In light of the statements
above and the very specific requirements that should be put on the MIC, acceptance of MIC judgments as arbitral awards in the meaning of the New York Convention in states where enforcement is sought, seems questionable. It follows that the best option for an effective MIC would be to establish it as an independent multilateral court
, which should provide for its own procedural rules as well as enforcement provisions or even an own independent fund system.
1
This would not only ensure a largely consistent application of the investment standards, but also an effective enforcement of MIC judgments. Such a multilateral court should be open for accession to other states and Regional Economic Integration Organisations (REIOs).
8.1 Practical Implementation of the Establishment of an MIC
The establishment of an international dispute settlement institution is usually accomplished by means of a treaty or other international agreement. For that, there are different basic models available.
Dispute resolution institutions are often designed as organs of international organisations, as independent international organisations themselves or also as mere bodies for the implementation or application of the treaty.
2 In this way, the ICJ is a main organ of the UN,
3 the CJEU is an EU institution
4 and both the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and Rwanda (ICTR) are subsidiary organs of the United Nations Security Council.
5 On the other hand, many international courts, such as the International Criminal Court, are designed as separate international organisations.
6 In addition, some international treaties foresee the establishment of dispute settlement mechanisms that are either established as permanent courts (ITLOS for the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea,
7 ECtHR for the ECHR
8) or mere bodies for the application of the treaty (such as the Human Rights Committee under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)).
9
In the field of investment dispute resolution, two institutions, although they do not exercise any dispute resolution function, but rather mere administrative bodies supporting activities for arbitral tribunals, are considered to be international organisations. This is clearly the case with ICSID, which was established by the Washington Convention of 1965 as an international organisation with explicit international legal personality.
10 The PCA
is also an international organisation, founded by the Hague Convention in 1899.
11 Both international organisations are based on treaties, have states as members and are open to further parties.
For the establishment of the MIC
, the creation of an independent international organisation by means of an international treaty (MIC Statute) would be the most appropriate option (see paras. 548 et seqq.).
12 The creation of an international organisation
would ensure the essential points for the functioning of an independent court, such as functional immunity for the judges, equal financial treatment for the parties to the agreement, the conclusion of seat and immunity agreements etc.
8.2 Structuring the MIC as an International Organisation
The legal situation of the MIC would be determined in the national legal arena by privileges and immunities. Immunity guarantees would secure its functionality. As an international organisation
, the MIC would enjoy legal personality
under international and national law. This would ensure that the MIC could conclude international treaties such as a seat agreement establishing the necessary privileges and immunities
. At the same time, it could conclude contracts under national law, acquire assets and rent facilities etc. The latter aspect of a legal personality under national law is usually achieved by provisions, according to which an international organisation explicitly has the right to conclude private law contracts, to acquire assets and to initiate proceedings before state courts.
13 In numerous recent treaties that establish international organisations, international legal personality is also expressly foreseen.
14 The MIC should also follow this example.
Central to the effective implementation of judicial independence would be a functional immunity
from jurisdiction for the judges as seen in all international courts and quasi-judicial dispute resolution organs.
15 At the same time, the MIC, to whom decisions could be attributed to, should enjoy immunity from national court jurisdiction,
16 in order to avoid any interference with the independence of the MIC in its decision-making process through complaints before national courts.
Furthermore, it would be important to grant the other usual privileges and immunities
to the MIC as well as the judges and other staff of the organisation. These include the right of free movement and residence, customs relief, exemptions from social security contributions etc.
17
These also include tax exemptions
, which should not be misunderstood as personal privileges of the judges and other staff of the MIC, but rather reflect the principle of equal treatment of MIC Member States.
18 Only an exemption from income taxation by the host state would ensure that the salaries of the judges and other staff of the MIC funded by the Member States would not disproportionally benefit the host state.
These privileges and immunities could already be stated in the basic treaty, in a separate privileges and immunities protocol or in a seat agreement. The United Nations Convention on Privileges and Immunities
serves as a model for many other immunity agreements.
19 In particular, with regard to safeguarding judicial immunity, it would make sense to provide for this in a multilateral instrument (and not a mere bilateral seat agreement).
In principle, international organisations have a permanent seat
.
