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*Karl P. Sauvant, PhD*
*Resident Senior Fellow*
*Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment*
Columbia Law School - The Earth Institute, Columbia University
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"China Moves the G20 toward an International Investment Framework and
Investment Facilitation", "China Moves the G20 on Investment", "The Rise of
Self-judging Essential Security Interest Clauses in IIAs", "Can Host
Countries have Legitimate Expectations?", "The Next Step in Governance: The
Need for Global Micro-regulatory Frameworks", "How International Investment
Agreements can Protect Free Media", "The Evolving International Investment
Law and Policy Regime: Ways Forward", "China's Outward FDI and
International Investment Law", and  "Policy Options for Promoting FDI in
the LDCs" *are* available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/results.cfm and
http://www.works.bepress.com/karl_sauvant/.




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哥伦比亚大学国际直接投资展望中文版都可以在我们的网站查看:http://ccsi.columbia.edu/
publications/columbia-fdi-perspectives.
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*Columbia FDI Perspectives*
Perspectives on topical foreign direct investment issues
No. 193  February 13, 2017
Editor-in-Chief: Karl P. Sauvant ([log in to unmask])
Managing Editor: Matthew Schroth ([log in to unmask])
*Investment contracts are not a substitute for investment treaties*
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=de6448ff51&e=dd153d6a25>
by
David Collins[1] <#m_7018277189720403767__edn1>

Common in sectors such as petroleum, investment contracts embody the
well-established principle of *pacta sunt servanda* (“agreements must be
kept”) for which there is a long history of international jurisprudence.
Where they provide directly for international arbitration, such contracts
can obviate the need for a specialized treaty regime. In contrast to
heavily standardized international investment agreements (IIAs), contracts
allow parties to tailor their commitments, often by reference to industry
practice and clearly defined goals. With negotiated contractual protections
in place, countries receive the benefit of FDI in the form and manner of
their choosing, just as investors enjoy the assurance of host countries’
binding commitment to honor their obligations.

Given this flexibility and legal certainty, some observers have advocated
investment contracts as a substitute for IIAs, partly because of suspicion
over the IIA regime’s legitimacy.[2] <#m_7018277189720403767__edn2> Yet
most foreign investment is not covered by individual contracts with host
countries, and contract-based arbitration currently represents only a small
portion of total investor-state claims.[3] <#m_7018277189720403767__edn3>
The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID)
reported in 2016 that investment contracts were the source of tribunals’
jurisdiction in only 17% of cases.[4] <#m_7018277189720403767__edn4> More
tellingly, the portion of contract-based claims at ICSID has steadily
declined since 2010, when it comprised 22% of all claims.[5]
<#m_7018277189720403767__edn5> This trend may indicate that there are good
reasons to be suspicious of investment contracts as a replacement of IIAs:


   - Although IIAs contain indeterminate concepts such as fair and
   equitable treatment and indirect expropriation, some contracts do the same:
   albeit well-developed, the common law of commercial contracts is hardly
   free from ambiguity, as evidenced by recent high-level judgments.[6]
   <#m_7018277189720403767__edn6> Moreover, it is far from clear that there
   is indeed a body of international commercial rules (known as *lex
   mercatoria*, or “merchant law”) to assist in interpreting investment
   contracts and to fill in gaps where necessary.[7]
   <#m_7018277189720403767__edn7>



   - Without IIAs, investors would have to negotiate contracts with
   countries on an individual basis. This may well be within the resources of
   large multinational enterprises (MNEs) in the infrastructure or extractive
   sectors where such contracts are more common. But the transaction costs
   would be onerous for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) operating in
   other sectors where SMEs are the direct beneficiaries of IIAs signed by
   their home countries. This is problematic as more SMEs undertake outward
   FDI, relative to large MNEs.[8] <#m_7018277189720403767__edn8> Indeed,
   governments negotiating trade agreements with investment chapters regularly
   point out the strategic advantages of these instruments for SMEs.[9]
   <#m_7018277189720403767__edn9> Furthermore, given that more than 100,000
   MNEs exist (with more than 1 million foreign affiliates), most of them
   SMEs, this implies the need for many contracts.[10]
   <#m_7018277189720403767__edn10>



