1. Introduction:
what is at stake in this debate?
1. The title of the motion underlying
this rapporteur mandate sounds highly technical. But the issue at
stake is in fact a highly political one. It gives rise to polemic,
ideologically charged debates, in particular in the context of the
negotiation process on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
(TTIP) between the European Union and the United States and the
Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) between the European
Union and Canada. For the opponents of TTIP and CETA, the proposed
Investor–State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) clause (now: Investment
Court System (ICS)) has been one of the most controversial issues.
Others stress the opportunities for growth and job creation provided
by TTIP and CETA in general and investment protection (including
ISDS/ICS) in particular, from a market-liberal economic perspective.
2. The dramatic debates in the European Parliament and its relevant
committees on a motion for a resolution aimed at giving guidance
to the European Commission for the ongoing negotiations with the
United States
shows how much is at stake. The vote in
the European Parliament plenary was postponed at short notice in
view of persisting strong disagreements, not least concerning ISDS.
Another indication
for the size of the stakes is the overwhelming response to the European
Commission’s public call for submissions from civil society: more
than 150 000 submissions were made, many of which represent powerful
trade unions, business associations and non-governmental organisations
(NGOs).
Most recently, the signature of
CETA by Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau and the representatives
of the European Union had to be postponed in dramatic circumstances
because the leader of the Belgian region of Wallonia refused to
authorise the central government to agree to the signature, not
least because of objections to the ISDS/ICS clause included in CETA.
3. In my view, and clearly also in that of the movers of the
new motion on “Investor protection and human rights”
which I have been invited to take
into account in this report, ISDS/ICS raises serious questions concerning
the impact of these mechanisms on human rights (including social
rights) and on the rule of law, which are the Council of Europe’s
core values. ISDS/ICS raises procedural concerns (Article 6 of the
European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, “the Convention”))
such as the alleged lack of transparency, doubts about the impartiality
of arbitrators and possible conflicts of interest. These mechanisms
also raise substantive legal concerns. One of them is the risk of
“regulatory chill”, when democratically elected governments fearing being
sued before non-State tribunals empowered to award high amounts
of damages against them may hesitate to take necessary regulatory
measures to protect the environment, workers’ rights or (other)
human rights such as freedom of association, expression, information
and the right to privacy. Another substantive concern is that for
democracy and national sovereignty, when States are prevented by
agreements entered into by previous governments from adapting their
legislation and practice to changes in the factual situation or in
political priorities.
4. This said, the protection of property is also a human right,
protected in Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention (ETS
No. 177), and this right also applies to foreigners, including legal
persons (corporations). In my view it is therefore inadmissible
to argue, as did Mr Alfred de Zayas during the hearing at the committee meeting
on 19 April 2016,
that foreign
investors do not deserve or require legal protection because they merely
exploit the host States and are free to take into account the risk
of expropriation and other political risks in their investment and
pricing decisions.
5. The political core issue is the balancing of interests between
(foreign) investors and the host State and its stakeholders. In
actual fact, these interests are not as far apart as the heated
discussions in the public fore suggest. Investors need stability
and predictability of the conditions determining whether the planned investment
will be financially viable, whilst governments of host States want
to remain free to adopt and enforce any regulations they deem in
the public interest in areas such as the protection of the environment,
labour rights, social protection etc., also vis-à-vis foreign companies.
But governments also need to attract long-term foreign investments
in order to promote sustainable economic growth, job creation and
transfers of technology. Such investments will fail to materialise
if the conditions investors require are not met. In unstable conditions, the
only investments made will be “hit-and-run” operations where investors
try to extract very high profits from a speculative investment during
a short period of time for which they can foresee being safe from
expropriation or destructive regulation. Also, in the absence of
effective formal protection mechanisms, informal self-protection
strategies are likely to spread, including bribery and other forms
of interference in the political process in the host countries.
So, really, it is in (almost) everyone’s interest that investment
conditions are stable in the long term and that their evolution
remains predictable.
6. The protection of foreign investments is thus not only required
by the European Convention on Human Rights, but it also makes economic
sense. Effective protection of foreign investments encourages long-term, sustainable
investments which promote economic growth and create jobs. This
requires reliable, efficient and neutral dispute resolution mechanisms,
which also contribute to levelling the playing field between large corporations
and small and medium-sized businesses. These need investment protection
mechanisms most urgently as they do not have the political clout
needed to secure bilateral diplomatic protection by their home State,
nor the resources to engage in informal self-protection strategies
in the host State.
7. In this report, I will take a closer look at the advantages
and drawbacks of ISDS mechanisms on the one hand and purely national
remedies on the other. In assessing the concerns raised by ISDS,
care must be taken to distinguish those problems which could really
be caused by international arbitration mechanisms taking the place
of national judicial remedies from those which result from the tenor
of the substantive clauses of the investment protection treaty.
