Total v. Argentina
Total v. Argentina
Total v. Argentina
Washington, D.C.
Total S.A.
v.
Argentine Republic
Decision on Liability
Mr. Jan Paulsson, Mr. Nigel Blackaby, Dr. Joaquín Pedro da Rocha
Mr. Georgios Petrochilos, Mr. Noah Rubins, Procurador del Tesoro de la Nación Argentina
Ms. Sylvia Noury, Mr. Craig Chiasson, Procuración del Tesoro de la Nación Argentina
Mr. Moto Maeda, Ms. Caroline Richard Buenos Aires, Argentina
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP
Paris, France
i
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1
2. GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE SUBJECT MATTER OF THE DISPUTE AND OF TOTAL’S CLAIMS AND REQUEST FOR
RELIEF 9
3. APPLICABLE LAW 13
ii
2. RELEVANT FEATURES OF THE ELECTRICITY REGIME IN ARGENTINA WHEN TOTAL MADE ITS INVESTMENT 108
3. TOTAL’S COMPLAINT CONCERNING THE ALTERATION OF THE ELECTRICITY SECTOR’S LEGAL FRAMEWORK L 128
3.1 General ............................................................................................................................................................... 128
3.2 Specific Measures Complained of by Total and Their Impact .......................................................................... 130
4. BIT BREACHES ALLEGED BY TOTAL 137
5. ARGENTINA’S POSITION 138
6. DAMAGES CLAIMED BY TOTAL 139
7. EVALUATION OF TOTAL’S CLAIM OF BREACH OF THE FAIR AND EQUITABLE TREATMENT STANDARD 140
7.1 General Considerations ..................................................................................................................................... 140
7.2 Evaluation of Specific Measures ........................................................................................................................ 145
7.2.1 The pesification of the capacity payments and of the spot price ................................................................................... 145
7.2.2 The Alteration of the Uniform Marginal Price Mechanism .......................................................................................... 149
7.2.3 The “Refusal” to Pay Power Generators Their Receivables and the Conversion of Receivables Into a Stake in
FONINVEMEM ...................................................................................................................................................................... 153
8. CONSEQUENCES OF THE TRIBUNAL’S FINDINGS ON TOTAL’S CLAIM FOR DAMAGES 154
9. EXAMINATION OF TOTAL’S CLAIMS UNDER ARTICLES 4, 5(1) AND 5(2) OF THE BIT 155
10. ARGENTINA’S STATE OF NECESSITY DEFENCE 157
11. TRIBUNAL’S CONCLUSIONS AS TO TOTAL’S CLAIMS IN POWER GENERATION 159
iii
Part I - Introduction
1. Procedural Background
1. On October 12, 2003, Total S.A. (“Total” or the “Claimant”) submitted before the
Secretary-General of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes
(“ICSID” or the “Centre”) a Request for Arbitration against the Argentine Republic
(“Argentina” or the “Respondent”), pursuant to the Convention on the Settlement of
Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of other States (“ICSID
Convention”) and the Treaty between France and Argentina concerning the
Reciprocal Promotion and Protection of Investment of July 3, 1991 (“BIT”).
2. In accordance with Rule 5 of the ICSID Rules of Procedure for the Institution of
Conciliation and Arbitration Proceedings (the “Institution Rules”), the Centre
acknowledged receipt of the Request for Arbitration on November 3, 2003. On
November 4, 2003, the Centre transmitted a copy of the Request for Arbitration to
the Argentine Republic and to the Argentine Embassy in Washington, D.C. On
January 22, 2004 the Secretary-General registered Total’s Request for Arbitration
and gave notice thereof to the parties, pursuant to Article 36(3) of the ICSID
Convention. Pursuant to Rule 7(d) of the Institution Rules, the Secretary-General also
invited the parties to proceed as soon as possible to constitute an Arbitral Tribunal in
accordance with Articles 37 to 40 of the ICSID Convention.
3. On March 29, 2004, the Claimant appointed Mr. Henri C. Alvarez, a Canadian
national, as arbitrator. On April 14, 2004, the Argentine Republic appointed Dr. Luis
Herrera Marcano, a national of Venezuela, as arbitrator. On August 20, 2004, in
accordance with Rule 4 of the Rules of Procedure for Arbitration Proceedings (the
“Arbitration Rules”), the Chairman of the Administrative Council of ICSID
appointed Professor Giorgio Sacerdoti, a national of Italy, as President of the
Tribunal. On August 24, 2004, the Deputy Secretary-General of ICSID informed the
parties that all members of the Tribunal had accepted their appointments and that, in
accordance with Arbitration Rule 6(1), the Tribunal was deemed to have been
constituted on that same day.
1
4. The first session of the Arbitral Tribunal was held on November 15, 2004. During the
session, the parties confirmed that the Tribunal had been properly constituted
pursuant to the ICSID Convention and the Arbitration Rules and that they did not
have any objections in this respect.
5. During the course of the first session, the parties agreed on a number of procedural
matters as reflected in the written minutes of the session which were signed by the
President and the Secretary of the Tribunal. Among other matters, it was agreed that,
in accordance with Arbitration Rule 22, the languages of the proceedings would be
English and Spanish. It was confirmed that the Claimant would file its pleadings in
English and Argentina would file its pleadings in Spanish, without a subsequent
translation of the written pleadings into the other party’s chosen procedural language.
After hearing the parties, the Tribunal decided by Procedural Order No. 1 that the
Claimant would file its Memorial on the merits within five months of the date of the
first session. The Tribunal also decided that, if the Respondent wished to raise any
objections to jurisdiction, it should do so within 45 days of the receipt of the
Claimant’s Memorial on the merits. In the event of an objection to jurisdiction, the
Claimant would file its Counter-Memorial on jurisdiction within 45 days of the
receipt of the Respondent’s Memorial on jurisdiction. In the same Procedural Order,
the Tribunal further decided that: if the Respondent did not raise any objections to
jurisdiction, it would file its Counter-Memorial on the merits within five months of
receipt of the Claimant’s Memorial on the merits; the Claimant would then file its
Reply on the merits within 60 days of receipt of the Respondent’s Counter-Memorial
on the merits; and the Respondent would file its Rejoinder on the merits within 60
days of receipt of the Claimant’s Reply on the merits.
6. The Claimant filed its Memorial on the merits (“CMM”) on April 11, 2005;
Argentina filed its “Memorial sobre objeciones a la jurisdicción del Centro y a la
competencia del Tribunal” on June 3, 2005. In accordance with Arbitration Rule
41(3), the proceeding on the merits was thereby suspended. In conformity with
Procedural Order No.1, the Claimant then submitted its Counter-Memorial on
jurisdiction on August 1, 2005.
7. The hearing on jurisdiction was held in Washington D.C. on September 5, 2005. Ms.
Cintia Yaryura, Ms. María Victoria Vitali and Mr. Ariel Martins addressed the
2
Tribunal on behalf of Argentina. Mr. Nigel Blackaby, Mr. Georgios Petrochilos and
Mr. Luis A. Erize addressed the Tribunal on behalf of the Claimant. During the
course of the hearing, the Tribunal posed questions to the parties, as provided for in
Arbitration Rule 32(3).
9. On the same date, the Tribunal confirmed that pursuant to Procedural Order No. 1,
the Respondent would submit its Counter-Memorial on the merits within five months
of the date of the Decision on Jurisdiction i.e., by January 26, 2007. The Claimant
would thereafter file its Reply on the merits within 60 days of receipt of the
Respondent’s Counter-Memorial on the merits and the Respondent would file its
Rejoinder on the merits 60 days of receipt of the Claimant’s Reply on the merits.
According to the schedule, Argentina filed its Counter-Memorial on the merits on
January 26, 2007.
10. On February 9, 2007, the Claimant proposed a revised schedule for the submission of
the Claimant’s Reply and the Respondent’s Rejoinder. By letter of February 16,
2007, Argentina indicated that it did not oppose the Claimant’s proposal to modify
the schedule. Taking into consideration the parties’ views in this respect, the Tribunal
decided to modify the deadlines established in Procedural Order No. 1, which had
been issued on August 25, 2006. Accordingly, the Tribunal ordered the Claimant to
file its Reply on the merits by May 15, 2007 and the Respondent to file its Rejoinder
on the merits within 102 days of receipt of the Claimant’s Reply.
11. By letter of March 16, 2007, the Respondent requested a one-month extension for the
submission of both the Claimant’s Reply and the Respondent’s Rejoinder. On March
16, 2007, the Claimant submitted its observations on the Respondent’s extension
request. By letter of April 9, 2007, the Tribunal decided to grant the one month
1
The Decision is available at http://ita.law.uvic.ca/documents/TotalSAv.Argentina_002.pdf
3
extension requested by Argentina. The Tribunal decided that the Claimant’s Reply on
the merits should be filed by June 15, 2007 and the Respondent’s Rejoinder on the
merits within 102 days of receipt of the Claimant’s Reply on the merits.
12. By letters of May 9 and 18, 2007, the Claimant informed the Tribunal that it would
submit its Reply on May 18, 2007, and that it expected Argentina’s Rejoinder to be
submitted around August 28, 2007. By letter of May 14, 2007, Argentina requested
the Tribunal to maintain the one-month extension that it had requested and to order
the submission of its Rejoinder by October 1, 2007. As indicated by the Claimant, the
Reply on the merits was submitted on May 18, 2007.
13. By letter of May 22, 2007, the Tribunal stated that the Respondent was entitled to
rely on the one-month extension granted by the Tribunal. The Tribunal also
confirmed that the Claimant was free to file its Reply before the deadline established
by the Tribunal in its letter of April 9, 2007. Accordingly, the Tribunal ordered that
the Secretariat should not forward the Claimant’s Reply to the Respondent until June
15, 2007, and that the Respondent should file its Rejoinder within 102 days of receipt
of the Reply.
14. By letter of September 25, 2007, the Respondent filed a request for production of
documents and requested a 15-day extension for the filing of its Rejoinder on the
merits. By letter of September 30, 2007, the Claimant submitted its observations on
the Respondent’s letter of September 25, 2007. By letter of October 3, 2007, the
Tribunal granted the extension requested by the Respondent and ordered the
submission of the Rejoinder of the merits by October 15, 2007.
15. By letter of October 9, 2007, the Respondent requested the deadline to be moved to
October 16, 2007, as October 15, 2007 was an official holiday in Argentina. By letter
of October 10, 2007, the Tribunal granted the Respondent until October 16, 2007 to
submit its Rejoinder on the merits. The Tribunal also indicated that it would fix a
deadline for the Respondent to file comments on certain financial valuation issues as
the Respondent had not yet received some documents that the Claimant had been
ordered to produce. The Respondent filed its Rejoinder on the merits on October 16,
2007. The parties exchanged a number of communications regarding the production
of documents dealing with financial valuation matters. Having considered the parties’
4
positions in this respect, the Tribunal, by letter of November 5, 2007, ordered the
Respondent to submit its report on quantum by November 20, 2007. The Respondent
filed its expert report on damages on the date ordered by the Tribunal.
16. On December 10, 2007, the Tribunal held a pre-hearing conference call with the
parties and, on December 13, 2007, it issued procedural directions for the
organisation of the hearing on the merits.
17. The Tribunal held a hearing on the merits at the seat of the Centre in Washington
D.C. from January 7 through January 18, 2008. Present at the hearing were:
ICSID Secretariat:
5
Mr. Craig Chiasson (Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, LLP)
6
Dr. Ignacio Torterola (Procuración del Tesoro de la Nación Argentina)
Dr. Rodrigo Nicolás Ruiz Esquide (Procuración del Tesoro de la Nación Argentina)
18. The following witnesses and experts appeared before the Arbitral Tribunal for the
Claimant: Mr. Pablo Spiller, Mr. Manuel Abdala, Mr. Benoît Charpentier, Mr.
Hugues Montmayeur, Mr. François Faurès, Mr. Jacques Chambert-Loir, Mr. Yves
Grosjean and Mr. Michel Contie; and, for the Respondent, Mr. Gerardo Sanchis
Muñoz, Ms. Alicia Caballero, Mr. Diego Guichón, Mr. Alejandro Sruoga, Mr.
Alejandro Gallino, Prof. Nouriel Roubini, Mr. Mario Damill, Mr. Roberto Frenkel,
Mr. Cristian Folgar (by video) and Mr. Augusto Belluscio.
19. On April 11, 2008, the parties filed their post-hearing briefs.2 On May 26, 2008, the
parties filed their submissions on costs. In its submission, Argentina claimed that the
cost incurred by Argentina amounted to US$1,215,222.99. In its submission on costs
the Claimant:
2
As of the hearing on the merits Total and Argentina had filed 690 and 274 exhibits, respectively. This is without
considering legal authorities, witness statements and expert reports.
7
“request[ed] that the Tribunal:
20. On May 9, 2008, the Respondent requested the Tribunal’s authorisation to produce
certain documents. On May 15, 2008, the Claimant filed observations on the
Respondent’s request. By letter dated May 21, 2008, Ms. Natalí Sequeira, Secretary
of the Tribunal, informed the parties that the Tribunal had determined that the new
exhibit RA-299, which Argentina sought to place on the record of the case, as well as
exhibits RA 294-297 already introduced by the Respondent as annexes to its post-
hearing brief, were inadmissible. By the same letter, the parties were informed that,
as a matter of due process and in view of the stage of the proceedings, the Tribunal
had decided not to take into consideration new evidence and arguments submitted
subsequent to the post-hearing briefs.
21. On February 20, 2009, the Claimant requested the Tribunal’s authorisation to
produce a number of documents concerning developments involving certain
Argentine authorities that had affected TGN. On March 20, 2009, the Respondent
filed observations on the Claimant's request and requested authorisation to produce
documents on the same issue concerning TGN. On April 9, 2009, the Tribunal issued
a further decision on production of documents. Recalling its previous decision of
May 21, 2008, the Tribunal restated that it would not take into consideration new
evidence and arguments submitted subsequent to the post-hearing briefs and that it
would rely solely on the evidence and the parties’ submissions already on the record
of the case.
22. On October 23, 2009, Argentina wrote to the Centre in order to inform the Tribunal
about facts related to a labour dispute between Total and one of its former
employees. According to Argentina’s letter, the facts on which the aforementioned
labour dispute are based are of particular relevance to these arbitration proceedings.
3
See Total’s Costs Submission, para. 29.
8
The Tribunal expresses its doubts that the facts outlined by the Respondent in its
letter are relevant to the ongoing arbitration proceedings. The Tribunal notes that the
Respondent is seeking to place new documents and arguments on the record of the
case, contrary to the previous decisions taken by the Tribunal relating to the
production of documents. The Respondent’s request was absolutely out of time in
view of the stage of the proceedings. The Tribunal determines, therefore, that it
cannot either admit these documents as evidence or take into consideration the legal
arguments based thereon.
2. General Overview of the Subject Matter of the Dispute and of Total’s Claims
and Request for Relief
23. The Tribunal considers it useful to sum up briefly at the outset the subject-matter of
the dispute, in fact and in law, as presented by the Claimant in its “Request for
Arbitration” and subsequently particularised.
24. In its Request for Arbitration, Total submits that it is a company incorporated in
accordance with the laws of France, having its registered office in France and,
therefore, that it qualifies as a French “investor” within the meaning of Article 1.2(b)
of the BIT. Total has made a number of investments in Argentina in the gas
transportation, hydrocarbons exploration and production and power generation
industries. According to Total, its investments in Argentina include majority and
minority shareholding interests in companies operating in the gas transportation,
exploration and production and power generation sectors, as well as various licences,
rights, concessions and loans, each of which qualifies as an “investment” in
accordance with the meaning of this term in Article 1.1 of the BIT.
25. Total maintains that it made its investments in each of the various areas on the basis
of the representations and promises made by the Argentine government about the
legal and regulatory framework for privatised gas transmission companies, the oil
and gas exploration and production industry and the power generation industry. Total
alleges that a number of measures taken by the Argentine government, most of which
derived from or followed Law 25.561/02 (the “Emergency Law”), together with the
Emergency Law itself, breached or revoked the commitments made to attract
9
investment and upon which Total relied in making its investments. More specifically,
Total indicates that these measures include:
- the freezing of the gas consumer tariff (which is the sum of the: (a) well-
head price of gas; (b) gas transportation tariff; and (c) gas distribution
tariff);
- the pesification, at a one to one rate, of all other payments to which power
generators are entitled; and
- the refusal to pay power generators their dues, even at the dramatically
reduced values resulting from the Measures.
26. The Claimant claims that the measures adopted by Argentina have resulted in several
breaches of the BIT. As to Total’s gas transmission assets, Total argues that the
Measures: expropriated Total’s investment in TGN in breach of Article 5(2) of the
BIT; resulted in unfair and inequitable treatment of Total’s investment in TGN in
breach of Article 3 of the BIT; discriminated against Total’s investment in TGN in
10
breach of Articles 3 and 4 of the BIT; and are in breach of Argentina’s obligation to
respect specific undertakings contrary to Article 10 of the BIT.
27. As to Total’s investments in the exploration and production of crude oil and natural
gas, Total claims that the Measures: revoked Total’s right freely to dispose of its
hydrocarbons in breach of the duty of fair and equitable treatment pursuant to Article
3 of the BIT; affected Total’s hydrocarbon production in an arbitrary and
discriminatory manner contrary to Articles 3 and 4 of the BIT by benefiting
domestic, industrial, commercial or residential consumers to the detriment of Total;
and restricted Total’s export of hydrocarbons in further breach of the duty to accord
fair and equitable treatment pursuant to Article 3 of the BIT.
28. In relation to Total’s investments in the power generation sector, Total claims that
Argentina, through the Measures: failed to observe its obligation to refrain from
taking measures equivalent to expropriation without prompt, adequate and effective
compensation in breach of Article 5(2) of the BIT; breached the duty of fair and
equitable treatment in Article 3 of the BIT; and discriminated against Total’s
investments in Central Puerto and HPDA in breach of Article 4 of the BIT.
29. Based on the above, the Claimant asks the Tribunal to declare that Argentina, by its
various acts and the conduct specified in Claimant’s Request for Arbitration and
Memorials, breached the above mentioned Articles of the BIT. In its Request for
Arbitration, the Claimant seeks compensation for the alleged damages caused to its
investment by Argentina’s violations of the BIT “in an amount to be assessed and
which is provisionally assessed to be no less than US$ 940 million”, in addition to
interest, additional reparation to be further specified and payment by Argentina of all
arbitration costs and expenses.
30. To support its request for damages, during the arbitral proceedings, Total filed three
reports by its experts Mr. Spiller and Mr. Adbala (LECG, LLC). Based on the data
contained in these Reports4, in its Post-Hearing Brief, Total claimed damages in the
aggregate amount, as of 31 December 2006 of US$1,292,100,000, divided as
4
The reports by Mr. Abdala and Mr. Spiller are as follows: “Assessment of Argentina’s Recent Regulatory Conduct
in Electricity Generation” (hereinafter LECG Report on Electricity), dated May 16, 2007; “Damage Valuation for
Total’s Investments in Argentina” (hereinafter LECG Report on Damages), dated May 18, 2007; and “Corrections
and Updates to “Damage Valuation for Total’s Investments in Argentina” (hereinafter LECG Addendum on
Damages), dated December 27, 2007.
11
between each of its various claims of breach of the BIT by Argentina as set forth
below .5
31. In its Post-Hearing Brief, Total submitted the following Request for Relief to the
Tribunal:
“On the basis of the foregoing and the Claimant’s prior written pleadings, the
Claimant respectfully requests that the Tribunal, dismissing all contrary requests
and submissions by Argentina:
(i) DECLARE that Argentina has breached Article 5(2) of the Treaty by taking
measures which deprived the Claimant’s investment in TGN of substantially all
of its value without provision for the payment of the prompt and adequate
compensation required under Article 5(2) of the Treaty;
(ii) DECLARE that Argentina has breached Article 3 of the Treaty by failing to
accord fair and equitable treatment to the Claimant and its investments in TGN,
the hydrocarbons exploration and production sector and the Claimant’s equity
participations in Central Puerto and HPDA;
(iii) DECLARE that Argentina has breached Article 5(1) of the Treaty by failing
to “fully and completely protect[ ] and safeguard[ ]” the Claimant’s investments
in TGN, in the hydrocarbons exploration and production sector, and as an equity
investor in Central Puerto and HPDA;
(iv) DECLARE that Argentina has breached Article 4 of the Treaty by taking
discriminatory measures to the detriment of the Claimant in respect of its
investments in TGN, in the hydrocarbons exploration and production sector, and
in respect of its equity participations in Central Puerto and HPDA;
(v) ORDER Argentina to compensate the Claimant for the foregoing breaches of
the Treaty and international law, in the aggregate amount as of 31 December
2006 of US$1,292,100,000;
(vi) ORDER Argentina to pay compound pre-judgment interest on all amounts
awarded under (v) above, accruing from 1 January 2007 until the date of the
Award, at a rate of:
i. 13.5% per annum for damages with respect to TGN;
ii. 12.18% per annum for damages with respect to Total Austral; and
iii. the current six-month US Treasury bond rate for damages with
respect to HPDA and Central Puerto;
(vii) ORDER Argentina to pay compound interest, from the date of the Tribunal’s
Award to the date of Argentina’s final payment to the Claimant, at the six-month
US Treasury bond rate on any and all amounts of compensation ordered by the
Tribunal;
(viii) ORDER Argentina to pay all of the costs and expenses of this arbitration,
including the fees and expenses of the Tribunal, the fees and expenses of any
experts appointed by the Tribunal and the Claimant, the fees and expenses of the
Claimant’s legal representation in respect of this arbitration, and any other costs
of this arbitration, to be specified in the Claimant’s costs submissions, to follow,
plus interest; and
(ix) AWARD such other relief as the Tribunal considers appropriate.”6
5
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 1161. The Tribunal notes that in Total’s Annual Management Report of the
Board of Directors for the year 2002, which was submitted at the hearing on the merits, the following statement
appears at p. 34: “Non-recurring items in 2002, comprised mainly of impairments in Argentina related to gas and
power assets and the LPG marketing activity, had a negative impact on operating income of 659 M€.”
6
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 1161.
12
32. On the basis of the facts and legal arguments set forth in its briefs, as well as the
statements and reports made and documents submitted by its witnesses and experts,
Argentina asks the Arbitral Tribunal to dismiss each and every one of Total’s claims
and to order the Claimant to pay all of the expenses and legal costs deriving from this
arbitration,7 including Argentina’s own costs amounting to US$1,215,222.99.
3. Applicable Law
33. The Parties agree that Article 8(4) of the BIT provides the sources of law to be
applied in this arbitration. However, they disagree as to the hierarchy or order of
application of these sources of law. Article 8(4) of the BIT provides:
The ruling of the arbitral body shall be based on the provisions of this
Agreement, the legislation of the Contracting Party which is a party to the
dispute, including rules governing conflict of laws, the terms of any private
agreements concluded on the subject of the investment, and the relevant
principles of international law.
34. Total submits that international law and Argentina’s law apply to distinct aspects of
the dispute and at different analytical stages.8 Total sets its analysis out in the
following way:
(a) At the first stage, the tribunal must decide whether particular assets or
rights constituting the putative investment exist. In this context, the law of the
host state is naturally relevant, because the bundle of rights that constitute an
investment is a creature of domestic law;
(b) At the second stage, the Tribunal must determine whether or not those
rights constitute an investment protected by the applicable Treaty. This issue has
been already resolved by the Tribunal in the Decision on Jurisdiction, and is
therefore not in question here;
(c) Finally, at the third stage, the conduct of the host state must be examined
on the basis of the substantive standards set out in the applicable Treaty, which
must be complemented by the “relevant principles of international law”. These
standards are the basis on which the liability of the state must be assessed.9
35. Total submits that Argentine law is only relevant as factual evidence of Total’s
investments, but that international law is relevant to the question of whether and how
7
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 664.
8
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 152.
9
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 152, footnotes omitted.
13
Total’s investments are protected under the BIT and that Argentina’s compliance
with its duties of protection under the BIT must be analyzed exclusively under the
BIT and relevant principles of international law. Total says its position is consistent
with fundamental principles of international law, including Article 27 of the 1969
Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (“VCLT”) and the International Law
Committee Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts
(the “ILC Articles”).10 Total maintains that Argentina cannot use its domestic law to
avoid liability at international law and, in any event, that Argentine law is consistent
with the BIT.11
36. Argentina submits that, pursuant to Article 8(4) of the BIT, Argentine law is not only
relevant as factual evidence of Total’s investments but is also a source of law, as are
the BIT and the relevant principles of international law.12 According to Argentina,
this implies that:
“in order to determine the scope and/or the violation of the international
parameters and of the investor protection standards contemplated, it is essential to
analyze the application of the internal law under consideration to the controverted
issue, specially emphasizing the circumstances of each case, which is a universal
law criterion.”13
37. Argentina suggests that Total’s position that Argentina’s Measures are incompatible
with both Argentine law and international law contradicts Total’s assertion that
Argentine law is only relevant to determining questions of fact. Finally, Argentina
submits that, because Argentine law is applicable to the merits of the dispute before
the Tribunal, it could invoke a so-called emergency principle that exists in
Argentina’s legal system.14 Under this emergency principle, the Argentine Congress
is empowered to enact emergency rules affecting property rights where a serious
economic situation so requires. Argentina’s legal system permits the application of
such emergency rules to situations that it considers to be sufficiently serious (such as
the economic emergency of 2001-2002).15 According to Argentina, this emergency
10
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 155 and the sources cited there.
11
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 159 – 175 and 389.
12
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 497, 499.
13
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 501.
14
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 502 ff.
15
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 507 ff. referring to the case-law of the Supreme Court of the Argentine
Republic according to which emergency rules (such as the Emergency Law of 2002), enacted to cope with
economic crises that are so serious as to justify their adoption, are compatible with Argentina’s Constitution.
14
principle, as developed and acknowledged by the Supreme Court of the Argentine
Republic since 1920, is relevant to the Tribunal’s determination of whether the BIT
has been breached.16 In conclusion, Argentina submits that since this emergency
doctrine is firmly established in Argentina’s legal system, Total could not (and
should not) have ignored it.17 In Argentina’s words:
“Total knew that under certain emergency conditions, the Argentine courts could
legitimate the exceptional measures taken by the Argentine Congress to mitigate
the circumstances. Therefore, it should have considered its legitimate
expectations at the time of investing, based on the fact that the Argentine law
acknowledges the validity of the emergency law provided that, of course, there is
a situation serious enough so as to justify the adoption of that kind of
measures.”18
38. The Tribunal notes that the Argentina-France BIT sets forth directives to arbitral
tribunals established under the BIT about the law applicable to disputes relating to
investments made under the treaty, without providing for an order of application of
these sources of law. Taking into account these arguments of the parties, the Tribunal
considers it appropriate to distinguish two different questions.
39. The first question concerns the role of Argentina’s domestic law in determining the
content and the extent of Total’s economic rights as they exist in Argentina’s legal
system. In this regard the Tribunal believes that Argentine law has a broader role
than that of just determining factual matters. The content and the scope of Total’s
economic rights (in Total’s words, “Argentina’s commitments to Total”)19 must be
determined by the Tribunal in light of Argentina’s legal principles and provisions.
Moreover, the extensive reliance by the Claimant on Argentina’s acts of a legislative
and administrative nature governing the gas, electricity and hydrocarbons sectors, as
well as the extensive discussion between the parties regarding the content and extent
of Total’s rights in respect of the operation of its investments, is a recognition that
Argentina’s domestic law plays a prominent role.20 Thus, the Tribunal shall
16
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 504.
17
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 511.
18
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 505.
19
See also Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 154.
20
The Tribunal also notes here that a number of legal authorities to which Total refers in its post-hearing brief
supports the role of domestic law as not limited to determining factual questions. See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief,
para. 153 referring to the opinion of Prof. Schreuer according to which “investment relationships typically involve
domestic law as well as international law….” See also Enron Corporation and Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina,
ICSID Case No. ARB/01/3, Award, 22 May 2007, paras 206-207. The above award is quoted by Total in relation to
15
determine the precise content and extent of Total’s economic rights under
Argentina’s legal system in respect of Total’s claims under the BIT, wherever
necessary in order to ascertain whether a breach of the BIT has occurred.
40. The second question regards the relevance that Argentina claims the emergency
doctrine under Argentine law to have in determining whether a breach of the BIT has
taken place. In this regard the Tribunal makes the following observations. First, since
Total complains of breaches of the BIT, the Tribunal must apply principally the BIT,
as interpreted under international law, to resolve any matter raised. This means that
the Tribunal must assess Argentina’s responsibility under the BIT by applying the
treaty itself and the relevant rules of customary international law. The Tribunal
cannot accept Argentina’s position that, by invoking the emergency principle as it
exists under Argentine law, Argentina can avoid international responsibility for
violation of the treaty. This would contradict the fundamental principle of
international law according to which “a party may not invoke its internal law as a
justification for its failure to perform a treaty” (Article 27 of the Vienna Convention
on the Law of the Treaties).21 Secondly, the Tribunal notes that any complaint by
Total that Argentina’s measures are in breach of domestic law is not raised per se but
is used by Total to support Total’s claims under the BIT. Therefore the fact that any
domestic measure challenged by Total might be legitimate in Argentina’s legal
system thanks to the emergency doctrine would not relieve the Tribunal from
examining whether Argentina has nevertheless thereby breached the BIT.
41. As to Total’s investment in the gas transportation industry, Total explains in its
Request for Arbitration that it owned an indirect 19.23% stake in Transportadora de
Gas del Norte S.A. (“TGN”). “Of this 19.23 per cent stake, 19.19 per cent is
the question of the compatibility of Argentina’s measures affecting the gas sector with Argentina’s Constitution.
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 175 ff.
21
This principle reflects the general principle of customary international law according to which, for the purpose of
State responsibility for the commission of an internationally wrongful act, the characterization of an act as lawful
under the State’s internal law is irrelevant. This principle has been restated at Article 3 of the Articles on
Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts drafted by the International Law Commission and
annexed to General Assembly Resolution A/RES/56/83.
16
indirectly held through Gasinvest, which currently holds a 70.44 per cent stake in
TGN and in which Total has a stake of 27.24 per cent; the other 0.038 per cent is
directly held by the Total group.”22 TGN is one of two gas transportation companies
established when the Republic of Argentina privatized Gas del Estado in 1992, which
had been a “Sociedad del Estado”, up to then. At that time TGN was granted a
licence “for the rendering of the public gas transportation utilities”23 in northern and
central Argentina for a term of 35 years, extendable at TGN’s option for a further ten
years, subject to compliance by TGN with the terms and obligations contained in the
licence.24
42. In May 1992, Argentina enacted Law 24.076 (the “Gas Law”) and Decree 1738/92
(the “Gas Decree”),25 which established the post-privatization legal framework of the
gas sector. After an international bidding process, accompanied by an Information
Memorandum of September 1992 prepared by Argentina’s financial advisers,26 the
government of Argentina sold a 70% share in TGN to Gasinvest (a Consortium of
investors27) on December 28, 1992.28 The government of Argentina retained a 25%
share in TGN until July 1995 when a second public bidding process took place on the
basis of an Offering Memorandum prepared, on request of the government of
Argentina, by its financial advisers.29 After having successfully participated in this
second bidding process, CMS Gas Transmission Argentina (an Argentinean
Company controlled by CMS Energy, a US company) acquired the remaining 25%
stake in TGN from the government of Argentina on 26 July, 1995.30
22
See Total’s Memorial, footnote 76 at p. 27 (Exhibit C-275).
23
See Decree 2.457/92 (TGN Licence) Article 1 (Exhibit C-53(1)).
24
See Article 3.1. and 3.2. Basic Rules of the TGN License attached to Decree 2.457/92 (Exhibit C-53). .
25
Exhibits C-31 and C-48, respectively.
26
See Information Memorandum, Privatization of Gas del Estado S.E. dated September 1992 (Exhibit C-50).
27
The original members of the Gasinvest consortium are listed in Total’s Request for Arbitration at footnote 95, p.
41.
28
See Total’s Request for Arbitration, para. 98 at p. 41; Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 271-271.
29
See “The Offering Memorandum” of July 1995 (Exhibit A RA 97), presented by Argentina for the cross-
examination of Mr. Charpentier. See also CMS Gas Transmission Company v. Argentina, ICSID Case No.
ARB/01/8, Award, 12 May 2005, para. 58.
30
It is worth noting that on July 12, 2001, CMS Gas Transmission Company notified its consent to ICSID
arbitration and the dispute regarding the freezing of US PPI tariffs adjustment of the gas tariffs, as of January 1,
2000, by Argentine Government under the Argentina-US BIT. On 26 July, 2001, the Centre received CMS’s
Request for Arbitration against Argentina.
17
43. In March 2000, one of the investors in the Gasinvest consortium, the TransCanada
Group (which had merged with the Nova Group, another Gasinvest shareholder, in
June 1998), decided to sell its share and Total made a non binding offer to buy it.
44. As to the history of Total’s investment in the Argentine gas transportation sector,
according to Total’s own description:
“Several years after the privatization by Argentina of its Gas sector, Total
decided to invest in Argentine gas transportation assets to complement its already
significant investments in gas production. In reliance upon the (by then tried and
tested) regulatory framework provided by Argentina for gas transportation, on 30
May 2000, Total agreed to purchase a 19.23 per cent stake in TGN from the
TransCanada Group (TCPL) for an amount of US$230 million. This transaction
was completed, and the shares in TGN were transferred to Total, on 23 January
2001.”31
45. Finally, after TGN’s debt restructuring in 2006, Total’s stake in TGN decreased from
19.23% to 15.35%.32
46. Total’s position is that the general legislation and the specific regulations and
provisions in force in Argentina when Total bought its stake in TGN resulted in a
legal framework (the “Gas Regulatory Framework”) that included various types of
“promises” or “commitments” on which Total had relied when making its investment
and on which it was entitled to rely.
(i) the tariff would be reviewed by ENARGAS every five years in accordance
with certain pre-established criteria, ensuring the maintenance of TGN’s
economic equilibrium over the period of the Licence (the Five-Year Tariff
Review);
31
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief para. 273, where a diagram explains the corporate structure of Gasinvest and TGN
(see also Total’s Memorial para. 53).
32
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief para. 582.
18
(ii) tariffs could be subject to a non-recurrent review by ENARGAS on “objective
and justified” grounds (such as to reflect costs variations) or if those tariffs
became “inadequate, unduly discriminatory or preferential”, always ensuring a
continued reasonable rate of return for TGN (the Extraordinary Tariff Review).
This could be triggered by the Licensee or consumers;
(iii) the tariff would be calculated in dollars and converted into pesos for billing
purposes only, and would be adjusted every six months in accordance with
variations in the US Producer Price Index (the US PPI);
(b) the tariff would not be frozen or subject to regulation or price control without
full compensation from the Government and the basic rules of the TGN Licence
(which included the tariff regime) would not be changed without TGN’s
consent.”33
48. All of Argentina’s commitments listed by Total in its submissions are set forth in the
Gas Law, the Gas Decree and an administrative act containing the TGN Licence,
Decree 2.457/92 dated 18 December 1992 (the “TGN Licence”). Total claims that the
changes, which Argentina unilaterally made to that legal framework, were in breach
of those commitments and resulted at the same time in a violation of various BIT
provisions to Total’s prejudice.
49. The Tribunal has examined all of the legislation and the regulations referred to by
Total. The Gas Law regulates the gas transportation and distribution activities which,
pursuant to Article 1, are considered to be a “national public service”. The Law
establishes in Article 2 a series of paramount principles that govern the gas regime
and ENARGAS (“Ente Nacional Regulador del Gas”, the Regulatory Body in the
Gas sector) enforcement activity. The protection of consumer rights is the first
objective of the Law (Article 2(a)), followed by that of fostering investments for the
purpose of guaranteeing the gas supply in the long term (Article 2(b)). The Law also
states the principle that gas transportation and distribution activities are to be
regulated to ensure just and reasonable tariffs (Article 2(d)) and to “[c]ause the
natural gas supply price to the industry be equal to the international price in force in
countries with similar resources and conditions.” (Article 2(g))
50. The Gas Law establishes at Article 38(a) the principle of guaranteeing to efficient
Licensees sufficient revenue to cover all reasonable operational costs of the service,
taxes, amortisations, and a reasonable rate of return according to the criteria of
Article 39. More specifically, according to Article 38(a), “[s]ervices rendered as to
33
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 274 [footnotes omitted].
19
transportation and distribution will be offered at tariffs adjusted to the following
principles: a) To provide transportation and distribution companies operating in an
economical and prudent way with the chance to obtain sufficient revenue to cover all
reasonable costs, including, taxes, amortization and a reasonable rate of return as set
forth in the following Article; […].” Article 39 provides that: “In order to provide a
reasonable rate of return to such efficient companies, the tariffs applied to
transportation and distribution companies must entail: a) such revenue to be similar
to the revenue of other activities with similar or comparable risk; b) a relationship
between the efficiency and the satisfactory rendering of services.”
51. The Gas Law provides for two mechanisms according to which ENARGAS has to
review tariffs. Article 42 of the Gas Law provides for a periodic Five-Year Tariff
Review (to be carried out by ENARGAS according to the principles of Articles 38
and 39), which will set out new maximum tariffs according to the rules contained in
Article 39. Precisely, [e]very FIVE (5) years, the ENARGAS shall review the tariff
adjustment system. Such review must be performed in accordance with the
provisions of Articles 38 and 39 and will set new maximum tariffs as per Article 39
hereof.”
52. Articles 46 and 47 enable both Licensees and consumers to require ENARGAS to
carry out an Extraordinary Review of tariffs, of “charges, maximum prices,
classifications or services set forth in the terms of the authorization to operate”,
provided that their modifications are reasonably required by specific unforeseeable
circumstances of an extraordinary character (Articles 46(2) and 47 of the Gas Law).
According to Article 46(1), “[t]ransportation and distribution companies, as well as
users, may request the ENARGAS to modify the tariffs, charges, maximum prices,
classifications, or services set forth in accordance with terms of the authorization to
operate, considered necessary if the request is based on objective and justified
circumstances.”34 Furthermore, Article 46 of the Gas Decree specifies the nature of
the “objective and justified circumstances” that shall support a request by consumers
or Public utilities to modify tariffs under the Extraordinary Tariff Review. According
to the Gas Decree (Article 46), “the modifications provided for in Article 46 of the
34
Article 46(2) of the Gas Law provides that: “Once the request for modification is received, ENARGAS must
adopt a resolution within the term of SIXTY (60) days prior to the calling for Public Hearing which must be held no
later than FIFTEEN (15) days after reception of said request.”
20
Law must be based on specific circumstances not provided for previously and cannot
be recurrent. Such modifications do not include the readjustment set forth in Article
42 of the Law.” According to Article 47 of the Gas Law: “When ENARGAS deems,
as a consequence of proceedings initiated ex officio or by private action, that there
are reasons to consider a tariff, charge, classification or service of a transportation or
distribution company is inadequate, unduly discriminatory or preferential, it shall
notify such circumstance to the transportation or distribution company and it shall
make it public by calling a Public Hearing for such purpose no later than FIFTEEN
(15) days after such notice.” According to the last sentence of Article 47: “Once such
hearing takes place, it shall decide within the term stated in Article 46 above.”
53. As to the calculation of the tariffs in dollars of the United States of America. (“US$”
or “US dollars”), Article 41(2) of the Gas Decree provides that: “Tariffs for
transportation and distribution shall be calculated in United States dollars. The
resulting tariff chart shall be expressed in pesos to be converted according to Law
No. 23.928, taking into account, for their reconversion to pesos, the parity set in
Article 3 of Decree No. 2.128/91.” The TGN Licence also contains a number of rules
regarding the tariffs and their calculation. Section 9.2 of the TGN Licence provides
that: “Annex III of the Decree approving these Basic Rules contains the tariff to be
perceived by the Licensee. Said tariff shall only be modified according to the
provisions of this Law, the Regulatory Decree, these Basic Rules and the provisions
of the tariff itself.” Furthermore, “[t]he tariff has been calculated in United States
dollars. The adjustments of 9.3 shall be calculated in United States dollars.” More
precisely, “[t]he resulting or recalculated Tariff Chart shall be expressed, at the time
of its application for billing in pesos at the rate of convertibility set in Article 3 of
Decree 2.128/91, implementing Law No. 23.928, and its eventual modifications.”
Annex III contains the Basic Rules regarding the TGN Licence and establishes that:
“Tariffs are expressed in pesos to be converted according to Law No. 23928.”
54. As to the periodic adjustment of the US dollar tariffs, the first paragraph of Article 41
of the Gas Law does not provide any specific mechanism such as the US PPI
adjustment on a semi-annual basis. Instead it provides in more general terms that:
“During the authorization to operate, tariffs shall be adjusted in accordance with a
methodology based on international market indicators reflecting changes in assets
21
and services value representing suppliers’ activities. Such indicators shall be
adjusted, in turn, in more or less, by a factor meant to stimulate efficiency and
installations constructions, operation and maintenance investments at the same time.
Such methodology shall reflect any tax variations on tariffs.” According to Article
41(3) of the Gas Decree, “The methodology to adjust the transportation and
distribution companies’ tariffs based on international markets indicators set in Article
41 hereof shall be included in the corresponding authorizations to operate. The
ENARGAS shall determine the necessary information requirements to monitor the
adequate application of the mechanism set forth in the terms of the authorization to
operate, within the term and periods set forth therein. The ENARGAS shall not be
able to suspend, limit or reject such tariff adjustments except in cases of error in
calculation and/or applied proceedings.” The reference to US PPI is found instead in
Section 9.4.1.1 of the TGN Licence. This section provides that: “Transportation
tariffs shall be adjusted semi-annually in accordance with PPI variations.”
55. As to the Gas Regulatory Framework described above, Total distinguishes between
‘core commitments’ and ‘additional commitments’. As to the ‘core commitments’, in
Total’s words:
“[…] The overarching promise of the Gas Regulatory Framework was that
TGN’s economic equilibrium would be maintained throughout the 35 to 45 years
of its Licence. That is to say that Argentina promised that TGN’s regulated tariff,
which represented 98% of its revenue, was and would continue to be regulated so
as to provide TGN with sufficient revenue to cover all reasonable costs, including
taxes, amortizations and capital costs, and make a “reasonable rate of return”
similar to activities of comparable risk.”35
(c) First, Argentina promised that TGN’s tariffs were and would be calculated in
dollars, and converted to Argentine pesos for billing purposes only.
(d) Secondly, Argentina provided that TGN’s dollar tariffs would be
automatically adjusted every six months in accordance with variations in the US
35
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 20 [footnotes omitted].
22
Producer Price Index (the US PPI), thereby preserving its dollar revenue in real
dollar terms.”36
Total further points out that: “[…] the Gas Regulatory Framework provided two
mechanisms designed to allow the regulator, ENARGAS, to set and restore
TGN’s economic equilibrium on both a recurrent and non-recurrent
(extraordinary) basis. The Gas Regulatory Framework provided that:
(a) tariffs would be reviewed by ENARGAS every five years in order to set the
tariffs for the next five-year period, taking into account TGN’s planned
investments and potential efficiencies, always ensuring sufficient revenue to
cover all reasonable costs, including taxes, amortisations and capital costs, and a
“reasonable rate of return” (the Five-Year Tariff Review);
(b) if TGN’s economic equilibrium was disrupted, tariffs could be subject to a
non-recurrent review by ENARGAS on “objective and justified” grounds (such
as to reflect costs variations) or if the tariffs became “inadequate, unduly
discriminatory or preferential”, always ensuring sufficient revenue to cover all
reasonable costs, including taxes, amortisations and capital costs, and a
“reasonable rate of return” for TGN (the Extraordinary Tariff Review); Argentina
further bolstered its promise of stable and sufficient revenues with several
stabilisation clauses. Argentina promised that tariffs would not be frozen or
subject to regulation or price control without full compensation from the
Government, and that the basic rules of the TGN Licence (which included the
tariff regime) would not be changed without TGN’s consent.”37
57. Total also points to the terms of TGN’s Licence and to the Bidding Rules38 enacted
by Argentina in 1992, regulating the participation of interested parties in the
international bidding process that was aimed at selling the privatized companies,
notwithstanding that Total did not participate in this process.
58. Total considers that three rules in the TGN Licence should be qualified as
“stabilisation clauses”.39 First, Section 9.8 establishes under the heading
‘Inaplicabilidad de Controles de Precios’ that: “The Licensee tariff regime shall not
be subject to freezing, management and/or price control orders. If, in spite of this
provision, the Licensee is obliged to adapt to a tariff control regime establishing a
lower level than that resulting from the Tariff, the Licensee shall be entitled to
receive equal compensation payable by the Grantor.” Secondly, Section 9.1 provides
that: “The Service Rules may be periodically modified, after the effective date, by the
Regulating Authority, to adapt it to the evolution and improvement of the Licensed
Service. When such modifications are not due to the Licensee’s initiative, it must be
consulted previously. Said modifications cannot alter these Basic Rules and, should
36
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 21 [footnotes omitted].
37
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 22-23 [footnotes omitted].
38
Pliego de bases y condiciones para el llamado a licitación pública internacional para la privatización de Gas del
Estado No. 33-0150 (Exhibit C-49).
39
See above para. 56, quoting Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 22-23.
23
they alter the economic-financial equilibrium of the License, a tariff review shall be
carried out as determined by the Regulating Authority.” Finally, Section 18.2
provides that: “The Grantor shall not modify these Basic Rules, in whole or in part,
except by prior written consent expressed by the Licensee and prior recommendation
of the Regulating Authority. Those provisions modifying the Service Rules and the
Tariff adopted by the Regulating Authority shall not be deemed modifications to the
Licence in force, notwithstanding the right of the Licensee to require the
corresponding Tariff readjustment if the net effect of such modification alters, in a
favourable or unfavourable sense, the economic-financial equilibrium existing prior
to such modification.”
59. Total has also invoked the violation by Argentina of TGN Bidding Rules (Annex F).
These Bidding Rules had been prepared by Argentina in 1992 for the international
bidding process aimed at selling TGN stocks that occurred in November-December
1992. As also explained by the Information Memorandum on Privatization of Gas del
Estado S.E., the Bidding Rules of 1992, which were approved by the Ministry of
Economy and Public Works and Services (Ministerial Decree No. 874/92),
prescribed “the qualification, bidding and award process and the requirements which
must be satisfied in order to submit a bid for one or more of the new companies” and
deadlines for interested parties to make their offer for the new companies.40 These
Rules were, therefore, addressed to the parties who participated in the award process
in November-December 1992.
60. Having described the legal regime for the gas transportation sector in place since
1992 on which Total relies, the Tribunal recalls that Argentina has pointed to two
developments it considers to be relevant because they had taken place shortly before
or while Total was proceeding to acquire the TGN shares. Argentina is of the view
that these developments weakened the Gas Regulatory Framework and that Total
should have considered this when it made its investment.