20 This distinguishes them,
inter alia, from arbitral tribunals. The seat of the MIC
should be at the place where the Secretariat works and the Plenary Body meets.
21 In any case, in the interest of better international acceptance of the MIC, the option of providing for several seats could also be considered. If necessary, organs of the MIC could be connected to the existing infrastructure of other international organisations and courts (see para. 560 et seqq.). A seat for the Plenary Body could be located in Geneva, as the representatives of the Members of the General Council of the WTO, which are likely to be identical with the representatives of the Members of the MIC Plenary Body, are already present there. In addition, it should be discussed whether, with a large number of member states from all continents, several locations for the conducting of negotiations on all continents should be considered.
The relationship of the MIC with the host state should be regulated in a seat agreement
, in which the balance between the MIC’s interest in effective work as well as the economic and security concerns of the host state can be found.
22 The MIC Statute, which could already incorporate immunity rules, should therefore be supplemented with further seat and immunity agreements concluded with,
inter alia, the host state of the MIC. These contain rules on:
-
the protection of the facilities of the MIC; protection of the MIC staff, including their immunity;
-
a guarantee of the free movement of persons of judges and other staff;
-
dispute settlement in connection with the seat agreement; and
-
questions of tax exemption.
It would also be possible to conclude a main seat agreement and to regulate the details regarding e.g. the meetings of the Plenary Body, or to regulate the establishment of the negotiation venues in an open or undefined way so that further concretization of it is possible through secondary law.
Furthermore, it could also be determined with regard to the seat that for instance the President of the Court
must also live at the seat of the MIC.
23
8.3 Connection to Existing Institutions
The model examined here of a two-tiered MIC is in principle difficult to integrate into the structure of existing models. In addition to the establishment of an independent international organisation, the connection to existing institutions would also come into question.
In the CETA/TTIP discussion on the establishment of bilateral permanent judicial institutions to settle investment disputes, a preference for the integration in the ICSID system is shown. This is reflected, in particular, in the idea that the decisions of the planned “courts” can be considered as ICSID arbitral awards. However, as has already been pointed out (see para. 498), even if such an
inter se modification of the ICSID Convention would be allowed, such modified arbitral awards would only be seen as ICSID awards by the modifying parties. Therefore, the essential advantage of the ICSID Convention, namely automatic enforceability in all member states, would be lost. The parties to the ICSID Convention that do not participate in the modification are not obliged to enforce such modified arbitral awards from a CETA or TTIP court. Therefore, a direct institutional connection between the MIC and ICSID does not seem practical. Moreover, an amendment of the ICSID Convention
that requires unanimity seems rather unrealistic,
24 especially because some states that explicitly oppose the MIC System are unlikely to agree on an amendment of the ICSID Convention.
25
It has also been suggested that an investment court should be integrated into the WTO Dispute Settlement System. However, this would require a fundamental change of the DSU. The WTO Dispute Settlement System is open to its members only, never to private persons, i.e. investors.
26 In addition, in the past, a substantive extension of WTO Law to allow access and protection of foreign investments has repeatedly failed, as it happened during the Uruguay Round
27 with one of the so-called Singapore Issues.
28 An integration into the WTO System thus also appears to be unrealistic at the present time.
29
The same applies to a connection of the MIC with the ICJ because, in addition to an extensive change of jurisdiction of the ICJ, access to the Court would have to be made possible for natural and legal persons, i.e. the ICJ Statute would have to be extensively amended.
30
This does not preclude, however, making use of the institutional expertise of ICSID
and its facilities etc. That would of course be possible for the MIC as an independent international organisation. So far, the ICSID Secretariat has offered its support in non-ICSID arbitration procedures and has provided administrative support in procedures under UNCITRAL and other arbitration rules.
31
Similarly, in an agreement between the MIC and ICSID or also the PCA or other arbitral institutions, logistical and staff support could be obtained. The MIC could therefore share infrastructure with other organisations that do not fully use their infrastructure either at an initial phase of the MIC or even in the long term.
32 In particular, during an initial phase when the amount of cases is not yet foreseeable, it could be beneficial to use hearing facilities and secretarial support from such existing institutions, to avoid setting up expensive court infrastructure. After the initial phase, the average number of procedures could be more easily estimated and the judicial bench could potentially be expanded (see paras. 111 et seqq.). During an expansion phase, the court could acquire its own premises once the longer-term sharing of infrastructure with other institutions or organisations no longer seems possible.