As a matter of fairness and legal certainty, which is also part
of the rule of law, if States make unreasonable promises in order
to attract foreign investments, they should not enter into, or change
such clauses and not count on making them inoperable because of
the expected “national bias” of the State courts. As we will see,
the proposed ICS may well turn out to be a valid compromise solution
which can avoid most, if not all, the drawbacks of the two other
options.
2. Current status of ISDS
8. ISDS clauses allow foreign
investors to sue the host State before ad hoc tribunals set up by
the parties to the agreement whenever a dispute on the application
of the investment agreement arises. European States have concluded
thousands of international investment agreements (IIAs)/bilateral
investment treaties (BITs) with ISDS clauses with third countries
and among themselves. ISDS is an almost-universal feature of the 3 268 IIAs
in force as of 2014.
Whilst several States,
in particular in Latin America, have denounced ISDS clauses, in
particular following high-profile cases that went against them,
a number of Western countries have concluded IIAs without ISDS,
for instance:
- two free trade
agreements by Australia immediately following an adverse ISDS ruling
against Australia; but Australia has subsequently reverted to including
ISDS in its investment agreements;
- the EU–Ukraine Association Agreement; but this agreement
anticipates adding investment protection at a later stage.
9. The European Union as a distinct entity only gained competence
over investment agreements when the Treaty of Lisbon entered into
force on 1 December 2009 (see below),
which
is why its only agreements so far are with Ukraine and Canada (see
below). None of the European Union’s agreements so far include standard
ISDS clauses. However, EU member States have included ISDS clauses
in 1 365 IIAs with non-EU States, plus about 190 among themselves.
10. Although most treaty disputes are resolved bilaterally, between
States, IIAs provide remedies to private investors who may be unable
to enlist their home State’s diplomatic apparatus in support. The
creation of a neutral, efficient dispute settlement mechanism is
intended to encourage foreign direct investment by reassuring investors
who worry that the host State’s courts may be biased against them
or process their claim inefficiently.
11. IIAs differ in many aspects, although the investor and the
respondent State are usually invited to select one arbiter each,
with a third chosen by agreement between the two. Otherwise, procedural
rules vary widely though the World Bank’s International Center for
the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), the United Nations
Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) and the International
Chamber of Commerce (ICC)’s rules on arbitration have set standards
that are widely used in practice.
12. By 2014,
608 ISDS claims
were known to have been filed,
and 356 had been resolved.
Of those arbitrations, 37% ruled for the State, 28% were settled,
and 27% ruled for the investor (only 25% awarding monetary damages).
As claims generate legal costs of US$8 million on average,
it
is likely that only the strongest claims enter the system at all.
13. By 2014, 40% of claims were filed against developed States,
continuing a trend of increasing claims against them. 80% of investors
filing claims were from developed States (64% from the European
Union). Many of these investors are multi-national companies, which
are most frequently based in developed States.
14. ISDS opponents point out that developing countries are nonetheless
most vulnerable to frivolous ISDS claims as they may be obliged
to agree to expensive settlements in order to avoid litigation costs
they cannot afford. NGOs such as the Corporate Europe Observatory
point out that industry
insiders first lobby governments to enter into IIAs with unclear,
overly broad investment protection provisions and ISDS clauses and
then push investors to file numerous claims from which the same
people benefit in turn as highly paid lawyers or arbitrators.
3. Rule
of law and human rights concerns raised by ISDS
15. As indicated above (paragraph
3), concerns about ISDS include procedural and substantive issues. Regarding
procedure, ISDS is considered as lacking transparency and, linked
to this, predictability of outcomes. Arbitrators, typically industry
insiders or lawyers recruited from a small circle of specialised
firms, are considered as biased in favour of investors and lacking
sensitivity with regard to the public interest of the host State,
whose democratically legitimate political decisions they tend to
set aside too readily.
Regarding substantive
issues, opponents of ISDS point to the “regulatory chill” resulting
from the threat of high damages awards based on overly broad interpretations
of different types of investment protection clauses. The following reflections
are based on the European Convention on Human Rights as interpreted
by the European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”).
3.1. Rule
of law issues raised by ISDS
16. The concept of the rule of
law includes, inter alia,
the right to a fair trial (Article 6 of the Convention), which in
turn requires that disputes are resolved transparently, by an “independent
and impartial tribunal”. The rule of law also requires a minimum
of legal certainty and predictability of outcomes and the respect
of equality before the law, also in terms of access to justice.
All of these issues come into play in the assessment of ISDS.
3.1.1. Applicability
of Article 6 of the Convention (right to a fair trial)
17. The Court has applied Article
6 (right to a fair trial) to civil disputes that mirror the claims
brought by investors under ISDS, including refusal of a license
(
Benthem v. the Netherlands), refusal to approve
a property-sale contract (
Ringeisen v.
