Keywords

1 Introduction

The aim of the chapter is to reflect on the role the home state plays in foreign investment law in the light of some recent developments and in particular some innovative provisions contained in investment treaties or model treaties. The chapter is divided in three parts that follow a chronological order: the role traditionally played by the home state; the role played by the home state in modern foreign investment law; and the role the home state may play in the future.Footnote 1

2 Role of the Home State Before the Development of Foreign Investment Law

Before the full development of international investment law as we know it today, the role of the home state was essentially limited to protecting its subjects at the international level. As pointed out by the Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ) in 1924, it was—and still is—“an elementary principle of international law that a State is entitled to protect its subjects, when injured by acts contrary to international law committed by another State, from whom they have been unable to obtain satisfaction through the ordinary channels”.Footnote 2

In protecting its subjects, the home state performed three main functions. First, it contributed to the setting of normative standards for what was essentially the protection of aliens and their properties abroad. This occurred at the level of customary international law through legal claims and counterclaims put forward—and often fiercely resisted—in official documents, such as diplomatic correspondence in the context of international disputes.Footnote 3

At the same time, states concluded increasingly sophisticated agreements, inter alia, for the promotion and protection of foreign investment. These agreements took typically the form of friendship, commerce and navigation (FCN) treaties and similar instruments. Initially dealing with a rather heterogeneous range of issues, these treaties progressively focused on economic matters. The most sophisticated of these treaties can be considered as the precursors of modern bilateral investment treaties (BITs).Footnote 4

Secondly, the home state played an important role in the adjudication of disputes concerning alleged violations of the international rules on the treatment of aliens and their properties. The typical mechanisms were claims commissions, mixed arbitral tribunals, and occasionally resort to the Permanent Court of Permanent Justice and later the International Court of Justice (ICJ).Footnote 5 These disputes were clearly interstate disputes in which the home state asserted its own rights or, more precisely, “its right to ensure, in the person of its subjects, respect for the rules of international law”.Footnote 6

This is evidenced by the fact that the home state was the claimant,Footnote 7 and therefore was in control of the presentation of the claim and the submission of evidence, although the affected nationals could marginally be involved in the proceedings. That the claim belonged to the home state was further confirmed by the calculation of compensation. As pointed out by the PCIJ, “the damage suffered by an individual is never […] identical in kind with that which will be suffered by a state; it can only afford a convenient scale for the calculation of the reparation due to the State”.Footnote 8

Thirdly, with regard to the enforcement of the rules on the protection of nationals and their properties, the home state characteristically acted in diplomatic protection, which was based on the legal fiction that “an injury to the national was an injury to the State”.Footnote 9 The home state did not hesitate to intervene militarily in a period in which, “from the nature of things and the absence of any common superior tribunal, nations [were] compelled to have recourse [to go to war], in order to assert and vindicate their rights”.Footnote 10 The action of the home state typically took the form of what was elegantly—but by no means less brutally—called gunboat diplomacy.Footnote 11 Significantly, the first treaty limitation on the use of military force related precisely to the recovery of contract debt claims claimed by one government from another government as due to the former’s nationals.Footnote 12

The exercise of diplomatic protection was opposed by several Latin American states, which developed the so-called Calvo doctrine.Footnote 13 According to the doctrine, foreigners were entitled to the same protection as nationals and could not lay claim to more extensive protection.Footnote 14 An important corollary of the doctrine was that states could not intervene in diplomatic protection. Latin American states sought to exclude diplomatic protection through the inclusion in contracts with foreigners of the so-called Calvo clause.Footnote 15

3 Role of the Home State in Foreign Investment Law

3.1 Normative Function

The first function sketched in the previous section, namely norm-setting, is still firmly in the hands of states. The legal protection of foreign investment has changed radically with the conclusion since 1959 of more than 3000 bilateral investment agreements or economic integration agreements containing provisions on investment.Footnote 16 The conclusion of these agreements recorded a spectacular increase in the 1990s and 2000s.

