Professor Steve Peers,
University of Essex
Introduction and
overview
A key part of the ‘Brexit deal’ –
officially known as the EU/UK Trade
and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) – is the issue of dispute
settlement. This blog post is a detailed annotation of the treaty’s dispute settlement
rules. I have also provided this summary of the blog post at the outset. (The blog post was also updated on April 29 2021 to refer also to the final Article numbers of the TCA)
This blog post is the fourth in
the series of analyses of the TCA – following on from my overview
of the TCA, Professor Tamara Hervey’s analysis
of the social security provisions, and my analysis of the links between the TCA
and human
rights. (Update: a later blog post covers environment and climate change)
As a reminder, the TCA is a
separate treaty from the withdrawal agreement, which continues to apply between
the UK and the EU. The withdrawal agreement has its own rules on dispute
settlement, which I discussed in a detailed annotation here.
I have used them as a point of comparison for the TCA dispute settlement rules.
(As we’ll see, there’s also a link between the two treaties: a failure to
comply with a ruling relating to the withdrawal agreement can lead to
retaliation under the TCA).
Like the withdrawal agreement
dispute settlement rules, the TCA rules have the same basic structure as WTO
dispute settlement. I’ve explored that comparison in more detail in the blog
post on withdrawal agreement dispute settlement, but the basic idea is that if
the parties have a complaint, they first of all enter into consultations. If
the consultations don’t lead to agreement, either side can trigger arbitration.
If the arbitrators rule that one side has breached the agreement, in principle
that side has to comply with the ruling within a reasonable period. If it
doesn’t comply by the deadline, the winning side can invoke proportionate
retaliation against the losing side by withdrawing benefits under the
agreement. If the losing side later complies with the ruling, the winning side
has to stop suspending those benefits. If there’s a dispute about whether the
losing side has fully complied with the ruling, or whether the retaliation by
the winning side was proportionate, or what is a reasonable time to comply with
the ruling, the arbitrators can decide that too.
Unlike the WTO system, there’s no
appeal body under either the withdrawal agreement or the TCA (this is the part
of the WTO system that’s been blocked by Trump; the EU and several other WTO
Members – apparently not including the UK yet – have devised a ‘work-around’
the Trump block, and it remains to be seen if the incoming Biden administration
continues Trump’s approach).
One key point of difference
between the withdrawal agreement and TCA as regards dispute settlement is the
role of the CJEU. In the withdrawal agreement, the CJEU had its usual
jurisdiction regarding the UK during the transition period. Now that period has
ended, the dispute settlement rules start to apply, but the CJEU still retains
some limited jurisdiction. Moreover, dispute settlement and the CJEU are linked
– because the dispute settlement arbitrators have to ask the CJEU questions
about the interpretation of EU law in the event that a dispute which reaches
them concerns a ‘concept or provision’ of EU law.
The TCA, on the other hand,
provides for CJEU jurisdiction only as regards UK participation in EU
programmes – and that’s it. The TCA arbitrators don’t need to ask the CJEU any
questions about EU law, because there’s no other direct reference to EU law in
the TCA. (It is, however, possible that the CJEU will be involved with disputes
concerning the TCA on the EU side – but its rulings won’t bind the UK,
except as regards participation in EU programmes).
A second key point of difference is the
complexity of the main dispute settlement system. Leaving aside the overlap
with CJEU jurisdiction and links to the CJEU, the withdrawal agreement provides
for a single dispute settlement system with no variations or exclusions. The
TCA, on the other hand, provides for multiple variations upon the dispute
settlement system and exclusions from its scope – including some entirely
different forms of dispute settlement for certain issues.
Some of these special rules are
set out in the text of the dispute settlement rules, annotated in this blog
post, and some of them appear separately in the TCA. For the latter, I have
added two additional annexes which examine the details of those rules – which
concern the ‘level playing field’ and fisheries. I have not examined the
separate dispute settlement rules on criminal law, because they provide for a
purely political form of dispute settlement, with no recourse to arbitration.
In practice, on the one hand, the
EU prefers to avoid formally using dispute settlement systems set up under its
FTAs with non-EU countries; but on the other hand, it makes frequent use of the
WTO dispute settlement system, as both ‘plaintiff’ and ‘defendant’. It remains
to be seen whether the EU/UK relationship resembles the informal political
dispute settlement process that characterises EU FTAs, or the more litigious environment
that exemplifies the EU’s WTO membership.
Lawyers (and law professors) might salivate at the prospect of the
latter, but international relations specialists might argue that the former is
more stable – pointing to the Trump saga by way of example.
Annex I: the general dispute settlement rules
PART SIX: DISPUTE SETTLEMENT AND
HORIZONTAL PROVISIONS
TITLE I: DISPUTE SETTLEMENT
Chapter 1: General provisions
Article 734 (ex-INST.9): Objective
The objective of this Title is to
establish an effective and efficient mechanism for avoiding and settling
disputes between the Parties concerning the interpretation and application of
this Agreement and supplementing agreements, with a view to reaching, where
possible, a mutually agreed solution.
Note: this is similar, but not quite identical, to the purpose of the
withdrawal agreement dispute settlement provisions (see Article 167 of that
agreement).
Article 735 (ex-INST.10): Scope
1. This Title applies, subject to
paragraphs 2, 3, 4 and 5, to disputes between the Parties concerning the
interpretation and application of the provisions of this Agreement or of any
supplementing agreement (“covered provisions”).
2. The covered provisions shall
include all provisions of this Agreement and of any supplementing agreement
with the exception of:
(a) Article 32(1) to (6) and Article 36 (ex-paragraphs 1 to 6 of Article
GOODS.17 [Trade remedies] and Article GOODS.21 [Cultural property] of Title I
of Heading One Part Two);
(b) Annex 12 (ex-TBT-X [Medicinal
products]);
(c) Title VII [Small and medium
sized enterprises] of Heading one of Part Two;
(d) Title X [Good regulatory
practices and regulatory cooperation] of Heading One of Part Two;
(e) Article 355(1), (2) and (4) (ex-paragraphs 1, 2 and 4 of Article LPFS.1.1 [Principles and objectives]) Article 356(1) and (3) (ex-paragraphs 1 and 3 of Article LPFS.1.2 [Right to regulate, precautionary approach and scientific and technical information] of Chapter 1 [General provisions]), Chapter 2 of Title XI of Heading One of Part Two [Competition policy], Articles 371 and 372 (ex-LPFS.3.9 [Independent authority or body and cooperation] and LPFS.3.10 [Courts and tribunals] of Chapter 2 [Subsidy control]), Chapter 5 of Title XI of Heading One of Part Two [Taxation - Level Playing Field] , and Article 411(4) to (9) (ex-paragraphs 4 to 9 of Article LPFS.9.4 [Rebalancing] of Chapter 9 [Horizontal and institutional provisions] of Title XI [Level playing field for open and fair competition and sustainable development] of Heading One of Part Two);
(f) Part Three [Law enforcement
and judicial cooperation in criminal matters], including when applying in
relation to situations governed by other provisions of this Agreement;
(g) Part Four [Thematic
cooperation];
(h) Title II [Basis for
cooperation] of Part Six [Dispute settlement and horizontal provisions];
(i) Article 782 (ex-FINPROV.10A [Interim
provision for transmission of personal data to the United Kingdom] of Part
Seven); and
(j) the Agreement on security
procedures for exchanging and protecting classified information;
3. The Partnership Council may be
seized by a Party with a view to resolving a dispute with respect to
obligations arising from the provisions referred to in paragraph 2.
4. Article 736 (ex-INST.11 [Exclusivity]) shall apply to the provisions referred to in paragraph 2.
5. Notwithstanding paragraphs 1
and 2, this Title shall not apply with respect to disputes concerning the
interpretation and application of the provisions of the Protocol on Social
Security Coordination or its annexes in individual cases.
Note: there is no equivalent provision in the withdrawal agreement, as
it has a single set of dispute settlement provisions (leaving aside the overlap
with the CJEU’s remaining jurisdiction in that agreement).
The first exclusion relates to the bulk of the provision on trade
remedies – ie anti-dumping law, anti-subsidy rules and economic safeguards,
where there is a cross-reference to WTO law (so WTO dispute settlement would be
available instead). However, note that the TCA also has its own rules on two of
these issues (subsidies and safeguards), which are subject to TCA dispute
settlement, albeit with some different rules in the case of subsidies.
It also excludes the provisions on cultural goods from dispute
settlement. Note that these rules only apply to cultural goods taken after 1993
– so would not, for instance, apply to the Parthenon marbles. There is no
alternative dispute settlement process here.
The second exclusion concerns the annex on medical products (which was
actually Annex TBT-2, not TBT-X, in the previous numbering). There is no alternative dispute settlement
process there.
The third exclusion concerns the rather vague rules on small and
medium-sized business in the trade heading. There is no alternative dispute
settlement process here either.
