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Summary Readings Week 5

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Mandatory Readings Week 5 for the Course International Investment Law. Summary of the Book chapters provided for this week.

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International Investment Law
Readings 5: Fair and Equitable Treatment (FET) & Fair Protection
and Security (FPS)
Schefer, ‘International Investment Law’
5. Standards of host state behaviour
5.1 Background: the idea of minimum standards
 Constitutional protections + bilateral treaties secured until the
Bolshevik Revolution  efective removal of right to property for its
own citizens so also for foreigners
 National treatment meant only treating the foreigner as a national,
whether or not the national had property rights or not
 Mexican revolution  calls for strict interpretation of national
treatment, but the US objected to this  CIL on minimum
standards of treatment of aliens (especially Hull advocated this!)
 Until standards were taken up into bilateral treaties, there existed
no consensus on this in IL, but nowadays it is a widespread feature
which we can’t deny
 What would the international standard mean in order for a tribunal
to apply a treaty?
 Four of the most common standards: non-arbitrariness in
regulation, non-discriminatory treatment, reasonableness in
regulatory oversight, and the full protection and security of the
investor and the investment
5.4 Full protection and security
 Standard that protects the investor against third party interference
in an investment  both state and private (protection against
employee uprising or civil disturbances and from threatening the
investor itself)
 Some tribunals would extend it to due process and legal security
(provision of a stable legal regime, availability of timely access to
court proceedings)


1

, 5.4.1 Physical security
 The investor and the investment may not be bodily injured,
harassed or threatened, nor may it be damaged by the host or by
individuals or groups within the host territory
 Wena Hotels-case: hotels forcefully taken over, but police did not
act nor prosecute the villains
 AAPL v. Sri Lanka-case: confrmation that the state is not strictly
liable for attempting but failing to protect the investor/investment
 American Manufacturing and Trading v. Zaire-case: objective
obligation of vigilance, standard of due diligence  defnition
relative to the host’s capacities
Pantechniki SA Contractors and Engineers v. The Republic of
Albania
 Albania had an FPS-obligation under the treaty, due diligence in the
protection of its investment against both private and public action
 Due diligence needs to be analysed in light of the circumstances
and the resources of the state in question  there was no police at
the scene which could turn its back, in fact, there was
powerlessness of the Albanian government
 Conclusion: Albania did comply with its duty to extend full
protection and security in the circumstances that gave rise to this
case
5.4.2 Legal Protection
 Precise extent of FPS: open issue
 ELSI-case: extension of FPS to include legal protection and
resolving the dispute in a timely fashion
Suz, Sociedad General de Aguas de Barcelona, SA and Vivendi
Universal SA v. the Argentine Republic and AWG Group v. The
Argentine Republic
 Tender for water provision of Buenos Aires, the parties got the
concession  consortium Aguas Argentinas, took over $700 million




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