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Commission Decision (EU) 2016/1385 of 1 October 2014 on State aid SA.27408 (C 24/10 (ex NN 37/10, ex CP 19/09)) implemented by the authorities of Castilla-La Mancha for the deployment of digital terrestrial television in remote and less urbanised areas (notified under document C(2014) 6846) (Only the Spanish text is authentic) (Text with EEA relevance)
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THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular Article 108(2) thereof,
Having regard to the Agreement on the European Economic Area, and in particular Article 62(1)(a) thereof,
Having called on interested parties to submit their comments pursuant to the provisions cited above, and having regard to their comments,
Whereas:
1. PROCEDURE
2. DESCRIPTION OF THE MEASURE
Area I — including the vast majority of the Spanish population, where the costs of switchover were borne by the broadcasters — 96 % of the territory for the private broadcasters, and 98 % for the public broadcasters. As the broadcasters bore the costs of the switch-over, no aid was granted for the switch-over in Area I.
Area II — less urbanised and remote areas covering 2,5 % of the population who in the past received public and private channels via analogue terrestrial television. However, as the switch to digital technology requires upgrading of the existing and building of new transmission centres, significant investments in the terrestrial network were necessary. Private broadcasters did not have sufficient commercial interest in providing the service in Area II and refused to bear the costs of digitisation. The Spanish authorities established therefore the investigated State aid scheme for upgrading the existing transmission centres and building of new digital ones. This process was commonly referred to as ‘DTT coverage extension’ (i.e. extension of coverage of DTT above what was compulsory for the commercial broadcasters).
Area III — where due to topography it is not possible to provide TV service via the terrestrial platform and where it is done by satellite. The transmission of Free-to-air TV signals in Area III is provided by Hispasat. The fact that the TV service is provided through satellite entails costs for the consumers who have to acquire satellite dishes and set-up boxes.
| a To upgrade their networks, municipalities paid up to EUR 32,6 million to TelecomCLM and Abertis. | ||||
| b Collaboration agreements cover 2 year O&M. In the case of municipalities this amounts to EUR 4,5 million and for operators to EUR 2 million. JCCM Internal Study on the implementation of the National plan for the Transition to DTT in Castilla La-Mancha, p. 53. | ||||
| (Million EUR) | ||||
| Upgrade of transmission centres | New transmission centres | Upgrading the infrastructure of municipalitiesa | Operation & Maintenanceb | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TelecomCLM | 13,2 | 2,26 | 32,6 | To be determined |
| Abertis | 0,25 | — | To be determined | |
| Total | 13,45 | 2,26 | 32,6 | At least 6,5 |
3. COMMENTS FROM SPAIN
4. COMMENTS FROM INTERESTED PARTIES
5. LEGAL ASSESSMENT
Is the aid measure aimed at a well-defined objective of common interest?
Is the aid well designed to deliver the objective of common interest i.e. does the proposed aid address a market failure or other objective? In particular:
Is the aid measure an appropriate instrument, i.e. are there other, better place instruments?
Is there an incentive effect, i.e. does the aid change the behaviour of firms?
Is the aid measure proportional, i.e. could the same change in behaviour be obtained with less aid?
Are the distortions of competition and the effect on trade limited, so that the overall balance is positive?
Calculations should be based on net present value (NPV) of recurrent cost instead of using the plain sum(80),
the study neglects the exponential evolution in the need (and related cost) for new DTT transmission sites due to the remoteness of the last villages to be covered and considers rather a linear expansion,
the study calculates yearly O&M cost of 3 % of equipment cost, while the authorities themselves mention that ‘costs for two years of operating and maintenance are estimated at 20 % of the equipment costs’ (i.e. yearly 10 %)
6. RECOVERY
7. CONCLUSION
HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION:
http://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2005/06/15/pdfs/A20562-20567.pdf
http://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2005/07/30/pdfs/A27006-27014.pdf
Commission Decision 2014/489/EU of 19 June 2013 on State aid SA.28599 (C 23/10 (ex NN 36/10, ex CP 163/09)) implemented by the Kingdom of Spain for the deployment of digital terrestrial television in remote and less urbanised areas (outside Castilla-La Mancha) (OJ L 217, 23.7.2014, p. 52).
