2014 Year in Review: The Top Ten Developments in International Energy Arbitration - WAMR 2015 Vol. 9, No. 2
Author(s):
Laurence Shore
Page Count:
16 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
Having already made an attempt at the 2013 year in review,
I will try to get the 2014 review right. I admit that I do feel
somewhat in the position of my college roommate who went to
medical school and several years later sent me a letter (yes, preemail
age) informing me that he was doing emergency room
medicine and planned to keep doing it until he got it right.
There is no need for quite such concern today, as what you are
about to hear is most likely incapable of killing you. In addition,
the ITA has a two-term limit on presenting the year in review, or
they certainly will have after today. Consequently, 2015 is
already looking good, but lame duck status does not deter me. My
selection and organizing principles for 2014 are personal, but
nonetheless I am going to disclose them now along with my
review themes.
This might give you the impression that my themes were
imposed on the evidence rather than emerging from it, and I am
going to have to accept that risk. However, looking around this
room, I can see that a number of you have personal experience of
taking the very same risk.
My methodology for selecting and organizing this review is as
follows. I thought it would be fitting to divide the subject matter
into two general categories: the first being awards and decisions
and the second being the potential effects of the political economy
on energy arbitration. Under the awards and decisions category, I
have paid particular attention to a few subsets, above all, cases
that may contribute to the development of international
arbitration law and international law. As you will shortly find out,
there are quite a few such cases, which may not be entirely
positive for energy arbitration. After all, while an abundance of
shipping cases has done much to shape commercial arbitration
shipping cases has done much to shape commercial arbitration