Very well.
ISDS, as you know, gives foreign investors protection against the actions of states in which they have invested. Treaties that promote and protect investments provide foreign investors with protection against illegal expropriation, as well as fair and equitable treatment. They require states to offer the same conditions to foreign investors as to their own nationals. In short, they provide a dynamic and welcoming environment for foreign investors.
Canada's policy on promoting and protecting foreign investment, since the introduction of NAFTA in 1994, has been extremely successful. I believe that it's essential for Canada to continue to provide foreign investors with ISDS protection to maintain Canada's international economic appeal and reputation.
Canada's recent trade agreements are comprehensive, modern and detailed. Removing ISDS from the agreements might suggest that Canada is not a reliable and serious partner.
I spoke on this very topic at American University Washington College of Law in October 2019, before the pandemic.
The debate about the merits of arbitration is not new. International arbitration has long been the object of hostility and hyperbole. The World Bank's own International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes has often been a lightning rod for criticism. Detractors have accused the institution of bias in favour of corporations and lamented its prohibitive costs and lack of an appeal mechanism.
In my humble view, most of these critics are unfamiliar with the world of international arbitration. They call for ISDS eradication. They claim that ISDS lacks “the normal safeguards of a serious legal system”. Despite the consistently verified fact that states win more investment cases than they lose, they insist on the old canard that the system is biased against states and encourage states “to actively explore the termination of ISDS provisions”.
These critics usually propose no alternative to ISDS. Some envision a multilateral investment court with permanent members and an appellate mechanism. In its submission to UNCITRAL working group III, the European Union recently stressed three main categories of “concern” with ISDS: one, “Lack of consistency, coherence, predictability and correctness of arbitral Decisions by [arbitral] tribunals”; two, concerns pertaining to “Arbitrators and decision makers”; and three, “Cost and duration of ISDS cases”.
This standing court would resemble the promised but yet to be delivered CETA investment court system. The European Union proposes a permanent body comprised of two levels, which are a first-instance tribunal and then an appellate tribunal, staffed with full-time adjudicators held to strict ethical and diversity requirements.
I'll be referring in my evidence to the European proposal, in order to underscore the advantages of ISDS, and also talk about existing reform proposals.
In Washington at the end of 2019, I said that for decades international arbitration has developed and improved, achieving success in new markets and on an ever-increasing scale. In 2018, parties registered a record 56 cases at ICSID, which was a record. The year 2018 was also a record-breaking year for the London Court of International Arbitration and the ICC International Court of Arbitration.
I stress that the same year, in a wide-ranging study of practitioners, academics, judges, third party funders and government officials, 97% responded that international arbitration is their preferred method of resolving cross-border dispute.
Yet, for decades, we've been told that arbitration must be stopped. Recently, the death chants have intensified. You've heard some of them recently. Investor-state dispute settlement, ISDS, “should be dismantled and either discarded or rebuilt from scratch”.
Debate on the merits of arbitration is nothing new, and extends beyond Canada's borders. It is a heated subject of debate. The most virulent criticisms condemn an unfair system that always rules in favour of the multinationals and makes contradictory decisions at prohibitive cost. Very often, these criticisms come, at least in part, from those who don't benefit from the system's strengths. The reality is much more nuanced.
I believe that Canada needs to keep ISDS in its agreements. I'll go over what I said in Washington once again.
The popularity of arbitration is not circumstantial. It stems from advantages inherent to arbitration as a process for settling disputes. International arbitration has outlasted, and will outlast, its critics because it functions well.
Fortunately, in recent years, many members of the international arbitration community have reacted vigorously to this contestation. Gary Born, an eminent U.S. international arbitrator, recently said that to “ensure [our own] survival”, we must stress “the five Es” of arbitration: “efficiency, expedition, expertise, evenhandedness, and enforceability.”
I'd like to briefly describe the advantages of ISDS and, at the same time, the reasons why I believe that this mechanism should continue to be part of Canada's trade and foreign policy arsenal.
