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Vitamin Price Fixing Triggers Class Action
by Warren
Key - Gippsland Aquaculture Industry Network (GAIN)
Australia -
National law firm,
Maurice Blackburn Cashman
have commenced class action proceedings against several companies for
compensation resulting from alleged price fixing of vitamin products used in the
animal nutrition market in
Australia.
A number of products were covered by the class action including:
vitamins A, E, B1, B2, B5, C,
Betacarotene or Canthaxanthin for animal nutrition or health purposes or
pre-mixes containing these vitamins.
Canthaxanthin is widely used in
the Aquaculture industry as a feed additive particularly in the salmon farming
industry. More information on Canthaxanthin is available below this article.
Three companies have brought the class action against the defendants, claiming
damages and alleging that the "cartel" was actively engaged in price fixing in
the 1990's. They claim this was in breach of the Trade Practices Act 1974, and
are now claiming remedies including injunctions and damages on behalf of
themselves and all other members of the class action group.
The companies being sued are members of the
F. Hoffman-La Roche group
(being F Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd, Roche Vitamins Asia Pacific Pte Ltd, Roche
Products Pty Ltd and Roche Vitamins Australia Pty Ltd),
the
Aventis group (being Aventis SA, Aventis Animal
Nutrition SA, Aventis Animal Nutrition Asia Pacific Pte Ltd and Aventis Animal
Nutrition Pty Ltd), and
the BASF group
(being BASF AG, BASF East Asia Regional Headquarters Ltd and BASF Australia
Ltd).
The
ACCC (Australian Competition
Consumer Commission) has successfully prosecuted the Australian defendants for
their participation in the cartel. In February 2001the Australian Federal Court
found the participants guilty of illegal price fixing and market sharing
arrangements. This resulted in record penalties of
AUD$26M
being imposed. Further information about the ACCC's prosecution of the cartel
participants is available at the ACCC website
www.accc.gov.au
Damages were not recovered by the ACCC prosecution on behalf of the affected
businesses and civil action is necessary to pursue the matter further. Further
information for those affected or those who believe they may have been affected
during the period March 1992 to December 1999 is available on the Maurice
Blackburn Cashman website at:
http://www.mauriceblackburncashman.com.au/ca_vitamins.htm
The price fixing activities have not been restricted solely to
Australia. In May
1999, more than thirty class action suits were lodged in the
US in respect of
financial losses caused by the cartel. Some of these class actions were settled
in September 1999. The resulting settlement provided for a payout totalling an
incredible $USD1.1 Billion. This amount represented a refund of approximately 20
cents for every dollar spent by businesses on affected vitamins purchased in
recent years.
F. Hoffman-La Roche Ltd,
BASF AG and several of their senior executives were found guilty of price fixing
related to the cartel in May 1999. These charges were made by the Anti-Trust
Division of the United States Department of Justice and resulted in fines
totalling $USD725 Million.
Rhone Poulenc SA was not
charged due to co-operation with authorities during the investigation.
More information about the
US Department of Justice prosecution is available at:
http://www.usdoj.gov/atr/cases.html
F. Hoffman-La Roche Ltd,
BASF AG and Rhone Poulenc SA have also been pursued in relation to the matter by
the Canadian Competition Bureau. All three have pleaded guilty and now face
civil action in
Canada. The
Canadian Competition Bureau has obtained convictions and imposed record fines
against a number of vitamin manufacturers for their involvement in the cartel.
Class actions are also pending in
British Columbia,
Ontario and
Quebec. More information on
specific cases can be located at:
http://www.strategis.ic.gc.ca/sc_consu/engdoc/homepage.html
Search for "Vitamin Price
Fixing" for relevant information.
In November 2001record
fines totalling EURO$855.22 (approximately
AUD$1.5
Billion) were imposed on a number of companies by the European Commission for
their participation in price fixing and secret market sharing arrangements
affecting vitamin products.
The European Commission
decision document can be viewed online at:
http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/pri/en/oj/dat/2003/l_006/l_00620030110en00010089.pdf
(english)
Further
regulatory proceedings are also being pursued in
New Zealand,
Switzerland and
by the European Union.
About
Canthaxanthin
Canthaxanthin is a naturally occurring carotenoid found in many different plants
and animals. It is the red colouring of many fruits, vegetables, and flowers It
gives the pink hue of the feathers of brightly coloured tropical birds such as
flamingos and roseate spoonbills. A few species of pink shellfish and some ocean
crustaceans such as the red lobster contain this xanthophyll as does the pink
flesh of salmon and the red spots on the skin of trout.
Canthaxanthin functions as an
ultra violet photon absorber, a single and triplet oxygen quencher, and a free
radical deactivator. The incredible endurance of pink salmon on their long
migrations to spawning grounds may possibly be due to the antioxidant qualities
of Canthaxanthin saturating their bodies. They swim for thousands of miles in
highly ionized oxygenated water (condition which would normally be fatal to a
fish) without damage or death. Canthaxanthin is a pigment, belonging to the same
family as beta-carotene.
For further information concerning the
Australian class action contact:
Maurice Blackburn Cashman
Brook Davie or Bernard Murphy
Level 10,
456 Lonsdale St,
Melbourne,
Victoria,
Australia, 3000.
Ph: (03)9605 2872
Fax: (03)9600 2401
Email:
kyliereid@mbc.aus.net
Additional information is available at the following address.
http://www.mauriceblackburncashman.com.au/ca_vitamins.htm
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