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Ending International Investment Agreements: Russia's Withdrawal from Participation in the Energy Charter Treaty

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2018

Tania Voon
Affiliation:
Professor, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne; Panellist, Energy Charter Treaty Roster.
Andrew D. Mitchell
Affiliation:
Professor, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne; Panellist, Energy Charter Treaty Roster.
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Extract

When states withdraw from bilateral investment treaties or denounce multilateral treaties related to foreign investment, a range of intersecting questions arise in domestic and international law. Recent developments have demonstrated potential incongruities between domestic and international approaches to investment protection, including as regards the effectiveness of withdrawal and the implications for existing investments. This essay reflects on international and domestic disputes involving the withdrawal of the Russian Federation from participation in the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT) to highlight these interactions. These issues have become particularly pertinent today because more than 1,500 international investment agreements (IIAs) are nearing expiry of their initial term, providing an opportunity for termination. Moreover, some states have begun to terminate or denounce investment treaties, while many more are engaging in a process of renegotiation and reform. The Russian case study also highlights the potentially far-reaching effects of a state simply signing a treaty, even many years after the state has expressed its decision to withdraw from it, and notwithstanding tensions with the domestic legal framework.

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Research Article
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Copyright © 2018 by The American Society of International Law, Tania Voon and Andrew D. Mitchell

When states withdraw from bilateral investment treaties or denounce multilateral treaties related to foreign investment, a range of intersecting questions arise in domestic and international law. Recent developments have demonstrated potential incongruities between domestic and international approaches to investment protection, including as regards the effectiveness of withdrawal and the implications for existing investments. This essay reflects on international and domestic disputes involving the withdrawal of the Russian Federation from participation in the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT) to highlight these interactions.Footnote 1 These issues have become particularly pertinent today because more than 1,500 international investment agreements (IIAs) are nearing expiry of their initial term, providing an opportunity for termination.Footnote 2 Moreover, some states have begun to terminate or denounce investment treaties, while many more are engaging in a process of renegotiation and reform.Footnote 3 The Russian case study also highlights the potentially far-reaching effects of a state simply signing a treaty, even many years after the state has expressed its decision to withdraw from it, and notwithstanding tensions with the domestic legal framework.

The Yukos Litigation

Multiple international and domestic disputes have arisen from Russia's alleged treatment of OAO Yukos Oil Company,Footnote 4 including cases (not addressed here) in the European Court of Human Rights,Footnote 5 France,Footnote 6 the United States,Footnote 7 and elsewhere.Footnote 8 The investment treaty arbitrations involving Yukos have attracted considerable analysis, particularly because the tribunal hearing the “first wave” of ECT claims (by the Yukos controlling shareholders Hulley Enterprises,Footnote 9 Yukos Universal,Footnote 10 and Veteran PetroleumFootnote 11 ) awarded them a combined sum exceeding US$50 billion plus costs: the highest known investment treaty award to date.Footnote 12 The factual aspects of the claims and reasoning underlying the findings of breach are addressed elsewhere.Footnote 13 Here, we focus on the jurisdictional aspects of the disputes, to explore how domestic and international tribunals have understood the interface between domestic and international law in connection with Russia's participation in the ECT.

Russia's Provisional Application of the ECT

On December 17, 1994, Russia signed the ECT, which entered into force on April 16, 1998, but it never ratified it. Russia's nonratification of the ECT leads to the question of provisional application. Article 45(1) of the ECT states: “Each signatory agrees to apply this Treaty provisionally pending its entry into force for such signatory in accordance with Article 44, to the extent that such provisional application is not inconsistent with its constitution, laws or regulations.”Footnote 14

On August 20, 2009, Russia officially informed the depository of the treaty that it did not intend to ratify the ECT.Footnote 15 Article 45(3)(a) provides for provisional application to end sixty days after such notification. Article 45(3)(b) provides a “survival” mechanism: a state that terminates provisional application pursuant to Article 45(3)(a) remains bound, for twenty more years, by the investment protection obligations in Part III and the dispute settlement provisions in Part V of the ECT. Although states may opt out of the obligations in Article 45(3)(b) by indicating their nonacceptance, Russia did not do so (Article 45(3)(c); Annex PA).