Astra challenged the termination of the contract before a court of first instance in Santander (procedure nr. 1728/2009), which on 23 December 2011 ordered the Cantabrian authorities to indemnify Astra for the unjustified termination of the contract. The Court did not find any breach of agreement on the side of Astra that would justify the termination of the agreement. According to the Court, the decision of the Spanish central government to develop the national strategy for DTT was one of the reasons for the termination of the agreement. See judgment 000313/2011 of the Court of First Instance in Santander.
The concession includes the assignment of a frequency for terrestrial broadcasting.
Internet Protocol Television is a term to refer to distribution systems of TV and video signals through an electronic communications network using internet Protocol.
The Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions on transforming the digital dividend into social benefits and economic growth (COM(2009) 586) recommended that the Member States should cease using the 800 MHz band for high-power broadcasting services and fully implement the EU technical harmonisation decision by a certain date agreed at the EU level.
See for instance, for France Aide d'Etat N 666/2009 — Modification du régime d'aides à la TNT 111/2006, for Slovakia State aid N 671/2009 switch-over to digital TV broadcasting in Slovakia. In Spain: State aid SA.28685 (2011/NN) Reception of digital television in Cantabria. It should also be noted that in Spain in remote and less urbanised areas under investigation (so-called Area II) it was not always viable to provide TV signal via DTT platform and therefore satellite transmission was chosen in some cases, both for the transmission between the centres and for transmission to some households (in more detail see chapter 2.2.2.). For the purpose of this decision, all of these installations are still considered to be ‘terrestrial’.
See Decision No 243/2012/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 March 2012 establishing a multiannual radio spectrum policy programme and in particular Article 6(4) therein (OJ L 81, 21.3.2012, p. 7).
See Commission Decision SA.32619 — Compensation of damages for the liberation of digital dividend (OJ C 213, 19.7.2012, p. 41). Due to the complexity of the reorganisation of services and spectrum use, Spain asked for derogation to the date of implementation of Article 6(4) of Decision No 243/2012/EU.
Around 26 national FTA channels and around 30 regional channels.
[…].
It established the obligation of private broadcasters to reach by that date 96 % of the population in their respective areas of coverage, while public broadcasters should reach 98 % of the population in their respective areas of coverage. In this Area I the broadcasters had the obligation to cover these percentages of population with the terrestrial digital television, and they had to bear the costs of digitisation themselves. Hence, no State aid was necessary.
http://www.televisiondigital.es/Documents/PlanNacionalTransicionTDT.pdf
Further classified in Phases I, II and III.
http://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2008/03/06/pdfs/A13832-13834.pdf
The decision regarding the distribution of funds to the development of broadband and to digitisation of television in Area II was left to the regional authorities.
The framework agreements were signed between MIEyT and the Autonomous Communities in 2006 within the framework of the Plan Avanza.
http://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2009/07/02/pdfs/BOE-A-2009-10972.pdf
See, for example, Andalucía's Addendum http://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2009/10/28/pdfs/BOE-A-2009-17108.pdf
In total more than 600 agreements — framework agreements, addenda etc. — were concluded between the authorities concerning the extension of coverage.
The Government of Castilla-La Mancha concluded that it would not have the time necessary to organise a public tendering within the timeframe of the national Plan for the Transition to DTT. Compare: Annexes II — JCCM Internal Study on the implementation of the National plan for the Transition to DTT in Castilla La-Mancha, p. 31.
Castilla-La Mancha Authority: The Implementation of the DTT Transition Plan in Castilla-La Mancha, presentation to the European Commission, 27 October 2010.
Municipalities are equipment owners and they have to pay for Operation and Maintenance (O&M) cost for the first two years of operation.
Collaboration Agreement between the JCCM and the Municipality of Caspueñas, p. 76.
On the basis of ‘DTT Equipment Transfer Agreements’, as signed on 17 May 2013. This was to ensure the provision of O&M of the DTT equipment beyond the 2-year period laid down in the Collaboration Agreements. However, in the case of 3 collaboration agreements Abertis remained the owner of the DTT equipment.