States remain the masters of these agreements. They negotiate, amend, interpret and terminate them (unilaterally or by mutual consent) in accordance with the terms of the agreements themselves and the law of treaties. Contrary to FCN treaties, modern BITs focus exclusively on the promotion and protection of foreign investment. They contain increasingly sophisticated definitions and substantive and procedural rules.Footnote 17

3.2 Adjudication

The real breakthrough, however, has occurred with regard to the second function, namely adjudication of disputes. Modern investment agreements systematically provide for two categories of disputes: interstate disputes and disputes between investors and the host state. While interstate disputes remain rather exceptional, according to UNCTAD, the number of known investor-state disputes is approaching 1000.Footnote 18 Virtually all investment treatiesFootnote 19 give the concerned foreign investors access to international arbitration tribunals, normally without any obligation to exhaust domestic remedies beforehand.Footnote 20 The rationale behind these provisions is precisely to remove the dispute from the domestic arena and insulate it from any kind of pressure, including political pressure.Footnote 21

These provisions propel foreign investors into the realm of international dispute settlement, a development that can be explained in two ways.Footnote 22 According to the first explanation, the agreement creates a legal relationship between the host state and the investor, the latter being the holder of substantive rights. Violations of these rights can be vindicated directly by the investor. As held by a tribunal, investment arbitration is “a remedy exercisable by an investor by itself and in its own right against the host state”.Footnote 23 It is worth noting that some investment treaties, such as the BIT between Peru and the Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union (BLEU), expressly recognise “that investors of one of the Contracting Parties are entitled to prevail directly their rights against the other Contracting Party through the arbitration.”Footnote 24

Alternatively, a second and more conservative explanation splits substantive and procedural provisions. From this perspective, substantive rules continue to be binding exclusively upon states, while investors are permitted to file requests for arbitration in case of violation.Footnote 25 From this perspective, the right of investors is derivative as states have transferred the right to seek the enforcement of the obligations contained in the treaty to their respective foreign investors. According to a North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) tribunal, foreign investors “are permitted for convenience to enforce what are in origin the rights of Party states”.Footnote 26

In spite of the different theoretical foundations, however, the ultimate result is in good substance the same. In sharp contrast with disputes described in the previous section, in investment arbitration the claim is put forward and managed by the investor itself. The investor first attempts to reach a friendly settlement, makes a selection between the possible fora (if more than one are available), is involved in the appointment of the members of the tribunal, is in charge of all litigation strategies, submits all written documents, participates in the hearings, and ultimately is the recipient of compensation, if any is due.Footnote 27 As pointed out by a tribunal, “[t]he State of nationality of the Claimant does not control the conduct of the case. No compensation which is recovered will be paid to the State”.Footnote 28 Quite the contrary, the idea of investment arbitration is precisely to keep the state as much as possible away from the proceedings.

The emancipation of investors as fully independent actors allowing them to bring and manage their own claims before arbitral tribunals means that claims brought against the host state by a foreign investor and by the home state are independent, even if they refer to the same measures or conduct. In Plamav.Bulgaria, the tribunal convincingly held that even if the investor cannot invoke the relevant provision on the settlement of investor-state disputes (Article 26 of the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT)),Footnote 29 the right of the home state to invoke the state-state dispute settlement provision (Article 27 of the ECT) remains intact.Footnote 30

Furthermore, the home state cannot prevent its own investors from filing a request for arbitration, not even if it has started state-state proceedings. In Empresas Lucchetti v. Peru, the host state asked for the suspension of the investor-state proceedings since the claimant’s allegations at the heart of the dispute were the object of a concurrent state-state arbitration. The tribunal held that the conditions for a suspension of the proceedings were not met and rejected the request without further discussion.Footnote 31

The independence of each claim is further demonstrated by the fact that some treaties expressly preclude the possibility of international claims brought by the home state if the investor has started arbitration proceedings, unless the host state has failed to abide by and comply with the award rendered in the dispute. Article 27(1) of the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States (ICSID Convention) offers an excellent example. It provides that “[n]o Contracting State shall give diplomatic protection, or bring an international claim, in respect of a dispute which one of its nationals and another Contracting State shall have consented to submit or shall have submitted to arbitration under this Convention, unless such other Contracting State shall have failed to abide by and comply with the award rendered in such dispute”.Footnote 32 Finally, in investor-state disputes, the home state can make—and has indeed made—non-disputing party submissions expressing disagreement with the position of its own investors, an issue that will be discussed below.Footnote 33

Yet, in spite of the developments concerning the settlement of disputes through arbitration, diplomatic protection retains its importance, especially before resort to arbitration. Diplomatic action continues to be used for the purpose of facilitating the settlement of the dispute,Footnote 34 and even of pushing the host state to consent to arbitration.Footnote 35 From this perspective, diplomatic protection has not been disposed of by arbitration, but rather plays a complementary role.Footnote 36

