CELEX: 32017M8435
Language: en
Date: 2017-07-27 00:00:00
Title: Commission Decision of 27/07/2017 declaring a concentration to be compatible with the common market (Case No COMP/M.8435 - FMC / DUPONT DIVESTMENT BUSINESS) according to Council Regulation (EC) No 139/2004 (Only the English text is authentic)

EUROPEAN COMMISSION
                                                                 Brussels, 27.7.2017
                                                                 C(2017) 5441 final
  In the published version of this decision, some
  information has been omitted pursuant to                                 PUBLIC VERSION
  Article 17(2) of Council Regulation (EC) No
  139/2004 concerning non-disclosure of
  business secrets and other confidential
  information. The omissions are shown thus
  […]. Where possible the information omitted
  has been replaced by ranges of figures or a
  general description.
                                                                 To the notifying party
Subject:             Case M.8435 – FMC/DuPont Divestment Business
                     Commission decision pursuant to Article 6(1)(b) in conjunction with
                     Article 6(2) of Council Regulation No 139/20041 and Article 57 of the
                     Agreement on the European Economic Area2
Dear Sir or Madam,
(1)       On 8 June 2017, the European Commission (the 'Commission') received
          notification of a proposed concentration pursuant to Article 4 of the Merger
          Regulation by which the undertaking FMC Corporation ('FMC' or the 'Notifying
          Party', USA) acquires within the meaning of Article 3(1)(b) of the Merger
          Regulation control of parts of the undertaking E.I. du Pont de Nemours and
          Company ('DuPont', USA) (the 'Divestment Business') (the 'Transaction').3 FMC
          and the Divestment Business are designated hereinafter as the "Parties", whilst
          the undertaking resulting from the Transaction is referred to as the 'merged entity'.
(2)       By decision of 27 March 2017, adopted in application of Article 8(2) of the
          Merger Regulation, the Commission declared the notified concentration between
          The Dow Chemical Company ('Dow') and DuPont within the meaning of
          Article 3(1)(a) of the Merger Regulation compatible with the internal market and
1         OJ L 24, 29.1.2004, p. 1 (the 'Merger Regulation'). With effect from 1 December 2009, the Treaty
          on the Functioning of the European Union ('TFEU') has introduced certain changes, such as the
          replacement of 'Community' by 'Union' and 'common market' by 'internal market'. The
          terminology of the TFEU will be used throughout this decision.
2         OJ L 1, 3.1.1994, p. 3 (the 'EEA Agreement').
3         Publication in the Official Journal of the European Union No C 194, 17.6.2017, p. 50.
Commission européenne, DG COMP MERGER REGISTRY, 1049 Bruxelles, BELGIQUE
Europese Commissie, DG COMP MERGER REGISTRY, 1049 Brussel, BELGIË
Tel: +32 229-91111. Fax: +32 229-64301. E-mail: COMP-MERGER-REGISTRY@ec.europa.eu.
 ---pagebreak---     the EEA Agreement,4 subject to full compliance with the commitments annexed
    to that decision (the 'Commitments').
(3) The present Transaction forms part of an asset purchase and sale agreement,
    entered into between DuPont and FMC on 31 March 2017 (the 'PSA'), which
    provides for the acquisition by FMC of certain DuPont activities in order to
    comply with the above-mentioned Commitments.
1.  THE PARTIES
(4) FMC is a US-headquartered global specialty chemicals company that is active in
    the agricultural, industrial, and consumer businesses.
(5) The Divestment Business comprises the majority of DuPont's global insecticide
    and herbicide activities, as well as its crop protection R&D activities. It also
    includes an exclusive licence for the supply of picoxystrobin, a fungicide active
    ingredient ('AI'), to be used for rice applications in the EEA.
2.  THE CONCENTRATION
(6) The Transaction consists of the acquisition of sole control by FMC over the
    Divestment Business, which will be implemented by closing of the PSA. As part
    of the consideration for the sale of the Divestment Business, FMC will transfer its
    health and nutrition business to DuPont. This transaction is being examined by
    the Commission in Case M.8440 as a separate transaction.5
(7) The Transaction constitutes a concentration within the meaning of Article 3(1)(b)
    of the Merger Regulation.
3.  UNION DIMENSION
(1) The Transaction does not have a Union dimension within the meaning of
    Article 1 of the Merger Regulation as it does not meet the thresholds of
    Article 1(2) or Article 1(3).
(2) However, on 18 April 2017, the Parties informed the Commission by means of a
    reasoned submission that the concentration would be notifiable in Austria,
    Cyprus, Germany, Ireland and Spain and would fulfil a number of further criteria
    for its referral to the Commission. In particular, the referral to the Commission
    would avoid multiple national filings, thereby increasing administrative
    efficiency. On that basis, under Article 4(5) of the Merger Regulation, the Parties
    requested the Commission to examine the Transaction. None of the Member
    States competent to examine the Transaction under the respective national laws
    expressed their disagreement within 15 working days of receiving the reasoned
    submission.
4   Case M.7932 Dow/DuPont (2017).
5   Case M.8440 DuPont/FMC (Health and Nutrition Business); publication in the OJ No C 189,
    15.6.2017, p. 52.
                                               2
 ---pagebreak--- (3)  Therefore, the concentration is deemed to have a Union dimension pursuant to
     Article 4(5) of the Merger Regulation.
4.   RELEVANT MARKETS
(4)  In the EEA, the Parties overlap in the sale of crop protection products and in
     particular, in the sale of selective herbicides and insecticides, as well as in the
     supply of AIs for formulated products.6
4.1. Market definition
(5)  In past cases, the Commission found that the relevant product markets for crop
     protection products can be defined on the basis of crop/pest combinations where
     each such combination constitutes a separate relevant product market. Moreover
     the Commission found that, for herbicides, further distinctions can be made
     depending on the time of application of the relevant crop protection products and
     that, for insecticides, distinctions can be made based on the way of application.7
(6)  On this basis, the Commission found that the relevant product markets for
     selective herbicides can be segmented by crop, weeds targeted and timing of their
     application.8 For insecticides, it found that the relevant product markets can be
     segmented by crop, soil or foliar application and pest.9 For fungicides, it found
     that each crop/disease combination constitutes a separate relevant market.10
(7)  As to the relevant geographic markets for crop protection products, in past cases
     the Commission found that they are national in scope mainly because
     authorisation for crop protection products is still regulated at the national level
     and each Member State remains responsible for maintaining specific national data
     requirements.11
(8)  The majority of respondents to the market investigation have confirmed the
     relevance of these market definitions for the present case.12
(9)  Therefore, for the purposes of the present case, the Commission will assess crop
     protection markets at the national level on the basis of crop/pest combinations as
     well as time of application for herbicides and way of application for insecticides.
6    The supply of AIs to third parties will not be further discussed in this decision because the Parties
     are only active to a very limited extent in this business and for each of the AIs that they supply to
     third parties in the EEA the Parties hold a limited share and there appear to be a significant
     number of alternative suppliers.
7    Case M.7932 Dow/DuPont (2017) and Case M.7962 ChemChina/Syngenta (2017).
8    Ibidem.
9    Ibidem.
10   Ibidem.
11   Ibidem.
12   Questionnaire to customers, questions 4 and 5 and questionnaire to competitors, questions 6 and 7.
                                                       3
 ---pagebreak--- 4.2.   Industry background
4.2.1. Crop protection products
(10)   Crop protection products, also known as pesticides, are used in agriculture in
       order to protect a crop from other biological organisms (pests) that can negatively
       affect the crop development either by attacking it or by competing with it for
       resources. The main categories of crop protection products are herbicides (to
       fight weeds), insecticides (to fight insects), fungicides (to fight fungi causing
       diseases).
(11)   The key components of crop protection products are AIs which produce the
       desired biological effect (that is, killing the pest or making it inoffensive).
(12)   A formulated product as sold to distributors and farmers is composed of one or
       more AIs mixed with inactive ingredients such as solvents, fillers, and adjuvants.
       These ingredients aim at making the AIs more stable, effective, safer, or easier to
       apply.
(13)   Crop protection products have properties that can endanger human or animal
       health or the environment since their AIs are essentially aimed at impacting
       certain animals, vegetation, or fungi. In the EEA, the approval and
       commercialisation of AIs and formulated crop protection products is mainly
       governed by Regulation (EC) No 1107/2009 ("Regulation 1107").13
(14)   Before an AI can be used in crop protection products sold to farmers in the EEA
       the AI must have been approved by the Commission, upon the advice of the
       European Food Safety Authority ("EFSA"). Second, the crop protection product
       incorporating the AI (alone or as part of a mixture of the AI with other AIs and
       co-formulants) must have been authorised by the competent authority in the
       Member State(s) where it will be sold.
(15)   Although a farmer may have only a few specific crop/pest needs, AIs and
       formulated products typically have activity on several pests for a given crop, and
       often also on several crops (sometimes affecting different, but biologically
       related, pests). A large number of finished products are therefore available on the
       market, including numerous mixtures of several AIs with a high level of
       differentiation and segmentation to address specific farmer needs.
(16)   Consequently, the closeness of competition between different formulated
       products within a given product market is the result of a range of factors,
       including similarity in terms of AIs and effectiveness as well as overall spectrum
       and price.
4.2.2. Overview of the different categories of companies active in crop protection
(17)   A number of players are active in the sale of crop protection products, with
       different size and business models.
13     Regulation (EC) No 1107/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of
       21 October 2009 concerning the placing of plant protection products on the market and repealing
       Council Directives 79/117/EEC and 91/414/EEC, OJ L 309, 24.11.2009, p. 1.
                                                    4
 ---pagebreak--- 4.2.2.1. R&D players
(18)    Four companies are large integrated crop protection players globally,
        characterised by their scale and their activities at all stages of the value chain
        (namely discovery, development, mixture/formulation and commercialisation)
        through large R&D budgets and operations for crop protection. These are
        Syngenta, Bayer, BASF, and Dow/DuPont (hereafter also referred to as the
        "global R&D-integrated players").14
(19)    Sales by these R&D-integrated players account for around 70% of the total EEA
        crop protection market and 78% of the global crop protection market, and these
        companies are seen as the top players in crop protection.
(20)    A number of other companies are active in the development, but not the
        discovery, of new AIs. In particular, FMC is a player which used to be active in
        the discovery of new AIs. However it exited active discovery approximately ten
        years ago. Since then FMC launched only few products containing AIs discovered
        by other companies.
(21)    A number of other small or mid-sized companies, mostly from Japan, have R&D
        operations, including discovery of new AIs, but do not compete on the same scale
        as global R&D-integrated players through global registration and route to market
        capabilities. In particular, the Japanese crop protection companies tend to focus
        on the Japanese market, including relevant products for rice and fruits and
        vegetables, insecticides and fungicides. They typically do not have a large scale
        presence in Europe but sometimes cooperate with the global R&D-integrated
        players, as well as with generic companies including via some shareholding links.
(22)    In consequence, only a handful of companies are active in R&D in a given
        segment at the global level and have the ability to develop and market new
        molecules and products across geographies that can have a significant commercial
        impact.
4.2.2.2. Generic players
(23)    On the other hand, there are a number of companies which are generic players
        which focus on crop protection products that are no longer subject to patent
        protection. Generic players may have sizeable revenues, the largest being Adama.
        None of these, however, has substantially moved to or remained active in the
        discovery of AIs. Their activities are largely dependent on access to AIs
        originally developed by R&D players.
(24)    "Generic" players differ to some extent in business model and activities, with
        some selling "commodity-like" off-patent AIs, while others such as Adama and
        FMC develop new AIs discovered by other players and create innovations by
        mixing off-patent AIs.
(25)    As regards downstream sales of crop protection products, the generics' share has
        been overall stable in recent years.
14      Following completion of the Transaction FMC would become the fifth large integrated crop
        protection company active in the discovery of new AIs.
                                                       5
 ---pagebreak--- 4.2.3. Main industry trends
4.2.3.1. Consolidation
(26)    Historically, the R&D part of the crop protection industry has gone through
        different waves of consolidation.
(27)    Consolidation also took place in the generic part of the industry in recent years.
        In 2014 and 2015, Platform Specialty Products Corporation acquired Chemtura
        AgroSolutions, the Agriphar Group and Arysta LifeScience Limited to form a
        vertically integrated agrochemical company. In 2014, FMC acquired Cheminova.
        Finally, in 2011, Sumitomo Chemical Corp increased its shareholding in Nufarm
        Limited to 21.7%.
