SO M O
Roos van Os & Roeline Knottnerus
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
A gateway to ‘treaty shopping’ for investment protection
by multinational companies
October 2011
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
A gateway to ‘treaty shopping’ for investment protection
by multinational companies
Multinational companies (MNCs) investing abroad have been using Dutch
bilateral investment treaties (BITs) to sue host country governments for
over 100 billion dollars for alleged damages to the profi tability of their
investments. This is one of the outcomes of new SOMO research into the
unknown and opaque fi eld of Dutch BITs and their legal impacts. In addition,
the majority of companies enjoying generous investment protections
offered by Dutch BITs are so-called ‘mailbox companies’, Companies with no
employees on their payroll and no real economic activity in the Netherlands.
It is a known fact that many transnational companies choose the jurisdiction
of the Netherlands as the base for their global trade and investment
operations because of its favorable tax regime that facilitates corporate
tax avoidance strategies (SOMO, 2007).
This SOMO report highlights the until now unexplored role Dutch investment
protection policy plays in establishment decisions of MNCs. The report argues
that current Dutch investment policies are used for treaty shopping, allowing
for investor–state dispute settlement based on broad-based BIT defi nitions
that pose a danger to policy space and the safeguarding of public goods and
interests. Treaty shopping is not only highly problematic from a sustainable
development perspective for southern countries, but increasingly for northern
states as well.
This paper is the fi rst in a series of publications analysing
the impact of Dutch foreign and economic policy on sustainable
development and public interests. The series is part of a project
entitled ‘Private gain from public loss’ in which policies aiming
to attract foreign business or investment to or through
the Netherlands (the so-called ‘vestigingsbeleid’, or business
location policy) will be analysed in the framework of
development policy coherence.
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
A gateway to treaty shopping for
investment protection by multinational companies
Roos van Os & Roeline Knottnerus
Amsterdam, October 2011
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
2
Acknowledgements
A number of people deserve special thanks for their valuable comments and suggestions about this
report: Nathalie Bernasconi (IISD), Hege Elisabeth Kjos (UvA), Myriam Vander Stichele and Ronald
Gijsbertsen (SOMO) and Joris Tieleman for his much-appreciated research assistance. Please note
that those who have given feedback do not necessarily agree with the contents of the report. Full
responsibility for the report rests with the authors.
About SOMO
SOMO is an independent, non-profit research and network organisation working on social, ecological
and economic issues related to sustainable development. Since 1973, the organisation has been
investigating multinational corporations and the consequences of their activities for people and the
environment around the world. SOMO supports social organisations by providing training, coordinating
networks and generating and disseminating knowledge on multinational corporations in a context of
international production, trade, finance and regulation.
Colophon
Titel: Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
Ondertitel: A gateway to treaty shopping for investment protection by
multinational companies
Datum: October 2011
Authors: Roos van Os & Roeline Knottnerus
Layout design: Frans Schupp
ISBN: 978-90-71284-84-7
This publication is made possible with financial assistance from The Dutch Ministry
of Foreign Affairs. The content of this publication is the sole responsibility of SOMO
and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of The Dutch Ministry of Foreign
Affairs.
Published by:
Stichting Onderzoek Multinationale Ondernemingen
Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations
Sarphatistraat 30
1018 GL Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Tel: + 31 (20) 6391291
Website: www.somo.nl
This document is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-
NonCommercial-NoDerivateWorks 2.5 License.
3
Contents
1. Introduction ........................................................................................................ 4
1.1 General Context ................................................................................................... 4
1.2 Aim and Focus ..................................................................................................... 5
1.3 Research methods ............................................................................................... 6
1.4 Structure .............................................................................................................. 6
2. Background ........................................................................................................ 7
2.1 The International Investment Regime .................................................................. 7
2.2 Different Generations of Investment Agreements ............................................... 8
2.3 Treaty Shopping: A Literature Review ................................................................. 9
2.3.1 What is treaty shopping? ..................................................................................... 9
2.3.2 Controversies around treaty shopping ................................................................. 10
2.4 Influential Case Law on Treaty Shopping ............................................................ 13
3. Dutch policy on BITs ......................................................................................... 16
3.1 Foundation ........................................................................................................... 16
3.2 European Integration ........................................................................................... 19
4. Scope of the Dutch Model BIT .......................................................................... 21
4.1 Introduction .......................................................................................................... 21
4.2 Definition of Investment ....................................................................................... 21
4.3 The Definition of Investor ..................................................................................... 23
4.4 Dispute Settlement .............................................................................................. 24
4.5 Environmental, Social and Related Issues in IIAs ............................................... 26
5. Awards ................................................................................................................ 28
5.1 Introduction .......................................................................................................... 28
5.2 Quantification of Cases........................................................................................ 29
5.3 Treaty shopping perceived through arbitral awards ............................................ 30
6. Conclusions and recommendations ................................................................ 38
Annex 1 Overview of claims invoked by Dutch investors .......................................... 43
4
Introduction
1.1 General Context
The Netherlands is a popular base camp for (intermediate) holding and financial companies. An
estimated 20,000 so-called mailbox or letterbox companies, with no substantial commercial or
operational presence, have been created by multinational companies (MNCs) in order to benefit from
fiscal and other commercial benefits.
1
These incentives are deliberately put in place by the Dutch
government for international business groups that act through the Netherlands. While its favourable
tax climate is the main ground that makes the Netherlands an attractive jurisdiction for holding
companies, the Dutch foreign investment policy, with its extensive investment protection treaties, is
also highly valued by investors from around the world.
The Netherlands boasts an extensive network of bilateral investment treaties (BITs) that offer investors
the highest levels of protection and security in other contracting states. There are currently around 95
of these BITs in force.
2
Foreign investors, often incorporated in the Netherlands for fiscal
considerations, tend to use the Netherlands as a base camp for investment in the developing world.
3
The broad definitions, substantive provisions and investor-friendly conditions make the Netherlands a
favoured candidate for what is has been dubbed treaty shopping.
4
This is confirmed by the publicly
available list of pending and concluded cases, which suggests that in several cases opportunistic
reasons underpin the choice of the Netherlands as a jurisdiction in which to base investments.
5
The theory and corporate practices of treaty shopping […] so popular with transnational industry have
gained increasing critical attention.
6
With the exponential growth of international trade and investment
over the last 30 years, the broad definitions used in BITs are extending far-reaching protections to
assets and economic actors beyond the original intentions of the signatories to these agreements.
With unwanted and unforeseen consequences increasingly coming to the fore in the wake of
globalisation, some countries have recently begun to place limits on the opportunities for shell
companies to benefit from investment protection. Increasingly, the governance gap between existing
extra-territorial operations of MNCs and the absence of any effective global regulatory oversight is
perceived as undesirable, especially in light of issues related to sustainable development and states
1
M. van Dijk, F. Weyzig and R. Murphy, “The Netherlands: A tax Haven?” (2006) SOMO,
<http://somo.nl/html/paginas/pdf/netherlands_tax_haven_2006_NL.pdf> accessed 24 June 2011
2
See for a total overview of BITs signed by the Netherlands: <http://www.rijksoverheid.nl/onderwerpen/internationaal-
ondernemen/documenten-en-publicaties/rapporten/2010/02/22/ibo-landenlijst.html> accessed 24 June 2011
3
See: M. Skinner, C.A. Miles and S. Luttrell, “Access and advantage in investor-state arbitration: The law and practice of
treaty shopping” (2010) 3 JWELB 260
4
Ibid; Skinner et al. states that “Treaty Shopping” connotes the conduct of foreign investors who deliberately seek to acquire
the benefits of an investment treaty by making foreign investments or bringing claims from third countries that have more
favourable treaty terms with the target host state.
5
See the UNCTAD Database of Treaty-Based Investor-State Dispute Settlement Cases <http://www.unctad.org/iia-dbcases/>
and the Investment Treaty Arbitration website <http://ita.law.uvic.ca/> accessed 25 June 2011
6
See: M. Skinner, C.A. Miles and S. Luttrell, “Access and advantage in investor-state arbitration: The law and practice of
treaty shopping” (2010) 3 JWELB 260; J.P Blyschak, “Access and advantage expanded: Mobil Corporation v. Venezuela and
other recent arbitration awards on treaty shopping” (2011) 1 JWELB 32; UNCTAD, “Scope and Definition“, (2011) UNCTAD
Series on Issues in International Investment Agreements II, < http://www.unctad.org/en/docs//diaeia20102_en.pdf> accessed
25 June 2011
5
policy space to regulate.
7
Globalisation of business has so far been a process that has mainly secured
and legalized the rights of business, at times beneficial but often detrimental to (global) public goods
and the wider public interest. The opportunities offered by BIT networks to engage in treaty shopping
for investment protection are a case in point, destructive as they are to government attempts to regain
a firmer grip on capital in a globalized world order. The European Parliament recently adopted a
resolution which calls for a survey to investigate whether overly wide definitions of BITs in relation to
investors/investment have led to abusive practices in European countries, and has urged that this
assessment be used to clarify and narrow down the legal definition of the terms investor and
investment used in these treaties, in order to bring about a much needed rebalancing of investor
rights and obligations.
8
1.2 Aim and Focus
This paper, written partly in response to the European Parliaments call for an assessment of the
impacts of the provisions in EU member states BITs, focuses on the Netherlands as a hub for treaty
shopping for investment protection. The Netherlands as a treaty haven for international investment
arbitration has been growing in importance over recent decades. The country features prominently as
a jurisdiction in investment arbitration cases, a fact which has been duly noted in various scholarly
articles on jurisdiction in investment disputes. However, a systematic analysis of treaty provisions in
BITs signed by the Netherlands and case law in which Dutch companies are involved is still largely
lacking. This paper offers a first attempt at such an analytical overview by examining the impacts of
Dutch policy and practice in relation to its BITs on treaty shopping practices and corporate
restructuring via the Netherlands. This topic is discussed throughout the paper in the context of the
renewed attention for the relation between the international investment regime and concerns regarding
sustainable development, including environmental issues and states‟ duty to protect human rights.
It has been argued that Dutch policy with regard to investment treaties is incompatible with its
corporate social responsibility (CSR) policies and its development policy. Important recent initiatives
and instruments supported by the Dutch government, including the newly adopted UN Business and
Human Rights Guiding Principles and the 2011 renewed OECD Guidelines for Multinational
Enterprises, should give rise to a systematic revision of the key principles underlying Dutch investment
policy and the Dutch stance in the current European policy debate on the contours of its future
common investment policy. We have written this report to facilitate discussion among politicians and
policy-makers and civil society organisations, with the aim of contributing to an investment policy that
coheres better with international development objectives.
7
Human Rights Council, Protect, Respect and Remedy: a Framework for Business and Human Rights: Report of the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business
enterprises, John Ruggie, 2011 A/HRC/8/5 at 3, online: <http://www.reports-and-materials.org/Ruggie-report-7-Apr-
2008.pdf> accessed 24 June 2011
8
European Parliament resolution: “Recalls that the standard EU Member State BIT uses a broad definition of “foreign
investor”; asks the Commission to assess where this has led to abusive practices; asks the Commission to provide a clear
definition of a foreign investor based on this assessment and drawing on the latest OECD benchmark definition of
FDI“ European Parliament resolution of 6 April 2011 on the future European international investment policy (2010)
2010/2203(INI))
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
6
1.3 Research methods
The study is based primarily on desk research. Numerous internet sources were accessed, including
the UNCTAD Database of Treaty-Based InvestorState Dispute Settlement Cases and the Investment
Treaty Arbitration website. All sources are cited in footnotes in the text.
In general, a disclaimer is required. Although there is a marked trend towards transparency about
international investment arbitration, neither the arbitration framework as such nor the majority of IIAs,
including the Dutch model BIT, contain many specific rules and regulations with regard to the level of
transparency or access to case-related documents. Rather, what rules there are focus on
guaranteeing the confidentiality of awards. As a result, an unknown number of cases remains
undisclosed and unreported, with settlements reached behind closed doors and/or related documents
remaining hidden. As there is no single up-to-date database on arbitration cases to draw on, and the
Dutch government does not publish an inclusive list of arbitrations in which Dutch investors are
claimants, the analysis presented in this report has been based on information gathered by combining
multiple sources, and it must be assumed that the data presented is incomplete.
In accordance with SOMO‟s standard research methodology, the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs,
Agriculture and Innovation, as the prime object of the study, was informed of the research in advance,
and was given a standard period in which to review a draft report, to comment and to correct any
factual errors prior to publication. The Ministry decided not to respond formally, as it neither recognises
nor supports the tone, findings or conclusions of the report. It prefers to respond at a time and in a
manner that suits its own agenda.
9
As the information regarding the complainant companies discussed
in this report is based solely on tribunal awards and other secondary sources, it was not sent to them
for comments.
1.4 Structure
The structure of this paper is as follows: Section two provides some general background by discussing
the main characteristics of the international investment regime, the successive generations of
investment treaties, the impacts of international investment agreements (IIAs) on development, and a
literature review of treaty shopping. Section three examines both past and present Dutch policy with
regard to investment agreements, as well as current developments arising from ongoing European
integration. The scope of the Dutch investment treaties is explored in section four, with a special focus
on those aspects relevant to treaty shopping. Section five examines a number of illustrative cases
brought by Dutch investors, touches upon quantifiable aspects and provides a substantive overview of
awards in which treaty shopping surfaces as a relevant aspect. The paper closes with a conclusion
and recommendations.
9
Translated email correspondence with the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation, 29 August 2011
7
2. Background
2.1 The International Investment Regime
Since Germany and Pakistan entered into the first ever IIA in 1959, countries have concluded more
than 3,000.
10
These agreements most often take the form of a bilateral investment treaty (BIT). In
addition, investment protection is increasingly included in free trade agreements (FTAs), with the most
notable example being the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
11
In this paper, the terms
BIT and IIA are used interchangeably.
From a historical perspective, investment treaties are developed by capital-exporting countries to
promote investment and protect their nationals in capital-importing countries. With capital flowing
predominantly from more advanced countries to less developed ones, the bulk of these investment
treaties have traditionally been concluded between developed countries and developing countries.
Recent global geopolitical changes, however, have caused this trend to shift, with an increasing
number of SouthSouth agreements now being signed.
12
The rationale behind IIAs is that by offering
investors enhanced security by guaranteeing a layer of protection beyond that provided by the laws of
the host state, they will help to attract foreign investment. However, the relation between investment
protection agreements and inward investment flows remains, at best, controversial.
13
In contrast to many other international agreements between states, but like double taxation treaties,
investment agreements tend to be rather briefly worded. Broadly speaking, investment agreements
usually comprise three elements:
10
UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2010: investing in a low carbon economy, (2010) United Nations, p. 81,
<http://www.unctad.org/en/docs/wir2010_en.pdf> accessed 24 June 2011 The first BITs were concerned with the promotion
of investment rather than the protection.
11
North American Free Trade Agreement, Opened for signature 17 December 1992, 32 ILM 289 (entered into force 1 January
1994). Chapter 11 of NAFTA is investment treaty between Canada, the United States and Mexico. See <http://www.nafta-
sec-alena.org/en/view.aspx?x=343> accessed 13 July 2011.
12
R. Dolzer and C. Schreuer, Principles of International Investment Law (Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford 2008) p.21
13
UNCTAD, The role of international investment agreements in attracting foreign direct investment to developing
countries (Geneva: United Nations 2009) The most important argumentation underpinning the system of investment treaties
is that IIAs generate investment flows, in particular between the contracting parties of the agreement. An underlying
argument is that inward investment stimulates the economic development of countries, a causal relation that can not be
taken for granted. See: M. van Dijk and M. Vander Stichele, “Is foreign investment good for development?” (2008) SOMO
Paper, March 2008. <www. somo.nl/publications-n/Publication_2478/at_download/fullfile> accessed 24 June 2011 The
relationship between trade, investment, economic growth and (sustainable) development is far from clear-cut. In addition,
empirical evidence is equally ambiguous on the relation between investment treaties and inward investment flows. In recent
years, there has been a large amount of (mostly quantitative) research on this subject. S. Rose-Ackerman and J. Tobin,
Foreign direct investment and the business environment in developing countries: the impact of bilateral investment treaties,
(2005), Yale Law & Economics Research Paper, No. 293; E. Neumayer and L. Spess, Do bilateral investment treaties
increase foreign direct investment to developing countries? (2005) World Development 33(10) 15671585; J. Yackee, Do
Bilateral Investment Treaties promote FDI? Some Hints from Alternative Evidence (2010) Virginia Journal of International
Law, 51-2, p. 397-442. An exhaustive review of the literature falls outside the scope of this paper. But in general, there
seems to be little evidence that treaties lead to significant more inward investment flows. Other factors, such as political
stability, overall levels of economic development and exchange rates appear to be more important determinants of foreign
direct investment (FDI). The question remains to what extent IIAs are decisive in investment decisions of multinational
enterprises (MNEs). Brazil, an attractive destination for FDI but with no effective BITs in place, is an appealing example in
this respect.
UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2003: FDI Policies for Development: National and International
Perspectives. New York and Geneva: United Nations 2003) at 53. Fourteen BITs have been signed by Brazil and none are in
force.
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
8
1. Definitions among others, of what constitutes an investment and who counts as an
investor establishing the scope of the treaty;
2. Substantive obligations for host countries, which include, but are not limited to, non-
discrimination principles (national and most-favoured nation treatment), protection against
expropriation, fair and equitable treatment;
3. Provisions on investorstate dispute resolution that provide for international arbitration.
In this last element investment treaties differ from any other treaty, in that they allow foreign investors
to sue a host state, often without exhaustion of local remedies, before an international tribunal if they
believe that the IIA governing their investment has been violated. Disputes are resolved by
international arbitration, usually under the auspices of one of the following: the International Centre for
Settlements of Investment Disputes (ICSID), in Washington DC; the United Nations Commission on
International Trade Law (UNCITRAL); the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), in Paris; or the
Stockholm Chamber of Commerce (SCC). ICSID arbitration is often assumed to be superior, as it is a
self-contained, independent and internationalized system of dispute resolution that is not supervised
or corrected by national courts.
14
As the number of IIAs began to increase, so did the number of
arbitrations. The number of investorstate disputes grew from 6 known cases in 1995 to 226 in 2005.
In 2010, the number of known treaty-based investorstate dispute settlement cases filed under IIAs
grew by at least 25, bringing the total to 390 by the end of that year.
15
2.2 Different Generations of Investment Agreements
In reviewing investment treaties, it is helpful to distinguish between the different generations of IIAs.
16
The BITs signed between 1959 and the mid-1980s are generally referred to as the first generation,
and those signed between the mid-1980s and the mid-1990s as the second generation. Third
generation agreements are those concluded since 1995. The first two generations of IIAs saw a
substantial increase in investment protection, particularly through the inclusion of the investorstate
dispute settlement mechanism although very few awards were made. Significantly, these first and
second generation BITs continued to operate under the radar, well away from public scrutiny. Where
arbitration cases were brought, they concerned BITs with developing countries, and the adverse
effects were felt mainly in those developing countries. This changed in the 1990s, when major capital-
exporting countries, such as the United States and Canada, revised their approaches after foreign
investors from third countries brought their first arbitration suits against them under the BITs that they
themselves had negotiated. This spurred a debate about the very nature of the current regime of
international investment law. In essence, the controversy centres on the balance between the interests
of investment and investors on the one hand and the regulatory power and interest of host states, and
non-economic objectives, on the other.
17
14
A. Newcombe and L. Paradell, Law and Practice of Investment Treaties, Standards of Treatment, (Wolters Kluwer 2009),
p.27
15
UNCTAD, Latest DeveLopments in investorstate Dispute settlement (2011) IIA Issue Note, 1,
<http://www.unctad.org/en/docs//webdiaeia20113_en.pdf> accessed 24 June 2011
16
A. Newcombe and L. Paradell, Law and Practice of Investment Treaties, Standards of Treatment. (Wolters Kluwer 2009), p.
46-48; M. Sornarajah, “A Coming Crisis: Expansionary Trends in Investment Treaty Arbitration“ in K.P. Sauvant with M.
Chiswick-Patterson, eds., Appeals Mechanism in International Investment Disputes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008)
17
A. Newcombe and L. Paradell, Law and Practice of Investment Treaties, Standards of Treatment. (Wolters Kluwer, 2009),
p.63 L. Markert, The Crucial Question of Future Investment Treaties: Balancing Investors” Rights and Regulatory Interests of
Host State, (2011) International Investment Law and EU Law, EJIEL, p.145-171
9
Since the mid-1990s, a third generation of BITs has been gradually emerging. UNCTAD distinguishes
between four broad trends in this new generation of investment agreements.
18
First, there is a
deviation from the traditional open-ended asset-based definition of investment, in order to prevent
abusive practices in which assets were covered that were not intended by the parties to be covered
investments. Next, revised wording of various substantive treaty obligations emerges as new patterns
of BITs formulation. Third, agreements emerge that address a set of issues broader than specific
economic aspects: for example, protection of health, safety, and the environment, the promotion of
internationally recognized labour rights, and the maintenance of standards provisions. Lastly,
innovations regarding investorstate dispute settlement procedures are emerging, including enhanced
transparency in arbitrations and more detailed provisions on investorstate dispute settlement in order
to provide more legally oriented, predictable and orderly conduct at the different stages of the process.
This paper zooms in on the trends relating to the narrowing down of definitions and the developments
in investorstate dispute settlement in particular, as these are key to determining the scope of treaty
shopping practices that are the papers main focus. The text looks at these developments in the
context of the relationship between BITs and economic development, which is discussed in the next
paragraph.
2.3 Treaty Shopping: A Literature Review
2.3.1 What is treaty shopping?
Treaty shopping refers to the conduct of foreign investors in acquiring the benefits of investment
treaties in their actual or planned host state through third countries, through which their investment
needs to be routed.
19
To provide an example, Zimbabwe and the United States have not signed a BIT,
while the Netherlands and Zimbabwe have signed one. A US investor who wishes to invest in
Zimbabwe can acquire BIT protection in that country by structuring its investment through the
Netherlands, or any other country that has signed a favourable investment treaty with Zimbabwe.
Principally, there are two ways to structure the investment in order to gain the BIT protection. Either
the US investor can incorporate a legal entity in the Netherlands and make the investment directly via
this entity, or the investor can make the investment indirectly in Zimbabwe through any legal entity or
entities (located in any country) that is owned by a Dutch legal entity. This is called an indirectly
controlled investor (Section 4 shows this is the trademark of the Dutch BIT). This latter option
structuring investment through several legal entities can also create huge tax advantages. The
reason that the Netherlands is such a popular hub for intermediate or holding companies is the
existence there of a combination of several investor-friendly policies.
18
UNCTAD, Recent developments in international investment agreements, (2005) IIA monitor No. 2, <
http://www.unctad.org/en/docs/webiteiit20051_en.pdf> accessed 24 June 2011
19
M. Skinner, C.A. Miles and S. Luttrell, “Access and advantage in investor-state arbitration: The law and practice of treaty
shopping” (2010) 3 JWELB 260
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
10
Figure 1 Investment by an investor from a non-Contracting Party through an intermediate
company established in the Contracting Party
20
Apart from this, two forms of treaty shopping can be distinguished.
21
The first relates to the back end
of an investment, and is the more controversial, as the corporate restructuring is done after a dispute
has arisen. It will be shown below that this generally considered illegal. The second, and most
common, method takes place at the front end of the investment process. A company is set up in a
country which the investor believes has a favourable BIT with the host state. By means of such
nationality planning, the investor seeks to gain access to both substantive and procedural provisions
that are more advantageous than those offered by the BITs entered into by its own home state.
2.3.2 Controversies around treaty shopping
Treaty shopping is a controversial issue. Opinions differ on both the legality and desirability of treaty
shopping, often depending on ones interest and position within the international investment system.
Here, some arguments for and against are considered.
Legal but undesirable?
According to many observers, investment treaties are founded on the principle that host states
deliberately trade away some of their sovereignty in exchange for opportunities to attract investment
flows.
22
In this view, it should not matter to host states where investment capital originates, nor what
relations corporate investors maintain with the states of their incorporation.
23
Countries negotiate
treaties on the basis that an IIA achieves its purpose as long as it attracts foreign capital, and that the
country of the capitals origin is of little importance. This line of reasoning makes treaty shopping a
perfectly legal and acceptable practice under the current regime. Dolzer and Scheuer state that
20
UNCTAD, 2011. p.87 and Loyens & Loeff, The Netherlands, A gateway to the world, online publication, date unknown, see
<http://www.loyensloeff.com/en-US/AboutUs/CountryDesks/Documents/gatewaytotheworld.pdf> accessed 10 July 2011
21
M. Skinner, C.A. Miles and S. Luttrell, “Access and advantage in investor-state arbitration: The law and practice of treaty
shopping” (2010) 3 JWELB 260
22
R. Dolzer and C. Schreuer, Principles of International Investment Law (Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford 2008) ; C. Schreuer at the
conference 50 years of BITs, (2009) Frankfurt, Germany,
23
UNCTAD, “Scope and Definition“, (2011) UNCTAD Series on Issues in International Investment Agreements II, <
http://www.unctad.org/en/docs//diaeia20102_en.pdf> accessed 25 June 2011
11
nationality planning or treaty shopping is not illegal or unethical in principle, though states may
perceive it as undesirable and increasingly take measures against such practices.
24
Consent, but not to future consequences
A more formalistic argument holds that states have the power to design and consent to investment
treaties they are in need of. Consistent state practice in wording and design, including broad
definitions of investment and investor that allow treaty shopping, would show that states do not
object to current practice.
25
As a result, nationality as a decisive factor in whether or not investment
protections extend to specific investors can be seen as an increasingly elusive criterion in a globalised
world. In this set-up, investment protection is governed by a patchwork of mainly bilateral investment
treaties, which to all intents and purposes functions as a multilateral system of investment protection.
26
Some states may well perceive treaty shopping is unproblematic. However, an article with the
provocative title Why LDCs Sign Treaties that Hurt Them
27
shows that not all capital-importing
countries negotiators fully grasped all implications of IIAs at the time of signing. That past
governments were in many cases not fully, if at all, aware of the future consequences of the BITs they
were concluding is confirmed by the recent critical reactions to treaty shopping from countries in Latin
America and southern Africa, who have recently begun to adopt a much warier approach to
international investment treaties.
28
Reciprocity
A conventional argument against treaty shopping is that it violates the principle of reciprocity.
Investment treaties, like most bilateral treaties, establish reciprocal rights and obligations between the
contracting states.
29
Treaty shopping runs counter to this principle, in that an entity with no substantial
ties to a contracting state could avail itself of the treaty protections that its own state may not be willing
to reciprocate to investors from the host state. In order to prevent treaty standards overruling more
general standards of international law, various scholars have proposed a so-called external standard
approach. In this view, the criteria relating to investors/investment in IIAs should be supplemented
with additional external criteria for example through conditions set through ICSID
30
in order to
24
R. Dolzer and C. Schreuer, Principles of International Investment Law (Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford 2008) ; C. Schreuer at the
conference 50 years of BITs, (2009) Frankfurt, Germany,
25
The ILA/German Branch, The Determination of Nationality of Investors in International Investment. Agreements (IIAs) (2009)
Transnational International Law Research Centre, Online report, p. 65 <http://telc.jura.uni-
halle.de/sites/default/files/BeitraegeTWR/Heft%20106.pdf > accessed 24 June 2011
26
Schill for example argues that “multi-jurisdictional structuring […] shows that bilateralism as an ordering paradigm for
international investment relations is unfeasible, because investors can virtually opt for the BIT regime they prefer.“ S. W.
Schill, “ The Multilateralization of International Investment Law: The Emergence of a Multilateral System of Investment
Protection on the Basis of Bilateral Treaties” (2008). Society of International Economic Law (SIEL) Inaugural Conference
Paper, No. 18/08.
27
A. T. Guzman, Why LDCs Sign Treaties That Hurt them Explaining the Popularity of Bilateral Investment Treaties (1998) 38
VA J. INT”L L. p.639-688
28
L.T. Wells, The Emerging Global Regime for Investment: A Response, (2010) 52 Harv. Int”l L.J. Online p. P.46-48
29
M. Sornarajah, International Law on Foreign Investment (Cambridge University. Press Cambridge 2004), p. 8; C. McLachlan,
L. Shore, M. Weiniger, International Investment Arbitration (Oxford. University Press 2007)
30
C. Schreuer, “ICSID Convention: A Commentary“ (CUP, Cambridge 2000). p.139-141. Much has been written on whether
the ICSID convention provides for additional criteria or conditions for both the investor and investment. The Convention itself
does not define the term “investment”. It is, however, possible to identify certain typical characteristics of investment under
the Convention: i) duration of the project; ii) regularity of profit and return; iii) risk for both sides; iv) a substantial commitment;
and v) the operation being significant to the host state”s development.
30
Tribunal awards show that ICSID jurisdiction is not open to just any kind of operation that the parties might qualify as an
investment.
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
12
ensure an effective connection between the corporation and the home state. It must be said, however,
that reciprocity in investment agreements does not work in the same way as in classical state
agreements, as IIAs are focused on the mutual benefits of the host state and the investor, and the
investor is to some extent a direct right-holder.
31
Nevertheless, the next paragraph shows that
conditions related to human rights could in theory be included in a reciprocal deal around investment
protection, and therefore could be undermined by investors who shop around for the most attractive
jurisdiction to invest from.
Sustainable development
More wide-ranging is the argument that treaty shopping is highly undesirable from the perspective of
sustainable development.
32
What is beneficial for companies (gaining access to investment protection)
is not necessarily beneficial to a host state, in terms of welfare or sustainable development. Treaty
shopping can expose a host country to claims by companies to which it would not otherwise allow
entry. Also, in various cases local MNCs have structured investment through other states in order to
access investment protection not available to local competitors. A better balance between investor
rights and obligations in IIAs is required. Norms for investors are already starting to emerge within the
so-called corporate social responsibility (CSR) framework, even though references to such issues are
as yet of a non-binding nature.
33
Given the fact that several developing, emerging and developed
countries have begun critically to reassess their BITs framework,
34
it is likely that countries will want in
the future to include investor obligations, including human rights and environmental clauses that apply
both to the states and to investors. However, the phenomenon of treaty shopping could detract from
government efforts to reform or rebalance investment treaties.
35
Government regulation of companies, industries or commodities on the grounds of human
rights or other sustainable development considerations (e.g. certified commodities or
environmental criteria) may be undermined by treaty shopping practices when treaty shoppers
opt for treaty havens that abstain from including stipulations of this kind, even though the
BITs of the host country and the actual home country of the investor may well contain
provisions that allow for such regulatory action.
36
Governance gap
Such problems are compounded by the governance gap between the extra-territorial operations of
MNCs and the (binding) regulatory oversight of governments, which is still mainly national or regional,
though global non-binding and corporate social responsibility norms have taken a giant leap forward in
the last decade. UN Special Representative on Business & Human Rights, has touched upon the
governance gap in the following manner:
31
Dolzer and Schreuer, p.23
32
P. Muchlinski, “Corporations and the Uses of Law: International Investment Arbitration as a “Multilateral Legal Order” (2011).
Oñati Socio-Legal Series, Vol. 1, No. 4, <http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1832562> accessed 24 June
2011
33
UNCTAD, “Scope and Definition“, (2011) UNCTAD Series on Issues in International Investment Agreements II, <
http://www.unctad.org/en/docs//diaeia20102_en.pdf> accessed 25 June 2011
34
Autralia, India, South Africa, etc
35
L. Peterson, Human Rights and Bilateral Investment Treaties, (2009), Rights and Democracy, <http://www.dd-
rd.ca/site/_PDF/publications/globalization/HIRA-volume3-ENG.pdf > accessed 24 June 2011
36
P. Muchlinski, “Corporations and the Uses of Law: International Investment Arbitration as a “Multilateral Legal Order” (2011).
Oñati Socio-Legal Series, Vol. 1, No. 4,“ <http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1832562> accessed 24 June
2011
13
The root cause of the business and human rights predicament today lies in the governance
gaps created by globalization between the scope and impact of economic forces and actors,
and the capacity of societies to manage their adverse consequences. These governance gaps
provide the permissive environment for wrongful acts by companies of all kinds without
adequate sanctioning or reparation.
