Europäisches Beihilfenrecht Blog

State Aid Uncovered Blog

In Lexxions Blog „State Aid Uncovered” veröffentlicht Prof. Phedon Nicolaides wöchentlich kritische Analysen zu den neuesten Urteilen und Entscheidungen zu staatlichen Beihilfen. Jeder Beitrag stellt die wichtigsten Punkte eines Gerichtsurteils oder einer EU-Kommissionsentscheidung vor, ordnet sie in den Kontext ähnlicher Rechtsprechung oder Praxis ein, bewertet die zugrundeliegende Argumentation und zeigt etwaige Ungereimtheiten oder Widersprüche auf.

In loser Folge werden auf diesem Blog auch Gastbeiträge von anderen Experten für staatliche Beihilfen veröffentlicht, welche die Inhalte der Blogbeiträge ergänzen.

Jetzt abonnieren!

Professor at Maastricht University; Professor at University of Nicosia, and Academic Director at Lexxion Training

Commission decision on SA.59158 ×

Linked Enterprises through Relationships between Natural Persons

Introduction A perennial issue facing aid-granting authorities is whether the aid applicants are SMEs. A mis-assessment of the SME status can have dire consequences as demonstrated by a Commission decision in May 2025 concerning State aid granted by Germany to sawmill Abalon Hardwood Hessen [AHH] [SA.24030]. The Commission found the aid to be incompatible with the internal market and ordered […]

Selectivity and the Reference System

Introduction A public measure must be selective and satisfy the other criteria of Article 107(1) TFEU in order to be classified as State aid. The detection of selectivity requires a comparative exercise: a comparison of the aid beneficiary or beneficiaries with non-aid beneficiaries. But which non-aid beneficiaries to take into account. The answer is those who are in a similar […]

Coverage of Losses of a State-Owned Company

Introduction Eu law does not prohibit states from owning or investing in companies [see Article 345 TFEU]. This means that when the state, as owner, makes payments to the companies it owns or loses part of its capital as a result of commercial losses, it does not grant to them State aid if such payments are mandated by law and […]

Tax Exemption of General Application

Introduction In November 2014, the General Court in case T-219/10, Autogrill v Commission, held that a tax exemption for the acquisition of foreign undertakings did not constitute State aid because it did not exclude any undertaking from benefitting from it. This was because the beneficiaries could not be identified beforehand. However, on appeal, in December 2016, the Court of Justice […]

Subsidies to Incentivise Closure of Excess Capacity Are State Aid

Introduction Very often Member States claim that subsidies they grant as compensation for the costs incurred by the recipient undertakings do not confer an advantage to them and therefore do not constitute State aid. The Court of Justice of the EU [CJEU] has on the whole rejected this claim even if the subsidy is less than the costs which are […]

Lease of Public Land

Introduction Public land is a public asset that must be priced correctly when rented out to third parties. The problem is that in most cases rented out plots of public land are either too large or are in unusual places. In either case, comparable commercial transactions are difficult to find, especially if transactions in such plots are infrequent. In these […]

Compensation for Non-payment of State Aid Can Constitute State Aid

Introduction A perennial question by aggrieved investors who feel cheated by u-turns in public policy is: “May I claim compensation for damage that I have suffered as a result of non-payment of the State aid that was promised to me?” As a result of recent case law, it is now clear that there are several answers to this question: First, […]

i) Compensation Can Be State Aid ii) Failure to Act

Introduction This article reviews two judgments concerning a claim that compensation does not constitute State aid and a complaint that the Commission had failed to act, respectively. The latter case is particularly interesting because it is probably the only judgment in the past decade or two that the Court of Justice has actually upheld a claim that the Commission breached […]

Although Member States Are Free to Determine their Tax Systems, they Must still Conform with State Aid Rules

Introduction On 10 September 2024, the Court of Justice [CJEU] delivered its much anticipated judgment, in case C-465/20 P, Commission v Ireland & Apple. It ruled that Ireland had granted incompatible State aid to Apple through preferential tax rulings.[1] The judgment was the result of an appeal by the Commission against the judgment of the General Court in case T-778/16, Ireland […]

