Investment Treaty Arbitration and Developing Countries: Indian Experience
Investment Treaty Arbitration and Developing Countries: Indian Experience
Investment Treaty Arbitration and Developing Countries: Indian Experience
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION...............................................................................................................................2
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY.........................................................................................................4
CHAPTER 1- HISTORICAL BACKGROUND....................................................................................5
CHAPTER 2- WHITE INDUSTRIES V. COAL INDIA BIT AWARD....................................................7
CONCLUSION...................................................................................................................................9
BIBLIOGRAPHY..............................................................................................................................10
INTRODUCTION
The Government of India has had a long history of Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) 1 given that they
have signed more than 80 of such treaties. But recently, for the first time in its long history, India had to pay
due to an arbitration award. This award was brought by an Australian company called White Industries, a
private party, under the India-Australia BIT.
The award was granted on the grounds that India had failed to meet its obligation to provide effective
means of asserting claims and enforcing rights under the BIT. The reason behind this was the delay of
about eight years in Judicial enforcement of an arbitration award that was obtained by White Industries.
This award was challenged and an issue that arose from this case was under the consideration of the
Supreme Court of India.2
If reports are to be believed then the Government of India has agreed to pay and honour the award.
However, what remains unknown is whether the Government of India has learned a lesson from this award
and whether the existing BITs are under review to ensure such instances are not repeated. One can do
nothing but speculate in absence of any transparency.
There are two major reasons why a careful analysis is required: (1) its implications on other BITs; (2) its
effect on separation of powers provided for in our Constitutional polity. The question to ask at this juncture
is how long does the executive branch would have to be held responsible for its failure to provide effective
means to assert claims and enforce rights due to delays in courts.
Even though the White Industries case was the first of its kind to give a jolt to the Government, more such
jolts are underway. Recently the Supreme Court cancelled 122 2G licenses which were issued by the
Government of India.3 This has prompted many private parties like Telenor of Norway and Sitema of Russia
to commence or threaten to commence BIT arbitrations given that they rely upon the BITs than India has
with their countries.4 Large economic loss is not just its only effect. But it also affects our political relations
with a circle of countries.
For instance, in the Sistema 2G case, a statement was issued by the Russian Embassy on October 30, 2012
stating its disappointment with the Supreme Courts decision on Sistema. It was stated that if the issue was
not resolved, then the Indo-Russian bilateral cooperation would have to face great repercussions. Those
are strong words, indeed. Unlike other cases, Sistema did not apply for the processing of a fresh license. A
formal notice was sent as well to the Indian authorities, claiming that the Supreme Courts decision goes
contrary to Indias obligation under the Indo-Russia BIT.
There are some lessons that are to be learned from this. It is no secret that India is in dire need of Foreign
Direct Investments (FDI). However, any decision on FDI should be taken only after taking into
See http:// finmin.nic.in/bipa/bipa_index.asp.
The case was disposed of, as a part of a group of cases, by the Supreme Court in September 2012, along with the Bharat
Aluminium case reported in (2012) 9 SCC 552.
3
Centre for Public Interest Litigation v. UOI, (2012) 3 SCC 1, para. 60.
4
See http://rusembassy.in/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5279%3Arussia -threatensarbitration-on-2g-licensecancellation-for-sistema&catid=16%3Apress-on-bilateral-relations=en.
1
2
consideration its costs. Before discussing the costs, it is prudent to have a good understanding of how these
BITs originated.
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES:
The aim of this paper is to understand the concept and elements of Investment Treaty Arbitrations.
The objective of the paper is to analyze how Investment Treaty Arbitrations affect investment in developing
countries especially India.
RESEARCH QUESTIONS:
How does Supreme Court decisions and Executive decisions by India contrary to BITs affect
investment ?
to because of its modern management techniques. The government of A may feel the need to regulate the
expansion by citing public interest. The investor from country B may disagree. Taking into mind these
compromises the BITs are drawn up. Such situations can be thought of in advance and prepared for by those
drafting the BIT.
However, there are a number of situations in which this never happens. For example, in February 2012,
Indonesia passed a law requiring foreign mining companies to divest 51% of their holdings to an Indonesian
partner after ten years. The government wants more money from mining of the rich deposits to build better
infrastructure. Not everybody agreed. The government regulation is impossible for foreign mining
investors. Its impossible if in only 10 years after production they have to divest 51 percent of their stake in
the mines, said the mining associations Abubakar. Indias Adani Enterprises had also invested in mines in
Indonesia. That soon after the news, the share value of Adani Enterprises fell by 9% shows the effect of
such announcements.9
Another example: In May 2012, Argentina expropriated half of Spanish oil giant Repsols investment in
YPF, leading to what is known as Shale wars. Argentina claimed that Repsols failed to keep its investment
promises and instead funnelled profits out of the country through dividend payments. Repsols, which had
57% stake in the Argentianian subsidiary, found its 51% taken away by what it claimed was expropriation.
Repsols demanded 8 bn (equal to around INR 4,800 crores) as compensation, while Argentina not only
rejected the figure, but also claimed compensation for environmental damage.10
These conflicting versions would have to be resolved peacefully, for which the BITs or Regional Treaties
(such as NAFTA) or Multilateral Treaties (such as ICSID or the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership or TPP)
provide for International investment arbitration. The question is whether this is a fair and just solution.