(28)    Further consolidation is happening in the market currently, with notably the
        Dow/DuPont and ChemChina/Syngenta transactions, and the proposed
        acquisition of Monsanto by Bayer.
(29)    In consequence, in many relevant product markets only a handful of significant
        players are present.
4.2.3.2. Disappearance of AIs and decreasing innovation
(30)    In recent years a number of older AIs disappeared from the EEA market due to
        stricter regulatory requirements, which also contributed to a sharp rise in R&D
        costs for crop protection.
(31)    However, while regulatory costs have increased, expenditure on R&D as a
        percentage of revenues has decreased over the last twenty years. Moreover,
        innovation output has decreased in the crop protection industry.
(32)    There has also been in recent years a shift in geographical focus, with less
        emphasis on Europe and more on the rest of the world, notably emerging markets.
(33)    Meanwhile, limited solutions are available for so-called "orphan" crops or minor
        uses because companies focus on major global crops such as maize, wheat, rice.
(34)    In consequence, AIs which are older but have good regulatory and effectiveness
        profile can be very successful commercially, and in fact be quite profitable, even
        several years after patent protection has expired.
5.      COMPETITIVE ASSESSMENT
5.1.    Legal Framework
(35)    Under Article 2(2) and (3) of the Merger Regulation, the Commission must assess
        whether a proposed concentration would significantly impede effective
        competition in the internal market or in a substantial part of it, in particular
        through the creation or strengthening of a dominant position. For example, with
        regard to non-coordinated anticompetitive effects that could derive from a
        concentration, a merger may entail horizontal effects where the undertakings
        concerned are actual or potential competitors in one or more of the relevant
                                                  6
 ---pagebreak---      markets concerned. In that case, the Commission appraises horizontal effects in
     accordance with the guidance set out in the Horizontal Merger Guidelines.15
5.2. Methodology for the assessment
(36) For the present review, the Commission's competitive assessment focuses on the
     narrowest segmentation for which data is available, that is, crop/pest
     combinations.16
(37) The market share data is based on the last year available, in most cases this
     is 2015, but it is earlier for some markets. For the relevant crop/pest
     combinations, the Commission has identified a total of 18 horizontally affected
     markets.17 However, in two markets, there is no longer an overlap between the
     Parties because FMC recently stopped its activities there.18 Since FMC's decision
     to exit those two markets was unconnected to the Transaction and they are no
     longer affected markets, the Commission has not included them in its competition
     assessment below.
(38) For the purposes of this case, and in line with its most recent precedent in the
     agrochemical industry, the Commission has defined a set of criteria to identify
     preliminarily affected markets where the Transaction does not raise serious
     doubts as to its compatibility with the internal market.19
(39) This set of criteria identifies markets where the levels of concentration preceding
     the Transaction and the increases in such concentration levels brought about by
     the Transaction make it possible to conclude that it is unlikely that the
     Transaction would significantly impede effective competition. These markets
     include the following:
     (a)      Markets in which the HHI20 post-merger is below 1000; According to the
              Horizontal merger Guidelines, such markets normally do not require
              extensive analysis;21
     (b)      Markets in which the HHI post-merger between 1000 and 2000 and delta
              below 250, provided that the Parties' combined share is below 50%;22 or
15   Guidelines on the assessment of non-horizontal mergers under the Council Regulation on the
     control of concentrations between undertakings, OJ C 265, 18.10.2008, p. 6-25 ("Horizontal
     Merger Guidelines").
16   For herbicides, the weed grouping is the broad pest category (i.e. broadleaf, graminicide or cross-
     spectrum) and for insecticides, it is the type of insect family (i.e. chewing or sucking insects).
17   Markets in which the Parties' combined share is 20% or higher.
18   These two markets are: broadleaf grassland herbicides in France and post-emergence broadleaf
     sunflower herbicides in Bulgaria.
19   See Case M.7962 ChemChina/Syngenta (2017).
20   As set out in paragraph 16 of the Commission's Horizontal Merger Guidelines, the Commission
     often considers the Herfindahl-Hirschmann Index (HHI) to measure the level of concentration in
     the market. The HHI is calculated by summing the squares of the individual market shares of all
     firms in the market.
21   Commission's Horizontal Merger Guidelines, paragraph 19.
22   Commission's Horizontal Merger Guidelines, paragraph 20.
                                                        7
 ---pagebreak---        (c)      Markets in which the HHI post-merger is above 2000 and delta is
                below 150, again provided that the Parties' combined share is
                below 50%.23
(40)   The Horizontal Merger Guidelines however provide that, under special
       circumstances, a Transaction may still raise competition concerns despite
       fulfilling the criteria listed in b) and c) above. The markets for which the
       Commission has not found any special circumstance, and for which it has
       therefore concluded that the Transaction would not significantly impede effective
       competition, have been reviewed separately for each crop protection product
       section concerned, as it follows below.
(41)   The markets satisfying this set of criteria, and for which the Commission has
       concluded that the Transaction does not raise serious doubts as to its compatibility
       with the internal market, have been assessed separately for each of the concerned
       herbicides and insecticides sections, as indicated below.
5.3.   Herbicides
5.3.1. Markets that do not raise serious doubts
       A.     France – beets – post-emergence broadleaf herbicides
(42)   In the market for post-emergence broadleaf herbicides for beets in France, the
       Parties have a combined market share of [20-30]% (Divestment
       Business: [20-30]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from the Transaction
       is less than [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI post-Transaction
       would be [>2000] with a delta of [<150]. Further, it follows from the market
       investigation that the Transaction does not reveal any competition concerns
       arising in this market.
(43)   Therefore, in view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market
       investigation, the Commission considers that the Transaction does not raise
       serious doubts as to its compatibility with the internal market with respect to the
       market for post-emergence broadleaf beets herbicides in France.
       B.     Romania – cereals – post-emergence broadleaf herbicides
(44)   In the market for post-emergence broadleaf herbicides for cereals in Romania, the
       Parties have a combined market share of [20-30]% (Divestment
       Business: [20-30]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from the Transaction
       is [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI post-Transaction would be
       [>2000] with a delta of [<150]. Further, it follows from the market investigation
       that the Transaction does not reveal any competition concerns arising in this
       market.
(45)   Therefore, in view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market
       investigation, the Commission considers that the Transaction does not raise
       serious doubts as to its compatibility with the internal market with respect to the
       market for post-emergence broadleaf cereal herbicides in Romania.
23     Commission's Horizontal Merger Guidelines, paragraph 20.
                                                   8
 ---pagebreak--- 5.3.2. Markets that raise serious doubts
(46)   From its review, the Commission considers that FMC is an important and close
       competitor to the Divestment Business's cereal broadleaf herbicide sulfonylurea
       ('SU') portfolio in France, Germany, Hungary, Spain, Sweden, and the United
       Kingdom. This is for the following reasons.
(47)   First, the Commission considers that FMC is the main generic competitor for the
       Divestment Business's SU portfolio with its own SU offering and with
       florasulam, a post-emergence cereal broadleaf herbicide. While certain of the SUs
       are also marketed by other supppliers, FMC and the Divestment Business are the
       two players offering the broader choice of SU formulations and mixtures in key
       post-emergenge cereal broadleaf herbicide markets. Moreover, the Divestment
       Business's internal documents show that it considers FMC a key threat and
       constraint for its SU business. […].24 […].25
(48)   […].26
(49)   This is confirmed by a majority of respondents to the market investigation
       indicating that indeed FMC's and the Divestment Business's SU portfolio are
       close competitors.27
(50)   Second, the Commission finds that in countries where FMC and the Divestment
       Business offer products based on the same AI, FMC's products are often sold at a
       price significantly lower than those of the Divestment Business.28 […]. Therefore,
       the Commission considers that the pricing constraints exercised by FMC on the
       Divestment Business's SUs are, in certain instances, material.
(51)   Third, the Commission understands that FMC competes with the Divestment
       Business's portfolio not only with its own SU offering but also with florasulam, a
       post-emergence cereal broadleaf herbicide which is a close competitor to the
       SUs.29 FMC is the main generic supplier of florasulam in the EEA.30 It follows
       that the part of FMC's portfolio which is an important and close competitor to the
       Divestment Business's cereal broadleaf herbicide SU portfolio consists in FMC's
       SU portfolio and florasulam.
(52)   Fourth, the Commission finds that while the Notifying Party argues that it expects
       that the cereal broadleaf herbicide portfolios of FMC and the Divestment
       Business in the EEA will be significantly impacted by the launch of new products
       by their competitors […], this contention is not supported by the internal
       documents of the Parties. […].31 […].32 […].33 Therefore, contrary to what the
24     […].
25     […].
26     […].
27     Questionnaire to customers, question 7 and questionnaire to competitors question 9.
28     COMP M.8435_FMC_DUPONT_DIVESTMENT_BUSINESS_RFI 4 RESPONSE_22 JUNE
       2017.
29     Questionnaire to customers, question 10. See also Case M.7932 Dow/DuPont (2017).
30     COMP M.8435_FMC_DUPONT_DIVESTMENT_BUSINESS_RFI 4 RESPONSE_FMC
       ATTACHMENT A.
31     […].
                                                      9
 ---pagebreak---      Notifying Party argues, it is unlikely that the sales of SUs will decrease in the
     short- to mid-term.
(53) In view of the foregoing, the Commission considers that the removal of FMC as
     an independent competitor to the Divestment Business would materially reduce
     price competition in national markets in which SUs represent a significant share
     of sales for cereal broadleaf herbicides and thus an important family of products
     for cereal farmers. On this basis and in light of the results of the market
     investigation, the Commission considers that the Transaction raises serious doubts
     as to its compatibility with the internal market for the sale of post-emergence
     cereal broadleaf herbicides in France, Germany, Hungary, Spain, Sweden, and the
     United Kingdom. Each of these markets is assessed individually below.
     A. France– cereals – post-emergence broadleaf herbicides
(54) The Commission considers that the Transaction raises serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market for the sale of post-emergence cereal
     broadleaf herbicides in France. This is for the following reasons.
(55) First, post-Transaction the Parties would be the second largest supplier with a
     combined share of [20-30]% (FMC: [0-5]%, the Divestment Business: [10-20]%).
     The largest player in this segment is Dow/DuPont ([40-50]%) followed by
     Sumitomo ([5-10]%) and Syngenta/Adama ([5-10]%).
(56) Second, FMC is the second largest generic player in this segment and, as
     discussed above, an important and close competitor for the Divestment Business's
     SU portfolio in France.
(57) Third, the Divestment Business's main products in this segment are SU
     formulations and mixtures, including a metsulfuron-methyl/tribenuron-methyl
     mixture, a metsulfuron/tribenuron mixture, a carfentrazone-ethyl/metsulfuron-
     methyl mixture, a thifensulfuron formulation. In France, FMC sells a broad range
     of products containing SUs, including a metsulfuron-methyl/thifensulfuron-
     methyl mixture, a metsulfuron-methyl formulation, and a tribenuron-methyl
     formulation. In addition, FMC sells florasulam formulations as well a florasulam
     mixture which as discussed above are close competitors to the Divestment
     Business's SU portfolio.
     B. Germany– cereals – post-emergence broadleaf herbicides
(58) The Commission considers that the Transaction raises serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market for the sale of post-emergence cereal
     broadleaf herbicides in Germany. This is for the following reasons.
(59) First, post-Transaction the Parties would be the second largest supplier with a
     combined share of [30-40]% (FMC: [0-5]%, the Divestment Business: [20-30]%).
     The largest player in this segment is Dow/DuPont ([30-40]%) followed by
     BASF ([10-20]%) and Nufarm ([5-10]%).
32   […].
33   […].
                                              10
 ---pagebreak--- (60) Second, the market is concentrated: the HHI level post-Transaction would
     be [>2000] with a delta of [>150].
(61) Third, FMC is the second largest generic player in this segment and, as discussed
     above, an important and close comepetitos for the Divestment Business's SU
     portfolio in Germany.
(62) Fourth, the Divestment Business's main products in this segment are SU
     formulations and mixtures, including a tribenuron-methyl formulation, a
     flupyrsulfuron-methyl formulation, and a carfentrazone-ethyl/metsulfuron-methyl
     mixture. In Germany, FMC sells a metsulfuron-methyl/diflufenican mixture as
     well as a florasulam formulation which as discussed above is a close competitor
     to the Divestment Business's SU portfolio.
     C. Hungary– cereals – post-emergence broadleaf herbicides
(63) The Commission considers that the Transaction raises serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market for the sale of post-emergence cereal
     broadleaf herbicides in Hungary. This is for the following reasons.
