International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes
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ICSID logo
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Formation | 1966 |
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Type | Dispute resolution organization |
Legal status | Treaty |
Purpose | International arbitration |
Headquarters | Washington, D.C. |
Membership
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159 countries |
Secretary-General
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Meg Kinnear |
Parent organization
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World Bank Group |
Website | icsid.worldbank.org |
The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) is an international arbitration institution which facilitates legal dispute resolution and conciliation between international investors. The ICSID is a member of the World Bank Group, from which it receives funding, and is headquartered in Washington, D.C., in the United States. It was established in 1966 as an autonomous, multilateral specialized institution to encourage international flow of investment and mitigate non-commercial risks by a treaty drafted by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development's executive directors and signed by member countries.[1][2] As of 2012[update] there were 158 member countries contracting with and governing the ICSID. Contracting member states agree to enforce and uphold arbitral awards in accordance with the ICSID Convention. The center performs advisory activities and maintains several publications.
Contents
History
In the 1950s and 1960s, the Organization for European Economic Cooperation (now the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) had made several attempts to create a framework for protecting international investments, but its efforts revealed conflicting views on how to provide compensation for the expropriation of foreign direct investment. In 1961, then-General Counsel of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) Aron Broches developed the idea for a multilateral agreement on a process for resolving individual investment disputes on a case by case basis as opposed to imposing outcomes based on standards. Broches held conferences to consult legal experts from all parts of the world, including Europe, Africa, and Asia, to discuss and compose a preliminary agreement. The IBRD staff wrote an official draft of the agreement and consulted with legal representatives of the IBRD's board of directors to finalize the draft and have it approved. The board of directors approved the final draft of the agreement, titled Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States, and the Bank president disseminated the convention to its member states for signature on 18 March 1965. Twenty states immediately ratified the convention. The convention establishing the ICSID entered into force on 14 October 1966.[1][3][4]
Bilateral investment treaties (BITs) proliferated during the first decade of the 21st century, reaching more than 2,500 by 2007. Many such treaties contain text that refers present and future investment disputes to the ICSID.[5]
Statistical details of cases
From its launch to 30 June 2012, the ICSID has registered 390 dispute cases. The ICSID's caseload consisted of 88% convention arbitration cases, 2% convention conciliation cases, as well as 9% additional facility arbitration cases, and 1% additional facility conciliation cases. As of 30 June 2012[update], the ICSID's registered cases are distributed across the following economic sectors: oil, gas, and mining (25%), electricity and other energy (13%), other industries (12%), transportation industry (11%), construction industry (7%), financial industry (7%), information industry and communication industry (6%), water industry, sanitation, and food protection (6%), agriculture, fishing, and forestry (5%), services and trade (4%), and tourism industry (4%).
As of 27 July 2012[update], 246 of ICSID's 390 registered cases were concluded. Of the outcomes for arbitration proceedings as of 30 June 2012[update], 62% of disputes have been resolved by the ICSID's tribunal, while 38% have been settled or discontinued. Conciliation commission reports were issued for 67% of the conciliation proceedings, while 33% of proceedings were discontinued. In 75% of the conciliation reports parties failed to reach agreement, and only 25% recorded agreement among parties.[6][7]
The following law firms have served the most times in ICSID cases in alpha order: Arnold & Porter LLP, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP, King & Spalding LLP, Latham & Watkins LLP, Shearman & Sterling LLP, Sidley Austin LLP and White & Case LLP.[8] The claimant which has filed the most applications is Impregilo S.p.A.[8] States appearing most often as a respondent are in descending order: Argentina 49, Venezuela 36, Egypt 17, Ecuador 12, Congo 12, Peru 11 and Ukraine 10 times. Only two states, Gabon and Romania, have ever filed ICSID case against an investor. between 2009 and 2012 legal representation cost between US$1 million and 7.6 million. The approximate duration of a case was 3.6 years.[8]
Governance
The ICSID is governed by its Administrative Council which meets annually and elects the center's Secretary-General and Deputy Secretary-General, approves rules and regulations, conducts the center's case proceedings, and approves the center's budget and annual report. The council consists of one representative from each of the center's contracting member states and is chaired by the President of the World Bank Group, although the president may not vote. The ICSID's normal operations are carried out by its Secretariat which comprises 40 employees and is led by the Secretary-General of the ICSID. The Secretariat provides support to the Administrative Council in conducting the center's proceedings. It also manages the center's Panel of Conciliators and Panel of Arbitrators. Each contracting member state may appoint four persons to each panel.[4]:15 In addition to serving as the center's principal, the Secretary-General is responsible for legally representing the ICSID and serving as the registrar of its proceedings. As of 2012[update], Meg Kinnear serves as the center's Secretary-General.[2]
Membership
ICSID's 159 member states which have signed the center's convention include 158 United Nations member states plus Kosovo. Of these member states, only 151 are "contracting member states", that is they have ratified the contract.[9] Former members are Bolivia, Ecuador (withdrew 2009),[10] and Venezuela, which withdrew in 2012.[11] All ICSID contracting member states, whether or not they are parties to a given dispute, are required by the ICSID Convention to recognize and enforce ICSID arbitral awards.[4]
Non-contracting signatories
The following member states have signed the ICSID convention (date in parentheses), but have not ratified it.[9]
- Belize (1986)
- Dominican Republic (2000)
- Ethiopia (1965)
- Guinea-Bissau (1991)
- Kyrgyzstan (1995)
- Namibia (1998)
- Russia (1992)
- Thailand (1985)
Non members
Brazil, Mexico, India and South Africa are countries with large economies that have never been ICSID members.