A State-Owned Company Acts as a Private Investor – Part II

Part II: Advantage The Commission, first, explained that the “(80) intervention must be considered as a whole, considering the purpose and timing of the various stages in which AMCO’s intervention is to be made, within the context and contents of the second arrangement proposal. Whether or not a transaction is in line with market conditions must be established through a […]

Commission decision on SA.59158 ×

Linked Enterprises through Relationships between Natural Persons

Introduction A perennial issue facing aid-granting authorities is whether the aid applicants are SMEs. A mis-assessment of the SME status can have dire consequences as demonstrated by a Commission decision in May 2025 concerning State aid granted by Germany to sawmill Abalon Hardwood Hessen [AHH] [SA.24030]. The Commission found the aid to be incompatible with the internal market and ordered […]

Selectivity and the Reference System

Introduction A public measure must be selective and satisfy the other criteria of Article 107(1) TFEU in order to be classified as State aid. The detection of selectivity requires a comparative exercise: a comparison of the aid beneficiary or beneficiaries with non-aid beneficiaries. But which non-aid beneficiaries to take into account. The answer is those who are in a similar […]

Coverage of Losses of a State-Owned Company

Introduction Eu law does not prohibit states from owning or investing in companies [see Article 345 TFEU]. This means that when the state, as owner, makes payments to the companies it owns or loses part of its capital as a result of commercial losses, it does not grant to them State aid if such payments are mandated by law and […]

Tax Exemption of General Application

Introduction In November 2014, the General Court in case T-219/10, Autogrill v Commission, held that a tax exemption for the acquisition of foreign undertakings did not constitute State aid because it did not exclude any undertaking from benefitting from it. This was because the beneficiaries could not be identified beforehand. However, on appeal, in December 2016, the Court of Justice […]

Subsidies to Incentivise Closure of Excess Capacity Are State Aid

Introduction Very often Member States claim that subsidies they grant as compensation for the costs incurred by the recipient undertakings do not confer an advantage to them and therefore do not constitute State aid. The Court of Justice of the EU [CJEU] has on the whole rejected this claim even if the subsidy is less than the costs which are […]

Lease of Public Land

Introduction Public land is a public asset that must be priced correctly when rented out to third parties. The problem is that in most cases rented out plots of public land are either too large or are in unusual places. In either case, comparable commercial transactions are difficult to find, especially if transactions in such plots are infrequent. In these […]

Compensation for Non-payment of State Aid Can Constitute State Aid

Introduction A perennial question by aggrieved investors who feel cheated by u-turns in public policy is: “May I claim compensation for damage that I have suffered as a result of non-payment of the State aid that was promised to me?” As a result of recent case law, it is now clear that there are several answers to this question: First, […]

i) Compensation Can Be State Aid ii) Failure to Act

Introduction This article reviews two judgments concerning a claim that compensation does not constitute State aid and a complaint that the Commission had failed to act, respectively. The latter case is particularly interesting because it is probably the only judgment in the past decade or two that the Court of Justice has actually upheld a claim that the Commission breached […]

Although Member States Are Free to Determine their Tax Systems, they Must still Conform with State Aid Rules

Introduction On 10 September 2024, the Court of Justice [CJEU] delivered its much anticipated judgment, in case C-465/20 P, Commission v Ireland & Apple. It ruled that Ireland had granted incompatible State aid to Apple through preferential tax rulings.[1] The judgment was the result of an appeal by the Commission against the judgment of the General Court in case T-778/16, Ireland […]

A State-Owned Company Acts as a Private Investor – Part II

Part II: Advantage The Commission, first, explained that the “(80) intervention must be considered as a whole, considering the purpose and timing of the various stages in which AMCO’s intervention is to be made, within the context and contents of the second arrangement proposal. Whether or not a transaction is in line with market conditions must be established through a […]