Austria),
expropriation
of land (
Sporrong and Lönnroth v. Sweden), and land compensation
proceedings (
Lithgow and others v. the
United Kingdom). The specific character of the legislation,
the parties’ status (any “legal person” is protected, not just natural
persons or citizens of the respondent State), and the type of judicial
body adjudicating the claims do not matter, only that the body has the
authority to settle the dispute (
Ringeisen).
In
Regent Company v. Ukraine, the
Court found that an arbitration tribunal created by a voluntary
contract remained subject to Article 6 requirements, and that the voluntary
nature of the contract did not constitute a waiver of these rights
enshrined in Article 6.
18. Article 6 requires an “independent and impartial tribunal
established by law”. ISDS tribunals generally seem to meet these
three standards. The State’s ratification of the underlying IIA
establishes the tribunal by law. Since both the investor and the
respondent State participate in the selection of arbitrators, these
can be expected to be independent of the government and, also based
on the process of selection by the parties, could be expected to
be impartial. By contrast, foes of ISDS claim that arbitrators (including
those appointed by governments) tend to be generally biased in favour
of investors, as they are selected from a small pool of industry
insiders, in particular high-powered law firms, who have a vested
interest in stimulating more such profitable litigation by generously
accommodating investors’ claims.
But others point to empirical
studies showing that arbitrators have diverse backgrounds, including
as national judges and civil servants.
19. Most Article 6 rights can be waived, but the waiver must be
freely entered into, on the basis of adequate information; and it
must be unequivocal and not violate public order or an important
public interest.
The procedure for
arbitration is spelled out in IIAs, so the investor is knowledgeable
about the process and its limitations. Because investors can as
a rule also pursue their claim in the host State’s courts (unlike
the compulsory arbitration in
Regent
Company), they have valid alternatives and make a free
choice to use the ISDS protocol.
3.1.2. In
particular: ISDS and transparency
20. Transparency of arbitration
proceedings is the greatest procedural concern with ISDS tribunals.
While the rules laid down in IIAs differ, many do not require any
publication of decisions or documents submitted during the proceedings.
In some cases it is not even required to notify non-parties that
a claim has been filed or is being arbitrated. The International
Chamber of Commerce’s Arbitration Rules allow a tribunal to make
the entire arbitration process confidential “upon the request of
any party”.
Such
secrecy can indeed be an obstacle to the protection of Article 6
rights and also stand in the way of developing a “case law” guiding
the interpretation of substantive rules, to the detriment of legal
certainty and the predictability of outcomes.
21. Under Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights,
judgments must contain sufficient reasoning to address each party’s
factual and legal arguments (e.g.
Ruiz
Torija v. Spain). This
cannot be verified if the judgment and even the filings and briefs
are kept away from the public eye and the courts. According to the
European Court of Human Rights, judgments should also be made available
to the public (e.g.
Ryakib Biryukov v.
Russia), which
is expressly forbidden by the confidentiality agreements in some
ISDS proceedings.
22. In response to these valid concerns, there has been a trend
towards more transparency in ISDS proceedings. For example, the
2013 version of UNCITRAL’s Arbitration Rules that IIAs frequently
refer to when defining ISDS procedures, has incorporated a set of
“Rules on Transparency” that requires public filing of notices,
briefs, and decisions/settlements in an online repository.
The Rules
declare that “the arbitral tribunal shall ensure that [transparency]
objectives prevail”,
but nevertheless allows treaties
or even arbitrators in individual cases the discretion to permit
exceptions.
This clearly
gives rise to concern. Also, the new rules in principle apply only
to IIAs that invoke UNCITRAL’s Arbitration Rules after 1 April 2014
(either being ratified after that date or both parties agreeing
after that date to apply the Rules on Transparency). The United
Nations Convention on Transparency in Treaty-based Investor–State
Arbitration (Mauritius Convention on Transparency), which was opened
for signature on 17 March 2015 could and should speed up this process.
3.1.3. ISDS
as a threat to legal certainty
23. Legal certainty, the principle
that those subject to a law must know how to regulate their conduct
in order to comply with the law, may also be jeopardised by ISDS.
Ad hoc tribunals are still not required to even consider prior decisions,
and the above-mentioned transparency problems mean that unpublished
or unelaborated/unargued decisions leave future tribunals without
any guidance allowing them to rule consistently.
24. The European Court of Human Rights has recently found violations
of Article 6 because of “uncertainty – be it legislative, administrative
or arising from practices applied by the authorities”.
This has been the
case whether a single entity produced inconsistent rulings,
or
different entities within the State persisted in producing irreconcilable
rulings (
Ştefănică and others v. Romania). The
current shroud of secrecy over ISDS arbitrations prevents any assessment
of whether a State or an investor is treated consistently enough
to provide legal certainty.
