1. Introduction
In a series of high-profile and controversial rulings, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU or Court) has sought to foreclose intra-European Union (EU) investment arbitration,Footnote 1 finding that arbitration under investment treaties, between a foreign investor from one EU Member State and another Member State, is incompatible with EU law. In particular, according to the Court, constitutional principles under EU law, relating to the autonomy of the EU legal order and mutual trust, preclude the intra-EU application of arbitration clauses under investment treaties.Footnote 2
To comply with the rulings, most EU Member States, supported by the European Commission (Commission), have concluded an agreement terminating intra-EU bilateral investment treaties (BITs),Footnote 3 and are pursuing the intra-EU disapplication of the arbitration clause under the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT).Footnote 4 Crucially, when considering the compatibility of intra-EU investment arbitration with EU law, the CJEU has relied on settled case law regarding international commercial arbitration,Footnote 5 which is provided for under private contracts rather than treaties.Footnote 6 Indeed, the Court premised its reasoning on a strict distinction between investment and commercial arbitration, and the latter appears to be unscathed from the EU's initiatives post-Slovak Republic v Achmea (Achmea).
This article critically analyses the distinction made by the Court between international investment and commercial arbitration under EU law, with a view to examining the extent to which EU investors still have recourse to contract-based arbitration (that is, arbitration under an investor–State contract) as a means of investment protection and dispute settlement against an EU Member State. First, the article considers the long-standing approach of the CJEU vis-à-vis commercial and, more broadly, contract-based arbitration. Second, it sets out the CJEU's rationale for differentiating commercial from investment arbitration and assesses its persuasiveness. The analysis is based on two criteria: the different origins of arbitral proceedings, and the intensity of the review of the relevant arbitral award. The former, distinguishing between the contractual and treaty origins of the respective proceedings, is largely convincing, though not entirely nuanced. However, the latter incorrectly suggests that investment awards are inherently subject to a lesser form of judicial review. Finally, even when differentiating according to these criteria, it is argued that arbitration under investment contracts can still serve as a mechanism for settling intra-EU investor–State disputes. This would accord with CJEU case law and uphold the Court's approach of distinguishing between commercial and investment arbitration. In this respect, the present article does not develop an argument de lege ferenda; rather, it calls for a careful interpretation of the case law, and judicial restraint.
2. International commercial and contract-based arbitration in CJEU case law
There is ample CJEU case law relating to commercial and, more broadly, contract-based arbitration. As permitted under Article 267 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU),Footnote 7 courts of EU Member States have referred various questions of EU law to the CJEU, primarily arising from litigation concerning parallel proceedings and post-award litigation. The Court's approach towards commercial arbitration seems consistent, at least with respect to its compatibility with EU law, but areas of contention do exist. Open questions remain concerning the reach of EU law in arbitration-related proceedings before national courts: notably, the CJEU's stance on this may well be seen as contingent upon the principle of effectiveness. The principle seeks to preserve the effective enforcement of EU law in national courts. For instance, by adopting a rationale of effectiveness, Advocate General Wathelet opined in Genentech Inc v Hoechst GmbH and Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH that a national court should be able to annul an award which violates ‘fundamental’ EU rules (in casu, Article 101 of the TFEU) even where the relevant national law governing annulment proceedings only permits review on the basis of flagrant violations of certain public policy rules.Footnote 8 Nevertheless, while the Court has not been unconcerned about commercial arbitration, it has not shown an interest in challenging it ontologically, as it has done with intra-EU investment arbitration under international treaties.
For instance, the Court has considered international commercial arbitration in the context of litigation concerning parallel proceedings and anti-suit injunctions. In Gasser GmbH v MISAT Srl, the CJEU found that, in principle, it is for each national court seised to determine whether it has jurisdiction to resolve a dispute, in line with the relevant EU rules, which at the time were set out in the 1968 Brussels Convention on Jurisdiction and the Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters (Brussels Convention).Footnote 9 The Court further found that injunctions issued by a court of one Member State are not compatible with EU law insofar as they prevent parties from commencing or continuing legal proceedings before a court of another Member State.Footnote 10
This ruling has been extended to anti-suit injunctions sought pursuant to an arbitration agreement, despite arbitration being excluded from the Brussels Convention.Footnote 11 In Allianz SpA and Generali Assicurazioni Generali SpA v West Tankers Inc (West Tankers), the CJEU was famously asked whether a court of one Member State may issue an injunction precluding the commencement or continuation of judicial proceedings in another Member State insofar as the latter proceedings would breach an arbitration agreement.Footnote 12 The CJEU found that an anti-suit injunction would, in these circumstances, be incompatible with the Brussels I Regulation, which effectively replaced the Brussels Convention.Footnote 13 The Court argued, inter alia, that an anti-suit injunction ‘necessarily amounts to stripping [a court of another Member State] of the power to rule on its own jurisdiction under [the] Regulation’.Footnote 14 Moreover, it would be incompatible with the principle of mutual trust: it would ‘run counter to the trust which the Member States accord to one another's legal systems and judicial institutions’.Footnote 15 Lastly, the Court found that an anti-suit injunction could preclude an applicant from initiating proceedings under the Brussels I Regulation, as the national court would be ‘prevented from examining itself the preliminary issue of the validity or the applicability of the arbitration agreement’.Footnote 16 This would ‘deprive’ the applicant of ‘a form of judicial protection’ to which they would be ‘entitled’ under EU law.Footnote 17 While West Tankers illustrated that arbitration proceedings can generate some tension with national courts’ jurisdiction, the principle of mutual trust and the principle of effective judicial protection, the Court refrained from making any generalised remarks about (commercial) arbitration per se.