See in particular the judgments: DVB-T Brandenbourg, T-21/06, Germany against Commission, [2009] ECR II-00197, paragraph (69) and Mediaset SpA v Commission, T-177/07, [2010] ECR II-02341.
In the case of Castilla-La Mancha the authorities have not argued that the measure should be considered as an SGEI. It would also not fulfil the Altmark criteria, as- among other reasons — there is no entrustment act, the beneficiaries were not selected on the basis of an open tender, nor has the authority calculated the compensation on the basis of the cost a well-run undertaking would face for delivering such services.
Originally, municipalities had built and owned analogue transmitting centres over the last decades. They received the public funding for digitisation of this infrastructure.
Junta de Castilla-La Mancha submission to the EC (case C24/2010) — deployment of digital terrestrial television in remote and less-urbanised areas in Castilla-La Mancha, submitted on 6 June 2014.
This, however, is in contradiction with the documents provided by Spain. For instance, article 7 of the DTT Equipment Transfer Agreement between TelecomCLM and the JCCM speaks about the DTT services provided by the operator in Area II. Moreover, as set out in recital 73, JCCM itself has argued that Abertis and TelecomCLM should be considered network operators in Area II. It is also in contradiction to the operators' activities as described in detail in recitals 113 to 120.
Dr Julián Seseña ‘Extensión de la cobertura de la señal TDT en Castilla-La Mancha: Estudio comparativo socio-económico de opciones tecnológicas’, September 2008, study realised for theJunta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha (JCCM).
Furthermore, the JCCM argues that a later ‘ex post’ comparative cost breakdown would confirm the conclusion that the terrestrial solution would outweigh the satellite one. This breakdown complements the studies previously submitted by JCCM to the Commission and would show that, even though the initial investment for the terrestrial solution was slightly higher than the satellite one, from the 4th year the terrestrial solution would have been more economically efficient than the platform offered by Astra. For that calculation the JCCM used costs assumptions presented by Astra in a Memorandum of 10 November 2011.
Currently around 900 operators are listed in the Registry.
JCCM decided to implement satellite in scarcely populated centres in Area II where there was no transmitting centre or the cost of digitising the existing terrestrial infrastructure was too high. 100Collaboration Agreements were concluded with municipalities and led to the installation ofsatellite receptors in each household, which was less costly than constructing a new transmitting centre.
The rationale behind this exclusion was to avoid the digitisation of a centre which is already covered by the broadcasters' official DTT coverage obligation in Area I.
A 60 % population coverage in the region could only be achieved (based on certain transmitting parameters) with 8-12 emission centres located in the outskirts of the main cities of the region.Radiodifusión would not have such centres. All those emission centres would take part, for the last 10years, in the official coverage plan for broadcasters. However, no public Administration, national, regional or local, would consider the digitisation of such centres as they would have been already included in the official coverage plan for extension of DTT in the region.
The JCCM provided two examples of Collaboration Agreements signed by Abertis.
Paragraph 22 of Abertis Telecom submission of 31 January 2011.
Astra refers to its internal cost study submitted together with the complaint, carried out in November 2008. The study compares the costs of extension of coverage using both technologies — terrestrial and satellite. The assumptions of the study differ from the ones carried out by Spain and Abertis in various respects, amongst others concerning the costs of satellite antenna and necessity of purchase of an external set-up box for the reception of digital terrestrial TV. The study concludes that the extension of coverage via satellite would not be more expensive than using the terrestrial technology.
Abertis refers to its own cost study conducted in January 2010 to compare the respective costs of using DTT and satellite technology to provide digital television services in Area II. According to this study, the overall cost for using DTT technology would represent about EUR 286 million in a 10-year period, whereas the total costs of using the satellite technology in the same period would amount to approximately EUR 532 million.
SA.28599 — C(2013)3204 final of 19 June 2013.