40
See Information Memorandum, Privatization of Gas del Estado S.E., supra note 26 at p. 10 and the timetable for
the bidding and award process at p. 12.
24
61. First, Argentina points to Law No. 25.344 enacted on October 19, 2000 that had
declared “the emergency of the economic and financial situation and of the contracts
by the Argentine public sector”. This Law, “[…] specifically triggered extraordinary
prerogatives in relation to administrative contracts, suspended all lawsuits against the
Argentine Government and consolidated its debt (deferment of payments).”41
Although Argentina recognizes that this law was not applicable to public service
sectors, Argentina contends that the issuance of that law was a legal recognition that
an “economic and financial emergency” was already in place in 2001, when Total
made its investments in both the gas transportation and the electricity generation
sectors, a fact that Total should have taken into account in evaluating the
macroeconomic and regulatory risk involved.42
62. Secondly, Argentina points with repeated emphasis to a development that was
specific to the gas sector. On January 6, 2000 (therefore before Total’s offer to
TransCanada Group dated 30 May, 2000 for the 19.23% stake in TGN) ENARGAS
and the gas licensees (including TGN) concluded the first agreement to exceptionally
(and just once) suspend the US PPI Adjustment of gas tariffs from January 1, 2000 to
June 30, 2000, and to defer its application up to June 30, 2000 (Article 1 Acta
Acuerdo).43 At the same time, Article 1 of the Acta Acuerdo provided for a full
recovery by the Licensees of the suspended adjustments between July 1, 2000 and
April 30, 2001. The Acta Acuerdo’s reasons and its legal basis are stated in its
Preamble and are connected with the severe recession taking place in Argentina’s
economy. The Preamble recalls that the Secretaría de Energía del Ministerio de
Economía (the “SoE”) had taken the initiative to ask Licensees to consider a
temporary suspension of the US PPI adjustment in accordance with the objectives
stated in Article 2 of the Gas Law and its implementing regulations.44 The Preamble
mentions also that the SoE “has expressed its concern as regards the current
economic situation [i.e. the ongoing deep recession and deflation] and the need to
41
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 68-69 (as to this law in general, paras. 70-73).
42
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 68. In this connection, the Tribunal notes that Argentina had pointed to
Law 25.344 for the first time at the Hearings on the Merits when witness Belluscio mentioned it.
43
See Exhibit C-119.
44
As to the objectives of the Gas Law, see above para. 49. Taking into account the aim of the Acta Acuerdo to
mitigate the negative effect of Argentina’s economic recession and deflation on the general population, the Tribunal
considers that the protection of consumer rights established in Article 2(a) Gas Law is particularly relevant here.
This conclusion is expressly supported by Decree 669/00 containing the Second Acta Acuerdo (see Decree’s
Preamble eighth and ninth sentences).
25
provide solutions in accordance with the economic plan designed from time to time
by the National Authorities, not affecting the compliance with the legislation of the
regulatory framework in force.” As to the Licensees’ position, the Preamble stated
that, on the one hand, the Licensees were “conscious of the social needs which have
arisen as a consequence of the general economic situation sustained by the country”;
on the other, they “want to remark that such situation is not isolated from the
economic integrity and its results, therefore, the full force of the public policies of
privatization are essential.” (fourth sentence).
63. As to this development concerning the Gas Regulatory Framework, Total has not
denied that, while deciding to make its investments in TGN, it was aware of the
above-mentioned Acta Acuerdo. Rather, Total contends that “Given that this
agreement was made on an “exceptional and only once” basis, as a favour to a new
regime [i.e. Fernando De la Rúa’s new administration], and that the deferred US PPI
was to be recovered six months later with interest, Total did not take the deferral into
account in its valuation of TGN nor in the offer it made to TCPL.”45
64. On August 4, 2000, after the Total/TransCanada Group Share Purchase Agreement
dated 30 May, 2000 (but prior to the completion of the sale), Argentina enacted
Decree No. 669/00 (“The application of the adjustment on the corresponding tariffs
in 9.4.1.1 and 9.4.1.4 of the Basic Rules of the Gas Transportation and Distribution
License in order to mitigate the economic impact caused by the application of
international market indicators, affecting the general population and the industrial
sector. Application of the adjustment related to the Producer Price Index, Industrial
Commodities (PPI). Agreement signed by the Government and the Licensees.”)46
This decree of July 2000 approved the second agreement (Acta Acuerdo) between the
government and the gas licensees (in this case including TGN) to further defer and
suspend the US PPI adjustment of gas tariffs until June 30, 2002. The second Acta
Acuerdo was premised on the existence of a “deep crisis” that made it necessary to
mitigate the impact of the reference to international prices. The Decree’s Preamble
(eleventh sentence) stated that “in order to understand in full the depth of this crisis,
it is necessary that the State and the gas Licensees, with the sole and specific purpose
of mitigating the impact on the economy generated by the application of international
45
See Total’s Memorial, para. 77.
46
Exhibit C-54.
26
market indicators in tariffs to users of natural gas adopt measures to avoid a severely
negative economic effect for the general population and the industry as well.” Thus,
the Decree contradicted the solemn statement in the first Acta Acuerdo that the first
suspension would be exceptional and non-recurrent. The Tribunal notes that the
Decree’s Preamble included a significant reference to Argentina’s commitments
under its investment treaties: “that the privatization process and the investments
resulting from it find the legal protection of the rules in force, and, specifically, also
in the Bilateral Investment Treaties entered into by the ARGENTINE REPUBLIC
and ratified by several laws.” (fourth sentence). In addition, the Decree’s Preamble
went on to state that “[…] said adjustment system constitutes a basic statement,
condition of the bids and offers awarded as a consequence of them, therefore, it
entails a legitimately acquired right by the succeeding Licensees in each License.”
(fifth sentence)
65. A few days later (on August 18, 2000), on request of the ‘Defensor del Pueblo de la
Nación’ (the Ombudsman), Judge Clara María do Pico issued an injunction
suspending the application of Decree 669/00.47 The Ombudsman disputed as contrary
to the rights and interests of consumers the subsequent recovery in full of the US PPI
adjustment with 8.2% interest after the period of suspension (after June 30, 2002),
provided for in Decree 669/00 through the creation of a specific fund (el Fondo de
Estabilización del PPI). According to the Ombudsman, this mechanism for
recovering the deferred US PPI adjustment did not consider the prejudice to
consumer interests and the radical change in the economic circumstances as of 1999.
The Ombudsman referred to the deep recession taking place in Argentina’s economy
and the deflation experienced by Argentina since 1999 on the one hand, and to the
unusual increase in prices in the United States of America (“US”) on the other hand.
The judge accepted this argument and found that the full recovery of the deferred US
PPI adjustment provided for in the Decree was in contrast with the core principle that
tariffs shall be just and reasonable not only for Licensees but also for consumers (Art.
9.1, Annex B, Decree 2255/92 Reglamento del Servicio y Tarifas). Moreover,
according to the judge, these new economic circumstances could be qualified as
“justified objective circumstances”, thereby calling for an Extraordinary Tariff
Review by ENARGAS and requiring the taking into account of consumer interests.
47
See Exhibit C-122.
27
According to the judge, the government and ENARGAS acted improperly and
beyond the Gas Regulatory Framework by providing for the US PPI adjustment
through Decree 669/00 without the intervention of consumers in public tariff review
proceedings (such as the Extraordinary Tariff Review according to Article 47 of the
Gas Law).
66. Promptly thereafter, on August 28, 2000, considering that this judicial suspension of
Decree 669/00 breached the US-Argentina BIT, CMS Gas Transmission, a
shareholder in TGN, sent a letter to the President of the Argentine Republic to start
the 6-month period of negotiation required under the Argentina-US BIT prior to
commencing ICSID arbitration. On September 22, 2000, ENARGAS, the Ministry of
Economy and the Attorney General appealed this injunction but ultimately were
without success.48 On January 23, 2001, Total closed the acquisition of TGN’s
19.23% stake. As to these events, which occurred while Total was making its
investment in TGN and were deemed by another foreign (US) shareholder to be a
potential breach of the US-Argentina BIT, Total contends that: “Given the
government’s own appeal against the decision, and the weak legal grounds on which
it perceived the decision was based, TGN was confident that it would soon be
overturned. As a result, this development did not impact the completion of the sale to
Total.”49
67. To the contrary, Argentina contends that Law No. 25.344 was part of a chronology of
emergency events, which started with the two Agreements (Actas Acuerdo) and were
followed by the preliminary injunction suspending the inflation adjustment to
account for the US PPI in the gas transportation sector. Moreover, Argentina points
out that “All these events are prior to the investment made by TOTAL in the gas and
electricity generation sector.”50 Given all of the above facts, and in contrast with
Total’s description in its Opening Statement at the Hearings, Argentina has described
the context in which Total made its investments in both the gas transportation sector
and the electricity generation sector in the following terms:
48
See Exhibit C-125. The Government’s appeal was rejected by the Buenos Aires Court of Appeals on October 5,
2001. TGN and the other Licensees also appealed the injunction.
49
See Total’s Memorial, para. 81 (as these events generally para. 80).
50
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 75 [italics in original].
28
“[...] (a) instead of “a conscious policy of the Argentine Government to attract
foreign investments,” there existed a desperate policy to save the economy; (b)
instead of a State Reform Law implementing a “massive privatization program,”
there was an Economic Emergency Law authorizing the intervention of
administrative contracts; (c) instead of the recent signature of 39 BITs, there were
two Agreements and a preliminary injunction with effects with respect to natural
gas transportation and distribution licenses, and an investor (CMS) who resorted
to the ICSID; and (d) instead of a recent currency pegged to the US dollar
pursuant to the Convertibility Law as a measure against hyperinflation, there was
a currency heading for a mega-devaluation, and an economic and social situation
that was described in an emergency law as a “deep depression process.”51
68. Having reviewed the different legal provisions that the parties consider relevant to
Total’s investment, the Tribunal now turns to Argentina’s Measures challenged by
Total as having “completely destroyed” that framework in breach of the protection
conferred by the BIT.
69. According to Total, the Measures enacted by Argentina that breached its
commitments towards Total are all contained in or took place pursuant to the
Emergency Law of January 6, 2002. More specifically, in Total’s words,52 “[…] each
and every one of the core commitments upon which Total relied on making its
investment has been abrogated, as shown in the chart below:
51
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 79.
52
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 37.
29
Dollar calculated tariffs Pesification of tariffs at an artificial rate of
(Article 41 Gas Decree; Section 9.2 TGN US$1 to 1 peso
Licence; Article 7.1 Annex F Bidding (Article 8 Emergency Law)
Rules)
Tariffs adjusted semi-annually by the Adjustment of tariffs in accordance with the
US PPI US PPI prohibited
(Article 41 Gas Law; Article 41 Gas (Article 8 Emergency Law)
Decree; Section 9.4.1.1 TGN Licence;
Section 7.5 Annex F Bidding Rules)
No freezing of tariffs without full Unilateral modification of TGN’s Licence and
compensation; no modification of the imposition of a mandatory renegotiation
terms of the Licence without the licensee’s process which disregards the terms of the
consent(Article 4(5), 41 Gas Decree; Section original Licence (Articles 8-10 Emergency Law;
9.1, 9.8, 11.5 18.2 TGN Licence) MoE Resolution 38/2002; Article 2 Law 25,790)
70. Before examining in detail the provisions challenged by Total and their effect on the
legal framework on which Total relies, the Tribunal considers it appropriate to recall
the economic, social and political evolution of Argentina that led to the Emergency
Law and to the major policy and legal initiatives taken by the authorities to cope with
the crisis. This evolution and the emergency legislation are relevant also to the
Tribunal’s examination of the other issues raised by Total in this arbitration.
71. The Emergency Law, which Total challenges, was enacted by Argentina during the
well-known economic, political and social crisis experienced by the country during
2001-2002, in response to that crisis and as an attempt to control and overcome it.
This crisis has been defined both as one of the worst economic crises in its history
and “among the most severe of recent economic crises” worldwide.53
72. Argentina’s crisis of 2001-2002 occurred after three years of deep recession and
deflation. Nevertheless, Argentina’s means to cope with this deep recession were
53
See IMF Occasional Paper N° 236, Lessons from the Crisis in Argentina (2005) (hereinafter IMF, Lessons from
the Crisis) (Exhibit C-454); IMF, The IMF and Argentina 1991-2001, IMF, Independent Evaluation Office, 2004
(hereinafter IMF Evaluation Report), 8. As stated in the Preface to the Report, the Independent Evaluation Office of
the IMF (IEO), which authored the Report, “was created in 2001 to provide objective and independent evaluations
on issues relevant to the IMF. It operates independently of IMF management and at arm’s length from the IMF
Executive Board”. IMF Evaluation Report “evaluates the role of the IMF in Argentina during 1991-2001, focusing
particularly on the period of crisis management from 2000 to early 2002”, ibid 11. In its description of the crisis, the
Tribunal relies on Lessons from the Crisis, the Evaluation Report, as well as on the summaries in previous ICSID
awards dealing with the effects of Argentina’s crisis, such as Continental Casualty Company v. Argentina, ICSID
Case No. ARB/03/9, Award, 5 September 2008, available at
http://ita.law.uvic.ca/documents/ContinentalCasualtyAward.pdf
30
constrained by the fact that the convertibility of pesos at par with the US dollar under
its currency board system prevented recourse to devaluation.54
73. At the end of 2000 and in the course of 2001, Argentina passed several laws aimed at
implementing or preserving the structural reforms that the IMF had asked Argentina
to undertake in accordance with the conditions of the Stand-by Arrangement with the
IMF of March 2000, while maintaining the convertibility regime.55 This was a
fundamental element of the policy of stability pursued by the IMF in agreement with
Argentina. From December 2000 to September 2001, the IMF provided exceptional
financial support to Argentina amounting to US$ 17 billion. This IMF financial
support continued until August-September 2001, “[D]espite concerns about the lack
of political support for the measures that would be needed to achieve the zero-deficit
target…”56 Notwithstanding the fiscal program for 2000 carried out to implement the
Fiscal Responsibility Law approved by the Argentine Congress in September 1999
and aimed at reducing the public deficit, at the beginning of March 2001, the
economic crisis worsened due to a further decline in economic activity that resulted
in a major deterioration in fiscal performance and, consequently, a significant
deterioration in the federal government’s finances.
74. To cope with the worsening crisis, at the end of March 2001, the government recalled
Mr. Domingo Cavallo (the author of the Convertibility plan in 1991) as Minister of
Economy and Congress granted him emergency powers. Shortly thereafter (on May
1), the new Minister publicly reaffirmed that Argentina would preserve the
convertibility regime.
54
The IMF in hindsight attributes the origin of the crisis to a number of factors hitting Argentina in the second half
of 1998. Among the external factors, IMF Evaluation Report (see supra note 53) identifies the appreciation of the
US dollar and the devaluation of the Brazilian real. More specifically, the Report outlines that “The convertibility
regime ruled out nominal depreciation when a depreciation of the real exchange rate was warranted by, among
other things, the sustained appreciation of the US dollar and the devaluation of the Brazilian real in early 1999.
Deflation and output contraction set in, while Argentina faced increasingly tighter financing constraints amid
investor concerns over fiscal solvency.” After having criticized the IMF for supporting the country’s weak policies
too long –“even after it had become evident in the late 1990s that the political ability to deliver the necessary fiscal
discipline and structural reforms was lacking”- the Report went on to affirm at p. 3 that: “By the time the crisis hit
Argentina in late 2000, there were grave concerns about the country’s exchange rate and debt sustainability, but
there was no easy solution. Given the extensive dollarization of the economy, the costs of exiting the convertibility
regime were already very large.”
55
The Convertibility Law, adopted by Argentina in 1991, sought to counteract the hyperinflation that existed at the
beginning of the 1990s, by pegging the peso to the US dollar at par and was part of a broader plan (the so-called
Convertibility Plan) that reformed Argentina’s economy. See below para. 137 ff.
56
See IMF Evaluation Report, supra note 53, 9.
31
75. Others measures adopted by Argentina at the end of 2000, and during the course of
2001, included: the introduction of a financial transaction tax, together with more
flexibility in the external pegging of the peso (through the addition in the
Convertibility Law of the euro as a peg besides the US dollar); labour market reform
and social security reform (both planned but not completed due to the widespread
social opposition); a package of trade and tax measures aimed at improving the
competitiveness of enterprises (the so-called competitiveness plan) in June 2001; the
Zero Deficit Law of July 2001; a voluntary exchange of external government bonds
of a face value of US$29.5 billion for longer-term instruments (the so-called mega-
swap); and the “Intangibility Law” of September 24, 2001 (declaring all deposits in
pesos or in foreign currency “intangible”). In October 2001, after the rating agencies
had downgraded Argentina’s debt twice, Minister Cavallo announced that he would
launch a further voluntary restructuring of all government debt (Decree 1387 of
November 1, 2001).
76. The further development of the crisis was described by the ICSID Tribunal in the
case Continental Casuality Company v. Argentina, based on the official IMF
documents, in the following terms:
57
Data taken from the tables in IMF, Lessons from the Crisis, supra note 53, 25.
32
press, hinted at the impossibility for Argentina to maintain the convertibility
regime. At the end of this month the peso started to devalue in the free market of
Montevideo. Facing a substantial run on deposits, on December 1, 2001 the
Government enacted Decree 1570 (Corralito), freezing deposits in the banking
system (only pesos 250 withdrawals per week were admitted) and prohibiting
transfers out of the country.”58
77. In early December 2001, the IMF announced “that the pending review under the
Stand-by Arrangement could not be completed under the circumstances”, thus
withdrawing its financial support to Argentina.59
78. The Corralito (Decree 1570 of December 1, 2001) entailed the blocking of
withdrawals from banks and was initially introduced as a temporary measure.
However, it was the first of the Emergency Measures that Argentina took while the
crisis was developing, which culminated in the devaluation of the peso, the
pesification of dollar denominated assets in Argentina and the default on public debt
and its rescheduling.
79. The crisis brought about a worsening of substantial social and personal hardship in
the general population, already heavily burdened by three years of deep recession. In
December 2001, the unemployment rate reached a record level of 18% and the
indigence level increased by 358%, with most of the increase having taken place
from May 2001 onward. Political demonstrations, riots and supermarket looting
began in various locations and spread to major cities. At this point, the economic and
social crisis acquired a political dimension. The government declared a state of siege
and, at the end of December, after riots and demonstrations had caused tens of
deaths, President De la Rúa resigned. The end of De la Rúa’s government was
followed by a vacuum in political power. After the resignation of President De la Rúa
on December 20, 2001, and the unsuccessful appointment by Congress of three
successive presidents between December 20 and December 30, Senator E. Duhalde
was elected President by the Congress to complete the presidential term, and he
assumed formal power on January 1, 2002. The regular functioning of the democratic
institutions was re-established only with the general elections held on May 25, 2003,
when Néstor Kirchner was duly elected president of Argentina.
58
Continental Casualty Company v. Argentina, supra note 53, paras. 122-124 [footnotes omitted].
59
See IMF Evaluation Report, supra note 53, 5.
33
4.2 Basic Features of the Emergency Law
80. It was in this context that Argentina passed the Emergency Law on January 6, 2002.
The Emergency Law and Measures adopted thereunder provided for the official
abolition of the convertibility regime and of the connected pegging of the peso at par
with the US dollar, as well as the forced conversion into pesos of all dollar
denominated financial instruments, indebtedness, contracts and all public utilities
tariffs (“pesification”) subject to Argentina’s law.
81. The Emergency Law, having declared a “public emergency in social, economic,
administrative, financial and exchange matters”, directed the government at Article 1
to “1. Proceed with the reorganization of the financial, banking and exchange market
systems. 2. Reactivate the operation of the economy and improve employment and
income distribution levels, with emphasis laid on a regional economies’ development
programme. 3. Create conditions for a sustainable economic growth, compatible with
public debt restructuring. 4. Regulate the restructuring of continuing obligations,
affected by the new exchange system implemented on article 2”, according to the
rules specified in the following articles. According to Article 8, “[a]s from the
passing of this Law, all contracts executed by the Public Administration under the
rules of public law, amongst them, those related to public works and services, dollar
or other currencies adjustment clauses and indexatory clauses based upon price ratios
from other countries and any other type of indexation system ceased to be effective,
providing that prices and rates resulting from such clauses would be expressed in
pesos at an exchange rate of one peso ($ 1) = one US dollar (USD 1).”60 Article 9
authorised the government to “renegotiate contracts mentioned in Article 8. In the
case of contracts having as their purpose the rendering of utilities, the following
criteria must be considered: 1) impact of rates on the competitiveness of the economy
and income distribution; 2) the quality of services and investment plans, whenever
they are contractually provided for; 3) interest of users and the possibility of gaining
access to such services; 4) safety of systems involved; and 5) company’s
profitability.” According to Article 10, “[t]he provisions of Articles 8 and 9 hereof
shall under no circumstances authorize the contracting companies or companies
60
Besides the pesification and renegotiation of the tariffs in the public service sectors, the Emergency Law provides
for the pesification of contracts subject to private law and at the same time for their renegotiation between the
parties (Article 11). The measure is not at stake as to Total’s claim in relation to TGN.
34
rendering public services, to suspend or alter the fulfilment of their obligations.”
While providing for the pesification of public services tariffs and blocking the
application of “adjustment clauses pegged to US dollars or any other foreign
currency and index clauses based on price indexes from other countries, as well as
any other index mechanism”, Article 9 of the Emergency Law provided for a
renegotiation of the licences of providers of public services and fixed the criteria
according to which the renegotiation process should be dealt with. Among these
criteria, were “the interest of users and utility accessibility” and “companies’
revenue.”
82. The Tribunal notes that the above principles set forth in the Emergency Law did not
derogate from but rather reflected and restated the fundamental criteria established by
the Gas Law and the principal objectives of the Gas Regulatory Framework. These
objectives and principles are enshrined in the Gas Law in the following terms: to
guarantee prudent and efficient Licensees the ability to cover their costs and receive a
reasonable rate of return (Article 38(a) Gas Law) and the protection of consumer
rights (Article 2(a) Gas Law), taking into account that gas transportation and
distribution activities are a “national public service” (Article 1). Finally, the Tribunal
notes that neither the Emergency Law nor the subsequent implementing decree
officially abolished, replaced or amended the text of the Gas Law and the Gas
Decree. Both of these legal instruments have remained in force.
4.3 The Tariff Renegotiation Process Taking Place Pursuant to and Following the
Emergency Law
83. The Emergency Law of January 2002 limited itself to establishing a renegotiation
process with the Licensees and the general criteria of that renegotiation. The
Emergency Law did not indicate whether this renegotiation mechanism would be
different than the one provided for in the Gas Regime. More generally, the
Emergency Law did not establish whether the renegotiation process would consist of
the various reviews and adjustment mechanisms specifically provided for in
Argentina’s legal system for each public utility sector or rather whether these
mechanisms would be replaced by one or more new types of proceedings.
35
84. In any case, on February 12, 2002 Argentina, through Decree 293/02,61 created a
single Commission tasked with renegotiating all of the concessions and licences
having as their object “to make public works and provide public services” in
accordance with Article 8 of the Emergency Law and the criteria in Article 9 of that
law. Decree 293/02 established the renegotiation process for all public utilities’
concessions and licences and stipulated that the process would last 120 days starting
on March 1, 2002. By a subsequent Decree (Decree 370/02) enacted on February 22,
2002, the “Comisión de la Renegociación de Contratos de Obras y Servicios
Públicos” was placed under the control of the Ministry of Economy. On March 18,
2002, the Ministry of Economy with Resolution 20/0262 articulated rules regulating
the renegotiation process and listed in Annex II all the Concessionaires and the
Licensees involved in the process (including TGN). According to the Ministry of
Economy (hereinafter “MoE”) Resolution 20/02 (section 2.1.2.), “…the NATIONAL
EXECUTIVE, by way of the Commission created under the MINISTRY OF
ECONOMY by Decree No. 293 dated 12 February 2002 and integration determined
by Decree No. 370 dated 22 February 2002, shall proceed to renegotiate the
Contracts for the Concession of Works and Public Utilities in execution, affected by
the emergency and the new exchange regime, to the extent of such impact, with the
scope set forth in Article 9 of the Emergency Law.” As to the renegotiation’s
objectives, the Resolution stated at section 2.1.3.: “Constitutes a primary objective of
this process, to seek, as long as possible and with a criterion of shared sacrifice, to
adapt by mutual consent the concession or licence contracts during the emergency
period and as long as the situation can be overcome, without applying structural
changes, in order to preserve the contract term and the original conditions with a
view of future recovery.” Section 2.1.4 went on to state that: “The period covering
the emergency shall require short term adjustment in order to adapt the execution of
contracts to the economy, hoping that in a sustained recovery scenario within the next
TWO (2) years – which is the duration of the emergency as set forth in Article 1 of
Law No. 25.561- it is possible for the parties to assume medium and long term
commitments.” Finally, it concluded that: “The tariff review process schedules
currently applicable must be reorganized in parallel, where applicable. The short-
61
See Exhibit C-19.
62
See Exhibit C-57.
36
term scenario features may demand periodic reviews of the parameters taken into
account to readjust the contracting conditions during the emergency situation.”
85. MoE Resolution 20/02 (section 2.2.1.) also provided for a generally applicable
timetable for the renegotiation process: on the one hand, the Resolution restated the
deadline of 120 days (as of March 1, 2002) set out in Decree 293/02; on the other,
emphasizing that the renegotiation process involved several contracts, it gave
warning that “the commencement and ending terms for each phase may differ from
case to case.”
86. To enable the Commission at the Ministry of Economy to pursue the renegotiation
process, on April 9, 2002, MoE Resolution 38/0263 blocked all public service tariff
reviews that were pending at that moment pursuant to the legal regime for each
sector. More specifically, the Resolution noted that “the regulating organisms of the
corresponding public services are developing their activities in accordance with their
governing rules, among them, tariff reviews and other decisions affecting directly or
indirectly utilities prices and tariffs.” Taking account of this, the Resolution
explained that “it is convenient to avoid such decisions to materialize during the
renegotiation process provided for in Law No. 25.561.” Accordingly, the Ministry of
Economy prevented regulators in the various public service sectors from adopting
any decision or action directly or indirectly affecting service prices or tariffs and
from carrying on any ongoing tariff review (Article 1 and 2). On June 26, 2002,
Argentina enacted Executive Decree 1.090.64 On the one hand, this decree restated
the Licensees’ general obligation to maintain the quality of the public services that
they provided according to their Licences (Article 2). On the other, it provided that
the public utilities’ new claims had to be included in the renegotiation process,
eventually forming part of the acuerdo concluded with the Renegotiation
Commission (Article 1 paragraph 1). As a consequence, public service providers
submitting new claims against the government outside of the renegotiation process
would be excluded from participating therein (Article 1 paragraph 2).65
63
See Exhibit C-25.
64
See Exhibit C-23.
65
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 479.
37
87. As to the specific impact of the above provisions on TGN and the renegotiation
process, according to Total:
88. As requested by ENARGAS, on October 17, 2002 the Ministry of Economy issued
MoE Resolution 487/02.67 The resolution specifically noted that gas tariff reviews
had become necessary “in order to facilitate the preservation of the rendering of
public services,” and exempted ENARGAS from MoE Resolution 38/02.
Consequently, ENARGAS began the Extraordinary Tariff Review by calling a public
hearing. On November 14, 2002, however, the Hearing—namely, the first step in the
Extraordinary Review in accordance with Article 46 of the Gas Law—was suspended
by the injunction issued by Judge Rodríguez Vidal in the case Unión de Usuarios y
Consumidores y Otros v. EN-Mº Economía y Infraestructura.68 Finally, on
February 3, 2003, by MoE Resolution 62/03,69Argentina extended the renegotiation
process deadline of 60 days.
89. At the end of May 2003, Mr. Néstor Kirchner was elected President of Argentina in
the general election. At this point the new government decided to establish a new
mechanism to carry out the renegotiation process both outside of the Gas Regulatory
Framework and separate to the Renegotiation Commission established in February
2002 by the previous Duhalde government. Following the re-organization and
renaming of the Ministerio de Economía and the Ministerio de la Producción (now
called Ministerio de Economía y Producción and Ministerio De Planificación
66
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 477-478.
67
See Exhibit C-58.
68
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 478.
69
See Exhibit C-21.
38
Federal, Inversión Pública y Servicios, respectively), Decree 311 of 4 July 200370
created the Unidad de Renegociación y Análisis de Contratos de Servicios Públicos
(“UNIREN”), placed under the control of both Ministries. The UNIREN replaced the
Renegotiation Commission in undertaking the task of carrying out the renegotiation
process. Moreover, according to the Preamble of the Decree, the UNIREN was
charged with a broader task. This was “the joint preparation of a project of the
General Regulatory Framework for the public services corresponding to national
jurisdiction.” As is highlighted hereunder at paragraph 171 ff., the renegotiation
process for the adjustment of TGN tariffs under the UNIREN mechanism lasted
several years without producing any significant results. Finally, on April 17, 2007,
the UNIREN proposed a Final Draft Agreement Act (“Acta Acuerdo”) to TGN that
TGN considered unacceptable.71
90. Total invokes principally the fair and equitable treatment obligation under Article 3
of the BIT in order to maintain its claim against Argentina.72 More specifically, Total
claims that Argentina has violated Article 3 by breaching Total’s legitimate
expectations with respect to the stability of the Gas Regulatory Framework which
were based on various commitments that Argentina had given to attract foreign
investors in this sector upon privatization in 1992, and that Total reasonably relied on
such stability when it made its investment in TGN. Total emphasizes that this
domestic legal framework was “fundamentally altered” by the Measures, in breach of
Argentina’s own law, so that its legitimate expectations had been frustrated by those
Measures.73
91. The thrust of Total’s argument is that the fair and equitable treatment standard
includes the protection of the “legitimate expectations” of a foreign investor
regarding the stability of the legal regime. These expectations are legitimate and
deserve protection under the BIT standard according to Total in as far as (i) such
70
See Exhibit C-22.
71
On Total’s position on the renegotiation process see Claimant’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 489-515.
72
Total claims that the same measures that it alleges to be in breach of Article 3 of the BIT also constitute an
indirect expropriation in breach of Article 5.2. Although Total addressed its claim under Article 5(2) before that
under Article 3, the Tribunal considers it more appropriate to examine the latter first since Total argued its claim
under Article 3 much more extensively.
73
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 222 ff.
39
stability has been “promised “ (to the foreign investor), and (ii) the foreign investor
has “relied” upon such promises in making its investment.
92. Total points to different promises of varying specificity. From the broadest to the
more specific, Total refers to the “core commitments” or “overarching promise” of
the Gas Regulatory Framework “that TGN’s economic equilibrium would be
maintained throughout the 35 to 45 years of its Licence” so that the regulated tariff of
TGN, which represented 98% of its revenue, was and would continue to be regulated
so as to provide TGN with sufficient revenue to cover all reasonable costs, including
taxes, amortisations and capital costs, and to make a “reasonable rate of return”
similar to activities of comparable risk.”74 As to the legal basis of these promises,
Total refers to the Gas Law itself (art. 38(a) and 39) and to the Gas Decree (Article
2.4) of 1992.
93. Total points to two additional, more specific, commitments “which supported the
promise of economic equilibrium”75, namely:
(i) the “promise” that TGN’s tariffs were and would be calculated in US
dollars and converted to Argentine pesos for billing purposes only”, in
Article 41.2 of the Gas decree, Section 9.2 of TGN Licence, both of 1992;
(ii) the automatic adjustment of the dollar tariffs every six months in
accordance with the US Producer Price Index (US PPI) “thereby
preserving its [TGN] dollar revenue in real dollar terms”, as provided in
Article 41 of the Gas Law, Article 41.3 Gas Decree, Section 9.4.1.1 of the
TGN licence, all of 1992.
94. As recalled before, Total points to two further mechanisms that were designed to
allow the regulator, ENARGAS, to set and restore TGN’s economic equilibrium on
both a recurrent and non-recurrent (extraordinary) basis, namely: (i) the Five-Year
Tariff Review provided for in Article 41 of the Gas Law, Article 41.3 of the Gas
Decree and Section 9.4.1.1 of the TGN Licence; and (ii) the Extraordinary Tariff
Review provided for in Article 42 of the Gas Law, Article 42 of the Gas Decree and
Section 9.5.1 of the Licence, which was intended to be a non-recurrent review that
74
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 20.
75
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 21.
40
was available on objective and justified grounds or if the tariffs became inadequate,
unduly discriminatory or preferential.
95. Finally, as already mentioned, Total points to Argentina’s promises in the TGN
Licence that tariffs would not be frozen or subject to regulation or price control
without full compensation from the government, and that the basic rules of the TGN
licence (which included the tariff regime) would not be changed without TGN’s
consent (found in Section 9.8 and respectively Sections 9.1 and 18.2 of the TGN
Licence).
96. While agreeing generally on the content of the instruments and of the specific
provisions that Total invokes, Argentina objects to the legal significance that Total
attributes to them. On the one hand, Argentina does not dispute that the most
important principle in the Gas Law (“the most important provision of the regulatory
framework for the natural gas distribution utility”) is that “tariffs must be fair and
reasonable.”76 Argentina specifically acknowledges that the “governing principle” of
the Gas Law is that “the tariff must cover operating costs, taxes and amortization,
must allow a reasonable rate of return, assuring users the minimum cost compatible
with supply security.”77 Argentina, however, disputes the construction of the various
provisions on which Total relies as being “promises” made to Total, and stresses that
Argentina never “induced” Total to invest in TGN when Total did so nine years after
the privatization “under a totally private transaction.”78 Argentina stresses that the
terms “promise”, “guarantee” or synonyms thereof do not appear in any of the Gas
Law or, the Decree or the Licence. According to Argentina, Total has been unable to
submit any instrument containing a promise or guarantee in respect of the currency
and the automatic adjustment of the tariffs.79
97. According to Argentina, the instruments on which Total relies are “of different legal
hierarchy”.80 Even if they were labelled as “guarantees”, Argentina believes that they
are neither immune from changes in the case of events that threaten its stability nor
can they result in wider rights than those enjoyed by the rest of the population when
76
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 255. Emphasis in the original.
77
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 263.
78
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 251-253.
79
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, paras 58-59.
80
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 264.
41
the common welfare of society is at stake, such as during the crisis of early 2002.81
On the contrary, Argentina’s legislative and executive authorities have the right to
exercise their powers in amending these instruments whenever public interest so
dictates.82 This was indeed the case for the Emergency Law enacted within the
framework of the dramatic crisis of late 2001 that affected all of the Argentine
economy.83 Specifically, Argentina points out that the calculation of tariffs in US
dollars is provided for by the Gas Decree and not by the Gas Law. Argentina submits
that the main tariff parameter—that the tariff must be at all times fair and
reasonable—would have been breached if the tariff calculation in US dollars had
been maintained after the maxi-devaluation of the peso.84 Contrary to Total’s view,
Argentina submits that the reference to the calculation of tariffs in US dollars was
linked to the Convertibility Law.85 Since the abandonment of the Convertibility
regime at par was, according to Argentina, legitimate and necessary in the
circumstances of the crisis at the end of 2001, the pesification of the tariffs as part of
the pesification of all contracts, “did not amount to an arbitrarily unjust treatment”,
being part of “a universal remedy that was applicable to all dollar-denominated legal
relationships.”86
98. As to the Licence, Argentina stresses that the Licence is subject to Argentina’s law
(Section 16.1). Argentina draws a distinction between the limitations on the power of
Argentina’s Executive to amend the Licence without the Licensee’s consent and the
right of Argentina’s Congress to lawfully modify the Licence.87 Argentina concludes
81
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, paras 319-320.
82
In order to support this argument Argentina refers to Section 18.3 of the TGN Licence which provides that [NTD:
Translate.] “Si alguna disposición de esta Licencia fuera declarada inválida o inexigible por sentecia firme del
tribunal competente [i.e. los tribunales en lo Contencioso Administrativo Federal de la Capital Federal under
Section 16.1], la validez y exigibilidad de las restantes disposiciones de esta Licencia non serán afectadas. Cada
estipulación de la Licencia será valida y exigible en la mayor medida permitida por la ley aplicable [i.e. Argentina’s
Law under Section 16.2].” Argentina contends that this provision expressly covers Argentina’s Measures
(specifically the Emergency Law) and includes both judicial decisions and legislative acts. Consequently, according
to Argentina, Section 18.3 allows Argentina to modify by law the TGN Licence, specifically as to the US PPI tariffs
adjustment (see Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 188-193). Therefore, Argentina concludes at para. 193 that
“the Emergency Law in no manner could violate the BIT as applied to the Licence [...] because the legitimate
expectations of any investor included the possibility that a law passed by the Congress may, lawfully, modify the
Licence (even though this could not be done through an Argentine Executive’s act).”
83
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 293.
84
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 266.
85
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 267.
86
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 306.
87
In this regard Argentina points out to Sect. 18.3 in fine of the Licence: “Each provision of the Licence shall be
valid and enforceable to the greatest extent permitted by applicable law.” See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para.
193 and Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 188.
42
that, under its own terms, the Licence, namely, the “contractual instrument allegedly
violated”88 that is subject to Argentina’s law, could be modified by a Law passed by
the Argentine Congress, such that Total had to account for this possibility as part of
its legitimate expectations.89
99. The first issue for the Tribunal is to determine whether the legislation, regulation and
provisions invoked by Total constitute a set of promises and commitments towards
Total whose unilateral modifications entail a breach of the legitimate expectations of
Total and, as a consequence, are in breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard
in the BIT. The opposite view held by Argentina is that Argentina has not breached
any promise or guarantee made to Total because “[T]he Argentine State did not
execute any contract with Total”90 nor did it induce Total to invest in TGN.91 The
provisions invoked by Total as “guarantees” are in Argentina’s view nothing other
than the totality of the regulatory framework effective from time to time.92
100. It is undisputed that Total did not enter into a contractual relationship with
Argentina’s authorities in 2000-2001 when it acquired an indirect share in TGN by
buying a share of Gasinvest from TransCanada, one of the various foreign
shareholders of TransCanada. All of the laws and regulations, which Total invokes as
a source of the promises that it relies upon (the Gas Law and the Gas Decree of
1992), are instruments of general application, enacted by the Congress or the
Executive branch of Argentina pursuant to the powers vested in these bodies under
the Constitution of Argentina. Further, Total does not submit that it had participated
in any way in the privatization of the gas transportation utilities of Argentina in 1991-
1992 through which the first private investors in TGN had become its shareholders.
88
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 200.
89
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 193.
90
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 311.
91
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 253.
92
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 81.
43
Specifically, the TGN Licence sets forth the obligations of the Argentine authorities
vis-à-vis the concessionaire. These obligations encompass details of how those
authorities may (and should) exercise, with respect to the concessionaire, the
regulatory powers granted to them by the Gas Law and Gas Decree in order to
preserve the general interest underlying the performance of the public service. Since
Total is not a party to the concession, a more accurate description of the situation
would be that Total has invested in a public utility (namely TGN) which operated a
public service activity regulated by a defined legal regime set forth (also) in the
concession. Therefore TGN Licence cannot be regarded as a source of contractual
legal obligations of a specific character assumed directly by Argentina towards Total.
Accordingly, it is not correct to qualify and treat the TGN Licence provisions as
stabilisation clauses agreed between Total and Argentina. Stabilisation clauses are
clauses, which are inserted in state contracts concluded between foreign investors and
host states with the intended effect of freezing a specific host State’s legal framework
at a certain date, such that the adoption of any changes in the legal regulatory
framework of the investment concerned (even by law of general application and
without any discriminatory intent by the host State) would be illegal. For the reasons
stated above, this characterization does not fit the relationship between Total and
Argentina as to Total’s investment in TGN.
102. Total submits that legitimate expectations with respect to the stability of the legal
framework under which a foreign company makes an investment may derive not only
from contractual undertakings, but also from legislation and regulation that was
precisely meant to attract foreign investment. Total points out that the gas regulatory
framework was devised and enacted in order to attract long term private foreign
investments in utilities, which until then had been run by the State, that were badly in
need of modernization through massive investment by competent operators and
others, especially in view of the past record of high inflation in Argentina. This
regime was based on a sound economic underpinning, an integral part of which was
the overarching commitment to reasonable and fair tariffs for the operators and
specifically the US dollar peg.
44
103. Subjectively, Total submits that the existence of such a framework, which had
been in place for almost nine years when it decided to become a shareholder of TGN,
was a major consideration in carrying out such an investment.
104. To the contrary, Argentina points to the agreed suspensions of the PPI, which
were in place when Total made its acquisition of the shareholding in TGN from
TransCanada, that should have put Total on notice that the Gas Regulatory
Framework was being undermined. Argentina also submits that Total was careless in
making its investment in that it did not carry out the due diligence analysis that is
commonly undertaken before making such a large direct investment abroad. Had
Total carried out proper due diligence, it would have been aware of the looming
economic difficulties of Argentina and of their possible impact on the future stability
of the Gas Regulatory Framework.
105. The legal issue for the Tribunal is thus to determine whether the fair and
equitable treatment standard of Article 3 of the BIT, in particular as far as it includes
the “protection of legitimate expectations” of the foreign investor, has been breached
by the unilateral changes of legislation and regulation effected by Argentina and
challenged by Total.
6.1 Applicable Standard: the Fair and Equitable Treatment Standard in General
106. The undertaking of the host country to provide fair and equitable treatment to the
investors of the other party and their investments is a standard feature in BITs,
although the exact language of such undertakings is not uniform. The generality of
the fair and equitable treatment standard distinguishes it from specific obligations
undertaken by the parties to a BIT in respect of typical aspects of foreign investment
operations such as those concerning monetary transfers, visas, etc. At the same time,
the fair and equitable treatment standard can be distinguished from other general
standards included in BITs, namely the national and the most favoured nation
treatment standards, which guarantee a variable protection that is contingent upon the
treatment given by the host State to its own nationals or to the nationals of the best
treated third state.
45
107. The fair and equitable treatment standard is, by contrast, an autonomous standard,
although its exact content is not predefined, except in cases where a treaty provides
additional specifications, which is not the case for the France-Argentina BIT.93 Since
this standard is inherently flexible, it is difficult, if not impossible, “to anticipate in
the abstract the range of possible types of infringements upon the investor’s legal
position”.94 Its application in a given case must take into account relevant State
practice and judicial or arbitral case law as well as the text of the BIT and other
sources of customary or general international law.95
108. The meaning of various fair and equitable treatment clauses has been tested in
several investment disputes and the issue has been dealt with by a number of
academic writings, including by the most prominent scholars in the field of
international investment law. Some tribunals have started from the ordinary meaning
of the term, in accordance with Article 31(1) of the Vienna Convention of the Law of
Treaties (“VCLT”), recalling the dictionary definitions of just, even-handed,
unbiased, legitimate.96 On the other hand, one cannot but agree with Judge Higgins’
observation in the Oil Platforms case, that “the key terms “fair and equitable
treatment to nationals and companies”… are legal terms of art well known in the
field of overseas investment protection”.97
109. On the premise that a “judgement of what is fair and equitable cannot be reached
in the abstract; it must depend on the fact of the particular case” and that “the
standard is to some extent a flexible one which must be adapted to the circumstances
of each case”98, tribunals have endeavoured to pinpoint some typical obligations that
may be included in the standard, as well as types of conduct that would breach the
standard, in order to be guided in their analysis of the issue before them.
93
For instances of more specific content see the NAFTA Free Trade Commission Note of Interpretation of 31 July
2001 available at http://www.international.gc.ca/trade-agreements-accords-commerciaux/disp-diff/NAFTA-
Interpr.aspx?lang=en and the US Model BIT of 2004 available at
http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/117601.pdf
94
C. Schreuer, Fair and Equitable Treatment in Arbitral Practice, 6 J. World Trade,(2005/3), 357, 365.
95
ADF Group Inc. v. United States, ICSID Case No. ARB (AF)/00/1, Award, 9 January 2003, para. 184.
96
See MTD Equity Sdn. Bhd. & MTD Chile S.A. v. Chile, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/7, Award, 25 May 2004, para.
113; Siemens v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/02/8, Award, 6 February 2007, para. 290.
97
See Oil Platforms (Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America), Preliminary Objection, Judgment,
I.C.J. Reports 1996, p. 803, at p. 858 (Separate Opinion).
98
See Mondev International Ltd. v. United States of America, ICSID Case No. ARB(AF)/99/2, Award, 11 October
2002, para. 118, and Waste Management, Inc. v. United Mexican States, ICSID Case No. ARB(AF)/00/3, Final
Award, 30 April 2004, para. 99, respectively.
46
110. A breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard has been found in respect of
conduct characterized by “arbitrariness”99 and of “acts showing a wilful neglect of
duty, an insufficiency of action falling far below international standards, or even
subjective bad faith.”100 It has been also held that the standard requires “treatment in
an even-handed and just manner, conducive to fostering the promotion of foreign
investment”,101 thereby condemning conduct that is arbitrary, grossly unfair, unjust
or idiosyncratic or that “involves a lack of due process leading to an outcome which
offends judicial propriety – as might be the case with a manifest failure of natural
justice in judicial proceedings or a complete lack of transparency and candour in
administrative process.”102 Awards have found a breach in cases of discrimination
against foreigners and “improper and discreditable” or “unreasonable” conduct.103
This does not mean that bad faith is necessarily required in order to find a breach: “A
State may treat foreign investment unfairly and inequitably without necessarily acting
in bad faith.”104
111. In determining the scope of a right or obligation, Tribunals have often looked as a
benchmark to international or comparative standards.105 Indeed, as is often the case
for general standards applicable in any legal system (such as “due process”), a
comparative analysis of what is considered generally fair or unfair conduct by
domestic public authorities in respect of private firms and investors in domestic law
may also be relevant to identify the legal standards under BITs.106 Such an approach
is justified because, factually, the situations and conduct to be evaluated under a BIT
occur within the legal system and social, economic and business environment of the
host State. Moreover, legally, the fair and equitable treatment standard is derived
99
See ElettronicaSicula S.P.A. (ELSI), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1989, p. 15, para. 128 where an “arbitrary action”
was defined as “as a wilful disregard of due process of law, an act which shocks, or at least surprises, a sense of
judicial property.”
100
Genin and others v. Estonia, ICSID Case No. ARB/99/2, Award, 25 June 2001, para. 367.
101
MTD Equity Sdn. Bhd. & MTD Chile S.A. v. Chile, supra note 96, para. 113.
102
Waste Management, Inc. v. United Mexican States, supra note 98, para. 98 (as to infringement of “the minimum
standard of treatment of fair and equitable treatment”).
