A Comparative Analysis of the ICSID Annulment Grounds - WAMR 2006 Vol. 17, No. 10
Author(s):
Albena P. Petrova
Page Count:
28 pages
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PDF from World Arbitration and Mediation Report (WAMR) 2006 Vol. 17, No. 10
Published:
October, 2006
Jurisdictions:
Practice Areas:
Author Detail:
Albena P. Petrova, 2005-2006 Fellow at the Institute of International Economic Law, Washington, D.C.; LL.M., Georgetown University Law Center; JD, American University Washington College of Law; MA, Georgetown University School of Foreign Service; AB, Mount Holyoke College.
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Originally from: World Arbitration and Mediation Report (WAMR)
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Perspectives
A Comparative Analysis of the ICSID Annulment Grounds
By Albena P. Petrova *
Introduction
The International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes (“ICSID”) has
only rendered seven annulment decisions during a period of thirty-eight years, which
remains a rather insignificant figure compared to its rising volume of registered cases.
[1] Since June 2005, ICSID has issued two new annulment decisions, and a total of six
annulment cases are pending. [2] As a result, the historic low number of annulment cases
could double.
The first request for annulment came in 1984, eighteen years after the
International Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and
Nationals of Other States (the “Washington Convention”) [3] entered into force.
Between 1983 and 1993, three arbitral awards were annulled: Klockner I [4] (1983),
Amco I [5] (1984), and Mine [6] (1988). The ad hoc committees rejected requests for
annulment in Klockner II [7] (1990) and Amco II [8] (1992), and both decisions have
remained unpublished. No annulment decisions were rendered between 1993 and 2001.
In 2002, two annulment decisions emerged: Wena [9] and Vivendi. [10]
Since 2004, ICSID has witnessed a rise in annulment applications. Between July
2004 and September 2005, six applications for annulment have been submitted; [11] all
of those cases are pending. Within the last ten months, ad hoc committees have issued
two annulment decisions in CDC Group [12] and Consortium R.F.C.C. [13] The
decision in CDC Group is the latest published annulment case.
In view of the increasing number of pending annulment cases, concerns arise
about whether the annulment mechanism would continue to function successfully. This
article compares the grounds for annulment under the Washington Convention with the
grounds for setting aside under the United Nations Commission on International Trade
Law (“UNCITRAL”) Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration
(“UNCITRAL Model Law”) [14] and the grounds for non-enforcement and recognition
under the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
(the “New York Convention”). [15] Part I presents the grounds for challenging an
arbitral award under the Washington Convention, the UNCITRAL Model Law, and the
New York Convention. Part II first discusses the distinctive features of the ICSID
annulment process and how it has managed to achieve uniformity, consistency, finality,
and efficiency, and, second, analyzes the ICSID annulment grounds in a comparative
perspective. Then, Part III recommends that ICSID continue to favor a uniform and
consistent narrow interpretation of the annulment grounds and to balance finality and
efficiency with accuracy. The article concludes that it is crucial to favor finality,
accuracy, efficiency, uniformity, and consistency as ICSID faces a growing number of
pending annulment cases.