10
12
Tribunals answer was to find that standard of effective means of asserting claims and enforcing
rights was found in India-Kuwait BIT in its MFN clause15. Since in one means MFN in all, it applied
to the case in hand.
For determining the meaning of effective means standard, the Arbitral Tribunal relied upon the
controversial arbitral award of 27 August, 1993 of Chevron-Texaco v. Ecuador. There the standard laid
down was that the State that agrees to provide such a standard requires that the host State establish
proper system of laws and institutions and that those systems work effectively in any given case.
This finding is extraordinarily damaging to India. The judiciary in India is completely independent and
separate in India from the executive branch. The Constitution of India does not confer power on either the
executive or legislative branches to direct the judiciary to work effectively in any given case. It is difficult
to believe that these facts were not known to the arbitral tribunal that consisted of three well-known
arbitrators, all from common law jurisdictions and obviously familiar with Indias Constitutional structure.
White Industries could not have complained that other similar cases were being given preference over its
case. Each Contracting State shall provide effective means of asserting claims and enforcing rights with
respect to investments and ensure to investors of the other Contracting State the right of access to its courts
of justice, administrative tribunals and agencies and all other bodies exercising adjudicatory authority,
accompanied with the right to employ persons of their choice, for the purpose of the assertion of claims and
the enforcement of rights with respect to their investments.
In fact, the case of White Industries was awaiting trial as it was referred to a larger bench of the Supreme
Court, was heard along with a similar case where the petitioner was Bharat Aluminium, and was decided on
September 6, 2012 along with the case of Bharat Aluminium.16
As the Tribunals ruling stands, the only solution appears to be that India should review the MFN
provisions in its BITs and provide for exception in relation to the time taken by the courts. There is another
important point to be made. The Arbitral Tribunal held that all contractual rights, tangible or intangible are
capable of being expropriated.17
More importantly, in its view, the tribunal held that the foreign arbitral award itself is capable of being
expropriated. There are cases that both support and oppose this statement of principle.18 It is true that the
Tribunal refused Whites plea that India had violated any of contractual rights and also that the award was
expropriated as the case was pending in the court, nevertheless, these are warning signs for the government
to take appropriate action to review other BITs.
Article 4(5) of the India-Kuwait BIT provides: Each party shall provide effective means of asserting claims and enforcing
rights with regard to investments . Each Contracting State shall maintain a favourable environment for investments in its
territory by investors of the other Contracting State. Each Contracting State shall in accordance with its applicable laws and
regulations provide effective means of MFN.
16
See Bharat Aluminium Co. v. Kaiser Aluminium Technical Services Inc., (2012) 9 SCC 552. It was pleaded by both Bharat
Aluminium and White Industries that Bhatia International had to be overruled. The court accepted the contention but applied it
prospectively to agreements entered into on or after September 6, 2012, thereby effectively rejecting the White Industries case
that the foreign award could not be set aside under Part I.
17
The Award, paras. 12.3.1 and 12.3.2.
15
CONCLUSION
It is regrettable that instead of challenging the award and publicly examining the potential effects of the
findings of the Tribunal, the government of India is reported to have accepted the award and agreed to pay
according to its terms. The effect on other investors is that they are emboldened to make similar claims of
far larger amounts. Public Citizen, a US blog, in a somewhat but not materially different context said that
the dispute resolution system in such BITs exposes signatory countries to vast liabilities, as foreign firms
use foreign tribunals to raid public treasuries.
An open letter signed by former judges, law professors and prominent lawyers warns: The foreign investor
protections included in some BITs, and their enforcement through Investor-State arbitration threaten to
undermine the justice systems in our various countries and fundamentally shift the balance of power
between investors, states and other affected parties in a manner that undermines fair resolution of legal
disputes.
The final words of these former judges, law professors and prominent lawyers were: WE THEREFORE
CALL UPON all governments engaged in the TPP negotiations to follow Australias example by rejecting
the investor-state dispute mechanism and reasserting the integrity of our domestic legal processes. It is
ironical that Indias first experience of BIT, in which an Australian company won, was Australias last.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
http:// finmin.nic.in/bipa/bipa_index.asp.
Centre for Public Interest Litigation v. UOI, (2012) 3 SCC 1, para. 60.
http://rusembassy.in/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5279%3Arussia-threatensarbitration-on-2g-license-cancellationfor-sistema&catid=16%3Apress-on-bilateral-relations=en.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/07/business/worldbusiness/07cnd -soda.html?_r=0
http://www.iranchamber.com/history/oil_nationalization/oil_nationalization.php.
http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/content/en/mineweb-political- economy?oid=146885&sn=Detail
http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2012/04/17/shale-gas-wars-on-argentinas- nationalizationofrepsol-ypf/.
http://ilcurry.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/white-industries- awardilcurry.pdf.
Bhatia International v. Bulk Traders, S A (2002) 4 SCC 105.
http://ilcurry.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/white-industries- awardilcurry.pdf
Bharat Aluminium Co. v. Kaiser Aluminium Technical Services Inc., (2012) 9 SCC 552.