3.1.4. ISDS
as a threat to equality before the law and equal access to justice
25. ISDS is a legal remedy that
is only available to foreign investors, not local investors, nor
States, nor individuals claiming to be victims of the foreign investor’s
business activities. Local competitors must content themselves with
local courts, though in Europe they can also apply to the European
Court of Human Rights if they have exhausted all locally available
remedies and consider that their human rights have been violated. Governments
(and local citizens) cannot seize ISDS tribunals in order to hold
foreign investors to account, for example for the pollution of the
environment or the violation of social rights.
26. But such differences in treatment are only discriminatory
and therefore violations of the equality principle or the principle
of equal access to courts if they are not justified by objective
reasons. In this regard, the State has the whole panoply of sovereign
prerogatives at its disposal: it can pass laws to promote the public
interest and enforce them using all instruments of public power.
The State can take unilateral action directly, and it is up to the
investor to defend himself if he believes that this action violates
any protected rights.
27. By contrast, a local investor is also at the receiving end
of the State’s unilateral measures, in the same way as a foreign
investor. Why grant his foreign competitor an additional remedy
before an international tribunal? This differential treatment is
seen by some as an unjustified privilege for foreign investors.
It can only be justified
if foreign companies are indeed at a disadvantage compared to local
investors when it comes to the impartiality of national courts.
Numerous examples of “national bias” have been presented by proponents of
ISDS. They concern not only the “usual suspects” (developing or
other countries with known weaknesses of the justice system), but
also developed countries with generally strong courts such as the
United States.
Such cases are the very reason why
industry strongly lobbies in favour of ISDS, including in IIAs between developed
countries (such as TTIP and CETA).
28. But this “compensatory privilege” (compensating, in the view
of proponents of ISDS, the alleged “national bias” of national courts)
must of course not be abused by domestic companies posing as foreign
ones by the use of creative ownership structures, as is reportedly
frequently the case. In order to avoid such “forum shopping”, clear
and simple criteria such as the majority of the capital being held
by foreigners and the corporate headquarters being located abroad
must be strictly adhered to.
3.2. ISDS
as an obstacle to the implementation of human rights
29. The existence of investment
protection treaties enforced by ISDS can deter States from implementing progressive
public policies aimed at improving the protection of the environment,
workers’ rights or simply increasing State revenue – to be used
for improving the living conditions of the local population (“regulatory chill”).
This is the main concern of the movers of the new motion on “Investor
protection and human rights”, which I was invited to take into account
in the present report.
This is primarily a question of
the content of the investment protection treaties and not of the
nature of the enforcement mechanism available. But the nature of the
enforcement mechanism and the procedure followed can influence substantive
outcomes, which is why it will be necessary to examine some of the
most widely criticised clauses in IIAs from this angle.
3.2.1. Non-discrimination
clauses
30. A primary goal of IIAs is to
protect foreign investors from government discrimination relative
to other investors, in particular local competitors. Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 to the Convention recognises the human right to peaceful
enjoyment of property, and Article 14 requires that rights guaranteed
by the Convention must be secured without discrimination on many
grounds, including nationality. Even without an IIA, the Convention signatories
would therefore be required to afford the property rights of foreign
investors the same respect as those of local investors.
31. IIAs, however, prefer to explicitly define this treatment
in standard clauses that appear in almost every agreement. A “national
treatment” clause guarantees foreign investors the same treatment
as local investors. A “most favoured nation” clause guarantees that
foreign investors under an agreement will be treated by a State
no less favourably than that State treats foreign investors under
any other agreement.
32. However, such “most favourable” treatment may turn out to
be asymmetrical. Foreign investors are guaranteed minimum treatment
at the level of local investors and other foreign investors, so
their treatment must be as good as anyone else’s. Local investors
do not benefit from such protections under an IIA, but in States
Parties to the Convention they would enjoy protection against discrimination
under Article 14 of the Convention in conjunction with Article 1
of Protocol No. 1. The procedural inequality residing in the fact
that they must content themselves with the national courts (with
subsidiary protection from the European Court of Human Rights) has
been discussed above.
3.2.2. “Fair
and Equitable Treatment” clauses
33. Numerous IIAs include “Fair
and Equitable Treatment” (FET) clauses. The North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) provides in Article 1105 (“Minimum Standard
of Treatment”) that “[e]ach Party shall accord to investments of
investors of another Party treatment in accordance with international
law, including fair and equitable treatment ...”. But NAFTA offers
no additional guidance as to the meaning of “fair and equitable”,
so arbitrators have had to make their own assessments.
34. In the events leading to
Metalclad Corporation v. The United Mexican
States,
the American corporation Metalclad bought
the Mexican corporation Coterin, in part to develop a hazardous
waste landfill in Mexico. Metalclad obtained federal and State permits,
and started construction believing it had all necessary approvals.
