Has Russia violated its promises to Turkish Investors under the Turkey-Russia Bilateral Investment Treaty?
When the Russian Federation unleashed its deadly invasion of Ukraine, it was fully aware unprecedentedly severe sanctions would be imposed. As a direct result of these completely foreseeable sanctions, and other knock-on effects of the invasion, Turkish and other foreign investors in Russia will have seen the value of their investments take a serious hit, with further hits certain to come1.
In the following, ASC Law addresses the possibility Turkish investors in the Russian Federation may have claims under the solid, both substantively and procedurally, Turkey-Russia Bilateral Investment Treaty (the Turkey-Russia BIT). At the same time, we consider the similarly strong Turkey-Libya BIT, given Libya is also a country in which Turkish investors saw the value of their investments devastated by war, ie, after the early 2011 anti-Gaddafi hostilities quickly morphed into a full-scale, many-year insurgency.
Finally, we will discuss two arbitral awards, Öztaş Construction v Libya et al. (ICC Case No. 21603) Final Award, 14 June 2018 and Cengiz Construction v Libya (ICC Case No. 21537) Final Award, 7 November 2018. We will consider these awards, issued by tribunals constituted pursuant to the Turkey-Libya BIT, and what light they may shed on the strength of any claims arising under the Turkey-Russia BIT.
Investment Protections Found in the Turkey-Russia and Turkey-Libya BITs
The following chart sets forth several of the primary investment protections found in the Turkey-Russia and Turkey-Libya BITs, which are quite robust.
Investment protections | Turkey-Russia BIT (in force since 2000) | Turkey-Libya BIT (in force since 2011) |
---|---|---|
Fair and equitable treatment (FET)2 | Turkey-Russia BIT, Art. II (2) and Art. III (1) | Turkey-Libya BIT, Art. 2 (2) |
Full protection and security (FPS)3 | Turkey-Russia BIT, Art. II (2) | Turkey-Libya BIT, Art. 2 (2) (only ‘full protection’) |
Expropriation only with ‘adequate… compensation’4 | Turkey-Russia BIT, Art. VI | Turkey-Libya BIT, Art. 2 (2) |
Arbitration options | Turkey-Russia BIT, Art. X(2) (Stockholm Chamber of Commerce or ad hoc arbitration) | Turkey-Libya BIT, Art. 8 (International Chamber of Commerce, ie, the ‘ICC’, or ad hoc arbitration) |
The most important of these investment protections is the promise of ‘fair and equitable treatment’, ie, FET, which ‘is intended to give adequate protection to [an] investor’s legitimate expectations’. Impregilo S.p.A. v Argentina (ICSID Case No. ARB/07/17) Award, 21 June 2011, para 285. FET protection, while quite meaningful, is more limited than might be expected, with generally speaking more than simple negligence by the host State required. As one arbitral tribunal has explained, FET’s ‘ordinary meaning’ requires ‘“just”, “even-handed”, “unbiased”’ and ‘legitimate’ treatment of foreign investments, with the ‘infringement’ of FET requiring ‘treatment in such an unjust or arbitrary manner that the treatment rises to the level that is unacceptable’. Tulip Real Estate v Turkey (ICSID Case No. ARB/11/28) Award, 10 March 2014, para 401.
Is Russia in Breach of the Turkey-Russia BIT?
A. Likely a matter of ‘first impression’
Whether an invasion of another country by a State hosting foreign investors would be found to be a violation of treaty-based investment protections, given the arguably ‘indirect’ nature of the damages those investors would suffer, is likely a matter of first impression. Nevertheless, it would appear, to the authors of this piece, that such claims, at least prima facie, would have merit. We address two arbitral awards below, in Öztaş Construction v Libya and Cengiz Construction v Libya, which involved allegations of damage suffered by war in the host State itself, and what they suggest for the purposes of this piece.
B. Viability of any treaty claims depends on the specific facts and applicable law
Whether any specific Turkish party doing business in Russia would have viable claims under the BIT would depend on the specific facts and applicable law pertaining to its particular Russia-based activities and, indeed, whether those activities would even be considered an ‘investment’ covered by the BIT. Just as important would be the nature, and magnitude, of any damages suffered.
For example, Turkish businesses simply selling products to Russian counterparties would likely not to be found to have made an ‘investment’ in Russia. The consensus in investment arbitration case law is that mere cross-border sale of goods is not an ‘investment’ protected by investment treaties. See, eg, Global Trading and Globex v Ukraine (ICSID Case No. ARB/09/11) Award, 1 December 2010, para 56.
With regard to the nature, and magnitude, of any damages suffered, because treaty-based arbitration is both expensive and time consuming, resort to it is limited, as a practical matter, to investors who have suffered substantial damages. Certainly Turkish contractors are finding their work in Russia significantly more difficult post-invasion, as it may now be close to impossible to obtain the materials and workers they need and, even if obtained, paying for them (given the Ruble’s collapse, limits put on the use of other currencies, a steep rise in inflation, difficulties in accessing bank accounts, etc). Whether such damages justify initiating investment arbitration, however, is another question all together.