The fourth exclusion concerns the somewhat more concrete title on
regulatory cooperation, which also forms part of the trade heading. Again,
there is no alternative dispute settlement process.
The fifth exclusion concerns various aspects of the level playing field
(LPF) rules: some introductory rules, competition law, some parts of the
subsidies rules, taxation, and the ‘future review’ part of the rebalancing
clause on future divergences on labour, environmental and subsidies law. This
means that the rest of the dispute settlement clauses apply in principle to the
LPF clauses – but note that there are variations from the normal dispute
settlement rules for those LPF issues either in the dispute settlement part of
the treaty or in the LPF part of the treaty, discussed below and in Annex II.
For the LPF issues excluded entirely from the dispute settlement rules, there
is no alternative dispute settlement process.
The sixth exclusion is the whole of part Three of the agreement, on
criminal law. This Part has its own dispute settlement rules, which are
essentially political.
The seventh exclusion is the whole of part Four of the agreement, on
health security and ‘cyber’ issues. It does not have its own dispute settlement
rules.
The eighth exclusion is the list of issues on which the EU/UK
relationship is based. However, the process
for addressing some of the
issues concerned – described as ‘essential elements’ of the relationship – is not excluded from the dispute
settlement rules.
The ninth exclusion is the short-term transition period – lasting only
a maximum of six months – in which EU data protection law still applies to the
UK while the EU Commission considers adopting an ‘adequacy decision’.
Finally, the tenth exclusion relates to the separate UK/EU treaty on
the exchange
of classified information, which provides for settlement of disputes via
consultations (Article 18). There is no express reference to the separate UK/Euratom
treaty: note that it has its own simplified form of dispute settlement,
including possible recourse to arbitration (Article 21).
Note that political
dispute settlement is still possible as regards these excluded issues (para 3).
Moreover, the parties cannot settle their disputes about these excluded
provisions in any other dispute settlement system outside the scope of the TCA
(para 4): they are limited to discussing these disputes in the Partnership
Council or using the alternative dispute settlement rules that exist in the
treaty itself (regarding criminal law, for instance).
A different form of exclusion applies as regards social security (para
5). The social security rules as such are not outside the scope of dispute
settlement; but the dispute settlement system cannot be used to resolve
‘individual cases’.
Note that, as discussed below, it is not possible to retaliate for a
breach of (for instance) the trade provisions as regards any of the areas
excluded from the scope of the dispute settlement rules.
Article 736 (ex-INST.11): Exclusivity
The Parties undertake not to
submit a dispute between them regarding the interpretation or application of
provisions of this Agreement or of any supplementing agreement to a mechanism
of settlement other than those provided for in this Agreement.
Note: the wording is slightly different, but this is essentially the
same rule as found in Article 168 of the withdrawal agreement.
Article 737 (ex-INST.12): Choice of forum
in case of a substantially equivalent obligation under another international
agreement
1. If a dispute arises regarding
a measure allegedly in breach of an obligation under this Agreement or any
supplementing agreement and of a substantially equivalent obligation under
another international agreement to which both Parties are party, including the
WTO Agreement, the Party seeking redress shall select the forum in which to
settle the dispute.
2. Once a Party has selected the
forum and initiated dispute settlement procedures either under this Title or
under another international agreement, that Party shall not initiate such
procedures under the other international agreement with respect to the
particular measure referred to in paragraph 1, unless the forum selected first
fails to make findings for procedural or jurisdictional reasons.
3. For the purposes of this
Article:
(a) dispute settlement procedures
under this Title are deemed to be initiated by a Party's request for the
establishment of an arbitration tribunal under Article 739 (ex-INST.14 [Arbitration
procedures]);
(b) dispute settlement procedures
under the WTO Agreement are deemed to be initiated by a Party’s request for the
establishment of a panel under Article 6 of the Understanding on Rules and
Procedure Governing the Settlement of Disputes of the WTO; and
(c) dispute settlement procedures
under any other agreement are deemed to be initiated if they are initiated in
accordance with the relevant provisions of that agreement.
4. Without prejudice to paragraph
2, nothing in this Agreement or any supplementing agreement shall preclude a
Party from suspending obligations authorised by the Dispute Settlement Body of
the WTO or authorised under the dispute settlement procedures of another
international agreement to which the Parties are party. The WTO Agreement or
any other international agreement between the Parties shall not be invoked to
preclude a Party from suspending obligations under this Title.
Note: there is no equivalent provision in the withdrawal agreement, and
it is not explicit whether this provision applies to disputes which might fall
within the scope of both the withdrawal agreement and the TCA (relating to
goods trade or State aid as regards the earlier treaty’s Northern Ireland
protocol, for instance). At first sight, the withdrawal agreement is ‘another
international agreement to which both Parties are party’. However, since there
is a link anyway between the withdrawal agreement dispute settlement system and
retaliation on the basis of the TCA, as discussed further below, the
distinction may not matter that much in practice.
Para 1 gives the party seeking a remedy the option of which dispute
settlement system to use in the event of overlapping arguments under multiple
treaties. To avoid infringing the exclusivity clause, a party which invoked a
system other than the TCA would have to take care that it explicitly makes its
arguments in that other dispute settlement system without referring to the TCA.
The WTO is expressly envisaged as one example of an overlapping system, but the
wording is not exhaustive (‘including’). The most obvious example of an
overlapping argument would be cases where the trade in goods provisions of the
TCA expressly incorporate a WTO provision.
Para 2 prevents the complaining party from bringing multiple
proceedings under different systems: once it has made its choice of forum, it
must stick with it. That party can, however, bring a multiple complaint if the
first forum it chose refuses to rule on the merits of its complaints. Para 3
defines how this rule applies. Presumably this prevents not only multiple
proceedings brought roughly simultaneously, but also an attempt to bring a
complaint to Forum B after Forum A has rejected the essentially identical
complaint on the merits.
Para 4 means that the existence of the TCA does not stand in the way of
either side suspending its obligations after using the WTO dispute settlement
process or another treaty (such as the replacement agreement for the WTO
appellate body – if the UK joins the EU as a party to it). This is equally true
in reverse: the WTO dispute settlement process does not stand in the way of
either side suspending its obligations pursuant to the TCA dispute settlement
rules.
Chapter 2: Procedure
Article 738 (ex-INST.13): Consultations
1. If a Party (“the complaining
Party”) considers that the other Party (“the respondent Party”) has breached an
obligation under this Agreement or under any supplementing agreement, the
Parties shall endeavour to resolve the matter by entering into consultations in
good faith, with the aim of reaching a mutually agreed solution.
2. The complaining Party may seek
consultations by means of a written request delivered to the respondent Party.
The complaining Party shall specify in its written request the reasons for the
request, including the identification of the measures at issue and the legal
basis for the request, and the covered provisions it considers applicable.
3. The respondent Party shall
reply to the request promptly, and in any case no later than 10 days after the
date of its delivery. Consultations shall be held within 30 days of the date of
delivery of the request in person or by any other means of communication agreed
by the Parties. If held in person, consultations shall take place in the
territory of the respondent Party, unless the Parties agree otherwise.
4. The consultations shall be
deemed concluded within 30 days of the date of delivery of the request, unless
the Parties agree to continue consultations.
5. Consultations on matters of
urgency, including those regarding perishable goods or seasonal goods or
services, shall be held within 20 days of the date of delivery of the request.
The consultations shall be deemed concluded within those 20 days unless the
Parties agree to continue consultations.
6. Each Party shall provide
sufficient factual information to allow a complete examination of the measure
at issue, including an examination of how that measure could affect the
application of this Agreement or any supplementing agreement. Each Party shall
endeavour to ensure the participation of personnel of their competent
authorities who have expertise in the matter subject to the consultations.
7. For any dispute concerning an
area other than Titles I to VII, Chapter 4 [Energy and raw materials] of
Title VIII, Titles IX to XII of Heading One or Heading Six of Part Two, at the
request of the complaining Party, the consultations referred to in paragraph 3
of this Article shall be held in the framework of a Specialised Committee or of
the Partnership Council. The Specialised Committee may at any time decide to
refer the matter to the Partnership Council. The Partnership Council may also
seize itself of the matter. The Specialised Committee, or, as the case may be,
the Partnership Council, may resolve the dispute by a decision. The time
periods referred to in paragraph 3 of this Article shall apply. The venue of
meetings shall be governed by the rules of procedure of the Specialised
Committee or, as the case may be, the Partnership Council.
8. Consultations, and in
particular all information designated as confidential and positions taken by
the Parties during consultations, shall be confidential, and shall be without
prejudice to the rights of either Party in any further proceedings.
Note: para 1 is very similar to Article 169 of the withdrawal agreement.
The following paras are, however, far more detailed than the withdrawal
agreement. The time period for consultations (deemed to be concluded after 30
days, or 20 days in urgent cases, unless the Parties agree to continue them) is
shorter than under Article 170 of the withdrawal agreement, which provides for
three months of talks before arbitration can be triggered unilaterally.
