As mentioned in the last post, a European Commission policy paper and draft regulation on investment policy were on their way. They are now available here and here. Here's what the policy paper says about investor-state:
(d) Enforcing investment commitments
Ensuring the effective enforceability of investment provisions is a key objective of the Union. The Union has increased its focus in recent years on ensuring that agreements negotiated in the field of the common commercial policy can be, and are, effectively enforced, if necessary through binding dispute settlement. The Union has included in all of its recent FTAs, an effective and expedient state-to-state dispute settlement system. This dispute settlement system will, in the future, cover the investment provisions of EU trade and investment agreements.
In order to ensure effective enforcement, investment agreements also feature investor-to-state dispute settlement, which permits an investor to take a claim against a government directly to binding international arbitration.21 Investor-state dispute settlement, which forms a key part of the inheritance that the Union receives from Member State BITs, is important as an investment involves the establishment of a long-term relationship with the host state which cannot be easily diverted to another market in the event of a problem with the investment. Investor-state is such an established feature of investment agreements that its absence would in fact discourage investors and make a host economy less attractive than others.
For these reasons, future EU agreements including investment protection should include investor-state dispute settlement. This raises challenges relating, in part, to the uniqueness of investor-state dispute settlement in international economic law and in part to the fact that the Union has not historically been a significant actor in this field. Current structures are to some extent ill-adapted to the advent of the Union. To take one example, the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States (the ICSID Convention), is open to signature and ratification by states members of the World Bank or party to the Statute of the International Court of Justice. The European Union qualifies under neither.
In approaching investor-state dispute settlement mechanisms, the Union should build on Member State practices to arrive at state-of-the art investor state dispute settlement mechanisms. Among the main challenges are:
• The transparency of investor-state dispute settlement. In line with the EU's approach in the WTO, the EU should ensure that investor-state dispute settlement is conducted in a transparent manner (including requests for arbitration, submissions, open hearings, amicus curiae briefs and publication of awards);
• The atomisation of disputes and interpretations. Consistency and predictability are key issues and the use of quasi-permanent arbitrators (as in the EU's FTA practice) and/or appellate mechanisms, where there is a likelihood of many claims under a particular agreement, should be considered;
• Rules for the conduct of arbitration. The Commission will explore with interested parties the possibility that the European Union seek to accede to the ICSID Convention (noting that this would require amendment of the ICSID Convention).
So that's from the European Commission. What does the European Parliament think of all this? Iana Dreyer of ECIPE notes the following:
Now enter the EU Parliament. Since December last year, it has equal powers to the Council of member states to decide on trade and investment policy. Certain Members of the European Parliament (MEPs), mostly on the left side of the political spectrum, have already signaled that they will want to put conditions on grandfathering BITs. Not all member state BITs cater for investor-to-state arbitration proceedings, but a growing number do. For ideological reasons, some MEPs oppose the principle of investor-to-state dispute settlement, so the matter might become politicized. ...
It will be interesting to watch this develop in parallel with the debate in the U.S.
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