37
Following six years of work and consultations with governments, businesses and civil society groups,
the UN Human Rights Council endorsed in June 2011 the Guiding Principles for Business and Human
Rights submitted by the Special Representative. One guiding principle concerns the governance gap
in direct relation to IIAs: States should maintain adequate domestic policy space to meet their human
rights obligations when pursuing business-related policy objectives with other States or business
enterprises, for instance through investment treaties or contracts.
38
Whereas this illustrates that
positive steps are being taken at international level, the fact remains that investor rights are still carved
in hard law and have a directly enforceable character, while investor obligations and regulations
comprise soft norms and so-called guiding principles. There is, however, some international customary
and criminal law, such as the duty not to commit genocide or crimes against humanity, that applies
also to corporations. But Investor protections have expanded with little regard to States duties to
protect, skewing the balance between the two. Consequently, host States can find it difficult to
strengthen domestic social and environmental standards, including those related to human rights,
without fear of foreign investor challenge, which can take place under binding international
arbitration.
39
The practice of treaty shopping increases the possibilities to take advantage of gaps in
effective governance of multinational companies. Treaty havens such as the Netherlands are often
effectively incapable of, as well as morally averse to, taking control, and taking seriously its home-
country responsibility for outward investment and investors, especially as these investors are often
located only administratively in the Netherlands.
Having reviewed the different arguments and perspectives on treaty shopping, we shall examine two
important cases exemplifying this phenomenon, so as to gain insight into the approach of investment
tribunals.
2.4 Influential Case Law on Treaty Shopping
This section highlights two key cases that illustrate how controversial the issue of treaty shopping is,
even at the level of international arbitration.
40
Investment tribunals have not yet provided an
unambiguous answer to the question of how to approach treaty-shopping practices. Arbitrators have
expressed varying degrees of discomfort, but they generally point to the fact that many states have
37
Human Rights Council, Protect, Respect and Remedy: a Framework for Business and Human Rights: Report of the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business
enterprises, John Ruggie, 2011 A/HRC/8/5 at 3, online: <http://www.reports-and-materials.org/Ruggie-report-7-Apr-
2008.pdf> accessed 24 June 2011
38
Human Rights Council, Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Implementing the United Nations “Protect,
Respect and Remedy“ Framework, Report of the Special Representative of the Secretary General on the issue of human
rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises, John Ruggie, 2011 A/HRC/17/31, <
http://www.business-humanrights.org/media/documents/ruggie/ruggie-guiding-principles-21-mar-2011.pdf> assessed 24
June 2011
39
G. Ruggie, Promotion of all Human Rights, Civil, Political, Economic, Social and Cultural rights, including the Right to
Development. Business and Human Rights: Towards Operationalizing the ‚Protect, Respect and Remedy” Framework, report
to the UN Human Rights Council, May 2009, A/HRC/11/13. p.28-37
40
Further case law arising specifically from BITs signed by the Netherlands will be discussed in Section four.
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
14
chosen to use broad definitions in order to encompass any legal entity incorporated in the home
state.
41
Tokios Tokelés v. Ukraine
Tokios Tokelés, a company incorporated in Lithuania, brought a claim against the Ukrainian
government for breaching certain BIT obligations between Ukraine and Lithuania.
42
In response,
Ukraine asserted that Tokios Tokelés was in fact owned and controlled by Ukrainian nationals, and
that to find jurisdiction in this case would be tantamount to allowing Ukrainian nationals to pursue
international arbitration against their own government, which the Respondent argues would be
inconsistent with the object and purpose of the ICSID Convention. Tokios Tokelés v. Ukraine is
considered one of the first important cases on treaty shopping. While the BIT exclusively relied on a
incorporation test, Ukraine asked the Tribunal to pierce the corporate veil.
43
The majority Tribunal ruled in favour of Tokios, basing its decision on a reading of the term investor
as used in the BIT between the two counties. The BIT terms provided, among other things, that, with
respect to Lithuania, an investor is defined as any entity established in the territory of the Republic of
Lithuania in conformity with its laws and regulations.
44
The Tribunal stated that a narrow reading
mainly based on the terms of the UkraineLithuania BIT is allowed by the ICSID Convention, which
leaves to the reasonable discretion of the parties the task of defining key terms. We should be loath to
undermine it.
45
As the company did not create the local subsidiary to gain access to ICSID arbitration,
and the enterprise was founded six years before the BIT entered into force, the Tribunal added that
there was no evidence in the record that the Claimant used its formal legal nationality for any
improper purpose.
46
However, the Tribunals ruling was controversial, even among its own members. The president of the
Tribunal strongly dissented, by holding the opinion that the ruling of the Tribunal undermined the
object and purpose of the ICSID Convention:
47
The ICSID mechanism and remedy are not meant for, and are not to be construed as,
allowing and even less encouraging nationals of a State party to the ICSID Convention to
use a foreign corporation, whether pre-existent or created for that purpose, as a means of
evading the jurisdiction of their domestic courts and the application of their national law. It is
meant to protect and thus encourage international investment.
48
This case illustrates the dichotomy, discussed in section 1.4 above, between those who believe that
investment arbitration should be primarily and almost exclusively based on the norms concluded by
the states and those that hold that additional standards and conditions, such as laid down in the ICSID
Convention, are required to ensure that investments live up to certain standards in order to be
protected by BITs, and fall under the jurisdiction of the ICSID.
41
L. Peterson, Investment Treaty News: 2006 A Year in Review (2007) International Institute for Sustainable Development
(IISD), <http://www.iisd.org/pdf/2007/itn_year_review_2006.pdf> accessed 24 June 2011
42
Tokios Tokelés v. Ukraine ICSID Case No. ARB/02/18. Decision on Jurisdiction,(29 April 2009); see also discussion by
Skinner et al. (n 1)
43
Ibid Para 23
44
UkraineLithuania BIT. Article 1(2)(b)(II)
45
Ibid Para 82
46
Ibid Para 56
47
Tokios Tokelés v. Ukraine ICSID Case No. ARB/02/18Dissenting Opinion of Prosper Weil (April 29, 2004),
48
Ibid Para 30
15
Phoenix Action Ltd v. Czech Republic
The claim in Phoenix Action arose out of an Israeli companys acquisition of two Czech metal
companies, which were involved in proceedings before Czech courts. The companies were sold to
Phoenix Action Ltd (Phoenix), a company incorporated under the laws of Israel but controlled by
nationals of the Czech Republic.
49
Two months after the purchase, Phoenix notified the Czechs of the
existence of an investment dispute. The Czech Republic argued that,
Phoenixs allegations as to a violation of its rights as a foreign investor fall outside the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal mainly because Phoenix is nothing more than an ex post facto
creation of a sham Israeli entity created by a Czech fugitive from justice, Vladimír Beňo, to
create diversity of nationality.
50
In addition,
it considered that (t)his case represents one of the most egregious cases of treaty-
shopping that the investment arbitration community has seen in recent history […] and that
such abusive treaty-shopping is directly at odds with the fundamental object and purpose of
the ICSID Convention and the BIT, which are meant to encourage international investment.
51
The Czechs further argued against jurisdiction of the Tribunal as the acts said to constitute a violation
of the BIT took place before Phoenix acquired the companies.
52
Apart from these and other jurisdictional objections, the Czech Republic stated that Phoenix abused
the corporate structure, as not Phoenix but the Czech companies were the real parties to the interest.
Therefore the Tribunal ought to look beyond the apparent facts and lift the corporate veil.
53
The
Tribunal unanimously decided that the dispute fell outside the jurisdiction of the ICSID and the
competence of the Tribunal. The investment was, according to the Tribunal, not an economic
investment, based on the actual or future value of the companies, but, indeed, simply a rearrangement
of assets within a family, to gain access to ICSID jurisdiction to which the initial investor was not
entitled.
54
The Tribunal was unequivocal in its judgment that the evidence indeed shows that the
Claimant made an investment not for the purpose of engaging in economic activity, but for the sole
purpose of bringing international litigation against the Czech Republic.
55
These two cases illustrate the controversial nature of treaty shopping within arbitrational practice.
Whereas the Tribunal ruling in the Phoenix case unanimously judged the company to have crossed
the line of what is permissible, the Tokios Tokelés case shows that even though opinions within the
ruling Tribunal diverged heavily companies may equally be allowed to get away with treaty-shopping
practices to sue (indirectly) their home governments.
56
In the next chapters, which provide a detailed
analysis of Dutch BIT practices, several cases will be discussed in which Dutch BITs were invoked.
49
Phoenix Action, ltd v. the Czech Republic - ICSID Case No. ARB/06/5 Award (April 15, 2009); See also see also discussion
by M. Skinner, C.A. Miles and S. Luttrell, Access and advantage in investor-state arbitration: The law and practice of treaty
shopping (2010) 3 JWELB 260
50
Ibid Para 34
51
Ibid Para 34
52
Ibid Para 35
53
Ibid Para 40
54
Ibid Para 140
55
Ibid Para 142
56
Formally there is no principle of stare decisis in international investment arbitration, therefore international investment
tribunals are not bound by rulings of former tribunals, thought, awards often refer to other case law. See G. Kaufmann
Kolher,”Arbitral precedent: dream, necessity or excuse? (2007) 23 Arbitration Intl 357
Dutch Policy on BITs 16
3. Dutch policy on BITs
3.1 Foundation
Closely following Germany and other European countries, the Netherlands was among the first
actively to pursue BITs with developing countries. Its first BIT was concluded with Tunisia in 1963,
followed by treaties with Cameroon and Cote dIvoire in 1965.
57
As of early 2010, the Netherlands had
signed BITs with 98 countries, of which 91 are currently in force.
58
Currently, the Netherlands
maintains one of the largest BIT networks in the world.
59
The content of the agreements being concluded has not changed substantially since the first BITs
were signed. BITs of the first generation were more concerned with promotion of investment rather
than pure protection. Currently, the Netherlands negotiates its BITs on the basis of a model treaty
developed in 2003 in close cooperation with Dutch industry, which resembles to a great extent the
1994 model.
60
With variations, most treaties, which are published on the government website,
61
follow
the model treaty. The Dutch Model BIT is in line with the approach taken by many European countries:
short provisions, without a lot of detail; broad definitions of investments; prohibitions on host
governments from discriminating against foreign investments in favour of domestic investments or
investments from third states; requirements for governments to ensure fair and equitable treatment of
foreign investments; obligations on host governments to allow foreign investors to transfer funds and
repatriate capital; requirements for prompt, adequate compensation for expropriation of foreign
investors property; and an endorsement for investors seeking relief for alleged harm by bringing direct
claims against host states through international arbitration.
62
In the Dutch Model BIT, social and
environmental objectives are referred to in the preamble only in a non-binding and non-committal
manner.
57
M. Skinner, C.A. Miles and S. Luttrell, “Access and advantage in investor-state arbitration: The law and practice of treaty
shopping” (2010) 3 JWELB 260
58
See for a total overview of BITs signed by the Netherlands: <http://www.rijksoverheid.nl/onderwerpen/internationaal-
ondernemen/documenten-en-publicaties/rapporten/2010/02/22/ibo-landenlijst.html> accessed 24 June 2011
59
See UNCTAD Bilateral Investment Treaties Database: <http://www.unctadxi.org/templates/docsearch____779.aspx>
accessed 24 June 2011
60
Evaluation report of the Ministry of Economic Affairs on trade politics, Ministerie van Economische Zaken (2007),
Beleidsdoorlichting handelspolitiek: Eindrapport, Tweede Kamer, vergaderjaar 2007-2008, 30 991, nr. 3, Den Haag.
61
See: <http://www.rijksoverheid.nl/onderwerpen/internationaal-ondernemen/documenten-en-
publicaties/rapporten/2010/02/22/ibo-landenlijst.html> accessed 24 June 2011
62
N.Bernasconi-Osterwalder and L.Johnson, “Belgium”s Model Bilateral Investment Treaty: A Commentary”. (2010) Brussels-
Geneva, IISD-Oxfam Solidarity,
http://www.s2bnetwork.org/s2bnetwork/download/Belgian%20Model%20BIT%20Commentary%208%20March%202010%20
FINAL.pdf?id=372> accessed 24 June 2011
17
Box I: How Bits are concluded in the Netherlands
The procedure to conclude a BIT does not differ much from any other international treaty. Once the governments
of the two countries involved have decided on each other”s importance as trading partners, negotiations are
opened. Depending on the stakes, these negotiations often take place in several rounds, giving an opportunity for
each team of diplomats to go back and discuss the drafts with their home base. Very few people are aware of
these negotiations and there is mostly no public discussion or awareness among civil society, while interested
business representatives are very often informed or consulted. When the negotiations are concluded, the
delegations initial the treaty. Next, their governments will have to sign the text formally, a task which is usually
delegated to the Minister of Foreign Affairs or an ambassador. In the Netherlands, the treaty is subsequently
published in the Netherlands‟ Treaty Series Tractatenblad, submitted to the Council of State (Raad van State) for
an advisory opinion and sent to parliament (House of Representatives and Senate). If the House of
Representatives and the Senate do not respond within 30 days, the treaty is automatically accepted. If at least
one-fifth of the House or one-fifth of the Senate decide they want a vote on this treaty, there will be a vote.
Usually, however, these votes are mere formalities. After this procedure the treaty enters into force, usually a
month or so after the final signing.
To exit a BIT is a lot more difficult than to enter one. Article 14, the concluding article of the Dutch model BIT,
gives a standard duration of 15 years after signing, during which no one-sided change or withdrawal is allowed.
Unless notice of termination is given by either contracting party at least six months before the date of the expiry of
its validity, the BIT is tacitly extended for periods of ten years, whereby each contracting party reserves the right
to terminate the Agreement upon notice of at least six months before the subsequent date of expiry. The model
treaty further contains a clause whereby, upon termination of the treaty, any investment made prior to termination
of a BIT will continue to be protected by the treaty‟s provisions for a further 15 years.
The Dutch policy on investment treaties is part of a broader policy aimed at creating a competitive and attractive
business climate in the Netherlands.
63
The Netherlands investor-friendly bilateral investment treaties are not the
only trump card used to attract multinationals to incorporate inside the Dutch borders. An even bigger pull factor is
the favourable tax system and strong network of bilateral tax treaties that the Netherlands maintains. The blend of
its tax system and investment protection has had the side-effect of attracting an estimated 20,000 letterbox
companies.
64
With regard to investment, their presence does not appear to worry the Dutch government. In fact,
in a 2007 letter to Parliament, a former Dutch trade secretary went so far as to say that whether or not investors
invoking Dutch BITs are actually Dutch in any substantial way is an issue for the tribunal dealing with their
complaint and no concern of the Dutch government.
65
The Dutch efforts in concluding BITs have fluctuated over the years, mostly in response to
negotiations on investment in multilateral fora, such as the OECD Multilateral Agreement on
Investment (MAI) at the end of the 1990s, and the WTO several years later. The official Dutch position
is that it still favours a multilateral investment agreement over bilateral treaties, as a multilateral treaty
would create a level playing field and is more transparent.
66
After multilateral initiatives failed in the
OECD and WTO in the late 1990s and early 2000, the Netherlands decided to refocus on bilateral
treaties. A round of negotiations was launched, aimed at signing investment treaties with several
strategic countries and some large energy-producing countries. At this time, Dutch efforts focused
63
As the then trade secretary Mr Frank Heemskerk put it in 2008, the amount of energy invested in signing and drafting
business-friendly BITs is partly based on the government policy to create such an attractive business climate. In Brief van
Staatssecretaris Economische Zaken Heemskerk aan de Tweede Kamer, 1 februari 2008. <
http://www.rijksoverheid.nl/documenten-en-publicaties/kamerstukken/2008/02/01/vragen-van-de-leden-irrgang-en-van-
bommel-beiden-sp-over-bilaterale-investeringsverdrag-tussen-nederland-en-bolivia.html> Accessed 24 June 2011
64
M. van Dijk et al.
65
Brief van Staatssecretaris Economische Zaken
66
Evaluation report of the Ministry of Economic Affairs on trade politics, Ministerie van Economische Zaken (2007),
Beleidsdoorlichting handelspolitiek: Eindrapport, Tweede Kamer, vergaderjaar 2007-2008, 30 991, nr. 3, Den Haag. p. 33
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
18
exclusively on these strategic countries. Other countries wanting to conclude a BIT with the
Netherlands were advised simply to sign the Dutch model BIT, with little scope for negotiation.