Article 739 (ex-INST.14): Arbitration
procedure
1. The complaining Party may
request the establishment of an arbitration tribunal if:
(a) the respondent Party does not
respond to the request for consultations within 10 days of the date of its
delivery;
(b) consultations are not held
within the time periods referred to in Article 738(3), (4) or (5) (ex-INST.13(3), (4) or (5)
[Consultations]);
(c) the Parties agree not to have
consultations; or
(d) consultations have been
concluded without a mutually agreed solution having been reached.
2. The request for the
establishment of the arbitration tribunal shall be made by means of a written
request delivered to the respondent Party. In its request, the complaining
Party shall explicitly identify the measure at issue and explain how that
measure constitutes a breach of the covered provisions in a manner sufficient
to present the legal basis for the complaint clearly.
Note: as noted above, the time frames for triggering arbitration (ie,
the cross-references in para 1) are shorter than the three months under the
withdrawal agreement. Para 2 is similar, but not identical, to part of Article
170(1) of the withdrawal agreement. One difference (which cuts across the whole
TCA dispute settlement process) is that the TCA, unlike the withdrawal
agreement, makes no provision for the logistical support of the Permanent Court
of Arbitration in the Hague.
Article 740 (ex-INST.15): Establishment of
an arbitration tribunal
1. An arbitration tribunal shall
be composed of three arbitrators.
2. No later than 10 days after
the date of delivery of the request for the establishment of an arbitration
tribunal, the Parties shall consult with a view to agreeing on the composition
of the arbitration tribunal.
3. If the Parties do not agree on
the composition of the arbitration tribunal within the time period provided for
in paragraph 2, each Party shall appoint an arbitrator from the sub-list for that
Party established pursuant to Article 752 (ex-INST.27 [Lists of arbitrators]) no later
than five days after the expiry of the time period provided for in paragraph 2
of this Article. If a Party fails to appoint an arbitrator from its sub-list
within that time period, the co-chair of the Partnership Council from the
complaining Party shall select, no later than five days after the expiry of
that time period, an arbitrator by lot from the sub-list of the Party that has
failed to appoint an arbitrator. The co-chair of the Partnership Council from
the complaining Party may delegate such selection by lot of the arbitrator.
4. If the Parties do not agree on
the chairperson of the arbitration tribunal within the time period provided for
in paragraph 2 of this Article, the co-chair of the Partnership Council from
the complaining Party shall select, no later than five days after the expiry of
that time period, the chairperson of the arbitration tribunal by lot from the
sub-list of chairpersons established pursuant to Article 752 (ex-INST.27 [Lists of
arbitrators]). The co-chair of the Partnership Council from the complaining
Party may delegate such selection by lot of the chairperson of the arbitration
tribunal.
5. Should any of the lists
provided for in Article 752 (ex-INST.27 [Lists of arbitrators]) not be established or
not contain sufficient names at the time a selection is made pursuant to
paragraphs 3 or 4 of this Article, the arbitrators shall be selected by lot
from the individuals who have been formally proposed by one Party or both
Parties in accordance with Annex 48 (ex-INST-X [Rules of procedure]).
6. The date of establishment of
the arbitration tribunal shall be the date on which the last of the three
arbitrators has notified to the Parties the acceptance of his or her
appointment in accordance with Annex 48.
Note: Three arbitrators will serve on a TCA arbitration tribunal,
compared to five under the withdrawal agreement (para 1, compared to Article
171(3) of the withdrawal agreement). The withdrawal agreement provides for a
panel to be set up within 15 days (Article 171(4) of the withdrawal agreement),
rather than consultation within 10 days under the TCA (para 2). The TCA then
provides for a process of setting up the tribunal quickly if the parties don’t
agree on its members (paras 3 and 4). Under the TCA, the default if the list of
arbitrators has not yet been decided is to take names from the proposed list by
one or both parties (para 5). It is not clear what happens if one party tries
to frustrate the process by not proposing any candidates: does this block the
arbitration process because there must always be a member from each party, or
does the arbitration go ahead with a second member from the other
party? That prospect would certainly be a deterrent to trying to block the
process.
Note that the default under the withdrawal agreement is to involve the Permanent
Court of Arbitration in selecting the arbitrators, if the parties cannot agree
or do not suggest arbitrators (Article 171(5) to (9) of the withdrawal
agreement). In practice, the list of arbitrators for that agreement has now
been adopted by a Joint
Committee decision.
There are fast-track rules derogating from this clause in certain
cases: see Article 760 (ex-INST.34B), discussed below.
Article 741 (ex-INST.16): Requirements for
arbitrators
1. All arbitrators shall:
(a) have demonstrated expertise
in law and international trade, including on specific matters covered by Titles
I to VII, Chapter 4 [Energy and raw materials] of Title VIII, Titles IX to
XII of Heading One [Trade] of Part Two or Heading Six [Other provisions] of
Part Two, or in law and any other matter covered by this Agreement or by any
supplementing agreement and, in the case of a chairperson, also have experience
in dispute settlement procedures;
(b) not be affiliated with or
take instructions from either Party;
(c) serve in their individual
capacities and not take instructions from any organisation or government with
regard to matters related to the dispute; and
(d) comply with Annex 49 (ex-INST-X
[Code of Conduct]).
2. All arbitrators shall be
persons whose independence is beyond doubt, who possess the qualifications
required for appointment to high judicial office in their respective countries
or who are jurisconsults of recognised competence.
3. In view of the subject-matter
of a particular dispute, the Parties may agree to derogate from the
requirements listed in point (a) of paragraph 1.
Note: this Article is similar, but not identical to, Article 171(2) of
the withdrawal agreement, which referred more generally to expertise in EU law
and public international law. See also Article 181(1) of the withdrawal agreement,
on requirements for independence.
Article 742 (ex-INST.17): Functions of the
arbitration tribunal
The arbitration tribunal:
(a) shall make an objective
assessment of the matter before it, including an objective assessment of the
facts of the case and the applicability of, and conformity of the measures at
issue with, the covered provisions;
(b) shall set out, in its
decisions and rulings, the findings of facts and law and the rationale behind
any findings that it makes; and
(c) should consult regularly with
the Parties and provide adequate opportunities for the development of a
mutually agreed solution.
Article 743 (ex-INST.18): Terms of
reference
1. Unless the Parties agree
otherwise no later than five days after the date of the establishment of the
arbitration tribunal, the terms of reference of the arbitration tribunal shall
be:
"to examine, in the light of
the relevant covered provisions of this Agreement or of a supplementing
agreement, the matter referred to in the request for the establishment of the
arbitration tribunal, to decide on the conformity of the measure at issue with
the provisions referred to in Article 735 (ex-INST.10 [Scope]) and to issue a ruling in
accordance with Article 745 (ex-INST.20 [Ruling of the arbitration tribunal])".
2. If the Parties agree on terms
of reference other than those referred to in paragraph 1, they shall notify the
agreed terms of reference to the arbitration tribunal within the time period
referred to in paragraph 1.
Article 744 (ex-INST.19): Urgent
proceedings
1. If a Party so requests, the
arbitration tribunal shall decide, no later than 10 days after the date of its
establishment, whether the case concerns matters of urgency.
2. In cases of urgency, the
applicable time periods set out in Article 745 (ex-INST.20 [Ruling of the Arbitration
Tribunal]) shall be half the time prescribed therein.
Note: this compares to Article 173 of the withdrawal agreement, in
which the usual deadline of 12 months for a ruling is cut to 6 months for
urgent cases. Under the TCA, the final deadline of 160 days is cut to 80 days
for urgent cases. The tribunal has 10 days to decide on whether the case is
urgent (the withdrawal agreement provides for 15 days for this).
Article 745 (ex-INST.20): Ruling of the arbitration
tribunal
1. The arbitration tribunal shall
deliver an interim report to the Parties within 100 days after the date of
establishment of the arbitration tribunal. If the arbitration tribunal
considers that this deadline cannot be met, the chairperson of the arbitration
tribunal shall notify the Parties in writing, stating the reasons for the delay
and the date on which the arbitration tribunal plans to deliver its interim
report. The arbitration tribunal shall not deliver its interim report later
than 130 days after the date of establishment of the arbitration tribunal under
any circumstances.
2. Each Party may deliver to the
arbitration tribunal a written request to review precise aspects of the interim
report within 14 days of its delivery. A Party may comment on the other Party's
request within six days of the delivery of the request.
3. If no written request to
review precise aspects of the interim report is delivered within the time
period referred to in paragraph 2, the interim report shall become the ruling
of the arbitration tribunal.
4. The arbitration tribunal shall
deliver its ruling to the Parties within 130 days of the date of establishment
of the arbitration tribunal. When the arbitration tribunal considers that that
deadline cannot be met, its chairperson shall notify the Parties in writing,
stating the reasons for the delay and the date on which the arbitration
tribunal plans to deliver its ruling. The arbitration tribunal shall not
deliver its ruling later than 160 days after the date of establishment of the
arbitration tribunal under any circumstances.