103
Saluka Investments BV v. The Czech Republic, UNCITRAL, Partial Award, 17 March 2006, para. 309.
104
Mondev International Ltd. v. United States of America, supra note 98, para. 116. See also Siemens v Argentina,
supra note 96, para. 299, reviewing precedents.
105
S.D. Myers, Inc. v. Canada, UNCITRAL, First Partial Award, 13 November 2000, paras. 263-264; Genin and
others v. Estonia, Award, 25 June 2001, para. 367 ff.
106
There is a substantial body of authority to this effect. See Noble Ventures, Inc. v. Romania, ICSID Case No.
ARB/01/11, Award, 12 October 2005, paras 177-178 stating that a legal proceeding that exists in virtually all legal
systems, such as bankruptcy proceedings, cannot be regarded as arbitrary.
47
from the requirement of good faith which is undoubtedly a general principle of law
under Article 38(1) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice.
112. UNCTAD has followed such an approach in its publication on the topic, besides
referring to arbitral practice, in order:
“to identify certain forms of behaviour that appear to be contrary to fairness and
equity in most legal systems and to extrapolate from this the type of State action
that may be inconsistent with fair and equitable treatment, using the plain
meaning approach. Thus, for instance, if a State acts fraudulently or in bad faith,
or capriciously and wilfully discriminates against a foreign investor, or deprives
an investor of acquired rights in a manner that leads to the unjust enrichment of
the State, then there is at least a prima facie case for arguing that the fair and
equitable standard has been breached”.107
113. We turn now to the more specific concept, which Total asserts forms part of the
fair and equitable treatment standard, of the protection of “legitimate expectations”
on the part of an investor concerning the stability of the legal framework under which
it has made its investment.
114. Tribunals have often referred to the principle of the protection of the investor’s
legitimate expectations, especially with reference to the “stability” of the legal
framework of the host country applicable to the investment, as being included within
the fair and equitable treatment standard. However, case law is not uniform as to the
preconditions for an investor to claim that its expectations were “legitimate”
concerning the stability of a given legal framework that was applicable to its
investment when it was made. On the one hand, stability, predictability and
consistency of legislation and regulation are important for investors in order to plan
their investments, especially if their business plans extend over a number of years.
Competent authorities of States entering into BITs in order to promote foreign
investment in their economy should be aware of the importance for the investors that
107
UNCTAD, Fair and Equitable Treatment, UNCTAD Series on Investment Agreements, 1999 UN Doc.
UNCTAD/ITE/IIT/11, Vol. III, at 12.
48
a legal environment favourable to the carrying out of their business activities be
maintained.108
115. On the other hand, signatories of such treaties do not thereby relinquish their
regulatory powers nor limit their responsibility to amend their legislation in order to
adapt it to change and the emerging needs and requests of their people in the normal
exercise of their prerogatives and duties. Such limitations upon a government should
not lightly be read into a treaty which does not spell them out clearly nor should they
be presumed.109 In fact, even in those BITs where stability of the legal framework for
investment is explicitly mentioned, such as in the BIT between the United States and
Argentina of 1991 (in accordance with the U.S. Model BIT of the time) such a
reference appears only in the preamble.110
116. In various disputes between U.S. investors and Argentina under that BIT,
tribunals have relied on the explicit mention in its preamble of the desirability of
maintaining a stable framework for investments in order to attract foreign investment
as a basis for finding that the lack of such stability and related predictability, on
which the investor had relied, had resulted in a breach of the fair and equitable
treatment standard.111 This reference is justified because, although such a statement
in a preamble does not create independent legal obligations, it is a tool for the
interpretation of the treaty since it sheds light on its purpose.112 However, the BIT
between France and Argentina does not contain any such reference, following the
108
See M. Waibel, Opening Pandora’s Box: Sovereign Bonds in International Arbitration, 101 American Journal
of International Law (2007) 711, 750, according to whom the fair and equitable standard as developed in the case
law protects “legitimate commercial expectations” and requires that “governmental acts need to conform to
international standards of transparency, non arbitrariness, due process and proportionality to the policy aims
involved.”
109
In applying the fair and equitable standard under Article 1105 (1) NAFTA the Tribunal in S.D. Myers, Inc. v.
Canada, supra note 105, para. 263 considered that a determination of breach “must be made in the light of the high
measure of deference that international law generally extends to the right of domestic authorities to regulate matters
within their own border”, taking also into account any specific rule of international law.
110
See Continental Casualty Company v. Argentina, supra note 53, para. 258, with reference to the U.S.-Argentina
BIT of 1991 which includes the following preambular language, following the U.S. Model BIT of the time:
“Agreeing that fair and equitable treatment of investment is desirable in order to maintain a stable framework for
investment and maximum effective utilization of economic resources…”.
111
See LG&E v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/02/1, Decision on Liability, 3 October 2006, paras 124-125
citing similar findings by other tribunals “in light of the same or similar language”; Enron Corporation and
Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina, supra note 20, para. 259. The Tribunal notes that the U.K.-Argentina BIT does
not include any reference to such stability. See National Grid plc v. Argentina, UNCITRAL, Award, 3 November
2008, paras. 168 ff. and in particular para. 170.
112
Occidental Exploration and Production Company v. The Republic of Ecuador, LCIA Case No. UN 3467, Final
Award, 1 July 2004 relies explicitly on the language of the preamble in order to hold that “the stability of the legal
and business framework is thus an essential element of fair and equitable treatment.”
49
French BIT model.113 This absence indicates, at a minimum, that stability of the legal
domestic framework was not envisaged as a specific element of the domestic legal
regime that the Contracting Parties undertook to grant to their respective investors.114
The operative provisions of the France-Argentina BIT must in any case be read
taking into account, within the object and purpose of the treaty, the reference in the
Preamble to the desire of the Parties to create favourable conditions for the
investments covered.115
117. In the absence of some “promise” by the host State or a specific provision in the
bilateral investment treaty itself, the legal regime in force in the host country at the
time of making the investment is not automatically subject to a “guarantee” of
stability merely because the host country entered into a bilateral investment treaty
with the country of the foreign investor. The expectation of the investor is
undoubtedly “legitimate”, and hence subject to protection under the fair and equitable
treatment clause, if the host State has explicitly assumed a specific legal obligation
for the future, such as by contracts, concessions or stabilisation clauses on which the
investor is therefore entitled to rely as a matter of law.116
113
The BIT at issue here includes the obligation of each Party to extend “full protection and security” to covered
investments of nationals of the other Party in its territory, “in accordance with the principle of just and equitable
treatment in Article 3 of this Agreement” (Article 5(1) of the BIT). As to the scope of this kind of clause, some
awards (see Azurix v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/12, Award, 14 July 2006, para. 408; National Grid plc v.
Argentina, supra note 111, para. 187) have considered that this protection is not limited to physical assets and that it
encompasses the stability of the legal framework and legal security of the investment. Other awards have instead
stuck to the original limitation of physical security (BG Group Plc v. Argentina, UNCITRAL, Award, 24 December
2007, para. 326).
114
Total has pointed out, however, the official statement made by the representative of the Government of
Argentina to Congress in relation to the ratification of the BIT by Argentina: “Bearing in mind that the main
purpose of this type of agreements is to bolster genuine and productive investment, in consequence, certain
situations or measures which may affect negatively the value or product of the investment are foreseen. Hence, by
way of this agreement, the States agree to maintain the status, during the term of such, of certain rules concerning
the treatment of investments and enshrines among the signatory States the commitment not to contravene rules
which, being part of this subject, belong to the group of principles common to all nations… This way, a stable and
satisfactory environment is created which mitigates the concerns of foreign investors related to non-commercial
risks –called political risks- and promotes the international capital flow within in compliance with the laws of the
host State.” (Exhibit C-89, Mensaje del Poder Ejecutivo al Congreso de la Nación for Law 24.100/92, 10 June
1992). The Tribunal notes that this statement does not include a reference to stability, such as the one found in the
corresponding message relating to the 1992 BIT of Argentina with the U.K. : “By way of such [agreements], States
accord to maintain during its term certain rules concerning investment treatment, in order to establish an
environment of stability and trust to attract investments.” (Exhibit C-87)
115
Connected with this statement is the general obligation of Article 2 of the BIT, according to which each
Contracting Party shall admit and promote investments made by investors of the other Party, however “within the
frame of its legislation and provisions hereof.”
116
See CME Czech Republic B.V. v. Czech Republic, UNCITRAL, Partial Award, 13 September 2001, para. 611
concerning interference with contractual rights by a regulatory authority; Técnicas Medioambientales Tecmed, S.A.
v. United Mexican States, ICSID Case No. ARB (AF)/00/2, Award, 29 May 2003, para. 154 relating to the
replacement of an unlimited licence by one of limited duration for the operation of a landfill. See also Waste
50
118. The situation is similar when public authorities of the host country have made the
private investor believe that such an obligation existed through conduct or by a
declaration.117 Authorities may also have announced officially their intent to pursue a
certain conduct in the future, on which, in turn, the investor relied in making
investments or incurring costs.118 As stated within the NAFTA framework “the
concept of “legitimate expectations” relates […] to a situation where a Contracting
Party’s conduct creates reasonable and justifiable expectations on the part of an
investor (or investment) to act in reliance on said conduct, such that a failure by the
NAFTA party to honour those expectations could cause the investor (or investment)
to suffer damages.”119
119. In fact, when relying on the concept of legitimate expectations, arbitral tribunals
have often stressed that “specific commitments” limit the right of the host State to
adapt the legal framework to changing circumstances.120 Representations made by
the host State are enforceable and justify the investor’s reliance only when they are
specifically addressed to a particular investor.121 “Where a host State which seeks
foreign investment acts intentionally, so as to create expectations in potential
investors with respect to particular treatment or comportment, the host state should,
Management, Inc. v. United Mexican States, supra note 98, where the claim of the investor under Article 1105(1)
NAFTA was rejected. In particular the Tribunal considered at para. 98 that the fair and equitable standard would be
violated by the “breach of representations made by the host State which were reasonably relied upon by the
claimant.”
117
See the case of assurances provided by senior government officials to an investor in Wena Hotels Ltd. v. Arab
Republic of Egypt, ICSID Case No. ARB/98/4, Award on Merits, 8 December 2000, paras. 59 ff.
118
For a review of such instances see M. Reisman and M.H. Arsanjani, The Question of Unilateral Governmental
Statements as Applicable Law in Investment Disputes, 19 ICSID Review-Foreign Investment Law Journal 328
(2004).
119
See International Thunderbird Gaming Corporation v. Mexico, UNCITRAL, Arbitral Award, 26 January 2006,
para. 147. This is defined as “detrimental reliance” by T.J. Grierson-Weiler and I.I. Laird, Standards of Treatment,
Chapter 8 of P. Muchlinski, F. Ortino and C. Schreuer (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of International Investment
Law, Oxford, 2008, 275.
120
See CMS Gas Transmission Company v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/8, Decision on Jurisdiction, 17
July 2003, para. 27, holding that when general measures are challenged: “A direct relationship can, however, be
established if those general measures are adopted in violation of specific commitments given to the investor in
treaties, legislation or contracts. What is brought under the jurisdiction of the Centre is not the general measures in
themselves but the extent to which they may violate those specific commitments.”
121
See International Thunderbird Gaming Corporation v. Mexico, supra note 119, para. 147. On the facts of the
various cases some tribunals have, however, concluded that the legal order of the host State as it stood at the time
when the investor acquired the investment grounded the legitimate expectations of the investor with respect to the
stability of the relevant regulations: Gami Investments, Inc. v. Mexico, UNCITRAL, Final Award, 15 November
2004, para. 93; Feldman v. Mexico, ICSID Case No. ARB(AF)/99/1, Award on Merits, 16 December 2002, para.
128.
51
we suggest, be bound by the commitments and the investor is entitled to rely upon
them in instances of decision”.122
120. In other words, an investor’s legitimate expectations may be based “on any
undertaking and representations made explicitly or implicitly by the host State. A
reversal of assurances by the host State which have led to legitimate expectations will
violate the principle of fair and equitable treatment. At the same time, it is clear that
this principle is not absolute and does not amount to a requirement for the host State
to freeze its legal system for the investor’s benefit. A general stabilization
requirement would go beyond what the investor can legitimately expect.”123
121. The balance between these competing requirements and hence the limits of the
proper invocation of “legitimate expectations” in the face of legislative or regulatory
changes (assuming that they are not contrary to a contractual, bilateral or similar
undertaking, binding in its own right) has been based on a weighing of various
elements pointing in opposite directions. On the one hand, the form and specific
content of the undertaking of stability invoked are crucial. No less relevant is the
clarity with which the authorities have expressed their intention to bind themselves
for the future. Similarly, the more specific the declaration to the addressee(s), the
more credible the claim that such an addressee (the foreign investor concerned) was
entitled to rely on it for the future in a context of reciprocal trust and good faith.
Hence, this accounts for the emphasis in many awards on the government having
given ‘assurances’, made ‘promises’, undertaken ‘commitments’, offered specific
conditions, to a foreign investor, to the point of having solicited or induced that
investor to make a given investment. Total itself described the acts of Argentina on
which it relies in this way. As a result of such conduct by the host authorities, the
expectation of the foreign investor may “rise to the level of legitimacy and
reasonableness in light of the circumstances.”124 When those features are not present,
a cautious approach is warranted based on a case specific contextual analysis of all
relevant facts.
122
Conclusions by M. Reisman and M.H. Arsanjani, The Question of Unilateral Governmental Statements as
Applicable Law in Investment Disputes, supra note 118, 342.
123
See C. Schreuer, Fair and Equitable Treatment in Arbitral Practice, supra note 94, 374.
124
See Saluka Investments BV v. The Czech Republic, supra note 103, para. 304.
52
122. Indeed, the most difficult case is (as in part in the present dispute) when the basis
of an investor’s invocation of entitlement to stability under a fair and equitable
treatment clause relies on legislation or regulation of a unilateral and general
character. In such instances, investor’s expectations are rooted in regulation of a
normative and administrative nature that is not specifically addressed to the relevant
investor. This type of regulation is not shielded from subsequent changes under the
applicable law. This notwithstanding, a claim to stability can be based on the
inherently prospective nature of the regulation at issue aimed at providing a defined
framework for future operations. This is the case for regimes, which are applicable to
long-term investments and operations, and/or providing for “fall backs” or contingent
rights in case the relevant framework would be changed in unforeseen circumstances
or in case certain listed events materialize. In such cases, reference to commonly
recognized and applied financial and economic principles to be followed for the
regular operation of investments of that type (be they domestic or foreign) may
provide a yardstick. This is the case for capital intensive and long term investments
and operation of utilities under a license, natural resources exploration and
exploitation, project financing or Build Operate and Transfer schemes. The concept
of “regulatory fairness” or “regulatory certainty” has been used in this respect.125 In
the light of these criteria when a State is empowered to fix the tariffs of a public
utility it must do so in such a way that the concessionaire is able to recover its
operations costs, amortize its investments and make a reasonable return over time, as
indeed Argentina’s gas regime provided.
123. On the other hand, the host State’s right to regulate domestic matters in the public
interest has to be taken into consideration as well.126 The circumstances and reasons
(importance and urgency of the public need pursued) for carrying out a change
impacting negatively on a foreign investor’s operations on the one hand, and the
seriousness of the prejudice caused on the other hand, compared in the light of a
standard of reasonableness and proportionality are relevant. The determination of a
breach of the standard requires, therefore, “a weighing of the Claimant’s reasonable
and legitimate expectations on the one hand and the Respondent’s legitimate
125
See T.J. Grierson-Weiler and I.I. Laird, Standards of Treatment, supra note 119, 277.
126
See Saluka Investments BV v. The Czech Republic, supra note 103, paras 305-306. See also Feldman v. Mexico,
supra note 121, para. 112: “[G]overnments, in their exercise of regulatory power, frequently change their laws and
regulations in response to changing economic circumstances or changing political, economic or social
considerations. Those changes may well make certain activities less profitable or even uneconomic to continue.”
53
regulatory interest on the other.”127 Thus an evaluation of the fairness of the conduct
of the host country towards an investor cannot be made in isolation, considering only
their bilateral relations. The context of the evolution of the host economy, the
reasonableness of the normative changes challenged and their appropriateness in the
light of a criterion of proportionality also have to be taken into account.128 Additional
criteria for the evaluation of the fairness of national measures of general application
as to services are those found in the WTO General Agreement on Trade of Services
(GATS). The Tribunal recalls that Article VI of the GATS of 1994 on “Domestic
regulation” provides that “In sectors where specific commitments are undertaken,
each member shall ensure that all measures of general application affecting trade in
services are administered in a reasonable, objective and impartial manner” (emphasis
added). This reference concerning services (as undoubtedly Total’s operations in the
gas transportation and electricity were) in a multilateral treaty to which both
Argentina and France are parties offers useful guidance as to the requirements that a
domestic regulation must contain in order to be considered fair and equitable. The
Tribunal refers to the requirements found in Article VI GATS just as “guidance”
because it has not been submitted that the GATS is directly applicable here. This
would require that Argentina had admitted Total’s investment in the electricity sector
on the basis of a specific commitment in respect of the opening of electricity
generation to investors from other WTO Members.
124. Besides such an objective comparison of the competing interests in context, the
conduct of the investor in relation to any undertaking of stability is also, so to speak
“subjectively”, relevant. Tribunals have evaluated the investor’s conduct in this
respect, highlighting that BITs “are not insurance policies against bad business
127
See Saluka Investments BV v. The Czech Republic, ibid. See also D. Carreau, P. Juillard, Droit international
économique, 2ième édition, 2005, 442, para. 1265 according to whom the “equitable” requirement of the standard
implies that a satisfactory equilibrium be ensured between the interests of the investor, of its nationality State and of
the host State.
128
For instance, see Genin and others v. Estonia, supra note 105, para. 348, where the Tribunal states that in
considering the revocation of a banking license to a financial institution (Estonian Innovation Bank) in which a U.S.
investor made its investments “... the Tribunal considers it imperative to recall the particular context in which the
dispute arose, namely, that of a renascent independent state, coming rapidly to grips with the reality of modern
financial, commercial and banking practices and the emergence of state institutions responsible for overseeing and
regulating areas of activity perhaps previously unknown. This is the context in which Claimants knowingly chose to
invest in an Estonian financial institution, EIB.”
54
judgments” and that the investor has its own duty to investigate the host State’s
applicable law.129
125. The commitment to fair and equitable treatment in Article 3 of the BIT relates to
a treatment that must be in conformity with the principles of international law
(“conforme a los principios de Derecho International / en conformité des principes
du droit international”). The parties have discussed whether this reference is to a
minimum standard, as suggested by Argentina,130 or whether it sets forth an
autonomous standard, as submitted by Total.131 For the reasons stated hereunder the
Tribunal is of the opinion that the phrase “fair and equitable in conformity with the
principles of international law” cannot be read as “treatment required by the
minimum standard of treatment of aliens/investors under international law.”132 This
is irrespective of the issue of whether today there really is a difference between this
traditional minimum standard and what international law generally requires as to
treatment of foreign investors and their investments.133
127. The Tribunal will, therefore, proceed to further interpret the “fair and equitable
treatment” standard looking also at general principles and public international law in
129
See Maffezini v. Spain, ICSID Case No. ARB/97/7, Award on the Merits, 13 November 2000, para. 64. See also
MTD Equity Sdn. Bhd. & MTD Chile S.A. v. Chile, supra note 96, para. 178.
130
According to Argentina (Opening Statement, Hearing Day 2, 443:19-444-1) the minimum standard would not
include the obligation to maintain a stable legal environment and protect legitimate expectations of the investor.
131
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, 210 ff.
132
See to this effect the analysis of UNCTAD, Fair and Equitable Treatment, supra note 107, 40. A detailed review
of different opinions and statements on the issue is found in OECD, International Investment Law, A Changing
Landscape, 2005, at 81-96.
133
Several arbitral tribunals dealing with investment disputes have held that the law of the international protection
of foreign investors (of which the fair and equitable treatment standard is part) has considerably evolved since the
Neer decision of 1926 that was considered to restate the minimum treatment standard existing at that time (see
Enron Corporation and Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina, supra note 20, para. 257; Mondev International Ltd. v.
United States of America, supra note 98, paras 116-117). See also R. Dolzer and C. Schreuer, Principles of
International Investment Law, 2008, 128-130.
55
a non-BIT context. This approach is consistent with the interpretation of Article 3 of
the France-Argentina BIT by the “Vivendi II” tribunal which has expressed the view
we have developed above, namely, that: “The Tribunal sees no basis for equating
principles of international law with the minimum standard of treatment … the
reference to principles of international law supports a broader reading that invites
consideration of a wider range of international law principles than the minimum
standard”.134 The views expressed by commentators on the French model BIT, from
which the phrase derives, are consistent with these conclusions.135
128. Since the concept of legitimate expectations is based on the requirement of good
faith, one of the general principles referred to in Article 38(1)(c) of the Statute of the
International Court of Justice as a source of international law, the Tribunal believes
that a comparative analysis of the protection of legitimate expectations in domestic
jurisdictions is justified at this point. While the scope and legal basis of the principle
varies, it has been recognized lately both in civil law and in common law
jurisdictions within well defined limits.136
134
Compañiá de Aguas del Aconquija S.A. and Vivendi Universal v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/97/3, Award,
20 August 2007 (hereinafter also “Vivendi II”), paras. 7.4.6-7. referred to by Total in its Post Hearing Brief, para.
213.
135
See D. Carreau, P. Juillard, Droit international économique, 2ième édition, supra note 127, para. 1286 at p. 456.
We do not read otherwise the Introductory Note of H. Goldsong to the France-U.S.S.R. BIT of 1989, 29 ILM 317
(1990) on which Argentina relies, where the author expresses the view that the reference to international law
“qualifies” the scope of the undertaking of fair and equitable treatment. This qualification rather directs the
interpreter to take fully into account the protection afforded by international law, without going beyond that in the
context of the BIT, but also without reducing it below that level. As stated by Carreau, Juillard, Droit international
économique, 2ième éd., supra note 127, para. 1266 at p. 442: “the treatment granted to the investment by national
law could not breach the treatment required by the totality of the combined sources of international law.”
136
The concept is considered to have originated in German law where it is extensively used, CF Forsyth, The
Provenance and Protection of Legitimate Expectations, Cambridge L.J. 47, 241 (1988). As to civil law, see
Argentina Industria Madera Lanin, Corte Suprema 1977, Fallos 298:223. The State was required there to
compensate for the breach of la expectativa razonable of an enterprise to which a forest concession had been
initially promised, but was thereafter revoked. In English law (leading case: Schmidt v Secretary of State for the
Home Affairs [1969] 2 Ch 149, per Lord Denning) the House of Lords has stated that “the doctrine of legitimate
expectations is rooted in fairness”, R. v Inland Revenue Commissioners ex p. Preston [1985] 2 All E.R. 327, para.
835 per Lord Bingham. See also R. v North and East Devon Health Authority ex p. Coughlan [1999] LGR 703,
para. 57, holding that where “a lawful promise or practice has induced a legitimate expectation of a benefit which is
substantive, not simply procedural, authority now establishes that here too the court will in a proper case decide
whether to frustrate the expectation is so unfair that to take a new and different course will amount to an abuse of
power”. Generally, as to the notion in administrative law of Common Law countries, see W. Wade and CF Forsyth,
Administrative Law, OUP Oxford 2004, 372-376.
56
129. In domestic legal systems the doctrine of legitimate expectations supports “the
entitlement of an individual to legal protection from harm caused by a public
authority retreating from a previous publicly stated position, whether that be in the
form of a formal decision or in the form of a representation”.137 This doctrine, which
reflects the importance of the principle of legal certainty (or rule of law), appears to
be applicable mostly in respect of administrative acts and protects an individual from
an incoherent exercise of administrative discretion, or excess or abuse of
administrative powers.138 The reasons and features for changes (sudden character,
fundamental change, retroactive effects) and the public interest involved are thus to
be taken into account in order to evaluate whether an individual who incurred
financial obligations on the basis of the decisions and representations of public
authorities that were later revoked should be entitled to a form of redress. However it
appears that only exceptionally has the concept of legitimate expectations been the
basis of redress when legislative action by a State was at stake. Rather a breach of the
fundamental right of property as recognized under domestic law has been the basis,
for instance, for the European Court of Human Rights to find a violation of the First
Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights protecting the peaceful
enjoyment of property.139
130. From a comparative law perspective, the tenets of the legal system of the
European Community (now European Union), reflecting the legal traditions of
twenty-seven European countries, both civil and common law (including France, the
home country of the Claimant) are of relevance, especially since the recognition of
the principle of legitimate expectations there has been explicitly based on the
137
C. Brown, The Protection of Legitimate Expectations as A “General Principle of Law”: Some Preliminary
Thoughts, Transnational Dispute Management, www.transnational-dispute-management.com, March 2009. See also
J. Temple Lang, Legal Certainty and Legitimate Expectations as General Principles of Law, U. Bernitz, J.
Nergelius (Eds.), General Principles in European Community Law, Kluwer, 2000, 163-184.
138
See C. McLachlan, Investment Treaties and General International Law, 57 Int’l & Comp. L.Q. 361 (2008), at p.
377 with reference to the holding of the Annulment Committee in MTD Equity Sdn. Bhd. & MTD Chile S.A. v.
Chile, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/7, Decision on Annulment, 21 March 2007, para. 67-71; Gami Investments, Inc. v.
Mexico, UNCITRAL, Final Award, 15 November 2004, 44 ILM 545, 560 (2005).
139
See generally the review by the former president of the ECHR, L. Wildhaber, The Protection of Legitimate
Expectations in European Human Rights Law, M. Monti, N. Liechtenstein, B. Vesterdorf, L. Wildhaber, Economic
Law and Justice in Times of Globalisation, Festschrift Baudenbacher, 2007, 253, at 263: “the concept appears to
have no meaningful autonomous existence as far as its applicability is concerned. Where the applicants can point to
a possession, however, and to interference with their peaceful enjoyment of same, it is arguably the legitimacy of
their claim more than their subjective expectations that will weight in the balance”. In a case involving the
legitimate expectations of beneficiaries to future social benefits provided by legislation, the European Court of
Human Rights found a breach of Article 1 of the Protocol in the later withdrawing of such benefits by governmental
action, Doldeanu v. Moldova, Application 17211/03, Decision 13 November 2007.
57
international law principle of good faith.140 Based on this premise, the Tribunal of the
European Union has upheld the legitimate expectations of importers that the
Community would respect public international law.141 According to the Court of
Justice of the European Union (“ECJ”) private parties cannot normally invoke
legitimate expectations against the exercise of normative powers by the Community’s
institutions, except under the most restrictive conditions (which the Court has never
found in any case submitted to it).142
131. Under international law, unilateral acts, statements and conduct by States may be
the source of legal obligations which the intended beneficiaries or addressees, or
possibly any member of the international community, can invoke. The legal basis of
that binding character appears to be only in part related to the concept of legitimate
expectations—being rather akin to the principle of “estoppel”. Both concepts may
lead to the same result, namely, that of rendering the content of a unilateral
declaration binding on the State that is issuing it.143 According to the International
Court of Justice, only unilateral acts that are unconditional, definitive and “very
specific” have binding force, which derives from the principle of good faith. This
fundamental principle requires a State to abide by its unilateral acts of such a
140
See Opel Austria GmbH (formerly General Motors Austria GmbH) v. Council of the European Union, Case T-
115/94, Judgment, 22 January 1997 stating that “The principle of protection of legitimate expectations which
according to the case law, forms part of the Community legal order, is the corollary of the principle of good faith in
public international law.”
141
In the case mentioned in the previous footnote, contrary to Article 18 of the VCLT (according to which
signatories to a treaty not yet in force may not adopt measures that would defeat the treaty’s object and purpose),
the Community had increased a customs duty contrary to the treaty of accession of Austria to the EC due to enter
into force shortly.
142
Under ECJ case law, a competent businessman cannot invoke legitimate expectations in respect of the stability
of a regulation that the Commission has wide discretion to modify (see Di Lenardo Adriano Srl, Dilexport Srl and
Ministero del Commercio con l'Estero, Case C-37/02 and C-38/02, Judgment, 15 July 2004, para. 63, 82). The
liability of the EC for a legitimate normative act requires in principle, besides damage and causation, that the
damage be “unusual and special”. This is so if a particular category of economic operators are affected in a
disproportionate manner in comparison with others (“unusual damage”), and if the damage (“special damage”) goes
beyond the inherent risk of a given economic activity, without the legislative measure that gave rise to the alleged
damage being justified by a general economic interest. See Dorsch Consult Ingenieurgesellschaft mbH v. Council of
the European Union and Commission of the European Communities, Case T-184/95, Judgment, 28 April 1998,
para. 80, affirmed by the EC Court of Justice, Case C-237/98 P, Judgment, 15 June 2000.
143
See D.W. Bowett, “Estoppel” Before International Tribunals and its Relation to Acquiescence, 33 B.Y.I.L. 176
(1957): “It is possible to construe the estoppel as resting upon a responsibility incurred by the party making the
statement for having created an appearance of act, or as a necessary assumption of the risk of another party acting
upon the statement” referred to by M. Reisman and M.H. Arsanjani, The Question of Unilateral Governmental
Statements as Applicable Law in Investment Disputes, supra note 118, 340.
58
character and to follow a line of conduct coherent with the legal obligations so
created.144
133. Relevant provisions for our analysis are found in Article 7 of the Guidelines:
“[a] unilateral declaration that has created legal obligations for the State making
the declaration cannot be revoked arbitrarily. In assessing whether a revocation
would be arbitrary, consideration should be given to: (i) Any specific terms of the
declaration relating to revocation; (ii) The extent to which those to whom the
obligations are owed have relied on such obligations; (iii) The extent to which
there has been a fundamental change of circumstances”.
144
See Nuclear Tests (New Zealand v. France), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1974, p. 457, para. 46 at p. 472 and W.
Fiedler, “Unilateral Acts in International Law”, IV Encyclopedia of Public International Law 1018 (2000).
145
Adopted by the International Law Commission at its 58th session in 2006 together with commentaries thereto
(ILC Report, A/61/10, 2006, Chapter IX), based on the analysis of the jurisprudence of the ICJ and pertinent State
practice summarized in the eighth report of the Special Rapporteur (A/CN.4/557).
146
The preamble to the Guidelines states that “it is often difficult to establish whether the legal effects stemming
from the unilateral behaviour of a State are the consequence of the intent that it has expressed or depend on the
expectations that its conduct has raised among other subjects of international law” (4th sentence).
59
comparative law concepts, such as the importance of factual circumstances, the
relevance of content and intent, non-arbitrariness in case of revocation and the
restrictive interpretation of unilateral acts invoked as a source of commitments for the
issuing party.147 The cautious approach that emerges appears to be consistent, mutatis
mutandis, with that of domestic legal systems, European Union legal system and the
European Court of Human Rights case law.
135. We turn now to apply the legal principles that we have highlighted to the facts of
the case so as to evaluate Total’s various claims of breach by Argentina. In this
respect we find it appropriate to distinguish and sub-divide the three distinct claims
made by Total, as follows:
- the elimination of the calculation of the tariffs in US dollars;
- the elimination of the automatic adjustments of the US dollar tariffs every six
months in accordance with the US PPI, distinguishing in this respect the 6-month
automatic adjustment in itself from its pegging to the US dollar based PPI;
- the non-application or elimination of the promises of economic equilibrium and a
reasonable rate of return through the ongoing suspension of the Five-Year and
Extraordinary Reviews, thus freezing the tariffs since 2002.
136. The Tribunal recalls that the calculation of the gas transportation tariffs in US
dollars was provided for by Article 41 of the Gas Decree as an element of the
“normal and periodic adjustment of the tariffs authorized by the body” [ENARGAS].
The provision established further that the tariffs (“el cuadro tarifario”) would be
expressed in convertible pesos in conformity with Law 23.928, that is, Argentina’s
convertibility law of March 1991 (the “Convertibility Law”), with the reconversion
147
See Guidelines, Commentary to Article 7, supra note 145.
60
to pesos to be made in accordance with the parity established in Article 3 of Decree
2.198/91.148
137. Under the Convertibility Law and generally the Currency Board system that
Argentina had adopted in 1991, the peso was pegged to the US dollar at par and there
was free convertibility between the peso and the US dollar. As described by the IMF:
“The Convertibility Law, which pegged the Argentine currency to the U.S. dollar
in April 1991, was a response to Argentina’s dire economic situation at the
beginning of the 1990s. Following more than a decade of high inflation and
economic stagnation, and after several failed attempts to stabilize the economy, in
late 1989 Argentina had fallen into hyperinflation and a virtual economic collapse
[…]. The new exchange rate regime, which operated like a currency board, was
designated to stabilize the economy by establishing a hard nominal peg with
credible assurances of non reversibility. The new peso (set equal to 10,000
australes) was fixed at par with the U.S. dollar and autonomous money creation
by the central bank was severely constrained, though less rigidly than in a
classical currency board. The exchange rate arrangement was part of a larger
Convertibility Plan, which included a broader agenda of market-oriented
structural reforms to promote efficiency and productivity in the economy.
Various service sectors were deregulated, trade was liberalized, and anti-
competitive price-fixing schemes were removed; privatization proceeded
vigorously, notably in oil, power, and telecommunications, yielding large capital
revenues.”149
“In more precise legal terms, the convertibility regime entailed that the national
currency (the peso that replaced the Austral at one peso for each 10,000 Australes
on January 1, 1992) was freely convertible with the U.S. dollar at 1:1, and the
external value of the peso being pegged to the dollar under a currency board type
arrangement. Transactions in convertible currencies were permitted. Authorized
banks could open accounts in pesos or foreign currencies so that Argentines and
foreigners in Argentina were allowed to hold and use any currency. This
possibility led in time to the “dollarization” of Argentina’s economy to a notable
degree: contracts, especially medium and long term contracts such as rents, loans,
supply contracts were expressed in dollars, rather than in pesos, and bank
deposits were opened and maintained in dollars. Specifically, a large proportion
of the banking system’s assets and liabilities were denominated in dollars. The
level of dollarization, which had been growing steadily since 1991, increased
substantially in the second half of 2000: more than 70% of the private sectors
deposits and almost 70% of the banking system credit to private sector were
denominated in dollars by the end of 2000.”150
148
The same rules were included in Article 9.2 of TGN Licence (Reglas Básicas) which was subject to the Gas
Regulatory Framework as provided in Article 1 of the Presidential Decree 2.457/92 granting the Licence to which
the Licence was annexed.
149
See IMF Evaluation Report, supra note 53, 11 [footnotes omitted].
150
See Continental Casualty Company v. Argentina, supra note 53, para. 105 [footnotes omitted].
61
139. However, as reported officially by the IMF, in legal terms “the currency of
Argentina is the Argentine peso,” and only the peso. “Transactions in convertible
currencies are permitted, and contracts in these currencies are legally enforceable,
although the currencies are not legal tender.”151
140. As outlined by the Tribunal above at paragraph 81, all calculation of public utility
tariffs in US dollars, as well as their indexation to foreign currencies, was rendered
ineffective by the Emergency Law. According to Article 8, all of those tariffs would
be fixed in pesos at the conversion rate of 1:1. Other provisions of the same law
abolished the convertibility at par of the peso with the US dollar provided for under
the Convertibility Law, and provided that all private dollar-denominated contracts
would be converted to pesos at 1:1, with the possibility of renegotiation of the
indebtedness between the parties concerned. Through the various provisions of the
Emergency Law, Argentina de-linked its currency and its economy from the US
dollar. For the conversion, the law established generally the existing parity of 1:1,152
so that the existing nominal value of all monetary values would go on expressing
those values in pesos, although the peso had ceased to be convertible at par to the US
dollar.153
141. The pesification of the gas tariffs, as well as the tariffs of all other utilities and
public contracts, and the cessation of their adjustment according to foreign indices,
was carried out via the Emergency Law as an integral part of the complete de-linking
in legal terms of the peso from the US dollar (and, as a consequence, marked the end
of the pegging at par that had been in force since 1991 under Argentina’s currency
board system) taking place after the run on Argentina’s reserves and the massive
devaluation of the peso in the international market.
142. Total submits that it is not challenging the pesification of Argentina’s economy
as effected by the Emergency Law. Total objects only to the pesification of the gas
151
IMF Argentina, Status Under IMF Articles of Agreements: Article VIII, Position as of January 31, 1999 at p. 32;
IMF Argentina, Status Under IMF Articles of Agreements: Article VIII, Position as of December 31, 1999, at p. 33;
IMF Argentina, Status Under IMF Articles of Agreements: Article VIII, Position as of December 31, 2000, at p. 34.
152
The Tribunal recalls that at the beginning of 2002 the exchange rate depreciated to 1.8 pesos per dollar. On June
25, 2002 the market value of the peso against the US dollar had jumped to almost 1 to 4. Later, the exchange rate
stabilized around three pesos for one U.S. dollar.
153
A major exception was that dollar denominated deposits and credits with banks were converted at 1:1.4 (Decree
471 of March 8, 2002) thus giving a limited protection to depositors, the cost for the banks being covered by
Argentina’s treasury.
62
tariffs (and the connected abandonment of the PPI adjustment). Total claims that the
pegging of the gas tariffs to the US dollar was neither connected with nor part of the
convertibility system, and, accordingly, should not have been abolished as part of
such pesification in view of the promises and assurances given by Argentina under
the Gas Regulatory Framework about the stability of the tariff denomination in US
dollars.154 According to Total, the calculation of the gas tariffs in US dollars and the
automatic adjustment of the tariffs according to the US PPI were specific promises
given by Argentina in order to maintain TGN’s gas tariffs in real dollar terms.155 In
other terms, these two “additional commitments” were stabilisation clauses exactly
designed to operate in the event of a devaluation. On this premise, according to Total,
even in the case of a massive devaluation (entailing a radical change in the
Convertibility regime):
143. Argentina points out that, in terms of devalued post-2001 pesos, this would have
meant an increase in tariffs of about 200-300%. In response, Total states that it would
have been feasible to maintain those tariffs in US dollars through an Extraordinary
Tariff review, notwithstanding that the rest of the economy had been pesified.157
According to Total, had Argentina not pesified the tariffs and had ENARGAS carried
out the Extraordinary Review sua sponte on the consumers’ request according to
Articles 46 and 47 of the Gas Law, by taking into account the reduced value in US
dollar terms of those components of the tariff that were incurred in (devalued) pesos,
the tariff in US dollar terms would have decreased by almost 25% (equivalent in peso
terms to a 130% tariff increase).158 More specifically, after the Extraordinary Review
154
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 25 ff.
155
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 32.
156
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 30.
157
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 337.
158
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 44 relying on the LECG Report on Damages, paras. 142-144.
63
the tariffs of US$11 would have been equivalent to AR$33 (after the devaluation)
and would have amounted to US$8.33 (equivalent to AR$25).159
144. Recalling its previous legal analysis of the applicable principles regarding
government promises and undertakings made to foreign investors, i.e. the
requirement of specificity and the freedom that States generally have to amend their
laws, particularly when a fundamental change of factual circumstances occurs, the
Tribunal is not convinced by Total’s arguments for the following reasons.
7.2 No “Promise” of Dollar Denominated Tariffs and Their Adjustment was Made
to Total
145. The Tribunal considers that the provisions according to which the gas tariffs were
to be calculated in US dollars and adjusted in line with the US PPI cannot properly be
construed as “promises” upon which Total could rely, since they were not addressed
directly or indirectly to Total. They were provided for in the Gas Decree and in
TGN’s license as a means of implementing the core principle of the Gas Law,
namely, that of guaranteeing to efficient Licensees sufficient revenue to cover all
reasonable operating costs and ensuring a reasonable rate of return (Articles 38 and
39), in accordance with the dollar-based convertibility system then in force in
Argentina. Total contends that, under the Gas Regulatory Framework, dollar tariffs
were not linked to the Convertibility Law and invokes section 9.2 of TGN’s Licence,
Article 41 of the Gas Decree and section 7.1, Annex F of the Bidding Rules of
1992.160 The Tribunal notes, however, that section 9.2 of TGN’s Licence and Article
41 of the Gas Decree expressly refer to the Convertibility Law. This reference thus
supports the opposite conclusion, namely, that the dollar denomination of the tariffs
was closely linked to the Convertibility Law. In addition, another linkage is shown
by the fact that the Convertibility Law prohibited indexation in pesos,161 in order to
159
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 339 and the chart at p. 138.
160
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 321.
161
As part of this design the convertibility law, in strict adherence with the nominalistic principle, expressly
prohibited any indexation mechanism for debts, including in cases of delayed payment by the debtor (mora del
deudor). Article 7 of the Convertibility Law 23.928 of March 1991 provides that a debtor of a given amount in
pesos satisfies his obligation by remitting at the date due that nominal quantity. See also Continental Casualty
Company v. Argentina, supra note 53, para. 106 and footnote 123.
64
reinforce the stabilisation aim of the Convertibility regime,162 while indexation of
dollar values through reference to foreign prices was instead not prohibited.163
146. Total claims that the denomination of the tariff in US dollars was meant to
protect the distributors in case of devaluation. Total supports this argument by
reference to the TGN Offering Memorandum of 1995 pursuant to which the shares
still belonging to the government were offered for sale in the market. According to
Total, the warnings to investors contained therein concerning the consequences of a
peso devaluation on TGN’s operation did not include a warning that the US dollar
tariffs might be pesified.164 The Tribunal is, however, of the opinion that this
document rather points in the contrary direction. The 1995 Offering Memorandum
drafted for the sale of the 25% stake held by the government warned potential
investors of the risk of a great devaluation under the heading “Convertibility and
risks of the exchange rate.” More precisely, according to the Memorandum:
“Since the coming into force of the Convertibility Law in April, 1991, the
peso/dollar exchange rate has suffered strict variations. The Central Bank, which
in accordance with this Law is obliged to sell dollars to a price which does not
exceed a peso per unit, has adopted the policy to buy dollars also at the rate of 1
peso per dollar. The persistence of the free convertibility of pesos into dollars
cannot be ensured. In the event a great devaluation of the peso against the dollar
takes place, the financial position and results of operations of the Company might
be negatively affected, as well as its capacity to make payments in foreign
currency (including cancellation of debt denominated in foreign currency) and
dividend distribution in dollars at acceptable levels.”
In the light of this text, the Tribunal is of the view that the Memorandum, besides
warning potential investors of the general commercial risk of TGN’s default and of
decreasing demand for TGN caused by a devaluation of peso, also warned potential
investors in TGN that a great devaluation of the peso and/or an abandonment of
convertibility would affect the calculation of the tariffs in US dollar terms resulting
in prejudice to “the financial position and results of operations of the Company.”
162
In the IMF’s words: “The Convertibility regime was a stabilization device to deal with the hyperinflation that
existed at the beginning of the 1990s, and in this was very successful.” (see IMF Evaluation Report, supra note 53,
3)
163
This situation is not belied by Decree 669/00 Annex I (the act containing the Second Acta Acuerdo) where it
stated that: “the parties recognize that the application of the PPI does not entail an indexation within the terms of
Convertibility Law No. 23.928 but it results from the adjustment following the international evolution of value
changes for assets and services representing the activity, all this in accordance with Articles 95 and 96 of Law No.
24.076 determining public order for the Natural Gas Public Service.”
164
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 343.
65
This reflected the fact that, as Total points out, TGN’s regulated tariffs represented
98% of its revenue.
147. Finally, Total supports its argument that the US dollar tariffs and the PPI
adjustment were “commitments” on which it could legally rely, invoking section 7.1,
Annex F, Bidding Rules. We recall that with a view to obtaining foreign participation
in the privatization of the various Argentine state-owned utilities, the government
made specific commitments towards such interested foreign parties for the purposes
of inducing them to participate in the bidding process and to bring additional capital,
technical and other know-how to modernize and efficiently run those utilities. More
specifically, Total refers to section 7.1 of the Bidding Rules. Under the heading
“Ajuste Futuro de Tarifas” (Annex F section 7), section 7.1. provided that “Tariffs
are expressed in pesos, convertible as per Law No. 23.928 at par 1=1 with the United
States dollar. … tariffs would be adjusted immediately and automatically in the event
of a modification of the exchange rate. To all effects, the amount of Argentine
currency necessary to buy one US dollar in the New York market shall be
considered.”165 Moreover, the Bidding Rules at section 7.5. went on to indicate that:
“The Distribution tariff … shall be adjusted semi-annually, from the Taking of
Possession, in accordance with the variation operated in the wholesale price index of
industrial commodities of the US, taken by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve system, within the second month prior to the beginning of each semester
after the Taking of Possession, as established in the corresponding licence and the
remaining requirements established in the Tariff Rules and General Conditions of
Service. The Regulating Authority shall determine the mechanism for adjustment.”
148. The Tribunal does not need to analyse the import of those provisions because
Total did not take part in the bidding process in December 1992. Therefore, on the
basis of the legal principles highlighted above, Total cannot invoke the Bidding
Rules as a promise on which it could have relied when it invested in the gas sector in
2001. The situation of Total is, therefore, different from that of foreign investors who
165
According to the Bidding Rules, Annex F, section 7.2, “Variations of the gas price shall be applied to tariffs so
as not to produce benefits nor losses to the Distribution or Transportation companies, as per Article 38 (c) of Law
No. 24.076 and reglamentary provisions. Initial tariffs have been calculated on the basis of a gas price of $ 0,035
per m3 at 9.300 kilocalories or 38,93 megajoules, at a temperature of 15º C and 1 bar pressure. In the case of
propane/butane gas distributed by network, the initial tariffs have been calculated on the basis of a price of $ 142,50
per ton at separation plant exit. The Regulating Authority shall determine information requirements and necessary
mechanisms to adjust tariffs according to variations in the gas price.”
66
had participated in the privatization and, consequently, invoked their reliance on the
bidding rules in other disputes.
150. Summing up, the Tribunal concludes that the denomination of the tariffs in US
dollars was not the object of a promise or a commitment to Total but rather was an
integral element of the Gas Regulatory Framework in place in Argentina when Total
made its investment. The automatic adjustment of the tariffs to the US PPI was part
of this framework and was closely linked to and reflected the denomination and
calculation in US dollars of those tariffs, which in turn was correlated to the
convertibility monetary system in force in Argentina since 1991.
7.3 Relevance of the PPI Adjustment Suspension Being in Place when Total
Invested in TGN
151. The Tribunal now must examine the conduct of Total with respect to its alleged
reliance on the stability of the operation of the gas regime in US dollars as was the
case when Total made its investment, taking into account the suspension(s) of the US
PPI adjustments that were in place at that time.
