The Corporate & Commercial Law Society Blog, HNLU

Regulatory Turf Wars Resolved: Rethinking Regulatory Boundaries

NITIN PRADHAN AND MAHADEV KRISHNAN, FOURTH- YEAR STUDENTS AT ARMY LAW COLLEGE, PUNE AND NLUO, ORISSA

INTRODUCTION

The question of jurisdiction between the sectoral regulators and the Competition Commission of India (‘CCI’) is not new. Since the establishment of the CCI, concerns have been raised as to whether it is possible to co-exist with specialised regulators in technologically intensive sectors. The Kerala High Court (‘Court), in Asianet Star Communications Pvt. Ltd. v. CCI & Ors. recently provided some sorely needed clarity by holding that the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (‘TRAI) and the CCI play different but complementary roles.

The Court stressed that the mandate of one of the regulators cannot be displaced by that of the other and that the interaction between the two regulators should be driven by functional harmony, rather than displacement. TRAI comes into play in the structural and technical regulation of the telecom sector, licensing, tariffs, interconnection, and service quality, which provide smooth foundations of operations. In comparison, the mandate of the CCI is to protect competition, ensure that dominance is not abused and to ensure fairness in the market. Naturally, the two spheres overlap. The decision by the Court is important in that it enhances regulatory synergy instead of turf wars and the fact that overlapping jurisdictions, despite being a challenging issue, can be harmonized by working together.

The case raises fundamental questions about institutional balance in markets where both technical oversight and competition enforcement are indispensable. More broadly, it signals the maturing of India’s regulatory architecture, where cooperation rather than conflict may increasingly define the relationship between regulators.

Both regulators tend to claim that they are the first responder during jurisdictional conflicts. TRAI makes such a claim when complaints are technical or regulatory-based, e.g. when complaints are about licensing or interconnection. On the contrary, CCI intervenes when the matter involves anti-competitive practice or damage to the fairness of the market, which may not be within the regulatory jurisdiction of TRAI.

It also gained national attention in the landmark decision of Bharti Airtel Ltd. v/s CCI. There, the Supreme Court ruled that whenever technical issues are involved then the sectoral regulator such as TRAI must suggest an opinion before the CCI steps in, this seemed to tilt the balance towards TRAI. However, this raises an important question; can sectoral regulation and competition law operate side by side without undermining each other?

In this article, the authors explain the different roles of TRAI and CCI and reflect upon what the Asianet v. CCI judgment means for businesses, regulators, and the future of regulatory practice in India. Aiming to shed light on a possible forward path towards a more coordinated and effective framework for addressing overlaps between sector-specific regulation and competition law.

BACKGROUND TO THE DISPUTE

The dispute started when a major Kerala-based multi-system operator (‘MSO’) called Asianet Digital Network Pvt. Ltd. (‘ADNPL’) filed a complaint with the CCI against one of the dominant broadcasters called Star India Pvt. Ltd. (‘SIPL’). ADNPL claimed that SIPL had misused its market dominance in the broadcasting service market by: (i) Granting disproportionately high discounts to a rival MSO, Kerala Communicators Cable Ltd. (KCCL); (ii) Entering into “sham marketing agreements” involving unjustified payments to KCCL; and (iii) Effectively denying market access to ADNPL by conferring undue advantages on its competitor.

On observing a prima facie case, the CCI issued an order of an investigation under Section 26(1) of the Competition Act, 2002 (‘Act’). SIPL opposed the argument that the complaint was clearly within the jurisdiction of TRAI, as it involved tariffs, discounts and interconnection agreements all of which were covered in details by TRAI Act, 1997. According to SIPL, the CCI had interfered with a domain that should be left to the sectoral regulator by intervening. ADNPL responded that TRAI governs technical and structural concerns and that discriminatory pricing and sham agreements are anti-competitive practices which are well within the jurisdiction of the CCI.

Therefore, the High Court was obliged to consider two points: whether the presence of TRAI denied the jurisdiction of CCI, and whether the Section 26(1) of the CCI direction to investigate on the basis of which it ordered a certain investigation without issuing prior notice, infringed natural justice.

COURT’S REASONING AND KEY FINDINGS

In the present case the Court took a measured approach to address the seeming conflict between the TRAI and the CCI. The Court recognised TRAI and CCI as specialised regulators, but with distinct mandates. TRAI’s jurisdiction is deeply rooted in the technical and operational aspects such as licensing, tariff regulation and interconnection. Whereas, the duty of CCI is to ensure the fair market behaviour, investigating abuse of dominance and maintaining competitive equilibrium.

Crucially, the Court declined the notion that an overlap of functions implied the jurisdictional exclusion. Instead, it emphasised upon maintaining functional harmony while echoing the principles laid down in Bharti Airtel case. It reaffirmed that sectoral expertise should not forbid competition oversight where market manipulation is concerned.