Commission decision on SA.59158 ×

Linked Enterprises through Relationships between Natural Persons

Introduction A perennial issue facing aid-granting authorities is whether the aid applicants are SMEs. A mis-assessment of the SME status can have dire consequences as demonstrated by a Commission decision in May 2025 concerning State aid granted by Germany to sawmill Abalon Hardwood Hessen [AHH] [SA.24030]. The Commission found the aid to be incompatible with the internal market and ordered […]

Selectivity and the Reference System

Introduction A public measure must be selective and satisfy the other criteria of Article 107(1) TFEU in order to be classified as State aid. The detection of selectivity requires a comparative exercise: a comparison of the aid beneficiary or beneficiaries with non-aid beneficiaries. But which non-aid beneficiaries to take into account. The answer is those who are in a similar […]

Coverage of Losses of a State-Owned Company

Introduction Eu law does not prohibit states from owning or investing in companies [see Article 345 TFEU]. This means that when the state, as owner, makes payments to the companies it owns or loses part of its capital as a result of commercial losses, it does not grant to them State aid if such payments are mandated by law and […]

Tax Exemption of General Application

Introduction In November 2014, the General Court in case T-219/10, Autogrill v Commission, held that a tax exemption for the acquisition of foreign undertakings did not constitute State aid because it did not exclude any undertaking from benefitting from it. This was because the beneficiaries could not be identified beforehand. However, on appeal, in December 2016, the Court of Justice […]

Subsidies to Incentivise Closure of Excess Capacity Are State Aid

Introduction Very often Member States claim that subsidies they grant as compensation for the costs incurred by the recipient undertakings do not confer an advantage to them and therefore do not constitute State aid. The Court of Justice of the EU [CJEU] has on the whole rejected this claim even if the subsidy is less than the costs which are […]

Lease of Public Land

Introduction Public land is a public asset that must be priced correctly when rented out to third parties. The problem is that in most cases rented out plots of public land are either too large or are in unusual places. In either case, comparable commercial transactions are difficult to find, especially if transactions in such plots are infrequent. In these […]

Compensation for Non-payment of State Aid Can Constitute State Aid

Introduction A perennial question by aggrieved investors who feel cheated by u-turns in public policy is: “May I claim compensation for damage that I have suffered as a result of non-payment of the State aid that was promised to me?” As a result of recent case law, it is now clear that there are several answers to this question: First, […]

i) Compensation Can Be State Aid ii) Failure to Act

Introduction This article reviews two judgments concerning a claim that compensation does not constitute State aid and a complaint that the Commission had failed to act, respectively. The latter case is particularly interesting because it is probably the only judgment in the past decade or two that the Court of Justice has actually upheld a claim that the Commission breached […]

Although Member States Are Free to Determine their Tax Systems, they Must still Conform with State Aid Rules

Introduction On 10 September 2024, the Court of Justice [CJEU] delivered its much anticipated judgment, in case C-465/20 P, Commission v Ireland & Apple. It ruled that Ireland had granted incompatible State aid to Apple through preferential tax rulings.[1] The judgment was the result of an appeal by the Commission against the judgment of the General Court in case T-778/16, Ireland […]

A State-Owned Company Acts as a Private Investor – Part II

Part II: Advantage The Commission, first, explained that the “(80) intervention must be considered as a whole, considering the purpose and timing of the various stages in which AMCO’s intervention is to be made, within the context and contents of the second arrangement proposal. Whether or not a transaction is in line with market conditions must be established through a […]

Sie möchten einen Beitrag einreichen oder zur Weiterentwicklung des Blogs State Aid Uncovered beitragen? Weitere Details finden Sie auf der englischsprachigen Seite.

Gastbeitrag einreichen

Abonnieren Sie unseren Newsletter für aktuelle Informationen zu Entwicklungen, Konferenzen, Seminaren und Veröffentlichungen in Ihrem Interessenbereich.

Newsletter: Jetzt abonnieren