PRACTICE AREA

Investor-State Arbitration

Treaty-based claims between foreign investors and sovereign states — ICSID and UNCITRAL proceedings arising from bilateral investment treaties, free trade agreements, and multilateral instruments.

From claim viability assessment through enforcement of investment awards.

OVERVIEW

Protecting Cross-Border Investments

International investment law provides foreign investors with protections against host state interference through a network of bilateral investment treaties (BITs), free trade agreement investment chapters, and multilateral instruments. When a state expropriates, discriminates, or fails to provide fair and equitable treatment, investors may bring claims directly against the state before international arbitral tribunals.

These proceedings are among the most complex in international law — involving questions of public international law, sovereign immunity, treaty interpretation, and damages quantification. Effective representation requires counsel with deep expertise in both the substantive treaty standards and the procedural frameworks governing investor-state proceedings.

The firm serves both as counsel and, where appropriate, as arbitrator in investor-state matters, with substantial experience in each role, subject to applicable conflicts and independence standards.

ASSESSMENT

Claim Assessment Framework

We evaluate each investor-state claim across five critical dimensions before recommending a course of action.

Jurisdiction & Treaty Coverage

Identification of applicable bilateral investment treaties (BITs), free trade agreement investment chapters, and multilateral instruments. Analysis of consent mechanisms, fork-in-the-road clauses, and waiting periods.

State Conduct

Analysis of host state measures against treaty standards: expropriation (direct and indirect), fair and equitable treatment (FET), full protection and security, non-discrimination, and umbrella clauses.

Investor Nationality & Standing

Assessment of nationality requirements, corporate structuring considerations, denial-of-benefits provisions, and the standing of indirect or minority investors under the applicable treaty.

Damages & Quantum

Development of damages frameworks — fair market value, discounted cash flow, comparable transactions, and sunk costs — in coordination with quantum experts.

Protected Investment

Evaluation of whether the asset qualifies as a 'protected investment' under the treaty — including the Salini criteria, enterprise-based definitions, and asset-based formulations.

METHODOLOGY

Our Approach

A structured methodology for treaty claims — from viability assessment through enforcement.

Claim Viability

  • Treaty mapping and jurisdictional analysis

  • Investor nationality and standing assessment

  • State conduct evaluation against treaty standards

  • Preliminary damages and quantum framework

  • Cost-benefit analysis of arbitration versus alternative remedies

Pre-Filing Strategy

  • Treaty interpretation and amicable consultation requirements

  • Coordination with domestic proceedings and local counsel

  • Evidence preservation and document collection

  • Expert engagement — liability, quantum, and industry

  • Third-party funding assessment (if applicable)

Proceedings & Enforcement

  • Request for arbitration and jurisdictional submissions

  • Memorial advocacy — merits and quantum

  • Oral hearing preparation and witness coordination

  • Post-hearing submissions and costs

  • Annulment, set-aside, and enforcement planning

CLAIMS

Types of Treaty Claims

Treaty protections that may give rise to investor-state claims.

Direct & Indirect Expropriation

Seizure of assets, nationalization, and regulatory measures tantamount to expropriation that substantially deprive the investor of the value of its investment.

Full Protection & Security

Failure to protect the investor's physical and legal security, including against interference by state or non-state actors.

Fair & Equitable Treatment (FET)

Breach of the investor's legitimate expectations, arbitrary conduct, lack of due process, failure to provide a transparent and stable legal framework.

National Treatment & MFN

Discriminatory treatment of foreign investors relative to domestic investors (national treatment) or investors from other treaty states (most-favored-nation).

Denial of Justice

Systemic failures in the host state's judicial system — including undue delay, lack of access to courts, and manifestly unjust judgments — that deny the investor meaningful recourse.

Regulatory Interference

Regulatory changes, permit revocations, or administrative actions that impair the investment without adequate compensation or due process.

FORUMS

Procedural Expertise

Depth across the institutional frameworks governing investor-state proceedings.

ICSID

Proceedings before the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes under the ICSID Convention and Additional Facility Rules. ICSID awards benefit from a self-contained enforcement mechanism enforceable in all contracting states.

Annulment & Set-Aside

Post-award proceedings including ICSID annulment applications under Article 52 and set-aside proceedings in national courts at the seat of arbitration.

