Investment Protection Agreements Between the EU and Non-Member States (EU) - World Arbitration Reporter
Author(s):
Luca G. Radicati di Brozolo
Federica Iorio
Page Count:
40 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
May, 2015
Description:
Originally from World Arbitration Reporter (WAR) - 2nd Edition
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I. INTRODUCTION
For many years arbitration under investment protection
agreements between Member States of the European Union (the
“EU”)1 and non-EU States posed no specific issues. Most Member
States concluded bilateral investment treaties (“BITs”) with non-
Member States, including some that subsequently became members
of the EU.2 Those BITs were broadly similar to the classic model of
such treaties. They dealt exclusively with the protection of foreign
investments on a national and most-favored-nation basis, and
absolute standards of protection such as fair and equitable
treatment, full protection and security, prohibition of arbitrary and
discriminatory measures and guarantees in case of expropriation.
Also, similarly to most BITs, they provided for an arbitral mechanism
for the direct settlement of disputes between investors and the host
State, normally without the requirement of prior exhaustion of local
remedies.3
During that initial period the EU remained indifferent to the
conclusion of BITs by Member States with third States and did not
seek itself to enter into similar treaties. The bilateral and multilateral
treaties it did enter into—defined as free trade agreements,
economic partnership agreements, partnership and cooperation
agreements, stability and association agreements—aimed essentially
at providing free access to the markets of goods and services, whilst
investment protection remained ancillary to the EU’s aims. Those
agreements took the form of “mixed agreements”, i.e. agreements
negotiated by the European Commission (the “Commission”) and
entered into both by the EU itself (represented by the Council (the
“Council”) and by the Member States, since they related to matters
within the shared competences of the EU and Member States.4 They
did not focus specifically on the protection of private investments,
nor did they provide for any procedural mechanism directly
available to the investors for the safeguard of their rights against
breaches by the host State. Their principal purpose was to provide
free access to the markets of goods and services. The substantive
protection of investments was usually limited to national and mostfavored-
nation treatment, with respect to the establishment and
maintenance of investments and free capital movements.5
Thus, for a long time international investment protection law
embodied principally in the network of BITs, on the one hand, and
EU law, on the other hand, lived separate existences. In the words of
one commentator they were “distant worlds”.6 The contact between
the two “distant worlds” came about as a result of two sets of
circumstances. These relate respectively to BITs amongst Member
States (“intra-EU BITs”) and BITs between Member States and non-
Member States (“extra-EU BITs”), the compatibility of both of which
with EU law was called into question. This inevitably sparked a debate
also on the arbitral mechanisms provided for under those BITs.
also on the arbitral mechanisms provided for under those BITs.