Fair and Equitable Treatment Issues In Oil & Gas Investment-Treaty Arbitration - Chapter 05 - Leading Practitioners’ Guide to International Oil & Gas Arbitration
Author(s):
Mark WIlliam Friedman
Samantha J. Rowe
Page Count:
66 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
This chapter focuses on fair and equitable treatment (“FET”)
issues that arise out of multilateral or bilateral investment treaty
(together, “BIT”) arbitrations in the oil and gas (“O&G”) sector.
The chapter proceeds in three parts. First, we briefly discuss the
content and historical evolution of the FET standard. Second, we set
out different instances in which FET issues have arisen in
investment-treaty arbitration in the O&G sector: (i) issues concerning
or arising out of the contractual relationship between the investor
and the host State; (ii) changes to the legislative and regulatory
framework governing the investor’s investment; (iii) irregularities in
domestic judicial proceedings; and (iv) harassment of the investor or
its investment by domestic authorities. Finally, we provide a few
concluding thoughts.
II. EVOLUTION AND CONTENT OF THE FET
STANDARD
A. History of the FET Standard
The FET standard can be traced back to post-war initiatives to
protect foreign investors by affording them direct rights against the
State in which their investment is located—notably the Havana
Charter, which was prepared in 1948 as the basis for establishing the
International Trade Organization but was never ratified, in large part
because of capital-importing states’ resistance to provisions aimed at
protecting foreign investment.1 The United States Friendship,
Commerce and Navigation Treaties, negotiated in the same period,
contained obligations to accord “equitable” or “fair and equitable”
treatment to investments originating in the other State party.2 While
the first bilateral investment treaty—concluded between Germany
and Pakistan in 1959—did not contain an FET obligation,3 German
and Swiss BITs dating back to the 1960s do. In the early 1980s,
growing recognition of the economic benefits generated by foreign
investment triggered a shift in emphasis towards the treatment of
foreign investment by the host State, including the guarantee of nondiscriminatory
treatment vis-à-vis nationals of the host State and
treatment vis-à-vis nationals of the host State and