(64) First, post-Transaction the Parties would be the largest supplier with a combined
     share of [30-40]% (FMC: [0-5]%, the Divestment Business: [20-30]%), followed
     by Bayer ([20-30]%), Dow/DuPont ([10-20]%), and Syngenta/Adama ([5-10]%).
(65) Second, the market is concentrated: the HHI level post-Transaction would
     be [>2000] with a delta of [>150].
(66) Third, FMC is the largest generic player in this segment and, as discussed above,
     an important and close comepetitor for the Divestment Business's SU portfolio in
     Hungary.
(67) Fourth, the Divestment Business's main products in this segment are SU
     formulations and mixtures, including a tribenuron formulation, a thifensulfuron
     formulation and thifensulfuron/tribenuron formulations. In Hungary, FMC also
     sells SU-based mixtures and formulations, including a tribenuron-methyl
     formulation and a thifensulfuron-methyl/tribenuron-methyl formulation.
     D. Spain– cereals – post-emergence broadleaf herbicides
(68) The Commission considers that the Transaction raises serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market for the sale of post-emergence cereal
     broadleaf herbicides in Spain. This is for the following reasons.
(69) First, post-Transaction the Parties would be the largest supplier with a combined
     share of [30-40]% (FMC: [5-10]%, the Divestment Business: [30-40]%),
     followed by Bayer ([10-20]%), Nufarm ([10-20]%), and Dow/DuPont
     ([10-20]%).
(70) Second, the market is concentrated: the HHI level post-Transaction would
     be [>2000] with a delta of [>150].
(71) Third, FMC is the second largest generic player in this segment and, as discussed
     above, an important and close competitor for the Divestment Business's SU
     portfolio in Spain.
                                              11
 ---pagebreak--- (72) Fourth, the Divestment Business's main products in this segment are SU
     formulations and mixtures, including a metsulfuron-methyl/tribenuron-methyl
     mixture, a thifensulfuron-methyl/tribenuron-methyl mixture, a tribenuron-methyl
     formulation, and a thifensulfuron-methyl formulation. Likewise, FMC's main
     broadleaf post-emergence herbicides in Spain are also SU formulations and
     mixtures which compete directly with the Divestment Business's products,
     including a metsulfuron-methyl formulation, a thifensulfuron-methyl/tribenuron-
     methyl mixture, a tribenuron-methyl formulation, and a thifensulfuron-methyl
     formulation. In addition, FMC sells a florasulam formulation which as discussed
     above is a close competitor to the Divestment Business's SU portfolio.
     E. Sweden– cereals – post-emergence broadleaf herbicides
(73) The Commission considers that the Transaction raises serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market for the sale of post-emergence cereal
     broadleaf herbicides in Sweden. This is for the following reasons.
(74) First, post-Transaction the Parties would be the second largest supplier with a
     combined share of [20-30]% (FMC: [0-5]%, the Divestment Business: [10-20]%).
     The largest player in this segment is Dow/DuPont ([50-60]%) followed by
     Bayer ([5-10]%) and Nufarm ([5-10]%).
(75) Second, FMC is the second largest generic player in this segment and, as
     discussed above, an important and close comepetitors for the Divestment
     Business's SU portfolio in Sweden.
(76) Third, the Divestment Business's main products in this segment are SU
     formulations and mixtures, including a metsulfuron-methyl/tribenuron-methyl
     mixture and a thifensulfuron formulation. In Sweden, FMC sells a tribenuron-
     methyl formulation as well as a florasulam formulation which as discussed above
     is a close competitor to the Divestment Business's SU portfolio.
     F. United Kingdom– cereals – post-emergence broadleaf herbicides
(77) The Commission considers that the Transaction raises serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market for the sale of post-emergence cereal
     broadleaf herbicides in the United Kingdom. This is for the following reasons.
(78) First, post-Transaction the Parties would be the largest supplier with a combined
     share of [50-60]% (FMC: [5-10]%, the Divestment Business: [40-50]%),
     followed by Dow/DuPont ([10-20]%), Bayer ([10-20]%), and Nufarm ([5-10]%).
(79) Second, the market is concentrated: the HHI level post-Transaction would
     be [>2000] with a delta of [>150].
(80) Third, FMC is the second largest generic player in this segment and, as discussed
     above, an important and close competitor for the Divestment Business's SU
     portfolio in the United Kingdom.
(81) Fourth, the Divestment Business's main products in this segment are SU
     formulations and mixtures, including a metsulfuron-methyl/tribenuron-methyl
     mixture, a thifensulfuron-methyl/tribenuron-methyl mixture, and a metsulfuron-
     methyl formulation. In the United Kingdom, FMC sells two products containing
                                             12
 ---pagebreak---      SUs, a metsulfuron-methyl/thifensulfuron-methyl mixture and a tribenuron-
     methyl formulation, […]. The Parties argue that […], the overlap they give rise to
     should not raise competition concerns. However, the Commission notes that FMC
     could obtain an autonomous right to sell these products as it holds approvals for
     each of the relevant AIs and sells similar, if not identical, products independently
     […] in other EEA Member States. Moreover, in the United Kingdom FMC sells
     the products it sources […] under its own brand. Therefore, the Commission
     considers that FMC's metsulfuron-methyl/thifensulfuron-methyl mixture and
     tribenuron-methyl formulation are in competition with the Divestment Business's
     products. In addition, FMC sells a florasulam formulation as well as two
     florasulam mixtures which as discussed above are close competitors to the
     Divestment Business's SU portfolio.
5.4. Insecticides
(82) The market investigation has not revealed competition concerns with respect to
     insecticides in any of the affected national markets examined below.
     A. Bulgaria and Poland – fruit and nuts – chewing insecticides
(83) The Commission finds that, in the market for insecticides targeting chewing
     insects in fruit and nuts in Bulgaria, the Parties have a combined market share
     of [20-30]% (Divestment Business: [20-30]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment
     resulting from the Transaction is [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI
     post-Transaction would be [>2000] with a delta of [<150].
(84) In the market for insecticides targeting chewing insects in fruit and nuts in
     Poland, the Parties have a combined market share of [20-30]% (Divestment
     Business: [20-30]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from the Transaction
     is less than [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI post-Transaction
     would be [>2000] with a delta of [<150].
(85) Further, the market investigation did not reveal any competition concerns arising
     in either of these markets.
(86) In view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market investigation, the
     Commission considers that the Transaction does not raise serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market with respect to the market for insecticides
     targeting chewing insects in fruit and nuts in Bulgaria or Poland.
     B. France and Portugal – grapes – chewing insecticides
(87) The Commission finds that, in the market for insecticides targeting chewing
     insects in grapes in France, the Parties have a combined market share of [20-30]%
     (Divestment Business: [20-30]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from
     the Transaction is less than [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI post-
     Transaction would be [>2000] with a delta of [<150].
(88) In the market for insecticides targeting chewing insects in grapes in Portugal, the
     Parties have a combined market share of [20-30]% (Divestment
     Business: [20-30]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from the Transaction
     is [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI post-Transaction would be
     [>2000] with a delta of [<150].
                                              13
 ---pagebreak--- (89) Further, the market investigation did not reveal any competition concerns arising
     in any of these markets.
(90) In view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market investigation, the
     Commission considers that the Transaction does not raise serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market with respect to the market for insecticides
     targeting chewing insects in grapes in France or Portugal.
     C. France and Romania – corn – chewing insecticides
(91) The Commission finds that, in the market for insecticides targeting chewing
     insects in corn in France, the Parties have a combined market share of [20-30]%
     (Divestment Business: [20-30]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from
     the Transaction is less than [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI post-
     Transaction would be [>2000] with a delta of [<150]. Further, the market
     investigation did not reveal any competition concerns arising in this market.
(92) In the market for insecticides targeting chewing insects in corn in Romania, the
     Parties have a combined market share of [50-60]% (Divestment
     Business: [50-60]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from the Transaction
     is [0-5]%. The market is concentrated: the HHI post-Transaction would be
     [>2000] with a delta of [>150]. However, the Parties are not close competitors;
     they sell very different products. In this market, the Divestment Business sells
     Rynaxypyr, the leading new-generation chewing insecticide (from the diamide
     chemical class) and indoxacarb, a slightly older insecticide introduced in 2001
     (from the oxadiazine chemical class) and which accounted for approximately a
     […] of the Divestment Business' turnover in the EEA in 2016.34 FMC sells zeta-
     cypermethrin, an old generation insecticide from the pyrethroid chemical class35,
     pyrethroids were originally introduced in 1976.36 Older generation insecticides
     are under significant resistance and regulatory pressure and are losing market
     share to newer generation insecticides.37 Further, there are a number of
     competitors who compete more closely with the Divestment Business than FMC,
     such as Syngenta-Adama ([10-20]%), Bayer ([10-20]%) and Nufarm ([5-10]%)
     and will continue to exert a competitive constraint. In its market investigation, the
     Commission did not find any evidence of closeness between the Parties and
     further, the market investigation did not reveal any competition concerns arising
     in this market.
(93) In view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market investigation, the
     Commission considers that the Transaction does not raise serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market with respect to the market for insecticides
     targeting chewing insects in corn in France and Romania.
34   Form CO, paragraph 6.254.
35   Form CO, paragraph 6.252.
36   Phillips McDougall Leading Crop Protection Companies Report, pages 139 -142.
37   Form CO, paragraph 6.251. Sparks (2013) "Insecticide discovery: an evaluation and analysis,"
     Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology 107 (2013) 8-17.
                                                  14
 ---pagebreak---      D. Greece – cotton – chewing insecticides
(94) The Commission finds that, in the market for insecticides targeting chewing
     insects in cotton in Greece, the Parties have a combined market share of [50-60]%
     (Divestment Business: [50-60]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from
     the Transaction is less than [0-5]%. The market is concentrated: the HHI post-
     Transaction would be [>2000] with a delta of [<150]. However, the Parties are
     not close competitors; they sell very different products. The Divestment Business
     sells Rynaxypyr, the leading new generation insecticide. FMC on the other hand
     sells chlorpyrifos, an older generation generic insecticide and zeta-cypermethrin
     and, further, the market share increment brought about by the Transaction is very
     limited, at less than [0-5]%. Further, there are a competitors that compete more
     closely with the Parties. For example, the closest competitor to FMC is Syngenta-
     Adama with a [10-20]% share, and which sells products based on the same AI as
     FMC, namely chlorpyrifos.38 In addition, in Q4 2017, Dow/DuPont plans to
     submit an application for the authorisation of a product containing the AI
     spinetoram, another new generation insecticide […]39 […]. In its market
     investigation, the Commission did not find any evidence of closeness between the
     Parties and further, the market investigation did not reveal any competition
     concerns arising in this market.
(95) In view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market investigation, the
     Commission considers that the Transaction does not raise serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market with respect to the market for insecticides
     targeting chewing insects in cotton in Greece.
     E. Lithuania – oilseed rape – chewing insecticides
(96) The Commission finds that, in the market for insecticides targeting chewing
     insects in oilseed rape in Lithuania, the Parties have a combined market share
     of [20-30]% (Divestment Business: [10-20]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment
     resulting from the Transaction is [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI
     post-Transaction would be [>2000] with a delta of [<150].
(97) Further, the market investigation did not reveal any competition concerns arising
     in this market.
(98) In view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market investigation, the
     Commission considers that the Transaction does not raise serious doubts as to its
     compatibility with the internal market with respect to the market for insecticides
     targeting chewing insects in oilseed rape in Lithuania.
     F. Italy and Spain – vegetables – chewing insecticides
(99) The Commission finds that, in the market for insecticides targeting chewing
     insects in vegetables in Italy, the Parties have a combined market share
     of [30-40]% (Divestment Business: [30-40]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment
     resulting from the Transaction is less than [0-5]%. The market is not
     concentrated: the HHI post-Transaction would be [>2000] with a delta of [<150].
38   Form CO, paragraph 6.305.
39   Form CO, paragraph 6.308.
                                              15
 ---pagebreak--- (100) In the market for insecticides targeting chewing insects in vegetables in Spain, the
      Parties have a combined market share of [20-30]% (Divestment
      Business: [20-30]%, FMC: [0-5]%). The increment resulting from the Transaction
      is [0-5]%. The market is not concentrated: the HHI post-Transaction would be
      [>2000] with a delta of [<150].
(101) Further, the market investigation did not reveal any competition concerns arising
      in any of these markets.
(102) In view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market investigation, the
      Commission considers that the Transaction does not raise serious doubts as to its
      compatibility with the internal market with respect to the market for insecticides
      targeting chewing insects in vegetables in Italy or Spain.
