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Freshfields Risk & Compliance

| 1 minute read

Managing Political and Supply Chain Risks: Are BITs (still) worth the bother?

Over the past several years, we have had the opportunity to speak with many clients about the role bilateral or multilateral investment treaties, BITs for short, can play in mitigating political risk associated with foreign investments. More background on the basics is here.

Of late, it may seem like BITs are in the news for all the wrong reasons:

  • capital-importing states in South America and the EU seeking to cancel BITs;

  • states withdrawing from the World Bank’s investment arbitration institution, ICSID;

  • remodelled treaty texts designed to limit the scope of investor protection;

  • and critiques of the investor-state dispute settlement process under BITs spilling over onto the editorial pages of newspapers such as The Financial Times

Is the era of BITs at an end?

Far from it. And these headlines, significant as they are, should not obscure the fact that BITs remain a key building block of an effective strategy for mitigating political risk -- and that investors continue to recover, whether by voluntary compliance, settlement or judicial enforcement, multi-billion dollar awards against states in meritorious cases.

What these developments do signal is that navigating the investment treaty landscape is becoming ever more complex.

As the world’s pre-eminent treaty arbitration practice – with specialist, multi-lingual teams throughout Freshfields’ global network handling, and winning, investment disputes in virtually every corner of the globe – we are ideally positioned to advise quickly and efficiently both on how you might maximize available investment treaty protection when making or restructuring investments and on whether a given situation affecting investments might give rise to a claim that could be brought in arbitration under an investment treaty.

Tags

investment treaties, political risk