The municipality of Guadalcazar, however, had turned down similar
applications made by Coterin in the previous five years, and also
did not approve Metalclad’s application, thus preventing the operation
of the facility. The arbitral tribunal, because Metalclad claimed
to have relied on the federal government’s assurance that it had
obtained all the necessary permits, found that “Mexico failed to
ensure a transparent and predictable framework for Metalclad’s business
planning and investment [,which] demonstrates a lack of orderly
process”, and awarded Metalclad US$15.6 million in damages. Metalclad
thus used the “fair and equitable treatment” clause to elevate NAFTA
protection beyond basic non-discrimination and opening of markets
to the guarantee of a quality level of administrative services that
the federal government must provide, covering State agencies at
all levels. A local investor’s application had been refused in the
same way, so there was clearly no discrimination. The decision found
the assurances given by the Mexican Government to be “a failure
on the part of Mexico to ensure the transparency required by NAFTA”.
A
third denial of the same application by the same legal person (Coterin
and Metalclad as its direct legal successor) should have been the
normal outcome of transparent and predictable proceedings, but the
arbitrators chose to interpret “fair and equitable treatment” as
requiring that the burden of due diligence be placed squarely on
the State.
35. Fair and equitable treatment clauses can also warp the application
of other laws. Occidental Petroleum Corporation broke a contract
with Ecuador by selling 40% of its rights under the contract although
the contract stipulated that any unauthorised transfer of rights
would terminate the contract.
The State’s interest in deterring
other contracting partners from breaking contracts and Occidental’s
breach of contract were considered by the arbitration tribunal as
insufficient to justify enforcing the forfeiture clause in this
contract leading to the loss of Occidental’s investment. Contracts
normally do not require justification for enforcement, just the
parties’ prior voluntary agreement, but the tribunal found that
the US–Ecuador Bilateral Investment Treaty’s fair and equitable
treatment clause outweighed general contract law, leading to an
award of US$769 625 000 against Ecuador.
36. Such huge awards constitute hefty price tags for regulation
in the public interest. The long-term impact may well be a “regulatory
chill” that will make most States Parties to IIAs less likely to
enforce its legal regulations in the future, no matter how strong
the public interest involved. For example, when Germany established
new rules restricting the discharge of cooling water from nuclear
power plants, it had to lower relevant standards to settle a claim
brought by Swedish conglomerate Vattenfall under the Energy Charter Treaty.
37. As States see more of their legitimate police powers being
usurped by “fair and equitable treatment” claims, there are some
efforts to clarify and restrict the interpretation of this vague
phrase. The US–Chile Free Trade Agreement limits it to the minimum
standard of treatment of aliens required by customary international law,
which is generally limited to a
denial of fair judicial proceedings and outright expropriation of
property.
The
United States, Canada and Mexico issued a joint interpretative note
in 1999 applying the same limitation to NAFTA.
38. However, sometimes such protections are undercut in the same
agreement. For example, the
Japan-Switzerland
Free Trade Agreement (FTA) incorporates Article XIV of the World Trade Organization’s
General Agreement
on Trade in Services (GATS) in its own Article 95.1. Article XIV provides
that an agreement will not prevent measures by a State to,
inter alia, “protect human, animal
or plant life or health”, “protection of the privacy of individuals”,
or ensure safety. However Article 95.3 of the FTA explicitly prevents
Article XIV from applying to the “fair and equitable treatment”
standard promulgated in Article 86 of the FTA.
39. Of course, any non-enforcement of regulations required by
IIAs will only apply to foreign investors – local firms have to
follow regulations and take responsibility for their own due diligence.
3.2.3. Stabilisation
clauses
40. Stabilisation clauses are clauses
in private contracts between investors and host States dealing with changes
in the host State’s law during the life of the project.
Some such clauses
“freeze” the law of the host State with respect to the investment
project over its intended lifespan, thus exempting the investor
from any new laws; others (“economic equilibrium clauses”) accept
that the investor shall comply with new laws but require the host
State to compensate the investor for the cost of compliance.
41. Such clauses have been criticised as obstacles in the path
of necessary measures by host States to improve, for example, the
protection of the environment or the rights of workers. At the same
time, a certain degree of stability and predictability is needed
in order to make long-term investments “bankable”, especially when
large investments, for example in infrastructures, are required
before an investment becomes profitable.
42. The public debate about the investment agreements between
BP and Azerbaijan and Turkey concerning a major cross-border pipeline
project led BP to supplement the investment contracts with a “Human
Rights Undertaking” designed to avoid the potential negative impact
of the stabilisation clauses on the protection of human rights in
the host States.
Such “human rights undertakings”,
following a dialogue involving all stake-holders could indeed help
minimise the negative impact of such clauses on human rights whilst
safeguarding their role in making large-scale, long-term investments
economically viable.