As you all know, arbitration is a mechanism based on consent. It allows for the selection of a neutral and respected arbitrator to settle conflicts definitively. Giving the parties the opportunity to choose their own arbitrator, generally a specialist in the field, is a fundamental component of arbitration. Once the final ruling is made, it can receive recognition from the vast majority of countries under the New York Convention.
Again, I quote from my conference in Washington. These fundamental characteristics at the heart of arbitration have been scapegoated for perceived problems with arbitration. Most notably, critics submit that ad hoc party appointees may be biased. Resolving disputes definitely without an appellate process may force parties to live with flawed decisions. Now, in my view, such criticism mistakes advantages for disadvantages. These characteristics are the hallmarks of arbitration that make the process successful; they are not flaws that need correction.
I commence with the appointment of arbitrators. The European Union’s proposal refers to arbitrator bias, procedural delays and gender disparity, caused, the European Union says, by the fact that parties select their own arbitrator. Well, yes, this is of course a principal difference between arbitration and litigation. Each party to an arbitration selects one of his adjudicators.
Proponents of a standing body claim that it would improve ISDS’s perceived lack of impartiality. Their reasoning, in my view, is somewhat suspect and myopic. A standing body would supposedly “insulate decision-makers from 'powerful private interest'” and eliminate the pressure to deliver awards that will encourage parties to reappoint them. Whether a standing body of arbitrators is more independent than arbitrators appointed by the parties depends on one’s perspective.
Are we prepared to deny disputing the right of parties associated with arbitration to select decision-makers with the expertise, experience and overall DNA they consider essential for the fair resolution of their dispute, and substitute women and men of a quasi-judicial institution endowed with general, as opposed to specific, qualifications? I don’t think so. The system as it exists today works. Eliminating the appointment by parties of their adjudicators is not a guarantee that the system would be improved.
I will now very briefly address the second aspect of the ISDS that is frequently criticized, which is the absence of an appeal process. This has been condemned as a weakness of the mechanism, but I feel that it is instead one of its greatest strengths. Indeed, the fact that decisions are definitive and avoid the inherent delays of the judicial process is essential to the mechanism.
In the arbitration system as we know it, it should not be assumed that inconsistency between awards is necessarily problematic. It is a truism that different results may stem from the arbitrators’ different backgrounds, experience, or expertise. Factual matrices may be different. Every dispute is unique, and what may be seen as a mistake today may be found tomorrow to be justified as a valid distinction that fits the unique factual matrix of a case.
Although many continue to fuel arguments over the purported failings of arbitration, the speed at which the system has developed and continues to do so beyond Canadian borders is remarkable. In Asia, whether in Hong Kong, Singapore or China, all the recent statistics show record numbers of cases registered with arbitration bodies.
Its popularity is also evidenced by the inclusion of ISDS in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, and in China's new Silk Road project called the Belt and Road Initiative. China has said that it will create an international tribunal for disputes related to the project. China's confirmed interest in arbitration is a further argument for keeping ISDS.
To conclude, I'd like to make a few comments about recent geopolitical developments that should convince you of the need to continue to include ISDS in Canadian treaties. As parliamentarians, you are no doubt very well informed about the situation.
A number of countries have recently said that they were against international trade, as evidenced by Trumpism and the imposition of tariffs. Arbitration thus becomes even more attractive as the allure of domestic courts declines. Brexit and trade tensions between the United States and China will have little or no effect on arbitration.
I read recently a statement by Eric Tuchmann: “In an unruly world, international arbitration offers a safe haven for business disputes”. Any perception that certain jurisdictions are unfriendly to foreign businesses will simply encourage those businesses to take their capital elsewhere or to avoid domestic courts and seek out neutral forums where they can settle disputes with the assistance of impartial and skilled facilitators.
Arbitration's success is not circumstantial. Its popularity has grown, despite the criticism it faces, because it is a proven and effective method for settling complex disputes that do not lend themselves well to adjudication in domestic courts. Given its track record for success, as well as the increasing uncertainty and risk on our fragile planet, arbitration's success should continue.
I believe that Canada should continue to include ISDS in its bilateral and multilateral agreements.
Thank you, Madam Chair and members of the committee.