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The International
Association of Drilling Contractors (IADC) was established to undertake
activities for the benefit of the oil and gas drilling industry, to promote
safety, environmental preservation and advances in drilling technology. IADC
is committed to compliance with US, EC, and EEA Antitrust and competition
laws.
All IADC Committee,
Chapter, Subcommittee and other activities will be conducted in compliance
within the letter and spirit of antitrust laws to avoid even the appearance
of impropriety. Each member company is responsible for its own compliance
with such laws. Members are encouraged to consult with legal counsel
regarding antitrust and competition matters when participating in IADC
events and activities.
1. General
Antitrust Guidelines for IADC Members
As an IADC member
serving on an Association Committee, Chapter, Subcommittee, Task Force,
etc., you should acquaint yourself with these guidelines. It is appropriate
for IADC and its members to engage in a variety of beneficial activities,
including development of proposed standards and collection of industry
statistical data. It is prudent for members to exercise caution, however,
and refrain from discussion of or joint action in connection with the
following topics:
1. Current or
future prices, price adjustments or discounts.
2. Profit levels
sought or attained.
3. Dividing or
allocating customers, markets, or territories.
4. Any refusal
to deal with or boycott a customer, potential customer, supplier or
potential supplier.
5.
Activities that would lessen the ability of others to compete or potentially
compete with IADC members.
6. Restrictions
or limits on the availability of services.
7. Any limits on
sales of services or use of equipment.
Any action recommended
by IADC to its members is to be voluntary, not mandatory. Each Producer,
Drilling Contractor or Associate Member must make its own individual
marketplace decision whether to follow any IADC recommendation.
Potentially questionable
recommendations should be approved by IADC’s legal counsel before they are
disseminated. Each IADC member may consult with his/her own counsel or
IADC’s counsel should they have questions concerning the permissibility of
discussing any topic.
2. IADC
Guidelines for Meetings
The
following general guidelines for IADC meetings should help avoid potential
antitrust problems:
1. The
Chairperson of the meeting should control the meeting.
2. In advance of
a meeting, a notice of the meeting should be sent to each invitee and a copy
sent to other interested parties. The notice may contain an agenda or refer
to a website location where the agenda can be found.
3. The meeting
should be conducted in accordance with the agenda, though items may be
discussed in a different order than listed. In general, subjects not
included on the agenda should be raised under Other Business and considered
for inclusion on the agenda for a future meeting.
4.
If a member is uncertain
about the legality of a particular topic, he or she should check with legal
counsel, the Chairman of the meeting or IADC staff. If an attendee brings
up for discussion at a meeting a subject of doubtful legality, he
should immediately be informed that the subject is not a proper one
for discussion. In the absence of counsel, the Chairperson, IADC staff or
any member present who is aware of the legal implications of a discussion of
the subject should halt the discussion. Should the discussion continue,
despite protest, the Chairperson or IADC staff should declare the meeting
closed and all the attendees should leave.
5. General
minutes of meetings should be kept and maintained for future reference at
the committee specific site on IADC’s website for a period of 9-12 months.
Upon removal from the web site, they should be archived in the meeting
records for a minimum of three years. Matters subject to attorney-client
privilege will not be posted on the website, but will be included in the
meeting records.
6. Secret or
"rump" meetings held at the time of the regular meeting should be strictly
avoided. Such meetings seldom have a purpose except to discuss activities
of doubtful legality, and can seriously jeopardize legitimate activities,
and create a risk that those activities may` be investigated.
7. During
meetings there should be no recommendations with respect to "sensitive"
antitrust subjects, as listed below. In the less sensitive areas, such
as standardization activities, recommendations may be permissible.
3. Prohibited Discussion Topics
Specifically, the
following topics are matters that should not be discussed at IADC meetings:
1. Current or
future prices. (Discussion of past prices also warrants care if their
disclosure may significantly influence future pricing decisions.)
2. Profit levels
sought or attained.
3.
Price
adjustments.
4.
Cash
discounts.
5.
Credit
terms.
6. Dividing
up or allocating customers, markets or territories, or discussing responses
to proposals.
7.
Any limits
on sales of drilling services or use of equipment in specific geographic
areas or against specific customers, potential customers, suppliers, or
potential suppliers.
8.
Any
refusal to deal with or boycott a customer, potential customer, supplier, or
potential supplier.
9.
Activities
that would lessen the ability of others to compete or potentially compete in
the industry.
Revision 6 - 9th March 2009
Download these
guidelines (PDF format, about 52 KB)
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