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European Oil Markets
30JUN

Brussels used antitrust to reopen WhatsApp

4 min read
17:30UTC

The Commission ordered Meta to restore free WhatsApp Business API access for rival AI assistants within five working days, reaching for a competition power that predates the sovereignty agenda.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Where European AI loses distribution, the sovereignty law cannot reach; antitrust does.

The European Commission ordered Meta to restore free access to WhatsApp's Business Application Programming Interface (API) for rival artificial-intelligence assistants, giving the company five working days to comply. Adopted on Tuesday 9 June as Article 102 antitrust interim measures, the order set a compliance deadline around 15 June 1. Article 102 is the EU competition-law power to order emergency intervention against imminent market harm. Meta AI had been the only assistant available on WhatsApp since January 2026, after Meta's October 2025 terms barred third-party assistants and a March revision introduced pricing The Commission said worked like a closed door for startups.

Meta called the order "regulatory overreach", said it will appeal, and faces fines of up to 10% of global turnover if it does not comply 2. The measures run until June 2029 or the end of the investigation. Competition Commissioner Teresa Ribera said The Commission was acting to prevent harm "before it is too late" 3.

CADA, the sovereignty package's cloud law, governs which providers may host public-sector data and does nothing for the channels where European consumer AI actually reaches people . WhatsApp has more than 600 million European users, and Mistral's assistant had been locked out of it for five months. To reach that channel, Brussels used a competition power that predates the whole sovereignty agenda.

This Article 102 decision is distinct from the parallel Digital Markets Act case and from the Supplementary Statement of Objections The Commission sent Meta on 15 April; it is the one that carries the five-day clock. The contrast with the DMA track is sharp: von der Leyen has personally held the Google self-preferencing fine for weeks , yet moved fast here under the older power.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

WhatsApp is the messaging app that most Europeans use for their day-to-day conversations. It is owned by Meta (the company that also owns Facebook and Instagram). In October 2025, Meta changed its rules so that only Meta's own AI assistant could work inside WhatsApp. Mistral, the French AI company, and other European AI providers were locked out of a platform used by more than 600 million Europeans. On 9 June 2026, the EU's competition regulator ordered Meta to reopen the door within five working days. The legal power it used is called Article 102, which is a competition law that has existed since 1957. The EU's new cloud sovereignty law, adopted on 3 June, does not cover private messaging apps at all, so regulators had to use the older tool instead. Meta called the order regulatory overreach and plans to fight it in court.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

CADA's scope was deliberately restricted to public-sector procurement during the three-slip drafting period (March to June 2026), as the Commission traded off consumer-platform coverage to reduce US trade-framework objections. WhatsApp's API terms, the primary distribution channel for European AI assistants reaching 600 million European users, sit outside CADA's scope, governed by Meta's unilateral terms-of-service update rather than EU law.

Meta's October 2025 terms change that locked out third-party assistants came eight months after the original Chips Act and in the same period that CADA was being drafted. The Commission had no instrument in that law to address it; reaching for Article 102, a power dating to the 1957 Treaty of Rome, was the only tool that could move in five days.

Escalation

Three enforcement instruments against Meta and Google converge in the same six-week pre-recess window: this Article 102 order, the DMA parallel WhatsApp case, and the expected Google DMA fine . If Meta wins a suspension on appeal, the Article 102 instrument's credibility as a fast-response tool is weakened. If the Commission enforces a fine before Meta complies, it tests whether the 10% ceiling is a deterrent or a price to pay for delay.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    First use of Article 102 interim measures specifically targeting AI assistant distribution on a consumer messaging platform, creating a template applicable to other gatekeeper platforms where CADA has no reach.

    Short term · Reported
  • Risk

    If Meta wins an appeal suspension, the five-day compliance clock becomes a tool platforms can slow via litigation, undermining the emergency instrument's deterrent value.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    CADA's exclusion of consumer platforms from sovereignty obligations is now exposed as a structural gap that competition law must fill reactively, rather than CADA addressing it systematically.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #9 · EU chip share slips to 9% as law takes hold

European Commission· 18 Jun 2026
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