On 21 March 2022, the Member States of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes ("ICSID") approved a comprehensive set of amendments to ICSID's Regulations and Rules, including the ICSID Arbitration Rules (the "2022 Rules"), for resolving disputes between foreign investors and their host States. The 2022 Rules will come into effect on 1 July 2022 and apply to ICSID arbitrations commenced from that date onwards.
ICSID's Arbitration Rules are the most widely used set of rules in investor-state dispute settlement ("ISDS") and the 2022 Rules represent a significant overhaul to their 2006 predecessors in many respects (some 56 rules have metamorphosed into 86 rules). Last updated 16 years ago, the long-awaited 2022 Rules are the product of ICSID's most extensive review to date. This entailed a 5-year consultative process with the Member States involving hundreds of State officials, legal specialists and business representatives, which generated six voluminous working papers.
According to the Chair of the ICSID Administrative Council, the 2022 Rules aim to "streamline procedures to enable greater access and speed, increase transparency, and enhance disclosures, with the ultimate goal of facilitating foreign investment for economic growth"1. This Legal Update summarizes the key changes to the 2022 Rules against the backdrop of these ambitions.
Key changes
1. Improving time and cost efficiency
The 2022 Rules attempt to address a common criticism levelled against ICSID arbitration, and ISDS more generally, namely high costs and delayed proceedings. Important changes which address these concerns include:
ICSID has also issued a new set of rules and regulation for fact-finding proceedings and mediation proceedings, which can be used independently or as part of arbitral proceedings.
2. Increasing Transparency
The 2022 Rules aim to increase the level of transparency with regard to the publication of procedural orders, awards and annulment decisions, an important step given the "lack of transparency" criticism often levelled at ISDS.
Other transparency-related amendments include:
3. Enhancing Disclosures
Third-party funding was not addressed under the previous rules but is now dealt with under Rule 14 of the 2022 Rules. Rule 14 requires that parties disclose, when registering the Request (or as soon as the funding arrangement is concluded, if later) the name and address of any non-party from which they received funding, with an ongoing obligation until the completion of the proceedings to disclose changes to their funding arrangements.
The definition of third-party funding is quite broad under the 2022 Rules; for example, for corporate funders, it extends to persons and entities that own and control them. Further, although the 2022 Rules do not mandate the disclosure of any funding agreement, their disclosure can be ordered by an ICSID tribunal where it deems it necessary. Tribunals can also ask for further information in relation to the third-party funder.
It is expected that these enhanced disclosures will assist with the early identification of potential conflicts of interest, increase transparency, and potentially reduce conflict-related challenges.
4. Broader Access through the Additional Facility Rules
While arbitration and conciliation under the ICSID Convention remain available only to Member States and their nationals, the Additional Facility Rules will now be available when one or both disputing parties is not an ICSID Member State or a national thereof.
Additionally, Regional Economic Integration Organizations (such as the European Union or ASEAN) will be able to be a party to proceedings under the revised Additional Facility Rules, an important development given that States increasingly negotiate investment agreements as part of a regional entity.
This significant lowering of the jurisdictional requirements is likely to promote wider use of the ICSID Additional Facility Rules. Although other arbitral institutions are attempting to adapt to ISDS, this will allow more parties to benefit from ICSID's experience and services, which remains the leading institution for investor-State arbitration.
5. Cost Allocation and Security for Costs
The 2022 Rules retain the tribunal's discretion to allocate costs, except that where a tribunal disposes of all claims on the basis that they are manifestly without legal merit, it shall award the successful party their reasonable costs, unless "special circumstances" justify a different outcome.
The prior ICSID rules did not provide guidance as to how tribunals were to exercise their discretion, which is now directly addressed by Rule 52. It sets out the circumstances that the tribunal shall consider when allocating costs, which includes, inter alia, the outcome of the proceeding or any part of it, the complexity of the issues and the parties' conduct, including the extent to which they acted in an expeditious and cost-effective manner. Further, in addition to submitting a statement of costs, each party must file a written submission on the allocation of costs.
The 2022 Rules also introduce a new stand-alone provision on security for costs, a remedy previously available under the prior "Provisional Measures" rule. Rule 53 of the 2022 Rules empowers tribunals to award security in relation to both claims and counterclaims and sets out the procedure and the relevant circumstances that the tribunal shall consider, which, notably, includes a party's "willingness" and not only its ability to pay an adverse cost award, and evidence about the existence of third-party funding. Rule 53(4) seems to imply that the mere existence of third-party funding does not determine that a party is impecunious and thus that security for costs should be automatically granted. Rule 53 also prescribes what happens if a party fails to comply with an order to provide security for costs.
Brief Comment
These new changes should give parties confidence that their ICSID arbitrations will be conducted as cost-effectively, efficiently, fairly and transparently as possible and inject further legitimacy into investment arbitration more generally. Consequently, the 2022 Rules are likely to facilitate foreign investment.
What is next?
ICSID has committed to publishing guidance notes over the coming months2, which, together with published ICSID arbitral decisions, should help guide parties in relation to the proper application of the 2022 Rules. We will also issue a further Legal Update in due course focusing on the 2022 Rules in more depth.
For further information, please contact the authors: Alain Farhad, José Caicedo, Raid Abu-Manneh, Dany Khayat, Gerard Moore, Patricia Ugalde Revilla, Bruno Savoie or Lisa Dubot.
1 ICSID, "ICSID Administrative Council Approves Amendment of ICSID Rules”, https://icsid.worldbank.org/news-and-events/communiques/icsid-administrative-council-approves-amendment-icsid-rules
2 https://icsid.worldbank.org/news-and-events/communiques/icsid-administrative-council-approves-amendment-icsid-rules
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