Sophie Nappert
3 Verulam Buildings, Gray’s Inn
London WC1R 5NT
United Kingdom
• 2007-present: Arbitrator in independent practice at 3 Verulam Buildings, Gray’s Inn, London.
• 2000-2007: Head of International Arbitration, Denton Wilde Sapte LLP, London.
• 1997-2000: Solicitor, Masons LLP, London.
• 1992-1996: Solicitor, Norton Rose LLP, London and Paris.
•The Law Society of England and Wales
•The Bar of Quebec
•The AIPN
•The International Bar Association
•The International Law Association
• The International Center for Dispute Resolution (ICDR), Roster of Arbitrators – Commercial and Energy Disputes
• The London Court of International Arbitration
• The International Chamber of Commerce
• The Panel of Arbitrators for the Hong Kong Arbitration Centre
• The Panel of Arbitrators for the Korean Commercial Arbitration Board
• The Panel of Arbitrators for the Ukrainian Chamber of Commerce
• Canadian Roster for NAFTA Chapter 19 (Trade Remedies)
- Co-Chair of the ICC Task Force on Trusts and Arbitration
- ICC, Canadian delegate to the Commission on Arbitration
- Founder, the ICDR Energy Arbitrators’ List
Sophie is a dual-qualified lawyer in Canada and in the UK. Since 2007 she has been an arbitrator in independent practice, based in London. Before becoming a full-time arbitrator, she was Head of International Arbitration at a global law firm. Sophie is trained and has practised in both civil law and common law jurisdictions. She is the peer-nominated Moderator of OGEMID, the online discussion forum on current issues of international investment law, economic law and arbitration. She is ranked in Global Arbitration Review's Top 30 List of Female Arbitrators Worldwide and is commended as a “leading light” in the field by Who’s Who Legal.
In February 2018 the Canadian Government appointed Sophie to the NAFTA Chapter 19 (Trade Remedies) Roster for a ten-year tenure.
Sophie is the author of a Commentary on the 2010 UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules: A Practitioner’s Guide (Juris, 2012). She is a regular speaker at conferences and seminars on issues of international arbitration, international investment law and dispute resolution. She is a guest lecturer at Columbia Law School, Harvard Law School and McGill University Faculty of Law. She has created the Nappert Prize in International Arbitration, open to young scholars and practitioners worldwide, and administered under the auspices of McGill University.
In June 2018 she delivered the Proskauer Lecture on International Arbitration on the topic of Disruption is the new Black: Thoughts for Keeping International Arbitration on Trend. In November 2015 she delivered the Inaugural EFILA Annual Lecture on International Investment Arbitration: Escaping from Freedom? The Dilemma of an Improved ISDS. The Lecture won the 2016 Global Arbitration Review Award for Best Speech.
Recent appointments:
• Chair: A US$157 million dispute regarding the construction of an LNG regasification terminal in Eastern Europe.
• Chair: A US$50 million dispute regarding alleged design defects in windfarm equipment, governed by Quebec law.
• Chair: A US$250 million dispute between Latin American entities regarding the construction of marine works for an LNG project.
• Chair: A €30 million dispute between an investor and a State entity in Cameroon concerning the financial structuring of an agreement for the acquisition of telephonic systems, under the OHADA principles.
• Chair: A dispute between the parties to a telecoms agreement in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, involving an investor and a State entity. The dispute involved recalcitrant Respondents, Emergency Arbitrator proceedings, and parallel court proceedings in the courts of the DRC and South Africa.
• Chair: A dispute between the parties to a JOA concerning the drilling of offshore wells in an African country, and issues of unlawful cash calls, under the ICC Rules, pursuant to English law. Sum in dispute: USD 25 million.
• Chair: A dispute between a Singaporean party and a Hong Kong-based party regarding the supply of coal under the SCoTA Terms, including a jurisdictional challenge, striking out application and application for bifurcation of the proceedings.
• Chair: A dispute between the parties to a Shareholders’ Agreement in relation to the development of an energy project in Africa, under the ICC Rules. Injunctive relief is claimed.
• Chair: A dispute between a telecom company and an African State-owned entity under the ICC Rules.
• Fast-track dispute: Party-appointed arbitrator in a fast-track dispute under the ICDR Rules in relation to the operation of a luxury resort in the Caribbean. The arbitration agreement provides for 45 days between the composition of the arbitral tribunal and the final award.
• Fast-track dispute: Sole Arbitrator in an expedited dispute under the LCIA Rules between the American supplier of a component of aluminium smelter and its purchaser in Bosnia.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: A contentious and sensitive dispute about brand licensing involving a major oil& gas company and its licensee in Northern Europe.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: A dispute regarding the alleged expropriation of an investment under the Poland-Cyprus BIT under the SCC Rules.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: A gas price revision dispute between a Turkish company and a Greek company under the ICC Rules.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: A joint venture dispute between two US public companies in the pharmaceutical industry, under the UNCITRAL Rules, pursuant to French law. Sum in dispute: USD 33 million.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: A dispute (including a request for interim injunctive measures) between an oil company and a State under a Concession Agreement, under the SCC Rules – Gazprom v Lietuvos Respublika, CJEU Judgment at http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:62013CJ0536.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: A joint venture hotel project in Turkey between an international hospitality company and a local company, including complex issues of multi-party arbitration, consolidation and inter-linked agreements. ICC arbitration Rules, pursuant to Swiss law. Sum in dispute: USD 25 million.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: An LCIA arbitration concerning an advisory agreement on the restructuring of a CIS country’s external debt.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: An ad hoc arbitration concerning a BOT agreement between a Chinese company and an English company. Sum in dispute: GBP 15 million.