3.2.4. “Legitimate
expectations”
43. Many tribunals will also award
claims based on the “legitimate expectations” of the investors regarding the
States’ investment environment. These expectations were first addressed
in a 2003 case,
Tecmed v. United Mexican
States:
“The foreign
investor expects the host State to act in a consistent manner, free
from ambiguity and totally transparently in its relations with the
foreign investor, so that it may know beforehand any and all rules and
regulations that will govern its investments, as well as the goals
of the relevant policies and administrative practices or directives,
to be able to plan its investment and comply with such regulations …
The foreign investor also expects the host State to act consistently,
i.e. without arbitrarily revoking any pre-existing decisions or
permits issued by the State that were relied upon by the investor
to assume its commitments as well as to plan and launch its commercial
and business activities.”
44. IIAs do not usually include the term “legitimate expectations”,
and in
Tecmed there was no
explicit legal basis for the sweeping promise that the State will
never change anything that could have a negative impact on an investment.
Since then, many decisions have invoked expectations by merely citing
precedent. One concurring opinion in a 2005 arbitration suggested
“that ‘legitimate expectation’ has become for tribunals a preferred
way of providing protection to claimants in situations where the
tests for a ‘regulatory taking’ appear too difficult, complex and
too easily assailable for reliance on a measure of subjective judgment”.
45. The definition of “legitimate expectations” in
Tecmed is very broad and deprives
the State of the ability to change any regulations no matter how
urgent the public interest, for example in improved health or safety. Later
decisions have recognised that traders “cannot have a legitimate
expectation that an existing situation which is capable of being
altered by … institutions in the exercise of their discretionary
power will be maintained”.
Tribunals currently tend
to hold that expectations are legitimate only when States make a specific
representation to an investor or include a contract clause that
promises the stability of particular policies or regulatory frameworks.
Without such a specific promise, a State cannot be “legitimately
expected” to abdicate its responsibilities to its citizens.
46. Acknowledging that most tribunals
will recognise some form of legitimate expectations, IIAs should proactively
and explicitly define the expectations of the parties. A current
trend is to specifically exempt a State’s purpose of promoting environmental
protection and public health and safety from an investor’s expectations.
The Australia-Japan Free
Trade Agreement is a good example. Its Article 14.15 guarantees each
party the right to adopt measures to pursue similar public interests
to the previously mentioned Article XIV of the GATS.
Importantly,
no other clauses limit this protection (contrary to the Japan-Switzerland
FTA). Article 14.15 also protects the investors’ interests in that
it requires that such measures shall not be framed as disguised
restrictions on investment or as discriminations against investors
from a particular State.
47. Expectations regarding the parties’ human rights obligations
can also be set in advance with due diligence work targeting these
concerns directly. Human rights impact assessments and human rights
audits could offer the parties useful data when they negotiate an
investment protection treaty (between States) or an investment contract
(between the host State and an individual investor).
48. Some trade negotiations now include a “social impact assessment”
that determines the impact an agreement would have across society
in the States concerned. The European Union is conducting a similar “sustainability
impact assessment” as part of its negotiations on TTIP.
Similarly a “human rights impact assessment”
can be carried out in order to anticipate an agreement’s effect
on human rights.
Adding such steps to the standard
due diligence requirements in the preparation of international trade
and investment agreements and individual investment contracts would
contribute to identifying potential problems in advance and allow
the parties to draft their agreements in such a way as to prevent
negative consequences on human rights, the environment, the social
situation, etc.
49. Investors negotiating an investment contract under an IIA
can also set their expectations more accurately by using a human
rights audit, in addition to an assessment of the social impact
of investment rules. Such an audit would explore a host State’s
human rights obligations. This information would allow the investor to
forecast and account for future changes that might be needed to
accommodate those obligations (i.e. a commitment to paying “living
wages” or limiting pollution of natural resources).
To avoid wasteful inefficiency, a State
could centrally document such information to provide to investors
upon request. A State’s provision of false or out-dated information
could then be seen as a misrepresentation that would rightly be
“actionable” – through ISDS or in the State’s courts – as violating
legitimate expectations.
3.3. Investment
protection and the right to protection of property (Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1)
50. The property rights protected
by IIAs are in principle covered by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
to the Convention, which has been signed and ratified by every signatory
to the Convention. A key issue is the definition of the line between
“expropriation” (which is only possible under certain conditions
and even then gives rise to pecuniary compensation) and merely “controlling
the use of property in accordance with the general interest” (Article
1.2 of Protocol No. 1). There is ample case law not only of the
European Court of Human Rights interpreting Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1, but also of national constitutional courts interpreting similar
protections of the right to property in national constitutions.
This
case law should also serve as guidance to arbitration panels when
they interpret investment protection clauses in IIAs.
51. It should be noted that the European Court of Human Rights
has held that the Convention should be interpreted in harmony with
a State’s other international engagements as far as possible, but
also that the Convention could override incompatible agreements
(see
Fogarty v. the United Kingdom). This
means that clauses in IIAs which would prevent the implementation
of human rights obligations under the Convention shall be interpreted
narrowly or even overruled.
