Abstract

Investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms were intended to protect companies from the Global North against expropriation by Global South countries. Since 2000, investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms have increasingly been used against Northern countries to obtain compensation for and constrain policy decisions around nationalisation and remunicipalisation, as well as around the environmental or social regulation of service provision that threatens commercial interests. Social movements and governments alike resisted investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms, and despite the power wielded by multinational companies, the global trend is now to exclude investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms from new investment treaties. The purpose of this article is to provide a political-economy analysis of the processes of supporting and contesting the role of investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms in international treaties, processes that include activity at national, sub-national and international levels. The ensuing conflicts are analysed in terms of post-colonial contradictions over sovereignty under globalisation, continued contestation over the role of the public sector and climate change policies.Points for practitionersThe probability of investor success with investor–state dispute settlement mechanism claims should not be overestimated, and investor assessments of the basis and prospects for such cases should be subject to critical scrutiny. Governments should be aware of widespread popular antagonism towards investor–state dispute settlement mechanisms and global trends to remove such clauses from agreements. They should also review all bilateral investment treaties, free trade agreements and the Energy Charter Treaty that the country has ratified to assess the potential relative advantages of retention or leaving.

Highlights

  • The investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) clauses of international investment and trade treaties allow international investors to sue states and local governments before an international arbitration tribunal

  • While privatisation is still increasing worldwide (Weghmann, 2020), since the millennium, there has been a counter-tendency towards public ownership: more than 1400 cases of remunicipalisation or nationalisation involving more than 2400 cities in 58 countries have been identified since the year 2000 (Kishimoto et al, 2020)

  • ISDS procedures are a powerful tool for multinational companies to obtain compensation awards that both offset any commercial losses from policy decisions on issues such as privatisation and environmental standards, and act as a deterrent to the adoption of such policies

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Summary

Introduction

The investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) clauses of international investment and trade treaties allow international investors to sue states and local governments before an international arbitration tribunal. Even in the UK, a country famous for its excessive privatisations, at least 222 local government contracts were remunicipalised between 2016 and 2018 (APSE, 2019); nationalisation proposals proved to be very popular with voters in the 2019 UK election (Hall, 2020). In this context, investors have been using ISDS claims to seek compensation for the ending of concession agreements or for nationalisations, and as a financial deterrent to prevent such policies. After Veolia threated an International Review of Administrative Sciences 87(3)

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