Our African blog, Socialist Banner, has already drawn attention to ISDS, or Investor-State Dispute Settlement and what is known as
the “Dutch Sandwich” in relation to the oil company suing Uganda. And this blog
has also highlighted it in posts concerning the proposed TTIP and TTP trade
treaties. ISDS is a mechanism by which investors can sue a state by means of
arbitration, which is a kind of privatized court. Many lawyers stress the
advantage that plaintiffs don’t have to go before a local judge whom they feel
they cannot trust. You can choose a judge for yourself, the opponent does the
same, and the two of those choose a chairman. They are called arbitrators. The
case is heard at a renowned institute, like the World Bank. How could it not be
more fair?
Bernard Mommer, Venezuela’s former vice-minister for oil in
the time of Hugo Chavez has to laugh a bit, “The whole arbitration system is
biased in favour of investors.” After Argentina, no country has been sued as
much as Venezuela: until 2014 at least 37 cases have been filed against this
Latin American state. However, the fine they can expect now exceeds all of the
others. ConocoPhillips, a Texas-based oil company, claims 31 billion dollars
and seems to be on the winning side. According to critics, that case represents
everything that’s wrong with the ISDS system.
The dispute about oil began in 2006 when Chavez decided to
nationalise the oil sector. Mommer was responsible for the negotiations with
international oil firms about compensation. Most of the 41 companies in the
country agreed with the buyout. Two didn’t. Those were the Texas-based companies
ConocoPhillips and Mobil (now ExxonMobil).
“When we started with the expropriation, they went for
arbitration,” says Mommer. “I didn’t even know that this was possible. For
arbitration two parties need to consent, don’t they? How could they sue a state?”
But Mommer discovered that Venezuela signed Bilateral Investment Treaties
(BITs) in 1991, among others with the Netherlands. Those treaties give all
investors from the given country an offer to arbitration if they feel treated
unfairly by the host state.
These oil firms were offered a brilliant compensation,” says
Juan Carlos Boue, a Venezuelan researcher at the Oxford Institute of Energy.
“But when the oil price rose, they decided to leave the country with as much
money as possible.” For ExxonMobil, a giant with a revenue of 400 billion
dollars, twice as big as the GDP of Venezuela, there is more at stake. “They
have unlimited resources. They want to let the world know what happens if you
challenge them.” And the arbitrators? “Some of them are on the boards of
multinational companies. They just don’t want the countries to get away with
it. They have an extreme dislike towards countries like Venezuela.”
ConocoPhillips and Mobil quickly moved their Venezuelan
holdings to the Netherlands in 2006. That gave them the opportunity to claim,
as Dutch investors, that the unexpected policy change violated their BIT
rights. Together, they demanded 42 billion dollars.
“This is called the Dutch sandwich”, says George Kahale, a
top lawyer from New York, “You put a Dutch holding in the middle of your
company chain and you can call yourself Dutch.”
Companies are not allowed to do this if the dispute already
started. ExxonMobil and Conoco said that their move was made independently of
the dispute. However, a message in the Wikileaks cables where a representative
of Conoco admitted that they “already” moved to the Netherlands to “safeguard
their arbitration rights.”
ExxonMobil has had no luck. The three arbitrators have
judged that the expropriation was lawful. ExxonMobil gets compensation, but not
much more than what they were offered earlier, around one billion dollars. But
the Conoco case evolved differently. Two of the three arbitrators found the
expropriation unlawful. This means that Venezuela has to compensate the firm,
not on the basis of the low oil price in 2006, but on the basis of the much
higher price at the time of the claim. This will amount to tens of billions of
dollars. This is insane, says Kahale. “The fact is that four out of six
arbitrators found that the expropriation was perfectly lawful.”
Among the Wikileaks in a cable from 2008, the Conoco
representative tells the American ambassador that the negotiations are going
well and that Venezuela is being reasonable. This is in contradiction to what
Conoco was claiming in public. Yet the arbitrators – at least, two of the three
– now say that they can’t change their conclusion anymore and now have to
proceed to the next phase, about the damages.
“In other words”, says Mommer, “the investor can lie. We
can’t sue them anyway. They alone can sue us. This shows why Western countries
have invented this system. It has been set up to break down the nation-state.”
SDS is structurally flawed, says Kahale. “Who are the
judges? They are investment lawyers. Their commercial background shines through
in their decisions. Every judge of course always brings his own views to his
job. But in arbitration these people are deciding no longer private commercial
disputes, but megacases of international significance, with sometimes vital
importance for individual states, involving billions of dollars, with very
little training in international law.”
Too many, conflicts of interest arise. “You will never see a
supreme court judge acting as a counsel in another case. But many arbitrators
also act as a counsel. It’s very hard to preside over the legality of something
one day, and advocate the same issue the other day. It is natural that I’m
holding back in one or the other, depending on which case is more important to
me. There are very few checks and balances. Too many mistakes are made.”
Venezuela is fed up with ISDS claims. Soon after the claims
were filed, they pulled the plug, not only from the ICSID convention (which
acknowledges the World Bank as arbitration court) but also from a number of
BITs. The Dutch BIT was the first to be terminated a few years ago.
Unfortunately for Venezuela, this treaty contains a clause giving investors the
right to arbitration until 2023.
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