   - While parties can negotiate situation-specific terms in investment
   contracts in a manner impossible with respect to IIAs, it is equally
   plausible that the one-sided bargaining power thought to characterize
   treaty drafting may also accompany investment-contract negotiations. Highly
   mobile investors (likely those safest from governmental interference) may
   be able to extract benefits from host countries by threatening to relocate
   [11] <#m_7018277189720403767__edn11> or simply through more assertive
   negotiations assisted by expensive counsel unavailable to many governments.
   This may be especially the case in extractive sector concession
   arrangements with developing countries. Of course, unequal bargaining power
   can act against foreign investors, too, most notably in the case of
   investment contracts structured as joint ventures. Investors have
   demonstrated reluctance to pursue these types of contracts with host
   countries because of the difficulties involved in divided management, as
   well as the forced disclosure of technology and business secrets, both
   typical features of such arrangements.[12]
   <#m_7018277189720403767__edn12>


Finally, the use of investment contracts instead of IIAs does nothing to
resolve problems associated with investor-state dispute settlement, as such
contracts also tend to provide for international arbitration (at ICSID, for
example). Without reform of the underlying regime, therefore, a shift from
treaty-based to contract-based FDI protection would have minimal impact.

------------------------------
* *The Columbia FDI Perspectives are a forum for public debate. The views
expressed by the author do not reflect the opinions of CCSI or Columbia
University or our partners and supporters.*
[1] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref1> David Collins (
[log in to unmask]) is Professor of International Economic Law, City
University of London. The author is grateful to Jonathan Gimblett, Jeswald
W. Salacuse and Louis T. Wells for their helpful peer reviews. *Columbia
FDI Perspectives (ISSN 2158-3579) is a peer-reviewed series.*
[2] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref2> *See*, *e.g.*, M. Sornarajah, *The
International Law on Foreign Investment* (Cambridge: CUP, 2010), p. 301;
Jeswald W. Salacuse, *The Law of Investment Treaties* (Oxford: OUP, 2015),
pp. 19-21.
[3] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref3> Only a handful of reported claims are
based on investment contracts. *See*, *e.g.*, *Vacuum Salt Products Ltd. v.
Ghana*, ICSID Case No. ARB/92/1 (Award) (Feb. 16, 1994).
[4] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref4> ICSID, *The ICSID Caseload:
Statistics *(2016, 2nd issue), p. 10, available at
https://icsid.worldbank.org/apps/icsidweb/resources/pages/
icsid-caseload-statistics.aspx
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.
[5] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref5> ICSID, *The ICSID Caseload:
Statistics *(2010, 1st issue), p. 10, available at
https://icsid.worldbank.org/apps/icsidweb/resources/pages/
icsid-caseload-statistics.aspx
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.
[6] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref6> *See*, *e.g.*, *Attorney General of
Belize v. Belize Telecom* [2009] UKPC 10 (Privy Council) (discussing
implied terms).
[7] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref7> Sornarajah, *op. cit.*, p. 303.
[8] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref8> *E.g.*, OECD, “Enhancing the
competitiveness of SMEs through innovation” (2000), p. 18, available at
http://www.oecd.org/cfe/smes/2010176.pdf
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=a383621164&e=dd153d6a25>
.
[9] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref9> *E.g.*, European Commission,
“Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership: the opportunities for
small and medium-sized enterprises,” available at http://trade.ec.europa.eu/
doclib/docs/2014/march/tradoc_152266.pdf
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=2ce2b1fd41&e=dd153d6a25>
.
[10] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref10> UNCTAD, *World Investment Report
2016: Investor Nationality - Policy Challenges *(Geneva: UNCTAD, 2016), p.
134, available at http://unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/wir2016_en.pdf
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=0a9d8372d6&e=dd153d6a25>
.
[11] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref11> Avi Nov, “The ‘bidding war’ to
attract foreign direct investment: the need for a global solution,” *Virginia
Tax Review*, vol. 25 (2005), pp. 835-875.
[12] <#m_7018277189720403767__ednref12> Jeswald W. Salacuse, *The Three
Laws of International Investment: National, Contractual and International
Frameworks for Foreign Capital* (Oxford: OUP, 2013), p. 208.

