Why we must ban secret corporate courts from trade deals

Friends of the Earth Australia | 2 May 2018

Why we must ban secret corporate courts from trade deals

Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) is a dispute resolution method included in hundreds of trade and investment agreements designed to give exclusive legal protection to foreign companies investing abroad, giving them the right to sue host governments in a private tribunal over any perceived breach of the rules around the treatment of investors. This secret corporate court system is system is a threat to Australia’s democracy and environment and we believe it should be banned.

Click here to read in full Friends of the Earth’s briefing on The case for banning Investor State Dispute Settlement in Australia (pdf)

ISDS allows Foreign investors can bypass domestic courts and have their case heard by three arbitrators who decide whether the host state is liable to pay huge sums in compensation. The origins of the provisions came from the need to protect companies against the seizure of their assets by host states, for example a mine being nationalised without just compensation. Investment agreements have since evolved to include the values of non-discrimination, prohibition of performance requirements, fair and equitable treatment and free movement of capital, and most controversially, indirect expropriation, in which any government measure perceived to affect the actual or expected profits can be challenged.

Globalisation has led to monumental changes in the world’s economy. A key facet of this era of interconnectedness has been the increasing integration of the world’s economies, with resources, money and jobs crossing international borders more than ever before. The rapid expansion and liberalisation of the international trade network has been spurred along by the creation of preferential treaties to lower barriers to trade and encourage foreign investment between signatory countries. These agreements go beyond the reduction of tariffs on goods, also covering issues such as ‘services, investment, competition policy, government procurement, e-commerce and intellectual property’, as well as labour and environment provisions.

After the rapid rise of Bilateral Investment Treaties in the 1990s, in which over 1600 came into force (Australia signed 17 between 1990-1999), the latest global trend has been towards mega regional trade agreements, often referred to as ‘new generation’ free trade agreements. Examples of these agreements include the EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) between 11 countries in the Pacific and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the US and the EU.

ISDS is a potent inclusion in investment treaties and trade agreements, giving powerful rights to multinational corporations which allow them to bypass domestic courts and seek compensation through secretive, business-friendly tribunals. Analysis of the current ISDS system demonstrates how the system has dangerously strayed from its original intention; arbitration tribunals lack basic standards of a fair judicial system and corporations have attacked legitimate government measures intended to protect the public
and the environment. Any reasonable political measure that impacts a company’s projected profits can be equated to expropriation, with cases already launched against the banning of toxic chemicals, restrictions on tobacco advertising, requirements to stem pollution from coal plants and even for the introduction of a minimum wage.

The ISDS system impedes on national sovereignty to the benefit of corporations, yet places no obligations on investors to behave responsibly, creating an asymmetric system that gives multinationals the same rights as sovereign states. The significant increase in ISDS cases worldwide has resulted in more public attention on the once obscure element of international trade agreements, particularly as more cases are brought around issues of land, water security and pollution . Public backlash around the inclusion of ISDS has accompanied the negotiation of any new trade deals; an EU call for submissions on the TTIP received a record number of responses, the vast majority of which were concerned about the inclusion of ISDS.

Many countries have begun to reconsider their current trade agreement regime, and reassess the usefulness of ISDS provisions. Indonesia, South Africa, India, the EU and Poland are among those taking steps to reform their current trade regime. ISDS has been a component of Australian FTA’s and treaties for some time, with 27 currently in force that contain varying degrees of investor protections. Proponents of ISDS often tout this as proof that the ISDS system is harmless, however, the unpredictable nature of ISDS has seen influxes of cases launched against states after having no cases filed previously,8 chewing up millions of taxpayer dollars to defend and putting the regulatory capacity of the government at risk. As Australia strives to lock in more and more regional trade agreements, such as RCEP and the reemerging TPP, it is vital to reassess the inclusion of ISDS in future agreements, and push for a fairer trade and investment system.