5. The ruling shall include a
discussion of any written request by the Parties on the interim report and
clearly address the comments of the Parties.
6. For greater certainty, a
‘ruling’ or ‘rulings’ as referred to in Articles 742, 743 and 753 (ex-INST.17 [Functions of the arbitration
tribunal], INST.18 [Terms of reference], INST.28 [Replacement of arbitrators]) and Article 754 (ex-INST.29) (1), (3), (4) and (6) [Arbitration tribunal rulings and
decisions] shall be understood to refer also to the interim report of the
arbitration tribunal.
Note: as noted above, this compares to Article 173 of the withdrawal
agreement, which has a usual deadline of 12 months for a ruling. Under the TCA,
the final deadline is 160 days. Unlike the withdrawal agreement, the TCA
process includes circulation of an interim ruling which the parties can comment
on.
There are fast-track rules derogating from this clause in certain
cases: see Article 760 (ex-INST 34B), discussed below.
Chapter 3: Compliance
Article 746 (ex-INST.21): Compliance
measures
1. If, in its ruling referred to
in Article 745(4) (ex-INST.20(1) [Ruling of the arbitration tribunal]), the arbitration
tribunal finds that the respondent Party has breached an obligation under this
Agreement or under any supplementing agreement, that Party shall take the
necessary measures to comply immediately with the ruling of the arbitration
tribunal in order to bring itself in compliance with the covered provisions.
2. The respondent Party, no later
than 30 days after delivery of the ruling, shall deliver a notification to the
complaining Party of the measures which it has taken or which it envisages to
take in order to comply.
Note: this is similar to the obligation to comply with an arbitration
ruling set out in Article 175 of the withdrawal agreement.
Article 747 (ex-INST.22): Reasonable
Period of Time
1. If immediate compliance is not
possible, the respondent Party, no later than 30 days after delivery of the
ruling referred to in Article 745(4) (ex-INST.20(1) [Ruling of the arbitration tribunal]),
shall deliver a notification to the complaining Party of the length of the
reasonable period of time it will require for compliance with the ruling
referred to in Article 745(4). The
Parties shall endeavour to agree on the length of the reasonable period of time
to comply.
2. If the Parties have not agreed
on the length of the reasonable period of time, the complaining Party may, at
the earliest 20 days after the delivery of the notification referred to in
paragraph 1, request in writing that the original arbitration tribunal
determines the length of the reasonable period of time. The arbitration
tribunal shall deliver its decision to the Parties within 20 days of the date
of delivery of the request.
3. The respondent Party shall
deliver a written notification of its progress in complying with the ruling
referred to in Article 745(4) to the
complaining Party at least one month before the expiry of the reasonable period
of time.
4. The Parties may agree to
extend the reasonable period of time.
Note: this is nearly identical in substance to Article 176 of the
withdrawal agreement, except the process is speeded up. The 30-day period for
the losing party to indicate how long it thinks it will need to comply matches
the withdrawal agreement (para 1; Article 176(1) of the withdrawal agreement).
Unlike the withdrawal agreement, there is a minimum period of 20 days for the
winning party to dispute the losing party’s proposed timetable (para 2; Article
176(2) of the withdrawal agreement sets a 40-day maximum). Arbitration on this
issue is quicker than under the withdrawal agreement (20 days under para 2; 40
or 60 days under Article 176(2) and (3) of the withdrawal agreement). The rule
on the losing party notifying how it is getting on with compliance one month
before the deadline is the same in both treaties (para 3; Article 176(4) of the
withdrawal agreement). Both treaties allow for joint agreement to extend the
reasonable period of time (para 4; Article 176(5) of the withdrawal agreement).
Article 748 (ex-INST.23): Compliance
Review
1. The respondent Party shall, no later than the date of expiry of the reasonable period of time, deliver a notification to the complaining Party of any measure that it has taken to comply with the ruling referred to in Article 745(4) (ex-INST.20(1) [Ruling of the arbitration tribunal]).
2. When the Parties disagree on
the existence of, or the consistency with the covered provisions of, any
measure taken to comply, the complaining Party may deliver a request, which
shall be in writing, to the original arbitration tribunal to decide on the
matter. The request shall identify any measure at issue and explain how that
measure constitutes a breach of the covered provisions in a manner sufficient
to present the legal basis for the complaint clearly. The arbitration tribunal
shall deliver its decision to the Parties within 45 days of the date of
delivery of the request.
Note: this is essentially identical to Article 177 of the withdrawal
agreement, except that the time period for arbitrators to rule on whether the
losing party has complied with the ruling is 45 days under the TCA, whereas it
is 90 days under the withdrawal agreement.
There are fast-track rules derogating from this clause in certain
cases: see Article INST 34B, discussed below.
Article 749 (ex-INST.24): Temporary
Remedies
1. The respondent Party shall, at
the request of and after consultations with the complaining Party, present an
offer for temporary compensation if:
(a) the respondent Party delivers a notification to the complaining Party that it is not possible to comply with the ruling referred to in Article 745(4) (ex-INST.20(1) [Ruling of the arbitration tribunal]); or
(b) the respondent Party fails to
deliver a notification of any measure taken to comply within the deadline
referred to in Article 746 (ex-INST.21 [Compliance Measures]) or before the date of
expiry of the reasonable period of time; or
(c) the arbitration tribunal
finds that no measure taken to comply exists or that the measure taken to
comply is inconsistent with the covered provisions.
2. In any of the conditions
referred to in points (a), (b) and (c) of paragraph 1, the complaining Party
may deliver a written notification to the respondent Party that it intends to
suspend the application of obligations under the covered provisions if:
(a) the complaining Party decides
not to make a request under paragraph 1; or
(b) the Parties do not agree on
the temporary compensation within 20 days after the expiry of the reasonable
period of time or the delivery of the arbitration tribunal decision under
Article 748 (ex-INST.23 [Compliance Review]) if a request under paragraph 1 is made. The
notification shall specify the level of intended suspension of obligations.
3. Suspension of obligations
shall be subject to the following conditions:
(a) Obligations under Heading
Four [Social security coordination and visas for short-term visits]of Part Two,
the Protocol on Social Security Coordination or its annexes or Part Five [Union
programmes] may not be suspended under this Article;
(b) By derogation from point (a), obligations under Part Five [Union programmes] may be suspended only where the ruling referred to in Article 745(4) (ex-INST.20(1) [Ruling of the arbitration tribunal] )concerns the interpretation and implementation of Part Five [Union programmes];
(c) Obligations outside Part Five [Union programmes] may not be suspended where the ruling referred to in Article 745(4) concerns the interpretation and implementation of Part Five [Union programmes]; and
(d) Obligations under Title II
[Services and Investment] of Heading One of Part Two in respect of financial
services may not be suspended under this Article, unless the ruling referred to
in Article 745(4) concerns the
interpretation and application of obligations under Title II [Services and
Investment] of Heading One of Part Two in respect of financial services.
4. Where a Party persists in not
complying with a ruling of an arbitration panel established under an earlier
agreement concluded between the Parties, the other Party may suspend
obligations under the covered provisions referred to in Article 735 (ex-INST.10
[Scope]). With the exception of the rule in point (a) of paragraph 3, all rules
relating to temporary remedies in case of non-compliance and to review of any
such measures shall be governed by the earlier agreement.
5. The suspension of obligations
shall not exceed the level equivalent to the nullification or impairment caused
by the violation.
6. If the arbitration tribunal
has found the violation in Heading One [Trade] or Heading Three [Road] of Part
Two, the suspension may be applied in another Title of the same Heading as that
in which the tribunal has found the violation, in particular if the complaining
party is of the view that such suspension is effective in inducing compliance.
7. If the arbitration tribunal
has found the violation in Heading Two [Aviation]:
(a) the complaining party should
first seek to suspend obligations in the same Title as that in which the
arbitration tribunal has found the violation;
(b) if the complaining party
considers that it is not practicable or effective to suspend obligations with
respect to the same Title as that in which the tribunal has found the
violation, it may seek to suspend obligations in the other Title under the same
Heading.
8. If the arbitration tribunal
has found the violation in Heading One [Trade], Heading Two [Aviation], Heading
Three [Road] or Heading Five [Fisheries] of Part Two, and if the complaining
party considers that it is not practicable or effective to suspend obligations
within the same Heading as that in which the arbitration tribunal has found the
violation, and that the circumstances are serious enough, it may seek to
suspend obligations under other covered provisions.
9. In the case of point (b) of
paragraph 7 and paragraph 8, the complaining Party shall state the reasons for
its decision.
10. The complaining Party may
suspend the obligations 10 days after the date of delivery of the notification
referred to in paragraph 2 unless the respondent Party made a request under
paragraph 11.