*The material in this Perspective may be reprinted if accompanied by the
following acknowledgment: “David Collins, ‘Investment contracts are not a
substitute for investment treaties,’ **Columbia FDI Perspectives, No. 193,
February 13, 2017. Reprinted with permission from the Columbia Center on
Sustainable Investment (**www.ccsi.columbia.edu*
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=2ea092f624&e=dd153d6a25>*).”
A copy should kindly be sent to the Columbia Center on Sustainable
Investment at **[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>*. *
For further information, including information regarding submission to the
*Perspectives*, please contact: Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment,
Matthew Schroth, [log in to unmask]

   - No. 192, Joseph (Yusuf) Saei, “Influencing investment disputes from
   the outside,” January 30, 2017.
   - No. 191, Tarcisio Gazzini, “Beware of freezing clauses in
   international investment agreements,” January 16, 2017.
   - No. 190, Karl P. Sauvant, “China moves the G20 on international
   investment,” January 2, 2017.

*All previous FDI Perspectives are available at *
*http://ccsi.columbia.edu/publications/columbia-fdi-perspectives/*
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*. *

*Other relevant CCSI news and announcements*

   - *On February 27, 2017*, CCSI and the Government of Indonesia will
host “Developments
   in International Investment Agreements,” at Columbia University. The event
   will focus on issues surrounding investment liberalization as well as
   consider the interaction of investment treaty protections with domestic
   laws of the host-country. The event will bring together participants from
   academia, the private sector, government, and the general public to discuss
   and debate these issues. *Registration is free, but required. Please see
   our website here
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=e7cbdf43ba&e=dd153d6a25>
   for more information, including to register*.
   - *In November 2016*, Boston University’s Frederick S. Pardee Center for
   the Study of the Longer-Range Future and Global Economic Governance
   Initiative published a report, Trade in the Balance: Reconciling Trade
   and Climate Policy
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=1f38fbb0df&e=dd153d6a25>,
   to which CCSI’s Head of Investment Law and Policy, Lise Johnson, and Legal
   Researcher Brooke Guven contributed a chapter. Their chapter,
entitled “International
   Investment Agreements: Impacts on Climate Change Policies in India, China
   and Beyond,”
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=850c5ea17a&e=dd153d6a25>
considers
   the opportunities, and challenges, posed by international investment
   agreements as countries shape policies surrounding climate change
   mitigation and adaptation obligations.
   - *June - August 2017:* We are accepting applications for our three
   upcoming executive trainings: on Extractive Industries and Sustainable
   Development
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=c3596aa303&e=dd153d6a25>
   (June 5-16, 2017), Sustainable Investments in Agriculture
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=4e77203ae4&e=dd153d6a25>
   (July 12-21, 2017), and Investment Arbitration for Government Officials
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=bcc4e36ce7&e=dd153d6a25>
   (July 31-August 10, 2017). Each program is designed to equip participants
   with the necessary skills, analytical tools, and frameworks to address
   relevant challenges and opportunities, and to encourage a rich dialogue
   about best practices from around the globe. *More information about each
   training, including brochures and applications, is available at the links
   above.* Applications are accepted on a rolling basis. Participants will
   receive a Statement of Attendance from Columbia University.

Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
Columbia Law School - Earth Institute
Columbia University
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