4. ISDS
as a challenge to State sovereignty
52. As with most treaties, IIAs
usually allow parties to end the agreement either by an expiration
date (“sunset clause”) or a specific withdrawal mechanism. 80% of
investment treaties have an “anytime termination stage” during which
either party can cancel the agreement after the initial term of
the treaty.
Investments made prior to
the treaty’s termination must still be protected for a certain period,
but otherwise the parties are free from the treaty’s requirements.
53. But EU agreements do not allow its member States to withdraw
individually. The purpose of the European Union negotiating these
agreements instead of individual member States is to leverage the
volume and legal homogeneity of the common market, which requires
in principle that every member State participates. The Commission
argues that States surrendered this aspect of their sovereignty
when they ratified the Lisbon Treaty. But if the European Union
agrees to include ISDS or ICS in TTIP, CETA or any other future
agreement, States could find themselves facing restrictions also
regarding other competences that have not been fully transferred
to the European Union, such as the right to regulate on public health
and safety issues (see below).
54. EU agreements with third States concerning both EU competences
and national competences (so-called mixed treaties) require the
signature and ratification of all EU member States. This would give
the States protection against any agreement that would unacceptably
infringe on their sovereignty. But according to the European Commission,
the Lisbon Treaty grants the European Union exclusive competence
for the conclusion of trade and investment protection agreements,
basing itself on, in particular, Articles 3 and 207.5 of the Treaty on
the Functioning of the European Union.
The approval by the European Parliament
then takes the place of the ratification by national parliaments.
But in view of their potential impact on public policy areas that
remain within the competence of member States, it is presently highly
disputed whether agreements such as TTIP and CETA require ratification
by member States, too. Significantly, in July 2016, the European
Commission proposed the signature of CETA by Canada, the European
Union and all EU member States as a “mixed agreement” – without
prejudice to its legal position currently litigated before the European
Court of Justice according to which such agreements fall within
the exclusive competence of the European Union.
In my
view a solution must be found to allow individual EU member States
to opt out of an ISDS/ICS clause if and when it turns out that interpretations
of the agreement given by the tribunal have a negative impact on
national policies for which the competence has remained in the national
domain. As we have seen, States can terminate bilateral investment
agreements if they no longer correspond to their political objectives,
even if existing investments continue to benefit from protection
for a transitional period. But EU member States are effectively prevented
from exercising this option as such agreements are now concluded
by the European Union. Ways and means should therefore be explored
to enable EU member States to choose whether or not to participate in
investment protection agreements, for example by including investment
protection rules in an optional protocol.
55. Another sovereignty issue is raised by the provisional application
of mixed agreements prior to ratification. The EU–Ukraine Association
Agreement, for example, which is subject to ratification by all
member States, was provisionally applied across the European Union
as of 1 November 2014 (regarding the “political” provisions) and
1 January 2016 (regarding the trade-related provisions).
The provisional
application is in principle indefinite, unless terminated by a unanimous
decision of the European Council.
If future agreements contain
similar provisional clauses, the national ratification requirement
may lose part of its relevance as a protection for State sovereignty.
In my view, this is unacceptable.
The above-mentioned opt-out for individual member States in case
of conflict with national policies in the areas remaining in the
national competence must also (and even more so) be available during
the period of provision application. Such provisional application should
in any case be limited in time (for instance two years) and ideally
should only apply to those parts of the treaty which are within
the competence of the European Union.
5. Is
ISDS/ICS even necessary?
56. Supporters claim ISDS (or ICS)
is required because many countries’ courts insufficiently protect
foreign investors. This can be a result of the poor quality (or
perceived poor quality) of national courts. It should be recalled
that one quarter of EU member States have courts perceived by their
own public as below average in both independence and efficiency.
Other courts generally considered
as satisfactory tend to resist enforcing international agreements,
for example the United States doctrine following which its courts
only enforce international treaties that are explicitly self-executing
upon ratification or accompanied by domestic legislation.
57. ISDS tribunals as well as the proposed ICS create a “dual
court system” where (privileged) foreign investors can make legal
claims for a binding judgment outside of a State’s courts. The German
Magistrates’ Association (
Deutscher Richterbund)
opposed such a dual system in an opinion published in February 2016,
finding it both unnecessary and lacking
a sound legal basis in EU law. It is perhaps unsurprising that national magistrates
have more confidence in national courts. Their States nevertheless
conclude IIAs with ISDS clauses – which seems to indicate that they
trust each other’s courts less than their own. In the past, high-income
countries rarely signed IIAs with ISDS clauses between themselves,
as their investors usually trust their well-developed, independent
judicial systems.
But more
recent IIAs (such as the above-mentioned ones between Switzerland
and Japan and between Australia and Japan, and the agreements recently
signed with Canada (CETA) or under negotiation with the United States
(TTIP) have such clauses, as do most IIAs among EU member States.