Here, in addition to ICSID in Washington, the ITLOS
in Hamburg or the PCA with its various locations could be considered.
33 It would certainly also be necessary to decide whether to have the seat of the MIC in a state that is unlikely to show any interest in membership in the near future. In any case, as far as infrastructure is concerned, a considerable amount of money could be saved or infrastructure of other organisations and institutions could be used more effectively. The money saved in this way could be invested in first-class staffing: full-time judges, a Secretariat and an Advisory Centre.
It has also been proposed
34 that the project of judicial multilateralisation of an investment dispute settlement system should be promoted with support of UNCITRAL
,
35 OECD and UNCTAD,
36 since these organisations are very interested in reforming ISDS and are already active in the area of ISDS investment protection. As mentioned above and is well known UNCITRAL mandated its Working Group III in 2017 to discuss a reform of investment arbitration. Working Group III is now working on relevant solutions to be recommended to the UNCITRAL Commission.
37 Especially a structural reform with an MIC is now “on the table”. UNCTAD could bring development perspectives into the discussion.
38 In addition, the ILC could be involved in the work. Likewise, cooperation of the proposed MIC Advisory Center, particularly with the UNCTAD could be considered.
8.4 Entry into Force of the MIC Statute Only with a Minimum Number of Members
Like with the International
Criminal Court, for instance, it might make sense that the MIC Statute only enters into force after a certain number of ratifications
.
39 If only a small number of states are on board for the MIC project, just another ISDS system would emerge alongside the existing ones. Therefore, it should be determined that a certain number of states must ratify an MIC Statute before it can enter into force.
A minimum number of 40 members should be foreseen. In addition to the EU and its 28 Member States, eleven more states would have to be convinced of joining the MIC. The EU is already negotiating or is about to start negotiations for a large number of agreements, all of which should also include investment protection (China, Myanmar, Japan, Mexico, Indonesia, the Philippines).
40 The agreements with Vietnam, Mexico, Canada and Singapore have already included a commitment to a multilateral approach.
41
In the future, therefore, the EU should, in its negotiations of trade, general economic and association agreements, urge its partners to actively participate in the establishment of the MIC and thus strive for their membership thereto. In particular, investment chapters in such agreements or pure investment agreements could provide for (exclusive) jurisdiction of the MIC where appropriate and motivate the respective party to the agreement to join the MIC.
At the same time, the EU can invite its Member States and, as at least parts of the IIAs of the Member States concern exclusive Union competences, also authorise them
42 to agree on the MIC in new negotiations or renegotiations of their investment agreements as the court having jurisdiction over future disputes.
43 Here, the Commission’s Impact Assessment Study
has already indicated that, if the MIC would have jurisdiction for all EU and EU Member States agreements, already half of the existing international investment agreements
worldwide would be covered.
44
8.5 Establishment of MIC Jurisdiction by Explicit Modification of Existing and Future IIAs
The considerations above are based on the assumption
that the existing IIAs will remain largely in force, i.e. existing IIAs will be modernised and Member State agreements will gradually be replaced with EU agreements. It should therefore be shown how this particular substantive network could be linked to a two-tiered MIC at dispute resolution level. To clarify once more: the substantive protection standards would not be found in the MIC Statute, but would in principle continue to be present in other international treaties and obligations. The immediate use of the existing IIA-network has the advantage that in the case of existing agreements, no negotiations on protection standards need to take place.
8.5.1 Conclusion of New IIAs and FTAs with Investment Chapters
Firstly, the establishment of MIC jurisdiction
should take place through express determination of its jurisdiction in new agreements of the EU and of other states who wish to promote this new system. The EU negotiates free trade and/or investment protection agreements or prepares negotiations with a large number of states.
45 First of all, it should be determined in the MIC Statute that, in the future, all newly concluded agreements of the MIC Members in the area of investment protection should foresee the exclusive possibility of dispute resolution by the MIC. As a result, in their international treaty negotiations, all Members should endeavour to promote the extension of the MIC membership in the future (by way of a memorandum of understanding).