152. The Tribunal recalls that Total agreed to buy the shares of TransCanada Group in
May 2000 and that it closed the deal in January 2001. Thus, on this second date,
Total became a French foreign investor in Argentina whose investment in TGN was
protected by the BIT. As recalled above at paragraphs 62 ff., at that time the PPI
166
The Tribunal further notes that Total has not claimed that it had decided to invest in the gas distribution sector in
Argentina, rather than hypothetically in some other country, in view of the fact that these tariffs were set in US
dollars and adjusted to the US PPI.
67
adjustments had been suspended twice by agreement between the ENARGAS (and
the government) and the Licensees: first, in January 2000, for six months and
subsequently, on August 4, 2000, for two years. Moreover, on August 18, 2000, a
judge had suspended the application of the second adjustment and the subsequent
recovery of the increases due to accrue during the suspension.167
153. Argentina submits that Total could not have legitimate expectations about the
stability of the tariff regime as laid down in the Gas Regulatory Framework since it
had been undermined by those suspensions. Argentina suggests that, in analysing the
Gas Regulatory Framework, Total had not exercised the diligence that it should have
done as a foreign investor intending to make a long-term investment in a country
such as Argentina.168 In this regard, Total explained in its submissions that Total’s
management, even if aware of this development, “… did not consider that TGN’s
right to the adjustment of its tariffs in accordance with the US PPI to be in
jeopardy.”169
154. The Tribunal notes that Total’s management considered the first Acta Acuerdo as
a “favour” to Fernando De la Rúa’s new administration; the second suspension for
two years as immaterial because of the subsequent recovery provided for by Decree,
and the suspension of the Decree by injunction as irrelevant because Total believed
the injunction was based on weak legal grounds (the injunction had been challenged
by the government), notwithstanding, however, the admission of Mr. François Faurès
(one of Total’s managers in Argentina and a witness called by Total) that “there are
always doubts in a legal dispute, since it depends on an independent power.”170
155. The Tribunal notes that while all of these developments affecting the tariff
adjustment based on the US PPI were considered as irrelevant by Total’s
management in making its investment in TGN, another foreign company (CMS Gas
Transmission Company) that had already invested in TGN considered them relevant
enough to start a dispute against Argentina under the U.S.-Argentina BIT based on
167
For more details see para 65 above.
168
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 201 ff.
169
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 361.
170
See Cross-examination of François Faurès, Transcript of the Hearing in the merits (Spanish) Day 3, 796:2-
11.This is also in connection with the provision of Section 18.3 contained in the TGN Licence. See supra note 84.
68
the opposite conclusion that TGN’s right to adjust its tariffs in accordance with the
US PPI was in jeopardy.
156. The Tribunal is of the view that, although the various Actas Acuerdo and judicial
acts at the time were temporary, they affected the future existence of the PPI
adjustment mechanism. From a business point of view, an experienced international
investor such as Total could not have considered these developments as irrelevant to
the future stability of the PPI-adjusted US dollar gas tariffs. An objective risk
analysis of the situation should have alerted Total that the stability of the gas regime
was being undermined in practice from various directions. This was happening at the
very moment when, for the first time, the PPI would have provided greater protection
to the utilities than if a peso-based adjustment had been in place. Expecting that, after
a 2-year suspension, the government would have been willing and able to impose on
the users (usuarios) an obligation to pay the PPI increase retroactively for that period
appears contrary to common sense or experience. This is especially the case since a
judge, at the request of the Ombudsman, issued an injunction in the interest of those
users.
157. Total also claims that it did not weigh these negative developments because it
was focusing on a long term perspective in making its investment, as stated by one of
its managers in oral testimony. This is quite possible, but then Total contradicts itself
when it complains that its legitimate expectations based on the stability of this very
regime have been frustrated.
158. In conclusion, therefore, the Tribunal is of the view that Total’s alleged full
reliance on the mechanism for adjusting tariffs based on the US PPI was misplaced,
especially in light of the growing difficulties experienced by Argentina’s economy
that were at the root of the US PPI tariff adjustment suspension.
159. The Tribunal has already highlighted above that the reasons for, and modalities
and context of, a change to a national legal system (specifically, in this case, the
change affecting the Gas Regulatory Framework) are also relevant and important in
69
light of the requirement that a host State act in good faith , which underpins the fair
and equitable treatment standard.
160. In this respect the Tribunal considers that Argentina’s emergency at the end of
2001, taking into account its political and social fall-out, justified Argentina’s
abandonment of the convertibility regime, including the pesification of tariffs.
Leaving utilities tariffs in US dollars, while the rest of the economy had been de-
dollarized, would have lacked any reasonable basis and would have entailed a form
of reverse discrimination or a privilege for the beneficiaries. This is particularly true
taking into account that TGN’s gas transportation activity is not an ordinary business
operation but is qualified by law as a “national public service” (Article 1, Gas Law).
The principle that the gas transportation and distribution activities are to be regulated
so as to ensure that just and reasonable tariffs are applied (Article 2(d), Gas Law),
which Total has specifically emphasized, cannot justify any one-sided interpretation
in favour of public service providers. Rather, the Tribunal considers that a more
balanced interpretation is called for, taking into account that consumer protection is
one of the primary objectives of the Gas Law, which provides that the tariffs shall be
just and reasonable for consumers and at the same time that ensure that utilities can
earn a reasonable rate of return. Total suggests that while maintaining the tariffs in
US dollars, an Extraordinary Review could have reduced the tariff to reflect the
pesification of the local components of the costs. However, this would have
transferred most of the impact of the peso devaluation to Argentina’s consumers and
only the gas tariffs would have remained in dollars, while the rest of the economy
had been pesified.
161. In the case of a “normal” devaluation of the peso, the de-dollarisation of the gas
tariffs would not have been economically justified nor socially necessary, and might
thus be objectionable under the fair and equitable treatment clause of the BIT (Article
3). In contrast, the “bankruptcy” of Argentina in 2001-2002, the forced abrupt
abandonment of the US dollar parity and the devaluation of the peso by more than
300%, support the conclusion that the pesification of the tariffs and their de-linkage
from the US PPI were not unfair or inequitable.
162. The balancing test recalled above, requires an assessment of the existence of a
breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard taking into account the purposes,
70
nature and objectives of the measures challenged, and an evaluation of whether they
are proportional, reasonable and not discriminatory. In other terms, the changes to the
Gas Regulatory Framework brought about by the Measures have to be judged in the
context of the severe economic emergency that Argentina was facing in 2001-2002.
171
See above para. 72 ff.
172
Except that depositors obtained a preferential rate of 1:1,4, with the burden thereby imposed on banks refinanced
by Argentina’s treasury (a differential treatment challenged by Total under its claim that Argentina breached the
national treatment provision in Article 4 of the BIT, see below para. 204).
71
convertibility, reflecting the pegging of the tariffs to the US dollar rather than to the
evolution of prices in Argentina. The US PPI adjustment was not abolished by
cutting this link in isolation, but as part of the delinkage of the Argentine monetary
system from the US dollar that was effected by the general pesification via the
Emergency Law in the exercise of Argentina’s monetary sovereignty.173
164. The Tribunal finds that this measure and its application cannot be considered
unfair in the circumstances, considering the inherent flexibility of the fair and
equitable standard. Unfairness must be evaluated in respect of the measures
challenged, both in the light of their objective effects but also in the light of the
reasons that led to their adoption (subjective good faith, proportionality to the aims
and legitimacy of the latter according to general practice). It is therefore not possible
to share Total’s view, developed especially in the LECG Report on Damages, that the
pesification breached Total’s treaty rights and that its effects must be included in the
calculation of damages suffered by Total for which it claims compensation under the
BIT.174 Such changes to general legislation, in the absence of specific stabilization
promises to the foreign investor, reflect a legitimate exercise of the host State’s
governmental powers that are not prevented by a BIT’s fair and equitable treatment
standard and are not in breach of the same.175 The untouchability (“intangibilidad”)
of those foreign currency peg provisions invoked by Total cannot be the object of
173
The Tribunal notes that other international tribunals and authoritative scholarly works have also denied that in
most instances of devaluation a breach of international standards of treatment and/or protection of private property
is present, except in extreme situations of improper conduct by the State. This is the consistent jurisprudence of the
ECHR under Protocol 1 to the ECHR protecting private property (see L. Wildhaber, The Protection of Legitimate
Expectations in European Human Rights Law, supra note 139, p. 253 ff.). See, for the absence of any duty under
international law as to obligations in domestic currency subject to the nominalistic principle, F. Mann, The Legal
Aspect of Money, Fifth Edition, 1992, Oxford, 465 ff.; G. Burdeau, L’exercice des compétences monétaires par les
Etats, RC 1988-V, 261 (except for “des conditions totalement arbitraires”). See also I. Brownlie, Principles of
Public International Law, Seventh Edition, 2008, at p. 532, according to whom “State measures, prima facie a
lawful exercise of powers of government, may affect foreign interests considerably without amounting to
expropriation. Thus foreign assets and their use may be subjected to taxation, trade restrictions involving licences
and quotas, or measures of devaluation.” [italics in original]
174
Total complains that TGN was unable to meet its obligations in dollars undertaken outside Argentina. As a
consequence, TGN defaulted on these obligations and had to negotiate a restructuring of such debt with its foreign
creditors (thus transferring to them a share of the burden). The Tribunal is of the view that this was but a
consequence of the devaluation of TGN’s assets and revenues as a consequence of the monetary crisis in Argentina.
The Tribunal further notes that TGN found itself in the same position as any other local company that had financed
itself in hard currency outside Argentina - without entering into the debate between the parties whether TGN had
not been prudent in so doing as ENARGAS had pre-warned TGN (in this regard see ENARGAS’s Note 1906/99
and ENARGAS’s Note 3735/99, Exhibits A RA 207 and A RA 208, respectively).
175
According to the award of the LG&E Tribunal, this was the case of the obligations that were made by Argentina
to foreign investors under the Gas Law and its implementing regulations because they were the basis on which the
original investors relied during the privatization process to make investments in the gas sector. See LG&E v.
Argentina, cit. supra note 111, para. 175.
72
legal expectation in a case of monetary and economic crisis such as that experienced
by Argentina in 2001-2002.176
165. The general character, the good faith and absence of discrimination by Argentina,
as well as the exceptional circumstance that “forced” Argentina to adopt the
measures at issue, viewed objectively, preclude the Tribunal from finding that
Argentina breached the fair and equitable obligations of treatment under the BIT with
respect to the dollar denomination of the tariff and the six-month US PPI adjustment.
166. Having examined the measures taken by Argentina to address the crisis by
enacting the Emergency Law (i.e., the pesification of the tariffs and abolition of
adjustments based on the variations of the US PPI), the Tribunal now addresses the
de facto freezing of tariffs since 2002, which was caused by the failure of the
renegotiation mechanisms proposed by Argentina after the enactment the Emergency
Law.
167. We recall that the Tribunal has concluded above that pesification of the utility
tariffs was reasonable in the circumstances due to the crisis in Argentina and the
general de-dollarisation of Argentina’s economy. No expectations could reasonably
be maintained (even less “legitimately”) that only the tariffs would be excepted from
such a pesification, especially as Total was not a beneficiary of any specific promise.
The situation is, however, different concerning the absence of any readjustment of
the gas tariffs since 2002. We recall that the principle that tariffs of privatized gas
utilities should be sufficient to cover their reasonable costs and a reasonable rate of
return was enshrined in the Gas Regulatory Framework. As a means to ensure this
“economic equilibrium”, a variety of adjustments over time were provided for by the
Gas Regulatory Framework. These included the 6-month US PPI adjustment, the 5-
year Tariff Review and the Extraordinary Review. This framework is consistent with
sound management of utilities in a market economy, where private entrepreneurs
176
While it can be said that the fair and equitable treatment standard should be understood as a pro-active standard
that “is conducive to fostering the promotion of foreign investment” (MTD Equity Sdn. Bhd. & MTD Chile S.A. v.
Chile, cit. supra note 96, para. 113), we do not believe that a BIT may (and is meant to) insulate a foreign investor
either from a major crisis such as the one at issue here or from the impact of general non-discriminatory measures
taken by a host country to cope with such a crisis.
73
must be able to cover their costs and make a reasonable return in order to operate and
to raise capital to provide an efficient service, especially considering that investments
in such utilities are based on long term planning. The gas transportation tariffs were
accordingly to be determined and adjusted in a way reflecting those criteria. The
expectation of foreign investors in the gas sector about the long term maintenance of
the above-mentioned principle was reinforced by the existence of Argentina’s BITs.
Irrespective of their specific wording, undoubtedly these treaties are meant to
promote foreign direct investment and reflect the signatories’ commitments to a
hospitable investment climate.177 Imposing conditions that make an investment
unprofitable for a long term investor (for instance, compelling a foreign investor to
operate at a loss) is surely not compatible with the underlying assumptions and
purpose of the BIT regime (i.e., “… to create favourable conditions for French
investments …” in accordance with the Preamble to the Argentina-France BIT).178
168. An operator-investor such as Total was entitled, therefore, to expect that the gas
regime would respect certain basic features. This did not mean that Total could rely
on BIT protection to ensure the stability of the gas law regime without any possibility
of change to that regime by Argentina in the light of the dramatic developments. The
basic principles of economic equilibrium and business viability enshrined in the Gas
Law were protected from a forward looking perspective by the mechanisms of
readjustment, namely the ordinary and extraordinary reviews whose benefits were
not restricted to the participants in the initial privatisation.
169. The Tribunal notes that these principles and mechanisms were restated forcefully
in the Emergency Law and in the subsequent decrees of early 2002 that were based
on that law, which established a single commission for all renegotiations of utilities
contracts and set short deadlines to complete these processes.179
177
See Pope & Talbot Inc. v. The Government of Canada, UNCITRAL, Award on the Merits of Phase 2, 10 April
2001, paras 115-116; Saluka Investments BV v. The Czech Republic, supra note 103, para. 293.
178
The Tribunal recalls that Article 10 of the Emergency Law prevented public service providers from suspending
or modifying their obligation to provide the service.
179
The Tribunal notes that under well-established principles of Argentina’s law – which the Tribunal is empowered
to apply as law under Article 8.4 BIT – rights deriving from a concession are “acquired rights” protected under the
Constitution, see the leading Bordieu decision of the Supreme Court of Argentina (1925) referred to by Total (see
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 167). See also Section 9.8 TGN Licence which provides for the licensee’s right to
compensation in case of “freezing, administration and/or price control.” (Section 9.8 TGN Licence).
74
170. Moreover, since this process was moving slower than anticipated, the Ministry of
Economy authorised ENARGAS to proceed with an Extraordinary Review that had
been blocked by the Emergency Law.180 Thus, while pesifying the tariffs and
suppressing the US PPI adjustment, the Emergency Law restated the principle that
tariffs could be readjusted, a future undertaking that gained special importance after
the devaluation and the complete overturn of the US dollar basis of the gas regulatory
regime. We note moreover that the Gas Law enshrining the fundamental principles
mentioned above was not amended and is still in force.
172. This is not true after President Kirchner’s election and the creation through
UNIREN of a general mechanism to carry out tariff re-adjustments. It is generally
recognized that Argentina’s economy quickly recovered from the crisis—by the end
of 2003 and the beginning of 2004. Moreover, in February 2004 a 450% increase in
the gas price was imposed on industrial users. This increase did not go, however, to
the benefit of TGN, but rather financed the trust fund for new investments in the gas
180
See above para. 88.
181
See Exhibits C-59, C-60 and C-61 and Total’s Memorial, para. 91.
182
As to the blocking of ENARGAS’s Extraordinary Tariff Review see above para. 88. The other injunctions that
blocked the above-mentioned proposed 7% tariff increase are at Exhibits C-163, C-164 and C-179. See also Total’s
Memorial, footnote 144 at p. 42.
183
See inter alia, Continental Casualty Company v. Argentina, supra note 53, paras 157-158 and references listed
there. See also Total’s Reply, para. 620 ff.
184
The judicial injunction of 14 November 2002 mentioned above blocking ENARGAS’s extraordinary review and
the other injunctions blocking the 7% tariff increase enacted by the Government are evidence of the difficulty
during that period for the competent administrative authorities to carry out the process entrusted to them in an
orderly way.
75
transportation network.185 Total has also submitted that the government treated the
gas sector differently than other sectors in this respect.
173. The Tribunal recalls here that UNIREN was required to conclude the
renegotiation process by 31 December, 2004, this being the new term set out after the
ineffective expiration of the latest term fixed by MoE Resolution No. 62/03.186
However, this did not happen. Negotiations with utilities had been dragging. As late
as April 2007, UNIREN proposed to TGN a Final Acta Acuerdo entailing a 15%
staggered tariff increase, that would not have remedied the lack of readjustments in
the past. Moreover, Article 17 of the proposal imposed on TGN, as a precondition for
the agreement to come into force, the obligation to obtain from its shareholders: i) an
immediate suspension of any claim against Argentina; and ii) their agreement to
entirely withdraw those claims after the full tariff review was held and the new tariffs
published. As outlined by Total, under Article 17, TGN needed to secure the relevant
undertakings from 99.9% of its shareholders (including CMS and Total). Without the
above-mentioned suspensions and withdrawals, the Acta Acuerdo would be
terminated and thus TGN would not receive tariff increase, the Licence could be
revoked and TGN would be obliged to indemnify the government for any damages
payable as a result of a claim brought by a TGN minority shareholder. Total submits
that these conditions represent an additional breach of the fair and equitable treatment
required under Article 3 of the BIT.
174. In sum, from the passage of Emergency Law onwards, Argentina’s public
authorities repeatedly established new deadlines, causing protracted delays in the
renegotiation of concessions and licences (the tariff regime included) in the public
utility sector for almost six years. At the same time, any automatic semi-annual
adjustment (such as the one originally provided linked to the US PPI) had been
discontinued.
185
Total pinpoints this 450% increase in the gas tariffs for the industrial users to underline that Argentina has
treated TGN in an unfair and inequitable manner. As to the terms of the Government’s offer after many years of
renegotiation, Total points out that the offer included a “paltry temporary tariff increase of 15% in peso terms to be
applied from 1 January to 1 November 2008. This increase is dwarfed in comparison with 450% surcharges on
TGN’s pesified tariffs imposed on TGN’s industrial customers to remunerate the Government-established trust fund
for the expansions to TGN’s network …” (see Total’ Post-Hearing Brief, para. 41).
186
Law 25.790 of 2003 setting out the criteria for renegotiation by UNIREN (Exhibit C-261).
76
175. As mentioned above, the failure to promptly readjust the tariffs when the
Emergency Law was enacted and during the height of the crisis could have been
justified, provided that Argentina subsequently had pursued successful renegotiations
to re-establish the equilibrium of the tariffs as provided by law. This, however, has
not happened due to the inconclusive results of the renegotiation process entrusted by
Argentina to UNIREN. Therefore, the Tribunal cannot but conclude that, in this
respect, Argentina is in breach of its BIT obligation to grant fair and equitable
treatment to Total under Article 3 in respect of Total’s investment in TGN.
176. At this point, before concluding on this claim, the Tribunal considers it
appropriate to recall previous arbitral decisions that have dealt with the impact of the
Emergency Law and related measures on Argentina’s legal framework governing
generally the public utilities sectors and, more specifically, the gas sector. The
Tribunal shares the opinion that judicial consistency in the field of international
investment law is as far as possible desirable, notwithstanding the absence of a rule
of precedent.187
177. The Tribunal notes that, among the disputes against Argentina raised by foreign
investors in Argentina’s public utilities sectors, those involving Enron (a U.S.
187
The Tribunal notes that settlement of investment disputes under BITs is not a centralized system, even within the
context of ICSID, so that uniformity of solutions (even in cases presenting similarities and connections) may not
necessarily be attained. Each Tribunal has to decide each case independently based on the assessment of the
arbitrators operating to the best of their ability and guided by the specific BIT at issue. As a consequence, an
arbitral tribunal applying a specific BIT may well reach decisions different from those of other tribunals in similar
cases under similar BITs in light of the different factual contexts and the variable factual circumstances of, and the
tribunal’s consideration of the legal arguments submitted by the parties in, each case. The same position as to the
role of precedents has been taken by other ICSID Tribunals. In this regard see AES Corp. v. Argentina, ICSID Case
No. ARB/02/17, Decision on Jurisdiction, April 26, 2005, paras. 23-25, where the Tribunal noted at para. 25 that
“… striking similarities in the wording of many BITs often dissimulate real differences in the definition of some
key concepts, as it may be the case, in particular, for the determination of “investments” or for the precise definition
of rights and obligations for each party.”; SGS Société Genérale de Surveillance S.A. v. Republic of the Philippines,
ICSID Case No. ARB/02/06, Decision of the Tribunal on Objections to Jurisdiction, January 29, 2004, para. 97;
Enron v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/3, Decision on Jurisdiction (Ancillary Claim), August 2, 2004, para.
25. For a different approach to the role of precedents in investment treaty case-law, see Saipem S.p.A. v. The
People's Republic of Bangladesh, ICSID Case No. ARB/05/07, Decision on Jurisdiction and Recommendation on
Provisional Measures, 21 March 2007, para. 67 stating that: “The Tribunal considers that it is not bound by
previous decisions. At the same time, it is of the opinion that it must pay due consideration to earlier decisions of
international tribunals. It believes that, subject to compelling contrary grounds, it has a duty to adopt solutions
established in a series of consistent cases. It also believes that, subject to the specifics of a given treaty and of the
circumstances of the actual case, it has a duty to seek to contribute to the harmonious development of investment
law and thereby to meet the legitimate expectations of the community of States and investors towards certainty of
the rule of law.” [footnotes omitted]
77
investor in TGS, one of the two gas transportation companies subject to the
privatization process of 1991-1992), British Gas (a U.K. investor in MetroGAS, one
of the eight gas distribution companies subject to the privatization process of 1991-
1992) and National Grid Transco plc (a U.K. investor in Transener, an electricity
transmission company subject to the privatization process of 1992-1993) concerned
investors who had been original participants in the privatization process.188 By
finding that the enactment of the Emergency Law breached the relevant fair and
equitable treatment clause by Argentina, these tribunals emphasize the Bidding Rules
that regulated participation in the privatization of the various public utilities
concerned (as well as the various related Information Memoranda prepared by
Argentina’s financial advisers for this purpose). In order to find that Argentina had
breached the relevant BIT, these tribunals have referred explicitly to these rules as
specific commitments of Argentina towards foreign investors and as specific
promises made to them on which they had relied on in making their investment.
According to these tribunals, Argentina (through the pesification of gas tariffs and
the removal of the US PPI tariff adjustment mechanism as a consequence of the
Emergency Law) frustrated the expectations of those investors who legitimately
relied upon the provisions of the Bidding Rules and breached the fair and equitable
treatment obligation of the relevant BIT.
178. The Tribunal recalls that the position of Total is different from that of the
claimants in the above-mentioned cases who took part in the privatization process, as
Total invested in Argentina’s gas sector in 2001, almost ten years after the
privatization process took place. We have explained above why this Tribunal
believes that this different factual situation warrants different legal conclusions as to
the presence or lack of “specific commitments” by Argentina and as to the issue of
“legitimate expectations” based thereon.
179. On the other hand, the Tribunals in Sempra, LG&E and CMS,189 have found
breaches of the fair and equitable treatment standard because of the pesification of
tariffs (and the connected abolition of tariff adjustments to the US PPI), where the
188
See Enron Corporation and Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina, supra note 20, para. 47 ff.; BG Group Plc v.
Argentina, supra note 113, para. 24 ff.; National Grid plc v. Argentina, supra note 111, para. 56 ff, respectively.
189
See LG&E v. Argentina, supra note 111, para. 52 ff.; Sempra Energy International v. Argentina, ICSID Case
No. ARB/02/16, Award, 28 September 2007, para. 88 ff.; CMS Gas Transmission Company v. Argentina, supra
note 29.
78
investors involved had invested after the original privatization process. As Total did
here, these investors had subsequently acquired their interests in the gas distribution
and transmission utilities from Argentina itself,190 or from other investors. According
to these tribunals, the US dollar denomination of gas tariffs and their automatic
adjustment to the US PPI variations should have remained unaffected by the general
pesification adopted by Argentina through the Emergency Law pursuant to the fair
and equitable treatment standard protection under the relevant BITs. This Tribunal
has explained above the basis upon which it reached the partly different conclusion
that neither the pesification of gas tariffs nor the abolition of their linkage to the US
PPI variations are in breach of the fair and equitable clause of the Argentina-France
BIT. The Tribunal believes that its conclusions are firmly rooted in relevant
international law, as reviewed above, taking into account the features of the
Argentina-France BIT and the specific circumstances of Total’s investment, and in
the light of the exceptional nature of Argentina’s crisis.
180. As explained above, in following this different approach, this Tribunal has
distinguished the abandonment of the US dollar denomination of tariffs and their
linkage to the US PPI (found not to be in breach of the BIT in view of their
connection to the Convertibility Law and the exceptional crisis of Argentina that led
to the pesification)191 from the subsequent failure to readjust the tariffs. The Tribunal
190
This is the case of CMS which acquired its shares in TGN directly from Argentina pursuant to the second public
bidding process of July 1995 by which Argentina sold its remaining 25% share in TGN. See above para. 42.
191
The Tribunal notes that the CMS Tribunal has concluded that the measures complained of (which were the same
ones at issue in the present case, namely pesification of the tariffs, suspension of the PPI and suppression of
periodic reviews of the tariffs, since CMS was a shareholder of TGN like Total) “did in fact entirely transform and
alter the legal and business environment under which the investment was decided and made.” (CMS Gas
Transmission Company v. Argentina, supra note 29, para. 275) As a premise of its reasoning and conclusion,
having stated that “[t]here can be no doubt… that a stable legal and business environment is an essential element of
fair and equitable treatment”, the same Tribunal considered the fair and equitable treatment standard as an
“objective requirement” and, therefore, unrelated to the reasons for the challenged measures. See CMS Gas
Transmission Company v. Argentina, supra note 29, paras 274 and 280, respectively. To the contrary, for the
reasons given above, we have concluded that the requirement of “fairness”, and specifically the evaluation of
whether “legitimate expectations” on which the investor was entitled to rely and did in fact rely, had illegally been
affected by legislative changes to the legal framework made by the host state, cannot ignore the reasons for those
changes and their modalities. This is consistent with the flexible nature of this standard and the need to apply it on a
case-by-case approach, as stated by academic commentary and other international case law (see above paras 106
ff.). We recall that the Annulment Committee in the CMS case severely criticised the CMS Award’s application of
Article XI of the BIT (the non-precluding measures clause in the Argentina-US BIT), without distinguishing its
scope, nature and conditions of applicability from those of the state of necessity under customary international law.
(see CMS Gas Transmission Company v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/8, Annulment Decision, 25
September 2007, para. 128 ff.) In addition, the Annulment Committee annulled the CMS Award for failure to state
reasons where the Tribunal found a breach of Article II(c)(2), that is the so-called umbrella clause. (see ibidem,
para. 96 ff.).
79
has found that this latter conduct by Argentina constitutes a breach of the fair and
equitable treatment standard, also because it is contrary to the very principles spelled
out by Argentina’s law and authorities, both before and after the Emergency Law.
This Tribunal thus shares the view of previous Tribunals that have found Argentina
to be in breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard because of the persistent
lack of any tariff readjustment.
181. Finally, the Tribunal notes that many of the previous awards dealing with the
same matter, while following a different approach, mitigated the impact of their
holdings that Argentina acted in breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard,
by giving weight, on different bases, to the emergency situation of Argentina that
brought about the pesification of public service tariffs. In this respect, such tribunals
have relied on the defence of necessity under customary international law,192 or on
specific provisions in the relevant BITs,193 and have considered that Argentina’s
breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard did not occur when the measures
challenged were taken through the Emergency Law on January 6, 2002, but rather at
a later date (such as June 2002), recognizing that the BIT protection could not have
insulated an investor completely from the emergency situation of Argentina in 2001-
2002.194
182. The Tribunal thus only partially upholds Total’s claim concerning TGN under
Article 3 of the BIT. The Tribunal has found that some of Argentina’s measures
challenged by Total were not in breach of Article 3 of the BIT (pesification and
suppression of the US dollar link for the semi-annual automatic adjustments), while
other measures or aspects thereof are in breach of Argentina’s obligations under
Article 3 of the BIT (lack of readjustment). Therefore, the Tribunal cannot determine
The Tribunal further notes that the arbitral awards in Sempra v. Argentina and Enron v. Argentina have been
annulled in 2010 for not having properly examined the applicability of Art. XI of the Argentina-U.S. BIT on non-
precluded measures (Sempra Energy International v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/02/16, Annulment Decision,
19 June 2010, paras. 194 ff.) and for not having dealt adequately with the plea of necessity under customary
international law raised by Argentina (Enron Corporation and Ponderosa Assets, L.P v. Argentina, ICSID Case No.
ARB/01/3, Annulment Decision, 30 July 2010, paras. 367-395).
192
See LG&E v. Argentina, supra note 111, para. 226 ff.
193
As the non-precluding measures clause of Article XI US-Argentina BIT, see Continental Casualty Company v.
Argentina, supra note 53, para. 160 ff.
194
See National Grid plc v. Argentina, supra note 111, para. 180.
80
the damages suffered by Total, since the calculations submitted by Total regarding
quantum are based on different premises for Argentina’s liability. Accordingly, the
Tribunal has decided to postpone the quantification of damages to a separate
quantum phase.
183. The Tribunal considers it appropriate at this point to give some general
indications concerning the criteria, based on the above findings on liability,
according to which those damages should be calculated in the quantum phase, both as
to the time period to be considered, and the basis of the calculation. Based on the
analysis conducted above the Tribunal considers that the freezing of the tariffs was in
breach of the fair and equitable treatment clause as of 1 July, 2002 (i.e., the first 120-
day deadline established by Res. 20/2002 for the completion of the renegotiation
process).195 Since Argentina has not remedied this block by any of the renegotiation
mechanisms that it introduced after the Emergency Law or by operation of the
previous mechanisms that nominally remained in force, the Tribunal believes that a
six-month periodic readjustment of the tariff, as provided for in the Gas Regime but
based on the evolution of local prices, would be appropriate to calculate the damages
caused to Total.196 The calculation of these damages should take into account the
difference between the revenues actually received by TGN (pro-rata according to
Total’s share) and those which TGN would have obtained if the tariffs in pesos in
force on 1 July, 2002 had been readjusted on a semi-annual basis to reflect the
variation of prices in Argentina.197
8.1 The Tribunal’s Conclusions About Total’s Claims Concerning its Investment
in TGN under Article 3 of the BIT
184. On Total’s claims concerning its investment in TGN under Article 3 of the BIT,
the Tribunal, based on the above reasoning and findings,
195
See the detailed description of the various Decrees at paras 84-89.
196
At this stage the Tribunal is of the opinion that by calculating Total’s damages on this basis, the damages
suffered by Total by the lack of reviews both ordinary and extraordinary (excluding the effects of the pesification)
will also be made good. The parties may however submit further evidence in this respect in the quantum phase,
which the Tribunal will then take into account.
197
As mentioned in para. 203 below, Total has pointed to a 95.5% increase from January 2002 to March 2007 of the
consumer price index (IPC) and to an increase of 189% of the wholesale price index (IPIM) for the same period.
81
(i) concludes that Argentina breached its obligation under Article 3 of the
BIT to grant fair and equitable treatment to Total by not periodically
readjusting TGN’s domestic tariffs in force in pesos in January 2002 from
1 July, 2002 onwards;
(ii) concludes that the damages thereby suffered by Total must be
compensated by Argentina;
(iii) rejects all other claims by Total related to its investment in TGN; and
(iv) defers the determination of the above damages to the quantum phase.
9. Total’s Claim that Argentina has Breached Article 5(2) BIT With Respect to its
Investment in TGN (Total’s Claim of Indirect Expropriation)
185. In its claim under Article 5(2) of the BIT, Total complains that it has suffered an
indirect expropriation without compensation in breach of the said provision.198 More
specifically, Total claims that the same measures amounting to a breach of the fair
and equitable treatment obligation of Article 3 of the BIT, alternatively “constitute an
indirect expropriation as they substantially deprive Total of the value and economic
benefit of its investment in TGN, contrary to Article 5(2) of the Treaty. TGN has lost
approximately 86% of its value as a direct result of Argentina’s Measures – this goes
beyond a ‘substantial deprivation’ as it amounts to a virtual obliteration of the value
of Total’s investment in TGN.”199 Total submits that this loss of value of its
investment in TGN (for which Total paid US$ 230 million in 2000) was due to the
Measures in their totality (i.e., the pesification and freezing the gas tariffs as well as
the creation of the trust fund system to expand TGN’s network).200
186. Besides the substantial deprivation of the value of its investment, Total complains
that the establishment of the trust fund, financed by the surcharge on the tariffs paid
by industrial users not to TGN but to the fund, is a form of partial expropriation. This
is because the fund will finance the upgrading of TGN’s network thus becoming a
198
Article 5(2) of the BIT states that: “The Contracting Parties shall not take, directly or indirectly, any
expropriation or nationalization measures or any other equivalent measures having a similar effect of dispossession,
expect for reasons of public necessity and on condition that the measures are not discriminatory or contrary to a
specific undertaking.”
199
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 57.
200
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 157.
82
kind of co-owner of assets that were supposed to be owned only by TGN. Total
complains that, besides the substantial loss of value, the trust Fund mechanism has
impaired its control of TGN.
187. Summing up, Total explains its claim that Argentina has breached Article 5(2) in
the following terms:
188. Argentina opposes Total’s claim under Article 5(2) of the BIT. Relying on the
Pope & Talbot case,202 as well as cases such as Feldman,203 CMS,204 Methanex,205
Azurix,206 LG&E,207 Enron208 and Sempra,209 Argentina suggests that the Tribunal
has to apply the (loss of) control of the investment criterion in order to judge whether
the interference with Total’s property rights brought about by the Measures, is
substantial enough to constitute an indirect expropriation. Because Total (together
with the other shareholders) is still in full control of TGN and continues to manage
its investment, Argentina argues that the alleged interference, not being substantial,
cannot be regarded as an indirect expropriation.210 Furthermore, relying on the
Saluka award,211 Argentina points to “the principle according to which bona fide
201
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 584-585 [footnotes omitted].
202
See Pope & Talbot Inc. v. The Government of Canada, UNCITRAL, Interim Award, 26 June 2000, para. 100.
203
See Feldman v. Mexico, supra note 121, paras 142, 152.
204
CMS Gas Transmission Company v. Argentina, supra note 29, paras 263-264.
205
Methanex av. United States, UNCITRAL, Final Award, 3 August 2005, part IV.D para. 16.
206
Azurix v. Argentina, supra note 113, para. 322.
207
LG&E v. Argentina, supra note 111, para. 188.
208
Enron Corporation and Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina, supra note 20, paras 245-246.
209
Sempra Energy International v. Argentina, supra note 189, para. 284.
210
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 544.
211
See Saluka Investments BV v. The Czech Republic, supra note 103, para. 255.
83
non-discriminatory regulatory measures within the police power of the State do not
require any compensation.”212 In accordance with this principle, the negative effects
on the value of foreign investments caused by the changes introduced by the
Emergency Law (even if they had led to a significant devaluation of foreign assets)
are not compensable under either customary law or the BIT. Therefore, Argentina’s
measures, being regulatory measures of general application enacted to face the 2001-
2002 emergency, cannot be regarded as effecting a compensable expropriation.213
189. Total opposes Argentina’s reasoning with the following arguments. In the first
place, Total maintains that a loss of control of the management and enjoyment of an
investment is not required or decisive in order to find an indirect expropriation under
international law and in light of the specific wording of the Argentina-France BIT.
Total’s view is that Article 5(2) of the Argentina-France BIT covers a wider range of
measures than those “having effect equivalent to nationalisation or expropriation”
(Article 5 of the Argentina-U.K. BIT) or “tantamount to expropriation or
nationalisation” (Article IV(1) of the Argentina-U.S. BIT).214 More specifically,
Total contends that “[T]he words ‘similar effect’ encompass a wider range of
measures than “tantamount to” and the non-technical term “dispossession” covers the
loss of value of an asset, in addition to the loss of the title, control or use.”215 Hence it
is Total’s position that the above measures implemented by Argentina have an effect
similar to dispossession and constitute an indirect expropriation under the specific
wording of Article 5(2) of the BIT, irrespective of whether they are equivalent to an
expropriation or nationalisation.
190. In the second place, Total submits that, even if Argentina was correct that the
severe loss of value was caused by a regulation of general application without any
intent or even effect of dispossession, this would not prevent a finding of indirect
expropriation (regulatory taking). On the one hand, Total submits that: “[I]n any
event, even on a valid invocation of police powers, Argentina would not be exempted
from the obligation to provide Total with prompt, adequate and effective
212
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 545.
213
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 547 ff.
214
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 193-195 (see also Total’s Reply paras 439-441). These provisions have
been applied in the BG and National Grid cases (the Argentina-UK BIT) and in CMS and Enron cases as well as in
other such as Sempra and Azurix (the Argentina-US BIT). In all of these cases, arbitral tribunals rejected investors’
claims of indirect expropriation.
215
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 195.
84
compensation.”216 On the other, Total points out that Argentina’s Measures, even if
regarded as regulatory or police power measures, constitutes an expropriation
because they contradict the specific undertakings Argentina gave to Total and are
therefore in breach of Article 5(2) of the BIT, last sentence. These specific
undertakings or assurances are identified by the Claimant as:
191. Before discussing the legal issues, the Tribunal considers it appropriate to recall
the evidence concerning Total’s position as a major shareholder of TGN and its role
as “Technical Operator”. On the basis of the evidence and the arguments of the
parties in their Post-Hearing Briefs it is uncontested that Total is in full control of its
investment in TGN. Conversely, TGN operates under the management of its
shareholders and carries on its daily activities. It is listed on the Buenos Aires Stock
Exchange. The government’s decision in 2004 to establish a trust fund system in
order to finance expansions of the network by imposing surcharges on the tariffs paid
by industrial users does not entail either loss of control by Total over its investments
nor TGN’s loss of control over its business operations. The trust fund finances the
expansion of the network (which TGN is unable to do due to the lack of adequate
revenues caused by freezing the tariffs), while TGN operates the network as
licensee,218 besides managing the expansion projects.219 Total has not shown that the
trust fund interferes with the ability of TGN shareholders to manage TGN. Based on
the evidence, the Tribunal considers that Total has not been precluded in any way
from exercising its rights as a shareholder in TGN, as it was able to go on managing
TGN’s business together with the other shareholders in TGN. The Tribunal
216
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 586.
217
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 587.
218
See Argentina Rejoinder, paras 452-457 and Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 519. The parties agree that a small
part of the expansion was financed by TGN and that the cooperation between the trust fund and TGN is governed
by agreement between them.
219
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 519.
85
concludes that Total “is in control of the investment; the Government does not
manage the day-to-day operations of the company; and the investor has full
ownership and control of the investment”, as the ICSID Tribunal dealing with CMS
claim – another foreign investor in TGN - found in May 2005.220
192. The Tribunal will first examine Article 5(2) of the BIT, interpreting it in
accordance with Article 31 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of the Treaties.221
As mentioned above, Article 5(2) states that:
“The Contracting Parties shall not take, directly or indirectly, any expropriation
or nationalization measures or any other equivalent measures having a similar
effect of dispossession, except for reasons of public necessity and on condition
that the measures are not discriminatory or contrary to a specific undertaking.”222
193. The key expression as to indirect expropriation is the protection from “any
expropriation or nationalisation measures or any other equivalent measures having a
similar effect of dispossession.” Therefore, besides expropriations and
nationalisations, Article 5(2) covers measures which are “equivalent” to
expropriation and nationalisation, as far as they have a “similar effect of
dispossession.”223 Contrary to Total’s position, the term “dispossession” is not a
“non-technical term.” The term “dispossession” refers to a precise legal concept
under civil law systems to which both France and Argentina belong. Possession is a
factual relation between a thing, object or asset and a person who exercises factual
control over it. Possession in Roman and civil law is independent in part from legal
property.224 While a lawful owner or acquirer is entitled to obtain and exercise
220
See CMS Gas Transmission Company v. Argentina, supra note 29, para. 263.
221
Article 31 VCLT states that: “A treaty shall be interpreted in good faith in accordance with the ordinary meaning
to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and in the light of its object and purpose.”
222
In the French original: “Les Parties contractantes ne prennent pas, directement ou indirectement, de mesures
d’expropriation ou de nationalisation, ni tout autre mesure équivalente ayant un effet similaire de dépossession, si
ce n’est pour cause d’utilité publique et à condition que ces mesures ne soient ni discriminatoires, ni contraires à un
engagement particulier.” In the Spanish original: “Las Partes Contratantes se abstendrán de adoptar, de manera
directa o indirecta, medidas de expropiación o de nacionalización o cualquier otra medida equivalente que tenga un
efecto similar de desposesión, salvo por causa de utilidad pública y con la condición que estas medidas no sean
discriminatorias ni contrarias a un compromiso particular.”
223
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 542 where Argentina points out that: “…,the Argentina-France BIT also makes
reference to measures equivalent to expropriation, as the Argentina-US BIT and the NAFTA, which the Claimant
fails to mention….”
224
See G. Cornu, Vocabulaire Juridique, Presses Universitaires de France, 2000, p. 651, according to whom
‘possession’ is a “pouvoir de fait exercé sur une chose avec l’intention de s’en affirmer le maître (animus domini),
même si – le sachant ou non – on ne l’est pas;” and the term “possesio rei” “signifiant «possession d’une chose»
86
possession, possession, as a factual matter, may exist without or irrespective of a
title. Indeed, property may derive from protracted undisturbed possession over a
thing by a non-owner. The term “dispossession” therefore refers necessarily to the
loss of the control which is characteristic of “possession”.
194. The use of the terms “dépossession” or “mesures dont l’effet est de déposséder”
to characterise indirect expropriation is typical of French BITs. As stressed by two
authoritative French commentators “dans son acception habituelle, la mesure de
dépossession est celle qui prive l’investisseur de ses droit essentiels sur
l’investissement au profit de l’autorité publique, quelles que soient les modalités de
cette dépossession.”225 Contrary to Total’s position, in requiring a loss of material
control over the investment, the term “dispossession” in Article 5(2) appears
somehow to be more restrictive than the parallel provisions in the Argentina-U.S.
(“tantamount to expropriation”) and the Argentina-UK BIT which refer only to
“equivalent to nationalisation or expropriation”. Since Total has not been
dispossessed of its TGN holding nor of the management of its business, the Tribunal
concludes that the requirement of dispossession under Article 5(2) has not been met.
195. In any case, the Tribunal will also address Total’s argument that it is well-
established that a substantial deprivation of the value of an investment constitutes
indirect expropriation. Hence, Total requests the Tribunal to find in casu that
Argentina’s measures, having caused such a loss, are in breach of Article 5(2) of the
BIT. Looking beyond the specific wording of Article 5(2), the Tribunal considers that
under international law a measure which does not have all the features of a formal
expropriation could be equivalent to an expropriation if an effective deprivation of
the investment is thereby caused. An effective deprivation requires, however, a total
loss of value of the property such as when the property affected is rendered worthless
by the measure, as in case of direct expropriation, even if formal title continues to be
servant aujourd’hui à désigner la possession qui correspond au droit de propriété.” See also, ibid. p. 278 where the
term ‘dépossession’ is defined as “[p]erte de la possession, soit par violence ou voie de fait, soit à un titre juridique
(gage, antichrèse, séquestre); privation effective de la détention matérielle d’une chose. ” As to this notion under
Argentina’s legal system see the entry ‘poseer’ in Ana María Cabanellas de las Cuevas, Diccionario Jurídico
Universitario, Editorial Heliasta, 1ra Edición, 2000, Tomo II: poseer is defined as “tener materialmente una cosa en
nuestro poder. Encontrarse en situación de disponer y disfrutar directamente de ella…”
225
See D. Carreau, P. Juillard, Droit international économique, 1ere édition, 2003, para 1376, at p. 508. The two
authors, discussing the use of term “dépossession” in the French model BIT, go on to state that “[m]ais d’autres
instruments, notamment le modèle américain et…l’ALENA, utilisent l’expression, qui parait mieux appropriée, de
mesures équivalant à une mesure d’expropriation ou de nationalisation.” (see para. 1377 at p. 509)
87
held.226 This is supported by the general direction of the case law under BITs,227
other international jurisprudence228 and scholarly legal opinions.229
196. In light of the above legal principles, the Tribunal turns to examine the merits of
Total’s claim that it is the victim of an indirect expropriation. The Tribunal considers
that Total has not shown that the negative economic negative impact of the Measures
has been such as to deprive its investment of all or substantially all its value.
Therefore the Tribunal rejects Total’s claim of indirect expropriation in breach of
Article 5(2) of the BIT. We note that this conclusion is consistent with all of the
previous arbitral precedents dealing with indirect expropriation claims brought by
foreign investors in the utility sector under various BITs in respect of the same or
similar measures of Argentina in 2001-2002. According to this uniform arbitral case
law, Argentina’s Measures have been considered to not give rise to an indirect
expropriation under various BITs,230 in the absence of an effective deprivation of the
value of the foreign investment in the above-mentioned meaning (i.e., total
deprivation of the investment’s value or total loss of control by the investor of its
investment, both of a permanent nature).
197. Before concluding on this claim, the Tribunal recalls that the Claimant
challenged a number of distinct measures under Article 5(2) of the BIT: the
226
Thus, an expropriation could be found even where control remains in the hands of the foreign investor provided
that economic profitability of the investment has been totally destroyed in some other way.
227
See Sempra Energy International v. Argentina, supra note 189, para. 285 where the Tribunal stated that “a
finding of indirect expropriation would require more than adverse effect. It would require that the investor no
longer be in control of its business operation, or that the value of the business have been virtually annihilated.” As
to Argentina’s Measures see also LG&E v. Argentina, supra note 111, para. 191 where it is stated that
“[i]nterference with the investment’s ability to carry on its business is not satisfied where the investment continues
to operate, even if profits are diminished. The impact must be substantial in order that compensation may be
claimed for the expropriation”; BG Group Plc v. Argentina, supra note 113, paras 258-266 and Enron Corporation
and Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina, supra note 20, para. 245. See also Técnicas Medioambientales Tecmed,
S.A. v. United Mexican States, supra note 116, para. 115; CME Czech Republic B.V. v. Czech Republic,
UNCITRAL, Partial Award, 13 September 2001, para. 604; Goetz and others v. Burundi, ICSID Case No.
ARB/95/3, Award (Embodying the Parties' Settlement Agreement), 10 February 1999, para. 124.
228
See for example Starrett Housing Corp. v. Iran, Award, 14 August 1987, 4 Iran-US C.T.R. 122, at pp. 154-157;
Tippets, Abbett, McCarthy, Stratton v. TAMS-AFFA Consulting Engineers of Iran, Award, 29 June 1984, 6 Iran-US
C.T.R. 219, p. 255.