Furthermore, it is worth noting that diplomatic protection has undergone a profound evolution. The International Law Commission has considered the legal fiction behind the traditional exercise of diplomatic protection as unnecessary in contemporary international law and recognised that states may exercise it in their own right, that of their nationals, or both.Footnote 37 From this perspective, in CSMv.Argentina, the tribunal did not hesitate to hold that “the State of nationality is no longer considered to be protecting its own interest in the claim but that of the individual affected”.Footnote 38

3.3 Enforcement

With regard to the third function, namely enforcement, the introduction of investment arbitration has also meant a significant retreat of the home state once the investor has instituted arbitral proceedings and possibly the relegation of diplomatic protection to the hypothesis of failure by the host state to comply with the award rendered by the arbitral tribunal. A minority of investment treaties (around 12%) expressly preclude resort to diplomatic protection during arbitral proceedings, apart from informal diplomatic exchanges genuinely meant to facilitate the settlement of the dispute.Footnote 39

It remains to be seen whether diplomatic protection is still available during arbitral proceedings when the relevant treaties are silent on the issue. In Italy v. Cuba, the ad hoc arbitral tribunal held by majority that “tant que l’investisseur ne s’est pas soumis à l’arbitrage international contre l’Etat d’accueil, son droit à la protection diplomatique subsiste”.Footnote 40 The statement hints a contrario to the fact that diplomatic protection is not available once arbitral proceedings have been instituted. This position seems to be shared by some scholars. According to one view, investment arbitration is based on a trade-off since “the potential respondent State accepts to arbitrate with a private entity and […] is relieved from the risk of being exposed to diplomatic protection by the investor’s Home State”.Footnote 41

Yet, other authors are sceptical about the exclusion of diplomatic protection during arbitration proceedings in the absence of a specific treaty provision in this sense.Footnote 42 They have insisted on the absence of sufficient evidence on the emergence of customary rules preventing states from exercising diplomatic protection once arbitral proceedings have been instituted. According to this view, the very fact that some treaty provisions—such as Article 27 of the ICSID Convention—preclude diplomatic protection during arbitral proceeding proves that the two remedies are autonomous and may well coexist as long as the concerned states have not agreed otherwise.

The delicate relationship between diplomatic protection and investment arbitration has resurfaced in the context of the 2014 Rules on Transparency of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), whose Article 5(2) in fine directs the tribunal to take into account, when allowing non-disputing party submissions, “the need to avoid submissions which would support the claim of the investor in a manner tantamount to diplomatic protection”.Footnote 43

It is well known that several investment treaties, such as NAFTA,Footnote 44 the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) between the European Union and Canada,Footnote 45 or the BIT between Peru and Japan,Footnote 46 offer the non-disputing state parties the possibility of presenting formal written submissions on the interpretation of the relevant treaty provisions with a view to assisting the tribunal in its search of the common intention of the parties as recorded in the treaty.Footnote 47 Obviously, the interpretation put forward in the non-disputing party submission may influence the decision of the tribunal since interpretation “[i]nvolves understanding the intention” of the parties to the treaty.Footnote 48 Indeed, this is precisely the purpose of the submissions, namely to safeguard the “legitimate”Footnote 49 or “systemic”Footnote 50 interest of the treaty parties to the treaty in the correct interpretation of the treaty.

Non-disputing party submissions relate to the interpretation of certain treaty provisions and as such must be abstract and detached from the merits of the dispute. If they are not, the tribunal should simply discard them. Whether a submission is in favour of the investor should be incidental. The reference to “tantamount to diplomatic protection” in Article 5(2) of the 2014 UNCITRAL Rules on TransparencyFootnote 51 can indeed be read as excluding submissions intended to advance the cause of the investor by taking position on the specific circumstances of the pending dispute instead of clarifying the non-disputing party’s position on certain points of treaty interpretation. Otherwise the state would unduly interfere with the proceedings and affect their independence and fairness.

The risk is however more apparent than real. According to an arbitrator, the respondent state and the non-disputing state(s) inevitably “club together” to share the same interpretation at the expense of the investor.Footnote 52 Whatever the merits of this view and the negative connotation attached to it, the statement demonstrates that the home state does not necessarily share the position of its own nationals and has moved away from its role as protector. Indeed, the attitude of the home state must be seen through the lens of mutual interest and reciprocity, the engines of the development of international law. From this perspective, the home state is more interested in the proper interpretation of the treaty rather than in the outcome of the specific dispute before the tribunal. In other words, what really matters to the home state is ensuring that all investors falling within the scope of the treaty enjoy exactly the protection the contracting parties had agreed to grant them, nothing less and nothing more.