11. If the respondent Party
considers that the notified level of suspension of obligations exceeds the
level equivalent to the nullification or impairment caused by the violation or
that the principles and procedures set forth in point (b) of paragraph 7,
paragraph 8 or paragraph 9 have not been followed, it may deliver a written
request to the original arbitration tribunal before the expiry of the 10 day
period set out in paragraph 10 to decide on the matter. The arbitration
tribunal shall deliver its decision on the level of the suspension of
obligations to the Parties within 30 days of the date of the request.
Obligations shall not be suspended until the arbitration tribunal has delivered
its decision. The suspension of obligations shall be consistent with that
decision.
12. The arbitration tribunal
acting pursuant to paragraph 11 shall not examine the nature of the obligations
to be suspended but shall determine whether the level of such suspension
exceeds the level equivalent to the nullification or impairment caused by the
violation. However, if the matter referred to arbitration includes a claim that
the principles and procedures set forth in point (b) of paragraph 7, paragraph
8 or paragraph 9 have not been followed, the arbitration tribunal shall examine
that claim. In the event the arbitration tribunal determines that those
principles and procedures have not been followed, the complaining party shall
apply them consistently with point (b) of paragraph 7, paragraph 8 and
paragraph 9. The parties shall accept the arbitration tribunal's decision as
final and shall not seek a second arbitration procedure. This paragraph shall
under no circumstances delay the date as of which the complaining Party is
entitled to suspend obligations under this Article.
13. The suspension of obligations
or the compensation referred to in this Article shall be temporary and shall
not be applied after:
(a) the Parties have reached a
mutually agreed solution pursuant to Article 756 (ex-INST.31 [Mutually agreed
solution]);
(b) the Parties have agreed that
the measure taken to comply brings the respondent Party into compliance with
the covered provisions; or
(c) any measure taken to comply
which the arbitration tribunal has found to be inconsistent with the covered
provisions has been withdrawn or amended so as to bring the respondent Party
into compliance with those covered provisions.
Note: Unlike the withdrawal agreement (Article 178(1)), there is no
prospect of imposing fines upon a losing party that has not complied with its
obligation to comply with a ruling within a reasonable period of time. Instead,
the only remedy, in the absence of agreed compensation (para 1), is suspension
of obligations under the TCA, ie retaliation, which is also a possibility under
certain circumstances under the withdrawal agreement (Article 178(2)). This
difference means that the retaliation can occur more quickly under the TCA than
under the withdrawal agreement.
The TCA also has more complex limits on retaliation than under the
withdrawal agreement – which only prohibits retaliation as regards citizens’
rights (Article 178(2)(a)). First of all, retaliation can only take place as
regards the ‘covered provisions’ of the TCA (para 2) – which means that it can
only apply to the parts of the TCA covered by the main dispute settlement rules
(see the definition of ‘covered provisions’ in Article INST.10, discussed
above). For instance, this means that a breach of the treaty regarding trade
cannot lead to suspension of the provisions regarding criminal law, because the
latter are not part of the ‘covered provisions’.
Secondly, the provisions on social security and visas and on EU
programmes cannot be suspended (para 3(a)). (This is, in a way, consistent with
the withdrawal agreement exclusion of retaliatin on citizens’ rights, which
also means that no retaliation is possible regarding social security under the
withdrawal agreement).
However, participation in EU programmes can be suspended if the dispute concerns the issue of EU
programmes (para 3(b)), and conversely retaliation where the dispute concerns
EU programmes can only
concern EU programmes (ie, not on trade) (para 3(c)). In other words, as far as
retaliation is concerned, the provisions on EU programmes are self-contained.
Thirdly (and similarly), financial services obligations cannot be
suspended unless the arbitration ruling concerns financial services (para
3(d)). It should, however, be recalled that the TCA has limited provisions on
financial services.
Next, if there is a breach of the TCA as regards trade or road
transport, retaliation can occur in another title of the same heading of the economic
part of the treaty, ‘in particular if the complaining party is of the view that
such suspension is effective in inducing compliance’ (para 6). This is a
non-exhaustive test, and it is apparently up to the winning party to determine
how to apply it. This means, for instance that a breach relating to trade in
goods or the level playing field can be sanctioned by retaliation as regards
services, digital trade, capital, intellectual property, public procurement, or
energy (subject to some special rules on the level playing field discussed
below, and some parts of the rules on trade not being ‘covered provisions’ for
dispute settlement). For road transport, this means that there can be
cross-retaliation between goods and passenger transport.
A similar rule applies to breaches regarding air transport (para 7):
the winning party ‘should first seek’ to apply retaliation in the same title
(the two titles are air transport and aviation safety), but may ‘seek’ to
cross-retaliate against the other aviation title if it ‘considers that it is
not practicable or effective to suspend obligations with respect to the same
Title’.
Also, where the breach concerns trade, aviation, road transport or fisheries, the winning party
can cross-retaliate as regards any
covered provisions, ‘if the complaining party considers that it is not
practicable or effective to suspend obligations within the same Heading as that
in which the arbitration tribunal has found the violation, and that the
circumstances are serious enough’ (para 8). Presumably the limits on
cross-retaliation set out in para 3 continue to apply.
More broadly there is also a proportionality rule: ‘The suspension of
obligations shall not exceed the level equivalent to the nullification or
impairment caused by the violation.’ (para 5). Note that in the specific
contexts of subsidies and fisheries, there are more detailed rules on this
issue: see Article INST.34C, discussed below.
The retaliation then goes ahead unless the losing party objects that
the proportionality rule is infringed by the severity of the retaliation, or
that the ‘principles and procedures’ relating to cross-retaliation have not
been followed (para 11), within ten days after the winning party’s notification
of its intention to retaliate. This is similar to the possible review of
proportionality of retaliation under the withdrawal agreement (Article 178(3),
which also sets a ten-day deadline to object). Under both treaties, the request
to review the retaliation has suspensive effect. As usual, the TCA provides for
a shorter deadline for the arbitrators to rule on this than under the withdrawal
agreement (30 days, compared to 60 days).
Under the TCA, the arbitrators can rule on whether the retaliation is
excessive, whereas under the withdrawal agreement they rule on proportionality;
it is not clear whether that actually means a different legal test. Also under
the TCA, the winning party must adjust its planned retaliation if the
arbitrators rule that it would be breaching the cross-retaliation rules (para
12). But note that the wording of the cross-retaliation rules includes a degree
of discretion for the winning party; it is not clear whether the arbitrators
will undertake a review of the exercise of this discretion. Remember that if
the winning party is prevented from cross-retaliation by the arbitrators, it
can always retaliate in a different way instead.
Under both the TCA and the withdrawal agreement, retaliation is
‘temporary’ until the original ruling of breach is complied with or the parties
have otherwise agreed to settle the issue (para 13; compared to Article 178(5)
of the withdrawal agreement). But there is no actual time limit so in practice
‘temporary’ could mean a long time.
Finally, note that para 4 provides for retaliation under the covered
provisions of the TCA in the event of a breach of an ‘earlier agreement’. This
can only refer to the withdrawal agreement, and indeed Article 178(2)(b) of
that agreement foresaw this possibility. In practical terms, this means that
breaches of the withdrawal agreement (in the event of non-compliance with
arbitration rulings under that agreement within a reasonable time) can be
sanctioned by imposing trade or other sanctions under the TCA – making the
withdrawal agreement potentially easier to enforce indirectly (on the
assumption that retaliation, or the prospect of it, has an impact on whether a
party breaches the treaty, or keeps breaching it).
The details of that retaliation, and any review of it, are otherwise
addressed in the withdrawal agreement – except that the rule against
retaliating as regards social security and visa rules in the TCA also applies
as regards breaches of the withdrawal agreement.
Fun fact: since dispute settlement rulings under the withdrawal
agreement may have been based on the CJEU’s interpretation of EU law (see
Article 174 of the withdrawal agreement), it is implicitly possible that a CJEU
ruling could ultimately (but only in these specific circumstances) be the basis
of trade or other retaliation under the TCA.
Article 750 (ex-INST.25): Review of any
measure taken to comply after the adoption of temporary remedies
1. The respondent Party shall
deliver a notification to the complaining Party of any measure it has taken to
comply following the suspension of obligations or following the application of
temporary compensation, as the case may be. With the exception of cases under
paragraph 2, the complaining Party shall terminate the suspension of
obligations within 30 days from the delivery of the notification. In cases
where compensation has been applied, with the exception of cases under
paragraph 2, the respondent Party may terminate the application of such
compensation within 30 days from the delivery of its notification that it has
complied.
2. If the Parties do not reach an
agreement on whether the notified measure brings the respondent Party into
compliance with the covered provisions within 30 days of the date of delivery
of the notification, the complaining Party shall deliver a written request to
the original arbitration tribunal to decide on the matter. The arbitration
tribunal shall deliver its decision to the Parties within 46 days of the date
of the delivery of the request. If the arbitration tribunal finds that the
measure taken to comply is in conformity with the covered provisions, the
suspension of obligations or compensation, as the case may be, shall be terminated.