229
See C. Leben, La liberté normative de l’État et la question de l’expropriation indirecte, C. Leben (dir.), Le
contentieux arbitral transnational relative à l’investissement, Anthemis, 2006, 163 ff. at p. 173-175; R. Dolzer, C.
Schreuer, supra note 133, at p. 96-101.
230
See LG&E v. Argentina, supra note 111, para. 200 where the Tribunal stated that: “the effect of the Argentine
State’s actions has not been permanent on the value of the Claimants’ share, and Claimants’ investment has not
ceased to exist. Without a permanent, severe deprivation of LG&E’s rights with regard to its investment, or almost
complete deprivation of the value of LG&E’s investment, the Tribunal concludes that these circumstances do not
constitute expropriation.” See also BG Group Plc v. Argentina, supra note 113, para. 268-270; Enron Corporation
and Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina, supra note 20, para. 246.
88
pesification and the freezing the gas tariffs and the creation of the trust-fund system
to expand TGN’s network. The Tribunal recalls here that, by analysing the
pesification under Total’s claim of breach of Article 3, it has already judged the said
measure as a bona fide regulatory measure of general application, which was
reasonable in light of Argentina’s economic and monetary emergency and
proportionate to the aim of facing such an emergency. Therefore, the Tribunal has
concluded that in the absence of specific stabilization promises to the Claimant, the
pesification does not amount to a breach of Article 3 of the BIT.231 For the same
reasons, it is the Tribunal’s view that the pesification also does not amount to a
measure equivalent to expropriation or nationalisation,232 that is an indirect
expropriation entailing Argentina’s obligation to compensate Total. Moreover,
contrary to Total’s submissions, the pesification was not contrary to any specific
undertaking given by Argentina to Total. In this regard the Tribunal recalls its finding
under Total’s claim of breach of Article 3 of the BIT that the provision according to
which the gas tariffs were calculated in US dollars and adjusted in accordance with
US PPI variations cannot be properly construed as “promises” or “specific
undertakings” given by Argentina to Total since they were not addressed directly or
indirectly to Total.233
231
See above paras. 159 ff.
232
The Tribunal is aware of the current international debate on the issue of whether, by judging changes in national
legal systems introduced by legislative measures under bilateral investment treaties “… one should only take into
account the effects produced by the measure or if one should consider also the context within which a measure was
adopted and the host State’s purpose” (LG&E v. Argentina, supra note 111, para. 194). When foreign investors
complain of State regulatory actions under a BIT, in order to decide whether the measures also amount to an
indirect expropriation (a so-called regulatory taking) a tribunal must take into account their features and object so as
to assess their proportionality and reasonableness in respect of the purpose which is legitimately pursued by the host
State. These regulatory measures, when judged as legitimate, proportionate, reasonable and non-discriminatory, do
not give rise to compensation in favour of foreign investors. The Tribunal shares the dominant approach followed
by international tribunals, that is to take into account also the purpose and the causes of the measures taken by a
State (together with their adverse effects on the foreign investment). In this regard see R. Dolzer, C. Schreuer, supra
note 133, at p. 104, referring to the opinion of Fortier (Fortier, Drymer, Indirect Expropriation in the Law of
International Investment: I Know It When I See It, or Caveat Investor, 19 ICSID Review-Foreign Investment Law
Journal 293 (2004)), the Oscar Chinn Case and Sea-Land Service Inc. v. Iran, 6 Iran-US Cl. Trib. Rep. 149, 166
(1984).
233
See above paras 145 ff. The Tribunal recalls that Article 5(2) of the BIT prohibits measures “contrary to a
specific undertaking.” The Tribunal notes that the BIT contains a further reference to “specific undertaking” in
Article 10: “Investments which have been the subject of a specific undertaking by one Contracting Party vis-à-vis
investors of the other Contracting Party shall be governed, without prejudice to the provisions of this Agreement, by
the terms of that undertaking, in so far as its provisions are more favourable than those laid down by this
Agreement.” Based on Article 5(2), Total submits that the Measures enacted by Argentina, even if considered
legitimate as an exercise of its police powers, give rise to an obligation to compensate Total, because Argentina has
made specific undertakings to Total. However, Total has not invoked a breach of Article 10, although it has argued
that the “core commitments” of the Gas Regulatory Framework should be qualified as “specific undertakings”
under Article 5(2) of the BIT.
89
198. Finally, the Tribunal is unable to sustain Total’s claim that the failure to readjust
the tariffs would constitute also an indirect expropriation in breach of Article 5(2) of
the BIT. This is because this de facto freezing of the gas tariffs implied neither a
deprivation of the investment nor a total loss of its value. The Tribunal further notes
that damages under the heading of indirect expropriation would not be different from
damages due to breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard. In no case could
the Tribunal award double recovery for the same damages to the same assets
hypothetically caused by the breach of two different BIT provisions.234
199. For the reasons above, the Tribunal concludes that Argentina has not indirectly
expropriated Total’s investment in TGN in breach of Article 5(2) of the BIT.
10. Total’s claim that Argentina has breached Article 4 of the BIT (Non-
discrimination)
200. Total contends that Argentina’s Measures (i.e., the pesification and freezing of
gas transportation tariffs) discriminated against Total’s investment, transferring
wealth from TGN and other energy companies predominantly owned by foreign
interests to industry, commerce and agriculture predominantly owned by domestic
investors. Accordingly, since the Measures entail discriminatory treatment against
the energy sector as a whole and TGN in particular, they are not only in breach of
Article 3 of the BIT but also in breach of Article 4 “which obliges Argentina to treat
Total’s investment on a basis no less favourable than that accorded in like situations
to investments of its own nationals”.235
201. It is Total’s position that this discriminatory treatment against the energy sector
and TGN:
234
This would be so even if the methods of calculation were different under the two Articles of the BIT.
235
See Total’s Memorial, para. 369. Article 4 of the BIT reads as follows: “Each Contracting Party shall accord in
its territory and maritime zone to investors of the other Party, in respect of their investments and activities in
connection with such investments, treatment that is no less favourable than that accorded to its own investors or the
treatment accorded to investors of the most-favoured nation, if the latter is more advantageous…”
90
breach of the national treatment provision in Article 4 of the Treaty, for which
Total should receive full compensation.”236
202. Total develops two legal arguments to support its claim of breach of Article 4 of
the BIT. First, Total points out that Article 4 does not textually include any reference
to the “in like circumstances” criterion found in national treatment provisions in other
investment treaties (for example, the NAFTA or the U.S.-Egypt BIT). Accordingly,
Article 4 of the Treaty would not require comparison between investors “in like
circumstances”. Secondly, Total relies on Occidental v. Ecuador at paragraph 173,
where the tribunal states that, because the purpose of national treatment is to protect
investors as compared to local producers, “… this cannot be done by addressing
exclusively the sector in which that particular activity is undertaken.”238
236
See Total’s Memorial, para. 371.
237
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 257 (referring to Occidental Exploration and Production Company v. The
Republic of Ecuador), supra note 112 and 259.
238
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 255-258.
239
See Total’s Memorial, para. 368.
91
In this respect, Total points out that, on the one hand, prices for most sectors of
the economy have increased significantly in accordance with the balance between
supply and demand (from January 2002 to March 2007, the consumer price index
(IPC) and the wholesale price index (IPIM) increased by 95.5% and by 189%,
respectively); on the other hand, Argentina has accorded preferential treatment to
domestic investors in some other cases or sectors either by guaranteeing tariff
increases in line with inflation by law or decree or by providing subsidies.240 More
specifically, Total has complained that certain public service companies have been
authorised to keep all or some of their tariffs denominated in US dollars or pegged to
the US dollar. This authorisation was granted by Argentina in the case of airport-dues
tariffs for international flights, port tariffs and fees, and toll charges for the use of the
Parana River Waterway for international transportation.241 The Tribunal notes here
that Total has not denied that this “preferential treatment” (i.e., to maintain their
tariffs in US dollar terms) also concerned gas transportation tariffs for export
customers (including those of TGN).242
204. Furthermore, Total points out the following forms of relief/compensation that
Argentina accorded to several other sectors predominantly owned by national
interests – but not the energy sector predominantly owned by foreign interests: (i) the
government subsidies to train and underground transportation companies in order to
compensate for the loss caused by the pesification; (ii) the issuance of government
bonds to compensate banks for the loss resulting from the asymmetric pesification
(i.e., the pesification of private individuals’ bank deposits in US dollars at the rate of
1.4 pesos per US dollar, plus inflation adjustment from February 2002 in accordance
with CER variations); (iii) the review of tariffs and prices for public-works
construction contracts in order to reflect cost increases in line with inflation; and (iv)
240
See Total’s Reply, para. 22 ff.
241
See Total’s Reply, para. 23(v).
242
See Total’s Reply, footnote 25 at p. 11. At the very beginning, the Emergency Law did not distinguish as to the
‘pesification’ of tariffs between Argentina’s consumers and those concerning gas exports supplied to foreign
customers. As a result, the pesification also concerned the tariffs payable by customers located abroad from January
to May 2002. As outlined by Total itself, “However, following an outcry from TGN and other public utilities, in
May 2002, tariffs charged to foreign customers were exempted from the pesification by Decree 689/2002. As a
result, these tariffs (representing about 20% of TGN’s revenue prior to the Measures) continue to be calculated in
dollars and adjusted by the US PPI in accordance with the Gas Regulatory Framework …” (see Total’s Post-
Hearing Brief, para. 470-471 [footnotes omitted])
92
the increase of local salaries and employers’ contributions in both public and private
sector.243
205. According to Total, all of these measures, together with the freezing of energy
tariffs at the 2001 level, were part of a deliberate policy of Argentina’s government
to help domestic industry and agriculture and to favour domestic interests by a supply
of abnormally low-priced gas and electricity.244 More specifically, according to
Total:
“Although the text of the Emergency Law and the subsequent Measures adopted
by Argentina are nationality-neutral on their face, their effects and their
implementation by the Argentine authorities were unmistakably favourable to
domestic interests in the industrial and export sectors, at the expense of foreign
investors in the energy sector. This policy of transferring resources from one
sector [sic] another was acknowledged by Chief of Cabinet Alberto Fernandez
and Minister De Vido at a press conference in 2003 [sic]:“…we have achieved
the use of a redistributive criteria [in connection with the tariff increase] Those
who consume more have been benefited all this time by an increase in their
revenues. This was is no way counterbalanced, to express it somehow, by the
increase in tariffs. … During all this time, [exporters] have been able to export
their products in dollars and continued with a very low gas and electricity tariff in
pesos. I understand that they have had enough profit during all this time….””245
206. Finally, Total suggests that the process of renegotiating public service tariffs has
favoured those public service companies, which are predominantly owned by
domestic interests, that do not have significant sunk investments. Moreover, in
carrying out the renegotiation process with energy companies, Argentina further
intends to promote the “re-Argentinisation” of the energy sector.246 In this respect,
Total has complained that Argentina accorded a preferential treatment in the
renegotiation process to two energy companies with domestic ownership, Transener
and Transba. According to Total, the World Bank has also noted the discrimination
against companies owned by foreign interests and in favour of national ones.
243
See Total’s Reply, para. 22-23.
244
See Total’s Reply, para. 10.
245
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 60 and Transcript of Press Conference of the Chief of Cabinet Alberto
Fernández, the Minister of the General Planning, Public Investment and Services Julio de Vido and the Secretary of
Energy Daniel Cameron held in the Government Office, dated 13 February 2004, at Exhibit C-195.
246
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 13-16. Total has referred to two public speeches by President Kirchner
and one speech by the Minister of the General Planning, Public Investment and Services, Julio de Vido to evidence
Argentina’s policy to promote the “re-Argentinisation” of the energy sector (that is to push foreign investors in the
energy sector to sell their investments at depressed prices to Argentine interests). These are at Exhibits C-453, C-
626 and C-670, respectively.
93
“(...) this was the conclusion of a draft report issued by a World Bank delegation
that went to Argentina in 2003 to study the renegotiation process and provide
technical assistance: ‘… the tariff adjustment and renegotiations have proceeded
more quickly in railroads, inter-urban roads, dredging, mail and airports which
coincides with an ownership, debt and asset ownership pattern that is noteworthy
(see Table 1)’.”247
Total has produced an extract of “Table 1”, to which the World Bank delegation
referred in the excerpt above,:248
“the renegotiation process has also operated more swiftly for companies with
domestic ownership: (a) This is the case for railroad and inter-urban road
companies, who, as shown in the table below, have benefited from Government
subsidies. This has also been the case for public transportation companies that
have benefited from subsidies of up to AR2$ billion per year. (b) Other locally
owned companies have seen their pesified tariffs redollarised. This has been the
case for dredging companies, as shown in the table above, as well as for airports.
(c) It is noteworthy that the remaining two companies (out of the twelve
mentioned above) with approved renegotiated agreements – the electricity
transportation companies Transener and Transba – concluded those agreements
shortly after foreign shareholders sold their stakes to a local investor, Marcelo
Mindlin, widely known to be close to the Government. Incidentally, both
electricity companies received unusually generous one-off tariff increases of 31
and 25%, significantly higher than the 15% increase over twelve months that is
247
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 495 and World Bank Draft Aide Mémoire, Technical Assistance on the
Renegotiation of Infrastructure and Public Service Concessions, dated 17-23 February 2003 at Exhibit C-438 (see
also para. 253).
248
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 254 and 496.
94
on offer to TGN. Marcelo Mindlin’s purchase of Electricité de France’s 65%
stake in electricity distribution company Edenor also coincided with the swift
conclusion of its renegotiation process and implementation of a 15% tariff
increase retroactive to November 2005 …”249
“The acts challenged are of general nature and apply to Argentine economy or to
the power generation, production, hydrocarbon exploitation and gas
transportation sectors as a whole, irrespective of the nationality of the parties
affected by them. There is no regulation limiting its effect to foreign or national
subjects or pursuing discriminatory purposes.”250
“TOTAL was not treated different from any other company in a significantly
similar situation. Unequal treatment is only discriminatory among parties under
similar circumstances within the same business or economic sector.”251
“the difference in treatment which might have existed between the electricity
sector and the sectors with which the Claimant makes the comparison cannot give
rise to discrimination, because it implies that investors compared are not in an
arms length situation, since they belong to different economic sectors… In that
regard, since differences among the different sectors which were affected are
quite significant, it is not surprising that different solutions were tried or are being
tried for each of them.”252
249
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 500.
250
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 479.
251
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 481.
252
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 484, where Argentina refers to the Enron and Sempra cases. Both
Tribunals rejected the investors’ claim of discrimination. In this regard, the Enron Tribunal stated at para. 282 that:
“There are quite naturally important differences between the various sectors that have been affected, so it is not
surprising either that different solutions might have been or are being sought for each, but it could not be said that
95
In the second place, Argentina contends that, on the one hand:
“it is not true that foreign investors in the energy sector had been larger than in
manufacturing, commercial or banking sectors…foreign direct investment in the
industrial, commercial and banking sectors between 1992 and 2002 was not much
smaller than in the energy sector.”253
On the other hand, Argentina points out that one of the main TGN shareholders is
TECHINT, an Argentine company.254 Moreover, Argentina outlines that:
209. Finally, according to Argentina, even if the Tribunal finds that Argentina
accorded Total differential treatment as compared to that granted to other entities or
sectors:
any such sector has been singled out, in particular either to apply to it measures harsher than in respect of others, or
conversely to provide a more beneficial remedy to one sector to the detriment of another. The Tribunal does not
find that there has been any capricious, irrational or absurd differentiation in the treatment accorded to the
Claimants as compared to other entities or sectors.” (Enron Corporation and Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina,
supra note 20, para. 282). See also with almost the same wording Sempra Energy International v. Argentina, supra
note 189, para. 319.
253
See Argentina Rejoinder para. 655 and Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief para. 486.
254
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 487.
255
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 488.
256
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 490.
257
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 492.
96
10.3 Tribunal’s conclusions
The elements that are at the basis of likeness vary depending on the legal context
in which the notion has to be applied and the specific circumstances of any individual
case.
211. Under international investment agreements, both national treatment and most-
favoured-nation treatment require such a comparative analysis. Moreover, the
national treatment obligation does not preclude all differential treatment that could
affect a protected investment but is aimed at protecting foreign investors from de iure
or de facto discrimination based on nationality.
212. Therefore a claimant complaining of a breach by the host State of the BIT’s
national treatment clause: (i) has to identify the local subject for comparison; (ii) has
to prove that the claimant-investor is in like circumstances with the identified
258
This is but an application of the fundamental, traditional principle that a finding of discrimination (i.e., of an
inferior treatment applied in respect of a relevant regulation) presupposes a comparison between persons, things or
activities that are “eiusdem generis” (of the same species), See International Law Commission, Draft Articles on
Most-Favoured-Nation Clauses with Commentaries, Y.B. ILC 1978, Vol. II(2), 8-72. There is no reason why this
precondition should not apply equally in investment protection as in trade matters, where the requirement of
“likeness” is spelled out as to products in Article I.1 and II.2 of GATT and in Article II.1 and XVII of GATS as to
services. (that include direct investments in the service sectors under Article I.2 (c) GATS)
259
See R. Jennings, A. Watts (eds.), Oppenheim’s International Law, 9th ed. (Longman, 1992), Vol. I, p. 378.
Argentina refers also to the definition of discrimination developed by the European Court of Human Rights:
“Discrimination … is treating differently, without an objective and reasonable justification, persons in ‘relevantly’
similar situations. For a claim of [discrimination] to succeed, it has therefore to be established, inter alia, that the
situation of the alleged victim can be considered similar to that of persons who have been better treated.” (see
Fredin v. Sweden (No.1), 1991 Eur. Ct. H.R. 2, para. 60)
97
preferred national comparator(s); and (iii) must demonstrate that it received less
favourable treatment in respect of its investment, as compared to the treatment
granted to the specific local investor or the specific class of national comparators.
213. In view of the above, the Tribunal concludes that the absence of the term “like”
in Article 4 of the BIT is not decisive since this element is inherent in an evaluation
of discrimination.260 To succeed in its national treatment claim Total therefore has to
prove that Argentina accorded it less favourable treatment, in respect of its
investments, than that accorded to national investors in like circumstances or
situations to Total. The Tribunal cannot accept Total’s statement that, under Article 4
of the BIT, measures of general application that have practically resulted in different
treatment being accorded to investors in different sectors and irrespective of their
different nationality can be considered per se discriminatory without any “in like
circumstances” analysis. Moreover, different treatment between foreign and national
investors who are similarly situated or in like circumstances must be nationality-
driven. Accordingly, a foreign investor who is challenging measures of general
application as de facto discriminatory under Article 4 of the BIT has to show a prima
facie case of nationality-based discrimination. The Tribunal believes that the
allegations brought by Total have evidenced neither that the sectors are comparable
nor that the differential treatment is motivated by nationality or results in a worse
treatment for foreigners.
214. For the above-stated reasons, to find a breach of the national treatment obligation
the relevant criterion is not just whether a sector has been treated differently, that is
worse, than some other. Maintaining low energy prices by a hydrocarbon producing
nation in order to bolster other sectors of its economy seems to be a widely practiced
economic policy. It cannot be labelled by itself as discriminatory even if foreign
investors are more heavily engaged in that natural resources sector. On the contrary,
it is generally recognized that governments have considerable discretion in deciding
how to treat and regulate different sectors of the economy in view of political and
260
The same conclusion was reached by the Tribunal in the Parkerings-Companiet case in interpreting a Most-
favoured-nation clause that does not include any reference to the “in like circumstances” requirement. See
Parkerings-Compagniet AS v. Lithuania, ICSID Case No. ARB/05/8, Award, 11 September 2007, para. 369 where
the Tribunal states that: “The essential condition of the violation of a MFN clause is the existence of a different
treatment accorded to another foreign investor in a similar situation. Therefore, a comparison is necessary with an
investor in like circumstances.”
98
economic expediency. A finding of de facto discrimination in such a context would
require that the claimant present a prima facie case of nationality-based
discrimination without the host State proving that such different and less favourable
treatment is not unreasonable.
215. It is the Tribunal’s view that Total has failed to present a prima facie case of
discrimination in various respects. First, as to pesification, this measure was
applicable and hit all sectors of Argentina without distinction.261 The allegations
made and examples given by Total in support of its national treatment claim do not
lend themselves to consideration as like sectors or situations. As to the differential
treatment of different sectors of Argentina’s economy (even if an inter-sector
comparison would be admissible), Total failed to prove that such differential
treatment was nationality-based. In this respect, the Tribunal notes that a national
investor such as TECHINT (an investor in TGN like Total) was accorded the same
treatment by Argentina in respect of its investment in TGN, as Total was accorded.
216. Furthermore, the Tribunal notes that the measures which Total complained of
under Article 4 are also alleged by Total as a breach of Article 3. The Tribunal recalls
the conclusion reached above that Argentina is in breach of Article 3 by not having
made any adjustment to TGN’s tariffs since July 1, 2002, and having failed to
conclude the renegotiation process with TGN positively after more than seven years.
Even if such conduct had been discriminatory, this would not add an additional
element of illegality to conduct already found by the Tribunal to be unreasonable and
in breach of the BIT, nor would this additional finding be relevant for the
determination of damages.
217. For the reasons stated above, the Tribunal concludes that Argentina has not
breached Article 4 of the BIT.
218. Having so concluded, the Tribunal considers that the various acts referred to by
Total as evidencing discriminatory conduct by Argentina in keeping the gas tariffs at
non-remunerative levels while other sectors were not so constrained reinforce the
Tribunal’s conclusion that Argentina acted unfairly and unreasonably, in breach of
261
The preferential treatment of depositors (see supra note 153) was applicable to all depositors. Also TGN benefits
from the maintenance of dollar tariffs for supplies to foreign clients. In this regard see supra note 243.
99
Article 3. They may even cast doubt on whether Argentina’s authorities acted in good
faith in not affirmatively concluding renegotiation through UNIREN since 2004.
219. Before concluding, the Tribunal must address Argentina’s defences with respect
to any findings by the Tribunal Argentina breached the BIT in respect of Total’s
investment in TGN. These are (i) the plea of Argentina based on “state of necessity”
under customary international law;262 and (ii) Argentina’s defence based on Article
5(3) of the BIT.263
220. The Tribunal recalls that customary international law imposes strict conditions in
order for a State to successfully avail itself of the defence of necessity. Article 25 of
the ILC Articles on State Responsibility is generally considered as having codified
customary international law in the matter, as also accepted by both parties in this
case.264 Article 25 recognizes necessity as a “ground for precluding the wrongfulness
of an act not in conformity with an international obligation” and sums up the
fundamental conditions of applicability of necessity as follows:
“Article 25-Necessity
1. Necessity may not be invoked by a State as a ground for precluding the
wrongfulness of an act not in conformity with an international obligation of that
State unless the act: (a) is the only way for the State to safeguard an essential
interest against a grave and imminent peril; and (b) does not seriously impair an
essential interest of the State or States towards which the obligation exists, or of
the international community as a whole.
2. In any case, necessity may not be invoked by a State as a ground for precluding
wrongfulness if: (a) the international obligation in question excludes the
possibility of invoking necessity; or (b) the State has contributed to the situation
of necessity.”
262
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 876 ff.
263
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 675 ff.
264
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 887 ff.; Total’s Reply, para. 547 ff. CMS Gas Transmission Company
v. Argentina, Annulment Decision, supra note 191, para. 129; Continental Casualty Company v. Argentina, supra
note 53, footnote 238 at p. 72; Sempra Energy International v. Argentina, Annulment Decision,, supra note 191,
para. 111; Enron Corporation and Ponderosa Assets, L.P v. Argentina, Annulment Decision, supra note 191, para.
356.
100
221. The customary international law defence of necessity acts to excuse an otherwise
wrongful act and, thus, only becomes relevant once a breach of the BIT has been
found. As a positive defence, it is for the party that raises necessity as a justification
for its non-compliance, here Argentina, to prove that the elements required under
Article 25 are met. In respect of Total’s claim concerning its investments in TGN, the
Tribunal has found that the pesification of the gas tariffs and their de-linking from
variations in the US PPI not to be in breach of the BIT. Conversely, the Tribunal has
found that the de facto freezing of the gas tariffs, and the lack of any readjustment
thereof since July 1, 2002, breach Article 3 of the BIT. More specifically, the
Tribunal has concluded that since Argentina has not remedied the blockage of the
tariffs by any of the renegotiation mechanisms that it introduced after the Emergency
Law or by operation of the previous mechanisms that nominally remained in force, a
six-month periodic readjustment of the tariff, as provided for in the Gas Regime but
based on the evolution of local prices, would be appropriate to calculate the damages
caused to Total.265 Therefore the Tribunal has to evaluate the applicability of the
defence of necessity under customary international law only in respect of the failure
by Argentina to readjust the gas tariffs as specified above. More specifically, this
entails, first, ascertaining whether the protracted freezing of the gas distribution tariff
as of 2002 in breach of the BIT was necessary to safeguard Argentina’s essential
interests in preserving its people and their security in face of the economic and social
emergency of 2001.266 Second, the Tribunal must determine whether such freezing, if
necessary, was the only way to safeguard such alleged essential interest.
222. The Tribunal recalled in the previous paragraphs that the principle of
readjustment of the tariffs to ensure that public service providers could make a
reasonable return and provide the service, is enshrined in the Gas Law and that this
principle is still in force. Moreover, the Tribunal underlines that this fundamental
principle has not been abrogated nor suspended during the crisis. To the contrary, it
was restated by Argentina at the peak of the economic emergency of 2001/2002.
265
See para. 183 above.
266
See ILC Commentaries to Art. 25, para. 14. In this regard, the Tribunal considers that a State can invoke
necessity also to protect the security and safety of its people in face of a severe economic emergency. See ILC
Report on the work of its thirty-second session, Yearbook of the ILC, 1980, II, 2, p. 35 stating that necessity may
consist “a grave danger to existence of the State itself, to its political and economic survival”; see also LG&E v.
Argentina, cit. supra note 111, paras. 246, 251; Continental Casualty Company v. Argentina, supra note 53, para.
175 and sources cited there.
101
Article 9 of the Emergency Law provided for the renegotiation of the pesified tariffs
taking account of various criteria, of which the “interest of users and the possibility
of gaining access to such services” was just one. This legislative enactment
undermines Argentina’s position that the protracted freezing of the gas distribution
tariffs at issue here was necessary to safeguard Argentina’s essential interests in
preserving “its own existence and that of its population” against an imminent and
grave peril.267 The Tribunal notes that on October 17, 2002, pursuant to a request by
ENARGAS, the Ministry of Economy by MoE Resolution 487/02 exempted
ENARGAS from its previous Resolution 38/02 of April 10, 2002, which had
prohibited regulators, including ENARGAS, from undertaking any review of
tariffs.268 Contrary to the position advanced here by Argentina, Resolution 487/02
specifically noted that gas tariff reviews had become necessary “in order to facilitate
the continuance of public services.” Resolution 487/02 reflects the fact that in the
second part of 2002 Argentina was emerging from its crisis.269
223. Argentina has not shown that the economic security of the gas users would have
been imminently and gravely threatened if the gas tariffs would have been adjusted in
mid-2002 as Argentina’s own legislation provided for.270 Even if such would have
been the case, Argentina has not shown that the freezing of the tariffs would have
been “the only way for the State to safeguard” such an essential interest against a
grave and imminent peril. In this regard, the Tribunal notes that Argentina discussed
the lack of any reasonable alternatives to the emergency measures actually taken by
Argentina to cope with the crisis principally in respect of the pesification of the
economy that the Tribunal has found not in breach of the BIT. According to
Argentina, the pesification was the only way for Argentina to safeguard its own
economic and political survival as well as that of its people, also as a means to ensure
267
This is how Argentina has characterized its essential interests in its Counter-Memorial, para. 917. Similarly,
Argentina suggests that its essential interests were “the preservation of economic, political, social and institutional
life of the Argentine Government” and that the general measures enacted were necessary to safeguard its essential
security interests in “maintaining social stability and preserving the access to the essential services, which were
vital for the health and welfare of the population.” (Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 543 and 545,
respectively)
268
See para. 88 above.
269
See above at footnote 53.
270
It appears moreover factually unlikely that the relative limited re-adjustment of the tariffs to the variation of
prices in Argentina (see para. 183 above) could have impaired “an essential interest” of Argentina “against a grave
and imminent peril”. This has, in any case, not been proved by Argentina.
102
“fair and reasonable rates” of public utilities.271 Argentina has not discussed nor did it
provide evidence, as it was its burden, that there were no reasonable alternatives to
the freezing of the tariffs. Not only did Argentina fail to submit any evidence to
support its position that its measures were necessary, it also failed to respond to
Total’s submission to the contrary. For example, Total referred to the introduction of
subsidies to low-income households (as Argentina did in other utilities and public
services) and reducing tax burden on the utility bills for low-income households.272
224. Thus Argentina has failed to prove the defence of necessity under customary
international law as concerns the measures adopted in relation to Total’s investments
in TGN found to be in breach of the BIT. It is therefore unnecessary for the Tribunal
to examine whether the further conditions required under customary international law
for Argentina to avail itself of the defence of necessity have been fulfilled. Nor does
the Tribunal have to analyse Total’s counter-arguments in respect of those
conditions. The Tribunal concludes that Argentina’s defence based on the state of
necessity under customary international law is groundless.
226. It is Argentina’s position that “there are not doubts that Article 5(3) of the Treaty
is a rule that establishes an escape clause for an emergency case, and this rule
prevails over the rest of the Treaty. […]”273
271
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, paras. 899-913 and Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 553-557
272
See Total’s Post-hearing Brief, paras. 1047 ff..
273
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 519.
103
“[T]he BIT expressly provides for the adoption of emergency measures by a State
that may provoke losses to the investments of the other contracting party. It does
not only provide for such possibility, but it also legitimizes the actions of the
Government provided the following requirements are complied with: a) that
investors suffer losses in the territory or maritime zone of the other contracting
party due to a national emergency situation, among other circumstances; b) that
they receive from the authorities of the contracting State, in whose territory such
events happened, a not less favourable treatment than the one afforded to its own
investors or to nationals from other States, as regards measures adopted
concerning such circumstance.”275
In addition, Argentina argues that the provision grants the State such a broad
discretion to determine what constitutes a state of national emergency that the
Tribunal is limited to considering only whether Argentina acted in good faith in
applying this BIT clause.276
“… Article 5(3) cannot excuse Argentina’s liability under the Treaty, for the
following reasons: (a) The Purpose of Article 5(3) is to create an entitlement to
compensation where none would otherwise exist under the general rules of
international law. (b) In any event, Argentina’s focus on the word “emergency” in
Article 5(3) is misplaced. The terms preceding and following it make it clear that
Article 5(3) as a whole applies only in circumstances of physical strife and
destruction (“war”, “armed conflict”, “uprising” etc). It is not concerned with
economic “emergencies”. (c) Article 5(3) is relevant only to the losses suffered as
a direct result of war, armed conflict, etc. Total’s losses were caused not as a
result of economic “crisis” but by Argentina’s own Measures.”277
228. Having summarized the position of the Parties on Argentina’s defence based on
Article 5(3) in the above paragraphs, the Tribunal will deal with the interpretation of
Article 5(3) of the BIT in accordance with Article 31 VCLT. In this respect, the plain
reading of Article 5(3) clearly indicates that each Party shall grant to investors of the
other Party a treatment not less favourable than that accorded to its investors or to
investors of the most-favoured nation in case of losses affecting investments made in
274
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 522.
275
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 677. [emphasis original]
276
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 702.
277
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 984 and more extensively Total’s Reply, para. 519 ff.
104
its territory by the other Party’s investors “as a result of war or any other armed
conflict, revolution, state of national emergency or uprising”.
229. Contrary to Argentina’s position, the ordinary meaning of the terms used in
Article 5(3) do not support the conclusion that this clause is an escape clause for
emergency cases. This is not a so-called “non precluded measures” clause contained
in other Bilateral Investment Treaties concluded by Argentina with other States (for
instance Article XI of Argentina-US BIT). Article 5(3) envisages and regulates the
situation of losses suffered by investments made in the territory of one Party by
investors belonging to the other Party in case of “war or any other armed conflict,
revolution, state of national emergency or uprising” and is thus more properly
classified to a “war and civil disturbance” clause, or a “losses due to war” clause.278
Contrary to Argentina’s arguments, Article 5(3) is not applicable to an economic
emergency, unless the economic emergency, which hits one of the Parties, has led to
a “national emergency” where losses have occurred such as those that are a result of
war, uprising or any other kind of civil disturbance. The Tribunal can find no basis
on which to uphold Argentina’s argument that the provision legitimizes the
government of the host country taking measures that in time of national economic
emergency inflict losses on foreign investors. The losses suffered by Total were not
“a result of … national emergency” but, rather, a result of regulatory measures
passed by Argentina. In any case, the provision operates only when compensation of
losses has been granted by a Party to its own investors or to a third Party’s investors.
In such an event, Article 5(3) imposes the duty to treat investors protected by the BIT
no less favourably than other investors. The provision is thus inapplicable from all
points of view in the context at issue.
230. In view of the above, by invoking this clause Argentina could not be exonerated
from liability for having breached the BIT. Moreover, the Tribunal notes that this
clause has an opposite purpose to that of an exculpatory clause. In fact, this clause is
aimed at granting to the investments made in the territory of one Party by the
investors of the other Party an additional guarantee in respect of situations in which
the host State, even if not internationally obliged to do so, has provided for
278
UNCTAD Survey, Bilateral Investment Treaties in the Mid-1990s (1998) at 73, referred to in Total’s Reply,
para. 534, Exhibit CL-129.
105
compensation for the losses suffered due to certain events to its own nationals or
investors of third States
231. For all the above reasons, the Tribunal concludes that Argentina’s defence based
on Article 5(3) of the BIT is groundless.
106
Part III - Total’s Claim as to its Investments in Power Generation
1. Total’s investments
232. In the power generation sector, Total invested in two major power generation
companies, Central Puerto S.A. (“Central Puerto”) and Hidroeléctrica Piedra de
Aguila S.A. (“HPDA”).
233. Central Puerto is a large dual-fuel electricity generator, having the capacity to
produce 2,165 megawatts, which represents 9.5% of Argentina’s total installed
capacity. Central Puerto was created in 1992 as part of the privatization of Servicios
Eléctricos del Gran Buenos Aires S.E. (“SEGBA”), a state-owned enterprise, whose
power generation business was split into four thermal power generation companies.
At the time of privatization, approximately 63.93% of the total stock of Central
Puerto was acquired by three Chilean companies. Eventually, one of these
companies, Companía Chilena de Generación Eléctrica (later renamed “Gener”)
acquired the interest of the other two companies. In July 2001, Total acquired all of
the shares in Central Puerto held by Gener (which had been acquired in 2000 by
AES Corporation). Total says it paid approximately US $255 million and subscribed
to US $120 million of debt to acquire the shares of Central Puerto.279
279
See Exhibit C-70 for a diagram of Total’s shareholdings in Central Puerto and Exhibit C-44 for a copy of an
extract from Central Puerto’s share register.
280
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, footnote 87 at pages 44-45.
107
indirectly owned a 41.3% shareholding in HPDA.281 After privatization, HPDA
expended significant sums to acquire equipment and services (US $161.7 million)
and has assumed existing debt (US $405 million). According to Total, HPDA’s
hydroelectric plant currently comprises four units with an aggregate installed
capacity of 1,400 megawatts. These units entered into service in 1993-1994 and
represent 6.13% of Argentina’s installed electricity capacity.
235. In 2001, Total spent a total of US$327.45 million to acquire Central Puerto’s and
HPDA’s shares.282
236. In November 2006, while the arbitration was pending, Total sold its investments
in Argentina’s power generation sector and received US$35.0 million for its 63.79%
equity stake in Central Puerto and US$145.0 million for its 41.22% equity stake in
HPDA.283
2. Relevant features of the electricity regime in Argentina when Total made its
investment
237. In parallel with the Convertibility regime, Argentina also pursued a liberal
economic policy with respect to the electricity sector, through privatisation of state-
owned companies that had been operating in the sector. The reform of the electricity
sector was carried out by opening the sector to private investors and deregulation.
The Electricity Law of 1992,284 which has remained continuously in force since
enacted, and reflected this new approach, “was a clean break with the past.”285
238. In its Request for Arbitration, Total has explained the general functioning of the
system in economic terms (as existing until the end of 2001) from the perspective of
the generators as follows:
281
See Request for Arbitration, paras 158-160 and Exhibits C-72, a diagram showing Total’s participation in
HPDA, and Exhibit C-44, a copy of HPDA’s share register.
282
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 98.
283
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 133 at p. 66.
284
Law 24.065 entered into force on January 16, 1992 (Exhibit C-84).
285
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 104.
108
market, "capacity" payments, and payments reflecting the "cost of unsupplied
energy".
170. Under SoE Resolution 61/1992, the price of electricity in the spot market
was to be determined in accordance with the "economic cost" of production of
electricity. Such price was to be uniform and calculated, as is explained below, in
a way that rewards the most efficient (ie, most economical) power generators in
terms of variable production cost.
171. In accordance with the Electricity Law and the Procedures, both thermal
and hydroelectric generators declare to Cammesa their variable cost of production
of electricity in US dollars, twice a year. The Procedures provide that this
variable cost must be "expressed as equivalent fuel units ('US$/fuel-unit')", which
means that it is a function of, principally, the fuel cost of each unit multiplied by
its efficiency in generating electricity by utilising that fuel.
172. As already explained, it was -and still is -the cost of gas, the principal
fuel used by thermal generators in Argentina, that on the whole determines the
variable cost declared not only by thermal units (which overwhelmingly use gas
to produce electricity), but also by hydroelectric units (which have to declare
costs after thermal units, and seek to remain competitive vis-à-vis the thermal
units, in the way described at paragraph 61 above).”
173. Cammesa, in turn, determines the price of electricity in the spot market
on an hourly basis, calculating the demand and supply of electricity based on the
relevant data, which is being provided by generators. Cammesa then calls upon
generators to dispatch electricity until demand is met, in an ascending order of the
variable cost declared by each generator. As a result, a generator who is able to
declare low variable cost should be able to sell all of the electricity that it can
make available.
174. In this mechanism, the uniform price of electricity is equal to the cost of
the unit of electricity that is required to meet the next unit of demand. Each
generator is to be remunerated for its dispatches on the basis of this uniform
price, making a margin out of the difference between the uniform price and its
own declared variable cost, in order to cover its fixed costs and make a return.
This is illustrated in the diagram below.
175. The Electricity Law and the Procedures provided (until 2002) that
electricity generators are also to receive a "capacity" payment at the amount of
US$1O/MWh. This is a payment for electricity not actually dispatched in the spot
market but available to be dispatched at times of high demand. It was calculated
on the basis of a certain amount of MWh dispatched by each generator in the spot
market within a defined period of every month.
176. The economic purpose behind the capacity payment is to encourage
investment in "peaking" units that are called to dispatch electricity only at "peak"
times of high demand: these units are the safety valves of the generation network,
and ensure that no power cuts should occur.
109
177. The rate of the capacity payment described above was always fixed in
US dollars: the SoE has consistently expressed the capacity payment as a US
dollar value and Resolution 137/1992 deliberately fixed its amount per MWh in
US dollars.
178. Allied to the remuneration for capacity outlined above is the amount
referred to as the "cost of unsupplied energy", ie a price that applies in hours of
unsupplied demand to signal the value of electricity to its demand in the market.
This price was fixed at US$1,500/MWh in the Procedures, and remained at this
level until 2002. Under the same rules, this US dollar amount is to be determined
by the SoE based on a study of the social and economic value of the demand for
energy that cannot be satisfied.”286
239. Before examining the merits of Total’s claim in relation to the aforementioned
investments, the Tribunal considers it useful to give a detailed overview of the legal
regime governing Argentina’s power generation sector, as understood from the
parties’ submissions in this arbitration. In order to give this overview, the Tribunal
has relied extensively on the reports prepared by the parties’ experts (Mr. Abdala and
Mr. Spiller for the Claimant and Mr. Gallino and Mr. Sruoga for the Respondent), as
well as on the parties’ submissions.
240. The Electricity Law establishes the general framework governing Argentina’s
electricity sector, assigning to specialized authorities (mainly, the SoE) the task of
putting it into effect through highly technical regulations. The Tribunal will deal first
with the relevant provisions of the Electricity Law and the Decree which
implemented it (mainly, Decree 1.398/92).287
241. The Electricity Law provides for a regulator, namely the Ente Nacional
Regulador de la Electricidad (hereinafter also “ENRE”), established within the SoE
“which shall implement all the necessary measures to comply with the objectives
established in Article 2 hereof” (Article 54). The objectives of ENRE are spelled out
in Article 2.1 of the Electricity Law. These objectives are as follows: “a) To
adequately protect the rights of users; b) To promote competition in the electricity
production and demand markets, and to foster investments for the purpose of
guaranteeing the gas supply in the long term; c) To promote the operation, reliability,
equality, free access, non discrimination and widespread use of services and
286
Total’s Request for Arbitration, paras. 166-178, footnotes omitted. In its further briefs Total appears to have
modified various points of this description.
287
Exhibit C-35.
110
installation of electricity transportation and distribution; d) to regulate the electricity
transmission ensuring that the tariffs applicable to the services are fair and
reasonable; e) To encourage supply, transportation, distribution and efficient use by
setting appropriate rate methodologies; f) To encourage private investments in
production, transportation and distribution, thus ensuring market competitiveness
where possible”. Furthermore, ENRE “shall be subject to the principles and
provisions hereof, and shall control conformity of the electric sector activity to such
principles and provisions” (Article 2.2). Article 4 of the Electricity Law identifies as
players in the electricity market: “a) Power plants or producers; b) Transportation
companies; c) Distribution companies; d) Large users.”
242. In implementing reform of the sector, the electricity activity was divided into
three different sectors, namely generation, transmission and distribution. Under the
Electricity Law these three sectors are classified differently. While the Electricity
Law defines electricity transmission and distribution activities as “public service”
(Article 1.1), power generation activity is regarded as “service of ‘general interest.’”
243. More precisely, Article 1.2 of the Electricity Law states that: “The generation
activities, in any of its modalities, which are totally or partially devoted to the supply
of energy for the service are declared to be of “general interest”, the activities of
which are deemed affected to such public service and are governed by the legal rules
and regulations which allow for its normal operation.”288 Annex I, Article 1.3 of
Decree 1.398/92 clarifies that: “As the electric power generation activity is related to
the free relationship between supply and demand, it should be regulated only in those
aspects and circumstances affecting the general interest.” Accordingly, “[t]he electric
power generation activity of a thermal origin does not require prior authorization of
the National Executive for its exercise; however, the one of hydroelectric origin shall
be subject to an exploitation concession, … .” (Decree 1.398/92, Annex I, Article
5).289
288
See also Decree 1.398/92 at Article 1; ENRE, Informe Annual 1993/1994, point 3.1.b at Exhibit C-316.
289
See also Article 14 point a) Law 15.336, as amended by the Electricity Law (Article 89), which lists
hydroelectric power generation, among the activities requiring a concession from the Executive. Under the
Procedures, thermal plants may instead operate in the WEM upon authorisation by the Authority. In this regard see
below at para. 276.
111
244. As to the power generation sector, the Electricity Law lays down the following.
The SoE290 “shall determine the rules applicable to the DNDC [Despacho Nacional
de Cargas] for the performance of its duties, which shall guarantee the transparency
and fairness of decisions, according to the following principles: a) To allow the
execution of contracts freely agreed upon by the parties thereto, which parties shall
be power plants […], large users and distribution companies (forward market); b) To
dispatch the demand required, based on the acknowledgment of prices of energy and
power set forth in the following section, to which market agents shall expressly
commit, in order to be entitled to supply or receive electricity not freely agreed upon
by the parties […]” (Article 35.2 of the Electricity Law) . According to Article 35.1,
the DNDC is the body entrusted with managing the Wholesale Electricity Market
(hereinafter also “WEM” or in Spanish, the Mercado Eléctrico Mayorista or
“MEM”), composed of both the term (Article 35.2 a)) and spot markets (Article 35.2
b)). The DNDC had to be organised as a corporation (“sociedad anónima”) in
accordance with the same article. To this end, Decree 1.192/92 established the
Compañía Administradora del Mercado Eléctrico Mayorista S.A. (hereinafter also
“CAMMESA”), a not-for-profit company in which the main actors of the Wholesale
Electricity Market participate together with the State.
245. The Electricity Law provides that generators may sell the power they produce in
two ways. First of all, they may participate in the “term electricity market” in
accordance with Article 35.2 a) of the Electricity Law by concluding contracts with
other generators, distribution companies and large-scale consumers. To this end, the
same law provides that “generators can enter into supply contracts directly with
distributors and large users. Said contracts shall be freely negotiated between the
parties” (Article 6). Secondly, Article 35.2 b) provides that by participating in the
spot electricity market, generators may sell the power they produce “based on the
acknowledgment of prices of energy and power set forth in the following section”
(i.e., Article 36.1 of the Electricity Law).
246. As to the regulation of the spot market, Article 36.1 of the Electricity Law states
that: “The Secretary of Energy shall pass a resolution on the economic dispatch rules
for energy and power transactions provided for [in Article 35.2 b)] to be applied by
290
The SoE has the authority to implement the Law by enacting Resolutions.
112
DNDC.” The same Article goes on to state that: Such resolution shall provide that
generators receive for the power sold a uniform rate for all en each delivery location
established by the DNDC, based on the economic cost of the system. In order to
determine such rate, the cost that the unsupplied energy represents for the community
must be taken into account.” [emphasis added]. This is the key provision of the
Electricity Law upon which Total relies.
247. Furthermore, according to Article 36.2 of the Electricity Law, the SoE shall also:
“… determine that those who demand electricity (distribution companies) pay a
uniform rate, stabilized every ninety (90) days, and measured at the receipt points.
Such rate shall include the amounts received by power plants for the items indicated
in the paragraph above, and the transportation costs between the supply and receipt
points.”
“power generation was henceforth to be an open and free market. The state was
to sell its power plants, and more plants would be built and run in accordance
with the free-market rules of supply and demand.”292
Total submits that power generation was thus organized as a free market “trusting
that competition among efficient private companies would drive costs down”293 and
“the philosophy of the Electricity Law was that end-user tariffs were to be
determined according to the economic cost of producing electricity.”294 As a
consequence, under the Electricity Law and Decree 1.398/92, the State has a limited
role as to the regulation of power generation activities.