UNCITRAL

Investor-state proceedings under UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules — often applicable where the host state is not an ICSID contracting party or where the treaty specifies UNCITRAL as the procedural framework.

Enforcement

Cross-border enforcement of investment awards under the ICSID Convention, the New York Convention, and applicable bilateral and multilateral treaties.

STRATEGY

Strategic Considerations

Dimensions unique to investor-state arbitration that require specialized judgment.

Political & Sovereign Context

Investor-state disputes arise in a sovereign context. We advise on the political dimensions of treaty claims, including the impact of state succession, regime change, and diplomatic considerations on claim strategy.

Enforcement Risks

Enforcement of investment awards may face sovereign immunity defenses and political obstacles. We assess enforcement risks from the outset and design claim strategy to maximize post-award recovery.

Parallel Proceedings

Treaty claims frequently intersect with domestic litigation, regulatory proceedings, and commercial arbitrations. We coordinate across forums to ensure consistency and protect the investor's position.

Third-Party Funding

Where appropriate, we advise on the availability and structure of third-party funding arrangements. We maintain relationships with leading litigation funders and provide independent guidance on funding terms.

EXPERIENCE

Representative Experience

Select anonymized engagements. Descriptions are neutral and do not disclose confidential details. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.

ENERGY

ICSID

Claim arising from regulatory expropriation of energy concession — jurisdictional and merits phases.

Treaty basis: U.S.–Host State BIT

FINANCIAL SERVICES

UNCITRAL

ICSID

FET claim arising from retroactive changes to renewable energy feed-in tariff regime.

Treaty basis: Spain–Host State BIT

MINING

ICSID Additional Facility

Denial of justice and FET claims arising from revocation of mining concessions and judicial interference.

Treaty basis: Bilateral Investment Treaty

TELECOMMUNICATIONS

ICSID

National treatment and FET claims arising from discriminatory regulatory treatment of foreign telecommunications operator.

Treaty basis: Bilateral Investment Treaty

Indirect expropriation claim relating to forced restructuring of financial institution by host state regulator.

Treaty basis: FTA Investment Chapter

INFRASTRUCTURE

UNCITRAL

Expropriation and FET claims relating to termination of public-private partnership in transportation infrastructure.

Treaty basis: Investment Protection Agreement

RENEWABLE ENERGY

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Treaty definitions vary, but most cover a broad range of assets including equity interests, contractual rights, concessions, licenses, and intellectual property. Some treaties adopt the Salini criteria — requiring a contribution, certain duration, assumption of risk, and contribution to the host state's economy. We conduct detailed treaty analysis for each prospective claim.

  • ICSID proceedings typically take 3–5 years from registration to award, including jurisdictional and merits phases. UNCITRAL proceedings may be somewhat faster depending on the procedural timetable. Bifurcation of jurisdiction and merits can add to timelines but may be strategically advantageous.

  • Costs include institutional fees (ICSID registration and lodging fees), tribunal fees, legal fees, expert fees, and hearing costs. Total costs vary significantly depending on complexity but typically range from $2–15M for each side in a substantial case. We provide detailed budgets and phased cost projections.

  • Yes. ICSID awards are directly enforceable in all ICSID contracting states under the ICSID Convention. Non-ICSID awards are enforceable under the New York Convention. Enforcement may face sovereign immunity defenses, requiring careful strategy regarding asset identification and jurisdictional selection.

  • Third-party funders provide capital to cover legal costs and disbursements in exchange for a share of any recovery. Funding can enable meritorious claims that would otherwise be cost-prohibitive. We advise on funder selection, term negotiation, and disclosure obligations under applicable institutional rules.

  • In most cases, yes — subject to the treaty's dispute resolution provisions. Some treaties contain 'fork-in-the-road' clauses requiring the investor to choose between domestic courts and international arbitration. We advise on the coordination of parallel proceedings to protect the investor's options.

  • Not in the same matter. The firm serves as counsel or arbitrator depending on the engagement, with substantial experience in each role, subject to applicable conflicts and independence standards.

The information on this page is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed by use of this website. All engagements are subject to a conflicts check and execution of an engagement letter. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.

Assess Your Treaty Claim

Request a confidential claim assessment regarding an investor-state dispute. All inquiries are subject to a conflicts review.