Determining Compensation for Expropriation In Treaty-Based Oil & Gas Arbitrations - Chapter 06 - Leading Practitioners’ Guide to International Oil & Gas Arbitration
Author(s):
David W. Rivkin
Floriane Lavaud
Page Count:
46 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
August, 2015
Description:
Originally from The Leading Practitioners' Guide to International Oil & Gas Arbitration
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I. INTRODUCTION
The Occidental v. Ecuador II award1 and more recently the Yukos v.
Russia award2 leave no doubt that the largest damages awards in
treaty-based arbitration concern oil and gas disputes. In fact, four
out of the ten largest awards issued by the International Centre for
Settlement of Investment Disputes (“ICSID”) pertain to oil and gas
even though oil, gas and mining disputes only represent 25% of all
ICSID cases filed as of the end of 2013.3
The large size of these damages awards is not surprising, because
oil and gas arbitrations almost always deal with long-term contracts
involving substantial amounts of investment. Whether alleged treaty
violations occur during or before production, inevitably many years
remain in the life of the asset, which results in large claimed sums.
Given the amounts at stake, which are frequently in the billions of
dollars, even small variations in the way damages are calculated can
lead to substantial differences in the final damages award.
Because of the sheer size of claimed damages, it is incumbent
upon the investor-claimant to make the tribunal comfortable with the
amount of damages sought early on. Arbitrators are typically experts
at parsing complex issues of facts and law, but since they are
generally not mathematicians or economists, they are often much less
comfortable engaging in complex damages calculations. Tribunals
can be ill-at-ease when confronted with a very large damages claim,
the ultimate value of which must inevitably involve some measure of
estimation as to what would occur in the future. This element of
estimation, in turn, means that many of the factors in every oil and
gas damages calculation have some inherent uncertainty and offer a
range of possible values. Tribunals faced with such a circumstance
have wide discretion to choose numbers that they feel are appropriate
to factor into their analysis, and there is little room to challenge their
choices in this respect.4
In such circumstances, claimants are well-advised to present
arbitrators with as many actual figures as can be provided, rather than
rely solely on hired experts’ forecasts as to what those figures ought
rely solely on hired experts’ forecasts as to what those figures ought