291
More specifically, Total refers at para. 864 of its Post-Hearing Brief to a document prepared by ENRE (Informe
Annual 1993/1994, Exhibit C-316, at Point 3.1.b, supra note 280) and a conference paper by Mr. Legisa (former
President of ENRE) presented at a conference on Regulation in Infrastructure Services, New Delhi 2000, Exhibit C-
369. See also Total’s Post Hearing Brief, para. 865.
292
Electricity transportation and distribution were also privatized. The concessionaires were, however, remunerated
by tariffs, as in the gas-transportation sector. See Total’s Post Hearing Brief, para. 104.
293
According to Total “the cost of power generation fell drastically immediately after the 1992 reforms and by 2001
had decreased by 40%.” See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 104.
294
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 105.
113
249. More precisely, it is Total’s position that:
“[I]n the power-generation sector, the discretionary powers of the SoE are
expressly limited. By contrast with highly regulated sectors such as electricity
transportation and distribution (which are tariff-based sectors), according to
Decree 1,398/1992, the power generation sector is organized as a free market and
therefore it should be minimally regulated.”295
According to Total:
“[T]he limits to the scope of the SoE’s authority result from the explicit will of
the legislator, who wanted the regulations to be essentially limited to technical
aspects and the administration of the system. Principally, the system would be
governed by free-market rules. The role of the SoE is limited to the
implementation of the rules and objectives set forth in the Electricity Law.”297
250. Argentina opposes Total’s arguments. Moreover, Argentina suggests that, under
the Electricity Law, the SoE has a right to modify and adapt the regulation of
generators in order “to search a more efficient or competitive market, enabling the
continuity of the public services.”298 According to Argentina:
Therefore, Argentina says that the SoE has the right to modify the regulations
applying to generators on grounds of general interest because generators mainly
295
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 863. In order to support this argument Total refers to Decree 1.398/92,
Article 1.3, already quoted by the Tribunal at para. 243.
296
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 864.
297
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 866.
298
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 402.
299
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para 168 where, besides Article 1.2 of the Electricity Law and Article 1.3 of
Decree 1.398/92, Argentina also refers to Law 15.336, Article 3, Part 2.
114
supply energy to public utilities.300 Argentina argues that this right of the SoE comes
from the wide powers to adjust the rules of operation of the MEM reserved to it by
the Electricity Law (Articles 35 and 36 of the Electricity Law).301 According to
Argentina, two further elements support its position. First, these broad powers are
demonstrated by the SoE’s practice, which modified the functioning of the MEM
over 130 times from 1992 to 2001, before Total’s investments in the sector took
place.302 Second, everyone was aware of the extent of the SoE’s powers, as it has
been the object of much criticism. In this regard, Argentina stresses that:
“[A]s from the academic and regulatory point of view, some people criticized the
extension of such powers. That was the position adopted, among others, by
Spiller, already in 1996, before TOTAL made investments in electricity. At the
hearing, Abdala pointed out that he shared such Spiller’s statements. In their book
published in 1999, Spiller and Abdala stated that: “[a]t the SE level, the
Argentine Government has reserved the greatest portion of discretional power.”
At the hearing, Abdala acknowledged that the Secretary of Energy “had reserved
an important discretional power for setting rules of the game in this sector.””303
Total agrees that there was a need for technical regulation of generators, but
submits that the ability to regulate did not extend to subverting the fundamental
principle established by the Electricity Law.305
251. The Tribunal notes here that, on the one hand, the Parties agree that the SoE must
respect the Electricity Law (especially Article 36) and Argentine Constitutional
300
See generally Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, paras 164-174 and in particular para 169.
301
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, paras 399-400.
302
See below footnote 311.
303
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 344-345.
304
See Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 403 and Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 346 where Argentina restated
this argument in similar terms: “…, any sophisticated investor, such as Total, would include (or should include) in
its legitimate expectations the extensive powers of the Secretary of Energy to adjust the regulations governing the
MEM operation.”
305
Total’s Reply Memorial, paras. 348-360.
115
Law,306 when it exercises its regulatory powers; on the other hand, the Parties infer
from the aforementioned rules different conclusions as to the extent of SoE’s
discretionary powers under Argentina’s law. The Parties qualify differently the
provisions contained in Article 36. According to Total, Article 36 contains “pricing
rules” which should be regarded as promises made by Argentina to all generators.307
On the contrary, Argentina qualifies the provisions of Article 36 as “general
guidelines”308 which the SoE has the authority to implement within its broad
discretionary powers.309
252. The SoE has implemented the provisions of the Electricity Law (Article 36.1
included) by Resolution No. 61/1992 of 29 April 1992.310 This Resolution has been
amended many times by subsequent Resolutions before Total’s investments in the
sector.311 All of these Resolutions are known in their consolidated form as the
“Procedures” (in Spanish, “Los Procedimientos”), which contain the overall
regulation of the MEM.312 The Procedures also establish the mechanism according to
which CAMMESA, which is in charge of the administration of the wholesale market
(as the Tribunal has outlined above at paragraph 244), determines spot prices.
306
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, footnote 320 at p. 79 and Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 861-862.
307
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 854. The Tribunal notes here that Total also qualified these provisions,
such as “explicit mandatory principles” which “the SoE does not have authority to trump”, “price-determination
rules” (Total’s Post-Hearing Brief paras 861 and 826, respectively), “criteria for determination of prices” (Total’s
Post-Hearing Brief para 859) and “ground rules” at the hearings on the merits (see Transcript (English), Monday,
January 7, 2008, 174:6).
308
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, footnote 320 at 79.
309
In this regard, Total points out that the terms of HPDA’s concession (see below at paras. 277-278) do not
support Argentina’s classification of the content of Article 36 of the Electricity Law as providing general
guidelines. According to Total, HPDA’s concession provides for a right to terminate the concession in case of a
significant alteration of the “criteria for the determination of prices contained in the Electricity Law” (Article
56.1.4). Consequently, it is Total’s view that “[t]he operative word is “criteria” – not “guidelines” or “general
principles.”” (see Total Post-Hearing Brief, footnote 96 at p. 46)
310
See Resolution 61/92 of 29 April 1992, Organización del Sistema Físico del Mercado Eléctrico Mayorista.
Agentes Reconocidos. Organización. Procedimientos para la Programación de la Operación, el Despacho de
Cargas y el Cálculo de Precios. Sanciones por Falta de Pago. Disposiciones Transitorias. Ámbito de aplicación y
vigencia (Exhibits C-36). See also Extracts From The Procedures at Exhibit C-37.
311
Many changes in the Procedures had been introduced by the SoE as of 1992. For example, Total refers to
Resolution 137/92 of 30 November 1992 (Exhibit C-74), by which the SoE improved the Procedures in order to
adjust it to the “criterios de regulación de la actividad de transporte de energía eléctrica y de Generación
hidroeléctrica” (see Request for Arbitration, para. 175 and footnote 150). There were also the modifications - in
favour of generators - to the price setting mechanism (established by Resolution 62/92) introduced by Resolution
105/95 (in this regard see LECG Report on Electricity, para. 27 and footnote 13 at p. 17; Argentina’s Counter-
Memorial, para. 144; Gallino Report on Electricity, paras 180-184; and Argentina’s Rejoinder, para 404 ff). As to
these changes, Argentina points out that, “In late 2001, with the outbreak of the crisis, the Procedures had already
been modified by the Department of Energy on 131 occasions.” (see Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 404)
312
See Updated Version of the Procedures with relevant Annexes (Exhibit C-278).
116
253. In describing this complex mechanism and its operation below, the Tribunal will
refer to those aspects of the Procedures which are undisputed between the Parties and
their experts.
254. Under the Procedures, electricity prices in the spot market are set by CAMMESA
“on an hourly basis set by the economic cost of production, represented by the Short
Term Marginal Cost measured in the Load Center of the System.” (Article 9(b) SoE
Resolution 61/92). Every power generator has to inform CAMMESA of its variable
cost of production twice a year to allow CAMMESA to make these price
determinations. The variable costs declared by generators are mainly determined by
the cost of the fuels used for generation in the MEM. The Procedures (Annex 13,
Section 1) apply to the following fuels “… gas, coal, fuel oil, gas oil and nuclear …
.”
255. Each generator was required to calculate its variable cost in accordance with the
formulas provided for by Resolution 61/1992, depending on the type of fuel used for
production of electricity and the type of generation unit. More specifically, thermal
units (such as Central Puerto) have to calculate their variable costs according to a
formula which was a function of, principally, the fuel cost of each unit (to be used in
the following six months) multiplied by its efficiency.313 Annex 13, Section 2, of the
Procedures provides that: “The Variable Cost of Production (VCP) of a thermal,
conventional or nuclear unit is the variable cost anticipated by the Generator for the
production of power throughout a given period, and it includes the cost of fuels, the
cost related to machine consumption, the cost of different variable inputs of the fuels,
the start-up and halt costs for state-of-the-art and sub-base machines, and any other
required variables.” The same section goes on to state that: “This cost is expressed
per machined type installed in the unit, and there are four possible kinds (steam-
turbine, gas-turbine or engines, combined-cycle and nuclear), and for each type of
fuel that the machine may consume, considering those established for the
determination of fuel reference prices as type of fuels. The values defining the
variable cost of production are expressed in equivalent fuel units for consumption in
order to produce power (USD/fuel unit). The number of values defining the variable
313
See also Total’s Memorial, para. 190.
117
cost of production of a thermal unit, therefore, depends on the number of machines
installed in the unit and the amount of different fuels that may be consumed […].”
256. Under the Procedures, the variable cost declarations by thermal units were
subject to price ceilings (the so-called “Valores Máximos Reconocidos”).314
According to Annex 13, Section 3 of the Procedures, the reference prices of the
various relevant fuels are also defined and regulated and seasonal and monthly
reference prices are distinguished.315 As to the reference prices of fuels (the so-called
Precios de Referencia de combustibles), Annex 13, Section 1 of the Procedures
provides for the following definition: “The fuel Reference Price shall be the price
provided in the Wholesale Electric Market (WEM) for said fuel, which is calculated
for each type of existing fuel with the methodology established herein.”316 According
to the same section, the reference price of gas “is calculated with the prices in the
local market” and the reference price of the other fuels “is calculated: a) for the gas,
with the methodology indicated in point 5.3 herein; b) for coal and nuclear fuel, with
the fuel reference price.”
257. As to the reference price of gas, Annex 13, Section 5.3 of the Procedure refers to
the tariff set by ENARGAS in respect of the large-scale gas users. More specifically,
Section 5.3 states that: “The Gas Seasonal Reference price in the units is determined
by the corresponding existing rates for a six-month period for the gas Transport and
Distribution licensee who informs the ENARGAS for the interruptible supply (I) in
the charts called “Large Users – Charges per m3 consumed, ID or IT regime”. For
each unit, the Reference Price shall be determined for the kind of relationship
between the gas network, whether direct or indirect, with the Transportation (T) or
Distribution (D) company. The Gas Reference price in the reference point is
determined by the rate corresponding to the Capital. If a Generator submits an
interruptible gas contract, the rate corresponding to the interruptible supply shall be
applicable.” Section 5.3 concludes that: “Gas rates have a six-month duration, as
from May and as from November. Therefore, the gas reference price per month shall
314
In this regard, see also Total’s Memorial, para 191 where the Claimant refers to Annex 13, Section 3 and Section
5.3 of the Procedures as to the gas reference price. As to the reference prices of the other fuel costs, see Annex 13,
Section 5.2 of the Procedures.
315
More specifically see Section 5.1 of the Procedures.
316
As to the various types of fuels considered by the Procedures see above para. 254.
118
be equal to the seasonal reference price for the Seasonal Period to which that month
pertains.”
258. In respect of the other fuels, Section 5.2, item 1, of the Procedures (under the
Heading ‘Combustibles Líquidos’) provides that: “Liquid fuel reference prices are
calculated considering the fuel price in the international Market, the registered prices
and the future prices, plus: a) for imported fuel, the import cost of the product up to
La Plata; b) for national origin fuel, a surcharge of the FOB value representing the
commercialization costs.” As to these fuels, Section 5.2.1. specifies the following:
“The reference price for each liquid fuel is calculated considering past prices
registered in the International Market, the future tendency of the International
Market and the transport up to La Plata, the reference point.
The prices corresponding to the specific characteristics of fuels and to an
international commercialization port, defined as New York shall be used. […].”
Summing up, the reference prices of these fuels are generally based on their
international prices in New York. Nevertheless, the Procedures reserve to the SoE the
power to modify the method of calculation when extraordinary circumstances occur
relating to the international prices of these fuels. According to Section 5.2, item 2 of
the Procedures, “[i]n extraordinary situations in which the conditions in the fuel
markets are very far away from normal conditions, the calculation of liquid fuel
reference prices may be modified by the SECRETARY OF ENERGY of the
MINISTRY OF ECONOMY AND PUBLIC WORKS AND SERVICES. The
SECRETARY OF ENERGY of the MINISTRY OF ECONOMY AND PUBLIC WORKS
AND SERVICES shall notify the DISPATCH BODY (OED) of said modification
before the date on which Generators are to be informed of the reference prices.”
259. As to the variable costs declared by hydroelectric units (such as HPDA), Total
and its experts, Mr. Abdala and Mr. Spiller, explain that the variable cost of
generation for hydroelectric generators is given by the value of water, which
corresponds to the opportunity cost of water.317 This opportunity cost is based on the
value of the water in alternative uses (such as tourism activities or irrigation) and also
taking into account the management of reservoirs in relation to other economic
317
See Chapter II, Sections 2.3.1.2.2., 2.3.1.2.3, 2.3.1.3., 2.3.2. of the Procedures and Annex 22.
119
activities. For the purpose of calculating the opportunity cost of water, the Procedures
provide for two standard models called OSCAR (Optimizador Secuencial de Cuencas
Argentinas)318 and MARGO.319 In this regard, Total’s experts point out that,
“for run-of the river units this opportunity cost is almost zero. For the other kind
of hydro units this opportunity cost is given by the expected future replacement
cost of water, which in turn is given by the cost of thermal generation that may
replace the use of water for electricity purposes. Thus, the allowed variable costs
of hydroelectric plants are linked to the allowed variable costs of thermal
generators.”320
260. Turning back to the spot price formation mechanism, CAMMESA calls for
dispatch of all the power generators that have declared costs lower than those of the
marginal unit (that is the unit that sets the spot price). The marginal unit is the unit
next-in-line to the last plant dispatched in order to satisfy the hourly demand of
electricity.321 More specifically, CAMMESA prepares an ascending order (the so-
called merit order) calling for dispatch first from the generators that have declared
the lowest costs. The spot price, which is hourly-determined, is equivalent to the
variable costs declared by the marginal unit, that is, the least expensive generator
excluded by CAMMESA from the merit order.322 All of the generators dispatched
receive the same spot price from CAMMESA but do not obtain the same margin.
Their individual margin depends on their efficiency.323
261. It is undisputed between the Parties that the price of natural gas is the key
element determining electricity prices in Argentina.324 Most of the time, the marginal
unit (that is the unit that sets the spot price), used to be a thermal plant burning gas
except in cases of peak demand. In cases of peak demand, more costly generators
such as liquid fuel units are also utilized to meet the increased demand.
262. As to the place of hydro units and HPDA in the merit order, Total points out the
following. Historically, hydro units were not the marginal units. Hydroelectric units
318
See LECG Report on Electricity, footnote 48 at p. 29.
319
See Section 2.2 of the Procedures at p. 9.
320
See Request for Arbitration, para. 61 and LECG Report on Electricity, para. 26.
321
Until the enactment of Resolution 105/95, the marginal unit was the last one called upon by CAMMESA for
dispatch, as explained above at footnote 311.
322
See LECG Report on Electricity, paras 25 and 27; Argentina’s Rejoinder, para. 421.
323
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 810 point (h).
324
See Total’s Request for Arbitration para. 172; LECG Report on Electricity, para. 29; and Argentina’s Counter-
Memorial, paras 188-189.
120
were (and are) generally able to declare to CAMMESA low variable costs and, as a
consequence, to dispatch large quantities of electricity in the spot market so as to
have significant cash flows and repay sunk costs.325 In this respect, the Tribunal notes
that even after the enactment of the measures challenged by Total, hydroelectric units
declare variable costs lower than the “AR$120/MWh spot price cap” introduced by
SoE Resolution 2/02.326
263. Total submitted, in the course of its opening statement at the hearings on the
merits that:
“[T]his [that is hydroelectric units being the price setters] is not the typical
situation, but it can happen at times of low hydrolicity when the opportunity cost
of water is more expensive, more dear, than the cost of gas, and this applies in
particular to plants which are very expensive to build; like Piedra del Aguila,
about which you will hear more later, that can store energy. So they're not run-of-
the-river plants, but they can store energy for months, weeks, or even a season
and then sell it at times when there is a lot of demand and there is not a lot of
hydropower in the market.” [see Transcript (English), Monday, January 7, 2008,
180:11-21].
Summing up, while being able to declare low variable costs, hydro units require
an amount of upfront investment for their construction three times larger than that
required by an average thermal unit with the same installed capacity.327 According to
Total, this is particularly true for HPDA. On the one hand, HPDA is a seasonal plant
which can store electricity; on the other “… it is a classic baseload plant, a plant that
requires large margins”328 because it is very expensive to build.
264. Furthermore, in order to understand the functioning of the system, other activities
of CAMMESA as administrator of the MEM are worthy of note. CAMMESA
collects the payments made by distributors and large users for electricity acquired in
the spot market and pays the spot-price revenues due to generators for the electricity
325
See Request for Arbitration para. 62 and Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 810 point (i) where Total states that
“for technological reasons, more efficient generators have much higher sunk costs than less efficient generators: the
most efficient technology (i.e., hydroelectric and combined-cycle plants) requires greater amounts to be invested
upfront.” In this regard, Mr. Petrochilos, one of Total’s lawyers, stated in his Opening Statement at the Hearings on
the Merits that: “… when you have a hydro plant, it will be dispatching large amounts of the electricity because it is
a baseload and efficient plant …” (see Transcript (English), Monday, January 7, 2008, 177:21-22 and 178:1-2).
326
LEGG Report on Electricity, Graph IX at p. 55.
327
See Request for Arbitration, para. 62.
328
See the Opening Statement by Mr. Petrochilos on behalf of Total at the Hearings on the Merits, Transcript
(English), Monday, January 7, 2008, 190: 16-19.
121
sold in the spot market. Distributors do not pay for electricity at the spot prices
(which are hourly-determined and, therefore, variable) but pay at a “seasonal tariff”,
which the SoE fixes every six months.329 The “seasonal tariff” is, therefore, the price
to be paid by distributors during a six-month period330 and is calculated by
CAMMESA on the basis of various factors. Among these different factors are the
variable costs and the demand for electricity projected by generators and distributors,
respectively, and the market data for the first three months of the relevant season. In
fact, CAMMESA must review the seasonal tariff after the first three months of the
seasonal period has elapsed.331 This quarterly review is carried out by CAMMESA
(under the control of the SoE) in order to adjust the seasonal tariff, particularly taking
into account the variations between the actual demand by distributors in the first
three months of the seasonal period and their projected demand. In fact, the demand
for electricity by distributors is one of the main factors which contributes to the
determination of electricity prices.332
265. Summing up, the “seasonal tariff” is a projection by CAMMESA of the spot
prices for the next season. Because there can be differences between the actual spot
prices and the “seasonal tariff” to be paid by distributors, Resolution 61/92 provides
for a “[q]uarterly stabilization system of the prices for the Spot Market, intended for
the purchase from distributors.” (see Article 9 point c) below). More specifically,
according to Article 9 of Resolution 61/92, “The Wholesale Electric Market is
composed of: a) a Term contract market, […]. b) A Spot Market, with prices
determined on an hourly basis based on the economic cost of production, represented
by the Short-Term Marginal Cost measured in the Load Center of the System. c) A
quarterly stabilization system of the prices for the Spot Market, intended for the
purchase from distributors.”
266. To finance and cover any difference between the spot prices and the seasonal
tariff, the Procedures establish the so-called “Stabilization Fund”, managed by
329
See Chapter II, Section 2.12 of the Procedures.
330
See Chapter II, Section 2.4.6.3 of the Procedures.
331
This review is called “QUARTERLY RESCHEDULE.”
332
On this aspect see Chapter II, Section 2.11.1 of the Procedures.
122
CAMMESA.333 Under the Heading “PRICE STABILIZATION SYSTEM” the
Procedures at section 5.7 provide that:
“The difference arising from the amounts to be paid by debtors, considering that
the Distributors pay such amounts based on a system of seasonal prices, and the
amounts to be received by creditors, resulting from spot price transactions, shall
be absorbed by a stabilization system based on the existence of a provisional
deposit fund called STABILIZATION FUND. In this fund, the amounts
produced in the months in which there is a positive balance obtained from the
application of the seasonal price system with respect to the Spot Market shall be
deposited. Furthermore, this fund shall provide the necessary financial resources
to complete the credit amount of the sellers in those months when the results are
different. This Stabilization Fund shall not be used to compensate default
payments.
In case the financial resources which are available in the Stabilization Fund are
not enough to raise the complete credit amount in a given month, the OED [i.e.,
Dispatch Body, that is, Cammesa] shall require the necessary financial assistance
to the SEE. To these ends, the SEE shall provide for the grant of a repayable
automatic loan and without interest using resources of the Unified Fund […].”
267. Both the parties and their experts agree that “the economic cost of the system”,
upon which the uniform rate due to generators shall be based in accordance with
Article 36 of the Electricity Law, has two elements.334 Moreover, they agree that the
spot price formation mechanism based on the marginal costs (hourly determined)
reflects only one of these elements, that is, the short-term economic cost of
production of electricity.335 Accordingly, both parties have outlined that, in order to
reflect also the cost of non-supplied energy for the community as required by Article
36 of the Electricity Law, the mechanism includes other components. In addition to
the spot price, the Procedures provided for two additional payments due to generators
which reflect the cost of non-supplied energy for the community (which in turn
reflects the long-term costs of production of electricity). These two additional
payments are the capacity payment (technically termed “remuneration of available
capacity”) and “el sobreprecio por riesgo de falla (SPRF)” (the so-called “risk of
failure” price). The Tribunal will deal first with capacity payments and then with the
“risk of failure” price.
268. Capacity payments are revenues paid by CAMMESA to generators (in addition
to spot price revenues) in order to remunerate generators for their (proven) generation
333
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, footnote 1074 at p. 352 and Total’s Memorial, footnote 323 at p. 90.
334
See LECG Report on Electricity, para 23; Gallino and Srouga Supplementary Report on Electricity, para 5.
335
See LECG Report on Electricity, para 23-24; Gallino and Srouga Supplementary Report on Electricity, para 6.
123
capacity. Spot price payments and capacity payments (as well as other ancillary
sources of revenue) constitute what industry practitioners in Argentina call the
“monomic price”, that is, the average remuneration per MWh received by
generators.336
269. More specifically, the capacity payment due to each generator is calculated by
CAMMESA on the basis of the capacity dispatched by each generator in the past six
months.337 According to Section 2.4.2.1 of SoE Resolution 137/92, the capacity
payment was established by the SoE in an amount equivalent to US$5/MW,
increasing to US$10/MW in 1994.338
270. The Parties have extensively disputed the functions of capacity payments in the
price determination system described above.339 In this regard, the Parties seem to
agree that the capacity payment is set by the SoE so as to be an incentive to new
investments in the MEM when available capacity is not meeting demand (or,
conversely, to be a signal to halt investments in the opposite situation).340 However,
the parties have not pointed to any specific parameter or criterion on the basis of
which the rate of the capacity payment had been set at US$10/MW.
271. Furthermore, Total and its experts emphasize that capacity payments are also
aimed at recovering the investment costs of generators.341 On the contrary, Argentina
and its experts strongly oppose Total’s position on this further function of capacity
payments. More specifically, Mr. Gallino and Mr. Srouga in their Supplementary
Report suggest that “there is no rule supporting the assertion that the purpose of
capacity payments is mainly the coverage of capital costs or investment recovery.”342
In order to support this statement, Argentina’s experts point out that capacity
payments were (and are) to be determined by the SoE on the basis of the actual
capacity dispatched by each generator in the spot market during the previous six
336
See Total’s Reply, para. 277 and LECG Report on Electricity, para. 38, where it is stated that “the monomic
price, then, consists simply of the overall industry revenues from spot and capacity sales (as well as ancillary
sources of revenues for generators) divided by total spot sales (in MWh)”.
337
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 816 and footnote 941 at p. 308 (the sources listed therein); and Gallino and
Srouga Supplementary Report on Electricity, para. 62 ff.
338
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 817.
339
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 818 ff. and Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 513 ff.
340
See LECG Report on Electricity, para. 3.b at p. 30 and Gallino and Srouga Supplementary Report on Electricity,
paras 5, 7 and 64 ff. See also Total’s Reply, para. 297.
341
See LECG Report on Electricity, para. 36.
342
See Gallino and Srouga Supplementary Report on Electricity, para. 71.
124
months. Accordingly, “if the intention had been to remunerate the invested capital, it
would have been logic [sic] to pay per capacity regardless of dispatch.”343 Summing
up, Argentina suggests that,
272. The Tribunal now turns to the second additional payment, namely the ‘risk of
failure’ price determined by the SoE to reflect the cost of unsupplied energy. The
range of this price varies depending on the risk of blackout projected by CAMMESA
at a given time. The range was fixed by the SoE from US$120/MWh at times of
lowest risk (up to 1.6% risk) to US$1,500/MWh at highest-risk times (greater than
10% risk).345 These prices operate in the system “as maximum prices applicable at
times of risk of blackout”346 and, as stressed by both Parties, are quite common in
countries with systems similar to those in Argentina (such as the U.K. and Chile).347
273. As to this ‘risk of failure’ price, the Tribunal notes that it is not clear from
Total’s submissions exactly how this price operates in the spot market. In its
Memorial, Total explains that:
“Allied to the concept of the capacity payment is the payment referred to as the
“cost of unsupplied energy.” This is the spot price of electricity paid to all
generators at times when Cammesa determines that the available capacity in the
market is not sufficient to meet demand fully. In such periods of time the
marginal cost of electricity is no longer defined by the marginal cost of supply
(ie, the declared variable cost of the least efficient unit) but by the cost that would
be necessary to meet the demand that cannot be met on the capacity currently
available…”348
Argentina’s experts also contend that this ‘risk of failure’ price, which has
different ranges depending on the risk of outage anticipated by CAMMESA, operates
343
See Gallino and Srouga Supplementary Report on Electricity, para. 73.
344
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 358.
345
See Chapter II, Section 2.4.3.3.2 of the Procedures.
346
See Total’s Memorial, para. 194 and Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 822 ff.
347
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, footnotes 952 at p. 311 and Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 369.
348
See Total’s Memorial, para. 194 and also Total’s Reply, para. 295.
125
as a cap on spot prices.349 On the contrary, in their report Total’s experts explain that
the ‘economic cost of the system’,
“…, must include a component that remunerates generators for providing system
reliability, that is, to maintain enough reserves to avoid the extreme costs of
outages. Such remuneration component for the provision of reliability, in
Argentina was thought of as a margin over the short-run marginal cost of the
system whenever there were risks of outages; plus a “capacity payment”
(technically termed “remuneration for available capacity”), regardless of the level
of the presence of outage risks…”350
In this regard, Total’s experts refer to Article 2.7.2 of Annex II in SoE Resolution
38/1991.351 This Article states that: “The overall capacity remuneration will be
computed based on the seasonal planning considering in the period: a) the
overvaluation of energy in case of outage risks, based on the expected value of
energy deficit and the pre set cost of non delivery energy; b) the remuneration for
capacity made available in the absence of outage risks.”352
274. While Total repeatedly refers to these prices as “maximum prices applicable at
times of risk of blackout” in its Post-Hearing Brief,353 at the hearings on the merits,
Mr. Abdala, one of Total’s experts, rather describes the risk of failure price as a
surcharge to the spot price.354 More precisely, Mr. Abdala testified at the hearing as
follows:
“This price [the “risk of failure” price] is accommodated through two ways. First
is the one that we already described as capacity payments, $10 per megawatt that
we had before, the $4 that we have today. The second one, which is equally
important is that it is what is called a surcharge to the spot price. Whenever
Cammesa anticipates that there is a risk of deficit, then it will tell, look, you know
what, generators? You are going to get a surcharge, and this surcharge will be a
function of the risk that we have of outages and what is called the cost of
unsupplied energy, which is a price that is set also by the Secretary of Energy
which, for 10 years, was between $120 to $1,500 per megawatt. … Cammesa will
determine, say, there’s a 10 percent risk of deficit [of supply], well, the cost of
unsupplied energy is said to be $1,500 per megawatt hour, and that [i]s the
reference that Cammesa will use to pay a surcharge to the generators that are
producing under this risk situation.”355
349
See Gallino and Sruoga Supplementary Report on Electricity, paras 59 ff.
350
See LECG Report on Electricity, para. 23.
351
See Exhibit C-297.
352
See LECG Report on Electricity, footnote 4 at p. 15.
353
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 822.
354
See also Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 823.
355
See Direct Examination of Mr. Abdala, Transcript of the Hearing on the Merits (English), Day 5, 1342:17-
1343:18.
126
275. It is worth noting here that Resolution 38/91, to which Total’s experts refer to in
their report, preceded both the Electricity Law and the Procedures.356 The Electricity
Law and its implementing regulations (i.e., in particular the Procedures) were enacted
by Argentina in 1992 and replaced previous regulations (Resolution 38/91 included).
Moreover, the Tribunal notes that the Electricity Law and the Procedures constituted
the legal regime in force when Total made its investments in Central Puerto and
HPDA in 2001. For this reason, the Tribunal accepts both Parties’ description of the
risk of failure price as maximum price, which was set based on the risk of blackout
anticipated by CAMMESA.
276. Under Argentina’s law, while thermal generators may operate in the MEM with
an authorisation, hydroelectric generators, such as HPDA, may operate in the MEM
only on the basis of a concession agreement with Argentina’s government. Total
refers to the provisions of HPDA’s concession agreement as further elements
supporting the legal basis of its claim,357 that is Argentina’s promise to maintain a
stable pricing system in accordance with Article 36 of the Electricity Law.358 The
Tribunal will accordingly review here the relevant provisions of HPDA’s concession
in order to complete its analysis.
356
This is also admitted by Total in its Reply, footnote 378 at p. 116.
357
See HPDA Concession Agreement at Exhibit C-710.
358
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 855-859.
127
56.1.4. Established significant modifications to the price determination criteria
contained in Law No. 24,065 [i.e., the Electricity Law] and such modifications
were arbitrary and caused the compliance with the Agreement to be excessively
burdensome for the Concessionaire according to the provisions under section
1198 of the Civil Code.
“Should the Concession Grantor perform any of the acts mentioned in subsection
56.1 above, causing an actual damage to the Concessionaire, the latter will
request it to adopt, within a reasonable period depending on circumstances, the
measures required to amend the conditions claimed and, as the case may be, to
rectify its consequences. In addition, the Concessionaire will require the
Concession Grantor to offer a public hearing, before the maturity of such term, to
disclose and document the grounds for its request. Should the Concession
Grantor fail to adopt the requested measures after such term has elapsed, the
Concessionaire will demand it in due manner to do so in a term not exceeding 15
(fifteen) days, under the admonition of termination. After such term has elapsed
with no favourable outcome, the Concessionaire may declare the Agreement
terminated on the Concession Grantor’s fault.”359
3.1 General
279. Total’s claim with respect to HPDA and Central Puerto is based on Argentina’s
alleged commitments in the Electricity Law and the HPDA Concession (there is no
concession or any other contractual arrangement as to Central Puerto), upon which
Total says it relied when making its investments,
“Argentina’s promise was therefore that SoE would act as a fair and neutral
regulator in a free market and give effect to the rules in the Electricity Law, that
359
By referring to the latter provision of HPDA’s concession, Argentina points out that HPDA did not avail itself of
this remedy. See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para 241.
128
is: (a) that all payments to generators would be at a uniform rate; (b) that one of
those payments would be a payment for capacity, as distinct from electricity
actually dispatched in the system (Article 35(b)) of the Electricity Law); (c) that
the prices paid to generators would be based on the economic cost of producing
electricity; and (d) that this economic cost includes the long-term cost of
producing electricity”.360
281. According to Total, “Argentina was committed to the stability of the pricing rules
in the Electricity Law.”361 More specifically, it is Total’s view that,
“Argentina’s promises to power generators were set out in the Electricity Law.
That is the controlling text here. Those promises constituted legally enforceable
rights in Argentine law. […] the Electricity Law remains on the statute books,
without amendment. Argentina’s argument that “[t]he evolution of host State’s
laws is part of the context where investments and investors act” is of academic
interest here: the Electricity Law did not change. And it is clear under
international law that promises enshrined in statute are promises that may be
relied upon by foreign investors, and in this way generate legitimate expectations
protected by the Treaty.”362
“[I]n short, the pricing rules in the Electricity Law were a commitment that
Argentina expressly made to power generators and investors in such companies,
like Total here. The existence of the commitment is beyond question. It follows
from several considerations, each of which would of itself be sufficient:
(a) the presentations that we saw Argentina made to prospective investors prior to
the passage of the Electricity Law;
(b) the fact that the commitments were set forth, not in administrative regulations,
but an Act of Congress – which is still on the statute books;
(c) ten years of successful, consistent, and faithful implementation of the
Electricity Law by the SoE;
(d) the rule of Argentine Law according to which the pricing rules in the
Electricity Law constitute enforceable rights vested in the power generators
(paragraph 826 above); and (e) the express written commitment that all power
generators made, on entry in the market, to abide by the Electricity Law,
including its pricing rules.”364
360
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 113.
361
See Total’ Post-Hearing Brief, para. 858.
362
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 102.
363
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 867-874.
364
See Total’ Post-Hearing Brief, para. 854.
129
According to Total, the above-mentioned ‘considerations’, include the provisions
contained in HPDA’s concession,365 as already recited by the Tribunal.366
283. Total alleges that a number of measures taken by the Argentine Executive
breached or revoked the commitments given to attract investment in the power
generation sector that were contained in the Electricity Law (especially Article 36),
and upon which Total relied in making its investments.367 The measures complained
of by Total are the Emergency Law (Article 8) and a number of Resolutions adopted
by the Secretariat of Energy, some of which were specifically based on, and others
which just followed, the Emergency Law. According to Total, through the
Emergency Law and these SoE Resolutions, Argentina has altered the basic
principles of the electricity legal regime in such a manner as to breach the fair and
equitable treatment clause in the BIT.
284. A connected but distinct argument by Total is that these measures were in breach
of Argentina’s law, namely the Electricity Law (Article 36). Total argues that the
core issue for the Tribunal is whether the measures adopted by the SoE comport with
the Electricity Law, i.e., do these Measures respect the promise of remuneration to
generators at a uniform rate, based on the economic cost of the system, which takes
account of the cost of unsupplied energy?368 In this regard, it is Total’s position that
all of the regulations adopted by the SoE during and after the state of emergency are
in conflict with Article 36 of the Electricity Law (which is still in force) because they
“resulted in: (a) generators no longer receiving a uniform rate; (b) prices no
longer reflecting the economic cost of the system; and (c) prices no longer
reflecting the cost that unsupplied energy represents for the community, ie, no
longer encouraging investment in capacity to satisfy peak demand, and no longer
promoting long-term investment to satisfy future demand.”369
365
See Total’ Post-Hearing Brief, paras 855-859.
366
See above, paras 276-278.
367
See Total’s Memorial, para. 33.
368
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 880.
369
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 881.
130
285. Total identifies what it terms “radical alterations” of the existing regime for the
power generation sector resulting from the various measures taken by Argentina
through the SoE, which it submits constitute a breach of the BIT.
(i) the pesification of the spot price, and any other payments to which power
generators were entitled, specifically the capacity payments and the payment of
unsupplied energy, at a one to one rate; (ii) the alteration of the uniform marginal
price mechanism in the power generation market through violation of the uniform
rate rule and the introduction of a fixed price cap; and (iii) the “refusal” to pay power
generators their dues even at the dramatically reduced values resulting from the
measures,370 followed by the ‘forced’ conversion of Total’s existing and future
receivables (that CAMMESA is not able to pay) into participations in new power
plants. (i.e., “Fondo para Inversiones Necesarias que Permitan Incrementar la
Oferta de Energía Eléctrica en el Mercado Eléctrico Mayorista”, hereinafter also
“FONINVEMEM”)
287. As to (i), the pesification of the spot price and of any other payments to which
power generators are entitled (specifically the capacity payments and the payment of
unsupplied energy) at a one to one rate was effected through SoE Resolution 2/02
based on the Emergency Law. In this respect, Total also complains about Article 8 of
the Emergency Law and MoE Resolution 38/02 of April 9, 2002371 in that they
effected the pesification and freezing of electricity tariffs and, indirectly, led to the
pesification of the wellhead natural gas price on which the price structure for
electricity was based.372
370
This list is contained in para. 33 of Total’s Memorial. A more detailed description of the measures complained
of and their specific impact is found in Total’s Request for Arbitration, paras 104-116, 135-140, 180-198.
371
See Exhibit C-25.
372
See LECG Report on Electricity, paras. 46 and 50 ff.; Total’s Memorial, paras 332 and 279; Request for
Arbitration, paras 179-181; Total’s Memorial, para. 209 where Total explains that “Since (a) for the purpose of
variable cost declarations, the cost of gas was subject to a ceiling equal to the gas reference price; and (b) this gas
reference price was frozen and pesified by the Emergency Law and subsequently allowed to increase only
incrementally and still remain far from their 2001 values, the spot price is now mainly determined by the artificially
low gas reference price, …”. See also Total’s Post-Hearing Brief para. 123(a), where Total points out that “First,
the ENARGAS price that served as a cap for the cost of gas that generators could declare was converted to pesos at
a 1:1 nominal rate (“pesification”) and frozen …”.
131
288. As to (ii), the alteration of the uniform marginal price mechanism in the power
generation market occurred through the violation of the uniform rate rule and the
introduction of a fixed price cap. This alteration was effected through the enactment
of SoE Resolution 240/03. Furthermore, in 2006, the SoE enacted Resolution
1.281/06373 (Energía Plus Program) to foster new investments in the sector. To this
end, this resolution allowed new plants or upgrading of existing plants to receive
higher capacity payments than the existing plants, which continued to receive
capacity payments amounting to AR$12 per MW,374 thereby discriminating between
existing and new capacity.
289. In this respect, Total claims that, beginning in 2002, Argentina breached the
following three basic principles of the Electricity Law, which Total regards as
promises or commitments.375
290. First, Total says that generators no longer received a uniform rate, contrary to
Article 36 of the Electricity Law (“tarifa uniforme”). Total explains that the system
under Article 36 was implemented (though this was not provided for explicitly in the
law) by a uniform spot price (a “monomic” price that changed seasonally) that was
equivalent to the variable costs of the marginal unit.376 Instead, under Resolution
240/03, the spot price was set by units of burning natural gas. Liquid–fuel (petrol)
units which have higher variable costs, are not taken into account for setting the price
for all units, so that the spot price is lower than it would have been under the initial
system. Generators burning more expensive liquid fuel units receive additional
“transitory dispatch costs.”377 As a result, generators are no longer paid the same
price for the electricity that they produce.
291. Second, Total submits that prices no longer reflect the economic cost of the
system (also contrary to Article 36 of the Electricity Law). Total makes two
arguments in this regard. Contrary to sound market pricing theory, the price is no
longer set by the marginal plant.378 Further, the (highest) spot price, which previously
373
See Exhibit C-565.
374
See LECG Report on Electricity, paras 97 ff.
375
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 881; Total’ Memorial, paras. 206-345; Total’s Reply, paras 330-345; LECG
Report on Electricity, paras 3 and 46-100.
376
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 810 (f).
377
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 809, 884-885, and footnote 933 at p. 304.
378
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 811, 891.
132
were variable to reflect the risk of failure, has been capped at AR$120/MWh,379
thereby disregarding the “risk of outages”,380 which previously was taken into
account to encourage additional investments in capacity building through the “risk of
failure” variable price. It is worth noting here that before the measures were taken,
this price varied between US$120/MWh at lowest risk times and US$1,500/MWh at
highest-risk times (see above paragraph 272). Moreover, Total says that this cap was
below the variable costs of the marginal unit 40% of the time: thus it is an
administrative price not reflecting the cost of the system.381 According to Total,
292. Third, Total submits that prices no longer “reflect the cost that unsupplied energy
represents for the community”, i.e., no longer encourage investment in capacity to
satisfy peak demand, and no longer promote long-term investments to satisfy future
demand (with respect to the capacity payments). This concerns the “capacity
payments.”383 That amount was set in 1994 at US$10/MW and remained at that level
until the end of 2001. At the beginning of 2002, the capacity payments were pesified
at a rate of one-to-one, from US$10/MW to AR$10/MW. The capacity payments
were increased to AR$12/MW in July 2002,384 thus not compensating for the impact
of the decrease of value in terms of US dollars due to the pesification,385 nor
379
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 892.
380
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 892.
381
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 822, 893-895 and table at p. 338. Witness Sruoga called by Argentina has
explained that this cap was set to reflect the normal cost of a gas-burning plant and stated that the marginal cost was
only exceptionally above this cap. See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 896.
382
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 898 (and also para. 899). As to this ENARGAS’ intervention on the gas
price, Total also refers to the arguments that support its claim related to the investments in exploration and
production. See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 694-695 as to the pesification of the reference price of gas and
paras 695 ff. as to the freezing of the maximum reference price for the well-head price component of the gas tariffs.
383
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 816.
384
See SoE Resolutions 246/02 of July 4, 2002 (Exhibit A RA 112) and 317/02 of July 4, 2002 (Exhibit C-425). By
the enactment of these Resolutions, the SoE also changed the criteria according to which capacity payments had
been calculated until then. The new method of calculating capacity payments de-linked capacity payments to the
actual dispatch of electricity by each generator in the previous six months. According to these new criteria, each
generator is remunerated for its individual capacity, regardless of whether it was actually dispatched. See LECG
Report on Electricity, para 89 and footnote 113.
385
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 817.
133
reflecting the actual economic and social cost of unsupplied energy for the
community.”386
293. The third complaint by Total listed in paragraph 286 (iii) above concerns the
“refusal” to pay power generators their dues even at the dramatically reduced values
resulting from the implementation of the measures,387 and also the “forced”
conversion of Total’s existing and future receivables (that CAMMESA is not able to
pay) into participations in new power plants (FONINVEMEM). Total explains that
Resolution 943/03,388 reflects the inability of the Stabilization Fund389 to pay the
amounts owed to the generators, since both past and future receivables would be
paid only when the fund was able to do so, at a date that the SoE would determine in
the future. According to Total and contrary to the arguments of Argentina,390
participation in FONIMVENEM was only on its face voluntary. It was the only way
for generators to be paid 35% of their receivables while contributing to
FONIMVENEM with, and thus potentially recovering, the other 65%.391 Moreover,
according to Total, the fair valuation of those contributions in 2006 (pursuant to an
independent valuation) amounted at most to only 50% or 60% of the nominal value
corresponding to the receivables converted into contribution.392 The alternative
would have been to suffer even greater losses since non-participating generators were
to be paid at an uncertain date to be determined in the future by SoE.
294. The Tribunal recalls that from September 2003, CAMMESA was unable to pay
generators for the electricity that they were supplying, since the tariffs paid by the
consumers were not adequate to cover the payments owed by electricity distributors
to the generators. In fact, since 2002 Argentina has been using the money
accumulated in the Stabilization Fund to pay generators their dues and this fund has
386
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 816 ff. and 905 ff.
387
See above para. 286.
388
SoE Resolution 943/2003 of 27 November 2003, Exhibit A RA 150, discussed in Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at
para 934.
389
As to the Stabilization Fund, see above paras. 265-266.
390
Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para 231.
391
Pursuant to Resolution 406/03 and Resolution, 826/04 at Exhibit A AR 160. Total points out that HPDA and
Central Puerto became the largest shareholders of the new plants because they were the largest power-generators in
Argentina and thus the largest creditors of the Stabilization Fund. See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 941.
392
See Direct Examination of J. Chambert-Loir, transcript, Day 3, 816, 5-17 and Exhibit C-554; Total’s Post-
Hearing Brief, para 937. In case of sale, the buyer might not be available to value the participation at more than
30%, ibidem and para. 970.
134
been depleted.393 Since the Stabilization Fund is in deficit, it became impossible to
cover “the difference between Prices and Charges invoiced to demand agents and, the
amounts to be paid to creditors of the WHOLESALE ELECTRICITY MARKET
(MEM)”394 To cope with this problem, the SoE enacted Resolution 406/03 on
September 8, 2003.395 On the one hand, this Resolution (Article 2) authorised
CAMMESA to resort to the “unified fund” (“Fondo Unificado”), to make it possible
to access the necessary financial assistance pursuant to Section 5.7 of the
Procedures.396 On the other hand, it established a temporary mechanism “for the
assignment of the scarce and insufficient resources to face the credits of the
Wholesale Electric Market (WEM) …” (Preamble, third paragraph). To this end, the
same resolution set forth a priority system according to which CAMMESA had to
make partial payments to generators for their sales of electricity in the spot market.
According to the new system, CAMMESA had to first pay all generators (both
thermal power and hydroelectric generators) their short-term variable costs and, in
addition, to pay thermal units any “transitory dispatch costs.” Any funds available
thereafter had to be assigned pro rata among all generators (Article 4(e)). However,
because of the grave deficit of the stabilization and unified funds, the resolution
provided that any generators’ receivables that could not be covered by the limited
cash available became a debt of the Stabilization Fund towards generators, which in
turn became unsecured creditors thereof. As a result, according to Total and its
experts, “A total of AR$19.7 million is owed to Central Puerto and HPDA as “sales
credits”397 and, practically, “… the Government ended up withholding, through
Cammesa, approximately 65% of the generator’s gross margins.”398 In addition,
according to Article 5, on the one hand, all payments made to generators under this
system entail “the creditors’ commitment to pay providers for the necessary fuel,
inputs and human resources for the operation and maintenance …”; on the other
hand, CAMMESA and the SoE precluded generators from declaring that their units
were unavailable due to the lack of funds necessary to operate, under penalty of
393
See Total’s Memorial, para. 217 ff.; LECG Report on Electricity, para. 76 and footnote 89.
394
See SoE’s Resolution 406/03, Preamble, second paragraph (Exhibit C-80).
395
Ibidem.
396
See Total’s Memorial, para. 218 and footnote 325, where Total points out that several successive loans were
granted to the Stabilization Fund by a number of decrees: Decree 1.181/03 of December 5, 2003 (AR$150 million);
Decree 365/04 of March 31, 2004 (AR$200 million); Decree 512/04 of April 27, 2004 (AR$200 million); Decree
962/04 of August 2, 2004 (AR$300 million); and Decree 1672/04 of December 7, 2004 (AR$300 million).
397
See Total’s Memorial, para. 219.
398
See LECG Report on Electricity, para. 76.
