Juan Carlos Boué – Vattenfall vs. Germany: A Disgraceful Settlement of a Scandalous Claim

There is much talk about the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT), but is it even valid within the EU nations?

On March 5, 2021, it was announced that the Germany had reached an agreement with the Swedish state company Vattenfall to settle a claim valued at up to €7 billion, over the phase-out of nuclear energy in the wake of Fukushima. The government is to pay Vattenfall €1.4 billion, much too much, argues Juan Carlos Boué

Juan Carlos Boué is a Mexican national and London-based counsel in the’ international corporate and arbitration practice of the international law firm Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle

Cross-posted from Norbert Häring’s blog Money and More

Category:Vattenfall in Germany - Wikimedia Commons

Vattenfall could not have expected much more than €1.4 billion, even if the the award of a tribunal under the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT) had gone its way, since claims in investor-state arbitrations are usually wildly inflated. Given that the government had lost on all of its jurisdictional objections and had also failed twice to disqualify the arbitration panel, its willingness to come to terms might appear reasonable, not least because of the pro-investor bias of arbitration tribunals.

But, actually, the government has acted a bit like someone who decides to go ahead with paying a ransom even after it has become clear that the kidnappers are no longer holding the hostage. This is because the ramifications of the decision of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in the Achmea case, which sounded the death knell for intra-EU bilateral investment treaties and arbitrations, have now engulfed the ECT.

In the Achmea judgment from March 2018, the ECJ decided that an arbitration clause in a bilateral investment treaty between two EU member states was incompatible with EU law, because an arbitration panel was given jurisdiction over questions of interpretation of EU law even though the panel was not part of the EU judicial system (and hence neither obliged nor able to consult the ECJ in matters of interpretation of EU law), and there were only limited means to review awards rendered pursuant to the treaty.

The Achmea judgment led to the signature by 23 EU member states on 5 May 2020 of an agreement terminating bilateral investment treaties between EU member states, thereby eliminating arbitration as a means for the settlement of intra-EU investment disputes.

On March 1, a Swedish court decided to ask the ECJ whether Achmea barred intra-EU investment disputes under the ECT.

More ominously still, on March 3, ECJ advocate general Szpunar opined (in connection with French proceedings to set aside the award in the case LLC SPC Stileks v. Moldova) that intra-EU investment arbitrations under the ECT are indeed barred by EU law in light of Achmea. For all that opinions of advocate generals are not binding, this raises the likelihood that an eventual victory by Vattenfall would prove Pyrrhic, as any award would be unenforceable.

In other words, the Vattenfall arbitration seemed to be turning into a “free spin” of the roulette wheel for the German government, a development that could have had major political implications, given the prominence of the Vattenfall case in the public debate about how the ECT is making climate protection difficult or very expensive for states. Faced with such a prospect, the German government preferred to spend taxpayers’ money to ensure that the difficult questions in this regard are put off for another day.

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