The Yukos ECT disputes center on Russia's provisional application of Part V of the ECT, and in particular Article 26, which provides in Paragraph 4 for investor–state dispute settlement (ISDS). Under Article 26(3)(a), contracting parties give their “unconditional consent to the submission of a dispute to international arbitration or conciliation.” Some exceptions apply: in Russia's case, such consent is not given “where the Investor has previously submitted the dispute” to Russia's courts or administrative tribunals or in accordance with any applicable, previously agreed dispute settlement procedure.Footnote 16

Thus, notwithstanding Russia's 2009 decision not to ratify the ECT, Russia has consented to ISDS for an additional twenty years with respect to investments made during the period of provisional application. However, this consent applies only to the extent that such application is not inconsistent with its constitution, laws, or regulations, and provided that the claim has not already been submitted to Russian courts or another dispute settlement procedure. The question of consistency between Russia's provisional application of the ECT and its domestic legal system is therefore central to identifying Russia's obligations towards investments made between its signature in 1994 and the termination of provisional application in 2009. That question is likely to remain paramount for any subsequent ECT claims against Russia until October 19, 2029.Footnote 17

Investment Treaty Tribunals' Acceptance of Jurisdiction over the Yukos ECT Claims

In the first wave of Yukos cases, the “central issue” in the jurisdictional phase was whether the tribunal's jurisdiction could be founded on Russia's provisional application of the ECT.Footnote 18 Russia contended that Article 26 of the ECT is not binding because it is inconsistent with its constitution and laws.Footnote 19

The tribunal referred to the words “to the extent that such provisional application is not inconsistent with its constitution, laws or regulations” in Article 45(1) of the ECT as a “Limitation Clause.”Footnote 20 Russia maintained that this clause, “by giving priority to the Constitution, ensures that provisional application of the ECT does not infringe upon the prerogatives of the Legislature (in Russia, the State Duma).”Footnote 21 The tribunal found that a signatory need not, in order to invoke the limitation clause, have made a declaration of nonacceptance of provisional application.Footnote 22 The key question therefore became whether

the Limitation Clause of Article 45(1) represents an “all-or-nothing” proposition, that is—whether it concerns the inconsistency of the principle of provisional application with the Constitution, laws or regulations of Respondent, or whether it requires a “piecemeal” approach which requires the analysis of the consistency of each provision of the ECT with the Constitution, laws and regulations of Respondent.Footnote 23

Russia favored the “piecemeal” approach, whereas the claimants and the tribunal supported the “all-or-nothing” approach.Footnote 24 The tribunal interpreted the words “such provisional application” as referring to provisional application of “this Treaty” (meaning the ECT as a whole), as specified in the first clause of Article 45(1).Footnote 25 The tribunal considered that allowing a signatory to “avoid the provisional application of a treaty … on the basis that one or more of the provisions of the treaty is contrary to its internal law” would undermine the principle of pacta sunt servanda and Article 27 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT), which states that “[a] party may not invoke the provisions of its internal law as justification for its failure to perform a treaty.”Footnote 26 The tribunal added:

Provisional application as a treaty mechanism is a question of public international law. International law and domestic law should not be allowed to combine, through the deployment of an “inconsistency” or “limitation” clause, to form a hybrid in which the content of domestic law directly controls the content of an international legal obligation.Footnote 27

The tribunal suggested that Russia did not “seriously challenge” the authorities cited by the claimants to the effect that “principle of provisional application per se” is not “unknown or unrecognized by Russian law.”Footnote 28 Making that assessment as at the time of Russia's signature of the ECT,Footnote 29 the tribunal held that “the principle of provisional application is perfectly consistent with the Constitution, laws and regulations of the Russian Federation.”Footnote 30 The tribunal also took account of an explanatory note submitted by the Russian government to the Duma at that time, which stated that Russia had made no declarations regarding nonacceptance of provisional application because the ECT's “provisions on provisional application were in conformity with the Russian legal acts.”Footnote 31