Activities
The ICSID does not conduct arbitration or conciliation proceedings itself, but offers institutional and procedural support to conciliation commissions, tribunals, and other committees which conduct such matters. The center has two sets of rules that determine how cases will be initiated and conducted, either under the ICSID's Convention, Regulations and Rules or the ICSID's Additional Facility Rules. To be processed in accordance with the ICSID Convention, a legal dispute has to exist between one of the center's contracting member states and a national of another contracting member state. It must also be of a legal nature and relate directly to an investment. A case can be processed under the ICSID Additional Facility Rules if one of the parties to the dispute is either not a contracting member state or a national of a contracting member state. However, most cases are arbitrated under the ICSID Convention.[12][13][14] Recourse to ICSID conciliation and arbitration is entirely voluntary. However, once the parties have consented to arbitration under the ICSID Convention, neither party can unilaterally withdraw its consent.[15]
The ICSID Secretariat may also administer dispute resolution proceedings under other treaties and regularly assists tribunals or disputing parties in arbitrations among investors and states under the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNICTARL)'s arbitration regulations. The center provides administrative and technical support for a number of international dispute resolution proceedings through alternative facilities such as the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, Netherlands, the London Court of International Arbitration, and the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris, France.[12]
The ICSID also conducts advisory activities and research and publishes Investment Laws of the World and of Investment Treaties.[16] Since April 1986, the center has published a semi-annual law journal entitled ICSID Review: Foreign Investment Law Journal.[17]
Although the ICSID's proceedings generally take place in Washington, D.C., parties may agree that proceedings be held at one of a number of possible alternative locations, including the Permanent Court of Arbitration, the Regional Arbitration Centres of the Asian-African Legal Consultative Committee in Cairo, in Kuala Lumpur, or in Lagos, the Australian Centre for International Commercial Arbitration in Melbourne, the Australian Commercial Disputes Centre in Sydney, the Singapore International Arbitration Centre, the Gulf Cooperation Council Commercial Arbitration Centre in Bahrain, the German Institution of Arbitration, the Maxwell Chambers in Singapore, the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre, and the Centre for Arbitration and Conciliation at the Chamber of Commerce of Bogota.[18]
Case studies
- The Indonesian government was sued in June 2012 by a London-based mining company Churchill Mining after the local government revoked the concession rights held by a local company in which the firm had invested.[19] The government is countering the Churchill case, claiming that Churchill did not have the correct type of mining licenses.[19]
- In October 2012, an ICSID tribunal awarded a judgment of $1.8 billion for Occidental Petroleum against the government of Ecuador.[19] Additionally, Ecuador had to pay $589 million in backdated compound interest and half of the costs of the tribunal, making its total penalty around $2.4 billion.[19] The South American country annulled a contract with the oil firm on the grounds that it violated a clause that the company would not sell its rights to another firm without permission. The tribunal agreed the violation took place but judged that the annulment was not fair and equitable treatment to the company.[19]
- Irish oil firm Tullow Oil took the Ugandan government to court in November 2012 after value-added tax (VAT) was placed on goods and services the firm purchased for its operations in the country.[20] The Ugandan government responded that the company had no right to claim tax on such goods prior to commencement of drilling. The case also attracted criticism for Tullow's use of local legal representation, Kampala Associated Advocates (KAA); the Ugandan law firm was founded by Elly Kurahanga, the president of Tullow's operations in Uganda and concerns were raised over his impartiality in the issue.[20]
- Tobacco major Philip Morris sued Uruguay for alleged breaches to the Uruguay-Swiss BIT for requiring cigarette packs to display graphic health warnings and sued Australia under the Australia-Hong Kong BITS for requiring plain packaging for its cigarettes. The company claims that the packaging requirements in both countries violate its investment.[19]
See also
- Calvo Doctrine
- Bolivian gas conflict
- Cochabamba protests of 2000
- Investor-state dispute settlement
- Multilateral Agreement on Investment
References
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External links
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