Beyond Price Reviews: Adjudicating Claims of Financial Hardship - Chapter 13 - Leading Practitioners’ Guide to International Oil & Gas Arbitration
Author(s):
George M. von Mehren
Ben Holland
Page Count:
26 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
August, 2015
Description:
Originally from The Leading Practitioners' Guide to International Oil & Gas Arbitration
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I. INTRODUCTION
Natural gas and liquefied natural gas (LNG) are often sold under
long-term, take-or-pay contracts. There are good business reasons for
this. For sellers, the revenues represented by take-or-pay
commitments may be essential to obtaining financing for, or
justifying the investment in, the high capital costs of producing and
transporting natural gas or LNG.1 For buyers and their customers, a
long-term supply contract ensures security of supply and secures their
own infrastructure investments. At the same time, these agreements
can represent considerable risk for both sellers and buyers because
the economic conditions under which they transact their businesses
may change during the lengthy term of the contract. As a practical
matter, what will happen over the life of an agreement is either
difficult or impossible to predict.2 Changed circumstances causing
financial hardship beget disputes and arbitration.
This has been evident during the past ten years in Continental
European gas and LNG markets. A host of changes—notably
liberalization, the economic crisis, the development of gas trading hubs
and other factors—have decreased and often eliminated the margins
available to buyers of gas and LNG when they resell the gas purchased
under long-term supply contracts to customers in their local markets.
In response, European buyers have initiated numerous “price review”
renegotiations and arbitration proceedings seeking to reduce the prices
they pay suppliers under long-term gas supply contracts. To a lesser
extent, sellers of gas into Europe have also initiated price reviews on
occasion and have been successful in obtaining higher prices.
Discussed in detail elsewhere in this volume,3 gas and LNG price
review proceedings are based on express contractual provisions in gas
and LNG supply contracts that specifically permit both buyer and
seller, on a periodic basis, to seek an adjustment of the contract price.
Typically these provisions establish a procedure under which either
party (or both) may notify the other of their claim for a price
adjustment. Generally, the buyer and seller are then contractually
required to negotiate the price dispute for a defined period of time. If
an agreement is not reached, either or both parties may initiate
arbitration. During the past ten years or so, arbitral awards in
European gas and LNG price review cases have often resulted in
significant monetary awards. Because the values in dispute are so
large, the outcome of these price review disputes are periodically
made public, through shareholder and other market announcements.
Price review arbitrations do not review non-price terms. Although no
analysis of the gas and LNG industry in Europe would be complete if
it did not consider their recent dramatic effect, gas and LNG price
reviews have limitations. First, these price reviews are based on an
express contractual agreement. They are not, per se, available when the
relevant supply contract does not include a price review provision.
Second, when price review provisions are included, they generally
only permit a renegotiation and review of the price payable under the
only permit a renegotiation and review of the price payable under the