the American semiconductor giant, and the EUs European Commission. Rounds one and two went to the commission and three and four went to Intel. The final victor remains uncertain, but courts appear increasingly willing to make it a fairer fight.

The result of round four alone may have broad implications for other companies entering the ring with the European Commission in the future. Innovation, growth, and economic stability are all on the line, with the commission pushing for a tech market that can best be described as permission-based. Reducing the incentives to innovate and invest freely in the EU could have ripple effects across the global economy.

European and American antitrust enforcers have already been on the same page in the sense that they favor an ever more prescriptive regulatory environment, presuming that conduct by large businesses is anticompetitive unless proven otherwise an almost impossible task. In Europe, the Digital Markets Act (which becomes effective in 2023) seeks to rebalance the digital economy and is clearly targeted at some of the most successful U.S.-based technology companies.

In a speechlast October, European Commission antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager stressed that over the past few years, antitrust ideas have increasingly been converging, in Europe and America, and that the growing sense of a common approach to the new challenges for competition law tells me that now is the time to cooperate even more closely than weve done before.

Indeed, the United States is following in the EUs footsteps. Some U.S. bills target only seven technology companies and would make corporate acquisitions or self-preferencing a companys use of its platform to boost its own products or services presumptively illegal, regardless of the effects on the economy. These proposals put aside economic analysis in favor of hard-and-fast rules about what a dominant company can and cannot do and imposes hefty fines for offenders.

The concept of rigid legal presumptions, devised by the European Commission and directed against certain large firms practices, is far from new. Its been used against Intel as far back as 2009. Intel, the dominant semiconductor manufacturer then and now, gave price rebates (loyalty discounts) to manufacturers (think Dell or HP) in exchange for those companies buying nearly all their computer chips from Intel alone. The European Commission claimed that Intel abused its market power and fined the company over 1 billion euros.

The commission did not come to this conclusion by conducting a careful and robust economic analysis. It asserted that since discounts can be anticompetitive, under the right conditions, they must be anticompetitive, despite a lack of evidence. The commission alleged harm between 2002 and 2005 using only evidence from the final quarter of 2002.

But the European General Court pushed back against the commissions overreach. In a recent decision, the need for better evidence was put front and center, and the court struck down the fine. In so doing, the court adopted an approach that has long been accepted by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Economic evidence has now become a powerful right hook for companies operating in the European Union. This should always be the case, but the new development nonetheless represents a victory for objective, innovation-friendly policy. No longer is the European Commission able to ignore similar evidence in cases where discount schemes were presumed illegal. No longer is the commissions judgement infallible, and this could mean a new wave of fights in court.

American companies are among the most ridiculed within the European Union, having faced numerous fines over the last decade. Until now, European courts have generally sided with the commission, leaving little recourse for companies fighting these fines. Google, Microsoft and Qualcomm have received some of the harshest fines ever imposed by the commission.

Other punches have begun to land. Both Apple and Amazon have won rounds against the commission on tax cases. But the European Commission has signaled that it is still ready to enter the ring with the whole gamut of industry-leading American technology companies, alleging wide-ranging anticompetitive harm across the European Union.

Likely gone are the days when companies tap out after the first round. Is the commission beginning to lose steam, and is it at risk of a knockout in a future case? Its too early to call, but some of the commissions punches seem to be weaker thanks to the European courts.

Alden Abbottis a senior research fellow with the Mercatus Center at George Mason University and a former general counsel with the Federal Trade Commission.AndrewMercadois an adjunct professor with the Antonin Scalia Law School.

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US companies should bring their boxing gloves to Europe's courts | TheHill - The Hill

Intel to invest up to 80 billion in European Union to expand semiconductor manufacturing and development – Windows Central

Rendering of Intel's planned factories in Magdeburg, Germany.Source: Intel

Intel announced plans to invest as much as 80 billion into semiconductor initiatives within the European Union. The company's plans include an initial 17 billion investment to create a fab mega-site in Germany and will advance research and development and manufacturing across the EU. Intel will create a new R&D hub in France, expand its investment in its foundry services in Ireland, and increase its manufacturing and foundry services in Italy, Poland, and Spain.

It will take some time for the investment to yield results, but it should greatly expand Intel's production capabilities with Europe once completed.

Intel will build two semiconductor fabs in Magdeburg, Germany, which is the capital of Saxony-Anhalt. Planning will begin immediately, and construction should start in the first half of 2023. Those fabs should begin production in 2027, though that is pending European Commission approval.