• Party-appointed arbitrator: An LCIA arbitration concerning the supply of pipelines, between a German company and a French company.
• Sole Arbitrator: An LCIA dispute concerning a suite of agreements between Russian businessmen, involving the deportation to and emprisonment of witnesses in Russia.
• Sole Arbitrator: An ICC dispute regarding a sulphuric acid plant tail gas unit treatment between an Italian company and the Canadian subsidiary of a major oil and gas corporation.
• Sole Arbitrator: An LCIA Arbitration between a global law firm and one of its partners concerning allegations of professional misconduct.
• Sole arbitrator: An LCIA arbitration concerning allegations of misconduct against the director of a Russian company.
• Sole arbitrator: An LCIA arbitration concerning allegations of bad faith and wilful default between a Ukrainian investor and a Russian broker.
• Sole arbitrator: An ICC arbitration in relation to an aircraft supply agreement.
• Sole arbitrator: An LCIA arbitration concerning the supply of military equipment in Pakistan.
• Sole arbitrator: An ad hoc arbitration concerning a shipbuilding contract between a Lithuanian shipping company and a Russian company, pursuant to Russian law.
• Sole arbitrator: A number of related LCIA arbitrations between Russian parties to a military supply agreement, and the guarantors thereto, pursuant to English law.
• Sole arbitrator: An LCIA arbitration between the Mexican distributor and supplier of children’s books, pursuant to English law. Emergency injunctive relief is claimed in relation to ongoing criminal proceedings against the Claimant in Mexico. Parallel ADR in relation to a commercial settlement for the return on unused books.
• ADR: Sophie also acts as mediator.
Pro Bono Work:
• Steering Committee of the OHADAC Project in the Caribbean, 2017-2018 (involving the creation of a Model Law on arbitration for the Caribbean, following the OHADA Model).
• Initial advice to the Government of a West African country regarding an investment dispute, 2017 (facilitated by the International Senior Lawyers Project).
• Creating Mooting Problem International Mooting Competition at the National University of India, Bengalore, 2017, 2018.
• Coaching Iran’s team for the Vis Moot, February 2015, 2016.
• Training of Arbitrators, Centre Commercial d’Arbitrage en Haïti, Port-au-Prince, Haïti, June 2014 (facilitated by the International Senior Lawyers Project).
• Chair of the Mooting Problem Drafting Team for the Foreign Direct Investment Moot Competition, 2011.
On 12 June 2018, Sophie delivered the 2018 Proskauer Lecture in International Arbitration on the topic of Disruption is the new Black: Thoughts for Keeping International Arbitration On Trend.
On 23 February 2018, Sophie delivered the keynote address on Algocracy in International Arbitration at the Annual Conference of the Centro Español de Arbitraje, Belgian Chapter, Brussels.
On 8 November 2017, she delivered a special address on The Impact of Artificial Intelligence on International Arbitration at the Asia-Pacific ADR Conference, Seoul.
On 20 September 2017, she delivered a key note address on Change Through Innovation in International Dispute Resolution at the DIS Annual Autumn Conference, Berlin.
On 26 November 2015 she delivered the Inaugural EFILA Annual Lecture on International Investment Arbitration: Escaping from Freedom? The Dilemma of an Improved ISDS, available at https://efilablog.files.wordpress.com/2015/11/efila-annual-lecture-sophi... 27-11-2015.pdf
The Lecture won the 2016 Global Arbitration Review Award for Best Speech, and Sophie was the first female winner of the award.
Sophie has authored a Commentary on the 2010 UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules: A Practitioner’s Guide, Juris, 2012. She publishes regularly in peer-reviewed legal journals and trade publications.
Recent and forthcoming publications:
• “Arbitration as a tool for Global Governance: The Use (and Abuse) of Discretion” in The Oxford Handbook of International Economic Governance (forthcoming).
• “The Practitioner’s Perspective on Technology in International Arbitration”, in C Aschauer and M Piers, eds, The Role of Technology and the Internet in International Arbitration, Cambridge University Press (2017), with Paul Cohen.
• “Brexit: Implications for the EU Reform of Investor-State Dispute Settlement”, Practical Law, 2016, with Nikos Lavranos.
• “Russian BITs in the post-ECT landscape after the Yukos Awards”, J Gaitis, ed., The Leading Practitioner's Guide to International Oil & Gas Industry Arbitration, Juris (2015), with Dr Yulia Selivanova.
• “Square Pegs and Round Holes: The Taxation Provision in the Energy Charter Treaty and the Yukos Awards”, Paris Journal of International Arbitration, 2015.
• “The Yukos Awards: A Comment”, Journal of Damages in International Arbitration, 2015.