When relevant, the level of suspension of obligations or of compensation shall
be adjusted in light of the arbitration tribunal decision.
Note: This clause provides for the arbitrators to decide whether the
losing party, having been subject to retaliation, has subsequently complied
with its obligations. If it has, then the retaliation has to end. It is similar
to Article 179 of the withdrawal agreement. The difference is, as usual, that
the TCA provides for shorter time periods: 30 days (instead of 45) to request the
arbitrators to review the measure taken to comply with the ruling, and 46 days
(instead of 75) for the arbitrators to rule on the issue.
Chapter 4: Common procedural
provisions
Article 751 (ex-INST.26): Receipt of
information
1. On request of a Party, or on
its own initiative, the arbitration tribunal may seek from the Parties relevant
information it considers necessary and appropriate. The Parties shall respond
promptly and fully to any request by the arbitration tribunal for such
information.
2. On request of a Party, or on
its own initiative, the arbitration tribunal may seek from any source any
information it considers appropriate. The arbitration tribunal may also seek
the opinion of experts as it considers appropriate and subject to any terms and
conditions agreed by the Parties, where applicable.
3. The arbitration tribunal shall
consider amicus curiae submissions from natural persons of a Party or legal
persons established in a Party in accordance with Annex 48 (ex-INST-X [Rules of
Procedure]).
4. Any information obtained by
the arbitration tribunal under this Article shall be made available to the
Parties and the Parties may submit comments on that information to the
arbitration tribunal.
Note: there is no equivalent clause in the withdrawal agreement. The
TCA is potentially open to hear arguments from third parties and experts,
although third parties are not parties to proceedings as such.
Article 752 (ex-INST.27): Lists of
arbitrators
1. The Partnership Council shall,
no later than 180 days after the date of entry into force of this Agreement,
establish a list of individuals with expertise in specific sectors covered by
this Agreement or its supplementing agreements who are willing and able to
serve as members of an arbitration tribunal. The list shall comprise at least
15 persons and shall be composed of three sub-lists:
(a) one sub-list of individuals
established on the basis of proposals by the Union;
(b) one sub-list of individuals
established on the basis of proposals by the United Kingdom; and
(c) one sub-list of individuals
who are not nationals of either Party who shall serve as chairperson to the
arbitration tribunal. Each sub-list shall include at least five individuals.
The Partnership Council shall ensure that the list is always maintained at this
minimum number of individuals.
2. The Partnership Council may
establish additional lists of individuals with expertise in specific sectors
covered by this Agreement or by any supplementing agreement. Subject to the
agreement of the Parties, such additional lists may be used to compose the
arbitration tribunal in accordance with the procedure set out in Article 740 (ex-INST.15) (3) and (5) [Establishment of an arbitration tribunal]. Additional lists
shall be composed of two sub-lists:
(a) one sub-list of individuals
established on the basis of proposals by the Union; and
(b) one sub-list of individuals
established on the basis of proposals by the United Kingdom.
3. The lists referred to in
paragraphs 1 and 2 shall not comprise persons who are members, officials or
other servants of the Union institutions, of the Government of a Member State,
or of the Government of the United Kingdom.
Note: the process of appointing arbitrators is comparable to Article
171(1) of the withdrawal agreement, although under the TCA the list of
arbitrators is shorter and there are possibly specialised arbitrators. The
deadline for the Partnership Council to adopt the list is late June; there are
no provisions for what happens if a dispute is lodged in the meantime.
Article 753 (ex-INST.28): Replacement of
arbitrators
If during dispute settlement
procedures under this Title, an arbitrator is unable to participate, withdraws,
or needs to be replaced because that arbitrator does not comply with the
requirements of the Code of Conduct, the procedure set out in Article 740 (ex-INST.15
[Establishment of the arbitration tribunal]) shall apply. The time period for
the delivery of the ruling or decision shall be extended for the time necessary
for the appointment of the new arbitrator.
Article 754 (ex-INST.29): Arbitration
tribunal decisions and rulings
1. The deliberations of the
arbitration tribunal shall be kept confidential. The arbitration tribunal shall
make every effort to draft rulings and take decisions by consensus. If this is
not possible, the arbitration tribunal shall decide the matter by majority
vote. In no case shall separate opinions of arbitrators be disclosed.
2. The decisions and rulings of
the arbitration tribunal shall be binding on the Union and on the United
Kingdom. They shall not create any rights or obligations with respect to
natural or legal persons.
3. Decisions and rulings of the
arbitration tribunal cannot add to or diminish the rights and obligations of
the Parties under this Agreement or under any supplementing agreement.
4. For greater certainty, the
arbitration tribunal shall have no jurisdiction to determine the legality of a
measure alleged to constitute a breach of this Agreement or of any
supplementing agreement, under the domestic law of a Party. No finding made by
the arbitration tribunal when ruling on a dispute between the Parties shall
bind the domestic courts or tribunals of either Party as to the meaning to be
given to the domestic law of that Party.
5 (ex-4A). For greater certainty, the
courts of each Party shall have no jurisdiction in the resolution of disputes
between the Parties under this Agreement.
6 (ex-5). Each Party shall make the
rulings and decisions of the arbitration tribunal publicly available, subject
to the protection of confidential information.
7 (ex-6). The information submitted by
the Parties to the arbitration tribunal shall be treated in accordance with the
confidentiality rules laid down in Annex 48 (ex-ANNEX-INST-X [Rules of procedure]).
Note: the provisions in paras 1, 2, and 6 – majority voting, no
dissenting opinions, binding effect, rulings published – are very similar to
Article 180 of the withdrawal agreement. However, the express statement that
the rulings create no rights or obligations for individuals is new, as are the
provisions in paras 3, 4 and 5: no ‘judicial activism’ by arbitrators, no
impact on domestic law or domestic courts, no jurisdiction of the parties’
courts to resolve resolution of disputes between the parties. This is a
strongly ‘dualist’ approach to the dispute settlement process – binding at international
level, but not in domestic law – which reflects the UK side’s approach to
sovereignty (although note that the CJEU also rejects the domestic effect of
WTO dispute settlement rulings within the EU legal order).
Article 755 (ex-INST.30): Suspension and
termination of the arbitration proceedings
At the request of both Parties,
the arbitration tribunal shall suspend its work at any time for a period agreed
by the Parties and not exceeding 12 consecutive months. The arbitration
tribunal shall resume its work before the end of the suspension period at the
written request of both Parties, or at the end of the suspension period at the
written request of either Party. The requesting Party shall deliver a
notification to the other Party accordingly. If a Party does not request the
resumption of the arbitration tribunal’s work at the expiry of the suspension
period, the authority of the arbitration tribunal shall lapse and the dispute
settlement procedure shall be terminated. In the event of a suspension of the
work of the arbitration tribunal, the relevant time periods shall be extended
by the same time period for which the work of the arbitration tribunal was
suspended.
Note: the strict time deadlines for arbitration can be suspended for up
to 12 months if both sides agree, presumably to allow an opportunity to
negotiate a diplomatic solution to a dispute instead. If the arbitrators resume
their work, the clock starts ticking on the deadlines again.
Article 756 (ex-INST.31): Mutually agreed
solution
1. The Parties may at any time reach a mutually agreed solution with respect to any dispute referred to in Article 735 (ex-INST.10 [Scope]).
2. If a mutually agreed solution is reached
during panel proceedings, the Parties shall jointly notify the agreed solution
to the chairperson of the arbitration tribunal. Upon such notification, the
arbitration proceedings shall be terminated.
3. The solution may be adopted by
means of a decision of the Partnership Council. Mutually agreed solutions shall
be made publicly available. The version disclosed to the public shall not
contain any information either Party has designated as confidential.
4. Each Party shall take the
measures necessary to implement the mutually agreed solution within the agreed
time period.
5. No later than the date of
expiry of the agreed time period, the implementing Party shall inform the other
Party in writing of any measures thus taken to implement the mutually agreed
solution.
Note: similarly to the previous provision, the TCA allows for a
compromise settlement of a dispute. The withdrawal agreement alludes to this
too, but does not go into detail on the process.
Article 757 (ex-INST.32): Time Periods
1. All time periods laid down in
this Title shall be counted in days from the day following the act to which
they refer.
2. Any time period referred to in
this Title may be modified by mutual agreement of the Parties.
3. The arbitration tribunal may
at any time propose to the Parties to modify any time period referred to in
this Title, stating the reasons for the proposal.
Note: the strict deadlines are not as strict as they first appear, as
the parties have the power to amend them (if both sides agree). This is on top
of the possibility to suspend the process, as discussed above.
Article 758 (ex-INST.34): Costs
1. Each Party shall bear its own
expenses derived from the participation in the arbitration tribunal procedure.
