New Directions in International Investment Law and Arbitration

C. Lim, Jean Ho, M. Paparinskis
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Abstract

CHAPTER OUTLINE This concluding chapter discusses the current backlash against investment arbitration and investment treaties. Section 1 discusses the backlash to investment arbitration under NAFTA's Chapter 11 in the early 2000s, and the consequent ‘rebalancing’ of the US Prototype BIT of 1994 in 2004. The chapter goes on to discuss how the backlash grew, beginning in 2007, from Bolivia's, Ecuador's and Venezuela's terminations of their participation in the ICSID Convention and other similar terminations worldwide to various national efforts to ‘rebalance’ (i.e. rewrite) their own BITs and other investment agreements. Section 2 highlights some of the latest treaty clauses which have emerged from this worldwide rebalancing effort, focusing on some of the most important substantive clauses; namely, FET and expropriation clauses, particularly in connection with the controversy over the continued ability of host States to enact environmental, health and other public welfare measures. The chapter then turns to current procedural innovations and proposals for reform, such as the proposal for an appellate mechanism. Section 3 concludes this chapter with the European Union's current proposal to replace investment arbitration altogether with a ‘Multilateral Investment Court’. Today, the system for settling investment disputes through investment arbitration faces proposals for its improvement, as well as for its demise, or at least its diminution as the principal mode of investment dispute settlement today. Yet, here is a field which has always seen such shifts in sentiment and little of what has been said in this book will likely be irrelevant in understanding what the future brings. INTRODUCTION For more than a decade there has been a global backlash against investment treaties and investment treaty arbitration. The early signs had showed in attempts to achieve more ‘balanced’ BITs in the 2004 US and Canadian Model BITs. 2004 also saw the Methanex arbitration. Following Methanex , ‘expropriation safeguards’ – meaning new forms of treaty language which guard against potentially overbroad findings of expropriation, particularly of indirect or regulatory expropriation – have come into focus. The Methanex Award has since been cited by, among others, the tribunal in Saluka for the general proposition that general, non-discriminatory regulation commonly accepted to be within the scope of a State's police powers will not be taken to amount to indirect expropriation.
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国际投资法与仲裁的新方向
最后一章讨论了当前对投资仲裁和投资条约的抵制。第1节讨论了21世纪初北美自由贸易协定第11章对投资仲裁的抵制,以及随之而来的1994年美国BIT原型在2004年的“再平衡”。从2007年开始,玻利维亚、厄瓜多尔和委内瑞拉终止参与ICSID公约和世界范围内其他类似的终止,到各国努力“重新平衡”(即重写)自己的双边投资协定和其他投资协定,这种反弹是如何增长的。第2节重点介绍了在这一全球再平衡努力中出现的一些最新条约条款,重点介绍了一些最重要的实质性条款;即FET条款和征用条款,特别是关于东道国是否有能力继续颁布环境、卫生和其他公共福利措施的争议。然后,本章转向当前的程序创新和改革建议,例如上诉机制的建议。第三节总结了欧盟目前提出的用“多边投资法院”取代投资仲裁的建议。今天,通过投资仲裁解决投资争端的制度面临着改进的建议,也面临着消亡的建议,或者至少是减少作为今天解决投资争端的主要方式的建议。然而,这是一个总是看到情绪变化的领域,本书中所说的很少可能与理解未来带来的事情无关。十多年来,全球对投资条约和投资条约仲裁一直存在强烈反对。早在2004年美国和加拿大的双边投资协定中,就已经出现了实现更“平衡”双边投资协定的早期迹象。2004年也见证了梅萨内斯的仲裁。继Methanex之后,“征用保障”——意味着新形式的条约语言,以防止征用的潜在过度广泛的发现,特别是间接或监管征用——已经成为焦点。此后,除其他外,萨卢卡法庭引用了梅塞内克斯裁决的一般性主张,即普遍接受的属于国家警察权力范围内的一般性、非歧视性规定将不被视为构成间接征用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Investment Dispute Settlement Fair and Equitable Treatment, and Full Protection and Security New Directions in International Investment Law and Arbitration The Metamorphosis of Investment Treaties Protected Investors
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