Regarding the procedure, the Court clarified that under Section 26(1) of the Act, the CCI is not required to issue prior notice before directing the DG to investigate. Additionally, the Court also clarified that marketing agreements, when used to disguise anti-competitive conduct, clearly falls under jurisdiction of CCI not TRAI’s.

Thus, the judgement upheld the autonomy of the CCI while also reaffirming the value of inter-regulatory cooperation rather than conflict.

EU EXPERIENCE: WHY TURF WARS ARE RARE

This is unlike the country India which has not experienced any conflict of jurisdiction between sectors within the European Union. This can be called the result of a highly orchestrated regulatory design. The Regulation 1/2003 clearly stipulates the application of Articles 101 and 102 TFEU, in parallel to national or sectoral regulations, whereas the ECN+ Directive (2019/1) takes the matter of coordination by supporting the national competition authorities with harmonization of powers and its integration into the European Competition Network (‘ECN’) The ECN serves as the facilitator of coherent enforcement so that the regulatory intersections do not result into the inter-institutional disagreements.

The reduction of redundancy and construction of cooperative enforcement is reflected not only in scholarly analysis, e.g., in Potocnik & Manzour, in European Papers, but also in the ICN, 2025 report. The principle has been entrenched in courts interpretation: in Deutsche Telekom (C-280/08 P) and Telefnicia (C-295/12 P), the CJEU said that even approved by the regulator tariffs could amount to margin compression under Article 102 TFEU. In Meta v Bundeskartellamt (C-252/21) decided more recently, the Court empowered competition authorities to take into account compliance with the GDPR and stressed that cooperation with regulators must be followed.

The combination of these aspects demonstrates that they are established on complementary and coordinating basis, with not much room left to turf wars as seen between TRAI and CCI in India continuously.

PREDATORY PRICING OR PRICE PENETRATION?

In the landmark Bharti Airtel Case, the SC was confronted with the critical question of whether Jio’s initial free pricing model amounted to predatory pricing under the Act. Bharti Airtel alleged that Jio’s deep pricing offering telecom services at virtually no cost was not a legitimate market entry strategy but a means to eliminate competition through price predation. The CCI, however, dismissed the complaint at the prima-facie stage, holding that no case of abuse of dominance was made out, especially since Jio was a new entrant and not a dominant player in the relevant market at the time.

The case not only clarified the line between legitimate price penetration and predatory pricing but also underscored the importance of TRAI’s sectoral expertise which includes regulating tariffs, interconnection agreements, and market entry conditions. It held that CCI should intervene only after TRAI has addressed the relevant technical and regulatory concerns.

The decision is particularly relevant in this case of similar allegations of discriminatory pricing and jurisdictional overlap between CCI and TRAI and therefore, the necessity of coordinated regulation and the balancing of market entry and anti-competitive protection in regulated industries.

IMPLICATIONS FOR BUSINESSES AND REGULATORY PRACTICE

The Asianet judgment is not just an institutional ground score settlement, but has real consequences on the market players. Telecom and media businesses will no longer be able to believe that their conformity to TRAI norms will exempt them of competition scrutiny. In even the most regulated industries, anti-competitive practices like discriminatory pricing, exclusive agreements or fake agreements could be subject to parallel proceedings by the CCI.

The judgement also hereby denoted that both regulatory due diligence is now a two-dimensional authentication, on one hand, sectoral compliance and on the other hand, competitive impact. Marketing agreements, tie-ups, or discount structures will not only have to be tested against TRAI guidelines but also against possible exposure to the competition law.

Furthermore, this facilitates a more cooperative style, switching from a turf war to a joint control that balances technical oversight and equity in the market. This move deters the exploitation of regulatory areas by businesses and ensures a transparent conduct across all operations.

CONCLUSION

The Asianet case is a milestone in the regulation development of India that was in conflict to cooperation. The Kerala High Court in maintaining the concurrent jurisdiction of TRAI and CCI, allowed that regulatory overlaps are not necessarily problematic provided both regulatory authorities are mindful of functional limits. In conjunction with Bharti Airtel, the ruling highlights the fact that the judiciary favours cooperation among regulators as opposed to competition.

Nonetheless, harmonisation through judges is not a complete solution. The convergence of telecom, media and technology sectors has been growing and as a result, overlaps will continue to increase. India should thus institutionalise inter-regulatory coordination by statutory reforms, memoranda of understandings or joint decision making. The UK and EU are good examples where coordination models are clear, and the regulators follow them.  The Indian regulation of the future is not in the strict jurisdiction separation but in the collaborative models that provides predictability to the business, efficiency to the markets and fairness to the consumers.

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