Ultimately, in addition to diplomatic protection, the home state may adopt the measures permitted under general international law to induce compliance by the host state with its investment obligations or final and binding investment awards.Footnote 53 Such measures may typically take the form of acts of retorsion, which consist in unfriendly measures always available to states—since they are not inconsistent with any relevant international obligations—possibly including withdrawal from the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Generalized Systems of Preferences.Footnote 54 Alternatively, the home state may resort to countermeasures. This presupposes a prior breach of international law—in this case non-compliance with investment obligations or investment awards—, it implies a conduct otherwise contrary to international law and must respect all conditions required under the rules on state responsibility.Footnote 55

It remains however doubtful whether, in the case of a plurilateral investment treaty, the right to adopt countermeasures may be extended also to what the International Law Commission has qualified under Article 54 of the Articles on the Responsibility of States as “States other than the injured State”—or, for the purpose of this chapter “states other than the home state”. Since the obligations imposed by the treaty are clearly based on reciprocity and not “established for the protection of a collective interest of the group”,Footnote 56 the right to adopt countermeasures clearly only concerns the home state. Indeed, these obligations are divisible, in the sense that a state may breach them with regard to one but not necessarily all other states parties to the treaty.Footnote 57

4 Towards a New Role for the Home State

The role the home state is going to play in the future, and indeed the role it has already started to play, must be appreciated in the context of the reform that the entire investment treaty regime is currently undergoing.Footnote 58 After the golden period between 1990 and the 2000s, the popularity of investment treaties has significantly dropped. States are now rather reluctant to conclude investment agreements, although regionalism is still on the rise.Footnote 59 A significant number of BITs have been terminated and their global number has started to decline. States have responded differently to the three main concerns raised with regard to investment treaties: their manifestly unbalanced content;Footnote 60 the safeguard of regulatory powers, which many states perceive as inadequate;Footnote 61 and the lack of legitimacy and other shortcomings of investment arbitration.Footnote 62

Some states have modernized their BITs with a view to bringing them in line with the development of international law, rebalancing and better defining their substantive provisions, and recalibrating the host state’s exposure to arbitration.Footnote 63 States have also adopted new and more sophisticated model BITs, as the Model Text for the Indian Bilateral Investment Treaty adopted in 2015 (hereinafter Indian Model BIT), which will be used in the negotiations of BITs between India and other states and can also be expected to inspire other governments.Footnote 64 Other states have reconsidered their investment treaty policy and eventually decided to switch to domestic legislation. The adoption of the South African Protection of Investment Act (2015), which is largely pegged to the South African Constitution, is a good example.Footnote 65

The concerns under discussion are real and have been addressed primarily by striking a better balance between, on the one hand, the rights and obligations of the host state and, on the other hand, those of investors. Moreover, a few legal instruments have introduced provisions imposing obligations upon the home state and enhancing the collaboration between the host and home states, most prominently in the promotion of sustainable development, the fight against corruption and the liability of foreign investors.

From this perspective, the Economic Community of West African States’ (ECOWAS) Supplementary Act of 2008 can be considered as having pioneered a new approach.Footnote 66 Several of its innovative provisions have subsequently made their way into other African treaties as well as treaties outside that continent. The ECOWAS Supplementary Act includes an entire section on the rights and obligations of the home state, dealing with four issues, namely facilitation of foreign investment, disclosure of information, liability of investors, and the fight against corruption.Footnote 67

In accordance with the ECOWAS Supplementary Act, first, the home state may facilitate cross border investment and is obliged to inform the host state of the measures adopted in this regard.Footnote 68 Second, and more incisively, the home states shall, on request and subject to a confidentiality caveat, promptly provide a potential host state with the information expected to enable the latter to comply with its obligations under the treaty and domestic legislation. The home states shall also, on request, promptly provide information on standards that may apply to investors, and most prominently, those related to social and environmental impact assessments.Footnote 69 On the latter point, it is worth stressing that the home state may contribute to standard-setting and to the review of standards applicable to the authorisation and management of investments made by its own investors in the host state. The main aim of these provisions is to optimise the impact of investment projects as well as to enhance compliance by the host state with its international commitments.