C. Are Öztaş Construction v Libya and Cengiz Construction v Libya ‘cautionary tales’?
The answer to the question posed in the above caption, for the authors of this piece, would be no. Indeed, the tale they tell should cause Russia great concern. Although any damage suffered by Turkish investors in Russia as a result of the invasion of Ukraine is arguably less direct than that suffered by the claimants in Öztaş Construction v Libya and Cengiz Construction v Libya, it was the Russian Federation which ‘triggered’ the Ukraine invasion, leaving Turkish investments exposed to enormous economic consequences. The actions of Libya, or lack of action as the case may be, pale in comparison.
1. Öztaş Construction v Libya
Öztaş Construction and the state-owned LIDCo entered into a contract, in 2008, whereby the Turkish contractor was to build and operate a water supply and transport system. Presumably as a result of the civil war unleashed by the anti-Gaddafi hostilities, the parties executed a termination agreement in 2013, pursuant to which LIDCo was to pay the claimant approximately LYD3.5m (US$2.8m). LIDCo, however, failed to make those payments. Öztaş Construction v Libya, supra, paras 62-63 and 65.
Öztaş Construction initiated an ICC arbitration in 2016 pursuant to the Turkey-Libya BIT. In the 2018 Award, the tribunal majority, when considering whether Libya had failed ‘to provide commercial and legal protection and a stable and predictable legal and business framework’, first observed, ‘[a]s a matter of international law, the condition of civil war or uprising… constitutes an extraordinary situation that negates any negligence or lack of due diligence against the State of Libya’. Id. at para 162.
More importantly, for the present purposes, the tribunal majority then stated:
‘Claimant has not shown… Libya has taken measures that directly aggravated or triggered the civil war and resulted in Claimant’s alleged losses.’ Ibid. (emphasis added).
That cannot be said about the Ukraine Invasion, or about any resulting damages. Russia itself, by its own aggressive acts, without doubt ‘aggravated’, and, indeed, ‘triggered’, this ‘extraordinary situation’.
2. Cengiz Construction v Libya
The Turkish Cengiz Construction entered into two contracts in the late 2000s with the Libyan Housing and Infrastructure Board. Pursuant to these contracts, the claimant was to ‘master plan, design and build’ certain ‘integrated infrastructure’ in Libya’s south. Cengiz İnşaat, supra, paras 2 and 94-95.
After ‘anti-government protests’ had escalated into ‘violence and civil war’, Cengiz Construction’s projects were abandoned. In 2016, it initiated ICC arbitration pursuant to the Turkey-Libya BIT, alleging its ‘investment was completely destroyed and rendered worthless’. Id. at paras 3 and 100-101.
The tribunal, in its 2018 Award, unanimously found Libya had breached its promise of FPS, in particular its ‘negative obligation to refrain from directly harming the investment by acts of violence attributable to the State’. Id. at paras 403 and 435.
As a result, Cengiz Construction was awarded damages of US$52.2m and arbitration costs of US$469,700 and €33,205, with interest to accrue on those amounts at LIBOR-plus 2%. Id. at para 693.
Final Thoughts
As explained above, whether any specific Turkish investor may have viable claims under the Turkey-Russia BIT will depend on the relevant facts and applicable law. Nevertheless, it is important that foreign investors know the nature and quality of any protections they may have under investment treaties, something ASC Law recommends be considered as part of its clients’ pre-foreign investment due diligence. Moreover, and in any event, knowing one’s rights, even if not exercised, is always valuable, as such knowledge may provide crucial leverage in the event disputes arise with one’s counterparties.
In closing, it has been said Russia’s brash invasion of Ukraine has ‘overturned the post-war world order’, while the ‘old order — with its Cold War attitudes, militaries, alliances and enmities — is reclaiming centre stage’5. But one important feature of the post-cold-war world order remains, which is the result of the proliferation of investment treaties over the course of the past 30 or so years.
These treaties, and their concurrent creation of what we would call a ‘private right of action’, have left signatory States with a little less room to manoeuvre, given foreign investors may now directly pursue, in arbitration, claims for harm suffered due to the wrongful acts of these States. Such harm, in the not-too-distant past, would only have been capable of redress through diplomatic efforts and/or the often-unpalatable option of pursuing claims in the local courts of the very States that have harmed the investments in the first place. This new feature of the post-war world order would seem here to stay.
Footnotes
1. According to Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, ‘[m]ore than 2000 projects with a total value of over 80 billion dollars have been realized so far by the Turkish contractors in Russia’.
2. Impregilo S.p.A. v Argentina (ICSID Case No. ARB/07/17) Award, 21 June 2011, para 285.
3. FPS ‘does not impose… a “strict liability” obligation… That is, the State cannot insure or guarantee the full protection and security of an investment’. Tulip v Turkey, supra at para 430. See also Azurix v Argentina (ICSID Case No. ARB/01/12) Award, 14 July 2006, para 408 (FPS also includes providing ‘a secure investment environment’).
4. A commonly accepted definition of ‘expropriation’ is when, due to the actions of the host state, the subject assets have ‘lost their value’ or ‘economic use’ for the investor. See, eg, Compania and Vivendi Universal v Argentina (ICSID Case No. ARB/97/3) Award, 20 August 2007, para 7.5.12.
5. ‘We must end the war on Ukraine and put an end to perpetual wars’, Heuvel, Washington Post, 1 March 2022.
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