The CJEU has also considered issues relating to commercial arbitration raised in post-award judicial proceedings. Post-award proceedings include annulment proceedings, whereby a party to the arbitration requests the annulment of an award pursuant to grounds set out in the national law of the seat of arbitration, and recognition and enforcement proceedings, whereby a party requests a national court to acknowledge the binding force of the award rendered and to enable its execution. In Nordsee, the Court found that arbitral tribunals are not considered to be a ‘court or tribunal of a Member State’ within the meaning of Article 267 of the TFEU, even though ‘arbitration is provided for within the framework of the law’ and awards issued have ‘as between the parties, the force of res judicata’.Footnote 18 Nevertheless, it held that questions of EU law arising from arbitral proceedings may be referred to the CJEU by national courts in the course of the ‘review of an arbitration award’, and such a review ‘may be more or less extensive depending on the circumstances’.Footnote 19
The relevance of EU law within such a review will depend on, inter alia, the rules of EU law which are deemed to be affected by the arbitration. In Eco Swiss, the CJEU found that a national court hearing an application of annulment is required to annul an award which violates Article 101 of the TFEU (as it is now) where national law provides for annulment based on violations of public policy rules.Footnote 20 The same would also be the case for recognition and enforcement proceedings.Footnote 21 This is owing to the ‘fundamental’ status of Article 101 of the TFEU within the single market edifice, as it contains rules prohibiting anticompetitive agreements and concerted practices.Footnote 22 Furthermore, in Asturcom, which concerned arbitration under a consumer contract, a Spanish court asked the CJEU whether, in the context of enforcement proceedings, it may of its own motion annul an award where the arbitration clause is incompatible with EU consumer protection law.Footnote 23 The Court found that the time limit governed by national procedural law, subject to which a consumer could bring an action for annulment of the award, is compatible with the principle of effectiveness of EU law, even where the arbitration agreement breaches EU law.Footnote 24 The CJEU left the latter determination to the referring court.
The Court's approach in the case law examined above has been described as ‘confirm[ing] the reluctance of the [CJEU] to interfere with the principle of procedural autonomy of Member States and the finality of arbitral awards, even in cases where rules of European public policy are engaged’.Footnote 25 While the extent of the CJEU's deference to national procedural autonomy on the whole can be contested,Footnote 26 the above case law indicates the Court's systemic tolerance of contract-based arbitration. The Court's reasoning demonstrates its faith in the role of national courts and the preliminary reference procedure to resolve any tensions with EU law arising from arbitral proceedings.
3. Distinguishing between international investment and commercial arbitration
In Achmea, the CJEU found that intra-EU arbitration provisions in BITs are incompatible with EU law.Footnote 27 This finding was extended to intra-EU arbitration under the ECT in Komstroy Footnote 28 and intra-EU arbitration pursuant to certain ad hoc arbitration agreements in PL Holdings.Footnote 29 In those cases, the CJEU distinguished investment from commercial arbitration, while acknowledging their commonalities as forms of international arbitration: ‘arbitration proceedings such as those [considered in the aforementioned judgments] are different from commercial arbitration proceedings’.Footnote 30 Drawing a firm distinction between investment and commercial arbitration was necessitated by the existing jurisprudential landscape, considered in Section 2, given that settled case law had never questioned the compatibility of commercial arbitration with EU law. The way in which, and the persuasiveness with which, the Court has distinguished the two will now be considered.
This section should be read in the light of the following terminological clarification: the Court's conception of commercial arbitration seems to capture all forms of contract-based arbitration. In describing commercial arbitration, the CJEU has relied on, inter alia, case law relating to consumer arbitration,Footnote 31 and extended, at least in part, its understanding to sports arbitration.Footnote 32 Moreover, the CJEU has effectively only considered investment arbitration under international treaties concluded by EU Member States.Footnote 33 The following discussion will refer interchangeably to investment arbitration and investor–State dispute settlement (ISDS), except where otherwise stated.
