Tamara Hunter and Zali Anderson explore the substantial penalties imposed by the Federal Court against Qteq and its executive, Mr Simon Ashton, following its earlier liability decision finding attempted cartel conduct
The Federal Court of Australia in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Qteq Pty Ltd (Penalty) [2026] FCA 356 has imposed $5 million in pecuniary penalties on Qteq Pty Ltd (Qteq) and $1 million on its CEO and Executive Chairman, Mr Ashton. This follows the Federal Court’s finding that both Qteq and Mr Ashton made 5 attempted cartel contraventions. Mr Ashton also received a non-indemnification order preventing him from using his insurance to satisfy his penalty.
The significant penalties further demonstrate the weight the Federal Court puts on deterrence, personal accountability and corporate compliance in cartel cases.
Facts and Background
In April 2025, the Court found that:
- Qteq, a supplier of permanent downhole gauges and related ‘gauge works’ to coal seam gas (CSG) well operators, and Mr Ashton had, on five occasions, attempted to enter into contracts, arrangements or understandings (CAUs) with competitors or likely competitors containing cartel provisions.
- Those attempts were directed at:
- protecting Qteq’s position as the supplier of gauge works to QGC Pty Ltd (QGC), a Shell‑operated CSG joint venture, and
- limiting broader competitive threats in gauge works, completions and drill stem testing.
- Mr Ashton, in his personal capacity, also attempted to induce the relevant competitors, or likely competitors, to enter each of the five CAUs.
A sixth alleged attempt involving Firetail Energy Services Pty Ltd failed because the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) could not establish that Qteq and Firetail were in, or likely to be in, competition for the relevant services, and so did not meet the ‘competition condition’. This attempt played no role in the penalty decision.
Our summary of the liability judgment can be found here.
In addition to the ‘usual’ penalty factors, the judgment provides a detailed framework for ‘extra-curial detriment’. In summary, reputational harm, lost current and future contracts are relevant to penalty assessment – but only to the extent they independently reduce the need for deterrence, as the court will not double-count ordinary consequences of contravention. A failed tender (with limited evidence tying the ‘failure’ to these proceedings), the sale of the business itself (with limited evidence tying the reduced business value to these proceedings), the personal impact of Mr Ashton (absent evidence), and the respondents’ ordinary legal costs were factors that did not count towards the court’s consideration of extra-curial detriment. The framework from this judgment is likely to be useful for future penalty decisions, as a general analysis about how reputational and commercial fallout should be considered in relation to penalties.
The calculation of pecuniary penalties
Maximum penalty
The applicable maximum aggregate penalties under the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) (CCA) at the time the conduct occurred were:
- Qteq: $50 million (5 x $10 million)
- Mr Ashton: $2.5 million (5 x $500,000)
The maximum penalties have since significantly increased (see our analysis of these changes here), but the court applies the regime as it was at the time of the contraventions.
Considerations in deciding the applicable penalty
In determining the appropriate pecuniary penalty, the CCA requires the court to have regard to:
- The nature and extent of the act or omission and any loss or damage caused
- The circumstances in which the conduct took place
- Whether the person has previously been found to have engaged in similar conduct.
In making his judgment Justice Bromwich considered the following:
| Principle | Respondents’ arguments | Court’s findings |
| Deterrence as the primary objective
(Note: the Qteq business was sold prior to the delivery of the penalty judgment) |
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Note: many of the court’s findings under the below principles are also made with the intention of achieving deterrence |
| Course of conduct and totality |
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| Nature and seriousness of the conduct |
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| Financial motivation and anticipated benefits |
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| Corporate size, financial position and capacity to pay
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Penalties imposed
The parties did not place specific reliance on any comparative cases. On the balance, Justice Bromwich concluded that a $5 million penalty for Qteq was appropriate to achieve the objective of deterrence. To achieve the same objective, Mr Ashton was handed a $1 million penalty and ordered not to call on any insurance policy for payment of the penalty.
Key takeaways
- Deterrence remains the primary objective of the pecuniary penalties for cartel conduct.
- Attempted conduct does not receive a discount where it is in ‘extremely difficult or unusual circumstances’, if anything it increases to further deter cartel conduct in these situations.
- The maximum penalties have significantly increased since the conduct occurred, so future contraventions are expected to attract even higher penalties.
- Divestment of a business is unlikely to materially reduce the penalty, due to the need for general deterrence.
- If a respondent relies on ignorance of unlawfulness, or some other benign state of mind, in mitigation, that state of mind must be proved on the balance of probabilities; the absence of a finding that the respondent knew the conduct was unlawful is not enough.
- Extra-curial detriment may be relevant to the penalty only to the extent it has an independent deterrent effect that reduces the need for deterrence, and care must be taken not to give separate weight to ordinary consequences of contravention proceedings or to overlapping matters that would involve double-counting.