With regard to the liability of its own investors, the ECOWAS Supplementary Act imposes upon the home state the obligation to ensure that its legal system allows for, or does not prevent or unduly restrict, civil action before its courts in relation to liability for damages resulting from alleged acts or decisions made by investors in the territory of the host state. The host state laws on liability shall apply to such civil proceedings.Footnote 70

The above provision on liability has been reproduced in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Model BIT Template (2012),Footnote 71 in the BIT between Morocco and Nigeria,Footnote 72 and more importantly the 2015 Indian Model BIT.Footnote 73 However, and quite significantly, the provision has not been included neither in the BIT concluded between India and Belarus on 24 September 2018,Footnote 74 nor in the Investment Cooperation and Facilitation Treaty concluded between India and Brazil on 25 January 2020.Footnote 75 This is a clear reminder that states may be reluctant to accept international obligations in this respect.

As pointed out by the Indian Law Commission in its analysis of the 2015 Indian Model BIT, the provision aims at removing or minimising jurisdictional constraints that could prevent civil action before the tribunals of the home state, most prominently under the forum non conveniens doctrine on grounds that there is a more appropriate forum to hear the case.Footnote 76 This would be typically the case of a dispute such as the one related to the infamous Bophal incident,Footnote 77 which was expressly mentioned by the Indian Law Commission.Footnote 78

Enhancing the liability of the home state has found the support of Nobel Prize economist Joseph Stiglitz, who emphasised, with regard to the liability of multinational companies under the United States Alien Tort Act,Footnote 79 that civil claims “will not harm economic development of least developed countries, United States businesses operating abroad, or investment in the United States”.Footnote 80

Coming back to the ECOWAS Supplementary Investment Act, investors must refrain from engaging in practices of corruption.Footnote 81 Connivance in corruption certified by a court of the host state would deprive the investor of the right under the treaty to bring a claim against the host state.Footnote 82 Interestingly, not only the host but also the home state may object, on grounds of violations of the above provision, to the jurisdiction of any tribunal before which the investor has brought a case under the treaty.Footnote 83

Moreover, the host state must make corrupt practices criminal offences and investigate, prosecute and punish them with appropriate sanctions.Footnote 84 The home state, in turn, must ensure that any money or other benefits obtained through these practices is not recoverable or deductible through any fiscal or tax policies. The home state must also provide all available information that might assist a tribunal dealing with a claim brought under the treaty in determining whether there has been a breach of an anti-corruption obligation.Footnote 85

Furthermore, both the host and the home state may initiate proceedings against the investor in case of breaches of the prohibition to become involved in corruption, or in case of persistent failure to comply with domestic obligations related to hygiene, security, health and social welfare, human rights and fundamental labour standards, as well as corporate governance and practices.Footnote 86 The dispute will fall within the jurisdiction of a tribunal established in accordance with the Supplementary Act. This part of the provision remains obscure as the Supplementary Act expressly provides only for the judicial settlement of a dispute between the host state and investors.Footnote 87 This serious shortcoming notwithstanding, the provision shows that states can go as far as envisaging a role for the home state in the judicial enforcement of the obligations of its own nationals under the treaty.

The above provisions design a role for the home state that is much more complex than the traditional norm-setting and protection of national investors and investments. They have introduced new responsibilities for the home state that, at least potentially, enhance the collaboration with the host state, increase the standard of liability for foreign investors, and ultimately may improve the legitimacy of foreign investment law.

5 Conclusions

Traditionally, the home state acted as the protector of national investors and could make investors’ claims its own for the purpose of diplomatic protection. The establishment and development of increasingly sophisticated and efficient international mechanisms for the settlement of disputes between investors and the host state have profoundly modified the situation. On the one hand, foreign investors have been fully emancipated and can normally bring their own claims before international arbitral tribunals. They are in control of the entire process of adjudication, although they may need the support of their own state in case of non-compliance with the arbitral award. On the other hand, the home state has been relegated to a rather marginal role as demonstrated, inter alia, by the scarcity of state-state investment disputes. During the proceedings, the presence of the home state has become much more discrete and it is not necessarily supportive of the national investors’ claims, as in the case of non-disputing party submissions.

Recently, however, a few investment treaties provide for a more active role of the home state. Although such treaties still remain rather isolated, it is possible to detect a relatively clear trend. Home states are progressively called to play a role that goes well beyond the traditional protection and may contribute to the reform of the investment treaty regime. Such a role is emerging in areas where the public interest is of paramount importance, such as the protection of the environment, the fight against corruption, and the liability of multinational companies. Yet, borrowing from the nomenclature of Hollywood’s Oscar awards, the home state will probably never be nominated for a leading role. This will remain the domain of the host state and foreign investors. But in due time the home state may receive a nomination for a supporting role.