3.1. Origin of arbitral proceedings
The first criterion used by the CJEU to distinguish between investment and commercial arbitration concerns the ‘origin’ of the relevant arbitral proceedings. On the one hand, commercial arbitral proceedings ‘originate in the freely expressed wishes of the parties’ concerned.Footnote 34 On the other hand, arbitral proceedings under intra-EU BITs or the ECT:
derive from a treaty by which Member States agree to remove from the jurisdiction of their own courts, and hence from the system of judicial remedies [guaranteed by EU law,] disputes which may concern the application or interpretation of EU law.Footnote 35
This distinction is prima facie convincing. The involvement of the State is clearly different in the establishment of the respective arbitral proceedings. In treaty-based ISDS, an investor from one State brings a claim against the host State, alleging a breach of the provisions of the relevant international investment treaty and other applicable laws,Footnote 36 or customary rules of international law. Investment arbitration claims ex hypothesi centre around State actions or omissions. Commercial arbitration, however, is agreed upon by parties to a contract. Commercial disputes typically concern private conduct, including States’ acta jure gestionis.Footnote 37 They are generally determined on the basis of the applicable law agreed upon by the parties, which may be national, transnationalFootnote 38 or possibly international law.Footnote 39
Nevertheless, the CJEU's classification of arbitrations based on the origin of the proceedings appears insufficiently nuanced. For example, it juxtaposes the contractual basis of commercial arbitration with both the treaty basis of investment arbitration and the effect of such treaties in ‘removing’ particular disputes from the EU judicial system. According to the Court, by concluding investment treaties, Member States have agreed that certain disputes will be heard before arbitral tribunals, rather than their respective judiciaries. However, this ‘removal’ effect may still be produced by commercial arbitration, the raison d’être of which is to serve as an alternative to recourse to courts. Indeed, there is nothing to suggest that ‘disputes which may concern the application or interpretation of EU law’Footnote 40 are more likely to arise in the course of investment rather than commercial arbitral proceedings. Although investment claims more clearly involve State conduct compared to commercial claims, EU law is not confined to regulating the exercise of public authority.Footnote 41 Moreover, while investment tribunals can sometimes apply EU lawFootnote 42 or issue awards which are seen to disregard EU law,Footnote 43 commercial disputes are routinely determined on the basis of national law. In the case of EU Member States, this includes EU law. Such commercial disputes, even where questions of EU law arise, are equally removed from the jurisdiction of national courts.
In light of the above, it must be assumed that when the Court sought to distinguish investment arbitration from commercial arbitration,Footnote 44 it was more concerned with the fact that the former ‘derive[d]’ from a treaty between two EU Member States than by that treaty's stricto sensu jurisdictional effect of ‘removing’ certain disputes from the EU judicial system.Footnote 45 Such an interpretation accords with the importance of the principle of mutual trust relied on by the Court in Achmea, which asserted the reciprocal nature of Member States’ obligations vis-à-vis the EU's institutional and judicial framework.Footnote 46 The Court thereby implicitly confirmed, in principle, its long-standing acceptance of contract-based arbitration.Footnote 47
Notwithstanding the Court's conclusion, it is worth further examining its understanding of parties’ consent in international arbitration. Investment treaties provide a State's consent to arbitral proceedings in relation only to disputes which may arise within the scope of the treaty.Footnote 48 Proceedings are initiated via a claim brought by an investor, not by reason of the treaty itself. While investment treaty arbitration—as a form of ‘arbitration without privity’Footnote 49—can be distinguished from contract-based arbitration, it hardly falls outside the CJEU's description of commercial arbitration as originating in the ‘freely expressed wishes of the parties’.Footnote 50 In his Opinion in Komstroy, Advocate General Szpunar discussed the different way in which commercial and investment arbitral proceedings rely on party autonomy. In particular, he noted that:
[c]ommercial arbitration proceedings presuppose the exercise by each party of its autonomy … [T]he jurisdiction of a court or tribunal, in commercial arbitration, always derives from an arbitration agreement concerning a dispute specifically defined therein.Footnote 51
With investment arbitration, however, he asserted that ‘the State waives the possibility that a dispute between it and an investor from another Member State falling within the scope of that agreement may be settled by the national courts’.Footnote 52 This may not necessarily be so, as an international investment treaty may provide for a range of dispute settlement mechanisms, for example, the ECT itself envisages recourse to national courts rather than arbitration.Footnote 53 In any event, while Advocate General Szpunar was correct to identify that parties’ consent to arbitration differs according to the basis of the agreement (whether a contract or a treaty), it is not the case that investment treaties disregard respondent States’ party autonomy. A ‘systemic’Footnote 54 granting of consent to arbitration over a range of potential disputes is not rendered improper by virtue of its wide scope. However, this critique of Advocate General Szpunar's comments on party autonomy does not undermine the arguments made by him in Komstroy,Footnote 55 and by the CJEU in other cases,Footnote 56 with regard to the principle of mutual trust and sincere cooperation which binds Member States.Footnote 57 However, as mutual trust strictly applies to relations of Member States inter se, it is not applicable in a private contractual context.