58. The German magistrates, among others, propose that the best
solution when national courts are ineffective is to improve these
courts, not to circumvent them. Improvement of national courts would
indeed be the ideal resolution. But this is a long-term project,
which is not immune from setbacks for different (political, budgetary)
reasons. Meanwhile, IIAs with ISDS/ICS clauses can encourage foreign
investment for their signatories, which increases pressure on developing
economies to participate in such agreements.
This
said, IIAs have only a limited impact in terms of foreign direct
investment. Countries in central and eastern Europe appear to benefit
spectacularly from IIAs, but States in sub-Saharan Africa and central
and South America do not register a significant increase in foreign
direct investment.
Factors beyond the presence and structure
of IIAs must be influencing these regional variations, and there
is no data on whether those factors would similarly promote and
channel investment in the absence of an IIA. The data in these studies
(1985-2011 for the primary study cited here) has come from an era
of significant global economic growth, and the IIAs could just be
further aiding the natural flow of capital. ISDS/ICS would appear
to be most useful when a State’s government is effective enough
to live up to a contractual partnership whilst regulating business
in the interest of society as a whole, but not yet reliably enforcing
the rule of law. In sum, ISDS/ICS may well make it easier under
those conditions to attract foreign investment through trade agreements.
6. Deep
reform of ISDS procedures or creation of an Investment Court System?
59. The EU–Canada Comprehensive
Economic and Trade Agreement addresses many of the criticisms levelled
against ISDS, as presented above. For example, CETA:
- in its preamble, stresses the
States’ “right to regulate” in order to achieve legitimate policy
objectives, such as public health, safety, environment, public morals,
social or consumer protection and the promotion and protection of
cultural diversity;
- provides clear, closed (and fairly restrictive) definitions
of investment protection standards such as “fair and equitable treatment”
and “indirect expropriation”. A “fair and equitable treatment” violation
can only arise when there is denial of justice, a fundamental breach
of due process, manifest arbitrariness, targeted discrimination
on manifestly wrongful grounds, or abuse treatment of investors,
such as coercion, duress and harassment. An “indirect expropriation”
can only occur when the investor is “substantially deprived of the
fundamental attributes of property, such as the right to use, enjoy
and dispose of its investment”;
- empowers the Parties to adopt binding interpretations
to control the interpretation of the agreement and correct possible
errors by the tribunals;
- incorporates the progressive UNCITRAL transparency rules
(see paragraph 22 above);
- gives the tribunals discretion to allow amicus curiae
third-party interventions;
- prevents forum shopping by excluding claims made by companies
carrying out an investment or a business re-organisation for the
purpose of bringing a case, or by “mailbox companies” having no
real business operations in the territory of one of the Parties;
- is the first IIA including a code of conduct for arbitrators,
ensuring high ethical and professional standards and requiring disclosure
of any situation that could give rise to conflicts of interest.
Improvements enhancing the role of States are also made with regard
to the selection of arbitrators in individual cases;
- facilitates the early dismissal of unfounded or frivolous
claims;
- introduces (for the first time in an IIA) the “loser pays
principle”, meaning that the investor must pay the litigation costs
of the State he has challenged;
- prohibits parallel proceedings before arbitration tribunals
and domestic courts, to avoid double compensation and divergent
verdicts.
60. These advances are impressive, compared to the existing situation
dominated by some 3 000 IIAs with “classic” ISDS mechanisms, the
drawbacks of which we have seen above. More progress in reforming
ISDS is possible step by step, for example by giving stakeholders
a right to intervene (rather than the tribunal the discretion whether
or not to accept such interventions). But the existing system is
very slow to reform, as numerous existing IIAs would need to be
replaced by more progressive ones. As a reaction to growing criticism of
ISDS in the political sphere, the European Commission adopted a
more radical approach, namely to promote the creation of a wholly
new Investment Court System, including a first-instance investment
tribunal and an appellate tribunal.
61. Such an institutionalised system, whilst remaining a fully
international mechanism not exposed to the risk of national bias,
would arguably combine the advantages of (reformed) ISDS with those
of classic courts: it would enable permanent members of the tribunal
appointed by the States on the basis of strict criteria of professionalism
and ethics to accumulate experience and build a body of case law
to interpret the relevant investment provisions in a way that fully
respects the States’ right to regulate for legitimate policy purposes whilst
protecting foreign investments against arbitrary and discriminatory
treatment.
62. To build such an Investment Court System would require a high
degree of international consensus in order to supplant the existing
mechanisms within a reasonable period of time. I suggest that the
Council of Europe make a modest contribution to building such a
consensus by stressing the shortcomings of the existing ISDS mechanisms
from a human rights and rule of law perspective and encouraging
its member States to play an active part in the establishment of
the future ICS.