BALANCING INVESTOR PROTECTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN INVESTMENT ARBITRATION

Abdurakhmonova Noila

Authors

  • Abdurakhmonova Noila LLM in International arbitration and dispute settlement Tashkent State University of Law

Keywords:

investor-state arbitration, FDI, investment, investment protection, bilateral investment treaties, ICSID

Abstract

Investment arbitration was originally developed primarily to protect
investors from wealthy developed countries against arbitrary expropriations by
governments in developing countries. However, over time, it has taken on a very
broad dynamic and is nowadays often used to limit regulatory interference of any
government with the business plans of any foreign or foreign owned companies.
This is causing "regulatory chill" in many parts of the world, where governments,
in particular in less developed or less affluent countries, are weary of changing or
enforcing environmental protections, labor laws, consumer laws, etc., because they
have already been forced to pay after costly arbitration proceedings in similar
cases. We cite a number of examples where countries were trying to introduce
sensible regulation in response to changing circumstances and ended up paying
damages to investors who might never have been able to implement their business
ideas even in the absence of the regulatory changes. As a result, we not only see an
undue limitation on the sovereignty of many countries and governments and their
ability to regulate in the best interest of their citizens. We also see more and more
countries turning their backs on investor-state arbitration and on bilateral or
multilateral protection treaties in general. A complete breakdown of the established
system may not be imminent but talk about a crisis does no longer seem alarmist.
What is needed, therefore, is a re-balancing of the rights and obligations of the investors and the host countries, and a better appreciation of sustainable
development goals and other valid public interest considerations in the host
countries. This idea is not new and we are not the first ones to postulate the need
for change. However, we may be offering some new ideas and a new evaluation of
some existing ideas on how such a change could be brought about in practice.

References

G.A. Res. 70/1, Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable

Development, (25 September 2015) (hereinafter the “2030 Agenda for

Sustainable Development”), Goal 10.b, Goal 17.5.

By the close of 2018, 3,340 IIAs had been ratified, 2,671 of which were in

force. United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, International

Investment Agreements Navigator, (Investment Policy Hub)

https://investmentpolicyhub.unctad. org/IIA (accessed 27 December 2018).

A growing minority of these agreements also includes provisions requiring

investment liberalization.

The Effect of Treaties on Foreign Direct Investment (Karl Sauvant & Lisa

Sachs eds., 2009); Joachim Pohl, Societal Benefits and Costs of International

Investment Agreements (OECD Working Papers on International Investment

No. 2018/1, 2018).

OECD, FDI Qualities Toolkit: Investment for Inclusive and Sustainable

Growth: Progress Report III (March 2019).

The Effect of Treaties on Foreign Direct Investment, Assessing the Impacts

of Investment Treaties: Overview of the Evidence (International Institute for

Sustainable Development Report September, 2017) Lisa Sachs & Lise

Johnson, Investment Treaties, Investor-State Dispute Settlement and

Inequality: How International Rules and Institutions Can Exacerbate

Domestic Disparities (Initiative for Policy Dialogue Working Paper 306,

.

Mavluda Sattorova, The Impact of Investment Treaty Law on Host Sates:

Enabling Good Governance (2018); Tom Ginsburg, International Substitutes

for Domestic Institutions: Bilateral Investment Treaties and Governance, 25

Int’l Rev. L. & Econ. 107 (2005).

Kyla Tienhaara, Regulatory Chill in a Warming World: The Threat to

Climate Policy Posed by Investor-State Dispute Settlement, 7 TEL 729

(2018).

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), World

Investment Report 2015: Reforming International Investment Governance,

-174 (2015). Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment, 10th Annual

Columbia International Investment Conference: Investment Treaty Reform:

Reshaping Economic Governance in an Era of Sustainable Development,

New York City, New York (November 10-11, 2015)

Published

2024-06-12

How to Cite

LLM in International arbitration and dispute settlement Tashkent State University of Law, A. N. (2024). BALANCING INVESTOR PROTECTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN INVESTMENT ARBITRATION: Abdurakhmonova Noila. Лучшие интеллектуальные исследования, 22(5), 231–244. Retrieved from https://web-journal.ru/journal/article/view/6204