Recent International Commercial Arbitration and Investor-State Arbitration Developments Impacting on Australia's Investments in the Resources Sector

L. Nottage, S. Butt
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Abstract

This paper highlights two sets of significant developments for businesspeople, legal advisors and policy-makers relating to international arbitration in the resources sector, particularly from an Australian perspective. Part 9.2 deals with international commercial arbitration (ICA), primarily between private firms, pointing out that a ‘legislative black hole’ arises for certain ICA agreements with the seat in Australia which were concluded before amendments to the International Arbitration Act (Cth) (IAA) commenced on 6 July 2010. Such ICA clauses are commonly included in long-term contracts, characteristic of the resources sector, so the IAA required amendment to provide support for ICA and these business relationships. A Bill introduced in 29 October 2014 aimed to fill this black hole. Part 9.3 turns to treaty-based investor-state arbitration (ISA), especially as it impacts on outbound investors from Australia. It reiterates opposition to the ‘Gillard Government Trade Policy Statement’, applied from April 2011 until the Abbott Government took power from 7 September 2013 and reverted to a case-by-case approach to including ISA protections in investment treaties. This Statement changed over two decades of treaty practice by insisting that Australia would no longer countenance any form of ISA in future treaties—even with developing countries with local laws and court systems that may not meet minimum international standards. We highlight problems that arise from such a stance, also proposed in a 2014 Bill in the Australian Senate from a minority Greens Party senator, by discussing two major developments in Indonesian law in 2012, both relevant to the resources sector. They suggest how international investment treaties (including two between Australia and Indonesia—both with ISA protections, which remain in effect, albeit perhaps limited in the earlier 1992 treaty) can help mitigate adverse effects on foreign investors. Part 9.3.1 discusses regulations issued to implement provisions of Indonesia’s Mining Law requiring eventual divestment of majority ownership to locals. Part 9.3.2 analyses a subsequent Constitutional Court decision to disband Indonesia’s regulator for upstream oil and gas exploration. Both examples highlight the need for Australia to retain ISA in addition to substantive law protections in any renegotiated or new investment treaty with Indonesia, including the bilateral free trade agreement under negotiation since September 2012, despite Indonesia’s announcement in March 2013 that it would be reviewing its 67 bilateral investment treaties.
最近国际商事仲裁和投资者-国家仲裁的发展对澳大利亚在资源领域的投资的影响
本文重点介绍了与资源部门国际仲裁有关的商人、法律顾问和政策制定者的两组重要发展,特别是从澳大利亚的角度来看。第9.2部分涉及国际商事仲裁(ICA),主要是私营公司之间的仲裁,指出在2010年7月6日《国际仲裁法》(Cth) (IAA)修订开始之前,与澳大利亚仲裁中心达成的某些ICA协议产生了“立法黑洞”。此类ICA条款通常包含在长期合同中,这是资源部门的特点,因此IAA需要修订,为ICA和这些业务关系提供支持。2014年10月29日提出的一项法案旨在填补这一黑洞。第9.3部分转向基于条约的投资者-国家仲裁(ISA),特别是它对澳大利亚境外投资者的影响。它重申反对“吉拉德政府贸易政策声明”,该声明从2011年4月开始实施,直到阿博特政府于2013年9月7日上台,并恢复了将ISA保护纳入投资条约的逐案处理方法。这一声明改变了20多年来的条约实践,坚持澳大利亚将不再在未来的条约中支持任何形式的ISA -即使是当地法律和法院系统可能不符合最低国际标准的发展中国家。我们通过讨论2012年印度尼西亚法律的两项重大发展,强调了这种立场所产生的问题,这两项发展都与资源部门有关,这一立场也在澳大利亚参议院的一项2014年法案中提出。他们建议国际投资条约(包括澳大利亚和印度尼西亚之间的两个条约——都有ISA保护,尽管可能在1992年的早期条约中受到限制,但仍然有效)可以帮助减轻对外国投资者的不利影响。第9.3.1部分讨论了为执行印度尼西亚《矿业法》规定而颁布的法规,这些规定要求最终将多数所有权转让给当地人。第9.3.2部分分析了随后宪法法院解散印尼上游石油和天然气勘探监管机构的决定。这两个例子都强调了澳大利亚在与印度尼西亚重新谈判或新的投资条约时,除了实体法保护外,还需要保留ISA,包括自2012年9月以来正在谈判的双边自由贸易协定,尽管印度尼西亚在2013年3月宣布将审查其67项双边投资条约。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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