Appetite for challenge
The President of the CAT noted, at the time of the one year anniversary of the commencement of the Act, that challenges brought under the Act have been sparce. So far, interested parties have not demonstrated significant appetite for private challenge. The CAT has speculated that the reason for this could be that the regime "is undeniably different and new" and "potential applicants are treading carefully and adopting a “wait-and-see” approach".
However, as mentioned in section 2, two challenges are currently in the CAT's pipeline, including a challenge to a loan granted by the GMCA.
The GMCA challenge
The GMCA challenge will explore the extent of the "commercial market operator" principle under the Act, which the GMCA relied upon to conclude that the relevant financial support did not constitute a subsidy.
The commercial market operator principle provides that a grant of financial assistance by a public body will not be deemed to be a subsidy where the financial assistance provided is on terms that could be made available in the market by a private operator that is driven by commercial objectives. The principle is therefore similar to the market economic operator principle under the EU state aid regime.
Where a grant of financial assistance does not constitute a subsidy by virtue of the application of the market economic operator principle, public bodies will not need to comply with their obligations as regards subsidies laid out in section 1. The outcome of this challenge will therefore be significant. Especially as we understand that public bodies appear to be leaning heavily on the commercial market operator principle in providing financial assistance to private parties in these early stages of the regime.
Forward looking conclusions
The consensus amongst practitioners is that the UK regime is very much in its early stages. A significant number of further challenges will need to be brought and resolved before the key legal tenets of the regime are fleshed out and can be approached with certainty.
It remains to be seen whether, in light of tight timelines for any challenge and a review standard that is favourable to public bodies, interested parties will seek to bring the challenges needed to develop the law in this area.