Moreover, although commercial arbitration cannot be said to ‘derive’Footnote 58 from international treaties, States have entered into international agreements to establish rules on the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards. As Giuditta Cordero-Moss observed, Article II(3) of the New York Convention provides that a court must in principle refer parties to arbitration where it is seised of a matter which falls within the scope of an arbitration agreement.Footnote 59 There are 172 State Parties to the New York Convention, including all EU Member States. Therefore, while not themselves parties to commercial arbitral proceedings, Member States have acquiesced to the removal of certain commercial disputes from their national jurisdictions.Footnote 60 The formulation adopted, on the same point, by Advocate General Rantos is even broader than the Court's. In International Skating Union, which concerned the annulment of a Commission decision finding that certain sports eligibility rules infringed EU competition law, Advocate General Rantos agreed with the General Court that arbitration before the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) is different from investment treaty arbitration.Footnote 61 He noted that, as with commercial arbitration proceedings, Achmea has no bearing on sports arbitration proceedings, because it:
concerned a (bilateral investment) treaty with a Member State and … related to the principles of mutual trust and sincere cooperation between Member States, preventing those States from allowing private parties to submit disputes to a body which is not part of the EU judicial system.Footnote 62
However, if Member States are prohibited from merely ‘allowing private parties to submit disputes to a body which is not part of the EU judicial system’,Footnote 63 Member States would also be precluded from concluding an international agreement such as the New York Convention, which facilitates arbitration by enhancing the enforceability of awards. Since this is not the case, it follows that EU law only precludes Member States from concluding international agreements which specifically provide the basis for private intra-EU arbitral claims.Footnote 64
The above discussion demonstrates that at times the CJEU's treatment of the ways in which parties may consent to arbitration has been insufficiently nuanced. Nevertheless, the above analysis demonstrates that the Court's differentiation between investment arbitration and commercial arbitration was closely focused on the treaty basis of the former. Speaking extrajudicially in the aftermath of Achmea, CJEU President Lenaerts characterised a hypothetical contract including an arbitration clause between Achmea BV and the Slovak Republic, as being ‘100% compatible with European Union law’ and distinguished this from a ‘public international law treaty between two Member States’.Footnote 65 Indeed, the Court has never questioned the compatibility of contract-based arbitration, as such, with EU law.
3.2. Intensity of judicial review
The second way in which the CJEU has differentiated commercial and investment arbitration relates to the intensity of the judicial review of arbitral awards. With regard to commercial and consumer arbitration, the CJEU has recognised the importance of ‘efficient arbitration proceedings’, which require that judicial review of arbitral awards should only be ‘limited in scope’.Footnote 66 Review ‘should be possible only in exceptional circumstances’,Footnote 67 ‘provided that the fundamental provisions of EU law can be examined in the course of that review and, if necessary, be the subject of a reference to the Court for a preliminary ruling’.Footnote 68 Having distinguished between proceedings according to their basis as discussed in Section 3.1, the Court then found that ‘considerations’ relevant to the intensity of judicial review of commercial arbitral awards ‘cannot be applied’ to arbitral proceedings under investment treaties.Footnote 69 In this light, it found the latter proceedings to be incompatible with EU law.Footnote 70
The CJEU's concern as to the judicial review of arbitral awards stems from the fact that this is governed by national law rather than EU law.Footnote 71 Review is, in principle, exceptional and its rigour is not uniform across the EU legal order—some national courts in the EU may therefore not have the opportunity to refer certain questions of EU law to the CJEU under Article 267 of the TFEU. The preliminary reference procedure under Article 267 of the TFEU is seen as the ‘keystone’ of the EU judicial system, ensuring the effective protection of rights under EU law.Footnote 72 However, the nature of review of awards is true of both commercial and investment arbitration. In both settings, awards are ordinarily subject to annulment or set-aside proceedings which are governed by the national law of the seat of arbitration as lex fori.Footnote 73 National law also governs recognition and enforcement proceedings, while the New York Convention is also typically applicable.Footnote 74 Although the parties’ choice of seat will determine the specific features of judicial review, the CJEU has accepted this as a sufficient mechanism for ensuring that commercial and other contract-based arbitral awards comply with ‘fundamental’ provisions of EU law.Footnote 75 Still, it took issue with the adequacy of judicial review to which investment arbitral awards are subject.