67
The core of Dutch investment policy to this day has been to create a transparent, stable and free
international investment climate.
68
The conclusion of BITs is based on the premise of a positive
correlation between investment agreements and trade and investment flows between countries.
Furthermore, the policy aligns to the notion that investment promotes knowledge spill-overs and
stimulates the host countrys economy, and as such is beneficial for developing countries.
69
Perhaps
even more importantly, BITs offer an attractive business climate in the Netherlands and provide Dutch
and foreign investors incorporated in the Netherlands with maximum protection abroad. There is no
comprehensive empirical support provided for these suppositions, however, nor has the Netherlands
ever carried out a methodical analysis of possible costs and benefits of its policy, let alone one which
has taken into account the (social and environmental) cost of treaty shopping for the home and the
host country. Despite the lack of any conclusive evidence to underpin its assumptions, the Dutch
government proceeded to negotiate ever more BITs with African partner countries as part of its
development agenda.
70
Box II: BITs and focus on development and CSR policies of the Netherlands
BITs are promoted as an integral part of the Netherlands‟ foreign policy. Poverty reduction has always been put
forward as a core element of this policy. A key question, then, is whether and how BITs can be seen to contribute
to this objective. The Dutch government has long promoted economic growth as the most important pre-condition
for sustainable poverty reduction in poor countries, and private-sector development as the main engine to boost
that growth. In its 2011 budget, the Dutch Foreign Office confirms that broad policy coherence, including through
promotion of the development dimension of international trade and financial systems, is a key focus of Dutch
development policy. The recommendation to poor countries is and remains: “open up your markets to attract
investment capital and lift people out of poverty”. What is new is the unabashed promotion of “enlightened self-
interest” by the present right-wing coalition government, which presents enhanced quality and effectiveness of
Dutch trade and investment promotion as a main means towards achieving sustainable poverty reduction.
The Dutch government aims to include Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in all of the government”s activities
to promote trade. While CSR is relevant terrain for many different policy fields and ministries, the Ministry of
Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation (EL& I) has a coordinating role. Central to the Dutch government‟s
CSR policy is promoting an entrepreneurial attitude that is receptive to the expectations of society. Underlying this
policy is the government‟s vision of the corporate social responsibility 20082011. The normative base is founded
on the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, the UN Global Compact and the ILOs
Tripartite Declaration on Multinational Enterprises. However, CSR starts where the law ends, and is, for the Dutch
government, by nature voluntary.
71
While there are many instruments created to promote the CSR of Dutch
companies abroad, the link between protection of rights in BITs and the Dutch duty to limit harm done by Dutch
companies is absent. It does not appear that the Dutch government is considering introducing CSR into its policy
regarding BITs.
In a 2011 debate on BITs and Free Trade Agreements, trade secretary Bleker confirmed once more that the BITs
are meant to apply to every investor registered in the Netherlands, including for those with only a letterbox. He
further noted, surprisingly, that the Dutch policy outlines not only rights but also clear duties for companies
67
Ibid p. 32
68
Ibid p. 33
69
Ibid p. 30
70
Ibid p. 31
71
MVO, <http://www.rijksoverheid.nl/onderwerpen/maatschappelijk-verantwoord-ondernemen/watis-mvo>
19
letterbox companies in particular and added that the European Union will be creating a strong framework
expressly for this purpose.
72
Current Dutch BITs, however, do not comprise any investor obligations, whether for
letterbox companies or not, and within the European Union the Dutch government can hardly be called a
progressive player on this issue (see next paragraph). While the importance of an in-depth debate on investment
policy appears self-evident, the topic has thus far been raised only twice in parliament, where it was discussed in
a rather minimal manner.
73
3.2 European Integration
The Lisbon Treaty, which came into effect on 1 December 2009 with a view to enhance the efficiency
and democratic legitimacy of the Union and to improve the coherence of its actions,
74
reorganizes the
external trade policy of the European Union (EU) in a profound manner, by introducing several
important institutional and substantive modifications to the EUs Common Commercial Policy (CCP),
one of the key pillars in the Unions relations with the outside world. An important novelty is the
inclusion of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the exclusive competence of the EU.
75
This has far-
reaching consequences for the BITs policies of all Member States (MS). Lisbon has set in motion a
policy process to draw up the framework for the EUs new common investment policy. This process
will necessarily determine the precise nature of the applicability of existing Member State BITs, the
competence of Member States to conclude BITs, and the outlines of the EUs future investment
agreements.
The creation of a legal framework for the negotiation of future investment agreements (including
investment chapters in trade agreements) by the EU, and the necessary transitional process to bring
the Member States BITs in line with the EUs new common investment policy,
76
has sparked a fierce
power struggle between the institutions of the EU. The European Commission is eager to flesh out its
new competences, while the Member States are reluctant to relinquish theirs. The Council,
representing Member States interests, has from the outset been actively involved in this policy
process.
77
The Netherlands is particularly active, and adopts a self-proclaimed leadership role,
78
together with some other countries with huge vested interests. These countries, organised as the
72
Verslag van een algemeen overleg. Vastgesteld 24 mei 201: <https://zoek.officielebekendmakingen.nl/kst-
2150102062.html?zoekcriteria=%3Fzkt%3DEenvoudig%26vrt%3D171&resultIndex=10&sorttype=1&sortorder=4> Accessed
24 June 2011
73
De staatssecretaris van Economische Zaken, Landbouw & Innovatie, Brief Nr. 1063 brief van de staatssecretaris van
economische zaken, landbouw & innovatie, 24 mei 2011, Verslag van de Raad Buitenlandse Zaken d.d. 13 mei 2011
74
Lisbon Treaty, Preamble. At: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:C:2007:306:0001:0010:EN:PDF
75
Treaty of the functioning of the European Union (TFEU), Article 206 and 207
76
In July 2010, the EC published a draft Regulation “establishing transitional arrangements for bilateral investment agreements
between Member States and third countries“ and a Communication “Towards a comprehensive European international
investment policy.“ European Commission, Proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council
establishing transitional arrangements for bilateral investment agreements between Member States and third countries
Reference to documents COM(2010)0344Brussels, 7.7.2010, COM(2010)344 final, 2010/0197,
www.europarl.europa.eu/meetdocs/2009_2014/documents/com/com_com(2010)0344_/com_com(2010)0344_en.pdf, visited
on 29 April 2011. Furthermore, reference is made to European Parliament Resolution of 6 April 2011 on the future European
international investment policy (2010/2203(INI)), www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//TEXT+TA+P7-TA-
2011-0141+0+DOC+XML+V0//EN>, visited on 29 April 2011. Reference is furthermore made to the EU Council”s
Conclusions on a comprehensive European international investment policy, 3041st Foreign Affairs Council meeting
Luxembourg, 25 October 2010, <www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/117328.pdf>, visited
on 29 April 2011. European Commission Communication, Towards a comprehensive European international investment
policy,8 July 2010, COM(2010)343 final
77
European Council, Conclusions on a comprehensive European international investment policy, 25 October 2010,
<http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/117328.pdf > accessed 24 June 2011
78
De staatssecretaris van Economische Zaken, Landbouw & Innovatie, Brief Nr. 1063 brief van de staatssecretaris van
economische zaken, landbouw & innovatie, 24 mei 2011, Verslag van de Raad Buitenlandse Zaken d.d. 13 mei 2011
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
20
Friends of Investment,
79
fiercely resist phasing out existing BITs, and insist that future EU investment
agreements offer at least the same level of protection as the one provided in the BITS instead of
high level of protection, as proposed in a recent European Parliament Resolution.
80
The European
Parliament calls on all parties involved to use the window of opportunity offered by Lisbon to
rebalance the rights and obligations of investors. The position advocated by key member states like
the Netherlands wilfully disregards this call for more balanced investment treaties.
With the emergence of EU investment agreements the Netherlands will, in the long run, lose its
current competitive edge as a treaty haven for investors, based on attractive BITs, as the incentive to
incorporate in the Netherlands to take advantage of the countrys extra-advantageous BIT network will
cease to exist. In order to stay ahead, the Dutch are bent on ensuring that future EU investment
agreements will offer at least the same level of protection the Dutch BITs currently offer.
81
79
The most important members of the Friends of Investment are the UK, NL, FR, DE, SE, FI, ES
80
Verwijzing nodig naar Arif rapport en resulterende EP resolutie.: European Parliament, Resolution on the on the future
European international investment policy (2010/2203(INI)),
81
T. Henquet, Dutch bilateral investment treaties and investment protection in the European union: some observations on non-
discrimination and investment restructuring; Paper prepared for presentation at a conference on “Contemporary Topics in
Investment Arbitration: Most Favored Nation Treatment of Substantive Rights and Investment Arbitration in China”,
organised by the Association for International Arbitration, 22 October 2010, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
21
4. Scope of the Dutch Model BIT
4.1 Introduction
What are the investment protections that the Dutch are so eager to maintain in the context of the EUs
future common investment framework? This chapter considers the different elements that make IIAs
more or less attractive to investors, by discussing several variables in IIAs relevant to treaty
shopping.
82
To narrow down the focus of this paper, while not ignoring the vital importance of
substantive investor obligations (e.g. non-discrimination standards or fair and equitable treatment),
they are not included in this paper. While, for example, the investors will value the strong national
treatment clause in the BIT between China and the Netherlands, it is assumed that such standards are
not of decisive importance for the discerning treaty shopper.
Instead the focus is put on the definition of the terms investor and investment, both of which can
contain restrictive elements with the aim of excluding some certain mailbox companies in particular
from BIT protection. In addition, some elements of the dispute settlement clauses and provisions are
discussed which are highly relevant to potential treaty shoppers as these determine the conditions
attached to bringing claims before international tribunals, and stipulate the tribunals to which the
investor has access. Lastly, some elements related to sustainable development are included. This
section discusses these provisions in IIAs and how they are included both in the Dutch Model BIT and
in the actual BITs signed by the Netherlands and other states. The text also addresses some of the
main problems associated with these clauses.
4.2 Definition of Investment
In international law, there is no standard definition of investment, and the interpretation of the term in
the context of an IIA depends to a large extent on the way it has been included. Generally, IIAs have
tended to favour a definition that is broad and asset-based.
83
The relevant clauses in IIAs usually refer
to any kind of asset, often followed by a non-exhaustive list of the forms such assets may take, which
include elements such as movable and immovable property; rights derived from shares, bonds and
other kinds of interests in companies and joint ventures; and claims to money from intellectual
property rights. This wide definition is prevalent in the second-generation BITs concluded in the 1990s
and still in force today. In recognition of the problems posed by such broad legal phrasing in a
globalising world, characterised by rapidly increasing transnational investment flows, recent treaty
practice is witnessing new approaches that aim to narrow the definition of investment.
84
These include
excluding specific types of assets such as portfolio investments, certain commercial contracts, certain
loans and debt securities, and so on; using a closed list definition with a wide asset-based list of
examples which are exhaustive rather than illustrative; limiting investments to those made in
accordance with host country law; and supplementing definitions of investment by express
references to investment risks and other factors commonly associated with investment, thereby
introducing objective criteria for specification of the scope of the definition. Important BIT countries
82
M. Skinner, C.A. Miles and S. Luttrell, “Access and advantage in investor-state arbitration: The law and practice of treaty
shopping” (2010) 3 JWELB 260
83
UNCTAD, “Scope and Definition“, (2011) UNCTAD Series on Issues in International Investment Agreements II, p.24<
http://www.unctad.org/en/docs//diaeia20102_en.pdf> accessed 25 June 2011
84
Ibid p. 19
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
22
such as the US (describing characteristics of an investment),
85
Canada (closed list)
86
and China (also
describing characteristics of an investment)
87
have begun to pose some limits to the standard
definition of investment.
Although the Netherlands adopted a new Model BIT in 2004, its template does not include any
attempts at narrowing down the definition of investment used. Rather, it continues to rely on a broad
and asset-based clause.
88
The Dutch Model BIT thus protects investments irrespective of whether
they are significant, lasting, contribute to the host countrys economic development, or are made in
accordance with the host countrys laws. With only a handful of exceptions, virtually all BITs concluded
by the Netherlands follow this broad asset-based definition.
89
Some Dutch BITs do limit the scope of
the definition by, inter alia: (1) adding that the investment has to be made in accordance with the laws
and regulations of the host country;
90
(2) adding a paragraph stating that investment also covers
reinvestment;
91
(3) adding a requirement of government approval.
92
Article 10 of the Dutch Model BIT provides that the provisions of the Agreement shall, from the date of
entry into force thereof, also apply to investments which have been made prior to that date. The Dutch
Model follows the approach taken by most IIAs. The objective of this provision is to ensure that an
investment tribunal will have jurisdiction to hear any claim even when it relates to an investment made
before the agreement entered into force.
93
However, the Dutch BITs as concluded show considerable
variations with regard to the scope of application of this clause.
94
85
United States Model BIT Article 1.1 Investment means every asset that an investor owns or controls, directly or indirectly,
that has the characteristics of an investment, including such characteristics as the commitment of capital or other resources,
the expectation of gain or profit, or the assumption of risk and a non-exhaustive list of forms an investment may take.
86
Canada 2004 Model BIT Article 1.1
87
China 2003 Model BIT Article 1.3 Investment means any assets owned or controlled, directly or indirectly, by investors of a
Contracting Party in accordance with the laws and regulations of the other Contracting Party, including a non-exhaustive list.
However, In order to qualify as an investment under this Agreement, an asset must have the characteristics of an
investment, such as the commitment of capital or other resources, the expectation of gain or profit, or the assumption of risk.
88
Article 1. For the purposes of this Agreement: (a) the term investments means every kind of asset and more particularly,
though not exclusively: movable and immovable property as well as any other rights in rem in respect of every kind of asset;
rights derived from shares, bonds and other kinds of interests in companies and joint ventures; claims to money, to other
assets or to any performance having an economic value; rights in the field of intellectual property, technical processes,
goodwill and know-how; rights granted under public law or under contract, including rights to prospect, explore, extract and
win natural resources.
89
Departures from the Model BIT text seem in most cases initiated by the other party to the agreement. First generation BITs
concluded by the Netherlands, predominantly in the 1970, only provide for State to State dispute settlement. Kenia (1970),
Malysia (1971), Malta (1984), Morocco (1971), Pakistan (1988), Senegal (1979), Singapore (1972), Sudan (1970) and
Thailand (1972) and are excluded from this analysis
90
Argentina (1992) and Turkey (1986); The BITs concluded with. Limiting the applicability of an investment agreement in this
way is intended to induce foreign investors to ensure that all local laws and regulations are satisfied in the course of
establishing an investment in UNCTAD
91
Kuwait (2001)
92
Sri Lanka (1984)
93
UNCTAD, “Scope and Definition“, (2011) UNCTAD Series on Issues in International Investment Agreements II, p.46<
http://www.unctad.org/en/docs//diaeia20102_en.pdf> accessed 25 June 2011
94
These can be classified into several broad categories: Agreements that follow the Dutch Model BIT and apply to investments
which have been made before the agreement entered into force (around 50%); Agreements that apply to all investments,
whether made before or after its entry into force, but do not apply to any dispute concerning an investment which arose,
or/and any claim concerning an investment which was settled, before their entry into force (around 25%); Agreements that
only apply to investments made after entry into force or include a specific limitation such as a date or application
requirement. The Nicaragua BIT for example excludes legal governmental action which took place before the date of entry
into force of the agreement Agreements that add whether before or after its entry into force, made in accordance with the
laws and regulations of the contracting party in force at the time the investments were made; R. Dolzer and
C. Schreuer, Principles of International Investment Law (Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford 2008) p.21 and p. 55.