5.5.  Conclusions of the competitive assessment
(103) In view of the foregoing and in light of the results of the market investigation, the
      Commission considers that the Transaction raises serious doubts as to its
      compatibility with the internal market for the sale of post-emergence cereal
      broadleaf herbicides in France, Germany, Hungary, Spain, Sweden and the United
      Kingdom.
6.    REMEDIES
6.1.  Framework of the assessment of the commitments
(104) Where, as in this case, a notified concentration raises serious doubts as to its
      compatibility with the internal market, the Parties may modify the notified
      concentration so as to remove the grounds for the serious doubts identified by the
      Commission with a view to having it declared compatible with the internal market
      pursuant to Article 6(1)(b) in conjunction with Article 6(2) of the Merger
      Regulation.
(105) As set out in the Commission Notice on Remedies,40 commitments have to
      eliminate the Commission's serious doubts entirely, they have to be
      comprehensive and effective from all points of view.
(106) In assessing whether or not commitments will restore effective competition, the
      Commission considers all relevant factors, including the type, scale and scope of
      the proposed commitments, with reference to the structure and particular
      characteristics of the market in which the Commission has identified serious
      doubts as to the compatibility of the notified concentration with the internal
      market, including the position of the Parties and other participants on the
      market.41
40    Commission Notice on remedies acceptable under Council Regulation (EC) No 139/2004 and
      under Commission Regulation (EC) No 802/2004 (2008/C 267/01), (the "Commission Notice on
      Remedies").
41    Commission Notice on Remedies, paragraph 12.
                                                16
 ---pagebreak--- 6.2.  Commitments submitted by the Notifying Party
(107) In order to address the serious doubts raised by the Transaction with a view to
      rendering the concentration compatible with the internal market, the undertakings
      concerned have modified the notified concentration by submitting to the
      Commission proposed commitments.
(108) The Notifying Party submitted two sets of commitments. Notably, the Notifying
      Party formally submitted a remedy proposal on 6 July 2017 and a revised remedy
      proposal on 7 July 2017 ("Initial Commitments"). After the Commission gathered
      the views of market participants on the Initial Commitments ("market test"), and
      informed the Notifying Party of the remaining serious doubts raised by the
      Transaction, the Notifying Party submitted a revised remedy proposal on
      18 July 2017 ("Final Commitments").
(109) The Commission considers the Final Commitments sufficient to ensure that, if
      implemented, the Transaction no longer raises serious doubts as to its
      compatibility with the internal market. The Final Commitments are annexed to
      this decision and form an integral part of the decision.
6.3.  Initial Commitments
(110) Initially, the Notifying Party proposed, to the benefit of the entity approved by the
      Commission as acquirer of the assets listed below (the 'Purchaser'):
      (a)      to provide royalty-free exclusive irrevocable licences for the EEA to the
               FMC lead active ingredients (metsulfuron-methyl, thifensulfuron-methyl,
               tribenuron-methyl and florasulam) and product registration data. Where
               the consent of third parties is required, FMC will use its best efforts to
               ensure that the relevant consent is obtained;
      (b)      to transfer the product registrations in the EEA for formulated products
               containing the lead active ingredients. Where the consent of third parties is
               required, FMC will use its best efforts to ensure that the relevant consent
               is obtained;
      (c)      to provide royalty-free irrevocable licences for the EEA to the secondary
               active ingredients (i.e. an active ingredient which is not one of the lead
               active ingredients) underlying the products whose registration is being
               transferred;
               together, the assets listed from (a) to (c) above are defined as the
               "Divested Assets";
      (d)      to transfer contracts with third party suppliers for the manufacture and sale
               of the products related to the Divested Asset portfolio;
      (e)      to divest the EEA customer list and other records relating to the Divested
               Assets;
      (f)      to transfer the intangible assets, such as registered intellectual property,
               including know-how, brand names and trademarks, primarily used by
               FMC in relation to the Divested Asset portfolio (with FMC retaining a
                                                 17
 ---pagebreak---               royalty-free exclusive irrevocable licence for use of such intellectual
              property on products outside this portfolio);
      (g)     to provide royalty-free exclusive irrevocable licences to intangible assets,
              such as registered intellectual property, know-how, brand names and
              trademarks, that are primarily used by FMC on products other than the
              Divested Asset portfolio;
      (h)     at the option of the Purchaser, to include personnel considered necessary
              to maintain the viability and competitiveness of the Divested Assets in
              […];
      (i)     at the option of the Purchaser, to enter into a transitional service
              agreement with the Purchaser for […], for all services that FMC currently
              supplies to support the Divested Asset portfolio products (this may be
              extended by […]);
      (j)     at the option of the Purchaser, to enter into a transitional supply/toll
              manufacturing agreement for […] (this may be extended by […]).
(111) In addition, the Notifying Party proposed to enter into related commitments, inter
      alia regarding the separation of the divested businesses from their retained
      businesses, the preservation of the viability, marketability and competitiveness of
      the divested businesses, including the appointment of a monitoring trustee and, if
      necessary, a divestiture trustee.
(112) The Commission assessed the appropriateness of the Initial Commitments offered
      and carried out a market test.
6.4.  The Commission’s market test
(113) The Commission launched a market test of the Initial Commitments on 10 July 2017.
(114) In general, there was the view that the Initial Commitments could remedy the serious
      doubts identified by the Commission, subject to the modification of a number of
      specific elements of the Initial Commitments identified by the market test.
(115) In particular, a majority of respondents indicated that it was important for the
      Purchaser to have the option of obtaining additional personnel for each of the markets
      in which serious doubts were identified by the Commission, in order to ensure the
      viability and competitiveness of the Divested Assets. They also indicated that
      regulatory personnel would also be necessary, on the basis that regulatory know-how
      is essential in supporting the formulated products sold on the market and, further, not
      all purchasers may have the necessary regulatory resources to deal with the SU and
      florasulam portfolio.42
(116) In all other respects, respondents generally considered that the Divested Assets
      include all necessary assets and would be able to compete effectively with the
      merged entity.
42    Questionnaire to competitors – Commitments – Market Test, questions 17 and 18.
                                                  18
 ---pagebreak--- 6.5.   Final Commitments submitted by the Notifying Party
6.5.1. Description of the Final Commitments
(117) As explained above, the Notifying Party submitted the Final Commitments on
       18 July 2017. The full text of the Final Commitments is attached as Annex to
       this Decision.
(118) The Final Commitments have been modified vis-a-vis the Intitial Commitments as
       described in Section 6.3 as follows: at the option of the Purchaser, to include
       personnel (which may include sales or regulatory staff familiar with the lead AIs)
       considered necessary to maintain the viability and competitiveness of the
       Divested Assets in not only […], but also […], to the extent that the Purchaser
       does not itself have sufficient sales or regulatory staff.
6.5.2. Assessment of the Final Commitments
(119) The Commission considers that the Final Commitments remove the serious
       doubts raised by the Transaction entirely, because these either (i) remove the
       entire overlap between the Parties in the post-emergence cereal broadleaf markets
       in which serious doubts were raised, or (ii) remove the part of the overlap in
       which the Parties were competing closely through their respective SU portfolios.
       The Commission also finds that the Final Commitments address the outstanding
       issues related to the viability and competitiveness of the Divestment Business, by
       including in the concerned assets to divest, at the option of the Purchaser,
       additional personnel for all markets in which the Commission had identified
       serious doubts.
6.5.3. Conclusion on the Final Commitments
(120) For the reasons outlined above, the Commission considers that the commitments
       entered into by the undertakings concerned are sufficient and appropriate to
       eliminate the serious doubts as to the compatibility of the Transaction with the
       internal market with respect to the sale of post-emergence cereal broadleaf
       herbicides in France, Germany, Hungary, Spain, Sweden and the United
       Kingdom.
(121) Under the first sentence of the second subparagraph of Article 6(2) of the Merger
       Regulation, the Commission may attach to its decision conditions and obligations
       intended to ensure that the undertakings concerned comply with the commitments
       they have entered into vis-à-vis the Commission with a view to rendering the
       concentration compatible with the internal market.
(122) The fulfilment of the measures that gives rise to the structural change of the
       market is a condition, whereas the implementing steps which are necessary to
       achieve this result are generally obligations on the Parties. Where a condition is
       not fulfilled, the Commission's decision declaring the concentration compatible
       with the internal market and the EEA Agreement is no longer applicable. Where
       the undertakings concerned commit a breach of an obligation, the Commission
       may revoke the clearance decision in accordance with Article 6(3) of the Merger
       Regulation. The undertakings concerned may also be subject to fines and periodic
       penalty payments under Articles 14(2) and 15(1) of the Merger Regulation.
                                                 19
 ---pagebreak--- (123) In accordance with the basic distinction between conditions and obligations, the
      commitments in Section B of the Final Commitments set out in the Annex
      constitute conditions attached to this decision, as only through full compliance
      therewith can the structural changes in the relevant markets be achieved. The
      other commitments set out in the Annex constitute obligations, as they concern
      the implementing steps which are necessary to achieve the modifications sought
      in a manner compatible with the internal market.
(124) The full text of the Final Commitments is annexed to this Decision as Annex and
      forms an integral part thereof.
7.    CONCLUSION
(125) For the above reasons, the Commission has decided not to oppose the notified
      operation as modified by the commitments and to declare it compatible with the
      internal market and with the functioning of the EEA Agreement, subject to full
      compliance with the conditions in section B of the commitments annexed to the
      present decision and with the obligations contained in the other sections of the
      said commitments. This decision is adopted in application of Article 6(1)(b) in
      conjunction with Article 6(2) of the Merger Regulation and Article 57 of the EEA
      Agreement.
                                                    For the Commission
                                                    (Signed)
                                                    Julian KING
                                                    Member of the Commission
                                             20
 ---pagebreak---                      CASE M.8435 – FMC/DUPONT DIVESTMENT BUSINESS
                         COMMITMENTS TO THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION
Pursuant to Articles 8(2) and 10(2) of Council Regulation (EC) No 139/2004 (the “Merger
Regulation”), FMC Corporation (the “Notifying Party”) hereby enters into the following
Commitments (the “Commitments”) vis-à-vis the European Commission (the “Commission”)
with a view to rendering the acquisition of sole control over the DuPont Divestment Business (the
“Concentration”) compatible with the internal market and the functioning of the EEA Agreement.
This text shall be interpreted in light of the Commission’s decision pursuant to Article 8(2) of the
Merger Regulation to declare the Concentration compatible with the internal market and the
functioning of the EEA Agreement (the “Decision”), in the general framework of European Union
law, in particular in light of the Merger Regulation, and by reference to the Commission Notice on
remedies acceptable under Council Regulation (EC) No 139/2004 and under Commission
Regulation (EC) No 802/2004 (the “Remedies Notice”).
Section A.         Definitions
1.       For the purpose of the Commitments, the following terms shall have the following
         meaning:
         Affiliated Undertakings: undertakings controlled by the Parties and/or by the ultimate
         parents of the Parties, whereby the notion of control shall be interpreted pursuant to
         Article 3 of the Merger Regulation and in light of the Commission Consolidated
         Jurisdictional Notice under Council Regulation (EC) No 139/2004 on the control of
         concentrations between undertakings (the “Consolidated Jurisdictional Notice”).
         Assets: the assets that contribute to the current operation or are necessary to ensure the
         viability and competitiveness of the Divestment Business as indicated in Section B,
         paragraph 6 (a), (b), and (c) and described more in detail in the Schedule.
         Closing: the transfer of the legal title to the Divestment Business to the Purchaser.
         Closing Period: the period of […] from the approval of the Purchaser and the terms of
         sale by the Commission.
         Confidential Information: any business secrets, know-how, commercial information, or
         any other information of a proprietary nature that is not in the public domain.
         Conflict of Interest: any conflict of interest that impairs the Trustee’s objectivity and
         independence in discharging its duties under the Commitments.
         Direct production costs: direct production costs include raw materials, direct labour
         costs, 70% of energy, packaging, toll manufacturing, transport and duties, warehousing,
         ecology and direct depreciation costs of incurred by the fixed assets used to produce
         such products for the Purchaser.
         Divestment Business: the business or businesses as defined in Section B and in the
         Schedule which the Notifying Party commits to divest.
 ---pagebreak--- Divestment CP Products: the crop protection products included in the Divestment
Business as defined in Section B (The Commitment to divest and the Divestment
Business) and in the Schedule.
