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Globally, foreign investors are increasingly making use of the investor-State dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism to challenge host State’s regulatory measures pertaining to intellectual property rights (IPR).Against this global backdrop, this chapter examines whether regulatory measures, in particular the compulsory licensing of pharmaceutical patents - an important public health flexibility measure - amounts to indirect expropriation under India’s bilateral investment treaties (BITs) and investment chapters in India’s free trade agreements (FTAs).The chapter finds that there is no one answer that can be given to this question.The outcome will depend on the language of the treaty.Those BITs and FTA investment chapters that specifically exempt issuance of compulsory licenses from the ambit of expropriation subject to some conditions provide more regulatory space to India.In case of other BITs that are silent on this, the outcome will depend on the approach adopted by the ISDS tribunals that is whether the tribunals relies upon the "sole effects" test or the "police powers" test to determine indirect expropriation.The chapter also discusses the 2016 Indian Model BIT that puts issuance of compulsory licensing outside the ambit of the BIT provided such issuance is consistent with the Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement.
This chapter presents a detailed analysis of the 2015 Indian Model BIT and places it in historical and legal context.It compares the scope, substantive provisions and dispute resolution mechanism in the 2015 Model BIT against earlier drafts of the new model, earlier models, and other investment treaties entered into by India. It also examines the provisions of the 2015 Model BIT in light of investment arbitration jurisprudence. In these ways this analysis demonstrates the particular concerns which motivated the 2015 ModelBIT and highlights the particular balance between investor rights and regulatory freedom that it seeks to achieve.
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