23
4.3 The Definition of Investor
A second important element determining the scope of application of investor rights in IIAs is the
definition of what constitutes an investor, as the benefits of the agreement apply only to those who
qualify under the definitions provided. Most BITs include a definition of natural and legal persons as
investors. There are three main tests that can be used, often in combination, to determine the
nationality of the investor: the incorporation or organization test,
95
seat test (siège social),
96
or
ownership or control test.
97
The Dutch Model BIT includes a definition of natural and legal persons as
investors.
98
In concurrence with customary international law, the commonest definitions of natural persons are
persons that are considered a national or citizen in the contracting states national legislation.
99
This is
also the case in virtually all BITs signed by the Netherlands that generally follow the Model BIT, which
provides that the term National shall comprise: natural persons having the nationality of that
Contracting Party.
100
There is much case law on the legal definition of what constitutes a natural
person. Even when alternative criteria are introduced, as some IIAs do, such as provisions relating to
dual nationality,
the term natural person remains a fairly uncontroversial legal principle.
With respect to legal persons, the Dutch Model BIT uses the place of incorporation as well as the
nationality or the ownership or control test. The control test is used to broaden the scope of investors
that can benefits from the BIT, as it is only for investors such as shareholders not constituted under
the law of the contracting party but in third states. The requirement of foreign legal persons controlled
by Dutch investors to be investors/nationals under the Dutch investment treaty is essential, as it
provides the opportunity for the indirect protection of investments and brings claims under the BIT
even by investors of the host state. To include indirectly controlled investors in the scope of a Dutch
BIT is its hallmark for treaty shoppers: no other European BITs offer such broad scope.
Even though the BITs concluded by the Netherlands show some variation with regard to the specific
wording of the relevant provisions, they generally tend to follow the broad definition used in the Dutch
model BIT. Some BITs depart from the Model by using comparable extensive phrases such as
wherever located for not constituted under the law of Contracting Party.
101
Also, some BITs skip the
phrase directly or indirectly,
102
while others have added more specific wording with regard to the
expression legal persons by adopting such terms as corporations, firms or associations, or even
government-controlled entities.
103
However, the legal implications of these adaptations are not
95
The incorporation or organization test is most commonly used and provides that a legal entity acquires nationality by way of
incorporation. It covers investors without any other connection with the state.
96
The seat or siège social test provides that a legal person holds the nationality of the primary place of incorporation or where
the effective management takes place. This test is most often used to prevent treaty shopping or a avoid granting protection
to “mail-box“ companies
97
UNCTAD, Bilateral Investment Treaties 1995-2006:Trends in Investment Rulemaking UNCTAD, (2007)
UNCTAD/ITE/IIT/2006/5, < http://www.unctad.org/en/docs/iteiia20065_en.pdf> accessed 24 June 2011
98
It provides in Article 1.b: the term “nationals” shall comprise with regard to either Contracting Party:
natural persons having the nationality of that Contracting Party;
legal persons constituted under the law of that Contracting Party;
legal persons not constituted under the law of that Contracting Party but controlled, directly or indirectly, by natural persons
as defined in (i) or by legal persons as defined in (ii).“
99
In IIAs sometimes the term natural persons, nationals, physical persons or citizens is used.
100
Model BIT article 1.b
101
Peru (1994), Zimbabwe (1996) and Uruguay (1988)
102
Ukraine (1994)
103
Mainly BITs concluded with Asian countries
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
24
directly clear. On the whole, Dutch BITs (more than three quarters of all BITs in force) do not
substantially differ from the Model.
104
4.4 Dispute Settlement
Investorstate dispute settlement is the mainstay of the current investment regime. It is also its most
contentious and problematic element. Investment dispute settlement is a relatively recent and rather
radical new approach that, in 1995, even before the recent explosion of investor-state cases, was
described as dramatically different from anything previously known in the international sphere.
105
The
dispute settlement regime in its current form allows investors to circumvent domestic courts and bring
claims against host governments directly before an international tribunal, as it does not require the
prior exhaustion of local remedies. This is in contrast to, for example, international human rights
treaties, which do require victims of human rights violations to exhaust local remedies. Dispute
settlement clauses provide the rationale behind treaty shopping, with investors not only seeking to
secure access to international arbitration but also to optimise their chances of a favourable ruling from
the international tribunal that is to judge their grievances. Many states have limiting conditions in their
BITs that must be fulfilled before an investor can file a claim for international arbitration. These include
efforts to settle the dispute amicably within a certain period, consent from both parties before
submitting a dispute for arbitration, or clarification of the interaction through local remedies. Lately,
there have been attempts to tighten conditions further, with countries introducing more detailed
procedural requirements, such as written notification and rules on transparency.
106
The provision on investorstate dispute settlement in the Dutch Model BIT is rather short compared to
many other BITs.
107
Central elements are: direct access to ICSID; no exhaustion of local remedies; no
requirements related to amicable settlements of disputes; and explicit reference to nationals of the
host party being treated as nationals of the other Contracting Party, in case they are controlled by
nationals of the home state. Whereas the first generation of BITs concluded by the Netherlands,
predominantly in the 1970s, only provided for state-to-state dispute settlement, there are now a further
28 Dutch BITs that follow the Model to the letter.
108
The remaining BITs show considerable variation in
the wording of their dispute settlement clauses. All, however, allow for investors to sue host states
before international tribunals when they feel that host state regulations are impinging on their
investment and expected profits. There is a rather broad category that includes reference to additional
international arbitration rules, in case the other Party is not a member of the ICSID. These clauses
generally stipulate that disputes must be referred to ICSID, ICSIDs Additional Facility, or otherwise to
an ad hoc tribunal established in accordance with the UNCITRAL rules. In some cases, the Stockholm
Chamber of Commerce, the rules of the London Court of International Arbitration or the ICC rules are
104
The 2001 China-Dutch BIT combines a incorporation with a seat test.
105
See, e.g.: J. Paulsson, “Arbitration Without Privity” (1995) 10 ICSID Rev – Foreign Investment LJ 232, 256 (“[T]his is not a
sub-genre of an existing discipline. It is dramatically different from anything previously known in the international sphere”).
106
UNCTAD, Bilateral Investment Treaties 1995-2006: Trends in Investment Rulemaking, 2007, p. 105.
107
“Article 9: Each Contracting Party hereby consents to submit any legal dispute arising between that Contracting Party and a
national of the other Contracting Party concerning an investment of that national in the territory of the former Contracting
Party to the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes for settlement by conciliation or arbitration under the
Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of other States, opened for signature at
Washington on 18 March 1965. A legal person which is a national of one Contracting Party and which before such a dispute
arises is controlled by nationals of the other Contracting Party shall, in accordance with Article 25 (2) (b) of the Convention,
for the purpose of the Convention be treated as a national of the other Contracting Party.
108
Bangladesh(1994), Belarus(1995), Belize (2002), Benin (2001), Bosnia-Herzegovina (1998), Gambia (2002), Georgia(1998),
Jordan (1997), Kazachstan (2002), Latvia (1994), Lithuania (1994), Macedonia (1998), Malawi (2003), Mali (2003), Moldova
(1995), Mongolia (1995), Mozambique (2001), Nicaragua (2000), Nigeria (1992), Paraguay (1992). Peru (1994), Slovenia
(1996), Tajikistan (2002), Tanzania (2001), Tunisia (1998), Uganda (2000), Uzbekistan (1996), Yemen (1985)
25
specifically mentioned. Several BITs, such as the Lebanon BIT, refer to the competent court of the
Contracting Party in the territory of which the investment has been made as one of the possibilities for
submitting disputes. Only the BITs with Chile and Sri Lanka require the exhaustion of local remedies,
and the BIT with China states that a dispute may be submitted to international dispute settlement only
if the investor concerned has withdrawn its case from the domestic court. Many BITs further contain a
clause on striving for amicable settlement of a dispute within a set time frame, mostly within either
three months (19 BITs) or six months (22 BITs), before an investor is allowed to put his claim before
an international arbitration tribunal. Most BITs which provide for additional avenues besides ICSID
state that the award shall be final and binding.
Dutch BITs increase their attractiveness to foreign investors by either containing or disregarding
certain elements related to investment arbitration. Most Dutch BITs contain a so-called umbrella
clause, by which the host state is bound to observe all commitments or obligations it has entered into
with a foreign investor; they are gathered under the umbrella of the BIT. The Dutch model BIT,
109
like
many others, phrases its umbrella clause (referring to any obligations) to give the widest scope.
110
And it is this that makes them highly contentious. Around three quarters of the BITs concluded by the
Netherlands employ such language. Most of the remaining Dutch BITs, by contrast, contain no
umbrella clause. A small third category deviates from these norms.
111
Neither the Dutch Model nor any
of the concluded BITs contain a so-called denial of benefits clause. Recently, they have tended to be
included in IIAs with the express aim of preventing treaty shopping. Denial of benefit clauses have the
same aim as restrictive definitions of investor within BITs (i,e deny the benefits of the treaty to a
company that does not have an economic connection to the state on whose nationality it relies), and
are a mark of third generation BITs.
112
In its use of what may be called an investor-friendly dispute-settlement clause, the Dutch model BIT,
like most BITs in force, fails to address a number of other problems inherent in investorstate dispute
settlement, such as issues relating to arbitrators conflicts of interests and the absence of any process
fostering sound decision-making and predictability, such as an appeals mechanism. In terms of
process, despite a growing international concern in relation to such issues, the Dutch model BIT is
silent on requirements regarding transparency of procedures. As dispute settlement in international
investment law is derived from international commercial arbitration, investorstate disputes can, owing
to considerations of confidentiality, be sealed off from public scrutiny. Investor-state arbitration,
however, often concerns issues that have an important public aspect. The arbitration cases more
than 300 launched since the first cases in the 1990s, mostly against developing countries, have
centred on issues of public interest, such as social policy and natural resources. In addition, awards
can potentially have a chilling effect on proposed legislation, when governments fear that measures
under consideration may invoke huge claims under international investment treaties, with damages
109
Article 3.4 of the Dutch model BIT states: “Each Contracting Party shall observe any obligation it may have entered into with
regard to investments of nationals of the other Contracting Party.“
110
Eureko B.V. v. Poland, Partial Award 19 August 2005 at para. 246. In OECD, Interpretation of the Umbrella Clause in
Investment Agreements 3 (Working Paper on Int”l Inv. No. 2006/3, 2006)
111
The Dutch-India BIT for example includes an exhaustion of local remedies clause specifically for investor-state contracts,
while the Dutch BIT with Mexico stipulates that disputes arising out of investor-state contracts will be settled under the terms
of the contracts underlying the obligations. Depending on the nature of the conflict and the presence of an investor state
conflict, an umbrella clause can be an invaluable asset for investors.
112
The effect of a denial of benefits clause can be explained in the following manner: “Under such a clause, the states reserve
the right to deny the benefits of the treaty to a company that does not have an economic connection to the state on whose
nationality it relies. The economic connection would consist in control by nationals of the state of nationality or in substantial
business activities in that state.“ In R Dolzer and C Schreuer, Principles of International Investment Law (OUP, New York
2008) p. 55 and LA Mistelis and CM Baltag, “Denial of Benefits and art 17 of the Energy Charter Treaty” (2009) 113 Penn St
L R 1301, §I.
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
26
potentially draining their budgets for social spending, health and education. A measure of
accountability therefore becomes vital, which can be ensured only through enhanced transparency.
States such as the US and Canada have begun to include provisions to ensure openness of
procedures in their IIAs. Not so the Dutch.
4.5 Environmental, Social and Related Issues in IIAs
To ensure that IIAs prevent conflicts between investment promotion and other policy goals, a trend
has emerged in investment agreements in the last decade to include provisions on environmental and
labour standards and other issues related to sustainable development. Where some states including
the parties to NAFTA, Canada and India have steered a progressive course, European states have
only recently begun to refer to the environment, labour and anti-corruption.
113
Text on these issues has
taken several forms, including in (non-binding) preambles specifying the goal of a treaty in terms of,
inter alia, sustainable development, non-lowering of standards, the right to regulate, and cooperation
commitments regarding social and environmental issues.
114
To date, however, no clear-cut, binding
investor obligations have been included in any agreement.
The Dutch model BIT includes some wording on sustainable development in its preamble.
115
Placing it
there constitutes a weak form of integrating environmental, labour, and sustainable development goals
in IIAs, as opposed to measures integrated within the main body of a treaty, as occurs in, for example,
the Belgium model BIT and the US and Canadian models.
116
This language is weak in a number of respects. The commitment itself uses phrases such as
recognising or considering rather than the more explicit shall or will, and so remains rather
vague and unspecific. It fails to specify any of the labour rights referred to, and carries no reference to
any other human right. The Dutch practice with regard to social and environmental clauses in
investment treaties is surprising, given the fact that time and again the Dutch government has stated
that it is a fierce proponent of CSR norms and social and environmental chapters in European trade
and investment agreements.
117
A neighbouring country, Belgium, seems to be far more progressive in
this respect, integrating at least labour and environmental clauses in the main part of text.
118
113
N.Bernasconi-Osterwalder and L.Johnson, “Belgium”s Model Bilateral Investment Treaty: A Commentary”. (2010) Brussels-
Geneva, IISD-Oxfam Solidarity,
http://www.s2bnetwork.org/s2bnetwork/download/Belgian%20Model%20BIT%20Commentary%208%20March%202010%20
FINAL.pdf?id=372> accessed 24 June 2011
114
S. Spears, “The Quest for Policy Space in a New generation of International Investment Agreements, (2010) Journal of
International Economic Law, 13(4) p. 1037--1075
115
The relevant text states Recognising that the development of economic and business ties will promote internationally
accepted labour standards; Considering that these objectives can be achieved without compromising health, safety and
environmental measures of general application;
116
The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties prioritizes the ordinary meaning of specific substantive text over general
purpose statements, the Preamble is so often ignored in favour of a broad definition provision. In UNCTAD p.120
117
See for example the recent letter of the Secretary of economic affairs to the Dutch parliament: Nr. 105 Brief van de
staatssecretaris van Economische Zaken, Landbouw en Innovatie, Aan de Voorzitter van de Tweede Kamer der Staten-
Generaal Den Haag, 23 maart 2011; and EZ, and Evaluation report of the Ministry of Economic Affairs on trade politics,
Ministerie van Economische Zaken (2007), Beleidsdoorlichting handelspolitiek: Eindrapport, Tweede Kamer, vergaderjaar
2007-2008, 30 991, nr. 3, Den Haag.
118
N.Bernasconi-Osterwalder and L.Johnson, “Belgium”s Model Bilateral Investment Treaty: A Commentary”. (2010) Brussels-
Geneva, IISD-Oxfam Solidarity,
http://www.s2bnetwork.org/s2bnetwork/download/Belgian%20Model%20BIT%20Commentary%208%20March%202010%20
FINAL.pdf?id=372> accessed 24 June 2011
27
As case law on this type of provision in international arbitration is also still minimal, it can be assumed
that treaty shoppers will not (yet) base their decision to incorporate in a specific jurisdiction on the
presence or absence of such clauses. The particularly weak terminology used in Dutch BITs is unlikely
to cause transnational corporations to shun the Netherlands as a treaty haven in the near future.
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
28
5. Awards
5.1 Introduction
The broad definitions of investment and investor used in Dutch BITs, allowing for a wide
interpretation of the protections offered by their provisions, have resulted in dozens of companies that
have shopped their way into investment arbitration by incorporating in the Netherlands. This is borne
out by the analysis presented here of the 40-odd arbitration cases launched under Dutch BITs, which
shows that the majority (29) of the investors that have sought arbitration through a Dutch investment
treaty are foreign (i.e. the ultimate or controlling parent is not based in the Netherlands), while 25 of
these claimants are so-called letterbox companies, with no employees or any substantial activities in
the Netherlands.
Arbitration awards involving Dutch investors have been discussed in many articles and commentaries.
To date, however, an inclusive overview of all known cases involving Dutch investors is lacking. This
chapter seeks to offer some qualitative and quantitative insights into investment agreement claims
under BITs signed by the Netherlands and third countries, drawing on a variety of sources, primarily
official awards, the UNCTAD Database of Treaty-Based InvestorState Dispute Settlement Cases,
and the Investment Treaty Arbitration website.
