Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-11T06:06:08.901Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Quiborax S.A., Non-Metallic Minerals S.A. and Fosk Kaplún v. Plurinational State of Bolivia

ICSID (Arbitration Tribunal).  26 February 2010 ; 27 September 2012 ; 16 September 2015 ; 07 September 2015 ; 18 May 2018 .

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Get access

Abstract

Procedure — Provisional measures — ICSID Convention, Article 47 — ICSID Arbitration Rule 39 — Whether criminal proceedings and corporate audits affected the claimants’ right to the preservation of the status quo and to non-aggravation of the dispute — Whether the criminal proceedings impaired the claimants’ right to present their case — Whether the claimants satisfied the criteria of urgency, necessity and proportionality — Whether a stay of criminal proceedings would affect sovereignty or be contrary to municipal law

Procedure — Exclusivity — ICSID Convention, Article 26 — Whether the exclusivity of the arbitral proceedings was threatened by the continuation of local criminal proceedings

Admissibility — ICSID Arbitration Rule 34(1) — Whether evidence from criminal proceedings was admissible

Jurisdiction — Foreign investor — ICSID Convention, Article 25 — Whether investors had acquired shares in a local company — Whether the shareholders engaged in fraud or fabricated evidence to gain access to arbitration — Whether a local company may be treated as the national of another State due to foreign control

Jurisdiction — Investment — ICSID Convention, Article 25 — Whether each investor satisfied the objective elements of an investment

Jurisdiction — Legality — Estoppel — Whether the State was estopped from contesting the legality of the investments — Whether there was any fraud or non-trivial violation of the host State’s legal order or foreign investment regime at the time when the investment was established

Admissibility — Foreign investor — Good faith — Whether a shareholder must advise the host State of its foreign nationality

Defence — Legality — Municipal law — Whether the defence was admissible — Whether the investment was obtained through an irregular process that benefited former public officials — Whether the investment was null and void ab initio under municipal law

Defence — Exhaustion of remedies — Fork-in-the road clause — Whether the claims were premature

Defence — Police powers — Customary international law — Whether an executive decree constituted a legitimate revocation of concessions based on actual violations of municipal law — Whether the revocation was carried out in accordance with due process

Expropriation — Direct expropriation — Lawfulness — Discrimination — Whether the revocation of concessions directly expropriated the investment of the foreign-controlled local company — Whether the expropriation complied with conditions for lawful expropriation

Expropriation — Indirect expropriation — Substantial deprivation — Whether direct expropriation of the foreign-controlled local company substantially deprived its shareholders of value

Fair and equitable treatment — Minimum standard of treatment — Impairment — Whether revocation of the concessions violated the minimum standard of treatment — Whether subsequent annulment of the concessions was a bona fide exercise of police powers or an ex post attempt to improve an arbitral defence

Remedies — Damages — Customary international law — Whether assessment of full reparation allowed for use of ex post data up to the date of the award

Remedies — Interest — Applicable law — Whether international law or municipal law applied to whether interest should be compounded

Remedies — Satisfaction — ILC Articles on State Responsibility, Article 37 — Customary international law — Whether the tribunal had jurisdiction to make a declaration — Whether the State’s conduct during the arbitral proceeding, including alleged harassment through criminal proceedings and failure to comply with provisional measures, warranted declaratory relief

Remedies — Moral damages — Whether any specific moral injury satisfied the threshold of exceptional circumstances

Costs — Whether it was fair in the circumstances for the State to bear the costs of arbitration

Annulment — Jurisdiction — Provisional measures — ICSID Convention, Article 52 — Whether the committee had jurisdiction to annul provisional measures

Annulment — Manifest excess of powers — ICSID Convention, Article 52(1) — Whether the tribunal’s findings on municipal law were in manifest excess of powers — Whether the tribunal acted in manifest excess of powers in determining the existence of protected investments — Whether the tribunal acted in manifest excess of powers by failing to apply the applicable law for quantum

Annulment — Serious departure from a fundamental rule of procedure — ICSID Convention, Article 52(1) — Whether the State was denied the right to be heard on the valuation methodology

Annulment — Failure to state reasons — ICSID Convention, Article 52(1) — Quantum — Whether the tribunal failed to state the reasons for its decision on quantum

Type
Case Report
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)