Such guidance can be found in the relevant documents of the Central government. In particular, the framework agreements signed in December 2008, entitled Framework Collaboration Agreement between the Ministry of Industry, Tourism and Trade and the Autonomous Community of […] for the Development of the National Transition Plan to DTT, foresee a list of activities that will be financed by the central and regional authorities in order to reach the coverage of digital television equal to the existing analogue coverage. On the one hand they refer to existingtransmission centres upgraded by broadcasters (DTT centres deployed in Area I) and, on the other hand, to ‘coverage extensions’ — additional centres that will need to be deployed in order to ensure the same penetration of digital television. Given that only the DTT technology requiresexistence of transmission centres, it seems clear that the actions foreseen concern only the DTT technology. Further, the addenda to the 2008 Framework Agreements signed between October and December 2009 refer to funding for the coverage extension. They define what should beunderstood by ‘action to extend the coverage’, by making explicit reference only to the terrestrial technology.
In meetings with the Autonomous Communities, MIEyT expressed its objective to ensure the transition to DTT also in Area II. This is confirmed by a presentation, publicly available on Internet, and signed by MIEyT. http://www.fenitel.es/asamblea08/PONENCIAS/4SETSI.pdf. It is also confirmed by statements from Autonomous Communities to the Commission's request forinformation. In their replies, the Autonomous Communities explicitly refer to the National Transition Plan adopted by Royal Decree 944/2005 and to the Plan Avanza. See, for example, thereply from Extremadura: ‘Conforme a lo dispuesto (…) del Real Decreto 944/2005 (…) por el quese aprueba el Plan técnico nacional de la televisión digital terrestre, en la cual se recoge la iniciativa local en la extensión de la cobertura de la TDT….’.
Commission decisions: N 622/2003 Digitalisierungsfonds Austria, C25/2004 DVB-T Berlin Brandenburg (paragraph (62)), C34/2006 DVB-T North-Rhine Westphalia (paragraph (83)), C52/2005 Mediaset (paragraph (96)).
Case T-196/04 Ryanair Ltd v European Commission, [2007] ECR II-2379, paragraph (88).
See Joined Cases T-443/08 and T-455/08: Freistaat Sachsen and Land Sachsen-Anhalt (T-443/08) and Mitteldeutsche Flughafen AG and Flughafen Leipzig-Halle GmbH (T-455/08) v European Commission, [2011] ECR II-01311, paragraph (115), where the Court states: ‘The fact that an activity is not engaged in by private operators or that it is unprofitable are irrelevant criteria in regard to the classification of that activity as an economic activity (…).’
Communication from the Commission on the application of the European Union State aid rules to compensation granted for the provision of services of general economic interest (OJ C 8, 11.1.2012, p. 4).
Case C-364/92, SAT/Eurocontrol,[1994] paragraphs 19 to 30, ECR I-43, C-113/07 P, Selex, [2009], ECR I-2207.
Case C-343/95, Calì & Figli, [1997], ECR I-1547, paragraph 22.
Case T-155/04 Selex, [2006] ECR II-4797, paragraphs 73-82, confirmed by C-113/07, Selex [2009], ECR I-2307.
As set out in section 2.1.3 public broadcasters have a 98 % coverage obligation and therefore had to cover Area II by their own means. Moreover, the national public TV channels of RTVE and regional public channels are broadcasted via a different network. While private broadcasters use the Single Frequency Network (SFN) signal, public broadcasters use the Red Global Española (RGE) network. As a result of these differences, the terrestrial facilities require different equipment for each of the two networks.
To the extent that a local operator as Radiodifusión broadcasted the signal of national broadcasters, it might have been eligible for the regional subsidies. However there was no tenderforeseen to invite the potentially interested operators to submit their offers. To the contrary — it was up to the regional authorities to take the initiative, locate the emission centres that were broadcasting the signal of national broadcasters and offer them support for the digitisation. In this respect Radiodifusión has put forward that even though it did broadcast the television signal, it had never been approached by the public administration to discuss the possible financing of the digitisation of its network.
Due to the DTT Equipment Transfer Agreements, in some cases the equipment acquired by TelecomCLM (with funds from the JCCM) was returned to the JCCM after 2 years of operation.
[…].
As set out in recital 24, Abertis dominates the market for the transmission of free to air TV signals on the terrestrial platform in Area I and via its subsidiary Hispasat in Area III. By extending the reach of digital terrestrial TV to Area II, the provision of nation-wide free to air TV signals remains under Abertis' control. The entry of Astra in Area II could generate more platform competition also in Area I and III in the future. By way of analogy, there exists ample literature, which demonstrates the benefits in terms of lowering prices and increasing quality of servicewhen satellite entered the TV market in the US. Prior to satellite entry, cable firms had enjoyedmonopoly power in local geographic areas. Compare for instance: Chenghuan Sean Chu, the effect of satellite entry on cable television prices and product quality, RAND Journal of Economics Vol. 41, No 4, Winter 2010 pp. 730-764.