Before going into detail, however, a disclaimer is required. Although a marked trend has emerged of
late towards increased transparency in relation to international investment arbitration, neither the
arbitration framework as such nor the majority of IIAs, including the Dutch model BIT, contain many
specific rules and regulations with regard to the level of transparency or access to case-related
documents. Rather, what rules there are focus on guaranteeing the confidentiality of awards. As a
result, an unknown number of cases remain undisclosed and unreported, with settlements reached
behind closed doors and/or related documents remaining hidden. As there is no single up-to-date
database on arbitration cases to draw on, and the Dutch government does not publish an inclusive list
of arbitrations in which Dutch investors are claimants, the analysis presented here is based on
information gathered by combining multiple sources, and it must be assumed that the data presented
is incomplete.
29
5.2 Quantification of Cases
The analysis presented here includes 41 arbitration cases. Based on the premise that the total of
known investment treaty claims is roughly 400,
119
the Netherlands accounts for about 10% of all
cases. So far, the Netherlands has never been the respondent in an investment arbitration; in all
cases the Dutch investor is the claimant. To compare this figure, there are less than 10 known claims
in which Belgium investors are involved, less than 20 with French investors, less than 30 with German
investors, but over 70 in which a US investor is a claimant. In two of the cases discussed, the claim
relies not on the Dutch BIT with a third country, but on the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT), to which the
Netherlands is a party. These cases have been included in the analysis, however, as they both relate
to a foreign investor incorporated in the Netherlands, using the Dutch route, as their countries of origin
(the US and Canada) are not party to the ECT itself.
When looking at the host countries that have been subjected to claims by Dutch investors, it appears
that the countries listed most frequently are the countries with most claims globally. It must be
mentioned, however, that Venezuela is over-represented, with eight cases from Dutch investors out of
around 15 globally, while Argentina is under-represented, with two Dutch claimants and 51 claims
worldwide. Interestingly, where the dispute settlement clause in the VenezuelaNetherlands BIT
permits international arbitration, the ArgentinaNetherlands BIT obliges the use of local remedies
before international dispute settlement is accessible.
Table 1 Host countries subjected to claims by Dutch investors
Host country
Numb
er of
claims
Tot
al
Venezuela
8
8
Czech Republic
6
6
Kazakhstan
3
3
Azerbaijan/Bolivia/India/Turkey
2
8
Slovak Republic
2
3
Argentina/Estonia/Georgia/Mongolia/Nicaragua/Nigeria/Paraguay/Romania/Senegal/Slovenia/Tu
nisia/Vietnam/Zimbabwe
1
13
Total
41
Crucially, the data clearly indicate that the majority (29) of the investors seeking arbitration through a
Dutch investment treaty are foreign (the ultimate or controlling parent is not based in the Netherlands),
while 25 of all legal persons acting as claimants have no employees at all on the payroll: these
companies are no more than shell companies, with hardly any substantial activities in the Netherlands.
There are six Dutch investors, and the origin in three cases is unknown.
As to the current status (June 2011) of the cases, 13 were pending and 13 had been settled. Awards
favouring the investor (six) outweighed rulings in favour of host states (four). In three cases, the status
of the awards remains unknown. In one instance an award was rendered but not made public, while in
another the proceedings were discontinued.
119
UNCTAD, “Scope and Definition“, (2011) UNCTAD Series on Issues in International Investment Agreements II, <
http://www.unctad.org/en/docs//diaeia20102_en.pdf> accessed 25 June 2011
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
30
The damages sought by the investor vary extremely, and can be very substantial. In 9 cases, the
exact amount could not be identified. In 12 cases it was more than US$1bn, in 15 cases between
US$25m and US$1bn, and in 5 cases less than US$25m.
Amounts sought by the investor
Number of cases
>US$10bn
4
US$1.1bn10bn
8
US$251m1bn
7
US$26m250m
8
<US$25m
5
N/A
9
Total
41
Total amount
c. US$100bn
The amounts add up to US$100bn. In the cases that have an outcome that (most probably)
compensates an investor (natural persons excluded), in only one case, of the 13 that are settled, is the
amount disclosed (US$650, Holcim v. Venezuela). In four of the six cases settled in favour of the
investor the amounts of money are known: they vary between less than US$1m and US$4.3bn.
120
5.3 Treaty shopping perceived through arbitral awards
In general, the arbitration tribunals that were asked to rule under the provisions of Dutch BITs upheld
the broad, asset-based definition of investment used therein, as well as the limited requirements for
national or investor.
121
In doing so, these tribunals have effectively given their seal of approval to
the practice where investors have restructured their investment through the Netherlands in order to
benefit from the extensive protection offered by Dutch BITs.
An in-depth discussion of all tribunal
awards involving matters related to treaty shopping falls outside the scope of this paper; instead, a
non-exhaustive series of examples that illustrate how arbitration tribunals have dealt with treaty
shopping practices are described below. These are presented chronologically and have been limited
to those cases on which official documentation has been disclosed.
CME Czech Republic BV v. Czech Republic
Company
CME Czech Republic BV, liquidated in 2006. Daughter of CME Media Enterprises
BV Dam 5 -B, 1012JS Amsterdam. Financial holding, 2 employees.
Forum
UNCITRAL (2001)
Host country
Czech Republic
Initial Claim
US$560m
Status
Awarded in favour of the investor
Award
US$270m
Mother company
Central European Media Enterprises, Czech Republic
120
Eureko v. Poland (US$4.3bn); CME Check Republic v. Czech (US$560); Eastern Sugar v. Poland (US$26m); Fedax v.
Venezuela (Les than US$1m)
121
T. Henquet, Dutch bilateral investment treaties and investment protection in the European union: some observations on non-
discrimination and investment restructuring; Paper prepared for presentation at a conference on “Contemporary Topics in
Investment Arbitration: Most Favored Nation Treatment of Substantive Rights and Investment Arbitration in China”,
organised by the Association for International Arbitration, 22 October 2010, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
31
A controversial and widely discussed case regarding treaty and forum shopping, CME Czech Republic
BV v. Czech Republic illustrates how one investor can tactically initiate parallel proceedings against
the same state, under two different BITs, with regard to the same dispute.
122
Two claims brought at
approximately the same time by the ultimate controlling shareholder, Lauder, a US investor, under the
BIT between the United States and the Czech Republic, and by CME Czech Republic, a Dutch
company that holds shares in the local company under the NetherlandsCzech Republic BIT. CME
Czech Republic BV was also owned by Lauder. The Czech Republic prevailed against Lauder, but
was ordered to pay US$270 million in damages to CME.
The CME Tribunal rejected the Czech Republics argument that Mr Lauder had been engaged in
impermissible treaty shopping:
The argument of abusive treaty shopping is not convincing. A party may seek its legal
protection under any scheme provided by the laws of the host country. The Treaty, as well as
the US Treaty, is part of the laws of the Czech Republic and neither of the treaties supersedes
the other. Any overlapping of the results of parallel process must be dealt with on the level of
loss and quantum but not on the level of breach of treaty.
123
This ruling has also been caused by the over-wide definition of investment and investor in the BITs.
Different entities (owner, shareholder, investor) along the ownership chain of the multinational
company are regarded as distinct nationals, each having its potential claim under the BITs available to
it.
124
This outcome would have been avoided if a control test had been included in the BIT. Then the
corporate veil could have been lifted, revealing the true nationality of the owner.
Aguas del Tunari, SA v. Republic of Bolivia
Company
International Water Holdings BV Teleportboulevard 140, 1043EJ Amsterdam.
Liquidated in 2010. Direct parent: 50% Baywater Holdings BV Prins Bernhardplein
200, 1097JB Amsterdam. Financial holding of Bechtel, US 50% Edison, Italy 50%
Forum
ICSID (2003)
Host country
Bolivia
Initial Claim
US$25million
Status
Settled
Award
N/A
Mother company
Bechtel, US 50% Edison, Italy 50%
Aguas del Tunari, SA v. Republic of Bolivia, known in connection with the Cochabamba water wars,
125
clearly demonstrates the ambiguous nature of definitions in investment treaties. The broad definitions
of investor and investment enable investment tribunals to interpret of these concepts very widely,
sometimes leading to unintended outcomes for the host country. In this case, awarded under the
NetherlandsBolivia BIT, the Tribunal rejected Bolivias complaint that Aguas was not an entity
controlled directly or indirectly by a national of the Netherlands, as is set out in the BIT. Bolivia held
the opinion that (effective) control referred to the ultimate owner, the US company Bechtel. This
argument caused the Tribunal to analyse thoroughly the meaning and application of the term
122
CME Czech Republic B.V. (The Netherlands) v. The Czech Republic, UNCITRAL, Partial Award of September 13, 2001
123
Paragraph 419 of the Award. CME Czech Republic B.V. v. Czech Republic, Partial Award (September 13, 2001)
124
R. F. Hansen, Investment treaty arbitration and International Political Economy: The systemic challenge of investor
nationality in an era of multinational enterprises, no date, < http://www.asil.org/files/ielconferencepapers/hansen.pdf>
accessed 24 June 2011
125
Aguas del Tunari, S.A. v. Republic of Bolivia, Decision on Respondent”s Objections to Jurisdiction, 21 October 2005, ICSID
Case No. ARB/02/3,
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
32
controlled directly or indirectly in the BoliviaNetherlands BIT. In the end, the majority of the Tribunal
concluded that the BIT does not require actual day-to-day or ultimate control as part of the controlled
directly or indirectly requirement contained in Article 1(b)(iii).
126
The Tribunal also concluded that it
does not view this treaty shopping conduct as problematic:
This decision reflects the growing web of treaty based referrals to arbitration of certain
investment disputes. Although titled bilateral investment treaties, this case makes clear that
which has been clear to negotiating states for some time, namely that through the definition
of national or investor, such treaties serve in many cases more broadly as portals through
which investments are structured, organized, and, most importantly, encouraged through the
availability of a neutral forum. The language of the definition of national in many BITS
evidences that such national routing of investments is entirely in keeping with the purpose of
the instruments and the motivations of the state parties.
127
In Aguas v. Bolivia, the Tribunal accepted that it was possible to restructure an investment in order to
access the BIT in case the original home state did not sign a BIT with the Host state.
Saluka Investment BV v. Czech Republic
Company
Saluka Investments BV, subsidiary of Netherlands Nomura Nederland NV;
subsidiary of Nomura Europe, based in London.
Forum
UNCITRAL (2004)
Host country
Czech Republic
Initial Claim
US$1.25bn
Status
Awarded in favour of the investor
Award
N/A
Mother company
Nomura Europe in London, subsidiary of Investment Group, Japan
In Saluka v. Czech Republic, the Japanese bank Nomura, via its London subsidiary, created a special
purpose vehicle incorporated in the Netherlands.
128
This Dutch subsidiary brought a claim under a
BIT between the Netherlands and the Czech Republic. The Czech Republic contended that the claim
should be dismissed as Nomura did not have any bona fide factual links to the Netherlands, stating
that Saluka was a mere shell company. As such, according to the Czech Republic, it did not satisfy the
requirements necessary to qualify as an investor able to benefit from the provisions of the Treaty.
129
The Tribunal, however, ruled that the BIT contained no language which would exclude holding
companies such as Saluka from benefiting from investment protection. Particularly, the Tribunal has
some sympathy for the argument that a company which has no real connection with a State
party to a BIT, and which is in reality a mere shell company controlled by another company
which is not constituted under the laws of that State, should not be entitled to invoke the
provisions of that treaty. Such a possibility lends itself to abuses of the arbitral procedure, and
to practices of treaty shopping which can share many of the disadvantages of the widely
criticized practice of forum shopping.
130
126
Para 264. The Declaration of José Luis Alberro–Semerena dissents to the Tribunal”s decision as to the interpretation given
to the phrase “controlled directly or indirectly.“ The difference between the majority and the dissent as to Respondent”s
request for production for documents follows directly from their difference in the interpretation of that phrase. Para 265
127
Para. 332
128
Saluka Investments B.V. v. The Czech Republic, UNCITRAL Partial Award, 17 March 2006
129
Para239-240
130
paras. 240-241.
33
Despite this statement, the Tribunal remained of the opinion that the provisions of the treaty should
guide its decision, and that it could not impose a narrower definition of investor than that to which the
State Parties to the agreement had concluded.
131
The Tribunal felt that its hands were tied by the
loose definition of investor in the treaty.
TSA Spectrum de Argentina SA v. Argentina
Company
TSA Spectrum de Argentina SA, fully owned by TSI Spectrum International NV
Financial holding, no employees.
Forum
ICSID (2005)
Host country
Argentina
Initial Claim
US$509m
Status
Awarded in favour of the state
Award
N/A
Mother company
TSA Spectrum based in Argentina
This is an exceptional case, as the Tribunal has looked beyond the formal place of incorporation in
order to determine the true nationality of the investor, who was a national of the host state. In TSA
Spectrum v. Argentina, one of the objections of Argentina to the jurisdiction of the Tribunal was that
TSA did not constitute a legal person enjoying protection as an investor under the BIT.
132
The Tribunal
stated that only a genuinely foreign investment should be protected by the ICSID mechanism.
133
It
denied jurisdiction under Article 25(2)(b) of the ICSID Convention on the basis that the Argentinian
claimant TSA, while 100% owned by a Dutch company, was ultimately owned by an Argentinian
citizen:
The only conclusion that can be drawn from the information and evidence available to the
Tribunal is thus that the ultimate owner of TSA on and around the date of consent was the
Argentinian citizen Mr. Jorge Justo Neuss. It therefore follows that, whatever interpretation is
given to the BIT between Argentina and the Netherlands, including the Protocol to the BIT,
TSA cannot be treated, for the purposes of Article 25(2)(b) of the ICSID Convention, as a
national of the Netherlands because of absence of foreign control and that the Arbitral
Tribunal therefore lacks jurisdiction to examine TSAs claims.
134
Rompetrol v. Romania
Company
The Rompetrol Group NV, Strawinskylaan 807 Tower A-8 Amsterdam. Financial
holding, no employees. Since 2009 subsidiary of Kaz MunaiGax PKOP
Forum
ICSID (2006)
Host country
Romania
Initial Claim
US$150m
Status
Pending
Award
N/A
Mother company
Luxembourg company called ROGI, owned at time by Romanian nationals Mr Marin and
Mr Patriciu
131
Ibid
132
See TSA Spectrum de Argentina S.A. v. Argentine Republic, Award, 19 December 2008, ICSID Case No. ARB/05/5, Para 39
133
Para 118
134
Para 162
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
34
The 2008 dispute in Rompetrol v. Romania, in the Romanian oil sector,
135
arose between a Dutch-
incorporated energy company and the Government of Romania. However, Romania has asked the
tribunal to decline jurisdiction because the Dutch company is a shell company.
136
The country argued
that the companys real and effective nationality determined on the basis of its ownership and
control, the source of its capital, and the nature of its commercial operations is that of the
Respondent.
137
The Tribunal declined this argument and noted that the provisions of the BIT between the Netherlands
and Romania are clear with regard to relying solely on a incorporation test: the Tribunal is in no
doubt, in the face of the clear provisions of Article 1(b) of the BIT, that Romania did specifically
consent to ICSID jurisdiction over claims brought by Dutch companies, without regard to the incidents
of control or source of capital.
138
The arbitrators also stated that it is not controversial for states to
negotiate international treaties that apply to their own citizens:
The classic instance is that characteristic feature of our period, human rights, but there is no
reason why identical policy considerations should not animate States in trade, environmental
or other fields; and indeed, as one knows from practical experience, important elements
connected with property, assets and economic activity enter into the heart of human rights
regimes.
139
According to the tribunal, Romania might have willingly negotiated an international treaty which
protected its own citizens provided that they incorporated in another territory and then invoked the
treaty in the guise of foreign investors.
140
Nevertheless, with regard to treaty interpretation, the
Tribunal noted that, in the end, it does not matter what the Parties to a BIT might (or might not)
conceivably have intended by signing the BIT, but what they actually did, and the evidence for that is
the terms of the treaty they concluded.