As the same procedural rules largely also govern investment arbitration, the Court's reservation in this regard seems unconvincing. After all, Achmea, Komstroy and PL Holdings, concerning investment arbitration awards, were referred to the CJEU by national courts under Article 267 of the TFEU. It is clear from these references that national courts can play a robust role in reviewing the conformity of awards with EU law notwithstanding the customarily limited grounds of annulment. The CJEU can thus ensure the uniform interpretation and application of EU law under Article 19(1) of the Treaty on European Union (TEU).Footnote 76
However, investment arbitration proceedings submitted to the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) in particular do not provide the same potential for judicial review by national courts. As of February 2025, over 1000 cases had been submitted to ICSID.Footnote 77 In the majority of cases,Footnote 78 the role of national courts shrinks drastically, as the Convention for the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States (ICSID Convention) rather than a national lex fori governs annulment proceedings, thereby precluding recourse to national courts.Footnote 79 Instead, Article 52(1) of the ICSID Convention provides for the establishment of an ad hoc committee, as part of the ICSID system, which considers annulment requests on the basis of the ICSID Convention.Footnote 80 With regard to recognition and enforcement, Article 54(1) of the ICSID Convention provides that Contracting StatesFootnote 81 ‘shall recognize an award rendered pursuant to this Convention as binding and enforce the pecuniary obligations imposed by that award within its territories as if it were a final judgment of a court in that State’.Footnote 82 This virtually automates the recognition and enforcement of an ICSID award and forecloses the possibility of refusal of recognition or enforcement, which differs from the approach under the New York Convention. Under Article V of the latter Convention, national courts can refuse the recognition and enforcement of an arbitral award at the request of the party against whom it is invoked or even, in certain circumstances, on its own initiative.
In Achmea, Advocate General Wathelet noted that Member States ‘should avoid the choice of ICSID in their BITs’ because national courts would be unable to review the ‘compatibility of [such awards] with EU law’.Footnote 83 However, as the award in Achmea was not an ICSID award—parties had instead selected the Permanent Court of Arbitration as the registry and proceedings were governed by the UN Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) Arbitration Rules—he noted that risk was ‘purely hypothetical’ in the particular case.Footnote 84 Indeed, while the ICSID Convention minimises the role of national courts and the CJEU, this is not the case with the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules,Footnote 85 which apply to ad hoc proceedings, and institutional rules such as the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce (SCC) Arbitration Rules.Footnote 86 Such rules were ‘originally meant to be applied’ to commercial disputes but are also applicable to investment disputes, subject to the parties’ agreement.Footnote 87 The level of judicial review of awards allowed under these rules has never been contested by the CJEU in the context of commercial arbitration. Ultimately, the courts of EU Member States and the CJEU can still become involved in the context of ad hoc and non-ICSID institutional arbitration, such as during enforcement proceedings, with a view to ensuring the uniform interpretation and effective application of EU law according to Articles 267 of the TFEU and 19(1) of the TEU.
It is clear from the above that in Achmea and subsequent case law the Court disregarded the profound differences between the ICSID and other arbitral regimes, by a priori associating all investment arbitration with an exclusion of judicial oversight. In fact, that is only true of ICSID proceedings. While the Court's approach can be criticised on this basis, it does underline the importance it places on ensuring that arbitral awards are reviewable by national courts.
4. Intra-EU arbitration under investment contracts
The above would suggest that since Achmea, commercial arbitration or, more accurately, a closely related form of arbitration, is the sole remaining means of settling intra-EU investment disputes outside of courts of EU Member States.Footnote 88
This section will consider the circumstances under which contract-based arbitration may emerge as a beneficiary of the conflict between EU law and ISDS under investment treaties, and as an effective avenue for investment protection and dispute settlement within the EU. This does not suggest that existing intra-EU investors necessarily have a choice between initiating investment or contract-based arbitral proceedings. Indeed, overlap may be limited in practiceFootnote 89 since recourse to contract-based arbitration obviously requires the existence of a contract. Moreover, there may well be differences between investment and, in particular, commercial arbitration in terms of remedies, including the calculation of damages.Footnote 90
Nevertheless, a hybrid form of arbitration, which is provided for under a contract between an investor from one EU Member State and the government or a public authority of another, could have an investment protection function in compliance with EU law. The hybridity stems from the fact that such a contract would bind both private (investor) and public (State) parties, though under international law, investment contracts are often considered to be purely private in nature.Footnote 91 Without prejudice to such characterisation in international law, for present purposes, it is argued that a State enters into an investment contract in a non-private capacity insofar as investment contracts mandate, condition or restrict its exercise of public powers. Their conclusion may also require special processes, such as parliamentary ratification.