In this context, it could be explicitly stated in future agreements concluded by the EU that, after its establishment, the MIC alone has jurisdiction to settle claims of investors.
46 In addition, the investment court system foreseen in the previous agreements could automatically lose its jurisdiction or its jurisdiction could pass on to the MIC as soon as it has been established. Transitional provisions should also be foreseen, as it is likely that the EU will negotiate further agreements, until the MIC is established and operational.
In addition, the agreements should stipulate that the parties to the agreement would actively participate in the negotiations on the establishment of a MIC and become members too. Furthermore, in new EU free trade and/or investment protection agreements, it should be provided for that in the future both parties to the agreement would actively participate in the promotion of a multilateral investment protection system and thus make the MIC the subject of negotiations with third countries (“snowball system”).
Secondly, existing trade agreements
of the EU (association agreements, framework agreements,
47 pure FTAs,
48 partnership agreements
49) are constantly reformed and renegotiated. In the event that investment protection is agreed with the respective partners, the respective party to the agreement should be requested to join the MIC.
50 For example, the agreement with Mexico has now been complemented with an investment protection chapter with reference to a Multilateral Dispute Settlement Mechanism.
51 This could then also establish the jurisdiction of the MIC for investment protection matters.
8.5.3 Inclusion of “IIA Networks” of the Member States in the Establishment of MIC Jurisdiction
Thirdly, in the renegotiations of their BITs, Member States should be obliged by the EU (based on its competence by virtue of Article 207 TFEU) to replace the existing ISDS systems contained therein with a reference to the jurisdiction of the MIC. This could be practical once there are more precise ideas about the design of the MIC, in particular once the requirements for its jurisdiction are determined. It could then come to an instrumentalisation of the IIAs of the Member States; the Member States could each use their bargaining power to reform long-term agreements with their treaty partners and encourage them to include the MIC.
In the future, after the establishment of the MIC, a clause could be included in the modified IIAs of the Member States to the effect that only the MIC (upon its establishment) has jurisdiction to decide investment disputes based on the IIAs of the Member States.
In addition, it could be provided in the renegotiations that both parties to the respective agreement, if they have not yet done so, commit to join the MIC and, in agreements with other states, advocate for an exclusive establishment of MIC jurisdiction (“snowball system”).
The aim here could be to link at least part of the approximately 1400 EU Member State IIAs to the MIC dispute settlement system and thus thereby contribute to the gradual
increase of MIC membership.
52
8.6 The MIC Statute as Opt-In Convention for the Modification of Existing IIAs
As stated above, the MIC
should preferably be established as a separate international organisation. This requires the conclusion of an international treaty, the MIC Statute. The MIC Statute could be designed as an opt-in convention. With each accession, the MIC would at least supplement other dispute settlement mechanisms. The text of the existing IIAs between MIC Members would then not have to be modified or renegotiated. The MIC’s jurisdiction could be justified by means of an opt-in convention similar to the Mauritius Convention,
53 whereby States could be obliged by the MIC Statute to offer dispute resolution by the MIC, at least additionally for future disputes.
54 The MIC Statute and the accession thereto could thus already give the MIC jurisdiction
to resolve investment disputes.
55
One directly related question is whether joining the MIC Statute would also constitute an opt-out
of ISDS options that were previously provided for in IIAs. This would depend in principle on whether only one or all the parties to the agreement of the respective IIAs join the MIC. In the event that not all parties to an IIA join the MIC Statute, the use of the MIC by investors could only be foreseen as an additional option, meaning that an opt-in would not directly result in an opt-out. If all parties to an IIA join the MIC, a corresponding amendment of the IIA could follow if this opt-out option is provided for in the MIC Statute. Possibly the MIC Statute could also foresee an optional clause allowing for Member States to opt out of dispute resolution, meaning that each individual Member of the MIC could decide whether to accept the MIC as exclusive or additional dispute resolution option for its IIAs.
56
Indeed, it would be desirable to design the jurisdiction of the MIC as comprehensively as possible and to prescribe an opt-out of other ISDS as a consequence of an opt-in. The financing of the MIC among other aspects would also benefit from the above—once the MIC is established, its Members should not be sued before another forum and additional legal costs should not incur there. The possibility to specify negative admissibility requirements in the MIC statute should be considered since legal protection cannot be provided in certain cases. The members of the MIC and at the same time the parties to the IIAs in question would agree that legal protection should not necessarily exist in every case. An opt-in should therefore in practice lead to an opt-out.