C52/05 — Digital decoders Italy (OJ C 118, 19.5.2006, p. 10 and OJ L 147, 8.6.2007, p. 1).
As a few examples for companies which have won tenders: Tredess is a manufacturer of digital transmission equipment belonging to the Televes Group which manufactures also digital satellite TV receivers, antennas, dishes (Compare: http://www.tredess.com and http://www.televes.es.) Similar: Mier (http://www.mier.es), Elecnor (http://www.elecnor.es/es/negocios/infraestructuras/telecomunicaciones/) Itelsis, BTESA, Axion, Retegal, Itelazpi, TelecomCLM.
The tenders in Area II regarding the extension of coverage often ask for ‘turn-key’ solutions which require integrating, installing and supplying several components of equipment (dish, antenna, transmitter, satellite receiver). In most cases the solution provided included satellite receiver equipment in order to receive the digital signal already distributed through satellite by the broadcasters.
CLM authorities could not provide any example of a bid submitted by another telecom operator. Some bids had been provided by ‘telecom installers’, however, they were excluded on the basis that they are not registered as telecom operators.
For example, Antena 3, Cuatro, Telecinco, La Sexta, La Siete, Teledeporte, TVE, La2, Canal 24 horas.
Analysis of the television market submitted by Spain in the notification of the measure: Compensation for damages for liberation of the digital dividend in Spain, SA.32619 (2011/N).
T-55/99 Confederación española de transporte de Mercancías (CETM) v Commission of the European Communities [2000] II-3207.
COM(2002) 263 final, ‘eEurope 2005: An information society for all’, COM(2003) 541 final, Communication from the Commission on the transition from analogue to digital broadcasting (from digital ‘switchover’ to analogue ‘switch-off’)' and COM(2005) 204 final, ‘Communication from the Commission on accelerating the transition from analogue to digital broadcasting’.
See ‘Less and better target state aid: a roadmap for state aid reform 2005-2009’, COM(2005) 107 final.
See footnote 68, COM(2003) 541 final.
See, amongst others, N622/03 Digitalisierungsfonds — Austria (OJ C 228, 17.9.2005, p. 12); C25/04 Einführung des digitalen terrestrischen Fernsehens (DVB-T) in Berlin-Brandenburg — Germany (OJ L 200, 22.7.2006, p. 14); C24/04 Digital terrestrial television in Sweden (OJ L 112, 30.4.2007, p. 77); C52/05 Digital decoders Italy (OJ L 147, 8.6.2007, p. 1); N270/06 Subsidies to digital decoders with API — Italy (OJ C 80, 13.4.2007, p. 3); N107/07 Subsidies to IdTV — Italy (OJ C 246, 20.10.2007, p. 2); C34/06 Einführung des digitalen terrestrischen Fernsehens (DVB-T) in Nordrhein-Westfalen (OJ L 236, 3.9.2008, p. 10); SA.28685 Captación de Televisión Digital en Cantabria — Spain (OJ C 119, 24.4.2012, p. 1).
See recital 132 of the Commission's decision C25/04 Einführung des digitalen terrestrischen Fernsehens (DVB-T) in Berlin-Brandenburg — Germany (OJ L 200, 22.7.2006, p. 14).
COM(2002) 263 final, ‘Europe 2005: An information society for all’.
COM(2003) 541 final, ‘Communication on the transition from analogue to digital broadcasting (from digital “switchover” to analogue “switch-off”)’, and COM(2005) 204 final, ‘Communication from the Commission on accelerating the transition from analogue to digital broadcasting’.
COM(2005) 541 final, 1 June 2005.
See above, footnote 56.
Cases T-8/06 -- FAB Fernsehen aus Berlin GmbH v Commission, Judgment of 6 October 2009, [2009] ECR II-04293; C-544/09P — Germany v Commission, Judgment of 15 September 2011, notyet published; T-177/07, Mediaset SpA v Commission, Judgment of 15 June 2010, [2010] ECR II-02341; and C-403/10 P — Mediaset SpA v Commission, Judgment of 28 July 2011, not yetpublished.
