Notes to editors:
- The Energy Charter Treaty (ECT) is an international investment agreement, to which both the EU and its Member States are party (Italy left in 2016), as well as non-EU states. It was designed by the EU in the 1990s in the post-Cold War era to protect foreign investments in the energy sector (it also covers the trade and transit of energy between states).
- In 2019, the Paris Court of Appeal agreed to seek a ruling from the CJEU on the interpretation of the ECT before it decides whether to annul a $49 million ISDS award obtained by Ukrainian investor Komstroy against Moldova.
- This follows the landmark 2018 Achmea ruling, which found that investor state dispute settlement (ISDS) provisions in bilateral investment treaties are incompatible with EU law, because they sideline and undermine the power of EU courts.
- The Achmea ruling resulted in most Member States signing a political declarationin 2019 that no new intra-EU investment arbitration should be initiated. Arbitration tribunals may therefore lack competence to hear intra-EU disputes based on the ECT.
- The CJEU proceedings involve neither the EU nor any member state, and the questions referred to the CJEU do not concern the applicability of the ECT intra EU, but in order to decide whether it has jurisdiction to answer the questions and interpret these ECT provisions, the CJEU indicated (by requesting member state observations on the issue) it would have to examine the implications of Achmea for the applicability of ECT intra EU (Article 26).
- The Advocate General discussed the legality of intra-EU ISDS proceedings based on the ECT in this case in his opinion issued in March this year. He argued that the ISDS provision in the ECT (Article 26) is incompatible with EU law, and invited the CJEU to examine the issue as part of its reasoning.
- In today’s ruling, the Court confirmed that despite the multilateral character of the ECT and the fact that it also governs relationships with non-EU countries, “the preservation of the autonomy and specific character of EU law precludes the ECT from being able to impose the same obligations on the Member States among themselves” (para 65). The Court thereby confirmed the Achmea reasoning equally applies to the ECT and concluded that the ISDS provisions of the ECT “must be interpreted as not applicable to disputes between a Member State and an investor from another Member State concerning an investment made by the latter in the first Member State” (para 66).
- ClientEarth has commented on the lawsuits brought by both RWE and Uniper.
- Read ClientEarth’s summary of why the EU should withdraw from the ECT, or the longer legal analysis.