8.6.1 The Standard Case: Consensus on the Establishment of MIC Jurisdiction
Under the MIC
Statute (as an opt-in convention
), the MIC should have jurisdiction
over actions brought against the EU or its Member States (assuming that the EU and its Member States are parties to the MIC Statute) if the third state where the plaintiff investor comes from (and the investor bases his claim on an IIA of his home country with the EU or (one of) its Member States) is also a party to the MIC.
57 In any event, in this case, the MIC should be added as a further dispute settlement option without any problem.
Regarding agreements already concluded in the past, dispute settlement by an MIC is obviously not foreseen, even though about 90%
58 of IIAs in force contain an ISDS mechanism. However, with the MIC Statute, jurisdiction
of the MIC could be extended to existing investment protection agreements and dispute resolution systems that exist pursuant to them.
59 The precondition should be that the respondent is an MIC Member
and the investor comes from a state who is party to the MIC. In this case, a consensual amendment (of a bilateral treaty through a multilateral treaty) would be presumed.
60
It must at least be discussed whether or not, due to the frequently used sunset clauses in IIAs
,
61 the possibility to fall back on traditional
ad hoc arbitration (as has generally been provided for in IIAs up until now) can be ruled out.
62 According to Article 30 para. 3 VCLT, states are allowed to modify treaties that have been concluded between them. In this respect, multilateral treaties can also amend bilateral treaties if both parties to the bilateral treaty are also parties to the multilateral treaty.
63 Sunset clauses should not be an obstacle.
64 These are of limited use as by virtue of their wording, classification and purpose, they normally refer to the unilateral termination of agreements by one party, not to the consensual modification of the content of the treaty.
65
As was the case in the Mauritius Convention
, it should be stipulated that an establishment of MIC jurisdiction
through MFN clauses is precluded.
66 The absence of such provisions would lead to significant legal uncertainty, as discussions on the scope of MFN clauses have been going on for a long time and
67 judicial interpretation is not uniform.
68
In addition, those joining the MIC should keep registers at the MIC Secretariat, which should also be published and include of every concluded treaty that shall be covered by the jurisdiction of the MIC.
8.6.2 Exceptional Cases: Jurisdiction of the MIC Even if the Home State of the Investor Is Not an MIC Member?
Jurisdiction could also exist simply by means of MIC membership of the respondent state, once the possibility of unilateral consent to dispute settlement is expressly foreseen in the MIC Statute (see paras. 201 et seqq.).
The inclusion of an option to bring a claim and thus establish jurisdiction in the opt-in convention in the case of non-membership of the respondent state ad hoc should be rejected in principle, but is possible.
If neither the home state of the investor, nor the host state of the investment were members of the MIC, it would also be possible to use an
ad hoc agreement to establish jurisdiction
. However, this is to be rejected in principle.
69
If one decides to follow the above mentioned possibilities despite the concerns expressed, the MIC Statute should at least provide for the possibility of the jurisdiction of the MIC through an ad hoc compromis. Here, special rules on cost allocation should be provided for. This scenario could also lead to problems with the enforcement of decisions under the system set out in the MIC Statute; use of the proposed fund system to settle awards in cases brought under ad hoc proceedings should be ruled out in any case.
8.6.3 Jurisdiction of the MIC in Case of Multilateral IIAs
The MIC Statute
could also apply to further multilateral treaties, such as the ECT
.
70 If possible, it should be adopted in the future as an exclusive dispute settlement option in the field of investment protection.
However, this would require that all Energy Charter Member States join the MIC. These include the EU itself and most of its Member States, as well as third states. It should also be possible for individual Member States of the ECT to unilaterally recognise the jurisdiction of the MIC for proceedings based on the ECT against them.