Investment contracts between States and foreign investors are a known basis of investor–State arbitration,Footnote 92 in addition to international treaties and domestic legislation. However, investment treaties have long represented the primary form of investment protection, particularly in Europe.Footnote 93 Substantively, contracts set out terms under which a particular foreign investment is to be made. The inclusion of a provision for arbitration in the event of a dispute upholds the principle of party autonomy, though in a strictly investor–State rather than State–State context, and procedural efficiency. While consent to arbitration is granted contractually, proceedings initiated on this basis are not deprived of their characterisation as ‘investment’ arbitration.Footnote 94 Nevertheless, looking at the main disputes in Achmea, Komstroy and European Food, which clarified the circumstances under which an intra-EU arbitration award may constitute unlawful State aid, the CJEU has only considered investment arbitration under investment treaties. As noted in the Introduction, such arbitration under an investment contract is referred to here as contract-based arbitration.
As explained in Sections 2 and 3, insofar as awards can be properly scrutinised by national courts, the CJEU has never expressed a general reservation against contractual arbitration agreements, even where this would remove disputes relating to the interpretation and application of EU law from national jurisdictions. The PL Holdings judgment appears to have been close to doing so.Footnote 95 The case concerned an investment dispute between a Luxembourg-based investor and Poland. The investor, PL Holdings, initiated proceedings under the applicable intra-EU BIT before a tribunal at the SCC Arbitration Institute. In set-aside proceedings before Swedish courts, Poland challenged, inter alia, the jurisdiction of the tribunal on the ground that the arbitration clause under the intra-EU BIT was incompatible with EU law. PL Holdings argued that, were the BIT clause found to be invalid, there was still a valid ad hoc arbitration agreement with Poland ‘in accordance with Swedish law and the principles of commercial arbitration’: PL Holdings submitted an ‘offer of arbitration’, which Poland ‘tacitly accepted’ by not challenging the tribunal's jurisdiction.Footnote 96 Such an agreement would essentially be contractual in nature. The Court noted that the arbitration clause in the intra-EU BIT in casu was invalid as it was identical to the clause considered in Achmea.Footnote 97 As was ‘confirmed’ in the plurilateral agreement for the termination of intra-EU BITs, such treaty clauses can ‘no longer serve as the basis for arbitration proceedings between an investor and that Member State’.Footnote 98
It is only in the above circumstances that the Court found that an ad hoc agreement such as the one allegedly in place between PL Holdings and Poland would ‘in fact entail a circumvention of the obligations arising for that Member State under the Treaties’.Footnote 99 The Court did not take a position against contractual arbitration agreements between investors and Member States in general. Rather, it closely focused on instances where a party may seek, through contractual agreement, to rescue intra-EU arbitral proceedings from the invalidity of the BIT clause which initially served as the basis of the dispute. The Court noted that:
such an ad hoc arbitration agreement would produce, with regard to the dispute in the context of which it was concluded, the same effects as those resulting from such a [BIT] clause. The fundamental reason for that arbitration agreement is precisely to replace the arbitration clause in a provision such as Article 9 of the [relevant] BIT in order to maintain its effects despite that provision's being invalid.Footnote 100
In other words, PL Holdings aimed at safeguarding the effectiveness of Achmea, not at expanding its scope. The Court was concerned that if such an ad hoc agreement were found to be compatible with EU law as interpreted in Achmea, this ‘legal approach … could be adopted in a multitude of disputes which may concern the application and interpretation of EU law, thus allowing the autonomy of that law to be undermined repeatedly’.Footnote 101 The Court explicitly noted that the ruling does not affect the validity of arbitration agreements included in ‘various types of contract’ concluded by Member States: ‘the interpretation of EU law provided in [PL Holdings] refers only to ad hoc arbitration agreements concluded in circumstances such as those at issue in the main proceedings’, namely where such agreements could ‘replace’ an invalid arbitration clause of an intra-EU investment treaty.Footnote 102