135
withholding the payments due to them.399 Moreover, on November 27, 2003, Article
1 of SoE Resolution 943/03 qualified generators’ receivables in two items:
- “one with certain due date, which is based on the available resources to
face them, and
- another one with uncertain due date, to be determined by the Secretary of
Energy, according to the provisions of the corresponding rule.”
In addition, the same Article made it clear that those receivables that would be
paid at a date to be determined by the SoE “do not constitute a liquid and payable
debt according to the provisions of Article 819 of the Civil Code.” Moreover, in July
2004, through SoE Resolution 712/04, Argentina created the FONINVEMEM to
finance the building of two new generators.400 The building of these new generators,
to be operational by 2007, was to be financed by generators, with “voluntary”
contributions consisting of those receivables, to be paid at a date to be determined by
the SoE that “do not constitute a liquid and payable debt according to the provisions
of Article 819 of the Civil Code,” pursuant to SoE Resolutions 406/03 and 943/03.
399
In this respect, see also LECG Report on Electricity, para. 77.
400
SoE Resolution 712/04 at Exhibit C-218.
136
296. In order to carry out the two projected investments the SoE had to “invite”
generators to make the contributions required more than once.401 As outlined above,
Total explains that under Resolution 943/2003, both past and future receivables
would be paid only when the fund was able to do so, at a date to be determined by the
SoE in the future.402 Based on the above evidence, Total submits that through the
aforementioned Resolutions, Argentina effected a ‘forced’ conversion of Total’s
existing and future receivables (that CAMMESA is not able to pay) into participation
in new power plants (FONINVEMEM).
297. Total claims that the fair and equitable treatment obligation of Article 3 of the
BIT was breached by the measures discussed, since the obligation to provide such
treatment protects investors against fundamental alterations of the regulatory
framework on which they legitimately relied in making their investment. Total
considers that the Electricity Law contained specific promises, and submits that,
although a breach of domestic law does not in itself amount to a breach of
international law in every case, here it does. The administration’s failure to comply
with fundamental investment framework frustrated Total’s reasonable and legitimate
expectations. At the same time, Total submits that the issue of whether Argentina had
promised legislative stability and whether Total had reasonably assumed such
stability is moot, because the Electricity Law had not been amended since its
promulgation and Argentina had not observed it.403
298. Total claims that the conduct of Argentina also breached the obligation found in
Article 5(1) of the BIT that “Investments made by investors of one Contracting Party
shall be fully and completely protected and safeguarded … in accordance with the
principle of just and equitable treatment mentioned in Article 3 of this Agreement”,
either as part of fair and equitable treatment or as a self standing obligation.404 Under
this standard, according to Total, Argentina was required to take positive steps to
401
See SoE Resolution 826/04 dated 11 August 2004 (Exhibit C-223), Article 1; SoE Resolution 948/04, dated 20
September 2004, Article 1 (Exhibit C-477).
402
See above para. 293 ff.
403
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 962-966 referring to CMS Gas Transmission Company v. Argentina, supra
note 29, paras 275-276 and LG&E v. Argentina, supra note 111, paras 133 and 139.
404
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 240 ff, 967 ff.
137
protect Total’s investments. Instead, Argentina did the very opposite. It adopted
measures that directly contradicted the applicable statute (the Electricity Law) – fully
aware that this would destroy Total’s investments. Argentina’s conduct – coercing
Central Puerto and HPDA to accede to the terms of FONINVEMEM – further
violates its duty under the Treaty.405
299. According to Total’s Request for Arbitration, through the various measures
Argentina also failed to observe the obligation not to take measures equivalent to
expropriation without prompt, adequate and effective compensation in breach of
Article 5(2) of the BIT and that of refraining from discriminating against Total
(Article 4).406
300. In its subsequent submissions, and specifically in its Post-Hearing Brief, Total
focused only on the breaches of the fair and equitable treatment clause (Article 3
BIT)407 and of the duty to accord to foreign investments full security and protection
under Article 5(1).408 For the sake of completeness, the Tribunal will also deal with
Total’s claims under Article 4 and Article 5(2) of the BIT.
5. Argentina’s Position
301. As to the changes in the domestic regulation of electricity generation and market
set up under the Electricity Law, Argentina denies that the modifications adopted by
the SoE were in breach of the law and exceeded its competence. As mentioned
above, Argentina maintains that the SoE had broad powers to regulate generation
activities on grounds of general interest (see above at paragraph 250). The measures
adopted from 2002 onwards complained of by Total were legitimate and reasonable
in view of the economic and social reality affecting Argentina.409 The measures
adopted in the power generation sector took into account the seriousness of the crisis
and were proportionate to the changes that had taken place, such as increases in
certain prices and the lack of certain inputs (e.g., natural gas since 2003). While
respecting the legal regime established by the Electricity Law, the measures were
405
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 969.
406
See Request for Arbitration, paras. 229-232 and 233-238, respectively.
407
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 961-966.
408
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 967-971.
409
See Argentina Post-Hearing Brief, para. 352 ff.
138
effective in avoiding major interruption in electricity supply. In view of the above,
Argentina submits that no breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard has
taken place. A foreign investor must anticipate that circumstances may change and
accordingly, must take into account the possibility of normative modifications. Such
transformations do not entail legal responsibility in the absence of specific
commitments that Argentina did not stipulate.410
302. As to the pesification of the capacity payments and other monetary parameters,
Argentina submits that the abandonment of the fixed exchange rate that led to the
pesification of the whole economy was reasonable and proportionate to the aims and
to the context of these measures.411
303. As to the impact of its various measures on the rights invoked by Total under the
BIT, Argentina submits that none constitute a breach thereof.
304. Due to the total impact of the measures, the Claimant complains that it has
suffered damages to its investment in HPDA and Central Puerto and that Argentina
has to compensate it for these damages under the BIT regime. Using the discounted
cash flow (“DCF”) method, Total’s experts evaluated the damages suffered by Total
to be in an amount of US$147.1 million for Total’s investment in HPDA412 and
US$235.4 for Total’s investment in Central Puerto (corresponding to a total amount
of US$382.5 million).413 Alternatively, to reflect Total’s sale of its equity
participations in November 2006, Total’s experts have proposed to assess Total’s
damages in the power generation sector using the transaction approach. Under this
method, Total’s damages amount to US$215.4 as to its investment in HPDA and
US$295.9 as to its investments in Central Puerto (corresponding to a total amount of
410
See Argentina Post-Hearing Brief, para. 442-456. Argentina relies on Parkerings-Companiet v. Lithuania, supra
note 260, para 332-333 and SGS Société Genérale de Surveillance S.A. v. Republic of the Philippines, supra note
187, para 121: “The host State must have assumed a legal obligation, and it must have been assumed vis-à-vis the
specific investment - not as a matter of the application of some legal obligation of a general character.”
411
See Argentina Post-Hearing Brief, para. 447.
412
See LECG Addendum on Damages, at p. 10.
413
See LECG Report on Damages, at p. 65.
139
US$511.3).414 Total contends that it has written off US$364.5 million in its financial
statements in order to reflect the economic impact of the measures on the value of its
participations in Central Puerto and HPDA.415 Total submits that “absent Argentina’s
Measures, those participations would have been worth US$655 million at the time of
the sale.”416
305. As mentioned above, Total’s claim as to HPDA and Central Puerto is based on
Argentina’s “commitments” regarding the stability of the electricity regime and
Argentina’s obligation to comply with the Electricity Law, upon which Total had
legitimately relied when making its investments. Beyond the claim that Argentina’s
overall conduct in the sector from 2002 onwards breached its promises and
commitments in violation of the BIT, Total alleges that the various measures which it
challenges have specifically breached the BIT standards that it invokes.
306. Accordingly, the Tribunal will deal with each distinct claim of breach by Total,
as set forth in paragraph 286 above, and thereafter examine these claims in their
entirety. Before so proceeding, the Tribunal notes that Total relies heavily on the
alleged breaches of the Electricity Law by the SoE, because it did not act as a “fair
regulator” as it was supposed to do under the basic pricing rules of the Electricity
Law (Article 36), which have remained unchanged: “Argentina was committed to the
stability of the pricing rules in the Electricity Law.”417
414
See LECG Report on Damages, at p. 69. The higher amount of damages under the transaction approach is
because Total’s experts estimate the actual value of Total’s shares in Central Puerto to be US$95 million and in
HPDA as US$195 million, while Total sold its equity stakes in the two generators for US$35 and 145 million,
respectively. See LECG Report on Damages, at p. 66.
415
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, footnote 88 at p. 45. The Tribunal recalls that, in 2001, Total had spent a total
amount of US$327.45 to acquire its two investments in HPDA and Central Puerto and had subscribed debt of
approximately of US$177 million.
416
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 98 and footnote 87 at p. 44-45, where Total has clarified that it also sold
the debt subscribed in the two generators when it sold its shares in 2006. Total makes clear that it “makes no claim
in respect of those participations.”
417
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 858.
140
307. The Tribunal reiterates that a breach of the BIT can be found irrespective of a
breach of domestic law, as Total itself recognizes. On the other hand, a breach of
domestic law may entail a breach of international law.418 In any case, Total has not
challenged the legality of the SoE administrative resolutions in Argentina nor has
Total asked that the Tribunal decide these issues based on Argentina’s law,
notwithstanding the reference to Argentina’s law in Article 8(4) of the BIT. Total
states, moreover, that “the Law could have been changed or abrogated. But it was not
… It is still the controlling text. Argentina has not observed it.”419
308. Total bases its claims on those commitments and promises of stability as the
basis on which its legitimate expectations have been frustrated, pointing to previous
case law that considered “an investor’s legitimate expectations of stability of the
basic parameters of the operative regulatory framework” as protected by the fair and
equitable treatment obligation of a BIT.420
309. The Tribunal has extensively discussed this issue, and the relevant concepts in
general and as they present themselves under the Argentina–France BIT, when it
applied them to Total’s claim relating to TGN, so that there is no need for further
discussion here. However, the Tribunal recalls briefly its basic considerations and
conclusions above, namely that:
(a) on the one hand, stability, predictability and consistency of legislation and
regulation are important for investors in order to plan their investment,
especially if their business plan extends over a number of years;421
(b) on the other, signatories of BITs do not thereby relinquish their regulatory
powers nor limit their prerogative to amend legislation in order to adapt it
418
In its Post-Hearing Brief, para. 962 Total submits that: “[…] Although a breach of domestic law does not in
itself amount to a breach of international law in every case, here it does.[…]”
419
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 965.
420
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 867-871 with reference to Sempra Energy International v. Argentina, supra
note 189, para. 299; Enron Corporation and Ponderosa Assets, L.P. v. Argentina, supra note 20, para. 107;
Occidental Exploration and Production Company v. The Republic of Ecuador, supra 112, para. 183; MTD Equity
Sdn. Bhd. & MTD Chile S.A. v. Chile, supra note 96, para. 114. The Tribunal notes that not all of those quotations
refer to factual or legal circumstances comparable to those at issue here.
421
See above para. 114.
141
to change, new emerging needs and requests of their people in the normal
exercise of their prerogatives and duties;422
(c) the BIT between France and Argentina does not contain any reference to
stability of the legal framework, not even in the preamble;423
(d) the legal regime in force in the host country at the time of making the
investment is not per se covered by a “guarantee” of stability due to the
mere fact that the host country entered into a BIT with the country of the
foreign investor. A specific provision in the BIT itself or some “promise”
of the host State, are required to this effect so rendering such an
expectation legitimate,;424
“In my view the right distinctions are here being drawn: governments may indeed
need to be able to act qua governments and in the public interest. That fact will
prevent specific performance (including restitution) from being granted against
them. But that is not to liberate them from the obligation to compensate those
with whom it has entered into specific arrangements. That is the reasonable place
422
See above para. 115.
423
See above para. 116.
424
See above para. 117.
425
See above para. 119.
142
to strike the balance between the expectations of foreign investors and the bona
fide needs of governments to act in the public interest.”426
(h) The host State’s right to regulate domestic matters in the public interest
has to be taken into consideration as well. Therefore the circumstances,
reasons (importance and urgency of the public need pursued) and
modalities (non-discrimination, due process, advance notice if possible
and appropriate) for carrying out a change impacting negatively on a
foreign investor’s operations on the one hand, and the seriousness of the
prejudice caused on the other hand, compared in accordance with a
standard of reasonableness and proportionality, are relevant. Thus an
evaluation of fairness must take into account the evolution of the host
economy, the reasonableness of the normative changes challenged and
their appropriateness in the light of a standard of reasonableness and
proportionality;428 and
(i) the conduct of the investor is also “subjectively” relevant since BITs “are
not insurance policies against bad business decisions.”429
310. In light of the above principles, the Tribunal does not agree with Total’s
argument that the legal regime (the pricing rules) that Argentina changed was the
object of a “promise” by Argentina that was binding on Argentina, and on which
Total was entitled to rely (“legitimate expectations”) as a matter of international law.
It is immaterial in this respect whether or not the “radical” changes in the Electricity
Law regime that Total complains of are also in breach of Argentina’s law and/or
represent a use by SoE of its power in disregard of the Electricity Law.
426
See Higgins, Taking of Property by the State: Recent Developments in International Law, (1982) Recueil Des
Cours III, 338-339, quoted by Total (CL-189) in its Post-Hearing Brief para. 773.
427
See above para. 122.
428
See above para. 123.
429
See above para. 124.
143
311. With respect to “capacity payments”, Article 36 of the Electricity Law does not
explicitly provide for such payments; it is telling that the cost of unsupplied energy is
an element considered in determining the uniform energy rate. Total submits the
economic explanation that capacity payments are essential to ensure that: (i) upfront
investments can be amortized; and (ii) new investments are made.430 Argentina’s
experts dispute this purpose.431 The Tribunal notes that the SoE’s regulatory powers
to fix a capacity payment are so broad that the authority could even abolish such
payments. This was meant to happen in June 2001 (shortly before Total entered the
electricity sector, convertibility was abandoned and the later enactment of measures
challenged by Total) by Decree 804/01, later abrogated by Law 25.468, as pointed
out by both parties.432
312. The Tribunal has found that the rules concerning tariffs in the Gas Regime were
not in the nature of specific commitments. In view of the freedom that States
generally enjoy to amend their laws, laws could be changed in light of subsequent
developments and needs. The Tribunal notes that the various provisions of the
Electricity Law set forth above and invoked by Total are not different from a formal
point of view from those invoked by Total in respect of the gas sector. They were and
are regulation of a general nature, organizing a certain public interest sector in which
private companies operate and setting forth the conditions of their operation. No
guarantee of stability was included in those provisions. If anything, they were in
many respects less rigid rules than those applicable to gas distribution. The
Secretariat of Energy appears to have broader powers to regulate the electricity sector
under the law than ENARGAS has for the gas sector. In light of the legal principles
on which the Tribunal relied with respect to the TGN claim above, the changes made
in the pricing structure, including specific parameters, are not per se in breach of
promises or legitimate expectations of the investors.
430
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 818.
431
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 358 where Argentina submits that: “Capacity payments were not
created as a guaranty to cover capital or recovery costs of the investments, and such circumstance was
acknowledged by Abdala at the Hearing: ‘In addition, capacity payments of $4 are a significant departure from the
commitments that the investors would have an opportunity to recover their investments. An opportunity is not a
guarantee, but an opportunity’ […].” In response, Total answers that the margins recognized by the spot price
would be insufficient to make a return on investment by private operators and “the capacity payment was an
incentive to invest …”. (see Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 119 and 122)
432
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 120 and Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 351.
144
313. This does not mean that any change or alteration of the regime, negatively
affecting the operations of the private generators and their economic equilibrium, is
shielded from the application of the fair and equitable treatment standard guaranteed
by the BIT. The respect for economic equilibrium principle entails that, in normal
situations and from a long term perspective, the private generators are able to cover
their costs and make a return on their investment, while providing their services to
the market and consumers as required under the Electricity Law. If this was not the
case due to the changes made to the electricity pricing principles after 2002,
Argentina would have breached its obligations under Article 3 of the BIT.
314. Total quotes a public statement by the head of ENRE in November 2000 to the
effect that Argentina’s legislation recognizes the long-term nature of the investments
in electricity so that “the companies should get a return on their capital investment
such that it will guarantee maintenance of the infrastructure required to provide the
service.”433 This is a relevant acknowledgment of a standard of treatment that
conforms to sound management principles for the electricity sector for evaluating
subsequent changes. This statement does not elevate, however, the specific pricing
rules in the Electricity Law to an express commitment by Argentina on which Total
could base legitimate expectations.434 Moreover, what Total labels as “pricing rules”
are better defined as “principles”, as textually mentioned in Article 35.2 of the
Electricity Law (“atendiendo a los siguentes principios …”), concerning not just
prices but a regulatory method of calculation of tariffs (Article 36.1).
7.2.1 The pesification of the capacity payments and of the spot price
315. The specific change relating to capacity payments about which Total complains
is basically their redenomination in Argentine pesos, which transformed the
US$10/MW rate to AR$10 (equivalent to US$4), subsequently increasing to
AR$12.435 Another effect of pesification complained of by Total is that the spot price
was indirectly affected by pesification of gas tariffs in that “the ENARGAS price that
433
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 836.
434
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 828 and 854.
435
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 123 and 910 ff. with reference to Resolution 2/02 of 14 March 2002 at
Exhibit C-81.
145
served as a cap for the cost of gas that generators could declare was converted to
pesos at a 1:1 nominal rate (“pesification”) and frozen.”436
316. These changes resulted in a consistent reduction in dollar terms of those prices as
a direct consequence of Argentina’s abandonment of the free convertibility system at
par with the dollar at the end of 2001 – beginning of 2002 in response to the major
economic crisis that the country was then facing. The reasons for and the way in
which the convertibility regime was abandoned are well known and have been
described above.437 Values expressed in dollars, into which the peso had until then
been freely changeable at a 1:1 rate, were converted into pesos at that same par value
(and not readjusted according to the devaluated free exchange rate of the peso against
the dollar, except partially for bank deposits). Values expressed in pesos remained so
expressed since the peso was and remained the official currency of Argentina. It is
therefore inaccurate to describe the process as the result of a “decision to reduce the
capacity payment rate by 60% without any justification” as Total asserts , quoting its
expert Dr. Abdala.438 The Tribunal recognizes at the same time that the subsequent
increase of the capacity payment in June 2002 (from AR$10 to AR$12), which was
not, however, followed by any further adjustment, reflected an administrative
decision by the SoE. The grounds for this decision have not been explained by
Argentina in these proceedings.439 On the other hand, as pointed out above at
paragraph 270, the amount of the capacity payment was not legally linked to any
definite parameter.
317. The Tribunal has already explained why the abolition of the convertibility of
pesos assets, value and tariffs, which were interchangeable with their expression in
dollars (the dollar being in free circulation in Argentina, accounts being freely
available in dollars, etc.) under the convertibility regime, was within the competence
of Argentina and not barred by the BIT clauses invoked by Total. The Tribunal has
also justified its conclusion that even tariffs specifically fixed in U.S. dollars and the
periodic readjustments to be made based on a U.S. price index (PPI) could be
pesified in the circumstances at issue without breaching the BIT. This is because of
436
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 123(a). See also above para. 287.
437
See above paras 71-79.
438
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 911.
439
See in this respect Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, footnote 1056 at p. 346 quoting Mr.Adbala’s testimony.
(Transcript (English) Day 5, 1352:7-1353:7)
146
the major economic, monetary and social crisis that forced Argentina to cease
pegging the peso to the dollar. The Tribunal has found that the pesification affected
all sectors of the economy and was carried out in a non-discriminatory way.440
318. That reasoning is also applicable in respect of the values, parameters and prices
prescribed in the electricity system. If anything, reliance on the continuous
application of dollar values or re-valued equivalent values in pesos was even less
tenable in this sector for the following reasons.
319. First, there was no legal provision mandating that the prices and parameters on
which Total relies be expressed in dollars and/or linked to foreign parameters (such
as the link to the US PPI in respect of gas transport tariffs). In fact, Total does not
suggest the contrary. The evidence indeed shows that it was common practice under
the convertibility regime for peso and dollar currency denominations to be
interchangeable. Accordingly, the denomination of a price or parameter in pesos
rather than in dollars did not signal that a different regime was being applied.” 441
320. Thus Total’s reference to individual elements of electricity prices that were
specifically expressed in dollars is not supported by the evidence. Nor has Total
pointed to particular features of such elements that would justify them being shielded
from the devaluation and the abandonment of the convertibility regime.
321. Secondly, the monetary values determined by and used in the electricity law,
such as the capacity payment, the variable spot price, the monomic price and the caps
were applicable across the electricity sector to all generators, other entities and
consumers. It is difficult to see how Argentina – even if it had wished to do so –
could have maintained unchanged the previous values and prices in dollars in favour
of some foreign-owned generators only. Even more so since some of those values
440
See above paras 159-165.
441
Most values set forth or fixed under the Procedures (Resolution 61/92) are expressed in pesos, as evidenced
either by the use of the symbol or of the word “pesos”. Some values are expressed in dollars (such as by using
“u$s”). More precisely, sometimes in the Procedures the same value expressed in pesos is later referred to with the
symbol of u$s. Compare Article 33 of Resolution 61/92, where capacity payment is expressed in pesos (5 $ (cinco
pesos) per MWh), with Section 2.4.2.1 of Resolution 137/ 92, where the same value is expressed at p. 72 in US
dollars (5 u$s/Mw hfv). Similarly, compare Article 34 of Resolution 61/92, where the “Costo de la Energía no
Suministrada” is fixed at “0,75 $ (setenta y cinco centavos) por KILOVATIO-HORA”, with Section 2.4.2.4 of
Resolution 137/92, where the same amount is expressed at p. 74 in u$s. This confirms that under the general
convertibility regime no difference was made in referring to one or the other currency that were for all purposes
interchangeable.
147
were in turn derived from the costs of components produced in other sectors of the
economy (such as the gas and other reference prices used in the calculation of the
costs of the generators).
322. Additionally, Total’s claim must be evaluated in the light of the “subjective”
conduct of Total in making its investment. It is uncontested that Total acquired its
shares in the two generators in September 2001. It is common knowledge, supported
by the parties’ exhibits in the present case, that at that date the economic and
financial troubles of Argentina were already substantial; they were of domestic and
international concern, not just within the business community and financial circles.
This was just a few months before the explosion of the crisis and the ensuing
currency devaluation, the enactment of the Emergency Law and the abandonment of
the convertibility regime. The deterioration had accelerated in the first half of the
year, with the abrupt replacements of the Minister of Economy and the Governor of
the Central Bank, the modification of the peso’s parity regime, and a major
international bond swap. The assistance of the IMF under a Stand-By Arrangement
launched at the beginning of the year had increased, notwithstanding growing doubts
both about the ability of Argentina to respect the agreed upon conditions and the
sustainability of the convertibility regime that the program was meant to support.
When Total made its investment in Argentina, the country was suffering from a
sustained capital flight (which would have almost completely drained the country’s
reserves within another few weeks) and foreign investors were taking measures to
protect the monetary value of their funds in Argentina.442
323. In view of this context, it cannot be overlooked that Total made a long term
investment in Argentina, of more than US$300 million, at a moment where the
maintenance of the convertibility of the pesos with the US dollar at par was being put
in doubt, irrespective of the soundness of the operation from an electricity business
point of view.443 On the one hand, as Total points out, the specific legal regime was
442
See IMF, Lessons from the Crisis, supra note 53, 35-38, and Appendix II, Chronology of Key Developments in
2001-2 pointing to the lowering of Argentina’s debt rating between July and October 2001. For an account of the
development of Argentina’s crisis in 2001 see above paras. 71-79 and sources quoted there. On capital flight from
July 2001, see IMF Evaluation Report, supra note 53, 5, 13, 50-51.
443
Total points out that electricity prices were at the time low because of over-capacity and that their increase had
been forecasted following an expected increase in demand, so that the investment at that time made economically
sense. See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 841ff, with reference to the testimonies of Mr Abdala and Montmayeur.
148
well established and investor-friendly, when Total made its investment. On the other
hand, the financial and currency conditions of Argentina had already deteriorated
markedly and steadily throughout 2001. As stated by the IMF:
324. The possibility of abandoning the 1:1 fixed parity with the US dollar, which
would have affected the value of Total’s investments and its future revenues in dollar
terms, should therefore have been taken into account by a prudent and experienced
international investor such as Total. The Tribunal considers that this context should
have influenced Total’s expectations when making its investments.445
325. The Tribunal has already described the alterations complained of by Total and
their impact on the conduct of the generators’ business (see above 286 ff). The main
feature is the abandonment of the uniform spot price, which was based on the
variable cost of the marginal unit (namely the least expensive producer excluded by
CAMMESA from the merit order), in favour of a reference to the costs of the units
burning natural gas. Moreover, a fixed cap of AR$120/MWh replaced the previous
variable “maximum price mechanism” that reflected the anticipated cost of failure.
According to Total, the new price mechanism did not reflect the economic cost of the
system and made it impossible for generators to operate with a reasonable margin
and to cover their investment costs.446 This is why, in 2002, both Central Puerto and
On the other hand Argentina submits that the situation described was due to the recession that was affecting the
country’s economy.
444
See IMF, Lessons from the Crisis, supra note 53, 36.
445
This may well have been the case and have been reflected in the price paid by Total (US$327.45 million for
Central Puerto’s and HPDA’s shares) since this price amounts to a fraction of the but-for value of Total’s shares in
the aforementioned generators (US$655 million) calculated by Total’s experts six years later at the end of 2006 (see
above para. 304). The Tribunal notes that this but-for value of Total’s investments at the end of 2006 did not
include any consideration of the above context.
446
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 911
149
HPDA defaulted on their foreign currency loans even though the amount of those
loans was reasonable.447
326. As to the general economic impact of the price changes (both spot and capacity),
Total points out that there were shortages and a lack of new investments. This
compelled Argentina to start importing electricity and, moreover, to resort to new
programmes such as Energía Plus and the FONINVEMEM scheme in order to
increase electricity supply.448
327. The Tribunal recalls its findings that the various features of the price structure
described by Total, which were in place when Total made its investments, were not
the object of specific promises by Argentina. The law spells out the general principle
that the uniform price should reflect the economic cost of the system. It does not
directly provide that such price be determined by the mechanism of a spot price
based on the marginal unit. It is conceivable that a different system might have
equally respected the principle of the economic equilibrium allowing generators to
cover their costs and make a reasonable return on their investment as mentioned in
general terms at paragraph 313 above. This requirement would have been met had the
spot price been fixed on the basis of the costs of the marginal unit (uniform marginal
price mechanism), without a cap of AR$120, according to the principles in force in
2001 (since that mechanism was indisputably fair and no different fair mechanism
had been put in place nor proposed by Argentina as an alternative benchmark).
328. It cannot be disputed however, that the pricing system the SoE progressively put
in place after 2002 is at odds with those principles as spelled out in the Electricity
Law, even leaving pesification out of consideration. After 2002, the market has been
characterized by unreasonably low tariffs.449 These, in turn, have massively reduced
the returns of the generators, barely permitting them to cover their variable costs,
contrary to sound economic management principles for power generators operating
447
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para 122 referring to the testimony of Dr. Montamayeur.
448
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 912 ff.
449
The 2004 average price of residential electricity in Argentina was a fraction of prices in all industrial countries,
around 20% of those in Germany, Japan, Italy; less than one third of those in France and the U.K.; and less than
half of those in the US. In this regard, see Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 133 and table therein from Energy
Information Administration, 2007, Exhibit C-706. Total emphasizes that the price of electricity in Argentina was
already one of the lowest in the world in 2001: new investments in the sector since 1992 had more than doubled
installed capacity, had eliminated power shortages and had brought the prices steadily down to the benefit of
consumers, see Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 831-833 and tables there.
150
within a regulated system of public utilities450. The low prices encouraged a
substantial increase in consumption that could not be matched by a parallel increase
in supply, since the producers could not finance new investments under the rigid
administrative pricing system in place.451 The unsoundness of such a policy in light
of practices generally followed in modern societies to ensure electricity supply, when
this is left to private companies, is demonstrated by the subsequent lack of
investment, power failures and the need to import electricity to Argentina (while the
country was previously self-sufficient or even an exporter to neighbouring
countries).452
329. The Energía Plus program and the FONINVEMEM scheme (to finance new
generators through the use of unpaid receivables of existing generators) show that the
pricing mechanisms put in place after 2002 were not economically sustainable. The
Tribunal recalls that new electricity producers are to be remunerated at higher prices
under the Energía Plus program so as to encourage new investments since existing
generators lacked resources to expand due to the default of CAMMESA and the
Stabilization Fund. This mechanism is in contrast with the principle of the uniform
price, which should reflect the economic cost of the system and ensure that new
investments are made according to the demand.453
330. The Tribunal considers that this situation, brought about by the SoE with full
awareness of its negative impact on affected generators operating under sound
economic principles, cannot be reconciled with the fair and equitable treatment
450
According to Prof. Spiller and Dr Abdala, the current spot price is one third of the marginal cost, based on
Cammesa figures, see Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 123(a) and graphic therein. Moreover, the fixed price cap of
AR$120/MWh operates 40% of the time. In this regard, see Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 123(c), 893-895 and
graphic therein; LECG Report on Electricity, para. 73.
451
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 877, based on the data contained in the LECG Report on Electricity that
have not been challenged by Argentina: “Argentina is on the brink of an energy crisis, as it was in the late 1980s.
Electricity demand has grown 30% since 2002 [footnote 1015: Gallino and Sruoga, at para 66]; the economy has
grown 8.8% annually [footnote1016:MoE, “Informe Económico” Año 2006, Exh. C-605, at 24.]; yet there has been
no investment in new capacity”. Total contrasts this evolution with the situation from 1999 to 2001, when lower
growth in the demand for electricity had been due to the reduction in GDP. See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para.
847 referring to Abdala cross-examination, Transcript (English) Day 5, 1411:8-1412:11.
452
See Total’s evidence mentioned supra at notes 442 and 444. The same evaluation has been expressed in the
international press. See The Economist, August 23, 2008, 42-43 “Argentina – Clouds gather again over the
Pampas.”
453
Reference should be made not only to Article 36 but also to Article 2 (b) “… foster investments for the purpose
of guaranteeing the gas supply in the long term” and (f) “encourage private investments in production… ensuring
market competitiveness where possible” as recalled by Total in its Post-Hearing Brief, para. 879.
151
standard of Article 3 of the BIT. As a consequence, the Tribunal finds that Argentina
has violated the BIT in this respect.
331. The disregard of the basic principles of the Electricity Law is relevant
irrespective of whether the changes introduced were in violation of Argentina’s
domestic legal system, an issue that the Tribunal does not need to resolve. This
finding of unfairness is reinforced by the fact that the complete overhaul of the
electricity regime established by the Electricity Law which remained on the books,
was effected through acts of administrative authorities.
332. The security that a regime established by law offered to investors, who
necessarily plan on a long-term basis, was thereby severely undermined. This
evolution goes beyond the normal regulatory risk that could be anticipated under the
Electricity Law since the SoE operated from 2002-2003 with “unfettered
discretion.”454
333. The fair and equitable treatment standard of the BIT has been objectively
breached by Argentina’s actions, in view of their negative impact on the investment
and their incompatibility with the criteria of economic rationality, public interest
(after having duly considered the need for and responsibility of governments to cope
with unforeseen events and exceptional circumstances), reasonableness and
proportionality. A foreign investor is entitled to expect that a host state will follow
those basic principles (which it has freely established by law) in administering a
public interest sector that it has opened to long term foreign investments.
Expectations based on such principles are reasonable and hence legitimate, even in
the absence of specific promises by the government. Hence, the fair and equitable
standard has been breached through the setting of prices that do not remunerate the
investment made nor allow reasonable profit to be gained contrary to the principles
governing the activities of privately owned generators under Argentina’s own legal
system. This is especially so in the utility or general interest sectors, which are
subject to governmental regulation (be it light or strict), where operators cannot
suspend the service, investments are made long term and exit/divestment is difficult.
454
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 849. This holds true regardless of the correctness or relevance of the distinction
that Total emphasizes (at paras 849, 863 ff) between “public interest sectors” such as electricity generation,
governed by free-market rules that limit regulatory discretion, and distribution, which Total describes as a tariff-
based sector, where prices are completely regulated.
152
334. An additional element that supports the Tribunal’s conclusion is the qualification
of generators’ rights under Electricity Law regime. Their right to respect for the price
determination rules set forth under the Electricity Law have been considered
“acquired rights” of property under Argentina’s Constitution “in a sector which, by
operation of law, does not consist of a public service but a public interest activity”.
These rules are “the legal standards which should be considered to effectively
determine administratively set prices.”455
335. Finally, the Tribunal finds further support for its conclusion in the terms of
HPDA’s concession. Article 56 of the concession grants a right of termination to the
concessionaire in case of substantial modifications to the criteria for determining
prices set forth in the Electricity Law, when those modifications are arbitrary and
make performance too onerous “under section 1198 of the Civil Code.”456 The
Tribunal is mindful that this provision is not directly applicable here. This is because
HPDA has not acted on this clause in Argentina nor has Total invoked it directly.
Still, the Tribunal considers it significant that radical changes in electricity pricing
rendering the concessionaire’s contractual obligation an “excessively onerous
performance” would be a just cause for termination of the concession by the
concessionaire. This provision shows that administrative authorities do not have such
broad discretion to make radical changes to the system under the Electricity Law, as
Argentina claims.
7.2.3 The “Refusal” to Pay Power Generators Their Receivables and the Conversion
of Receivables Into a Stake in FONINVEMEM
336. The Tribunal agrees with Total that the measures discussed at paragraph 293 ff.
resulted in a de facto refusal by Argentina to pay power generators their receivables,
even at the reduced values resulting from the measures.
337. The Tribunal is not convinced by Argentina’s argument that generators who
decided to participate in FONINVEMEM (among those Total’s generators) did so on
a voluntary basis. On the contrary, based on the evidence submitted, the Tribunal
agrees with Total that the conversion offered by Argentina as of August 11, 2004
455
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 873 based on the decision of the Federal Administrative Court of Appeals
of 11 March 2004 AGEERA c EN – PEN – Resol 8/02 SE y Otros s/ Amparo Ley 16,986 at Exhibit AL RA 215.
456
See above para. 277; Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 856.
153
cannot be defined as “voluntary”. If not “forced”, it was certainly strongly induced
by putting generators in a situation where they had no choice other than to accept the
scheme or otherwise risk suffering higher losses. First, generators were faced with a
situation in which the institution (CAMMESA), which was appointed by the public
regulator to manage the market efficiently, was unable to pay for the electricity
produced and distributed to consumers because consumers were charged an
insufficient tariff. Second, the generators were put in the position of choosing either
to contribute 65% of their past and future receivables to FONINVEMEM and
become shareholders of the generators that were to be built with the corresponding
funds, or to hold unpaid receivables, payment of which was legally and factually
uncertain in regards to when, how, and how much would be paid.457
339. In view of the above findings, the calculation of damages proffered by Total
cannot be accepted by the Tribunal since the ambit and basis of the breach found here
is different and considerably more limited than that assumed by Total. A quantum
phase is, therefore, necessary for the parties to elaborate and document their
respective positions as to damages. More specifically, the quantum phase shall deal
with the determination of the losses suffered by Total because of the negative impact
457
See SoE Resolution 826/04, Preamble seventh paragraph (Exhibit C-223). In its Post-Hearing Brief Total points
out at para. 970 (b) that under the subsequent SoE Resolution 1.193/05 (Exhibit A RA 288) “the Government
ultimately used the receivables of those generators that refused to participate to FONINVEMEM to finance the
construction of the two new plants, and prevented them from becoming shareholders in the new plants.”
154
of Argentina’s actions on HPDA and Central Puerto that have been found to be in
breach of the BIT.458
9. Examination of Total’s Claims under Articles 4, 5(1) and 5(2) of the BIT
340. The Tribunal considers that Total’s claim concerning the pesification of the
capacity payments and the spot price does not involve a breach of the expropriation
and full security standards, since the conclusion above at paragraphs 315-324 was
that the pesification was a lawful measure by Argentina in the circumstances. As to
Total’s claim regarding the alteration of the uniform marginal price mechanism,
which the Tribunal has in large part accepted at paragraphs 325-335, the findings of
breach were based on the unfairness of Argentina’s conduct.
341. As is evident from the analysis above, the various measures did not amount to,
nor entail an expropriation of Total’s investments in the power generation sector in
breach of Article 5(2) of the BIT notwithstanding that they resulted in a consistent
decrease in value of the assets due to decreased revenues caused by the actions of
Argentina’s authorities in the sector. This is because, as the Tribunal has clarified at
paragraph 191 ff. above, the mere loss of value of an investment due to host State
measures without deprivation of control is not a sufficient basis to find an unlawful
indirect expropriation. This conclusion is reinforced in view of the text of Argentina-
France BIT, as stated at paragraph 194.
342. The “refusal” to pay power generators their dues and the forced conversion of
receivables into participation in FONINVEMEM, which the Tribunal has found in
breach of Article 3 of the BIT, might be considered also an expropriation in breach of
Article 5(2) of the BIT. The Tribunal believes, however, that damages under a
finding of expropriation would not be different from those to be determined in the
quantum phase under the finding of breach of the fair and equitable standard made
above at paragraph 339 so that the Tribunal finds unnecessary to examine
Argentina’s conduct further under Article 5(2) of the BIT.
458
This includes determining the proper “but for scenario”, the actual scenario and the possible influence of both
the purchase price paid by Total in 2001 and the sale price of its equity stakes in Central Puerto and HPDA at the
end of 2006.
155
343. Under Article 5(1) of the BIT investments made by nationals of one Party in the
territory of the other Party benefit from full protection and security in accordance
with the principle of fair and equitable treatment in Article 3 of the BIT (In the
Spanish version of the BIT: “protección y plena seguridad en aplicación del
principio del tratamiento justo y equitativo mencionado en el artículo 3 del presente
Acuerdo”. In the French version of the BIT: “d’une protection et d’une sécurité
pleines et entières, en application du principe de traitement juste et équitable
mentionné à l’article 3 du présent Accord”). A plain reading of the terms used in
Article 5(1) of the BIT, in accordance with Article 31 VCLT, shows that the
protection provided for by Article 5(1) to covered investors and their assets is not
limited to physical protection but includes also legal security. The explicit linkage of
this standard to the fair and equitable treatment standard supports this interpretation.
This appears to be consistent with the interpretation of differently worded BIT
clauses adopted by other tribunals, even if not uniformly.459 Total’s claim under
Article 5(1) is rooted in the alleged violation by Argentina of its obligation to extend
legal security (rather than physical protection) to Total’s investments.460 As already
outlined above, the regime for generators established by Argentina after 2002 was
characterized by a marked difference between the principles in the Electricity Law
and the regulation resulting from SoE enactments, so that, according to Total,
Argentina breached also its duty to grant to Total’s investments legal security and
protection. Argentina opposes this argument and points to the broad powers granted
to the SoE under Argentina’s legal system. The Tribunal is of the view that an
analysis in depth of Total’s claim under Article 5(1) of the BIT is unnecessary. In
fact, the obligation set forth in Article 5(1) forms part of the fair and equitable
treatment standard, so that a finding of breach of that obligation would form part of
the breach of Article 3 rather than be an independent finding of breach. The Tribunal
has already found such a breach in respect of the same facts so that no additional
finding of breach of Article 5(1) is warranted. Moreover, no further damages would
result from following a different approach.
344. Finally, as to the prohibition of discrimination in Article 4 of the BIT, Total has
emphasized that the severe limitations on the price of electricity were imposed by
459
See supra note 113.
460
See above at paras 279-284.
156
Argentina in order to subsidize other sectors of the economy, including the export
industry, at the cost of the generators. This may well be the case, but such a policy
would not per se represent a breach of the non-discrimination standard. This standard
requires, as a rule, a comparison between the treatment of different investments,
usually within a given sector, of different national origin or ownership, as stated
above in respect of the TGN claim.460 The purpose is to ascertain whether the
protected investments have been treated worse without any justification, specifically
because of their foreign nationality. The similarity of the investments compared and
of their operations is a precondition for a fruitful comparison. The alleged cross-
sector subsidisation does not comply with such a condition. Such a policy choice
should clearly be made at the expense of foreign investors in order to breach Article
4.461 In casu, Total has not shown that its power generators were treated differently
from others, nor specifically that this would have reflected a nationality bias. This
claim cannot therefore be accepted.
345. Before concluding, the Tribunal must address the plea of Argentina based on the
defence of “state of necessity” under customary international law in order to excuse
its breaches of the BIT found by the Tribunal in respect of Total’s investments in
power generation. The Tribunal recalls in this respect its analysis of the issue in
respect of Total’s TGN claim, and specifically the rigorous conditions that are
required to sustain such a defence in light of Article 25 of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility.462 In respect of Total’s claim concerning its investments in power
generation, the Tribunal has found the pesification of capacity payments, spot price
and any other parameters and/or values prescribed in the electricity system not to be
in breach of the BIT. On the contrary, the Tribunal has found the alteration of the
uniform marginal price mechanism (discussed at paragraph 325 ff. above) and the
refusal to pay power generators their receivables and their conversion into a stake in
FONINVEMEM (discussed at paragraph 336 ff. above) to be in breach of the fair
460
See supra para. 210 ff.
461
The Tribunal recalls that Total has not shown a prima facie case of discrimination based on foreign nationality
as to the power generation sector.
462
See para. 220 ff. above.
157
and equitable treatment standard. As a consequence, the Tribunal must address
Argentina’s state of necessity defence in respect of these two measures only. The
above analysis of the electricity sector in Argentina from 2002 onward clearly shows
that the infringing measures were in no way necessary to safeguard Argentina’s
essential security interests in preserving its people and their security of energy
supply. More specifically, Argentina has not shown that the alteration of the price
mechanism to the detriment of generators was necessary to ensure the supply of
energy. On the contrary, the Tribunal recalls its finding (at paragraph 328) that the
pricing system that the SoE put in place after 2002 resulted in unreasonably low tariff
and encouraged a substantial increase in consumption that could not be covered. This
caused shortages in the supply of electricity and power cuts to the detriment of the
entire population and economy, exactly the opposite of safeguarding “an essential
interest against a grave and imminent peril”, as required by Article 25.1(a). In any
case, even accepting Argentina’s position as to the existence of a grave and imminent
threat to its essential interest in ensuring electricity at affordable prices, the above
pricing mechanism was not “the only way for the State to safeguard an essential
interest against a grave and imminent peril.” (Article 25.1(a)). As pointed out by
Total, alternatives not in breach of the BIT, such as targeted subsidies, were
available to Argentina in order to keep electricity tariffs at affordable levels for
consumers in need.463 As to the non payment of the generators’ receivables and their
forced conversion, Argentina has not explained nor provided any evidence as to
which essential interest was being safeguarded by the measures.. The Tribunal recalls
that the inability of CAMMESA to pay the electricity supplied by generators was due
to CAMMESA’s insufficient revenues which has been caused, in turn, by the pricing
mechanism established by the SoE after 2002. Since the receivables of generators
were caused by Argentina’s conduct in breach of the BIT, and were not justified by
necessity, their subsequent forced conversion cannot be justified either. In any case,
this forced conversion took place in 2004 when Argentina was not facing any
“imminent and grave peril” to its essential interest. The Tribunal, therefore,
concludes that Argentina’s defence based on the state of necessity under customary
international is groundless.
463
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 1047 ff.
158
11. Tribunal’s Conclusions as to Total’s Claims in Power Generation
- concludes that Argentina has breached its obligations under Article 3 of the BIT
to grant to Total fair and equitable treatment, in respect and as a consequence of:
(b) the non-payment of receivables arising from energy supplied in the spot
scheme.
- rejects all other claims by Total related to its investment in HPDA and Central
- defers the determination of the above damages to the quantum phase; and
- rejects any other plea and defences by Argentina, including those premised on the
“state of necessity.”
159
Part IV - Total’s Claim as to its Investments in Exploration and
Production of Hydrocarbons
347. Total’s original investment in Argentina was with respect to the exploration and
development of an area in and around the Austral Basin in Tierra del Fuego known as
Area 1 De La Cuenca Austral, also known as Cuenca Marina Austral – 1 (“CMA-1”).
The terms of Total’s investment were set out in a contract between Yacimientos
Petrolíferos Fiscales Sociedad del Estado (“YPF”) and Total Exploration S.A. and
its other Consortium members who had been successful in the competitive bidding
process for the contract. The Contrato Para La Exploración y Explotación Del Área
No. 1 De La Cuenca Austral – Tierra del Fuego (“Contract 19.944”) was approved
by Decree 2853/78, dated 1 December, 1978. It was executed on 24 April, 1979.464
Pursuant to the terms of Contract 19.944, the Consortium was required to explore and
develop CMA-1. In exchange, YPF was required to buy all of the hydrocarbons the
Consortium extracted (including crude oil and natural gas) at a price calculated on
the basis of free-market prices as reflected by the price of Nigerian bonny light crude
oil.465
348. Contract 19.944 was approved by Decree 2853/78 pursuant to Article 98(g) of
the Ley de Hidrocarburos, Law No. 17.319, adopted on 23 June, 1967.466 Pursuant to
that law, the National Executive Power was responsible for setting national policy
with respect to the exploitation, industrialization, transport and commercialization of
hydrocarbons and had the power to grant exploration permits and concessions for the
464
See Exhibits C-63(1) and C-63(2). At the time of the award of Contract 19.942, the members of the consortium
(the “Consortium”) were Total Exploration S.A., Deminex Deutsche Erdoelversorgungsgesellschaft mbh, Bridas
S.A.P.I.C. and Arfranco S.A. As described by Total’s witnesses, the composition of the Consortium changed
somewhat over time. Total’s investment came to be held by Total Austral S.A. In July 1999, Deminex changed its
name to Wintershall Energía S.A. In 1998, after a reorganization process, Bridas, which had previously acquired
Arfranco’s interest, transferred its rights in the Consortium to Panamerican Sur SRL, a joint venture between Bridas
(40%) and Amoco, now BP Amoco (60%); see Contie WS1, para.13. The respective interests in the Consortium for
the purposes of this arbitration are: Total 37.5%; Deminex 37.5%; and Panamerican 25%.
465
See Total’s Memorial, para. 126 and the sources cited there; Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 626-628; Contie
WS1, ¶15. Pursuant to the Contract, YPF was required to calculate the energy equivalent in natural gas of a barrel
of Nigerian bonny light crude oil and then pay the Consortium the portion of that price necessary to generate one
million BTUs of natural gas.
466
See Exhibit C-64.