2. The Parties shall share jointly and equally
the expenses derived from organisational matters, including the remuneration
and expenses of the members of the arbitration tribunal. The remuneration of
the arbitrators shall be in accordance with Annex 48 (ex-INST-ANNEX-X [Rules of procedure]).
Note: costs are not awarded to the winning party; rather, each side
bears its own costs regardless of the outcome.
Article 759 (ex-INST.34A): Annexes
1. Dispute settlement procedures
set out in this Title shall be governed by the rules of procedure set out in Annex 48 (ex-ANNEX INST-X [Rules of Procedure]) and conducted in accordance with Annex 49 (ex-ANNEX
INST-X [Code of Conduct]).
2. The Partnership Council may
amend Annexes 48 and 49. .
Note: the withdrawal agreement also has provisions on the rules of
procedure and code of conduct for arbitration, which can likewise be amended by
the Joint Committee (Articles 172 and 181 of the agreement).
Chapter 5: Specific arrangements
for unilateral measures
Article 760 (ex-INST.34B): Special
procedures for remedial measures and rebalancing
1. For the purposes of Article 374 and Article 411(2) and (3) (ex-3.12 [Remedial measures] of Chapter 3 [Subsidy control] and Article 9.4(2) and
(3) [Rebalancing] of Chapter 9 [Institutional provisions] of Title XI [Level
playing field for open and fair competition and sustainable development] of
Heading One of Part Two), this Title applies with the modifications set out in
this Article.
2. By derogation from Article 740 (ex-INST.15 [Establishment of an arbitration tribunal]) and Annex 48 (ex-INST-X [Rules of
procedure for dispute settlement]), if the Parties do not agree on the
composition of the arbitration tribunal within two days, the co-chair of the Partnership
Council from the complaining Party shall select, no later than one day after
the expiry of the two-day time period, an arbitrator by lot from the sub-list
of each Party and the chairperson of the arbitration tribunal by lot from the
sub-list of chairpersons established pursuant to Article 752 (ex-INST.27 [Lists of
arbitrators]). The co-chair of the Partnership Council from the complaining Party
may delegate such selection by lot of the arbitrator or chairperson. Each
individual shall confirm his or her availability to both Parties within two
days from the date on which he or she was informed of his or her appointment.
The organisational meeting referred to in Rule 10 of Annex 48 shall take place within 2 days from the
establishment of the arbitration tribunal.
3. By derogation from Rule 11 of
Annex 48 the complaining Party
shall deliver its written submission no later than seven days after the date of
establishment of the arbitration tribunal. The respondent Party shall deliver
its written submission no later than seven days after the date of delivery of
the written submission of the complaining Party. The arbitration tribunal shall
adjust any other relevant time periods of the dispute settlement procedure as
necessary to ensure the timely delivery of the report.
4. Article 745 (ex-INST.20 [Ruling of the
arbitration tribunal]) does not apply and references to the ruling in this Title
shall be read as references to the ruling referred to in Article 374(10 or point (c) or Article 411(3) (ex-(a) paragraph 10 of
Article 3.12 [Remedial measures] of Chapter 3 [Subsidy control] of Title XI
[Level playing field for open and fair competition and sustainable
development]; or (b) point (c) of Article 9.4(3) [Rebalancing]).
5. By derogation from Article 748(2) (ex-INST.23(2) [Compliance review]), the arbitration tribunal shall deliver its
decision to the Parties within 30 days from the date of delivery of the
request.
Note: disputes about subsidies and ‘rebalancing’ (divergences in future
labour, environment or subsidies legislation) are subject to special fast-track
rules. To summarise what these cross-references mean: there are two days to
decide on the composition of the tribunal (rather than ten days). There are
quicker rules to serve submissions (seven days rather than 20 days). The usual
deadline of 160 days to deliver a ruling is cut to 30 days. Finally, if compliance with a ruling is
disputed before retaliation can be authorised, the tribunal must rule within 30
days (rather than 45 days). There are further special rules on subsidies and
rebalancing, discussed in Annex II.
Article 761 (ex-INST.34C): Suspension of
obligations for the purposes of Article 374(12), Article 501(5) and Article 506(7) (ex-LPFS.3.12(12), Article FISH.9(5) and
Article FISH.14(7))
1. The level of suspension of
obligations shall not exceed the level equivalent to the nullification or
impairment of benefits under this Agreement or under a supplementing agreement
that is directly caused by the remedial measures from the date the remedial
measures enter into effect until the date of the delivery of the arbitration
ruling.
2. The level of suspension of
obligations requested by the complaining Party and the determination of the
level of suspension of obligations by the arbitration tribunal shall be based
on facts demonstrating that the nullification or impairment arises directly
from the application of the remedial measure and affects specific goods,
service suppliers, investors or other economic actors and not merely on
allegation, conjecture or remote possibility.
3. The level of nullified or
impaired benefits requested by the complaining Party or determined by the
arbitration tribunal:
(a) shall not include punitive
damages, interest or hypothetical losses of profits or business opportunities;
(b) shall be reduced by any prior
refunds of duties, indemnification of damages or other forms of compensation
already received by the concerned operators or the concerned Party; and
(c) shall not include the
contribution to the nullification or impairment by wilful or negligent action
or omission of the concerned Party or any person or entity in relation to whom
remedies are sought pursuant to the intended suspension of obligations.
Note: this provision sets out detailed rules to calculate how much
damage has been suffered for the purposes of retaliation as regards fisheries
and subsidies disputes. There are further special rules on subsidies and
rebalancing, discussed in Annex II.
Article 762 (ex-INST.34D): Conditions for
rebalancing, remedial, compensatory and safeguard measures
Where a Party takes a measure under Articles 374, Article 411, Article 469, Article 501, Article 506 or Article 773 (ex-Article 3.12 [Remedial measures] of Chapter three [Subsidy control] or Article 9.4 [Rebalancing] of Chapter nine [Institutional provisions] of Title XI [Level playing field for open and fair competition and sustainable development] of Heading One [Trade], Article ROAD.11 [Remedial measures] of Heading Three [Road transport], Article FISH.9 [Compensatory measures in case of withdrawal or reduction of access] or Article FISH.14 [Remedial measures and dispute resolution] of Heading Five of Part Two or Article INST.36 [Safeguards] of Title III of Part Six), that measure shall only be applied in respect of covered provisions within the meaning of Article 735 (ex-INST.10 [Scope]) and shall comply, mutatis mutandis, with the conditions set out in Article 749(3) (ex-INST.24(3) [Temporary remedies]).
Note: this provision clarifies that various forms of retaliation – as
regards subsidies, rebalancing, road transport and fisheries (as well as
economic safeguards) – can only applied to the ‘covered provisions’ within the scope
of the general dispute settlement rules, and are also subject to the various
limits on cross-retaliation discussed above. There are further special rules on
subsidies and rebalancing, discussed in Annex II.
Annex II: Dispute settlement and LPF
As noted above, for some aspects
of the ‘level playing field’, the usual dispute settlement rules are fully excluded (some of the
general rules; competition; some of the subsidy rules; taxation). Some LPF aspects are fully subject to the usual rules: Article 355(2) (ex-1.2(2)) of the LPF
rules (precautionary approach), and the rules on state-owned bodies (chapter 4).
Other LPF aspects are subject to a modified
version of the usual rules, as set out in Article 760 (ex-INST.34B), discussed
above. And other LPF aspects are subject to a various modified dispute settlement rules set
out in the LPF provisions themselves; this will not be obvious to
those who read only the dispute settlement rules. So the following sets out
those special LPF rules.
One special set of LPF rules
apply to:
-
Article Article 355(3) (ex-1.1(3)) of the LPF rules, which states:
“3. Each Party reaffirms its ambition of achieving economy-wide climate
neutrality by 2050”;
-
the rules on labour and environmental standards in
chapters 6 and 7 (including, but not only, the non-regression rule); and
-
the ‘sustainable development’ rules in chapter 8,
which concern not only environmental but also some labour standards.
These special rules consist first
of all of a special consultation procedure (Article 408, ex-9.1, of the LPF provisions).
Then there is a special panel of experts (Article 409, ex-9.2, of the LPF provisions),
in place of arbitrators. However, some of the dispute settlement rules are
‘switched back on’ as regards these experts, namely (para 19):
Except as
otherwise provided for in this Article, Article 739(1), Article 740 and Articles 753 to 758, as well as Annexes 48 and 49 (ex-INST.14(1) [Arbitration
procedure], Article INST.29 [Arbitration tribunal decisions and rulings],
Article INST.30 [Suspension and termination of the arbitration proceedings],
Article INST.31 [Mutually agreed solution], Article INST.32 [Time periods], Article
INST.34 [Costs], Article INST.15 [Establishment of an arbitration tribunal], or
Article INST.28 [Replacement of arbitrators] as well as ANNEX INST [Rules of
Procedure for Dispute Settlement] and ANNEX INST-X [Code of Conduct for
Arbitrators]), shall apply mutatis mutandis.