Divestiture Trustee: one or more natural or legal person(s) who is/are approved by the
Commission and appointed by the Notifying Party and who has/have received from the
Notifying Party the exclusive Trustee Mandate to sell the Divestment Business to a
Purchaser at no minimum price.
Dow: The Dow Chemical Company.
DuPont: E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company.
DuPont Divestment Business: the business to be divested by DuPont to the Notifying
Party in accordance with the commitments given to the Commission in Case M.7932
Dow/DuPont.
Effective Date: the date of adoption of the Decision.
First Divestiture Period: the period of […] from the Effective Date.
Hold Separate Manager: the person appointed by the Notifying Party for the Divestment
Business to manage the day-to-day business under the supervision of the Monitoring
Trustee.
Lead Active Ingredient: for the purpose of these Commitments, the following active
ingredients used by the Divestment Business shall be lead active ingredients:
metsulfuron-methyl, thifensulfuron-methyl, tribenuron-methyl and florasulam.
Monitoring Trustee: one or more natural or legal person(s) who is/are approved by the
Commission and appointed by the Notifying Party, and who has/have the duty to monitor
the Notifying Party’s compliance with the conditions and obligations attached to the
Decision.
Party or Parties: the Notifying Party and/or the DuPont Divestment Business.
Personnel: all staff currently employed by the Divestment Business, including staff
seconded to the Divestment Business and shared personnel.
Purchaser: the entity approved by the Commission as acquirer of the Divestment
Business in accordance with the criteria set out in Section D.
Purchaser Criteria: the criteria laid down in paragraph 16 of these Commitments that
the Purchaser must fulfil in order to be approved by the Commission.
Schedule: the schedule to these Commitments describing more in detail the Divestment
Business.
Secondary Active Ingredient: for the purpose of these Commitments, secondary active
ingredient refers to any active ingredient included in a product registration in the
Divestment Business where such active ingredient is not the Lead Active Ingredient.
                                                                                       2
 ---pagebreak---        Trustee(s): the Monitoring Trustee and/or the Divestiture Trustee as the case may be.
       Trustee Divestiture Period: the period of […] from the end of the First Divestiture
       Period.
Section B.      The commitment to divest and the Divestment Business
       Commitment to divest
2.     In order to maintain effective competition, the Notifying Party commits to divest, or
       procure the divestiture of, the Divestment Business by the end of the Trustee Divestiture
       Period as a going concern to a purchaser and on terms of sale approved by the
       Commission in accordance with the procedure described in paragraph 17 of these
       Commitments. To carry out the divestiture, the Notifying Party commits to find a
       purchaser and to enter into a final binding sale and purchase agreement for the sale of
       the Divestment Business within the First Divestiture Period. If the Notifying Party has not
       entered into such an agreement at the end of the First Divestiture Period, the Notifying
       Party shall grant the Divestiture Trustee an exclusive mandate to sell the Divestment
       Business in accordance with the procedure described in paragraph 31 in the Trustee
       Divestiture Period.
3.     The Notifying Party shall be deemed to have complied with this commitment if:
       (a)      by the end of the Trustee Divestiture Period, the Notifying Party or the Divestiture
                Trustee has entered into a final binding sale and purchase agreement and the
                Commission approves the proposed purchaser and the terms of sale as being
                consistent with the Commitments in accordance with the procedure described in
                paragraph 19; and
       (b)      the Closing of the sale of the Divestment Business to the Purchaser takes place
                within the Closing Period.
4.     In order to maintain the structural effect of the Commitments, the Notifying Party shall, for
       a period of […] after Closing, not acquire, whether directly or indirectly, the possibility of
       exercising influence (as defined in paragraph 43 of the Remedies Notice, footnote 3) over
       the whole or part of the Divestment Business, unless, following the submission of a
       reasoned request from the Notifying Party showing good cause and accompanied by a
       report from the Monitoring Trustee (as provided in paragraph 62 of these Commitments),
       the Commission finds that the structure of the market has changed to such an extent that
       the absence of influence over the Divestment Business is no longer necessary to render
       the proposed concentration compatible with the internal market. For the avoidance of
       doubt, the provisions of this paragraph 4 shall not prevent the Notifying Party from
       providing services to the Divestment Business as described in the Schedule.
5.     With respect to each crop protection product registration included in the Divestment
       Business (a “Divestment CP Product”), the Notifying Party shall not, for a period of […]
       after Closing, introduce and sell in any EEA national market in which the relevant
       Divestment CP Product is being sold at Closing (the “Divestment Product Territories”)
       any new product for use as a post-emergence broadleaf cereal herbicide with
       substantially the same formulation as such Divestment CP Product, provided that the
       foregoing shall not prevent or restrict the Notifying Party or its Affiliated Undertakings in
                                                                                                      3
 ---pagebreak---    any way from marketing or selling, or developing, obtaining or maintaining a product
   registration for, any product that is sold in the Divestment Product Territories at the date
   of Closing by the DuPont Divestment Business, including, for the avoidance of doubt,
   products that contain any of the active ingredients contained in any Divestment CP
   Product.
   Structure and Definition of the Divestment Business
6. The Divestment Business consists of cereal herbicide crop protection products from the
   Notifying Party. The legal and functional structure of the Divestment Business as
   operated to date is described in the Schedule. The Divestment Business, described in
   more detail in the Schedule, includes all assets that contribute to the current operation or
   are necessary to ensure the viability and competitiveness of the Divestment Business, in
   particular:
   (a)      all tangible and intangible assets (including intellectual property rights);
   (b)      all licences, permits and authorisations issued by any governmental organisation
            for the benefit of the Divestment Business; and
   (c)      all contracts, commitments and customer orders of the Divestment Business; all
            customer, credit and other records of the Divestment Business.
7. In addition, the Divestment Business may, at the request of the Purchaser, include the
   benefit, for a transitional period of […] after Closing (such period may be further extended
   up to […], in consultation with the Commission and the Monitoring Trustee, if required to
   preserve the viability and competitiveness of the Divestment Business), of all current
   arrangements under which the Notifying Party or its Affiliated Undertakings supply
   products or services to the Divestment Business, both of which shall be provided at
   Direct Production Cost of the supplying Party or Affiliated Undertaking, as detailed in the
   Schedule, unless otherwise agreed with the Purchaser.
8. If requested by the Purchaser, the Divestment Business may also include for a period of
   […] after Closing (such period may be further extended up to […], in consultation with the
   Commission and the Monitoring Trustee, if required to preserve the viability and
   competitiveness of the Divestment Business), agreements for the toll manufacture and
   supply by the Parties, at their respective Direct Production Costs, of the Divestment CP
   Products and/or Lead Active Ingredients in the Divestment Business, including such
   Secondary Active Ingredients as are required to produce the Divestment CP Products
   solely for sale in the EEA and manufactured in accordance with the quality specifications
   of the product registrations of the Divestment CP Products, to the extent such Divestment
   CP Products, Lead or Secondary Active Ingredients are manufactured by the Parties or
   their Affiliated Undertakings as of the Effective Date. Alternatively, where such
   Divestment CP Products, Lead or Secondary Active Ingredients are supplied to the
   Divestment Business as of the Effective Date by third party suppliers, the Notifying Party
   shall use its best efforts to (a) obtain the assignment of the relevant supply agreements, if
   any, to the Purchaser or, in the event that such assignment is not possible, (b) supply
   such Divestment CP Products, Lead or Secondary Active Ingredients through back-to-
   back supply agreements with such third parties at the wholesale price paid by the
   Notifying Party or its Affiliated Undertakings. Such products delivered to the Purchaser
   shall meet all quality requirements which would apply to the Notifying Party. In all cases,
                                                                                                 4
 ---pagebreak---        strict firewall procedures will be adopted by way of non-disclosure agreements so as to
       ensure that any competitively sensitive information related to, or arising from, such
       supply arrangements (for example, product roadmaps) will not be shared with, or passed
       on to, anyone outside the relevant business unit providing the product/service operations.
Section C.        Related commitments
       Preservation of viability, marketability and competitiveness
9.     From the Effective Date until Closing, the Notifying Party shall preserve or procure the
       preservation of the economic viability, marketability and competitiveness of the
       Divestment Business, in accordance with good business practice, and shall minimise as
       far as possible any risk of loss of competitive potential of the Divestment Business. In
       particular the Notifying Party undertakes:
       (a)       not to carry out any action that might have a significant adverse impact on the
                 value, management or competitiveness of the Divestment Business or that might
                 alter the nature and scope of activity, or the industrial or commercial strategy or
                 the investment policy of the Divestment Business; and
       (b)       to make available, or procure to make available, sufficient resources for the
                 development of the Divestment Business, on the basis and continuation of the
                 existing business plans.
       Hold-separate obligations
10.    The Notifying Party commits, from the Effective Date until Closing, to maintain the
       Divestment Business as a viable, competitive and saleable business and to keep the
       Divestment Business separate from the businesses it is retaining.
11.    Until Closing, the Notifying Party shall assist the Monitoring Trustee in ensuring that the
       Divestment Business is managed as a saleable business. Immediately after the adoption
       of the Decision, the Notifying Party shall appoint a Hold Separate Manager. The Hold
       Separate Manager shall manage the Divestment Business independently from the
       DuPont Divestment Business and in the best interest of the business with a view to
       ensuring its continued economic viability, marketability and competitiveness. The Hold
       Separate Manager shall closely cooperate with and report to the Monitoring Trustee and,
       if applicable, the Divestiture Trustee.
       Ring-fencing
12.    The Notifying Party shall implement, or procure to implement, all necessary measures to
       ensure that it does not, after the Effective Date, obtain any Confidential Information
       relating to the Divestment Business and that any such Confidential Information obtained
       by the Notifying Party before the Effective Date will be eliminated and not be used by the
       Notifying Party except as required by the Notifying Party to maintain the Divestment
       Business as a viable, competitive and saleable business. This includes measures vis-à-
       vis the Notifying Party’s appointees on the supervisory board and/or board of directors of
       the Divestment Business. The Notifying Party may obtain or keep information relating to
       the Divestment Business which is reasonably necessary for the divestiture of the
       Divestment Business or disclosure of which to the Notifying Party is required by law.
                                                                                                     5
 ---pagebreak---        Due diligence
13.    In order to enable potential purchasers to carry out a reasonable due diligence of the
       Divestment Business, the Notifying Party shall, subject to customary confidentiality
       assurances and dependent on the stage of the divestiture process, provide to potential
       purchasers sufficient information as regards the Divestment Business.
       Reporting
14.    The Notifying Party shall submit written reports in English on potential purchasers of the
       Divestment Business and developments in the negotiations with such potential
       purchasers to the Commission and the Monitoring Trustee no later than 10 days after the
       end of every month following the Effective Date (or otherwise at the Commission’s
       request). The Notifying Party shall submit a list of all potential purchasers having
       expressed interest in acquiring the Divestment Business to the Commission at each and
       every stage of the divestiture process, as well as a copy of all written offers made by
       potential purchasers within five days of their receipt.
15.    The Notifying Party shall inform the Commission and the Monitoring Trustee on the
       preparation of the data room documentation and the due diligence procedure and shall
       submit a copy of any information memorandum to the Commission and the Monitoring
       Trustee before sending the memorandum out to potential purchasers.
Section D.       The Purchaser
16.    In order to be approved by the Commission, the Purchaser must fulfil the following
       criteria:
       (a)       The Purchaser shall be independent of and unconnected to the Notifying Party
                 and its Affiliated Undertakings (this being assessed having regard to the situation
                 following the divestiture);
       (b)       The Purchaser shall have the financial resources, proven expertise and incentive
                 to maintain and develop the Divestment Business as a viable and active
                 competitive force in competition with the Parties and other competitors;
       (c)       The acquisition of the Divestment Business by the Purchaser must neither be
                 likely to create, in light of the information available to the Commission, prima
                 facie competition concerns nor give rise to a risk that the implementation of the
                 Commitments will be delayed. In particular, the Purchaser must reasonably be
                 expected to obtain all necessary approvals from the relevant regulatory
                 authorities for the acquisition of the Divestment Business.
