Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-21T23:42:48.675Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mesa Power Group, LLC v. Government of Canada

Permanent Court of Arbitration.  24 March 2016 ; 15 June 2017 .

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2022

Get access

Abstract

Jurisdiction – Foreign investor – Investment – NAFTA, Article 1116 – Whether a foreign investor met the jurisdiction requirements set forth in NAFTA – Whether claims based on a causal link between the challenged measures and the investment were sufficient for a tribunal to have jurisdiction under NAFTA Article 1116

Jurisdiction – Consultation – NAFTA, Article 1118 – Whether a foreign investor could comply with NAFTA Article 1118’s consultation requirement without substantively engaging with the State – Whether the fact that a foreign investor sought consultations with a State was sufficient to meet NAFTA Article 1118’s consultation requirement

Jurisdiction – Cooling-off period – NAFTA, Article 1120 – Whether an investor was required to observe NAFTA Article 1120’s cooling-off period – Whether every event that gave rise to a claim must have occurred before the cooling-off period – Whether the investor must have suffered damage prior to the cooling-off period

Jurisdiction – Investment – Timing – NAFTA, Article 1101 – NAFTA, Article 1116 –– Whether a tribunal had jurisdiction over claims based on investments made after the relevant measure was implemented by the State – Whether the date of an investment’s incorporation was sufficient to determine when an investment was made

State responsibility – Attribution – State enterprise – NAFTA, Article 1503(2) – Interpretation – Whether an entity established by a State should be considered an organ of the State – Whether actions by a State enterprise could be attributed to a State

Most-favoured-nation treatment – National treatment – Interpretation – NAFTA, Article 1108 – Procurement – Whether a procurement process was exempt from a State’s most-favoured-nation treatment and national treatment obligations – Whether the procurement of energy constituted a procurement process

Minimum standard of treatment – NAFTA, Article 1105 – Interpretation – Policy – Transparency – Whether a State must afford investors the minimum standard of treatment pursuant to customary international law – Whether tribunals should examine the State’s underlying policy decision when examining a State’s compliance with the minimum standard of treatment – Whether transparency was part of the minimum standard of treatment

Costs – Legal costs – Whether a party should be held responsible for its opponent’s legal costs when their good faith claims were dismissed by the tribunal

Annulment – Applicable law – Whether a court considering the vacatur or confirmation of an award should apply the law of its jurisdiction or the law of the seat of the arbitration

Annulment – Municipal law – Misconduct affecting parties’ rights – Exceeded arbitral power – Manifest disregard of the law – Interpretation – Deference – Whether a tribunal’s allegedly erroneous factual findings or legal conclusions serve as grounds for vacating its award – Whether an award should be vacated on the ground that the tribunal misinterpreted the meaning of procurement – Whether an award should be vacated on the ground that the tribunal deferred to the State’s decision-making in its renewable energy policy

Type
Case Report
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)