“We cannot just give up our rights that have been
given in the CoW,” Richard
"PT
Freeport Indonesia [FI] reserves of all its rights [...] including the right to
commence arbitration to enforce all provisions of the contract,” Freeport-McMoRan’s CEO Richard C.
Adkerson asserted on Monday, referring to a protracted dispute with
the Indonesian government.
That threat is quite similar to those made by many
other multinational companies (MNCs), which fear decreases in their huge
profits following reforms by their host governments.
Until around eight years ago
international arbitration within the investor-state-dispute settlement (ISDS)
mechanism had become a powerful weapon exploited by MNCs to circumvent national
regulations and bully governments, notably in developing countries, to postpone
or annul any reform or to silence environmental NGOs.
At the time of its launch
several decades ago, ISDS was indeed vital to encourage foreign investment into
developing countries where legal systems were still weak and where many
governments were corrupt. It was a forum designed to resolve conflicts between
investors and host governments.
ISDS has therefore been
written into bilateral investment and trade agreements or treaties. One of the
most popular arbitration tribunals is the Washingtonbased International Center
for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), a unit of the World Bank.
The ISDS mechanism allows
foreign investors to bypass local courts and seek compensation in international
tribunals such as the ICSID, for what they claim to be damages caused by
expropriation or policy or contractual changes by host governments.
The problem is that within the
ISDS scheme only investors or companies can bring lawsuits. A government may
defend itself but it cannot sue a company. The mere threat of an ISDS claim by
big MNCs can alarm host governments, especially those with bad international
reputations, to act in favor of the investor.
An 18-month study in 2014 and
2015 by the BuzzFeed News online platform on arbitration cases within the ISDS
system in Indonesia, India, Africa, Central America and the United States,
involving the inspection of tens of thousands of pages of legal documents,
revealed how big corporations have turned the threat of ISDS legal action into
a fearsome weapon to enable them to have their demands met by host governments
in developing countries.
Under the ISDS scheme there
seemed no longer a balance between protection of investors and the right of
governments to regulate.
It was as striking for its
power as for its secrecy, with its proceedings. Of all the ways in which ISDS
is used, the most deeply hidden are the threats, uttered in private meetings or
ominous letters that invoke those courts, the BuzzFeed study concluded.
The threats are so powerful
they often eliminate the need to actually bring a lawsuit. Just the knowledge
that it could happen is enough.
Arbitrators who decide the
cases are often drawn from the ranks of the same highly paid corporate lawyers
who argue ISDS cases. These arbitrators have broad authority to interpret the
rules however they want. And there is no meaningful appeal.
Especially for Indonesia,
which still grapples with many mining contracts awarded under the authoritarian
Soeharto administration (1967-1998), the mere threat of an ISDS claim could
trigger alarm.
Indonesia suffered the pang of
an international arbitration in 2000 when the government, groaning under the
economic crisis, canceled a geothermal power plant contract with Karaha Bodas,
a local subsidiary of two US companies, in West Java.
But Karaha went to an
international arbitration tribunal, which in December 2000, awarded it US$261
million, even though the company had not yet ploughed even half that amount
into the project. In other words, Indonesia owed a quarter-billion dollars to a
private company for electricity it would never receive, from a power plant that
had not been built.
Formerly, the dominant view in
ISDS circles was simply “the sanctity of a contract must be honored” as long as
it was concluded with a legitimate government, however immoral, incompetent or
corrupt the leader who signed the contract.
However the perception within
international arbitration tribunals now no longer sees a corporate contract as
being absolute but a balance between corporate rights and fairness, and,
especially, overall economic benefits. When circumstances change after a
contract was signed that make it impractical, or uneconomic or inefficient, to
comply with contractual obligations, courts may relieve a party of its
commitments.
The prevailing opinion now
even tends to excuse parties, especially governments in developing countries,
from fulfilling contracts if they were entered under compulsion (duress) or
corruption or if one party is not competent and the terms of investment
arrangements seem imbalanced.
Even the United Nations
Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has criticized the ISDS regime as
already going far beyond its original intention, as the system now suffers from
a lack of coherence, consistency and predictability.
No wonder many governments in
Asia, including Indonesia, Australia, Africa, Europe and Latin America, have
decided to remove ISDS provisions from their investment or trade agreements
because of the tendency of its mechanism to favor large foreign investors over
national governments. Even within the ICSID there has been an increasing trend
not to see corporate contracts as being absolute.
Last December an ICSID
tribunal decided in favor of the Indonesian government in its dispute with
mining firm Churchill, rejecting the British company’s claim over $1 billion in
damages, after what the latter alleged to be the expropriation of its rights
over huge coal reserves in East Kalimantan.
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