Although the tribunal's jurisdictional analysis could have ended there, it nevertheless addressed Russia's submission that Article 26 of the ECT is inconsistent with Russian law.Footnote 32 The tribunal rejected that submission on the basis that Russia's foreign investment law is “crystal clear” in recognising ISDS where agreed by the disputants,Footnote 33 again noting statements to this effect in the government's explanatory note.Footnote 34 Russia argued that only the Duma could grant consent to arbitration under Article 26, by ratifying the ECT.Footnote 35 However, the tribunal considered that Russia's federal law on international treaties of 1995 makes clear that Russia's consent to be bound by such a treaty may be expressed by signature of the treaty and that this decision rests with the executive arm of government.Footnote 36

Three other disputes make up a “second wave” of ECT claims against Russia in connection with Yukos, one of which (brought by Financial Performance Holdings) has been withdrawn.Footnote 37 Separate tribunals in the remaining two disputes (brought by Yukos Capital and Luxtona respectively) have ruled that they have jurisdiction on the basis of Russia's provisional application of the ECT.Footnote 38 These two rulings have not yet been made public and therefore the reasoning of the tribunals (and a dissent by at least one arbitrator) on provisional application is unavailable. However, their conclusion is consistent with the jurisdictional decisions in the first wave of cases, notwithstanding domestic court review of those decisions as discussed below.

Domestic Court Review of Tribunals' Jurisdiction over the Yukos ECT Claims

On April 20, 2016, The Hague District Court in the Netherlands (as the seat of the investment treaty arbitrations) quashed the three jurisdictional and three merits awards in the first wave of Yukos-related ECT claims.Footnote 39 An appeal to the Court of Appeal of The Hague is pending.Footnote 40 The District Court disagreed with the investment tribunal that the reference in ECT Article 45(1) to “this Treaty” means that Russia's provisional application of the ECT must relate to the treaty as a whole rather than only parts of the treaty.Footnote 41 Instead, the Court pointed out that the limitation clause in Article 45(1) applies expressly to the “constitution,” “laws,” and “regulations”: “It is … inconceivable that a ban on the provisional application of a treaty can be laid down in delegated legislation.”Footnote 42 The Court also disagreed with the tribunal that a “piecemeal” approach would be inconsistent with pacta sunt servanda or VCLT Article 27.Footnote 43

Having determined that the limitation clause in ECT Article 45(1) requires consideration of whether provisional application of particular ECT provisions is compatible with Russian law, the District Court went on to examine whether ISDS under ECT Article 26 “harmonise[s] with the [Russian] legal system.”Footnote 44 The Court stated that this “issue … should be answered according to Russian law.”Footnote 45 The Court considered that relevant legislative provisions “indicat[e] that public-law disputes regarding expropriation can only be adjudicated by the Russian courts”Footnote 46 and that these provisions

do not provide for the option of arbitration for disputes arising from a legal relationship between the Russian Federation and (foreign) investors, in which the public-law nature of the Russian Federation's actions in that relationship is predominant and in which an assessment of the exercise of public-law authorities by Russian Federation state bodies is concerned. … [I]t is beyond doubt that such a dispute exists in the current cases.Footnote 47

The Court concluded that ECT Article 26 “does not have a legal basis in Russian law.”Footnote 48 Moreover, pursuant to the principle of the separation of powers in Russia's constitution, treaties that depart from Russian law are incorporated in and take precedence over domestic law but require ratification by the legislature and not merely signature by the executive.Footnote 49 Therefore, Russia “was not bound by the provisional application of the arbitration regulations of Article 26 ECT.”Footnote 50

As regards the second wave of Yukos ECT claims, on July 20, 2017, the Swiss Federal Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to the interim jurisdictional ruling regarding the provisional application of the ECT by the investment treaty tribunal in the Yukos Capital claim, because that tribunal has reserved for the merits phase two other jurisdictional objections by Russia.Footnote 51 A similar domestic challenge to the jurisdictional decision regarding the Luxtona claim continues in Canada.Footnote 52 The interpretation of the provisional application provisions therefore remain unresolved at both domestic and international levels.