17.    The final binding sale and purchase agreement (as well as ancillary agreements) relating
       to the divestment of the Divestment Business shall be conditional on the Commission’s
       approval. When the Notifying Party or its Affiliated Undertakings have reached an
       agreement with a purchaser, it shall submit a fully documented and reasoned proposal,
       including a copy of the final agreement(s), within one week to the Commission and the
       Monitoring Trustee. The Notifying Party must be able to demonstrate to the Commission
       that the purchaser fulfils the Purchaser Criteria and that the Divestment Business is being
       sold in a manner consistent with the Commission’s Decision and the Commitments. For
                                                                                                     6
 ---pagebreak---        the approval, the Commission shall verify that the purchaser fulfils the Purchaser Criteria
       and that the Divestment Business is being sold in a manner consistent with the
       Commitments including their objective to bring about a lasting structural change in the
       market. The Commission may approve the sale of the Divestment Business without one
       or more Assets, or by substituting one or more Assets with one or more different assets, if
       this does not affect the viability and competitiveness of the Divestment Business after the
       sale, taking account of the proposed purchaser.
Section E.       Trustee
       Appointment procedure
18.    The Notifying Party shall appoint a Monitoring Trustee to carry out the functions specified
       in these Commitments for a Monitoring Trustee. The Notifying Party commits not to close
       the Concentration before the appointment of a Monitoring Trustee.
19.    If the Notifying Party has not entered into a binding sale and purchase agreement
       regarding the Divestment Business one month before the end of the First Divestiture
       Period or if the Commission has rejected a purchaser proposed by the Notifying Party at
       that time or thereafter, the Notifying Party shall appoint a Divestiture Trustee. The
       appointment of the Divestiture Trustee shall take effect upon the commencement of the
       Trustee Divestiture Period.
20.    The Trustee shall:
       (a)        at the time of appointment, be independent of the Notifying Party and its
                  Affiliated Undertakings;
       (b)        possess the necessary qualifications to carry out its mandate, for example have
                  sufficient relevant experience as an investment banker or consultant or auditor;
                  and
       (c)        neither have nor become exposed to a Conflict of Interest.
21.    The Trustee shall be remunerated by the Notifying Party in a way that does not impede
       the independent and effective fulfilment of its mandate. In particular, where the
       remuneration package of a Divestiture Trustee includes a success premium linked to the
       final sale value of the Divestment Business, such success premium may only be earned
       if the divestiture takes place within the Trustee Divestiture Period.
       Proposal by the Notifying Party
22.    No later than two weeks after the Effective Date, the Notifying Party shall submit the
       name or names of one or more natural or legal persons whom the Notifying Party
       proposes to appoint as the Monitoring Trustee to the Commission for approval. No later
       than one month before the end of the First Divestiture Period or on request by the
       Commission, the Notifying Party shall submit a list of one or more persons whom the
       Notifying Party proposes to appoint as Divestiture Trustee to the Commission for
       approval. The proposal shall contain sufficient information for the Commission to verify
       that the person or persons proposed as Trustee fulfil the requirements set out in
       paragraph 20 and shall include:
                                                                                                   7
 ---pagebreak---     (a)       the full terms of the proposed mandate, which shall include all provisions
              necessary to enable the Trustee to fulfil its duties under these Commitments;
    (b)       the outline of a work plan which describes how the Trustee intends to carry out its
              assigned tasks;
    (c)       an indication whether the proposed Trustee is to act as both Monitoring Trustee
              and Divestiture Trustee or whether different trustees are proposed for the two
              functions.
    Approval or rejection by the Commission
23. The Commission shall have the discretion to approve or reject the proposed Trustee(s)
    and to approve the proposed mandate subject to any modifications it deems necessary
    for the Trustee to fulfil its obligations. If only one name is approved, the Notifying Party
    shall appoint or cause to be appointed the person or persons concerned as Trustee, in
    accordance with the mandate approved by the Commission. If more than one name is
    approved, the Notifying Party shall be free to choose the Trustee to be appointed from
    among the names approved. The Trustee shall be appointed within one week of the
    Commission’s approval, in accordance with the mandate approved by the Commission.
    New proposal by the Notifying Party
24. If all the proposed Trustees are rejected, the Notifying Party shall submit the names of at
    least two more natural or legal persons within one week of being informed of the
    rejection, in accordance with paragraphs 18 and 23 of these Commitments.
    Trustee nominated by the Commission
25. If all further proposed Trustees are rejected by the Commission, the Commission shall
    nominate a Trustee, whom the Notifying Party shall appoint, or cause to be appointed, in
    accordance with a trustee mandate approved by the Commission.
    Functions of the Trustee
26. The Trustee shall assume its specified duties and obligations in order to ensure
    compliance with the Commitments. The Commission may, on its own initiative or at the
    request of the Trustee or the Notifying Party, give any orders or instructions to the
    Trustee in order to ensure compliance with the conditions and obligations attached to the
    Decision.
    Duties and obligations of the Monitoring Trustee
27. The Monitoring Trustee shall:
    (a)       propose in its first report to the Commission a detailed work plan describing how
              it intends to monitor compliance with the obligations and conditions attached to
              the Decision.
    (b)       oversee the on-going management of the Divestment Business with a view to
              ensuring its continued economic viability, marketability and competitiveness and
                                                                                                  8
 ---pagebreak---     monitor compliance by the Notifying Party with the conditions and obligations
    attached to the Decision. To that end, the Monitoring Trustee shall:
    (i)     monitor the preservation of the economic viability, marketability and
            competitiveness of the Divestment Business, and the keeping separate
            of the Divestment Business part of the DuPont Divestment Business
            separate from the businesses being retained by the Notifying Party, in
            accordance with paragraphs 9 and 10 of these Commitments;
    (ii)    supervise the management of the Divestment Business as a saleable
            business, in accordance with paragraph 11 of these Commitments;
    (iii)    with respect to Confidential Information:
            i.       determine all necessary measures to ensure that the Parties do
                     not after the Effective Date obtain any Confidential Information
                     relating to the Divestment Business except as required to
                     maintain the Divestment Business as a viable, competitive and
                     saleable business,
            ii.      in particular strive for the severing of the Divestment Business’s
                     participation in a central information technology network to the
                     extent possible, without compromising the viability of the
                     Divestment Business,
            iii.     make sure that any Confidential Information relating to the
                     Divestment Business obtained by the Notifying Party before the
                     Effective Date is eliminated and will not be used by the Notifying
                     Party except as required to maintain the Divestment Business as
                     a viable, competitive and saleable business, and
            iv.      decide whether any Confidential Information relating to the
                     Divestment Business obtained by the Notifying Party before the
                     Effective Date may be disclosed to or kept by the Notifying Party
                     if the disclosure is reasonably necessary to allow the Notifying
                     Party to maintain the Divestment Business as a viable,
                     competitive and saleable business, to carry out the divestiture or
                     if the disclosure is required by law;
    (iv)    monitor the splitting of assets between the Divestment Business and the
            Notifying Party or its Affiliated Undertakings;
(c) propose to the Notifying Party such measures as the Monitoring Trustee
    considers necessary to ensure the Notifying Party’s compliance with the
    conditions and obligations attached to the Decision, in particular the maintenance
    of the full economic viability, marketability or competitiveness of the Divestment
    Business, the holding separate of the Divestment Business separate from the
    businesses being retained by the Notifying Party and the non-disclosure of
    competitively sensitive information;
(d) review and assess potential purchasers as well as the progress of the divestiture
    process and verify that, dependent on the stage of the divestiture process
    potential purchasers receive sufficient and correct information relating to the
                                                                                        9
 ---pagebreak---               Divestment Business in particular by reviewing, if available, the data room
              documentation, the information memorandum and the due diligence process;
    (e)       act as a contact point for any requests by third parties, in particular potential
              purchasers, in relation to the Commitments;
    (f)       provide to the Commission, sending the Notifying Party a non-confidential copy
              at the same time, a written report within 15 days after the end of every month that
              shall cover the operation and management of the Divestment Business as well
              as the splitting of assets so that the Commission can assess whether the
              business is held in a manner consistent with the Commitments and the progress
              of the divestiture process as well as potential purchasers;
    (g)       promptly report in writing to the Commission, sending the Notifying Party a non-
              confidential copy at the same time, if it concludes on reasonable grounds that the
              Notifying Party is failing to comply with these Commitments;
    (h)       within one week after receipt of the documented proposal referred to in
              paragraph 17 of these Commitments, submit to the Commission, sending the
              Notifying Party a non-confidential copy at the same time, a reasoned opinion as
              to the suitability and independence of the proposed purchaser and the viability of
              the Divestment Business after the Sale and as to whether the Divestment
              Business is sold in a manner consistent with the conditions and obligations
              attached to the Decision, in particular, if relevant, whether the Sale of the
              Divestment Business without one or more Assets affects the viability of the
              Divestment Business after the sale, taking account of the proposed purchaser;
    (i)       broker a resolution of any dispute that may arise between the Purchaser and the
              Notifying Party regarding compliance with the conditions and obligations attached
              to the Decision;
    (j)       monitor whether the Direct Production Costs charged in application of
              paragraphs 7 and 8 of these Commitments as the case may be are consistent
              with standard industry practice;
    (k)       advise and, if need be, make written recommendations to the Commission as to
              the Notifying Party’s compliance with the conditions and obligations attached to
              the Decision when any dispute between the Purchaser and the Notifying Party
              regarding such compliance would be brought before the Arbitral Tribunal referred
              to in paragraph 46 below; and
    (l)       assume the other functions assigned to the Monitoring Trustee under the
              conditions and obligations attached to the Decision.
28. If the Monitoring and Divestiture Trustee are not the same legal or natural persons, the
    Monitoring Trustee and the Divestiture Trustee shall cooperate closely with each other
    during and for the purpose of the preparation of the Trustee Divestiture Period in order to
    facilitate each other’s tasks.
                                                                                                  10
 ---pagebreak---     Duties and obligations of the Divestiture Trustee
29. Within the Trustee Divestiture Period, the Divestiture Trustee shall sell at no minimum
    price the Divestment Business to a purchaser, provided that the Commission has
    approved both the purchaser and the final binding sale and purchase agreement (and
    ancillary agreements) as in line with the Commission’s Decision and the Commitments in
    accordance with paragraphs 16 and 17 of these Commitments. The Divestiture Trustee
    shall include in the sale and purchase agreement (as well as in any ancillary agreements)
    such terms and conditions as it considers appropriate for an expedient sale in the Trustee
    Divestiture Period. In particular, the Divestiture Trustee may include in the sale and
    purchase agreement such customary representations and warranties and indemnities as
    are reasonably required to effect the sale. The Divestiture Trustee shall protect the
    legitimate financial interests of the Notifying Party, subject to the Notifying Party’s
    unconditional obligation to divest at no minimum price in the Trustee Divestiture Period.
30. In the Trustee Divestiture Period (or otherwise at the Commission’s request), the
    Divestiture Trustee shall provide the Commission with a comprehensive monthly report
    written in English on the progress of the divestiture process. Such reports shall be
    submitted within 15 days after the end of every month with a simultaneous copy to the
    Monitoring Trustee and a non-confidential copy to the Notifying Party.
    Duties and obligations of the Parties
31. The Notifying Party shall provide and shall cause its advisors to provide the Trustee with
    all such co-operation, assistance and information as the Trustee may reasonably require
    to perform its tasks. The Trustee shall have full and complete access to any of the
    Notifying Party’s or the Divestment Business’ books, records, documents, management
    or other personnel, facilities, sites and technical information necessary for fulfilling its
    duties under the Commitments and the Notifying Party and the Divestment Business
    shall provide the Trustee upon request with copies of any document. The Notifying Party
    and the Divestment Business shall make available to the Trustee one or more offices on
    their premises and shall be available for meetings in order to provide the Trustee with all
    information necessary for the performance of its tasks.
32. The Notifying Party shall provide the Monitoring Trustee with all managerial and
    administrative support that it may reasonably request on behalf of the management of the
    Divestment Business. This shall include all administrative support functions relating to the
    Divestment Business which are currently carried out at headquarters level. The Notifying
    Party shall provide and shall cause its advisors to provide the Monitoring Trustee, on
    request, with the information submitted to potential purchasers, in particular give the
    Monitoring Trustee access to the data room documentation and all other information
    granted to potential purchasers in the due diligence procedure. The Notifying Party shall
    inform the Monitoring Trustee on possible purchasers, submit lists of potential purchasers
    at each stage of the selection process, including the written offers made by potential
    purchasers at those stages, and keep the Monitoring Trustee informed of all
    developments in the divestiture process.
33. The Notifying Party shall grant or procure Affiliated Undertakings to grant comprehensive
    powers of attorney, duly executed, to the Divestiture Trustee to effect the sale (including
    ancillary agreements), the Closing and all actions and declarations which the Divestiture
    Trustee considers necessary or appropriate to achieve the sale and the Closing,
                                                                                                 11
 ---pagebreak---     including the appointment of advisors to assist with the sale process. Upon request of the
    Divestiture Trustee, the Notifying Party shall cause the documents required for effecting
    the sale and the Closing to be duly executed.
