What is the Fair and Equitable Treatment Standard? Content and Sources - WAMR 2015 Vol. 9, No. 1
Author(s):
Marta de Sousa Nunes Vicente
Page Count:
34 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
July, 2015
Jurisdictions:
Description:
Originally From World Arbitration and Mediation Review (WAMR)
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I. INTRODUCTION
The proliferation of arbitration awards on foreign investment
has given rise to some critical questions.
Investor-State arbitration is typically based on the offer by a
State under a bilateral investment treaty (BIT) to submit a dispute
under the BIT to international arbitration. Investment treaties,
which have been growing since the last quarter of the 20th
century, are international agreements between two or more
States by means of which each party is bound to treat the
investments of nationals of the other party in accordance with
some procedural and substantive standards. Investors are
normally given the power to directly bring an action against host
States before arbitral tribunals.
From the point of view of a State, investment treaties open the
host State’s legal system to “international arbitration risk,” which
may result in high monetary compensation. In CME v. Czech
Republic, for instance, the arbitral tribunal condemned the Czech
Republic to pay reparation of US$ 353 million; an amount that
exceeded the country’s health care budget.
In fact, disputes that can be resolved by international
arbitration range from the host State’s allegedly outrageous
behaviour towards an investor, to other less straightforward
situations involving regulatory changes in financial distress
scenarios. Not surprisingly, many questions have swiftly emerged
regarding the content of these international standards as well as
the legitimacy and standard of review adopted by arbitral
tribunals. The Fair and Equitable Treatment (FET) standard, in
compliance with which each party is bound to treat the other
party’s investments in a fair and equitable manner, is, by virtue of
its conceptual abstraction, the standard within which the
problems outlined above resonate the most.