A Comparative Analysis of the ECT and BITs in Light of Evolving EU Policy - Chapter 09 - Leading Practitioners’ Guide to International Oil & Gas Arbitration
Author(s):
Graham Coop
Bernhard Maier
Page Count:
58 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
With the entry into force of the Treaty on the Functioning of the
European Union, as amended by the Lisbon Treaty (the “TFEU”), in
2009, foreign direct investment became part of the exclusive
competence of the European Union (the “EU”). Five years later, the
EU has begun to exercise its newly allocated power. For example,
the European Commission has recently negotiated a 512-page
comprehensive trade and investment agreement with Canada,
threatened that it would “pursue every appropriate legal avenue” to
stall enforcement proceedings in an intra-EU bilateral investment
treaty (“BIT”) dispute and asserted that the Energy Charter Treaty
(the “ECT”) does not create obligations among EU Member States
inter se.
These actions have generated considerable controversy. This
flows in part from the different approaches taken by the international
and the European lawyer respectively as regards the natures of
international and European law. Whereas the European Court of
Justice (the “Court of Justice”, the “Court” or the “ECJ”) and the
European Commission maintain that European law constitutes a
separate legal order, public international lawyers insist that European
law remains a subsystem of international law.
Inherent in the conclusion of bilateral and multilateral investment
agreements (and investor-State dispute resolution in particular) is a
certain scepticism towards other States’ political, regulatory and legal
framework. By contrast, the European Union is a “highly integrated
international supranational organisation”1 based on democracy,
equality and the rule of law, intended to offer its citizens “an area of
freedom, security and justice without internal borders”.2
Initially, the conflict appeared to be between the proponents of
BITs (and investor-State arbitration), on the one hand, and the
European institutions, on the other. Today, the debate has become
increasingly multidimensional. Not only is the EU encroaching upon
Member States’ ability to conclude investment agreements and to
engage in arbitrations thereunder, but the investment arbitration
system as a whole has become subject to increasing public criticism.
Opponents of investment arbitration claim that international
investment agreements grant special privileges to multinational
companies, limit governments’ scope to legislate in the public
interest, and are inherently undemocratic and should therefore be
done away with.
The state of flux resulting from these conflicting
multidimensional considerations has the potential to affect the
practical application of the provisions of intra-EU and extra-EU
BITs, as well as the ECT, in disputes involving oil and gas. States
and investors alike remain unsure whether these frameworks remain
applicable in their present form and how to manage this uncertainty
in practice.
in practice.