See footnote 7.
For instance, a study served as a justification for a choice of a particular technology in a broadband case, see Commission Decision N222/2006 — Aid to bridge the digital divide in Sardinia (OJ C 68, 24.3.2007, p. 6).
The UK chose DTT for the provision of local TV on the basis of an ex ante study carried out by its regulator OFCOM and on the basis of an ex ante consultation of market players. On this basis, the Commission did not insist on carrying out a technologically neutral tender. SA.33980 (2012/N) — Local TV in the UK.
See footnote 34.
There have been several other flaws of the study. For instance, the study does not provide sufficient justification why only 2,85 % of the population of Castilla-La Mancha are taken intoconsideration. This assumption has an impact on the cost effectiveness of the two platforms.
The NPV takes into account whether payments are made today or in the future (future revenues/expenditures are discounted). Already by introducing a rather conservative discount rate of 4 %, the gap between terrestrial and satellite cost shrinks.
If one takes into account updated figures, according to the Commission's own calculations, one obtains a shift in both cost scenarios, with an optimistic estimation of EUR 36 466 648 for the satellite mode and EUR 60 542 411for the terrestrial mode, and a pessimistic estimation of EUR 56 760 211 for the satellite mode and EUR 65 155 166 for the terrestrial mode. These calculations are based on three elements which have complemented the CLM study: (1) the consideration of the NPV approach to recurrent costs over a 10-year horizon, (2) the number of new transmission sites to guarantee the expected additional coverage and (3) the corrected level of O&M costs. The distinction between ‘optimistic’ and ‘pessimistic’ scenarios follows from the original CLM study.
It distinguishes 15 % terrestrial transmission including additional equipment to eliminate the echo and 15 % terrestrial with echo (page 34 of the study).
E.g. France, UK, Italy, Slovakia.
As further underlined by the judgement of the national court. See above, footnote 5.
See footnote 11.
http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/consultations/second-coexistence-consultation/
According to Astra's estimations, the total number of local channels actually broadcasted is limited to 415 channels.
Ley 11/1998, de 24 de abril, General de Telecomunicaciones.
These include services related to public defence and civil protection and operation of telephony network.
Ley 32/2003, de 3 de noviembre, General de Telecomunicaciones.
Article 2.1. of this law provides: ‘The telecommunications services are services of general interest provided under the rules of free competition’.
Annex II to the law 32/2003 contains precise, technologically neutral, definitions of the telecommunications and electronic communications network. ‘Telecommunications: any transmission, emission or reception of signs, signals, writing, images and sounds or information of any nature by wire, radio electricity, optical means or other electromagnetic systems’. ‘Electronic communications network means transmission systems and, where applicable, switching or routing equipment and other resources, including network elements which are not active, which permit the conveyance of signals by wire, radio, optical or other electromagnetic means, including satellite networks, fixed (circuit- and packet-switched, including internet) and mobile terrestrial networks, electricity cable systems, to the extent that they are used for the purpose of transmitting signals, networks used for radio and television broadcasting, and cable television networks, irrespective of the type of information conveyed’.
Cases T-195/01 and T-207/01, Gibraltar, [2002] ECR II-2309, paragraphs 109-111.
Case C-70/72 Commission v Germany [1973] ECR 00813, point 13.
Joined Cases C-278/92, C-279/92 and C-280/92 Spain v Commission [1994] ECR I-4103, point 75.
Case C-75/97 Belgium v Commission [1999] ECR I-030671 points 64-65.
Council Regulation (EC) No 659/1999 of 22 March 1999 laying down detailed rules for the application of Article 108 of the treaty on the functioning of the European Union (OJ L 83, 27.3.1999, p. 1).
If, in individual cases, Spain can demonstrate that a public tender has taken place for the supply of equipment, such amount would be excluded from recovery.
Commission Regulation (EC) No 1998/2006 of 15 December 2006 on the application of Articles 87 and 88 of the Treaty to de minimis aid (OJ L 379, 28.12.2006, p. 5).
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