The two new fabs in Germany will use Intel's Angstrom-era transistor technologies and be used for the company's foundry services and its own chip production.

"Our planned investments are a major step both for Intel and for Europe," said Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger. "The EU Chips Act will empower private companies and governments to work together to drastically advance Europe's position in the semiconductor sector. This broad initiative will boost Europe's R&D innovation and bring leading-edge manufacturing to the region for the benefit of our customers and partners around the world. We are committed to playing an essential role in shaping Europe's digital future for decades to come."

Intel will also spend 12 billion to double the manufacturing space and to bring Intel 4 process technology to its facilities in Leixlip, Ireland. After that expansion, Intel will have invested more than 30 billion in Ireland.

Italy and Intel have also entered negotiations to create a back-end manufacturing facility with an investment of up to 4.5 billion. If created, the factory will start operating between 2025 and 2027.

Intel also announced plans to build a new R&D hub near Plateau de Saclay, France. The company will also make France its European headquarters for high-performance computing and artificial intelligence design capabilities.

By the end of 2023, Intel will increase its lab space by 50% in Gdansk, Poland to focus on deep neural networks, audio, graphics, data center, and cloud computing.

Notably, this investment is being made by Intel within the European Union, not across a broader collection of European countries. The UK lost Intel chip factory consideration due to Brexit. That is now having a real-world impact in the form of Intel choosing to invest elsewhere in Europe.

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Intel to invest up to 80 billion in European Union to expand semiconductor manufacturing and development - Windows Central

Conference on Linguistic Diversity and the French language in the European Union (15 Mar. 22) – France Diplomatie

How can digital technology then foster plurilingualism in European institutions, in their internal working and in their external communication? What are todays obstacles to the wider teaching of languages in Europe and the development of ambitious policies to promote linguistic diversity? What should be the broad lines of the training and mobility of European citizens and civil servants in terms of strengthening linguistic diversity in Europe? How can the economic sector play a role in this diversity and what are the positive gains for companies?

These are the questions that will be raised and discussed by the conferences participants. Representatives of European Union Member States and European institutions, contributors in the field, civil society leaders and those working to further Francophonie will be called upon to share their experiences. Their common goal is to develop and promote linguistic diversity as a way to build European citizenship.

The event will take the form of four successive round tables, after the session of introductory remarks moderated by French, European and international senior officials.

Following the Innovation, Technology and Plurilingualism Forum organized by the Ministry of Culture from 7 to 9 February 2022, the first round table will question the benefits of digital innovation. It will focus on the benefits of innovation both in terms of the implementation of multilingualism within the European institutions, and how it is communicated to citizens. It will focus on showing how we can strengthen visibility and facilitate access to plurilingual content online.

The language of Europe is translation

Umberto Eco.

The second round table will highlight the benefit for each European of learning a second foreign language. It will show how fluency in several languages fosters employment and mobility, especially through the Erasmus+ programme. It will emphasize the benefit of bilateral cooperation at local and regional levels to promote multilingualism in Europe. This sequence is aligned with the objective of building a European Education Area by 2025, where proficiency in several languages is a condition for studying and working abroad and discovering the cultural diversity of Europe.

"Being able to speak different languages is a condition for studying and working abroad, and fully discover Europes cultural diversity"

European Commission Communication of 30 September 2020 on achieving the European Education Area by 2025.

The third round table will discuss the link between language proficiency, training and mobility in the HR strategies of national and European administrations. It will be an opportunity to talk about language-learning throughout ones career, both for European civil servants and public sector employees who work in the permanent representations of Member States.

The final round table will aim to illustrate that linguistic diversity in Europe contributes to economic growth, the creation of jobs and the employment of European citizens in all businesses. Personal accounts will illustrate the benefits of plurilingualism for Europeans and initiatives in cross-border areas will be highlighted.

Professor Christian Lequesne, author of a report in 2021 on linguistic diversity in the European institutions and within Member States, will oversee the feedback from round tables. The Minister Delegate for Tourism, French Nationals Abroad, Francophonie and for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, MrJean-Baptiste Lemoyne, and the Minister of State for European Affairs will close the conference and hold a joint press conference.

Key figures Around 4,000 interpreters work in Brussels for the European institutions, and more than 2.5 million pages are translated into the 24 official languages every year.

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Conference on Linguistic Diversity and the French language in the European Union (15 Mar. 22) - France Diplomatie

Judge to hear arguments over Fifth Amendment claims in Flint water crisis civil trial – Michigan Radio

On Tuesday, attorneys are scheduled to argue over whether former Michigan Governor Rick Snyder may invoke his Fifth Amendment right and not testify at a civil trial concerning the Flint water crisis.

Two engineering firms Veolia North America (VNA) and Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam (LAN) consulted on Flints water system during the water crisis and are being sued on behalf of four plaintiffs who were children during the crisis.

The children were exposed to lead and other contaminants in their drinking water. Theyre seeking financial damages from the engineering firms. The firms deny theyre liable.

Snyder is on a long list of potential witnesses the defense may call.

He has already been disposed in the case, but since the deposition, Snyder, along with eight others, was indicted on criminal charges related to the Flint water crisis.

Snyders attorney has informed the federal judge hearing the case that the former governor plans to invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege if he is forced to appear as a witness.

The Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees no person can be compelled to be a witness against him or herself.

Four other potential witnesses facing criminal charges, including two former Flint emergency managers, have also indicated they plan to plead the Fifth if they are called to testify.

In a motion filed with the court last week, attorneys for VNA say the five cant invoke their Fifth Amendment protection since they have already testified under oath in pre-trial depositions:

"None of the five witnesses invoked the Fifth Amendment privilege during his depositioneven though the Michigan Solicitor General was actively and publicly re-investigating the water crisis and had pledged to seek additional indictments against the people responsible for the crisis."

"These witnesses have testified at length in depositions; some have answered reporters questions; two even have testified before Congress. But they have yet to testify in open court. They should do so here."

Lawyers for Snyder and the others say they are concerned attorneys for the engineering firms plan to ask their clients questions beyond what was asked during pre-trial depositions.

In a filing with the federal court on Friday, Snyders attorney laid out what he believes is the real intent of calling the former governor to testify in the civil case.

VNA doesnt care what Governor Snyder says about his alleged 'misconduct and failures,' vis-a-vis the Flint Water Crisis, attorney Brian Lennon writes in his motion, Rather, VNA hopes to force Governor Snyder to repeatedly invoke the Fifth Amendment in front of the jury and thereby shift blame away from itself.

U.S. District Judge Judith Levy has scheduled a hearing on the issue for Tuesday.

In addition to Snyder, former emergency managers Darnell Earley and Gerald Ambrose, former aide to Snyder, Rich Baird, and former City of Flint employee Howard Croft have all indicated they want the court to quash their subpoenas to testify. Snyder and Croft are facing misdemeanor charges related to the water crisis. Ambrose, Early and Baird are facing more serious felony charges.

The civil trial is the first of potentially many related to the Flint water crisis.

Its being referred to as a "bellwether" trial, since it may serve as a guide for how other civil litigation related to the crisis may proceed. It is expected to last four months.

It is unrelated to the $626 million settlement of claims against the State of Michigan, city of Flint, Rowe Professional Services and McLaren Flint Hospital. More than 50,000 people have applied to be part of that settlement. They have until May to complete the application process to receive a share of the settlement.

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Judge to hear arguments over Fifth Amendment claims in Flint water crisis civil trial - Michigan Radio

ADVANCED EMISSIONS SOLUTIONS, INC. : Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement, Material Modification to Rights of Security Holders (form 8-K) -…

Item 1.01 Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement.

On March 15, 2022, Advanced Emissions Solutions, Inc. (the "Company"), aDelaware corporation, entered into the Fifth Amendment to Tax Asset ProtectionPlan (the "Fifth Amendment") between the Company and Computershare TrustCompany, N.A. (the "Rights Agent") that amends the Tax Asset Protection Plandated May 5, 2017, as amended (the "TAPP") between the Company and the RightsAgent.

The Fifth Amendment amends the definition of "Final Expiration Date" under theTAPP to extend the duration of the TAPP and makes associated changes inconnection therewith. Pursuant to the Fifth Amendment, the Final Expiration Dateshall be the close of business on the earlier of (i) December 31, 2023 or (ii)December 31, 2022 if stockholder approval has not been obtained prior to suchdate.

The foregoing description of the Fifth Amendment is qualified in its entirety byreference to the full text of the Fifth Amendment, attached hereto as Exhibit4.6 and incorporated herein by reference.

Item 3.03 Material Modification to Rights of Security Holders.

See the description set out under "Item 1.01 - Entry into a Material DefinitiveAgreement," which is incorporated by reference into this Item 3.03.

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ADVANCED EMISSIONS SOLUTIONS, INC. : Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement, Material Modification to Rights of Security Holders (form 8-K) -...