Conclusion

According to Fenghua Li, ECT Article 45 strikes a balance in connection with provisional application between increasing participation in the treaty by safeguarding a state's sovereignty, and imposing on the state reciprocal obligations under the treaty by allowing enforcement of those obligations through ISDS.Footnote 53 Yet the investment tribunal decisions in the Yukos ECT disputes so far appear to recalibrate that balance, diminishing the distinction between provisional application and ratification of a treaty: in the first wave of cases, both because of the tribunal's adoption of an “all-or-nothing” approach to provisional application, and because of the way the tribunal understood Russian law regarding the ratification process and ISDS. Several other investment treaty arbitrations concerning provisional application of the ECT have had similar outcomes.Footnote 54

Many IIAs include survival mechanisms extending their application to existing investments by ten or twenty years following their termination, expanding the significance of entering such a treaty. Moreover, like the ECT, several IIAs also address provisional applicationFootnote 55 and often contain limitation clauses precluding inconsistency with domestic law.Footnote 56 These clauses might be expected to prevent states from facing unanticipated obligations or claims during the period of provisional application and, following exit from the treaty, any subsequent survival period. The investment treaty awards concerning the provisional application of the ECT suggest that these expectations may be false. Should tribunals continue to follow this line of reasoning, states such as Russia may have difficulty changing their obligations under existing treaties but may instead need to revisit domestic legal frameworks and drafting practices in future IIAsFootnote 57 and rely on domestic courts to reconsider the appropriate approach in set-aside or enforcement proceedings. The Yukos cases, and particularly the huge award against Russia, may also cause states to reconsider their participation in the ECT or other IIAs that impose substantive obligations concerning provisional application, or even those that contain standard survival clauses.

References

1 See The Energy Charter Treaty, International Energy Charter.

2 See UN Conference on Trade and Development, International Investment Policymaking in Transition: Challenges and Opportunities of Treaty Renewal (UNCTAD IIA Issues Note No.4, June 2013).

3 See, e.g., Tania Voon & Andrew D. Mitchell, Denunciation, Termination and Survival: The Interplay of Treaty Law and International Investment Law, 31 ICSID Rev. 413 (2016). See also Tania Voon et al., Parting Ways: The Impact of Mutual Termination of Investment Treaties on Investor Rights, 29 ICSID Rev. 451 (2014).

4 See Chester Brown, The End of the Affair?, 17 J. World Inv. Trade 126, 127–128 (2016).

5 See Oao Neftyanaya Kompaniya v. Russia, App. No. 14902/04 (Eur. Ct. H.R. 2011).

6 See, e.g., Douglas Thomson, Rocket Funds Released in Yukos Battle, Glob. Arb. Rev. (June 27, 2017). See also Cour d'appel [CA] [regional court of appeal] Paris, cviii, June 27, 2017, 16/01314 (Fr.).

8 See, e.g., RosInvestCo U.K. v. Russia, SCC Arbitration V (079/2005), Final Award (Sept. 12, 2010); Russia v. RosInvestCo U.K., Hovrätt [Court of Appeals], Case No. T 10060-10 (Sept. 5, 2013) (Swed.) (setting aside the RosInvestCo award); Renta 4 v. Russia, SCC Arbitration V (024/2007), Award on Preliminary Objections (Mar. 20, 2009); Russia v. GBI SICAV, Hovrätt [Court of Appeals], Case No. T 9128-14 (Jan. 18, 2016) (Swed.) (declaring that the Renta 4 investment treaty tribunal lacked jurisdiction).

9 Hulley Enterprises Limited (Cyprus) v. Russia, Case No. AA 226, Final Award (Perm. Ct. Arb., Jul. 18, 2014); Hulley Enterprises Limited (Cyprus) v. Russia, Case No. AA 226, Interim Award on Jurisdiction and Admissibility (Perm. Ct. Arb., Nov. 30, 2009).