34. The Notifying Party shall indemnify the Trustee and its employees and agents (each an
    “Indemnified Party”) and hold each Indemnified Party harmless against, and hereby
    agrees that an Indemnified Party shall have no liability to the Notifying Party for, any
    liabilities arising out of the performance of the Trustee’s duties under the Commitments,
    except to the extent that such liabilities result from the wilful default, recklessness, gross
    negligence or bad faith of the Trustee, its employees, agents or advisors.
35. At the expense of the Notifying Party, the Trustee may appoint advisors (in particular for
    corporate finance or legal advice), subject to the Notifying Party’s approval (this approval
    not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed) if the Trustee considers the appointment of
    such advisors necessary or appropriate for the performance of its duties and obligations
    under the Mandate, provided that any fees and other expenses incurred by the Trustee
    are reasonable. Should the Notifying Party refuse to approve the advisors proposed by
    the Trustee the Commission may approve the appointment of such advisors instead, after
    having heard the Notifying Party. Only the Trustee shall be entitled to issue instructions to
    the advisors. Paragraph 35 of these Commitments shall apply mutatis mutandis. In the
    Trustee Divestiture Period, the Divestiture Trustee may use advisors who served the
    Notifying Party during the Divestiture Period if the Divestiture Trustee considers this in
    the best interest of an expedient sale.
36. The Notifying Party agrees that the Commission may share Confidential Information
    proprietary to the Notifying Party with the Trustee. The Trustee shall not disclose such
    information and the principles contained in Article 17 (1) and (2) of the Merger Regulation
    apply mutatis mutandis.
37. The Notifying Party agrees that the contact details of the Monitoring Trustee are
    published on the website of the Commission’s Directorate-General for Competition and
    they shall inform interested third parties, in particular any potential purchasers, of the
    identity and the tasks of the Monitoring Trustee.
38. For a period of 10 years from the Effective Date the Commission may request all
    information from the Parties that is reasonably necessary to monitor the effective
    implementation of these Commitments.
    Replacement, discharge and reappointment of the Trustee
39. If the Trustee ceases to perform its functions under the Commitments or for any other
    good cause, including the exposure of the Trustee to a Conflict of Interest:
    (a)        the Commission may, after hearing the Trustee and the Notifying Party, require
               the Notifying Party to replace the Trustee; or
    (b)        the Notifying Party may, with the prior approval of the Commission, replace the
               Trustee.
40. If the Trustee is removed according to paragraph 39 of these Commitments, the Trustee
    may be required to continue in its function until a new Trustee is in place to whom the
                                                                                                   12
 ---pagebreak---        Trustee has effected a full hand over of all relevant information. The new Trustee shall be
       appointed in accordance with the procedure referred to in paragraphs 18 to 25 of these
       Commitments.
41.    Unless removed according to paragraph 39 of these Commitments, the Trustee shall
       cease to act as Trustee only after the Commission has discharged it from its duties after
       all the Commitments with which the Trustee has been entrusted have been implemented.
       However, the Commission may at any time require the reappointment of the Monitoring
       Trustee if it subsequently appears that the relevant remedies might not have been fully
       and properly implemented.
Section F.       Fast track dispute resolution
42.    In the event that the Purchaser claims that the Notifying Party is failing to comply with its
       obligations arising from these Commitments, in particular the obligation to supply the
       relevant active ingredients and/or formulated products, as the case may be, at Direct
       Production Cost or wholesale price (as applicable) as referred to in paragraph 2(d) of the
       Schedule, the Purchaser may invoke the dispute settlement procedure described in this
       Section.
43.    The Purchaser shall notify the Notifying Party and the Monitoring Trustee of its request in
       writing and specify the reasons why it believes that the Notifying Party is failing to comply
       with the Commitments. The Notifying Party shall use its best efforts to resolve all
       differences of opinion and to settle all disputes of which it has been notified through co-
       operation and consultation within a reasonable period of time not to exceed fifteen
       working days after receipt of the request.
44.    The Monitoring Trustee shall present its own proposal for resolving the dispute within
       eight working days, specifying in writing the action, if any, to be taken by the Notifying
       Party to ensure compliance with the Commitments vis-à-vis the Purchaser, and be
       prepared, if requested, to facilitate the settlement of the dispute.
45.    Should the Notifying Party and the Purchaser fail to resolve their differences of opinion
       through cooperation and consultation, the Purchaser may initiate the arbitration process
       described below. The arbitration process shall be used only to resolve disputes regarding
       compliance with the Commitments.
46.    To initiate the arbitration process, the Purchaser shall give written notice to the Notifying
       Party nominating an arbitrator and stating the specific nature of the claim, the factual
       basis of its position and the relief requested. The Notifying Party shall appoint another
       arbitrator within 14 calendar days after receipt of the written notice. The arbitrators so
       appointed shall appoint a third arbitrator to be president of the arbitral tribunal within
       seven calendar days after both arbitrators have been nominated. Should the notifying
       Party fail to nominate an arbitrator, or if the two arbitrators fail to agree on the president,
       the default appointment(s) shall be made by the International Chamber of Commerce
       (“ICC”). The three-person arbitral tribunal shall herein be referred to as the “Arbitral
       Tribunal.”
47.    The dispute shall be finally resolved by arbitration under the ICC Rules of Arbitration, with
       such modifications or adaptations as foreseen herein (the “Rules”). The arbitration shall
       be conducted in Paris, in the English language.
                                                                                                       13
 ---pagebreak--- 48. The procedure shall be a fast-track procedure. For this purpose, the Arbitral Tribunal shall
    shorten all applicable procedural time-limits under the Rules as far as appropriate in the
    circumstances.
49. The Arbitral Tribunal shall, as soon as practical after the confirmation of the Arbitral
    Tribunal, hold an organisational conference to discuss any procedural issues with the
    parties to the arbitration. Terms of reference shall be drawn up and signed by the parties
    to the arbitration and the Arbitral Tribunal at the organisational meeting or thereafter and
    a procedural timetable shall be established by the Arbitral Tribunal. An oral hearing shall,
    as a rule, be established within two months of the confirmation of the Arbitral Tribunal.
50. In order to enable the Arbitral Tribunal to reach a decision, it shall be entitled to request
    any relevant information from the Notifying Party and/or its Affiliated Undertakings or the
    Purchaser, to appoint experts and to examine them at the hearing, and to establish the
    facts by all appropriate means. The Arbitral Tribunal is also entitled to ask for assistance
    by the Monitoring Trustee in all stages of the procedure if the parties to the arbitration
    agree.
51. The arbitrators shall agree in writing to keep any confidential information and business
    secrets disclosed to them in confidence. The Arbitral Tribunal may take the measures
    necessary for protecting confidential information in particular by restricting access to
    confidential information to the Arbitral Tribunal, the Monitoring Trustee and outside
    counsel and experts of the opposing party.
52. The burden of proof in any dispute governed under the Rules shall be as follows:
    (a)      the Purchaser must produce evidence of a prima facie case;
    (b)      if the Purchaser does so, the Arbitral Tribunal must find in favour of the
             Purchaser unless the Notifying Party can produce evidence to the contrary.
53. The Commission shall be allowed and enabled to participate in all stages of the
    procedure by:
    (a)      receiving all written submissions (including documents and reports, etc.) made by
             the parties to the arbitration;
    (b)      receiving all orders, interim and final awards and other documents exchanged by
             the Arbitral Tribunal with the parties to the arbitration (including terms of
             reference and procedural timetable);
    (c)      filing any Commission amicus curiae briefs; and
    (d)      being present at the hearing(s) and being allowed to ask questions to parties,
             witnesses and experts.
54. The Arbitral Tribunal shall forward, or shall order the parties to the arbitration to forward,
    the documents mentioned to the Commission without delay.
55. In the event of disagreement between the parties to the arbitration regarding the
    interpretation of the Commitments, the Arbitral Tribunal shall inform the Commission, and
                                                                                                   14
 ---pagebreak---        may seek the Commission’s interpretation of the Commitments before finding in favour of
       any party to the arbitration and shall be bound by the Commission’s interpretation.
56.    The Arbitral Tribunal shall decide the dispute on the basis of the Commitments and the
       Decision. The Commitments shall be construed in accordance with the Merger
       Regulation, EU law and general principles of law common to the legal orders of the
       Member States without a requirement to apply a particular national system. The Arbitral
       Tribunal shall take all decisions by majority vote.
57.    Upon request of the third party, the Arbitral Tribunal may make a preliminary ruling on the
       dispute. The preliminary ruling shall be rendered within one month after the confirmation
       of the Arbitral Tribunal, shall be applicable immediately and, as a rule, remain in force
       until a final decision is rendered.
58.    The Arbitral Tribunal shall, in the preliminary ruling as well as in the final award, specify
       the action, if any, to be taken by the Notifying Party to comply with the Commitments vis-
       à-vis the Purchaser (e.g., modify a supply contract pricing formula). The final award shall
       be final and binding on the parties to the arbitration and shall resolve the dispute and
       determine any and all claims, motions or requests submitted to the Arbitral Tribunal. The
       arbitral award shall also determine the reimbursement of the costs of the successful party
       and the allocation of the arbitration costs. In case of granting a preliminary ruling or if
       otherwise appropriate, the Arbitral Tribunal shall specify that terms and conditions
       determined in the final award apply retroactively.
59.    The final award shall, as a rule, be rendered within three months after the confirmation of
       the Arbitral Tribunal. The time-frame shall, in any case, be extended by the time the
       Commission takes to submit an interpretation of the Commitments if asked by the Arbitral
       Tribunal.
60.    The parties to the arbitration shall prepare a non-confidential version of the final award,
       without business secrets. The Commission may publish the non-confidential version of
       the award.
61.    Nothing in the above-described arbitration procedure shall affect the powers of the
       Commission to take decisions in relation to the Commitments in accordance with its
       powers under the Merger Regulation and the Treaty on the Functioning of the European
       Union.
Section G.       The review clause
62.    The Commission may extend the time periods foreseen in the Commitments in response
       to a request from the Notifying Party or, in appropriate cases, on its own initiative. Where
       the Notifying Party requests an extension of a time period, it shall submit a reasoned
       request to the Commission no later than one month before the expiry of that period,
       showing good cause. This request shall be accompanied by a report from the Monitoring
       Trustee, who shall, at the same time send a non-confidential copy of the report to the
       Notifying Party. Only in exceptional circumstances shall the Notifying Party be entitled to
       request an extension within the last month of any period.
63.    The Commission may further, in response to a reasoned request from the Notifying Party
       showing good cause waive, modify or substitute, in exceptional circumstances, one or
                                                                                                     15
 ---pagebreak---        more of the undertakings in these Commitments. This request shall be accompanied by a
       report from the Monitoring Trustee, who shall, at the same time send a non-confidential
       copy of the report to the Notifying Party. The request shall not have the effect of
       suspending the application of the undertaking and, in particular, of suspending the expiry
       of any time period in which the undertaking has to be complied with.
Section H.      Entry into force
64.    The Commitments shall take effect upon the date of adoption of the Decision.
       duly authorised for and on behalf of FMC Corporation
       18 July 2017
                                                                                                  16
 ---pagebreak---                                                SCHEDULE
1.       The Divestment Business as operated to date is part of the Notifying Party’s overall crop
         protection business offering and does not currently operate as a standalone business or
         entity. As a result, the Divestment Business will be carved out of the Notifying Party’s
         crop protection business.