Mobil v. Venezuela
Company
Mobil Corporation, Mobil Cerro Negro Holding Ltd, Mobil Venezolana de Petróleos
Holdings, Inc. Mobil Cerro Negro Ltd, Mobil Venezolana de Petróleos, Inc.,
Venezuela Holdings BV, Venezuela Holding BV, Graaf Engelbertlaan 75, 4837DS
Breda. Financial holding company, subsidiary of Exxon Mobil, no employees
Forum
ICSID (2007)
Host country
Venezuela
Initial Claim
US$6bn
Status
Pending
Award
N/A
Mother company
Exxon Mobil USA
Mobil v. Venezuela concerns a dispute around the nationalization of oil and gas projects, brought
against Venezuela by the Dutch holding company Venezuela Holdings BV, two Delaware (US) holding
135
The Rompetrol Group N.V. v. Romania, Decision on Respondent”s Preliminary Objections on Jurisdiction and Admissibility,
18 April 2008, ICSID Case No. ARB/06/3
136
Id., para. 100.
137
Para 100
138
Id. para. 101.
139
Para 109
140
See also L. Peterson, Human Rights and Bilateral Investment Treaties, Mapping the role of human rights law within investor-
state arbitration , Rights and Democracy, 2009, <http://www.dd-rd.ca/site/_PDF/publications/globalization/HIRA-volume3-
ENG.pdf >, accessed July 2011
35
companies, and two Bahamian companies.
141
The company responded to this by instituting
investment arbitration pursuant to the 1993 BIT between the Netherlands and Venezuela.
142
Venezuela challenged the jurisdiction of the Tribunal and contended that the BIT does not provide a
basis for ICSID jurisdiction over the dispute. It submits that the Dutch holding Venezuela Holdings is a
corporation of convenience created in anticipation of litigation against the Republic of Venezuela for
the sole purpose of gaining access to ICSID jurisdiction, and concludes that this abuse of the
corporate form and blatant treaty-shopping should not be condoned.
143
With regard to the provisions of the BIT, Venezuela contends that they establish that the obligations
of a Contracting Party run only to nationals of the other Contracting Party with respect to their own
investments and only to the extent that those investments are located in the territory of the first
Contracting Party.
144
Mobil did not deny the allegation put forward, and admitted that in 2004, after
the first unilateral tax imposition, it undertook a review of the extent of the legal protection for its
investments in Venezuela. Upon doing so, it concluded in early 2005 that it should restructure its
Venezuelan investments through a holding company incorporated in the Netherlands, which had a
bilateral investment treaty with Venezuela.
145
The Tribunal noted that the main if not the sole purpose of the restructuring was to protect Mobil
investments from adverse Venezuelan measures in getting access to ICSID arbitration through the
NetherlandsVenezuela BIT.
146
It also concluded that the restructuring of the investments to protect
investments against breaches of their rights by the Venezuelan authorities by gaining access to ICSID
arbitration through the BIT was a perfectly legitimate goal as far as it concerned future disputes.
147
In
addition, according to the Tribunal, the situation is different with regard to pre-existing disputes. It
considers that to restructure investments only in order to gain jurisdiction under a BIT for such
disputes would constitute [] an abusive manipulation of the system of international investment
protection under the ICSID Convention and the BITs.
148
For the Tribunal, treaty shopping or corporate planning in order to gain treaty protection is allowed.
This planning was, according to the Tribunal, legitimate regarding claims that arose after the
Claimants corporate restructuring, but not those that arose before the restructuring.
CEMEX Caracas Investments BV and CEMEX Caracas II Investments BV v. Venezuela
Company
CEMEX Caracas Investments BV and CEMEX Caracas II Investments BV. CEMEX
Caracas Investments BV, subsidiary of CEMEX Spain, subsidiary of CEMEX
Mexico. Financial holding, Amsteldijk 166, 1079LH Amsterdam, 4 employees
Forum
ICSID (2009)
Host country
Venezuela
Initial Claim
Over US$1bn
Status
Pending
Award
N/A
141
Mobil Corporation, Venezuela Holdings B.V.; Mobil Cerro Negro Holdings, Ltd.; Mobil Venezolana de Petróleos Holdings,
Inc.; Mobil Cerro Negro, Ltd.; and Mobil Venezolana de Petróleos, Inc. v. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Decision on
Jurisdiction, 10 June 2010, ICSID Case No. ARB/07/27
142
M. Skinner, C.A. Miles and S. Luttrell, “Access and advantage in investor-state arbitration: The law and practice of treaty
shopping” (2010) 3 JWELB 260
143
Para 27
144
Id., para. 162.
145
Para 189
146
Para 190
147
Para 204
148
Para 205
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
36
Mother company
CEMEX, Mexico
In 2008, Cemex Caracas Investments BV and Cemex Caracas II Investments BV,
149
companies
incorporated in the Netherlands, filed a Request for Arbitration against Venezuela with the ICSID.
Venezuelas prime objection to the ICSID Tribunals jurisdiction under the treaty stemmed from its
contention that both Cemex Caracas Investments BV and Cemex Caracas II Investments BV are
indirect investors in Cemex Venezuela, since they control it through their ownership of a Cayman
entity known as Vencement Investments, which owns 75.7% of Cemex Venezuelas shares.
The Tribunal observed that a number of ICSID tribunals had considered the question of indirect
investment. It also noted that there is no explicit reference to direct or indirect investments in the BIT,
and in particular in Article 1(a). It stated that the definition of investment given in that article is very
broad. The definition includes every kind of assets and enumerates specific categories of
investments as examples, and indirect investment is an investment made by an indirect investor. As
the BIT covers indirect investments, it necessarily entitles indirect investors to assert claims for alleged
violations of the Treaty concerning the investments that they indirectly own.
The Tribunal further noted that, when the BIT mentions investments of nationals of the other
contracting party, it means that those investments must belong to such nationals in order to be
covered by the treaty. But this does not imply that they must be directly owned by those nationals.
Similarly, when the BIT mentions investments made in the territory of a contracting party, all it
requires is that the investment itself be situated in that territory. It does not imply that those
investments must be directly made in such territory.
150
Thus, unsurprisingly, the Tribunal dismissed
Venezuelas jurisdictional objections.
Final remarks
The Netherlands is particularly popular because of its broad scope of application, which is due to the
extensive definitions of investment and investor/national in these treaties.
151
Dutch BITs seem to
provide an ideal breeding ground for treaty shopping for investment protection. Foreign companies
that aim to take advantage of the broad scope of application of Dutch BITs, and their strong
substantive investor protection, should bring the investment under the relevant Dutch BIT by bringing
a (new of existing) Dutch (intermediate) company in the corporate investment chain. The above
examples illustrate how loose definitions can facilitate expansive interpretations regarding who is
qualified to initiate proceedings in international tribunals. They also illustrate the danger of treaty
shopping when an unpredictable number of shareholders (direct, indirect, minority shareholders)
qualify to start arbitration, and how unanticipated risks can be generated for the host country.
An analysis of case law shows that the Dutch policy to attract investors has resulted in dozens (41) of
known investment cases (10% of known investment cases worldwide!) started by companies that have
shopped their way into investment arbitration by incorporating in the Netherlands. Most of these
companies are foreign, and the majority can be considered shell companies. The damages sought by
149
CEMEX Caracas Investments B.V. and CEMEX Caracas II Investments B.V. v. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, March 3,
2010, ICSID Case No. ARB/08/15
150
Para 157-158
151
T. Henquet, Dutch bilateral investment treaties and investment protection in the European union: some observations on non-
discrimination and investment restructuring; Paper prepared for presentation at a conference on “Contemporary Topics in
Investment Arbitration: Most Favored Nation Treatment of Substantive Rights and Investment Arbitration in China”,
organised by the Association for International Arbitration, 22 October 2010, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
37
the investor are in many cases substantial, in 12 cases more than US$1bn. In general, the arbitration
tribunals that were asked to rule under the provisions of Dutch BITs upheld the broad definition of
investment and investor. The overview allows some preliminary conclusions. With regard to the
conduct of treaty shopping, most tribunals have expressed some unease. Tribunals are to a large
extent bound by the scope of application and the provisions in the treaties signed by the contracting
states (Rompetrol, Saluka, Cemex, Aguas). Intention is not decisive, but content is (Rompetrol). But
the same tribunal seems to know that the current patchwork of bilateral treaties is actually meant to
function as a multilateral system. Property rights are compared to human rights, and are in principle
inalienable, regardless of nationality. The extensive uses of wide definitions in IIAs are evidence of the
intent that treaty shopping is perceived by states as unproblematic (Aguas). ICSID provides for some
restrictions (TSA spectrum), including additional criteria to lift the corporate veil. However, the
discretionary space for tribunals to apply additional criteria is almost boundless. In addition,
companies are in some cases allowed to get away with treaty shopping practices to (indirectly) sue
their home governments. Some tribunals problematize treaty shopping, but feel restricted in
addressing these considerations in their rulings (Saluka).
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
38
6. Conclusions and recommendations
Recently, there has been renewed attention for the at times problematic relation between the
international investment regime and issues relating to the global governance of MNCs and sustainable
development, including human rights and environmental concerns. On the other hand, and somewhat
conflicting, investment is increasingly seen as a development tool. The growing recognition of the
impacts that business activities, in particular those of powerful transnational investors, can have on
human rights and sustainable development, coupled with the exponential growth of transnational
economic activity since the 1990s, call for an urgent reassessment of the frameworks currently guiding
the protection of international investment.
For Europe, the coming into effect of the Lisbon Treaty in 2009 offers a unique opportunity to make
such a reassessment. Lisbon transfers the competence to negotiate investment treaties from the
EUs member states to the EU level. This demands that the EU and its member states now begin to
outline the framework for a future common investment policy, as well as transitional arrangements to
bring member states existing BITs into line with the broader principles of human rights and
sustainable development underpinning all EU policy. If, however, such policy coherence is to precede
objectives of simply ensuring maximum protection for home country investors in host states, a switch
in mind-set is required in the EU member states the Dutch not least as key participants in this
debate. The Netherlands, as a major foreign investor, is one of the pivotal member states in the
debate about the future EU investment treaty framework. Not only does the Netherlands maintain an
extensive network of bilateral investment treaties (95), the Dutch government also notes that in the EU
there are only four countries that invest more than the Netherlands, and only six that host more
investments.
152
The Dutch position in the European investment debate is that any future EU policy must offer at least
the same level of protection that Dutch investors currently enjoy. The Dutch seem reluctant to begin
viewing their investment policy, with its generous protection of investor rights, in a broader policy
context which would require a policy rebalancing to include specific investor obligations in relation to
human rights and sustainable development. However, the Netherlands is a preferred investment
jurisdiction mainly because of its generous fiscal regime. Should the transfer of competences from the
member states to the EU result in a common policy that will cost the Dutch their competitive edge
related to investment treaties, they will not have existing investors driven away by an enforced
lowering of the investment protections they currently enjoy. The Dutch seem relatively unconcerned by
any undesirable side-effects of the extensive investment protections safeguarded by their BITs.
Letterbox companies making use of investor-friendly Dutch BITs to challenge the regulatory
frameworks of host states is not seen as problematic.
Rather, the Netherlands prides itself on the scope of application of its BITs, which expressly aims to
include indirectly controlled investors and allows entities with no substantial ties to a contracting state
to avail themselves, through these BITs, of the treaty protections that their own state may not be
willing to extend to investors vis-à-vis the state hosting their investments. By making clever use of
third-country BITs, including those of the Netherlands, treaty shopping can even enable corporations
to bring suits against their own countries of origin. In terms of sustainability, the Dutch ought to
recognise that extensive investor protections enable easy circumvention of economic, social or
152
Fiche 10: Verordening overgangsregeling bilaterale investeringsovereenkomsten
39
environmental conditions related to the admission of investments put up by host country authorities
and that treaty shopping can thus expose. In relation to the wider policy context, there is scant
recognition, not only in the Netherlands, but among all EU member states that investorstate dispute
settlement based on broad-based BIT definitions can pose a danger to policy space and the
safeguarding of public goods and interests, and that this constitutes a risk no longer limited to
developing countries, but, in the wake of globalisation, has become an increasingly realistic scenario
for the developed world.
153
As such, Dutch investment policy is at odds with the Dutch governments own development objectives
and CSR policies. The new Dutch model BIT treaty, adopted in 2004, shows by omission that calls to
take such wider ramifications of investment protection into consideration continue to fall on deaf ears.
But even the Dutch government cannot ignore that, in the aftermath of the current financial crisis,
foreign investors, especially from emerging economies, are increasingly making their presence felt in
Europe, taking over strategic industries and private public-service providers, thus highlighting the
increasing friction between investor rights and public policy objectives.
This paper shows that treaty shopping is not a marginal side-effect of Dutch BITs, but poses a real
problem. Our analysis of the 41 known Dutch BIT arbitration cases roughly 10% of the global total
clearly indicates the wide range of treaty shopping practices: a substantial majority (29) of the
investors that have sought arbitration through a Dutch investment treaty is foreign (i.e. the country in
which the ultimate or controlling parent is based is not the Netherlands), while 25 of these claimants
are so-called letterbox companies, with no employees or substantial activities in the Netherlands.
What kind of benefits does this policy bring? Could it endanger diplomatic ties with host countries that
are getting sued under Dutch BITs? This has already happened with Bolivia.
These findings call for a renewed focus and not just in the Netherlands on policy coherence in
order to bring investment policy in line with broader (foreign) policy objectives relating to development,
human rights and inclusive growth. Much recent attention among of governments, civil society
organizations, practitioners and academics has focused on the imbalances in the international
investment regime, specifically the imbalance between investor rights on the one hand and public
interest and investor obligations on the other. Rather than resist change, the Netherlands ought to
follow the example of various other countries such as Canada, South Africa and Belgium that have
woken up to the new realities of globalisation and have begun to develop so-called third generation
BITs that seek to achieve a better balance between investor interests, on the one hand, and, on the
other, the regulatory powers of host states and non-economic factors such as the protection of health,
safety, the environment and recognised social and human rights. The Netherlands ought to show the
vision and leadership to take advantage of the opportunity offered by Lisbon to re-evaluate the basic
principles underpinning its investment policy. They should be guided in this by rational assumptions
arising from recent analytical insights and an adequate costbenefit analysis based on international
153
Ruggie on policy space: “States should maintain adequate domestic policy space to meet their human rights obligations
when pursuing business-related policy objectives with other States or business enterprises, for instance through investment
treaties or contracts. Commentary: Economic agreements concluded by States, either with other States or with business
enterprises such as bilateral investment treaties, free-trade agreements or contracts for investment projects create
economic opportunities for States. But they can also affect the domestic policy space of governments. For example, the
terms of international investment agreements may constrain States from fully implementing new human rights legislation, or
put them at risk of binding international arbitration if they do so. Therefore, States should ensure that they retain adequate
policy and regulatory ability to protect human rights under the terms of such agreements, while providing the necessary
investor protection.” John Ruggie, “Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Implementing the United Nations
“Protect, Respect and Remedy” Framework“, 2011 <http://www.ohchr.org/documents/issues/business/A.HRC.17.31.pdf>
accessed 24 September 2011
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
40
standards that should include, among others, the International Bill of Human Rights, the UN Business
and Human Rights Framework, the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, the ILO
Conventions and the UN Global Compact.
In 2005, the UN appointed John Ruggie as its Secretary Generals Special Representative on
Business and Human Rights to call attention to businesses impact on human rights following the
exponential growth of transnational economic activity since the 1990s
154
and to investigate and issue
recommendations on the corporate responsibility to respect and uphold human rights. The work of
Ruggie and his team resulted in the presentation in March 2011 of a framework of UN Guiding
Principles on Business and Human Rights, to help to operationalize and promote his earlier business
and human rights framework, presented in 2008. The aim of the Special Representative on Business
and Human Rights was to establish a global standard for preventing and addressing the risk of
adverse impacts on human rights linked to business activity.
155
While the Dutch government fiercely
supports the UN Business and Human Rights Agenda, policy-makers fail to understand that the State
duty to respect as outlined by these Guiding Principles requires them to deepen their understanding of
the relation between investment law and policy and the impact of “Dutch” companies abroad. As an
influential 2011 study on CSR and European corporations notes: “This can lead to substantial legal
and policy incoherence and gaps in protecting human rights and the environment, which often entails
significant negative consequences for victims, corporations and States themselves.”
