K-Line Guilty of 'cartel conduct'

Friday, August 2, 2019

Japanese shipping firm Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd (K-Line) was convicted of criminal cartel conduct and ordered to pay a A$34.5 million ($23.50 million) fine by a federal court, Australia's competition regulator said on Friday.

K-Line’s fine is the largest ever criminal penalty imposed under the Competition and Consumer Act, according to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC).

The company was found to have engaged in a cartel with other shipping companies in order to fix prices on the transportation of cars, trucks, and buses to Australia between 2009 and 2012, ACCC said.

K-Line pleaded guilty to the charges last year following a criminal investigation by the ACCC, and is the second Japanese shipping company to be convicted of cartel conduct by a Australian court.(reut.rs/2ysLcBM)

In 2017, Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha was convicted by Australia's Federal Court and fined A$25 million ($20 million) for its part in the activity.

Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha could not be immediately reached for a comment by Reuters.

Reporting by Niyati Shetty

Categories: People & Company News Contracts Legal Finance Government Update Intermodal

Related Stories

Iran War Hits Natural Gas Harder than Oil

Bahrain Proposes Use of Force to Protect Hormuz Shipping

Green Ammonia Shines When Regulation is Considered, says study

Current News

Russian Oil Producers Threaten Force Majeure Over Baltic Port Attacks

BIMCO: 130 Container Ships Stranded in Persian Gulf

Hapag-Lloyd Earnings Down from Last Year

Transneft Looks to Redirect Oil From Attacked Baltic Ports

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News