The Mercury

Dura agrees to pay fine for its role in collusion

- Roy Cokayne

GEOTECHNIC­AL specialist­s Dura Soletanche-Bachy has agreed to pay a fine of R988 589.08 for collusive tendering on 11 constructi­on projects.

This follows Dura entering into a settlement agreement with the Competitio­n Commission on these contravent­ions of the Competitio­n Act.

The penalty constitute­d about 2 percent of Dura’s total South African turnover in its financial year to December 2014. The Competitio­n Tribunal yesterday confirmed the settlement agreement.

It follows the commission in May 2009 initiating a complaint against Dura for certain alleged collusive arrangemen­t with competitor­s in the market for piling, lateral support, grouting and geotechnic­al drilling investigat­ive services.

In terms of this arrangemen­t, projects were routinely divided among the members of the cartel in accordance with a scorecard, which largely correspond­ed to their market share.

Investigat­ion

The commission in February 2010 initiated a further complaint against Dura for alleged collusive tendering related to the market for geotechnic­al drilling investigat­ion services and consolidat­ed these two complaints because they largely related to the same respondent­s.

Layne Quilliam, the legal counsel for the commission, said the commission in August 2009 initiated a further complaint against Hochtief, Concor, Group Five, Dura, Stefanutti, Nishimatsu Constructi­on and Grinaker LTA for alleged collusive tendering, or alternativ­ely price-fixing, related to the Durban undersea tunnel project.

The commission’s investigat­ion found that Dura, Esorfranki, Geomechani­cs, Rodio, Diabor and Grinaker LTA agreed on a formal arrangemen­t, which governed how tendering processes should be conducted by these firms, to allocate work. This arrangemen­t set out procedures to be followed by these firms once a tender was advertised to ensure the tender was awarded to the firm whose turn it was to get the work.

Representa­tives of the firms compiled and managed the scorecards in line with an agreed percentage of the market share allocated to each of the firms. The 11 projects affected by these arrangemen­ts were the Inner Circle Building in Johannesbu­rg; the Mercure Hotel in Johannesbu­rg; two tenders for the Centurion Gate project in Pretoria; the Lusip Dam in Swaziland; the Lesotho Highlands Water Project; the Gautrain Rapid Rail Link project; phase one and two of the Braamhoek Dam; the Coega harbour diaphragm wall; and Durban harbour tunnel project.

The number of the projects affected by the arrangemen­t

Quilliam said that the complaints initiated by the commission preceded the invitation for constructi­on firms to participat­e in the fast-track settlement process, which meant Dura could not settle these complaints in terms of that process. The tribunal also confirmed a consent agreement entered into between listed constructi­on company Basil Read and the commission in terms of which Basil Read was granted conditiona­l immunity for cover price-fixing on a tender for the rehabilita­tion of sectors of the P65/2 road from Parys to the N1.

The tribunal heard Basil Read reached agreement with Wascon and Meyker Re-Teng Constructi­on on the submission of cover prices for this tender.

In terms of this agreement, Basil Read and Wascon would bid an inflated price to enable Meyker to win this tender, with Meyker, Wascon and Basil Read also agreeing to pay a loser’s fee to each of the losing bidders.

Quilliam said Meyker was awarded the tender by Sanral but for reasons unknown to the commission only paid a portion of the loser’s fee to Basil Read.

Wascon and Meyker have since been liquidated. THE SUPPLY of Coca-Cola cans might be disrupted over the festive season following the failure of a local canmaker and the Food and Allied Workers Union (Fawu) to break a stalemate in a deadlock over remittance of R8 520 agency shop fees. Fawu secretaryg­eneral Katishi Masemola said yesterday Coca-Cola Canners in Wadeville in Germiston were not coming to the negotiatio­n table despite workers at the plant having embarked on a strike since November 6, to demand the remittance of the fees. The agency shop fees are in respect of 71 workers at the plant, who are not unionised, but for which Fawu wants deductions from their salaries because they benefited from the collective bargaining of the union. “This strike will continue indefinite­ly and other Coca Cola bottling companies and SABMiller may see our members embarking in sympathy strike,” he said. – Banele Ginindza

METALS

PLATINUM demand will probably beat supply for a fifth year in 2016 on more industrial usage, even as recycling rebounds, according to Johnson Matthey. Palladium’s deficit may narrow. Vehicle makers would buy more platinum to use in devices that curbed harmful emissions from vehicles, though the growth rate would be slower than in the last two years, the London-based company said in a report. While slumping platinum and steel prices had reduced the incentive to scrap older cars this year, there might be a “double-digit” increase in the amount of metal recycled from vehicles in 2016, it said. Even after years of deficits, prices are at the lowest since 2008 amid ample supplies of stored metal. This year’s shortage probably narrowed 35 percent. – Bloomberg

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