10 Yukos Universal Limited (Isle of Man) v. Russia, Case No. AA 227, Final Award (Perm. Ct. Arb., Jul. 18, 2014); Yukos Universal Limited (Isle of Man) v. Russia, Case No. AA 227, Interim Award on Jurisdiction and Admissibility (Perm. Ct. Arb., Nov. 30, 2009) [hereinafter Yukos Universal Limited, Interim Award].

11 Veteran Petroleum Limited (Cyprus) v. Russia, Case No. AA 228, Final Award (Perm. Ct. Arb., Jul. 18, 2014); Veteran Petroleum Limited (Cyprus) v. Russia, Case No. AA 228, Interim Award on Jurisdiction and Admissibility (Perm. Ct. Arb., Nov. 30, 2009).

12 See UN Conference on Trade and Development, Recent Trends in IIAs and ISDS (UNCTAD IIA Issues Note No.1 Feb. 2015).

13 See generally, e.g., Brown, supra note 4.

14 See also Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties art. 25, May 22, 1969, 1155 UNTS 331.

15 See Russian Federation, International Energy Charter.

16 Energy Charter Treaty art. 26(3)(b), art. 26(2)(a), art. 26(2)(b) and annex ID, Dec. 17, 1994, 2080 UNTS 95.

17 See, e.g., Yukos Universal Limited, Interim Award, supra note 10, at paras. 338, 339.

18 Id. at para. 244.

19 Id. at para. 247.

20 Id. at para. 246.

21 Id. at para. 293.

22 Id. at paras. 262, 284, 290. See similarly Ioannis Kardassopoulos v. Georgia, ICSID Case No. ARB/05/18, Decision on Jurisdiction, para. 228 (Jul. 6, 2007).

23 Yukos Universal Limited, Interim Award, supra 10, at para. 248(c).

24 Id. at paras. 292, 301, 311.

25 Id. at paras. 305, 308. See similarly Kardassopoulos, supra note 22, at paras. 210, 211.

26 Yukos Universal Limited, Interim Award, supra note 10, at para. 313.

27 Id. at para. 315.

28 Id. at paras. 329, 330.

29 Id. at para. 343.

30 Id. at para. 338.

31 Id. at para. 345.

32 Id. at para. 346.

33 Id. at para. 370.

34 Id. at para. 374.

35 Id. at para. 380.

36 Id. at paras. 381–83.

37 Douglas Thomson & Alison Ross, Second-Wave Yukos Case Withdrawn “Out of the Blue”, Glob. Arb. Rev. (Oct. 3, 2016).

39 Russia v. Veteran Petroleum Limited, Case No C/09/477162/HA ZA 15-2, (Hague District Court, April 20, 2016).

41 Veteran Petroleum, supra note 39, at para. 5.12.

42 Id. at para. 5.13.

43 Id. at para. 5.19.

44 Id. at para. 5.33.

45 Id. at para. 5.34.

46 Id. at para. 5.48.

47 Id. at para. 5.41.

48 Id. at para. 5.65.

49 Id. at paras. 5.87, 5.91, 5.93.

50 Id. at para. 5.95.

51 Bundesgericht [BGer] [Federal Supreme Court] July 20, 2017, Russia v. Yukos Capital Sàrl para. 3.3 (Switz.).

52 Hepburn, supra note 38.

53 Fenghua Li, The Yukos Cases and the Provisional Application of the Energy Charter Treaty, 6 Camb. Int'l L.J. 75, 84–85 (2017).

54 See, e.g., disputes mentioned in id. at note 69.

55 For example, several IIAs involving Europe or European countries.

56 Gerhard Hafner, The “Provisional Application” of the Energy Charter Treaty, in International Investment Law for the 21st Century 593, 597, 601 (Christina Binder et al eds., 2009).

57 See, e.g., Joel Dahlquist, Russia Sets Out New Guidelines for Contents of Future Investment Treaties, Inv. Arb. Rep. (Oct. 26, 2016).