8.6.4 Summary of the Establishment of MIC Jurisdiction
The MIC should determine that there is jurisdiction under the MIC Statute,
(a)
if, in the future,
i.e. following the entry into force of the MIC Statute and accession thereto, an IIA has been concluded between those MIC Members
71;
(b)
if an IIA has been concluded in the past between two MIC parties (consensual jurisdiction for existing treaties; a list of these treaties should also be sent to the MIC Secretariat for reasons of legal certainty; this does not mean this list should be exhaustive);
(c)
if an MIC Member State has named an IIA in its list (unilateral establishment of jurisdiction for existing treaties)
72; and
(d)
if an IIA has not been named in the list of an MIC Member State, but is acknowledged as an
ad hoc ground for jurisdiction by the respondent.
73
For the future, it could also be considered that a ground for jurisdiction can exist
(e)
if jurisdiction over an Investor State Contract is recognised in the ICS and the involved state is an MIC Member, or
(f)
if jurisdiction over an ICS, although not recognised in the ICS, is subsequently recognised by a compromis and the involved state is an MIC Member.
8.7 Transitional Provisions and System Conformity of the MIC
As stated earlier, existing IIAs
should largely remain in force, i.e. existing IIAs should be revised and modernised, and agreements of the Member States should be gradually replaced by EU agreements. The MIC would be added to the system as an alternative or new and exclusive dispute settlement option, or could replace it entirely, but it should not establish substantive protection standards.
The MIC Statute could also be seen as an amendment to the EU-Vietnam IPA and CETA (see para. 247), or as a subsequent multilateral agreement, amending bilateral agreements between certain parties to the agreement (see also to that extent Articles 30 paras. 3 and 41 VCLT). In any case, in future EU agreements, it should already be stipulated that the respective foreseen bilateral dispute settlement mechanisms cease to be in force and are replaced by MIC jurisdiction
once the MIC Statute enters into force and the respective party to the agreement, in addition to the EU, has joined the MIC.
74 At the same time, transitional provisions should already be made in future EU agreements in case the MIC takes over elements of its work in the future. In the case of the transfer of jurisdiction from bilateral ICS in EU agreements; the MIC Statute could also function as an amendment treaty of that EU agreement if the respective partners of the EU also become MIC Members. Corresponding detailed amendments to existing bilateral treaties could be set out in protocols and declarations to the MIC Statute.
In that regard, it could be foreseen that dispute settlement procedures that have already been initiated are completed by the respective bilateral dispute resolution system in the respective instance, but that a legal remedy would only be possible before the appellate instance of the MIC. Future EU agreements may already foresee explicit transitional provisions in the text of the agreement.
Transitional provisions
are also necessary for judges that have already been appointed based on bilateral agreements—if the ICS foreseen in these agreements are replaced by the MIC. These provisions should be adopted on a case-by-case basis, depending on the agreement. In the remuneration system for CETA-ICS-judges,
75 which is to be adopted by the mixed CETA Committee, it should already be stipulated that from the moment that the MIC is established or the bilateral ICS loses its jurisdiction, no new complaints can be initiated and no further retainer payments will be made.
When new members join the MIC Statute, the financing scheme must be adjusted accordingly. Representation in the Plenary Body is also immediately possible. Since accession does not involve market access obligations, as in WTO Law, but only the recognition of the MIC as (exclusive) permanent court for clearly defined types of disputes, the respective MIC accessions should be unproblematic to negotiate.
An expansion of the MIC jurisdiction to investment disputes under the ECT is currently only partially possible because it is a multilateral agreement with 53 members at this point in time. At best, a supplementary jurisdiction of the MIC could be accepted if both the respondent MIC Member as well as the host state of the complaining investor are members of the MIC (in the meaning of Article 41 para. 1 lit. b VCLT). Specific difficulties could arise here if there is an intra-EU dispute, but this is not considered at this point.
Mediation procedures
in existing IIAs should remain untouched, i.e. mediation based on existing IIAs is still possible.
76 However, it could be provided that the MIC also offers a mediation procedure, including the appointment of mediators. In this respect, a mediation center could be set up as sub-unit of the MIC which would then only have subsidiary jurisdiction in cases where no provisions on this topic exist in the bilateral IIAs.
The MIC could also provide in its Statute that its jurisdiction is extended to investor-state contracts
, insofar as these name the MIC as a dispute settlement forum (and if the respondent state is a member of the MIC).
