Canada has announced, on
November 1, 2013, that it has ratified the ICSID Convention and will at long
last become a member of the principal international rule-making and
administrative body for disputes between investors and their host states. This
is welcome news for Canadian companies and individuals concerned about the
protection of their investments abroad.
The ICSID Convention, known
formally as the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between
States and Nationals of Other States (and in shorthand as the
Washington Convention), entered into force in 1966. Canada did not
sign the Convention until 2006 and two years later enacted the legislation
required to give it domestic effect at the federal level. However, until
today's ratification, the Convention was not legally binding on Canada, nor
was Canada a member of the namesake organization established by the
Convention, the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment
Disputes.
The principal benefit of Canada's ICSID membership is that
Canadian investors abroad will now have access to ICSID's arbitration regime
when embroiled in a dispute with a foreign state in connection with an
investment made in that state, provided that state is also an ICSID member, or
Contracting State.
The key feature of investment arbitration
under the ICSID regime (which consists of the ICSID Convention itself and
ICSID's Arbitration Rules) is that it is largely divorced from the laws and
courts of individual countries. In particular, in contrast to investment
arbitration conducted under other rules, neither the jurisdictional competence
of ICSID arbitral tribunals nor the awards of those tribunals may be reviewed
or set aside by national courts. Awards are subject only to limited review by
ICSID-appointed annulment committees and are to be immediately recognized and
enforced by the courts of other ICSID Contracting States. The autonomy of the
ICSID process offers an additional measure of confidence to claimants that
arbitration proceedings will not be hindered by domestic court challenges and
that they will be able to promptly realize on awards in their favour, a
particular advantage to companies and individuals with investments in
locations where the rule of law and confidence in the courts is lacking. It is
therefore unsurprising that the ICSID regime is the preferred choice of
investors for investment arbitrations.
ICSID arbitration can be used
either pursuant to investor-State contracts containing ICSID arbitration
clauses or pursuant to bilateral or plurilateral investment treaties. Canada's
investment treaties have long provided for the use of the ICSID Arbitration
Rules, but those Rules are only available when both the State party to a
dispute and the investor's home State are ICSID Contracting States. Therefore,
until now they have not been available to Canadian investors or in investment
treaty claims against Canada, although ICSID as an institution has
administered cases involving Canada under other rules.
Canada's
ratification has ended many years of speculation as to why Canada had not
previously joined an organization that counts nearly 150 other states as
members, including the rest of the developed world. Moreover, the ICSID
Secretariat, which assists the parties and tribunals in the arbitration process,
has for several years been headed by a Canadian, making Canada's absence from
the organization all the more difficult to explain.
The glacial pace at
which Canada has proceeded to bind itself to the Convention is largely
explained by Canada's federal structure. The Convention does allow for a
Contracting State to designate the constituent subdivisions in which
the Convention will apply. Nevertheless, successive Canadian governments have
sought commitments from all provinces and territories that they would give
effect to the Convention within their jurisdictions or, failing that, have
sought to assure themselves that Canada can comply with the Convention's
requirement that an award against a constituent subdivision be enforceable
throughout Canada.
Although not all Canadian provinces and territories
have enacted implementing legislation to give effect to the Convention within
their jurisdictions, many have, including Ontario, British Columbia and
Saskatchewan, and others, notably Quebec and Alberta, are poised to do so soon.
Canada's ICSID membership will take effect on December 1, 2013, 30 days
after its ratification.