The above must be read in light of the CJEU's distinction between investment treaty arbitration and commercial arbitration, grounded in, first, the different origins of the respective proceedings; and, second, the adequacy of the judicial review to which the respective awards are subject. First, arbitral proceedings under an investment contract would clearly ‘originate in the freely expressed wishes of the parties’ as understood by the CJEU.Footnote 103 The agreement's contractual basis and hybrid private–publicFootnote 104 nature would mean that the principle of mutual trust would not be undermined, as mutual trust applies a priori between Member States inter se, rather than between Member States and private entities.Footnote 105 As an investment contract is inherently more limited in scope than an international treaty between two or more States, a Member State's consent to arbitration would not be ‘systemic’ in the sense understood by Advocate General Szpunar, but would rather be investment-specific.Footnote 106 Indeed, investment contracts can, by their nature, enable Member States to weigh more carefully the regulatory risks stemming from their obligations, at a lower level of abstraction.Footnote 107
Second, to ensure compliance with EU law, arbitral proceedings under an investment contract would need to guarantee a robust role for national courts and the CJEU in reviewing arbitral awards. As discussed in Section 3.2, the process provided for by the ICSID Convention would not be satisfactory in this regard. In light of Eco Swiss, non-ICSID proceedings under an investment contract would be compatible with EU law, as they permit national courts to examine ‘fundamental’ EU law provisions in the course of their review of arbitral awards at annulment and/or enforcement proceedings.Footnote 108
While in PL Holdings the Court did not take a position on arbitration agreements under investor–State contracts as such, Advocate General Kokott explicitly endorsed them, though she arguably encouraged national courts to perform a more intensive review of awards:
individual arbitration agreements between Member States and investors from other Member States concerning the sovereign application of EU law are compatible with the duty of sincere cooperation … and the autonomy of EU law … only if courts of the Member States can comprehensively review the arbitration award for its compatibility with EU law, if necessary after requesting a preliminary ruling under Article 267 TFEU.Footnote 109
In International Skating Union, the Court of Justice also cast the reviewability of arbitral awards as an essential guarantee for the effectiveness of EU law.Footnote 110 While the case did not concern intra-EU awards in particular, proceedings before CAS are relevant to the discussion insofar as they derive from a contract rather than an international treaty. By considering Eco Swiss and Mostaza Claro, on commercial and consumer contract-based arbitral proceedings, the Court questioned the adequacy of the judicial review to which CAS awards are subject.Footnote 111 Indeed, the CJEU alluded to the particular features of the CAS system by referring to relevant recitals in the Commission decision which was the subject of the annulment proceedings:Footnote 112 first, as the CAS is seated in Switzerland, Swiss courts may not refer questions to the CJEU under Article 267 of the TFEU in the course of annulment proceedings;Footnote 113 and, second, CAS awards on eligibility disputes are, in principle, self-enforcing, and courts in the EU will therefore not be able to review their compatibility with EU law in the course of enforcement proceedings.Footnote 114 In a more straightforward manner, in her Opinion in Seraing, Advocate General Ćapeta emphasised the implications of the self-enforcing nature of arbitration under the CAS—though under the International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) Statutes—for the power of national courts to ensure the compliance of awards with EU law.Footnote 115
The above analysis suggests that intra-EU arbitration under an investment contract would in principle (except under the ICSID Convention) be compatible with EU law: not only can tribunals be seated within the EU, but also, crucially, enforcement is likely to be sought within the EU, within the disputing parties’ respective jurisdictions. This would allow national courts to refer questions relating to the interpretation of EU law to the CJEU in the course of both annulment and enforcement proceedings.
A ruling by the Greek Council of State (Symvoulio tis Epikrateias; StE) suggests, however, that this view, grounded in the importance of ensuring effective judicial review of awards, may not be universally held.Footnote 116 The StE heard an appeal concerning the tax liability of the company which developed and operated the Athens International Airport pursuant to a contract concluded between the Greek State and a consortium of German investors.Footnote 117 It considered, inter alia, whether the dispute fell within the exclusive jurisdiction of an arbitral tribunal under the investment contract. The StE had previously found that awards issued on the basis of the same contract have the force of res judicata, though competent national courts can review them to establish that they were not issued ultra vires.Footnote 118 The StE, referring to Achmea and PL Holdings, found that an award issued under an intra-EU contractual arbitration agreement is ultra vires insofar as the investment dispute concerns the interpretation and/or application of EU law, in particular regarding value added tax.Footnote 119 In these circumstances, the tribunal would not have jurisdiction under the investment contract.
However, the foreclosure of intra-EU arbitration based on a contract is neither required nor supported by EU law. Tribunals constituted under the investment contract considered by the StE would follow the Arbitration Rules of the London Court of International Arbitration, which are primarily applied in commercial disputes.Footnote 120 As a result, national courts within the EU would still be able, at the enforcement stage, to review the award ‘for its compatibility with EU law, if necessary after requesting a preliminary ruling under Article 267 TFEU’.Footnote 121 What differentiates the arbitration agreement in this case from arbitration agreements under ordinary commercial contracts is State involvement. However, subject to the requirement of judicial review of awards, the CJEU has never suggested that a dispute which may concern the interpretation or application of EU law cannot be submitted to arbitration. As has been observed by the German Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice):
the treatment of commercial arbitration by the [CJEU] also shows that the question of whether arbitration mechanisms comply with Union law does not (solely) depend on whether courts [or tribunals] that are not part of the judicial system within the meaning of Art. 267 TFEU potentially have to interpret Union law.Footnote 122
From an EU constitutional law perspective, as long as the principle of mutual trust is not undermined, as it is in an intra-EU treaty context, it is immaterial whether contracts are purely private or investor–State.
5. Conclusion
This article has argued that the foreclosure of investment arbitration under intra-EU investment treaties post-Achmea is conducive to the emergence of contract-based investor–State arbitration.Footnote 123 The CJEU case law can, in this sense, further shape both investment protection and the role of arbitration within the EU.
Settled CJEU case law has illustrated the ways in which international commercial and consumer arbitration and related judicial proceedings may generate tension with the jurisdiction of national courts, the principle of mutual trust and the principle of effective judicial protection. This article therefore began by setting out the Court's historical approach regarding contract-based arbitration—an approach characterised by systemic tolerance and, largely, confidence in the EU judicial system to resolve tensions via the process under Article 267 of the TFEU.
The article then analysed how investment-treaty and commercial arbitration have been distinguished from one another with the Achmea, Komstroy and European Food rulings. Commercial arbitration has been considered broadly by the Court: its understanding in these cases, inter alia, drew from consumer arbitration and has since been invoked, in part, in respect of sports arbitration. In particular, the distinction was supported by two enquiries: first, the origin of arbitral proceedings; and, second, the intensity of the judicial review of awards. The first criterion is prima facie convincing: while the proceedings considered in Achmea originated from an international treaty between Member States, the proceedings considered in, say, Eco Swiss, derived from a commercial contract. However, the article disputes the Court's assertion that treaty-based proceedings do not ‘originate in the freely expressed wishes of the parties’ as regards respondent States:Footnote 124 consent can legitimately be granted even if it relates to a wide range of potential disputes.
The second criterion, relating to the judicial review of awards, must be considered in light of the first one. Given the origin of investment treaty arbitration, and the implications thereof for mutual trust, the intensity of judicial review to which awards are subject does not, for the CJEU, suffice in order to ‘ensur[e] the full effectiveness of EU law, even though [intra-EU disputes] might concern the interpretation or application of [EU] law’.Footnote 125 As a general statement, this seems problematic, as both commercial and investment-treaty awards are often subject to the same ‘exceptional’Footnote 126 form of judicial scrutiny during annulment or enforcement proceedings. It is accepted that ICSID awards are largely shielded from judicial review under Articles 52(1) and 54(1) of the ICSID Convention, but this is not the case in relation to awards under the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules and institutional rules, which typically apply to both commercial and investment disputes.
Notwithstanding the above criticism, it is not possible to read Achmea and subsequent CJEU case law as disrupting contract-based arbitration. Indeed, EU law cannot be said generally to preclude an agreement to refer ‘disputes which may concern the application or interpretation of EU law’Footnote 127 to arbitration. Such agreements are permitted subject to the sufficiency of judicial review of awards, and the respect of constitutional conditions such as mutual trust, compliance with which is not disputed in a contractual context.
Thus, it has been argued that intra-EU contract-based arbitration is, correctly, permitted under EU law. Since it would derive from investment contracts concluded by a Member State and an investor from another Member State, rather than from treaties, it would closely follow commercial arbitration as understood by the CJEU. Contract-based arbitration has long been used for the settlement of investment disputes. Its intra-EU emergence post-Achmea would seek to balance, on the one hand, an investor's interest in procedural efficiency and enhanced State guarantees and, on the other, a State's interest in only granting proportionate regulatory or other commitments to specific investors. The CJEU's PL Holdings ruling does not question the above; rather, it merely precludes ad hoc investor–State arbitration agreements concluded in order to evade the consequences stemming from the invalidity of the underlying intra-EU BIT. The judgment of the StE, which found that an award rendered under an intra-EU investment contract was ultra vires in light of Achmea and PL Holdings, is therefore concerning. On this basis, this article cautions against the development of a judicial reflex, whereby the EU legal order becomes ideologically inimical to all forms of intra-EU arbitration. This would not only disregard the specific normative underpinnings of Achmea and the EU's subsequent legal and policy initiatives but would also undermine the coherence of CJEU case law.
Acknowledgements
The author is grateful for the helpful comments received during the review process. All errors remain the author's own.