2.       In accordance with paragraph 6 of these Commitments, the Divestment Business is
         comprised of:
         (a)      The existing crop protection products as described in Table 1 and related assets
                  outlined below which shall be marketed for sale by the Notifying Party as a single
                  business and sold to a single purchaser. It shall include:
                  (i)       the Notifying Party’s crop protection product registrations in each EEA
                            Member State where it holds such registrations for the formulated
                            products listed in Table 11 and as described in Annex 1 and
                            Annex 6.1, including an irrevocable, exclusive, transferable, royalty-
                            free licence, including the right to sub-license, to obtain access to
                            (including, to the extent legally permissible, to hard copies of), and to
                            use any Divestment CP Product registration data (to the extent such
                            rights are held by the divesting Party) required to support, maintain,
                            develop and improve such product registrations in the EEA. Where the
                            consent of third parties is required the Notifying Party will use its best
                            efforts to ensure that the relevant consents are provided;
                  (ii)      for Lead Active Ingredients, an irrevocable, exclusive, transferable
                            royalty-free licence, including the right to sub-license, to obtain access
                            to (including, to the extent legally permissible, to hard copies of), and to
                            use any registration data owned at Closing (including studies launched
                            or completed by Closing, technical information or data which are or may
                            be necessary for supporting an application for a product registration,
                            such as toxicology, residues or efficacy studies) by the Notifying Party,
                            solely for the use and purpose of maintaining, supporting and renewing
                            the EEA active ingredient registrations for these Lead Active Ingredients
                            and maintaining, developing and improving the product registrations for
                            any Divestment CP Product registration in the EEA based on these
                            Lead Active Ingredients, as described more fully in Annex 2 and
                            Annex 6.2. For the Lead Active Ingredients in Annex 2 and Annex 6.2,
                            at the option of the Purchaser, the Notifying Party will use its (i) best
                            efforts to enable the Purchaser to join (a) existing task forces to which
                            the Notifying Party is a member (subject to third party consents) or
                            (b) its own individual existing or future renewal efforts to the extent
                            undertaken by the Notifying Party in its sole discretion or (ii) reasonable
                            best efforts to enable the Purchaser to join future task forces to which
                            the Notifying Party become a member, provided that, in all cases, the
1 Table 1 provides a non-exhaustive list of FMC Divestment CP Products.
                                                                                                         17
 ---pagebreak---                          Purchaser agrees to abide by the relevant terms and conditions of the
                         applicable task force agreement and the standards that are applied by
                         the Notifying Party in the ordinary course and pay its pro rata share of
                         costs. The best efforts or reasonable best efforts, as the case may be,
                         shall be limited to enabling the Purchaser to join existing or future task
                         forces and/or the Notifying Party’s own individual renewal efforts only
                         up to the next EEA expiry date (as of Closing) of the approval of the
                         relevant Lead Active Ingredient. If the Notifying Party chooses not to
                         continue to be engaged in a Lead Active Ingredient task force of which
                         it is currently a member, it will use its best effort to transfer its existing
                         task force membership to the Purchaser provided that, in all cases, the
                         Purchaser agrees to abide by the relevant terms and conditions of the
                         applicable task force agreement and the standards that are applied by
                         the Notifying Party in the ordinary course and pay its pro rata share of
                         costs. Where the consent of third parties is required for the transfer of
                         registration data of a Lead Active Ingredient to which the Notifying Party
                         has rights, the Notifying Party will use its best efforts to ensure that the
                         relevant consents are provided. For the avoidance of doubt,
                         notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Schedule, the Notifying
                         Party shall retain the right to use such registration data to (i) support,
                         maintain, develop and improve non-crop protection registrations in the
                         EEA, and/or (ii) subject to paragraph 5 of the Commitments, support,
                         maintain, develop and improve crop protection registrations in the EEA
                         for the Notifying Party’s crop protection mixtures.
                                            Table 1
                             Scope of Divestment                                     2016 Sales
                       (LAI = Lead Active Ingredient)                                 in the EEA
• All rights held by FMC in the EEA to LAI metsulfuron-methyl                       […]
• All FMC product registrations in the EEA for formulated post-emergence
  broadleaf cereal herbicide products with metsulfuron-methyl as the LAI:
  - Metsulfuron-methyl 200 WG
  - Metsulfuron-methyl 60 + diflufenican 600 WG
  - Metsulfuron-methyl 70 + thifensulfuron-methyl 680 WG
• All rights held by FMC in the EEA to LAI thifensulfuron-methyl                    […]
• All FMC product registrations in the EEA for formulated post-emergence
  broadleaf cereal herbicide products with thifensulfuron-methyl as the LAI:
  - Thifensulfuron-methyl 500 + tribenuron-methyl 250 WG
  - Thifensulfuron-methyl 500 + tribenuron-methyl 250 WG + florasulam
       50 SC
• All rights held by FMC in the EEA to LAI tribenuron-methyl                        […]
• All FMC product registrations in the EEA for formulated crop protection
  products with tribenuron-methyl as the LAI:
  - Tribenuron-methyl 750 WG
  - Tribenuron-methyl 600 + florasulam 200 WG
• All rights held by FMC in the EEA to LAI florasulam                               […]
• All FMC product registrations in the EEA for formulated crop protection
  products with florasulam as the LAI:
  - Florasulam 50 SC
  - Florasulam 50 + diflufenican 500 SC
                                                                                                        18
 ---pagebreak--- (b) all intellectual property used by the Divestment Business, including the brand
    names and registered trademarks as described more fully in Annex 1 and
    Annex 6.1 and know-how will be disposed as follows:
    (i)        intellectual property used primarily by the Divestment Business in the
               EEA shall be transferred to the Purchaser with the Notifying Party or its
               Affiliated Undertakings retaining an exclusive, irrevocable, perpetual,
               royalty-free licence to use such intellectual property, including brand
               names, outside of the scope of the Divestment Business (e.g., non-crop
               protection products, crop protection products not included in the
               Divestment Business or outside the EEA); and
       (ii)    intellectual property also used by the Divestment Business, but used
               primarily by the Notifying Party or its Affiliated Undertakings in any part
               of the Parties’ business which relates to any other products aside from
               the Divestment Business shall be retained by the Notifying Party or its
               Affiliated Undertakings and licensed to the Purchaser on an irrevocable,
               perpetual, royalty-free basis exclusively for use in the Divestment
               Business as required pursuant to these Commitments.
(c) contracts with third party suppliers for the manufacture and sale of the products
    in the Divestment Business where applicable, manufactured in accordance with
    the product registrations transferred with the Divestment Business and if
    requested by the Purchaser, as described more fully in Annex 3 and Annex 6.3,
    subject to third parties’ consent to the extent such consent is contractually
    required.
(d) if requested by the Purchaser, the Divestment Business may also include for a
    period of up to […] after Closing (such period may be further extended up to […],
    in consultation with the Commission and the Monitoring Trustee, if required to
    preserve the viability and competitiveness of the Divestment Business),
    agreements for the toll manufacture and supply by the Parties, at their respective
    Direct Production Costs, of the Divestment CP Products and/or Lead Active
    Ingredients in the Divestment Business, including such Secondary Active
    Ingredients as required to produce the Divestment CP Products, solely for sale in
    the EEA and manufactured in accordance with the quality specifications of the
    product registrations of the Divestment CP Products, to the extent such
    Divestment CP Products, Lead or Secondary Active Ingredients are
    manufactured by the Parties or their Affiliated Undertakings as of the Effective
    Date. Alternatively, where such Divestment CP Products, Lead or Secondary
    Active Ingredients are supplied to the Divestment Business as of the Effective
    Date by third party suppliers, the Parties shall use their best efforts to supply
    such Divestment CP Products, Lead or Secondary Active Ingredients through
    back-to-back supply agreements with such third parties at the wholesale price
    paid by the Notifying Party or its Affiliated Undertakings. Such products delivered
    to the Purchaser shall meet all quality requirements which would apply to the
    Notifying Party.
(e) an irrevocable, transferable, royalty-free licence, excluding the right to sub-
    license, to obtain access to (including, to the extent legally permissible, to hard
                                                                                           19
 ---pagebreak---     copies of), and to use the registration data (to the extent held by the divesting
    Party) relating to the Secondary Active Ingredients included in the Divestment
    Business, to support, maintain, develop and improve crop protection product
    registrations in the EEA for products included in the Divestment Business. For
    the avoidance of doubt, if the Notifying Party decides not to renew and/or not
    support the renewal of any of the Secondary Active Ingredients included in the
    Divestment Business in the EEA, the Notifying Party shall give written notice to
    the Purchaser within two weeks from its decision not to renew and/or support the
    renewal of any such Secondary Active Ingredient in the EEA to allow the
    Purchaser to undertake the renewal of such Secondary Active Ingredient.
(f) in so far as Secondary Active Ingredients are concerned, at the option of the
    Purchaser, the Notifying Party will use its (i) best efforts to enable the Purchaser
    to join (a) existing task forces to which the Notifying Party is a member (subject
    to third party consents) or (b) the Notifying Party’s own individual existing or
    future renewal efforts to the extent undertaken by the Notifying Party in its sole
    discretion or (ii) reasonable best efforts to enable the Purchaser to join future
    task forces to which the Notifying Party becomes a member, provided that, in all
    cases, the Notifying Party agrees to abide by the relevant terms and conditions of
    the applicable task force agreement and the standards that are applied by the
    Notifying Party in the ordinary course, and pay its pro rata share of costs. The
    best efforts or reasonable best efforts, as the case may be, shall be limited to
    enabling the Purchaser to join existing or future task forces and/or the Notifying
    Party’s own individual renewal efforts only up to the next EEA expiry date (as of
    Closing) of the approval of the relevant Secondary Active Ingredients.
(g) EEA customer lists and other records for each product in the Divestment
    Business, as described more fully in Annex 4 and Annex 6.4. For the avoidance
    of doubt, other records in the preceding sentence shall mean financial records
    available electronically including pricing, volume, incentive, payment, credit and
    rebate information for the past five years.
(h) inventory for sale in the EEA, including in-progress mixtures and formulations,
    packaging, supplies and material to the extent such exist, are required by the
    Purchaser and is commercially and technically feasible, together with
    authorisation for the Purchaser(s) to use any brand names displayed on such
    packaging for the purpose of selling the inventory, for a period of […].
(i) arrangements for the supply of transitional services at Direct Production Cost, if
    requested by the Purchaser, by the Notifying Party or Affiliated Undertakings for a
    transitional period of […] after Closing (such period may be further extended up
    to […], in consultation with the Commission and the Monitoring Trustee, if
    required to preserve the viability and competitiveness of the Divestment
    Business). For the avoidance of doubt, such transitional services may include
    technical assistance in relation to the manufacture, by the Purchaser, of the
    Divestment CP Products and/or Lead Active Ingredients in the Divestment
    Business and/or assistance of technical or regulatory personnel in relation to the
    support, maintenance, development and improvement of the registrations
    included in the Divestment Business.
                                                                                         20
 ---pagebreak--- 3. The Divestment Business shall not include:
   (a)       Any part of the Parties’ crop protection business which relates to any other
             products aside from the Divestment Business;
   (b)       Any assignment under an agreement with third parties where the Notifying
             Party’s relationship is not governed by a specific agreement;
   (c)       Production plants, sales offices or other physical plants;
   (d)       Personnel (save as provided for at paragraph 5 below);
   (e)       Any products manufactured for sale outside the EEA that are the same or
             substantially the same as any of the Divestment CP Products, including any
             registration rights for such products and any know-how, intangible assets and
             brand names used primarily for such products; and
   (f)       Any assets in the DuPont Divestment Business to be acquired by FMC including
             without limitation any assets related to sulfonylurea herbicide products in the
             DuPont Divestment Business.
4. For the avoidance of doubt, any intangible assets that are also used outside of the scope
   of the Divestment Business (i.e., non-crop protection products or outside the EEA) will be
   licensed to the Purchaser on a royalty-free basis exclusively for the Divestment Business
   as required pursuant to these Commitments, but will not be transferred to the Purchaser.
5. At the option of the Purchaser, the Divestment Business will include the Personnel who
   would reasonably be considered necessary to maintain the viability, marketability and
   competitiveness of the Divestment Business […]. The exercise of such option shall be
   supervised by the Monitoring Trustee and subject to applicable local employment
   legislation.
6. For any or all of the assets listed in Annex 5 and Annex 6.5 of the Schedule, which
   identifies all of the Lead Active Ingredients and Divestment CP Products which require
   third party consents to be transferred, the Parties shall obtain such consents and supply
   them to the Commission as part of the Notifying Party’s reasoned submission for the
   Purchaser approval.
7. If there is any asset that is not covered by paragraph 2 of this Schedule but that is both
   used (exclusively or not) by the Divestment Business and is necessary for the continued
   viability and competitiveness of the Divestment Business, that asset or an adequate
   substitute will be offered to potential Purchasers either outright for sale if such asset or
   adequate substitute is used exclusively by the Divestment Business or by way of an
   irrevocable, exclusive, transferable, royalty-free licence, including the right to sub-license
   if such asset or adequate substitute is used by both the Divestment Business and the
   Notifying Party’s retained businesses.
                                                                                                  21
 ---pagebreak---               ANNEXES
Annex 1   […]
Annex 2   […]
Annex 3   […]
Annex 4   […]
Annex 5   […]
Annex 6.1 […]
Annex 6.2 […]
Annex 6.3 […]
Annex 6.4 […]
Annex 6.5 […]
                      22