The European Commission accepts ENI commitments.
The ENI case was launched following an energy sector inquiry whose  conclusions, among other things, stressed that ENI's behaviour was  blocking competitors' access to the transport infrastructure that was  needed to import gas into Italy, and this was to the detriment of  consumers. ENI is a major Italian gas supplier and an operator of  transport pipelines, as well as a retailer to customers in the Italian  wholesale market.
 
 Deeming that ENI could be in breach of EU rules by committing an abuse  of a dominant market position, the Commission opened proceedings in May  2007.
 
 ENI submitted a set of commitments which might address the Commission's competition concerns. 
 
 In fact, ENI proposed structural remedies which practically entailed  the full divestiture of all ENI's shares in gas transport pipelines  where the European Competition had competition concerns. 
 
 In February 2010, the Commission accepted the commitments made by ENI towards improving competition in the energy sector. 
 
 Structural remedies were necessary since the European Commission was  aware of the conflict of interests that ENI faced. Any incentive for ENI  to make additional profits from transporting more gas in its pipelines  was more than outweighed by the incentive for ENI to maximise its  profits from selling gas to customers in the Italian wholesale market by  reducing access to that market for potential competitors.
 
 The European Commission therefore strongly welcomed ENI’s decision to  divest its shares in the three pipelines submitted to the investigation,  i.e. TAG, TENP and Transitgas. 
 
 According to the Commission, these remedies have the potential to  improve access to the Italian gas markets and contribute to an  integrated and competitive single European energy market.
 
 If this test of the market is successful, the Commission will take a  final decision as to whether it accepts the commitments and makes them  legally binding on ENI.