156
The Netherlands should live up to its duty to devise policy frameworks that are in line with the human
rights and sustainable development responsibilities of states and the corresponding duty of corporate
enterprise to respect these rights. In anticipation of a wider common European framework, the Dutch
ought to begin to advocate a standard that firmly embeds investment policy in this wider framework of
responsibilities and ought to adapt its investment treaties accordingly when they come up for
extension or renegotiation. Following UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights and
taking advantage of the window of opportunity in European policy development, the task now facing
the Dutch government, Dutch M(E)Ps and CSOs working on Dutch trade and investment policies is to
devise a model for socially responsible investing which fully takes into account the human rights,
social and environmental impacts of (foreign) investments. This would require the Netherlands to do
the following:
Narrow the overly broad definitions of “investor” and “investment” used in the text. Legal
wording that extends protections to indirectly controlled investors and speculative forms of
investment should be avoided. In recognition of the problems associated with treaty shopping,
Dutch BITs would benefit from the incorporation of a denial of benefits clause, which allows
contracting parties to deny treaty protection to those companies that are controlled by investors of
an entity that is not party to the treaty, and that have no substantial business activity in the territory
of the party under whose laws they are constituted.
157
For instance the Cariforum- EU Economic
Partnership Agreement defines that a juridical person “shall not be considered as a juridical
154
John Ruggie, “Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Implementing the United Nations “Protect, Respect and
Remedy” Framework“, 2011 <http://www.ohchr.org/documents/issues/business/A.HRC.17.31.pdf> accessed 24 September
2011
155
UN, Business and Human Rights Guiding Principles, endorsed by the HRC in June 2011, See: <http://www.business-
humanrights.org/media/documents/ruggie/ruggie-guiding-principles-endorsed-16-jun-2011.pdf> 24 September 2011
156
In 2011, the United Nations Trade and Development Conference (UNCTAD), in accordance with its mission to “help
developing countries to participate as effectively as possible in international rule-setting for investment”, has dedicated
publications to several contentious issues surrounding IIAs, including on the scope and definitions used in these treaties; on
the impact of IIAs on sovereign debt restructuring; and on IIAs and alternatives to arbitration in investor-state disputes.
157
UNCTAD, Bilateral Investment Treaties 19952006: Trends In Investment Rulemaking, 2006,
http://www.unctad.org/en/docs/iteiia20065_en.pdf Accessed 24 September 2011
41
person of the EC Party or of a Signatory CARIFORUM State respectively, unless it engages in
substantive business operations (1) in the territory to which the Treaty establishing the European
Community applies or of a Signatory CARIFORUM State.
158
Incorporate clauses explicitly safeguarding host states‟ policy space to regulate (and offer
scope for expansion if and when needed) in the interest of protecting public goods and
interests. While the problem is most acute in less advanced capital-importing countries, where
flanking regulation is often insufficient to prevent, address or mitigate harmful side-effects of (far-
reaching) investment protections, it is also an issue in the capital-exporting countries, where
regulatory frameworks tend to be more advanced. In relation to developing countries, a recent
European Parliament resolution calls for space to allow developing countries to pursue their own
industrial and development policies as well as for fairness in investment agreements […] allowing
developing countries to discriminate between different investments on the basis of their
contribution to development objectives and the inclusion of more narrowly defined non-
discrimination clauses (national treatment and most favoured nation), with a more precise
wording in the definition mentioning that foreign and national investors must operate in like
circumstances and allowing some flexibility in the MFN clause in order not to obstruct regional
integration processes in developing countries.
159
Develop policies that enable regulatory oversight of Dutch and European companies
abroad. Current government policy is completely geared to enhancing the attractiveness of the
Netherlands as a business hub. However, there seems to be no real interest in the levels of
sustainability of the companies these policies attract or their operations outside the Netherlands.
By stimulating the establishment of thousands of mailbox companies, over which regulatory
oversight is virtually impossible, the Netherlands will perforce attract dodgy business. Dutch
companies‟ investments can potentially have adverse effects on rights to food, water, education,
health, decent living standards, work and development. Such impacts should be extensively
assessed prior to the negotiation of investment agreements by the Netherlands and the EU.
Increase transparency regarding treaty making and fix the democratic deficit surrounding
BITs. International investment agreements by nature severely limit governments‟ scope for
national policy-making. However, parliamentary involvement in the Netherlands has, so far, been
very limited and restricted to specific disputes. Fixing this democratic deficit is crucial as inward
investment into Europe increases, raising the chances of claims against European countries,
including the Netherlands, while controversies in the EU run high about who is to foot the bill for
compensations granted in such cases: the European Union or the member state concerned.
Include enforceable sustainability clauses in the body of BIT texts. These should refer to the
body of internationally recognised standards, including, among others, the International Bill of
Human Rights, the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the OECD Guidelines
for Multinational Enterprises, the ILO Conventions and the UN Global Compact. In the Dutch
model BIT, as in most EU member state BITs, social and environmental objectives are referred to
only in the preamble, in a non-binding and non-committal manner. Policy coherence to monitor
158
Art. 61 of the Cariforum- EU Economic Partnership Agreement : Footnote (1) defines: “In line with its notification of the EC
Treaty to the WTO (WT/REG39/1), the EC Party understands that the concept of „effective and continuous link‟ with the
economy of a Member State enshrined in Article 48 of the EC Treaty is equivalent to the concept of „substantive business
operations‟ provided in Article V, paragraph 6, of the GATS, and in this Agreement.”
159
European Parliament, Report on the future international investment policy, (2010/2203(INI)
<http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2011-0070&language=EN >
Dutch Bilateral Investment Treaties
42
and address transnational corporations CSR records in third countries effectively should begin
with the establishment of appropriate policy frameworks at home. The Netherlands is an
outspoken proponent of both the recent update of the OECD Guidelines and the UN Guiding
Principles. It likes to put itself forward as a champion of the incorporation of CSR norms and social
and environmental chapters in EU trade and investment agreements. To give teeth to these
important initiatives and intentions, the Netherlands would need to critically assess and adapt the
trade and investment promotion policies that support Dutch business abroad, including BITs.
Human rights impact assessments and the inclusion of effectively functioning sustainability
clauses can be a first positive step. The integration of CSR in BITs would promote investment for
development by decreasing the possible negative effects of the activities of multinationals,
particularly in countries without effectively functioning governments.
Measure the impact of BITs and other treaties on developing countries. In terms of
development policy coherence, the Netherlands should take a critical look at the premise
underlying its current trade and investment policy that opening markets to attract foreign capital
is a panacea for the sustainable reduction of poverty. It is a truth almost universally acknowledged
that maintaining a tax regime like that of the Netherlands, which serves to facilitate the transfer-
pricing and tax-dodging practices that multinational companies are notorious for, deprives host
country governments of the public funds needed to devise the policies to lift their people out of
poverty. It is equally clear that investment protections that hamper targeted industrial and labour
market policies in developing countries and leave host countries wide open to litigation from
MNCs, whose claims for damages can seriously drain public coffers, are less than conducive to
poverty eradication.
Incorporate a much more balanced dispute-settlement arrangement. This should at the very
least include greater transparency in terms of proceedings and the disclosure of information, a
roster of permanent arbitrators, and rules to avoid conflicts of interest, as well as an appeals
mechanism. An obligation to exhaust local legal remedies before reverting to international
arbitration should also be included. This would force countries to observe local laws and
regulations, and would have the additional benefit of helping to reinforce the rule of law, in
particular in developing countries. In addition, dispute settlement arrangements should allow
balancing the investment treaty obligations with other international human rights and
environmental treaty obligations.
If, as expected in our globalising world, former outward investors increasingly become the recipients of
foreign investment, leaving them open to seeing their own regulatory frameworks challenged before
international tribunals, the risks associated with the investment protections that make this possible
may well be painfully brought home. The above recommendations should underpin Dutch negotiating
perspectives in the (re-)negotiations of the country‟s BITs, with the aim of achieving a better balance
between investors‟ rights and obligations. They should also guide the positions the Netherlands takes
at the European level in relation to the drawing up of a future EU-wide investment policy framework.
The possible adverse effects on sustainable development of extensive investment protections outlined
in this paper make a strong case for both ex-ante and ex-post assessments of the impacts of
investments covered by home states BITs. As a tax haven and a preferred jurisdiction for treaty
shoppers, the Netherlands carries an extra responsibility
43
Annex 1 Overview of claims invoked by Dutch investors
Company
Tribunal
Host Country
Case
initiated
in
Amount sought
by the investor
Status
Awarded
settled
Ultimate
parent
Incorporated in the
Netherlands
Number
of
employee
s in NLD
The Williams
Companies,
International
Holdings BV,
WilPro Energy
Services (El
Furrial)
Limited and
WilPro Energy
Services
(Pigap II)
Limited
ICSID
Venezuela
2011
US$ 7.5bn
Pending
Austria
Administred by a
trust office
0
Khan
Resources BV
UNCITRAL
(ECT)
Mongolia
2011
US$200m
Pending
Canada
Subsidiary of Khan
Resources
0
AES
Corporation
and Tau
Power BV
ICSID
(ECT)
Kazakhstan
2010
N/A
Pending
USA
Tau Powers BV
financial holding
0
KT Asia
Investment
Group BV
ICSID
Kazakhstan
2009
US$1,5bn
Pending
Unknown
Administerd by trust
office
0
Holcim
Limited,
Holderfin BV
and
Caricement
BV
ICSID
Venezuela
2009
N/A
Settled
US$650
Swiss
Subsidiary of
Holcim Swiss
5
44
Itera
International
Energy LLC
and Itera
Group NV
ICSID
Georgia
2008
N/A
Settled
N/A
Swiss
Subsidiary of
Gasitera Suisse AG
0
Alapli Elektrik
BV
ICSID
(ECT)
Turkey
2008
Over US$ 100m
Pending
Luxembourg
subsidiary of TMF
Group HoldCo BV
(over 1200
subsidiaries)
subsidiary of T Beta
Sarl in Luxembourg
0
CEMEX
Caracas
Investments
BV and
CEMEX
Caracas II
Investments
BV
ICSID
Venezuela
2009
Over US$1bn
Pending
Mexico
CEMEX Caracas
Investments BV
subsidiary of
CEMEX Spain,
subsidiary of
CEMEX mexico
4
Millicom
International
Operations BV
et al.
ICSID
Senegal
2008
US$600m
Pending
Luxembourg
Millicom
International
Celular,
Luxembourg
0
Eureko
UNCITRAL
Slovak
Republic
2008
Over US$144
Pending
Netherlands
Achmea,
Rabobank,
Netherlands
23000
HICEE
UNCITRAL
Slovak
Republic
2008
Over US$1bn
Awarded in
favour of
the state
Cyprus
Subsidiary of Penta
Cyprus
2
Saba Fakes
ICSID
Turkey
2007
US$19bn
Awarded in
favour of
the state
Natural person
Natural person
0
45
Mobil
Corporation,
Mobil Cerro
Negro
Holding, Ltd,
Mobil
Venezolana
de Petróleos
Holdings, Inc.
Mobil Cerro
Negro, Ltd,
Mobil
Venezolana
de Petróleos,
Inc.,
Venezuela
Holdings BV
ICSID
Venezuela
2007
US$6bn
Pending
USA
Exxon Mobil USA
0
Shell Nigeria
Ultra Deep
Limited
ICSID
Nigeria
2007
Over US$500m
Pending
Netherlands
SHELL Gas Nigeria
BV
0
Liman
Caspian Oil
BV and NCL
Dutch
Investment BV
UNCITRAL
(ECT)
Kazakhstan
2007
Over US$200m
Award
rendered
but not
public
N/A
Luxembourg
Citco C&T Holdings
(Luxembourg) 1678
subsidiaries
0
ConocoPhillips
Company
(US),
Petrozuata BV
(Netherlands)
and
ConocoPhillips
Gulf of Paria
BV
(Netherlands)
ICSID
Venezuela
2007
US$30bn
Pending
USA
Subsidiary of
Conoco Orinoco
INC
0
46
Eni Dación BV
ICSID
Venezuela
2007
US$1.1bn
Settled
N/A
Italy
subsidiary of ENI
OIL Holdings BV,
Subsidiary of EnI
Spa in Italy
0
Fondel Metal
ICSID
Azerbaijan
2007
N/A
Settled
N/A
Netherlands
subsidiary of
Fondel Netherlands
BV
5
Bureau
Veritas,
Inspection,
Valuation,
Assessment
and Control,
BIVAC BV
ICSID
Paraguay
2007
US$22m
Pending
France
Bureau Veritas
Group, France
48
E.T.I. Euro
Telecom
International
NV
ICSID
Bolivia
2007
US$60m
Unknown
N/A
Italia
Telecom Italia
0
Invesmart BV
UNCITRAL
Czech
Republic
2007
US$158m
Unknown
N/A
Italy
Investar SGR SpA
0
The Rompetrol
Group NV
ICSID
Romania
2006
US$150m
Pending
Romania/Kaza
khstan
Kaz MunaiGaz
0
Azpetrol
International
Holdings BV,
Azpetrol
Group BV and
Azpetrol Oil
Services
Group BV
ICSID
(ECT)
Azerbaijan
2006
US$350m
awarded in
favor of the
state
Azerbadjan
Azpetrol,
Azerbaidjan
0
Rail World
LLC and
others
ICSID
Estonia
2006
N/A
Settled
N/A
USA
USA
0
47
Shell Brands
International
AG and Shell
Nicaragua SA
ICSID
Nicaragua
2006
N/A
Settled
N/A
Netherlands
Shell Netherlands
N/A
Bernardus
Henricus
Funnekotter
and others
ICSID
Zimbabwe
2005
US$15
awarded in
favor of the
investor
US$12
Natural person
Natural person
N/A
TSA Spectrum
de Argentina
SA
ICSID
Argentina
2005
US$509m
awarded in
favour of
the state
Argentina
Argentinian
company
0
K+Venture
Partners
UNCITRAL
Czech
Republic
2005
US$5.1m
Settled
N/A
Unknown
N/A
0
I&I Beheer
B.V.
ICSID
Venezuela
2005
US$300 million
Proceeding
discontinue
d
Unknown
N/A
1
Mittal Steel
Company NV
ICSID
Czech
Republic
2005
US$1.4bn
Settled
N/A
Luxembourg
ArcelorMittal,
UK/Luxembourg
0
UNCITRAL
Vietnam
2004
US$140million
Settled
N/A
Natural person
Natural person
ABCI
Investments
ICSID
Tunisia
2004
N/A
N/A
N/A
Bahrein
ABC Bank Jordan
N/A
48
Interbrew
ICSID
Slovenia
2004
N/A
Settled
N/A
Belgium
Inbev (previously
Interbrew),
0
ABN Amro NV
UNCITRAL
India
2004
N/A
Settled
N/A
Netherlands
ABNAMRO
N/A
Offshore
Power
Production
CV,
Travamark
Two BV, EFS
India-Energy
BV, Enron BV,
and Indian
Power
Investments
BV
(Netherlands)
UNCITRAL
India
2004
over US$4
billion
Settled
N/A
USA
General Electric,
USA
0
Eastern Sugar
UNCITRAL
Czech
Republic
2004
US$143million
awarded in
favour of
the investor
US$26
UK
Man Group PLC,
UK
0
Saluka
Investments
BV
UNCITRAL
Czech
Republic
2004
US$1.25bn
awarded in
favour of
the investor
N/A
Japan
Netherlands
Nomura Nederland
NV
24
Aguas del
Tunari S.A.
ICSID
Bolivia
2003
US$25 million
Settled
N/A
USA/Italy
Bechtel, US 50%
Edison, Italy 50%
0
49
Eureko
UNCITRAL
Poland
2003
US$14bn
awarded in
favour of
the investor
US$4.3
bn
Netherlands
Netherlands
22,000
(worldwid
e)
CME Czech
Republic BV
UNCITRAL
Czech
Republic
2001
US$ 560 million
awarded in
favour of
the investor
US$ 269,
814,000
Czech republic
2
2
Fedax NV
ICSID
Venezuela
1998
less than 1
million
awarded in
favour of
the investor
US$598,9
50
Netherlands
Antilles
Curacao
0