77 This study does not assume, however, that investor-state contracts are part of the applicable law of the MIC.
The multilateralisation of dispute settlement mechanisms could be complemented in the future by a multilateral convention that provides for protection standards, but at the same time also emphasises the stronger and more explicit balancing of investor interests and regulatory interests of investors and states, as is already the case in recent IIAs, and foresees the MIC as a forum with jurisdiction regarding dispute settlement. Such a convention could be open to future accession of more and more members.
8.8 Working Language and Language of Proceedings at the MIC
For financial reasons, provisions on the working languages and languages of proceedings of the MIC should be established. An excessive number of working languages and languages of proceedings would considerably increase the respective procedural costs in individual cases, as translation for judges etc. would then have to be provided. Usually, English is the official and working language of most international organisations. Furthermore, the vast body of literature on public international law as well as international investment protection is written in English. Alternatively, it is possible that the MIC Statute allows the parties to the dispute to determine the language of the proceedings, in agreement with the deciding Chamber, and that the MIC Statute only specifies the working language of the Secretariat and the Plenary Body.
8.9 Cost Distribution in the New System
The financing
of the expected permanent costs of the MIC should be regulated,
i.e. the costs of the employees of the Secretariat, the judges as well as the necessary infrastructure in form of buildings, equipment etc. From an economic perspective, the MIC only makes sense for a critical mass of Member States, if they divided the costs
of such a permanent court among each other. The annual costs for the International Criminal Court are estimated at approximately EUR 130 million,
78 for the WTO Secretariat with more than 600 employees at approximately CHF 198 million.
79 The CJEU and the General Court (GC), with 75 judges, 11 advocates-general and some 2170 additional employees, needs up to EUR 380 million and the ITLOS costs approximately EUR 20 million for a period of 2 years. For the MIC, an amount in the low double-digit millions should also initially be estimated.
80
Although these court costs
are not to be considered insignificant, the MIC will certainly be able to reduce the average cost per dispute resolution procedure. For example, costs caused by the large number of judges in bilateral investment courts, could be saved as well as those costs incurred by the international community through other arbitration fees.
81 In light of the fact that average administrative costs (tribunal fees and secretary fees) are currently estimated at EUR 750,000,
82 an MIC with a minimum number of members should in any case not lead to additional costs within the current system. On the contrary, if it were possible to increase efficiency through the acceleration of proceedings, this would also lead to a decrease in other costs (mostly counsel fees), which are currently estimated at approx. EUR 4 million per party involved in the dispute.
83 Irrespective of the fact that a sufficient amount of states in reality would incur only limited additional costs, the MIC would not only offer a possibility to compensate for the shortcomings of the ISDS system, but also to counter balance deficits of the ICS as it is foreseen under CETA, and thus win acceptance of international jurisdiction over investment disputes.
The MIC should be financed primarily, just like other international organisations, through contributions of its members, i.e. the parties to the agreement.
84 Expenditure
would determine the necessary amount which should be collected proportionally from the members. Similar to the WTO,
85 the proportion that MIC Members have to bear could be calculated by taking the proportion of foreign direct investment of a state in relation to the total investment volume of all MIC Members. In order to determine the respective numbers, it is possible to make use of surveys made by the International Monetary Fund (IMF),
86 World Bank
87 or UNCTAD.
88 Proposals to impose or transfer the entire court costs to the parties to the dispute should be rejected. However, the parties should certainly be involved in financing by virtue of paying court fees, which are of course dependent on
inter alia the amount involved in the dispute, as is also determined by a large number of national court cost rules.
89 The members, however, should provide the basic funding.
8.10 Overview of the Necessary Agreements and Secondary Instruments
Overall, among others, the following agreements
and secondary legislation appear necessary for the establishment of an MIC:
-
Statute of a Multilateral Investment Court, including a Code of Conduct (MIC Statute);
-
Immunity agreements between the Member States of the MIC (Agreement on Privileges and Immunities of the MIC);
-
Seat agreement between the MIC, with its own legal personality, and the host state;
-
Procedural rules for the first and second instance;
-
Rules of procedure, including rules of conduct, for the Secretariat;
-
Guidelines for the necessary contents of a statement of claim;
-
Guidelines for the conduct of oral proceedings;
-
Guidelines on the court costs;
-
Guidelines on security deposits;
-
Retirement and pension provisions
for the staff of the MIC.
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