This is where disputes on the
first and fourth issues listed above (on climate change and sustainable
development) end. However, disputes on the labour and environmental chapters
(which in practice will cross over with the climate change and sustainable
development provisions) are subject to additional dispute settlement rules
(Article 410, ex-9.3, of the LPF provisions):
2. For the
purposes of such disputes, in addition to the Articles listed in Article 409(19) (ex-9.2(19) [Panel of experts]), Article 749 and 750 (ex-INST.24 [Temporary remedies] and Article
INST.25 [Review of any measure taken to comply after the adoption of temporary
remedies]) shall apply mutatis mutandis.
Thus, there is the possibility of
retaliation where a panel report rules there is a breach of the non-regression
clause, or other aspects of the labour and environment chapters. As with the
usual cases of retaliation, there is also a review of whether the losing party
ultimately has complied with the panel report, in which case the retaliation
has to be ended.
The next special set of LPF rules
applies to subsidies. The dispute settlement system cannot rule on subsidies in
individual cases (except in certain circumstances), or on the recovery of
subsidies in individual cases. This limit is not spelled out in Article 735 (ex-INST.10) (unlike the similar limit relating to social security disputes), but is instead
set out in Article 375(2) (ex-3.13) of the LPF provisions:
2. An
arbitration tribunal shall have no jurisdiction regarding:
(a) an
individual subsidy, including whether such a subsidy has respected the
principles set out in Article 366(1) (ex-paragraph 1 of Article 3.4 [Principles]), other than with
regard to the conditions set out in Article 367(2), Article 367(3), (4) and (5), Article 367(8) to (11) and Article 367(12) (ex-3.5(2) [Unlimited state
guarantees], (3) to (5) [Rescue and restructuring], (8) to (11) [Export subsidies]
and (12) [Subsidies contingent upon the use of domestic content]); and
(b) whether
the recovery remedy within the meaning of Article 373 (ex-3.11 [Recovery]) has been
correctly applied in any individual case.
Another set of special rules is
set out in the subsidies LPF clauses (but again, is not reflected in the main
dispute settlement rules). If a subsidy has allegedly caused a ‘significant negative
effect on trade or investment’ (or there is a ‘serious risk’ that it may do so),
the complaining party, following consultations, can retaliate without prior approval by the
arbitrators (Article 374, ex-3.12, of the LPF clauses). However, this retaliation can
then be challenged on a fast-track basis, although the arbitrators can only
examine its compatibility with some of the rules in the subsidies section (para
9, Article 374). This challenge must be brought within five days, and has no
suspensive effect; further consultation is not necessary. There are also
special rules expressly allowing ‘return retaliation’ if the arbitrators rule
that the initial retaliation is in breach of the rules, but it has not been
rescinded. ‘Double retaliation’ on the basis of both the subsidies and rebalancing clauses is ruled out.
Yet another set of modified
dispute settlement rules applies as regards ‘rebalancing’ (divergences in
future labour, environment or subsidies legislation). ‘If material impacts on
trade or investment between the Parties are arising as a result of significant
divergences’ in these areas, proportionate ‘rebalancing’ retaliation can be
imposed (Article 411, ex-9.4, of the LPF rules). The TCA provides that ‘assessment of
these impacts shall be based on reliable evidence and not merely on conjecture
or remote possibility.’
The intended retaliation must be
notified to the other side. Consultations then take place for 14 days, rather
than 30 under the usual rules. In the absence of an agreement, the rebalancing
retaliation can be imposed; notice that there is no prior requirement that
arbitrators find a breach of the TCA, with a reasonable time to comply, before
this retaliation can take place. However, within five days the other side can
ask arbitrators to rule on whether the retaliation is consistent with the TCA’s
rules on rebalancing, summarised above. The arbitrators must rule within 30
days. If they rule against the retaliation, it must be discontinued; if it is
not, ‘return retaliation’ is expressly possible. In addition to this, there are
some additional special rules set out in Article 760, ex-INST.34B, above, on composition
of the tribunal, serving of submissions, and time periods for rulings.
Annex III: Dispute settlement and Fisheries
Dispute settlement and fisheries
is subject first of all to the special rules in Article 501, ex-FISH.9, on compensatory
measures for withdrawal of access to waters. The basic rule is set out in para
1:
1. Following a
notification by a Party (“host Party”) under Article 500(5) (ex-FISH.8(5)[Access to
waters]), the other Party (“fishing Party”) may take compensatory measures
commensurate to the economic and societal impact of the change in the level and
conditions of access to waters. Such impact shall be measured on the basis of
reliable evidence and not merely on conjecture and remote possibility. Giving
priority to those compensatory measures which will least disturb the
functioning of this Agreement, the fishing Party may suspend, in whole or in
part, access to its waters and the preferential tariff treatment granted to
fishery products under Article 21 (ex-GOODS.5[Prohibition and customs duties]).
Note that the retaliation
concerns both access to waters and tariffs on fish, and is subject to a
proportionality rule. Para 2 is a rule on timing, and para 3 is a rule on
arbitration:
3. After the
notification of the compensatory measures in accordance with paragraph 2, the
host Party may request the establishment of an arbitration tribunal pursuant to
Article 739 (ex-INST.14 [Arbitration procedure] of Title I [Dispute settlement] of Part
Six), without having recourse to consultations in accordance with Article 738 (ex-INST.13 [Consultations]). The arbitration tribunal may only review the
conformity of the compensatory measures with paragraph 1. The arbitration
tribunal shall treat the issue as a case of urgency for the purpose of Article 744 (ex-INST.19 [Urgent proceedings] of Title I [Dispute settlement] of Part Six).
Note that consultations are
skipped, the proceedings are urgent (see discussion above), and the arbitrators
are limited to assessing whether the sanctions are consistent with the limits
in para 1.
Furthermore, if the ‘fishing
Party’ (most likely the EU) loses this case, the ‘host Party’ (most likely the
UK) can expressly impose ‘return retaliation’ against the retaliation measures
taken by the fishing Party, subject to proportionality, if the inconsistency is
‘significant’, subject to the arbitrators agreeing:
5. Following a
finding against the fishing Party in the procedure referred to in paragraph 3,
the host Party may request the arbitration tribunal, within 30 days from its
ruling, to determine a level of suspension of obligations under this Agreement
not exceeding the level equivalent to the nullification or impairment caused by
the application of the compensatory measures, if it finds that the
inconsistency of the compensatory measures with paragraph 1 is significant. The
request shall propose a level of suspension in accordance with the principles
set out in paragraph 1 and any relevant principles set out in Article 761 (ex-INST.34C
[Suspension of obligations for the purposes of LPFS.3.12(12), Article FISH.9(5)
and Article FISH.14(7)]). The host Party may apply the level of suspension of
obligations under this Agreement in accordance with the level of suspension
determined by the arbitration tribunal, no sooner than 15 days following such
ruling.
Note the cross-reference back to
Article 761, ex-INST.34C, discussed above, which includes a specific rule on
calculation of the amount of the permitted return retaliation.
Secondly, dispute settlement on
fisheries is subject to a special rule in Article 506, ex-FISH.14, which refers to
breaches of the fisheries rules in general. The complaining party may, after
giving notice (para 1):
(a) suspend,
in whole or in part, access to its waters and the preferential tariff treatment
granted to fishery products under Article 21 (ex-GOODS.5[Prohibition of customs
duties]); and
(b) if it
considers that the suspension referred to in point (a) is not commensurate to
the economic and societal impact of the alleged failure, it may suspend, in
whole or in part, the preferential tariff treatment of other goods under
Article 21; and
(c) if it
considers that the suspension referred to in points (a) and (b) is not
commensurate to the economic and societal impact of the alleged failure, it may
suspend, in whole or in part, obligations under Heading One [Trade] of Part Two
[Economic Partnership] with the exception of Title XI [Level Playing Field for
open and fair competition and sustainable development]. If Heading One [Trade]
is suspended in whole, Heading Three [Road Transport] is also suspended.
There is a special rule if the
dispute concerns fisheries as regards the Channel Islands or Isle of Man (para
2).
Any retaliation ‘shall be
proportionate to the alleged failure by the respondent Party and the economic
and societal impact thereof’ (para 3). A complaining party is obliged to enter
into brief consultations (para 4), and to trigger the dispute settlement
process within 14 days (para 5); the arbitrators must rule urgently. If the
arbitrators rule against the complaining party’s retaliation, it must cease (para
6). Again, return retaliation is expressly allowed (para 7), subject to
arbitration, with a cross-reference to the rules on calculation of damage in
Article 761, ex-INST.34C.
Given the relative size of the
fisheries industry, it is presumably unlikely (to say the least) that
arbitrators would find the suspension of all of the trade and road transport
provisions of the TCA was a proportionate reaction to the breach of the
fisheries provisions.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 27
Photo credit: Adrian Jack Bunsby,
via Wikimedia
commons
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete