EVFTA to
introduce new dispute resolution tribunal
Trade disputes between EU and Vietnamese
enterprises will be handled by an intricate international resolution
mechanism once the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement takes effect, giving new
hope to EU firms caught in legal limbo in Vietnam.
The European Commission and Vietnam’s Ministry of Trade
and Industry have agreed on the final text for the EU-Vietnam Free Trade
Agreement (EVFTA), formally concluding the legal review of the document. They
also concluded discussions on an investment protection agreement. It is
expected that the EVFTA will be signed this September and take effect in
early 2019.
Notably, the EVFTA sets up a permanent dispute
resolution system, under which disputes about one of the investment
protection provisions included in the FTA-such as protection against
expropriation without compensation, non-discrimination or fair and equitable
treatment-can be submitted to a standing international and fully independent
investment tribunal system.
The system’s members will be appointed in advance by
the EU and Vietnam, and will be subject to strict requirements of
independence and integrity.
“Cases will be heard by divisions of the tribunal which
will be composed of three members-one from the EU, one from Vietnam, and a
presiding member from a third-party country,” said a recently released guide
to the EVFTA. “Decisions of the tribunal can be appealed at a permanent
appeal tribunal, which will ensure legal correctness and certainty in the
interpretation of the agreement.”
“The usual grounds for non-enforceability of awards
have been included in the grounds for appeal, meaning that a final award must
be enforced and domestic courts cannot put into question the legal validity
of the decisions. This represents an important advantage for European
investors abroad,” the document went on to say.
According to a German firm producing paper and
paper-based products in a northern province of Vietnam, its year-long dispute
with four Vietnamese partners will likely be solved if this international
dispute resolution mechanism takes effect under the EVFTA. “If the dispute is
solved, we may invest more in our factory,” a firm representative told VIR.
“We have invested only slightly more than US$3 million so far.”
The firm was established in April 2008 by Vietnamese
businesspeople. During its operation, the firm imported machinery and
equipment from a German company, which later became a stakeholder.
However, after the stake purchase agreement was signed
and the new joint venture was established in 2010, the German company’s
chairman, who is also the joint-venture company’s chairman and deputy general
director, found out that his Vietnamese partners had made no stake
contributions to the joint venture and filed no legal documents.
Under the Law on Enterprises, all stakeholders have to
introduce all necessary documents on stake purchase within a period of 90
days after the enterprise is established. The firm later wanted to change its
business registration certificate, but was refused because the Vietnamese stakeholders’
capital contribution failed to be specified, and therefore the names of the
Vietnamese stakeholders cannot be removed from the certificate.
“We have brought the case to court, but to no avail.
The issue remains unsolved, and we are not sure when it can be resolved,” the
representative said. “We think the case may be solved by the international
dispute resolution mechanism under the EVFTA.”
An expert from the EU Delegation to Vietnam told VIR
that this special international dispute resolution mechanism “guarantees the
respect of the substantive investment protection rules applicable to European
and Vietnamese investors. The system strikes the right balance between
protecting investors and safeguarding the right to regulate.”
According to European Commissioner for Trade Cecilia
Malmstrom, the EVFTA is “a great opportunity for European exporters” and
“Vietnam is one of the fastest-growing countries in Southeast Asia, a market
with significant potential for the EU’s agricultural, industrial, and services
exports.”
The EVFTA will eliminate over 99% of tariffs between
the partners. Vietnam will liberalise 65% of import duties on EU exports to
the country at entry into force, with the remainder of duties being gradually
eliminated over a 10-year period. The EU will liberalise tariffs over a
seven-year period.
Vietnam has become the EU’s second-biggest trading
partner in ASEAN, with the trade turnover of nearly US$55.9 billion last
year.
VIR
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Thứ Ba, 17 tháng 7, 2018
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