160
exploitation and transportation of hydrocarbons. Article 6 of the Ley de
Hidrocarburos provided as follows:
349. When Total and the other Consortium members entered into Contract 19.944,
Law 19.640 of 2 June, 1972 exempted exports from Tierra del Fuego from export
taxes.467
467
See Exhibit C-292. Subsequently, the Customs Code confirmed the validity of the Tierra del Fuego exemption
by providing for a distinction between general customs areas and confirming Tierra del Fuego’s status as a special
customs area. See Exhibit C-293.
161
350. After Contract 19.944 was signed, Total conducted exploratory drilling and
obtained positive results . In 1987, Total and the Consortium members arranged for
US$250 million in financing to develop the main oil field in the CMA-1 region,
Hidra. Production from the Hidra field commenced in July 1989. By the beginning of
1990, the Hidra project consisted of two production platforms that produced
approximately 27.000 barrels per day. In addition, following the discovery that there
was a connection between another field in the CMA-1 area (the ARA Field) and an
onshore field owned by YPF known as Cañadón Alfa, YPF agreed to accord the
Consortium the right to production in the Cañadón Alfa Field according to the terms
of Contract 19.944 (the “Unitization Agreement”). Total and the Consortium made
substantial investments in the Cañadon Alfa Field such that, by 1994, Cañadon Alfa
had 71 gas wells that, on average, delivered to YPF approximately 6.3 million cubic
metres of natural gas per day.468 In 1993, Total announced the discovery of
substantial additional offshore gas reserves.469
352. One of the first steps taken by Argentina was the adoption of Decree 1212/89
which called for the renegotiation of existing contracts between foreign investors and
YPF. Decree 1212/89 was intended to increase production of hydrocarbons and to
support progressive deregulation; replace State intervention with free market
mechanisms and the principle of free disposal of crude petroleum and its derivatives;
permit the prices for hydrocarbon products of national origin to reflect international
prices; and replace rules that limited the free commercialization of crude oil and its
derivatives. Decree 1212/89 provided in relevant part as follows:
468
See, generally, Contie WS1, paras. 16-20.
469
Contie WS1, para. 21. This new discovery referred to reserves at drill sites named Carina, “Carina e-3” and
“Carina e-4”. These were similar to discoveries Total had made in the early 1980s at Carina e-1 and e-2.
162
Art. 3. EXTENSION OF THE FREE MARKET. YACIMIENTOS
PETROLÍFEROS FISCALES SOCIEDAD DEL ESTADO is hereby instructed to
negotiate in a mutual agreement, within a term of six (6) months, with holders of
pre-existent hydrocarbon extraction work, export and production contracts,
whereby YACIMIENTOS PETROLÍFEROS FISCALES SOCIEDAD DEL
ESTADO is bound to receive the extracted hydrocarbons, the reconversion of said
contracts into the concession system or association of the Law No. 17.319 and its
regulations. In every case, the contracts reconversion shall be subject to the
approval of the National Executive after the opinion issued by the Secretary of
Energy.
The contracts emerging from the regime established by the Decree No. 1443/85,
as amended by the Decree No. 623/87, shall be exempted from the
aforementioned provisions. The Ministry of Economy and Public Works and
Services shall establish the policies governing said contracts in a term of one
hundred and eighty (180) days, which policies shall be compatible with the
principles established in the Decree No. 1055/89 herein.
After the six (6) months mentioned in the first paragraph in this article,
YACIMIENTOS PETROLÍFEROS FISCALES SOCIEDAD DEL ESTADO shall
submit the proceedings to the Secretary of Energy, which shall propose the
measures it considers adequate to the contractors in order to re-establish the
financial economic balance. In case that is not possible and that there are justified
public interest and/or fiscal reasons preventing the continuity of said contracts,
the Secretary of Energy shall provide the legal measures that may be adopted to
those ends.
….
Art. 4. FREE AVAILABILITY. The oil produced by the new concessionaire
and the percentage related to the private partner will be freely available as per
Art. 15 of Decree No. 1055/89.
….
Art. 6. FREE IMPORT AND EXPORT. Prior authorization is not needed for
the import of crude oils and its by-products, which shall be exempt from import
fees until the condition or term established in article 5 hereof is complied with.
As from that moment, the import of crude oil and its by-products shall be subject
to the general fee policies.
For the export of crude oil and its by-products, the Secretary of Energy shall
make a decision regarding the authorization of the export within a maximum term
of seven (7) working days as from request, after which it shall be deemed
automatically granted.
….
Art. 9. PRICE FREEDOM. After the transition period, the price of oil will be
agreed upon freely. The prices of all oil by-products at all the stages shall be
freed.470
353. Two other decrees were issued in conjunction with Decree 1212/89. These were
Decrees 1055/89 and 1589/89.471 Together these Decrees were referred to collectively
by the Claimant as the “Deregulation Decrees”. Decree 1055/89 provided in relevant
part as follows:
WHEREAS:
470
See Exhibit C-65(2).
471
See Exhibits C-65(1) and C-65(3).
163
….
There are hydrocarbons fields operated by YACIMIENTOS PETROLÍFEROS
FISCALES SOCIEDAD DEL ESTADO where a low level of production is
registered as a consequence of the long lasting inactivity and/or semi-exploitation
state.
Such fields, for its marginality characteristic, require the application of an
exploitation scheme that permits the active and direct participation of investments
deriving from private capital for its reactivation and increase of production.
It is also necessary, in those fields operated by YACIMIENTOS PETROLÍFEROS
FISCALES SOCIEDAD DEL ESTADO registering a greater level of production,
to achieve a better recovery of the resource applying assisted production
techniques.
Such techniques require the contribution of modern technology and financial-
economic capacity concurring to the development of the fields together with
YACIMIENTOS PETROLÍFEROS FISCALES SOCIEDAD DEL ESTADO.
….
The objective of the national Government is to replace State intervention in the
setting of prices, margins and quotas with market mechanisms and the free play
of offer and demand.
It is the Government’s policy to deregulate the sector to permit effective and free
competition as quickly as possible in order to reflect international values and,
therefore, it was necessary to permit the free disposition of hydrocarbons both in
the internal market and the export market.
Sections 8, 9, 10 and 11 of the Law No. 23,696 and sections 2, 6, 11, 95 and 98
of the Law No. 17,319 confer related powers to the National Executive.
….
Article 1. Articles 8, 9, 10 and 11 of the Law 23,696 and articles 2, 6, 11, 95 and
98 of the Law No. 17.319 are regulatory. The promotion, development and
execution of plans intended to increase the national production of liquid and gas
hydrocarbons, including its by-products, are of top priority need in order to
ensure the internal self-supply and an adequate margin of reserves, to reach the
full development of the petrochemical industries and to obtain exportable
balances, giving privilege to the industrialization of the resources in their place of
origin.
….
Art. 14. FULL RIGHT OF DISPOSITION OF HYDROCARBONS.
Hydrocarbons produced from concessions governed by the National Mining Code
would benefit from a full right of free disposition, as from the one hundred and
eighty (180) days from the due date hereof.
Art. 15. The free availability of hydrocarbons referred to in sections 5(d), 13 and
14 of this Decree, shall be governed by the following provisions:
a) The products can be sold freely in the internal and the external markets,
within the terms of the applicable legal framework
b) The companies shall be ensured access to the systems and means of
treatment, movement, storage, and dispatch at rates compatible with international
prices.
c) The payment of royalties on freely available hydrocarbons shall be borne
by the companies, in conformity with the provisions set by the SECRETARY OF
ENERGY.472
472
Decree 1055/89, Exhibit C-65(1).
164
WHEREAS:
Article 3(2) of the Decree No. 1212/89 exempted the contracts deriving from the
regime of the Decree No. 1443/85, as amended by Decree No. 523/87 from the
regime, and established that the Ministry of Economy, Public Works and Services
shall set the polices for such contracts, in a compatible way with the principles
established in the Decree No. 1055/89, setting a term of one hundred eighty (180)
days to those ends.
The Government has an interest in establishing clear and definite rules which
guarantee the stability and legal security of existing contracts in the petroleum
sector.
….
….
165
application date. For the purposes hereof, the currency equivalence shall be
determined applying the rate of exchange established in Article 4 hereof.473
355. In 1991, Argentina adopted Decree 2411/91 (the “Reconversion Decree”) which
authorised YPF to renegotiate its service contracts that had been adopted under the
previous legislative regime, including Contract 19.944, and to convert these into new
agreements consisting of two parts: exploration permits and exploitation concessions.
The Reconversion Decree specifically referred to the Deregulation Decrees, which
established as guiding principles of the national government’s policy for the
hydrocarbon sector: the promotion of [free] market rules in fixing prices and [the
production] quantities of hydrocarbons; and the right of free disposal and free
commercialization, domestically and internationally, of the hydrocarbons produced
by the concessionaires.474 With respect to the reconversion of the service contracts
into concessions, the Reconversion Decree provided the following rights for the
holders of the new concessions:
Art. 5. Holders of the exploitation permits and concessions deriving from the
reconversion provided for herein shall enjoy full property rights over hydrocarbons they
produce in their areas, pursuant to Article 6 of the Law 17,319 and shall also enjoy the
free availability of said products pursuant to Article 15 of the Decree No. 1055 dated 10
October, 1989; Article 4 of the Decree No. 1212, dated 8 November, 1989 and Articles 5
and 6 of the Decree No. 1589 dated 27 December, 1989, which terms are incorporated in
the permit and/or concession title for its whole term of duration.
Art. 7. Every restriction to the free availability referred to in the previous Articles shall
empower concessionaires of the exploitation to receive, for the time of the restriction, a
value that is not lower than the one established in Article 6 of the Decree No. 1589,
dated 27 December, 1989.
Art. 8. The provisions established in Articles 5, 6 and 7 above shall apply to the
exploration permits deriving from the reconversion set forth in this Decree.
473
Decree 1589/89, Exhibit C-65(3).
474
See Exhibit C-66, Preamble, which reads as follows:
Decree No. 1055, dated 10 October, 1989 and Decree No. 1212, dated 8 November, 1989, establish two governing
principle of the National Government Policy for the hydrocarbons sector, to wit: the privilege conferred on the
market rules in the determination of prices and amounts of hydrocarbons and its free availability on the part of the
concessionaires, and the associates to the former YACIMIENTOS PETROLÍFEROS FISCALES SOCIEDAD DEL
ESTADO, which implies its free internal and international commercialization.
166
the activity of the permit holder or the assets intended for the execution of the respective
areas shall not be applicable.
Permit holders or concessionaires shall pay the fee established in Article 57 and
58 of the Law No. 17,319, as it may correspond.
Art. 10. Concessionaires shall be responsible for the direct payment to the province
where the concession they hold is located, on behalf of the National State, of the
royalties resulting from the application of Articles 59 and 62 of the Law No. 17,319,
paying up to twelve per cent (12%) of the production valued on the base of the prices
effectively obtained in the operations of commercialization of hydrocarbons from that
area, with the deductions established in Articles 61, 62 and 63 of the Law No. 17.319.
…. 475
356. In 1992, Argentina adopted a new law regulating the transport and distribution of
natural gas (the “Gas Law”).476 The general goals of the new Gas Law were stated to
be as follows:
Art. 2. The following objectives for the national policy on electricity supply,
transportation and distribution of natural gas are hereby established. They shall be
executed and controlled by the Ente Nacional Regulador del Gas, created under Art. 50
hereof:
(b) To promote competition in the electricity production and demand markets, and
to foster investments for the purpose of guaranteeing the gas supply in the long term;
(e) To promote efficiency in the transport, storage, distribution and use of natural
gas;
(f) To promote the rational use of natural gas, looking after an adequate protection
of the environment;
(g) To intend that the price of the supply of natural gas to the industry be equivalent
to the one in foreign countries having similar resources and conditions.
357. In 1993, YPF conducted an initial public offering in the United States of America
in order to issue tradeable debt in that country. In this connection, YPF, which was
still a publicly-owned entity, issued a prospectus regarding the issuance of American
depository shares in which it described the regulatory regime as follows:
475
Exhibit C-66.
476
Exhibit C-31.
167
Market Regulation
Under the Hydrocarbons Law and the Oil Deregulation Decrees, holders of
production concessions have the right to produce oil and gas, and own and are
allowed to dispose of such production in the market without restriction. As a
result, the Company, as well as private companies producing oil and gas under
service contracts with YPF following conversion of such contracts to
concessions, may sell their production in domestic or export markets, and refiners
may obtain crude oil from suppliers within or outside Argentina.
The Hydrocarbons Law authorizes the National Executive to regulate the
Argentine oil and gas markets and prohibits the export of crude oil during any
period in which the National Executive finds domestic production to be
insufficient to satisfy domestic demand. In the event the National Executive
restricts the export of oil and petroleum products or the free disposition of natural
gas, the Oil Deregulation Decrees provide that producers, refiners and exporters
shall receive a price, in the case of crude oil and similar imported petroleum
products, and in the case of natural gas, not lower than that 35% of the
international price per cubic meter of Arabian light oil, 34 API.
Taxation
358. In 1993, after the adoption of the Reconversion Decree, YPF requested that Total
and the members of the Consortium agree to convert Contract 19.944 into a
concession agreement pursuant to the terms of the Reconversion Decree. As the
operator of the Consortium, Total represented the Consortium in negotiations with
the Argentine authorities.478 After several months of negotiations, Total and
Argentina reached agreed terms for the conversion of Contract 19.944 into the new
concession agreement regime.479 On 23 November 1993, Total and YPF signed a
477
YPF “Prospectus, YPF Sociedad Anónima, 105 American depository shares representing 105 million Class D
shares”, dated 28 June 1993, Exhibit C-308, pp. 69-70.
478
See Contie WS1, paras. 28 and following. Total was represented by Patrick Rambaud, Total Austral’s general
manager at the time and Michel Contie, vice-president of Total Latin America at the time. Argentina was
represented generally by YPF and, on several occasions, by the Argentine Secretary of Energy.
479
See Contie WS1, paras. 29-31. According to Mr. Contie and Total, there were two preconditions for the
conversion of Contract 19.944 into a concession. These were that the replacement concession agreements would
168
document known as the “Acta Acuerdo” which set out the parties’ agreement for the
reconversion of Contract 19.944 into a production concession and an exploration
permit under the new concession agreement regime.480 This Acta Acuerdo provided
for the conversion of Contract No. 19.944 into an exploration permit with a term until
1 May, 1996 and a production concession (concesión de explotación) with a term of
25 years (plus a possible extension pursuant to Article 35 of Law 17.319) in return
for the rescission of Contract No. 19.944 and the extinguishment of the rights and
obligations assumed by the parties pursuant to that contract. The Acta Acuerdo
referred specifically to the Deregulation Decrees and the Reconversion Decree and
the rights granted to the holders of the new concessions pursuant to those
instruments.481
359. The terms of the above Acta Acuerdo and the provisions of the Deregulation
Decrees were specifically referred to, approved and adopted in Decree 214/94 (the
“Concession Decree”) adopted on 15 February, 1994. The Concession Decree
provided, in part, as follows:
That the reconversion of Contract No. 19,944 implies for its holders, a substantial
juridical change for the abandonment of its position as contractor of YPF
SOCIEDAD ANÓNIMA, preserved, to a great extent, from the economic risk of
exploitation once the mining risk phase had been overcome. The important
change in their economic position is also relevant for them upon the extinction of
YPF SOCIEDAD ANÓNIMA’s obligation to receive the hydrocarbons produced
and to pay higher prices than the ones established by the National Executive for
them.
have to guarantee Total’s right to freely dispose of the hydrocarbons it produced in Argentina, both in the domestic
and international markets and that Total would be free from restrictions on the export of hydrocarbons, including
export fees and duties without prior notice of one year and full compensation. Second, the replacement concession
agreements could not result in losses to Total. At the time, Total performed a calculation to estimate the difference
between the discounted cash flows expected to be generated under Contract 19.944 and the discounted cash flows
that would be generated over the same period of time under new concession agreements. The estimated difference
was approximately US$410 million. As stated by Total in its Memorial at para. 140, to compensate the loss caused
by the conversion of the Contract into a concession agreement, YPF agreed to transfer to the Consortium, of which
Total was a member, certain assets and interests in new fields that YPF had not developed for technological reasons
or that it had left undeveloped. These were a participating interest in the San Roque and Aguada Pichana
exploitation concessions, the concession for a natural gas field called Aries Norte and the oil reserves in the area of
Cañadon Alfa in the Austral Basin.
480
Exhibit C-92.
481
See Article 8-11 of the Acta Acuerdo.
169
….
….
….
Art. 17. In case that, as a consequence of the facts or the acts deriving from the
Public Powers, the holders of the Exploration permit, of the Exploitation
Concession and of the Joint Venture Agreements mentioned in Article 6 of this
Decree are prevented from exercising the rights emerging hereof, despite their
intention to do so, they shall have the right to cause the National Executive Power
to instruct the Application Authority or whoever it may correspond to receive the
hydrocarbons produced pursuant to Article 6 of Decree No. 1589, dated 27
December, 1989, for the duration of the restriction, pursuant to the terms of the
Exploration Permit, of the Exploitation Concessions and of the Joint Venture
Agreements. The National Executive shall be responsible for the applicable
damages and compensations pursuant to Article 519 of the Civil Code.482
482
Concession Decree, Exhibit C-67.
170
360. Following the adoption of the Concession Decree, Total expanded its exploration
and hydrocarbon production activities in Argentina.483 The production opportunities,
in which Total and the other members of the Consortium invested included, the
following:
361. Total entered into long-term contracts with local distributors for the sale of
natural gas.486 Total also entered into export contracts for natural gas with Chilean
customers, which were approved by the Argentine authorities.487 In general terms,
483
See, generally, Contie WS1, paras. 31-42; Contie, Transcript (English) Day 4, 1003-1004.
484
Slide III.17 of Total’s Opening Statement; Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 668 and the sources cited there.
485
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 671; Slide III.18 of Total’s Opening Statement.
486
According to Mr. Grosjean of Total, over 95% of the natural gas produced by Total was sold under long-term
contracts of ten years or more. The price of the gas was freely agreed between Total and its customers and was
expressed in US dollars. This was done both on the domestic and on the export market. See Grosjean, Transcript
(English) Day 3, 882-887. See Grosjean WS1, para. 12 for a list of Total’s long-term sales contracts for natural gas
for first delivery dates between 1995 and 2005.
487
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 672 and the sources cited there. Exports of natural gas were subject to
resolutions issued by the Secretary of Energy. Essentially, the criterion for approval of exports of natural gas was
the ability to confirm that adequate reserves existed to ensure the natural gas supply needed for the domestic
market. See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 672-674 and the sources cited therein. Prior to 1998, Total’s
contracts to export to Metro Gas, a Chilean customer, were approved pursuant to Law 24.076 and Decree 1.738/92,
as amended. Resolution 131/01 provided for the automatic approval of export contracts provided that current gas
reserves exceeded certain levels (see SoE Resolution 131/01, dated 9 February 2001, Exhibit C-133; Grosjean
WS2, para. 22). According to the terms of the resolution, this automatic approval of export contracts was
appropriate in view of regional gas reserves, the confirmation that adequate reserves continued to be available, as
well as the existence of a reasonable relationship between reserves and production after accounting for export
volumes granted on the basis of sufficiency of supply of the domestic market. Among the long-term contracts
approved pursuant to the applicable regulations were the following: Metro Gas (SoE Resolution 200/97, Exhibit C-
330); Colbún S.A. (SoE Resolution 353/99, Exhibit C-341); Colbún (SoE Resolution 3/02, dated 3 September 2002,
Exhibit C-427); Methanex (SoE Resolution 41/02, dated 11 September 2002, Exhibit C-428). The last two contracts
referred to were approved on the basis of meeting the requirements set out in SoE Resolution 131/01 and authorised
171
production in the Argentine market for natural gas increased significantly such that
Argentina became a regional exporter of natural gas.488
362. Unlike natural gas sales, oil and LPG sales were not subject to approval and Total
freely agreed sales agreements with its customers on both the domestic and
international markets.489 Total’s crude oil production came primarily from the Hidra
field in Tierra del Fuego. Pursuant to the terms of Law 19.640, crude oil exports from
Tierra del Fuego were exempted from export taxes.490
363. By the end of 2001, Total’s share of overall production of natural gas in
Argentina was approximately 22%. Among the exploration and production
companies operating in Argentina, Total had the highest percentage of its production
(in energy equivalent terms) in gas.491 Of its total production, the large majority
(82%) was natural gas and the remainder (18%) represented crude oil and LPG.492 Of
Total’s gas production, the majority was sold in the domestic market to distribution
companies and large industrial customers, including power generation plants. Total
also entered into a significant number of long-term export contracts for the sale of
natural gas, primarily to purchasers in Chile.493
364. In response to its financial crisis and other situations that arose in the Argentine
energy market, Argentina passed a number of general and more specific laws,
regulations and other measures that had an impact on investors involved in the
exploration and production of hydrocarbons.
the long-term export of natural gas in amounts of 1,650,000 m3/day for a term of 14 years and three months (to a
total of 8,580 million m3 of natural gas and one million m3/day for four years and 2,200,000 m3 for 16 years to a
total of 15,022 million m3 of natural gas, respectively.
488
See YPF “Prospectus”, dated 28 June 1993, Exhibit C-308 at 13; Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 3, 888-889.
489
Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 3, 880-883.
490
See Law 19.640, Exhibit C-292. See also Código Aduanero, Article 600-607, Exhibit C-293; MoE general
instruction 19/02, 26 May 2002, Exhibit C-406; Legal and Technical Customs Deputy Director’s Opinion, 128/04,
dated 21 September 2004, Exhibit C-478.
491
See Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 3, 900 – 901.
492
See Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 3, 900-902, 989-990.
493
See Grosjean WS1, para. 12; Transcript (English) Day 3, 880-883. According to Mr. Grosjean, approximately
95% of its natural gas sales were pursuant to long-term contracts. See also supra note 479.
172
365. As already discussed, in January 2002, Argentina enacted the Emergency Law 494
together with a series of implementing measures. The Emergency Law eliminated
Argentina’s convertibility system, which had pegged the Argentine peso to the US
dollar at a one to one ratio.495 Further, the Emergency Law redenominated all private
law contracts, including dollar denominated long term sales contracts, at the
exchange rate of one peso to one US dollar.496 At the time of the redenomination of
private law contracts, the peso was trading at a rate of approximately three pesos to
the US dollar.497
367. The pesification of private contracts also affected the price Total received
pursuant to gas sales contracts.
368. In addition, pursuant to the terms of Article 8 of the Emergency Law, the tariffs
payable for transportation and distribution of natural gas were pesified at the rate of
one peso to one dollar. Then, commencing in May 2002, ENARGAS established a
maximum reference price distributors could charge for the well-head price
component of the Consumer Gas Tariff.498 The effect of this measure was to freeze
the level of the Consumer Gas Tariff at the same level as in 2001, but pesified, i.e., at
the same peso value but, in US dollar terms, at approximately one-third of the
amount that it had been in 2001. The Consumer Gas Tariff comprises the well-head
gas price, the gas transportation tariff and the gas distribution tariff. Before the
measures, the well-head gas price was negotiated between the producers and
distributors and passed through to customers as a component of the Consumer Gas
Tariff. The Emergency Law pesified the reference price component (which
notionally represents the well-head gas price) of the Consumer Gas Tariff.499 This
494
See Exhibit C-13, Law 25.561/02 dated 7 January 2002.
495
See the Emergency Law, Articles 1-4; see also Grosjean WS1, para. 15.
496
See Emergency Law, Article 11 at Exhibit C-13.
497
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 686.
498
ENARGAS Resolution 2612/02 dated 24 June 2002 at Exhibit C-155; ENARGAS Resolution 2665/02 dated 15
August 2002 at Exhibit C-34(1); ENARGAS Resolution 2653/02 dated 22 August 2002 at Exhibit C-34(2);
ENARGAS Resolution 2654/02 dated 22 August 2002 at Exhibit C-34(4); and ENARGAS Resolution 2663/03
dated 22 July 2002 at Exhibit C-34 (5).
499
See Grosjean WS2 at paras. 11 – 16.
173
had the effect of “suppressing” the price that producers’ customers could pay for
natural gas, as distributors could not charge their customers more than the pesified
Consumer Gas Tariff.500
369. In October 2002, the Ministry of Economy adopted Resolution 487/02 to exempt
ENARGAS (and ENRE, the Ente Nacional Regulador de la Electricidad) from the
freeze on tariffs in order to undertake tariff revisions to maintain conditions that
would ensure the continuity of public services.501 However, any revision of the tariffs
was blocked by way of injunctions in the Argentine courts.502
370. The Emergency Law also provided the executive with the authority to impose
export withholding taxes on hydrocarbons. Pursuant to this authority, in February
2002, Argentina imposed a 20% export tax on crude oil503 and a 5% export tax on
LPG.504 These taxes were not applied to exports from Tierra del Fuego and the legal
and technical customs deputy director (of the Federal Administration of Public
Income) issued opinions in 2002 and 2004 confirming that exports from Tierra del
Fuego were exempt from the new measures.505
371. In February 2004, the SoE designed an agreement with producers of natural gas
(the “Price Path Recovery Agreement”)506 that would return domestic prices to a
level capable of sustaining the hydrocarbon production industry. Total Austral agreed
to the Price Path Recovery Agreement by signing it in the beginning of April 2004.
The Price Path Recovery Agreement was approved by means of Ministry of Federal
Planning, Public Investments and Services Resolution 208/04.507 The agreement set
July 2005 as the intended date for industrial and other large consumer prices to return
to free market pricing,508 and 31 December, 2006 as the date for a return to free
market pricing for residential and small commercial consumers.509 Argentina agreed
500
See Grosjean WS1, para. 19.
501
Ministry of Economy, Resolution No. 47/02, Exhibit C-58; see also above para. 88.
502
See, for example, injunction dated 25 February 2003 In the Matter of Unión de Usuarios y Otros c/ Ministerio de
Economía e Infraestructura – Exhibit C-178; see also above para. 88.
503
Decree 310/02 dated 14 February 2002 at Exhibit C-149; also see Grosjean WS1, para. 25.
504
MoE Resolution 11/02 dated 5 March 2002 at Exhibit C-150; also see Grosjean WS1, para. 25.
505
MoE General Instruction 19/02 dated 26 March 2002 at Exhibit C-406; Legal and Technical Customs Deputy
Director Opinion 128/04 dated 21 September 2004 at Exhibit C-478.
506
Exhibit A RA-269
507
Exhibit A RA-23.
508
See Grosjean WS1, para. 42.
509
Decree 181/04 dated 16 February 2004 at Exhibit C-197; Ministry of Planning Resolution 208/04 dated 22 April
2004 at Exhibit C-208; Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 3, 893: 7 – 9.
174
to increase well-head prices applicable to industrial consumers of natural gas,
supplied either by distributors or the producers, by 35% in May 2004, and then by
16% in each of October 2004, May 2005 and July 2005. Argentina’s factual witness
described the Price Path Recovery Agreement in this way:
That the purpose of the price recomposition agreement was to take internal prices
to levels that permit to sustain hydrocarbon producers, in particular producers of
natural gas; yes, I agree with that concept.510
372. In March 2004, in response to the energy shortage expected for the winter of
2004, the Secretary of Energy passed Resolution 265/04 and Undersecretary of Fuels
passed Disposition 27/04, which are referred to collectively as the “Gas Rationing
Program”.511 The Gas Rationing Program limited exports of natural gas by producers
to the volume of natural gas exported during the same month in 2003 unless a special
exemption was granted by the Secretary of Energy, and gave the Undersecretary of
Energy the power to suspend the export of natural gas not otherwise restricted and to
redirect that gas to specific consumers on the local market.512
373. In June 2004, the Gas Rationing Program was replaced with a new program, the
“Programa Complementario de Abastecimiento al Mercado Interno de Gas
Natural.”513 It required exporting producers to supply additional volumes of natural
gas to the local market to meet any unsatisfied demand of protected customers as
determined by the SoE, before complying with their export commitments. There was
no limit on the amount of additional natural gas that the SoE could require from
exporting producers for the domestic market.514
374. Also in 2004, Argentina twice increased the value of the export tax on crude
515
oil. In May 2004, the rate of the withholding tax on crude oil was increased to
516
25%. In August 2004, Resolution 532/04 was passed and it introduced a sliding
scale of export taxes based on increases in the West Texas Intermediate (“WTI”)
510
Cross-examination of Diego Guichón, Transcript (Spanish) Day 5, 1340:17 – 22.
511
SoE Resolution 265/04 dated 26 March 2004 at Exhibit C-205 and Undersecretary of Fuels Disposition 27/04
dated 31 March 2004 at Exhibit C-206.
512
SoE Resolution 265/04 dated 26 March 2004 at Exhibit C-205 and Undersecretary of Fuels Disposition 27/04
dated 31 March 2004 at Exhibit C-206; see also Grosjean WS1, paras. 46 – 47.
513
SoE Resolution 659/04 dated 18 June 2004 at Exhibit C-215.
514
SoE Resolution 659/04 dated 18 June 2004 at Exhibit C-215; also see Grosjean WS1, para. 50.
515
MoE Resolution 337/04 dated 12 May 2004 at Exhibit C-211; MoE Resolution 532/04 dated 5 August 2004 at
Exhibit C-222; MoE Resolution 335/04 dated 12 May 2004 at Exhibit C-210.
516
See Grosjean WS1, para. 25.
175
price of crude oil.517 The withholding tax was increased to 45% when the WTI crude
price exceeded US $45 per barrel.518
375. In 2004, Argentina imposed a 20% withholding tax on the export of natural gas519
and increased the amount of the withholding tax on LPG from 5% to 20%.520
376. In late 2004, the SoE passed Resolution 1679/04, which required that crude oil
made available for export first be offered on the domestic market.521
377. In April 2005, Argentina set a hard cap on LPG prices for units sold in the
domestic markets to residential users, and a cap for the remaining sales equal to the
average price of LPG sold in the previous 24 months (the “LPG Law”).522
378. In May 2005, Argentina set gas prices under the same price reference stated by
Resolution 659/04, which introduced a protection mechanism called “Additional
Permanent Injections”.523 It is argued that these two measures abandoned the
commitment to return to free market pricing contained in the Price Path Recovery
Agreement for large consumers, by extending the set volumes agreed with the
industry and imposing lower prices than those that had been agreed with the natural
gas production sector.524
379. As already discussed, Law 19.640, passed in 1972, had established a special
customs regime for Tierra del Fuego, including an exemption from export
withholding taxes. Total’s witnesses testified that the benefits of Law 19.640 were
critical to Total’s decision to invest in the harsh Tierra del Fuego region.525 This
region had limited pipeline capacity (TGS pipeline) and high transport costs to
Buenos Aires.526 Much of the gas from this region was exported into Chile under
long-term contracts, rather than sold into the domestic market.527 In late 2006,
Argentina passed Resolution 776/06, which retroactively imposed export taxes on
517
MoE Resolution 532/04 dated 5 August 2004 at Exhibit C-222.
518
See Grosjean WS1, para. 25.
519
Decree 645/04 dated 27 May 2004 at Exhibit C-212.
520
MoE Resolution 335/04 dated 12 May 2004; see also Grosjean WS1, para. 25.
521
See Grosjean WS1, para. 51.
522
Law 26,020 dated 8 April 2005 at Exhibit A RA 170.
523
SoE Resolution 752/05 dated 23 May 2005 at Exhibit C-497.
524
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at para. 708.
525
Cross-examination of Michael Contie, Transcript (English) Day 4, 1050:7 – 1051:1; Contie WS2, paras. 18 – 23.
526
Contie WS2, para. 18.
527
Grosjean WS1, para. 12.
176
exports from Tierra del Fuego.528 This action was codified into law with the passage
of Law 26.217/07.529
380. In November 2007, Resolution 394/07 again increased the export taxes on crude
oil and fuel.530 These taxes were a direct tax on exports paid by the exporter. The
effect was to prevent producers from receiving more than US$42 per barrel of oil
produced (any and all amounts in excess of this amount is retained by Argentina).
One of the purposes of Resolution 394/07 was stated to be the protection of the
economy and consumers from increases in the price of crude oil and to capture for
the state the profits otherwise receivable by producers. The sixth recital of Resolution
394/07 states:
[T]he modification of the export rights, which are applicable to a group of those
products, is deemed convenient, in order to ensure competitiveness of the
national economy.531
381. In this arbitration, Total claims that these measures impacted its investments in
the exploration and production sector and seeks damages for what it says is a breach
of its rights under Argentina’s legal system and, as a consequence, a breach of its
legitimate expectations based on those rights. In other words, Total contends that the
fair and equitable treatment clause contained in the Argentina-French BIT clause
covers Total’s expectations that Argentina would not act contrary to the rights that it
had guaranteed to Total under both its own general legal enactments and such a
specific instrument as Total’s concession.
382. The thrust of Total’s argument is that Argentina’s measures (listed and described
in the previous pages), by eviscerating Total’s rights under the relevant legal
framework and, consequently, frustrating Total’s legitimate expectations with respect
to its investments in the exploration and production sector, breached Argentina’s
528
MoE Resolution 776/06 dated 11 October 2006 at Exhibit C-575.
529
Law 26.217 dated 16 January 2007 at Exhibit C-613.
530
MoE Resolution 394/07 dated 16 November 2007 at Exhibit C-708 (d).
531
MoE Resolution 394/07 dated 16 November 2007 at Exhibit C-708 (d).
177
obligation to treat Total fairly and equitably under the BIT.532 For the purpose of
discussion, Total divides the numerous measures by their alleged impact on each
expectation that it identifies in relation to its investments in the exploration and
production sector: expectations with respect to the domestic sale of natural gas;
expectations with respect to the export of natural gas; expectations related to the sale
of crude oil; expectations related to taxes on crude oil exports; and expectations
related to pricing of LPG.
383. All Total’s expectations were, therefore, based on the following rights which
Total is entitled to as a holder of a production concession: full property rights over
the hydrocarbons produced, including the right freely to dispose of all of those
hydrocarbons set out in Article 6 of the Concession Decree and the right to be
compensated by the government for limitations of those rights pursuant to Article 8
of the Concession Decree. Furthermore, Total lists its rights under its concession,
referring to the (domestic and international) sale of the different products: as to the
domestic sale of crude oil, full property rights over the hydrocarbons produced,
including the right freely to dispose of all of those hydrocarbons (Article 6 of the
Concession Decree and Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law); as to the international
sale of crude oil, the right freely to export crude oil without restrictions (Article 6 of
the Concession Decree which incorporates by reference Decree 1589/89); as to the
domestic sale of natural gas, full property rights over hydrocarbons produced,
including the right freely to dispose of all of those hydrocarbons under Article 6 of
the Concession Decree and Article 5 of Decree 2411/91 (the so-called Reconversion
Decree); and the right to receive compensation for government-imposed limitations
on these rights, enshrined in Article 8 of the Concession Decree.
384. In this respect the Tribunal considers it useful to briefly recall the content of
Article 8 of the Concession Decree. This provision incorporates by reference Article
6 of Decree 1589/89. As to the restrictions to the export of petroleum, Article 6 of
this Decree incorporates by reference Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law. More
specifically, Article 6 of Decree 1589/89 provides that in the case of restrictions on
the export of crude oil and/or its derivatives, under Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons
Law compensation should be equivalent to an amount per product unit that is not
532
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 61; Total’s Memorial, para. 372 ff.
178
below that of petroleum and petroleum by-products of a similar nature. As to the
limitations on the right freely to dispose of natural gas, Article 6 of Decree 1589/89
provides for compensation amounting to a price not below 35% of the international
price per cubic meter of Arabian light oil, 34° API (see also Article 17 of the
Concession Decree).
387. The second measure that Total claims to have impacted its rights was the forced
conversion at a rate of one US dollar to one peso (“pesification”) of the reference
price component of the Consumer Gas Tariff, which Total asserts compounded the
533
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 686; Law 25,561/02 dated 7 January 2002 at Exhibit C-13, Article 11. It is
important to note that Total does not complain that the other Measures (abolishment of the convertibility system
and the “corralito” – restrictions on the ability to withdraw funds from banks) violated its treaty rights.
534
Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 3, 889:13 – 16.
535
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 689.
179
effects of the redenomination.536 Total alleges that the gas regulatory structure was
designed to ensure that ENARGAS passed through the well-head price (freely
negotiated between the producer and distributor) to the consumer through the
Consumer Gas Tariff. However, according to Total, the pesification of the well-head
prices paid for natural gas in 2001 artificially suppressed the price that Total’s
customers could pay for natural gas.537 Distributors could not pay producers, like
Total, more than the pesified well-head gas price.538
388. The third measure allegedly affecting Total’s right to freely dispose of the natural
gas that it produced, and the measure claimed by Total to be the critical step, was
Argentina’s decision in May 2002 to freeze the maximum reference price that natural
gas distributors could charge to consumers for gas at the 2001 pesified levels.539
Total argues that this step codified the depressed well-head price of gas created by
the measures. When ENARGAS later indicated a willingness to review tariffs, the
Argentine courts enjoined ENARGAS from revising upward the Consumer Gas
Tariff.540 Total submits that: the ENARGAS resolutions suggest that ENARGAS was
aware of the difference between the cost of producing natural gas and the price
consumers would have been required to pay for it under the Gas Law; ENARGAS
felt unable to take the costs of producers into account; and ENARGAS felt the
existing situation was incompatible with a truly competitive market for natural gas.541
Total says that these measures resulted in hydrocarbon producers shouldering the
cost of the recovery of Argentina’s economy by having them subsidize low energy
prices.542 Finally, on this point, Total submits that Argentina’s measures were not
necessary – its goals of relieving the effects of the crisis could have been more
536
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 690 – 694.
537
LECG Report on Damages dated 15 May 2007 at Annex R (i) to the Reply, paras. 198 – 200.
538
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 692.
539
ENARGAS Resolution 2612/02 dated 24 June 2002 at Exhibit C-155; ENARGAS Resolution 2665/02 dated 15
August 2002 at Exhibit C-158; ENARGAS Resolution 2614/02 dated 24 June 2002 at Exhibit C-34(1); ENARGAS
Resolution 2653/02 dated 22 August 2002 at Exhibit C-34(2); ENARGAS Resolution 2654/02 dated 22 August
2002 at Exhibit C-34(3); ENARGAS Resolution 2660/02 dated 22 August 2002 at Exhibit C-34(4); and ENARGAS
Resolution 2663/03 dated 22 August 2004 at Exhibit C-34(5).
540
Injunction issued by Judge Rodríguez Vidal, File No. 162,765/02 dated 25 February 2003, “Union de Usuarios y
Consumidores y Otros v. Ministerio de Economía y Intraestructura” at Exhibit C-178; see also above para. 88.
541
ENARGAS Resolution 2614/02 dated 24 June 2002 at Exhibit C-34(1); ENARGAS Resolution 2660/02 dated
22 August 2002 at Exhibit C-34(4); and ENARGAS Resolution 2703/02 dated 25 September 2002 at Exhibit C-
34(6).
542
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 699.
180
efficiently met by providing impoverished residential consumers with a direct
subsidy.543
389. Total submits that all of the above measures breached Total’s treaty rights by
frustrating its legitimate, investment-backed expectations that it would enjoy the right
to freely dispose of natural gas produced.544 Total submits that: Argentina had
promised that it would enjoy the right to freely dispose of the natural gas it produced;
Total relied on that promise when it agreed to the conversion of Contract 19.944 and
made substantial investments in Argentina; the measures and their effects breached
that promise; and that Total has suffered damages as a result.
390. In particular, Total contends that Article 11 of the Emergency Law, which
provided:
That monetary provisions payable since the day of the enactment hereof, deriving
from private contracts executed between individuals, in dollars or any other
foreign currency, or which contain adjustment clauses in dollars or any other
foreign currency be cancelled in pesos at currency board of one peso equal to one
US dollar …
543
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 701.
544
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at paras. 702 – 709.
545
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at para. 702 – 703.
546
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at para. 704.
547
Cross-examination of Diego Guichón, Transcript (Spanish) Day 5, 1339:5 – 1343:7.
181
of market prices within the context of the Price Path Recovery Agreement, which not
only failed to compensate producers, but also was not implemented by Argentina.548
392. Finally, Total confirms its position that it did not waive its claims to damages for
Argentina’s manipulation of the price of natural gas by signing the Price Path
Recovery Agreement. Total submits that such a waiver was initially requested by
Argentina, but that no such waiver was included in the final agreement.553
548
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at paras. 705 -709.
549
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 712.
550
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at para. 713.
551
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at para. 714.
552
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at para. 715; Cross-examination of Diego Guichón, Transcript (Spanish) Day 5,
1367:20 – 1368:5; Concession Decree, Exhibit C-67.
553
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief at paras. 717 – 718.
554
Concession Decree (Exhibit C-67), Article 6.
555
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 719.
556
Cross-examination of Diego Guichón, Transcript (Spanish) Day 5, 1367:20 – 1368:5.
182
by the requirement that contracts for the export of natural gas be reviewed in advance
by the state.557 Total says that it signed various export contracts after the Concession
Decree was issued and that the requests for exports under each of those contracts was
reviewed and approved by the Argentine Secretary of Energy. Total considers that
these approvals constituted express guarantees by the state that Total’s export rights
would be respected.
394. Total submits that the Gas Rationing Program imposed limits on all natural gas
exports by automatically limiting exports from producers for amounts that exceeded
the volume of natural gas exported during the same month in 2003, and arrogated the
power to suspend any export of natural gas not otherwise restricted and to redirect
that gas to specific consumers on the local market. In June 2004, the Gas Rationing
Program was replaced with a new program, which required that producers exporting
natural gas supply additional volumes of natural gas to the local market to meet any
unsatisfied demand of protected customers before being permitted to comply with
their export commitments.558 Total claims that the result of this resolution was to
fully restrict exports.559
395. As a result of Undersecretary of Fuels Disposition 27/04, Total says that Total
Austral had to suspend its exports to Colbun SA, a power generation facility in Chile,
under the terms of a contract known as Colbun 2, because the automatic export
limitation limited the amounts permitted to be exported to the levels exported in the
same month of 2003. In 2003, Total had not exported substantial amounts under the
new contract.560 Total submits that it suffered losses with respect to the natural gas,
which was originally destined for export to Chile, that instead was sold to specific
consumers in the domestic market below export price.561 Total states that Argentina
put Total in a position where it had no choice but to breach the contracts with its
Chilean counterparties and receive as much as two-thirds less for its natural gas.562
396. Total submits that Argentina’s defences with respect to its refusal to compensate
Total for its losses are inadequate. Total submits that Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons
557
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 720.
558
Secretary of Energy Resolution 659/04; Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 725.
559
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 725.
560
Grosjean WS1, para. 48.
561
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 726.
562
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 726; also see Grosjean WS1 at para. 49 et seq.
183
Law, even if applicable, does not release Argentina from the obligation to
compensate Total for its losses. Second, in response to Argentina’s argument that
Total had suffered no damages because it was granted relief in the Sierra Chata
arbitration against AES Gener, Total submits that this arbitration was of no
consequence as it related only to Total’s very small Sierra Chata interest.563
397. Total also claims losses with respect to mandatory renegotiation of its crude oil
contracts. Total states that Article 11 of the Emergency Law, which pesified all
private contracts at a one to one ratio, changed the price terms of a number of short
term contracts between Total and various refineries for the sale of crude oil. Total
notes that it never signed an agreement with the Argentine government concerning
the production of crude oil and that it, therefore, had the unrestricted rights of free
disposal and exemption from export duties under the Concession Decree.564 Total
submits that it was unable to recover the full value of the altered price terms and that
it claims for those losses occasioned by Argentina’s direct actions.565
398. Total submits that Argentina imposed export taxes on crude oil, which had the
purpose of manipulating and reducing the domestic price of oil. Total says that
Resolution 397/07 effectively prevented Total from receiving more than US$42 per
barrel of oil produced, despite the then-current prices that exceeded US$100 per
barrel.566 The export taxes were taxes payable by Total to Argentina.
399. Total submits that the export taxes violated the export guarantees of the
Concession Decree and the Deregulation Decrees, which required one year’s notice
of, and compensation for, any restriction or duty imposed on the export of liquid
hydrocarbons.567 Total says that the export taxes damaged it in two ways. First, the
563
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 728 & 732; see also Cross-examination of Pablo Spiller and Manuel Abdala,
Transcript (English) Day 8, 2432:20 – 2433:9.
564
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 733 – 735; Cross-examination of Yves Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 4,
981:19 – 982:1.
565
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 736.
566
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 737.
567
Decree 310/02 dated 14 February 2002 at Exhibit C-149; Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 739.
184
export taxes impacted the price it received for its exports of crude oil. Second, the
export taxes impacted the domestic price of crude oil by limiting the amount that
local refineries would pay: the export price less the export tax. Total refers to this as
the export parity issue.568
400. Total also submits that the export taxes constitute unlawful restrictions of Total’s
full property and free disposal rights under the Concession Decree. Total submits that
Argentina breached this promise. Further, Total submits that the reference within that
Section 17 of the Concession Decree to Article 519 of the Argentine Civil Code
created an additional, express promise to compensate Total in the event that
Argentina prevents Total from enjoying its full property rights.569
401. As already discussed, Argentina first imposed export taxes in 2002, and then
increased those taxes in 2004 and again in 2007. Total submits that the purpose of
these taxes was to insulate the domestic market for crude oil from the impact of free
market price movement, and to take, for the benefit of the government, the
“extraordinary” profits enjoyed by exporters as a result of the rise in the price of
crude oil.570
402. Argentina points out that Article 9 of the Concession Decree states that
concessionaires are subject to the general fiscal regime applicable in the country.
With respect to this defence, Total asserts that this interpretation of Article 9 is
incorrect. According to Total, Article 9 provides that the general fiscal regime does
not apply when the fiscal legislation is discriminatory, i.e. when it applies only to
hydrocarbons producers for the purpose of restricting the price of their product.
Second, according to Total, while Article 9 is very general, the prohibitions on
limitations of exports and on restrictions on full ownership and free disposal are quite
specific; any potential conflict between the provisions should be resolved in favour of
the specific provision.571 Third, Total submits that an agreement to subject oneself to
a general tax regime is not a waiver of rights under international law with respect to
the imposition of a particular tax or taxes, if the tax was (or the taxes were) adopted
568
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 740; Direct Examination of Yves Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 3, 896:17
– 899:19.
569
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 752 – 753.
570
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 741; Cross-examination of Yves Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 4, 979:17
– 20.
571
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 758.
185
in bad faith or for unlawful purposes.572 Total argues that the export taxes are
discriminatory, confiscatory and their purpose is the manipulation of the national
hydrocarbons market.
403. Total claims that it suffered similar losses in its LPG and gas export businesses as
a result of the export taxes introduced by Argentina.573
404. Total also submits that Argentina exacerbated the effects of the export taxes by
eliminating the long standing exemption from such taxes applicable to Tierra del
Fuego. Initially, the general export taxes imposed on oil and gas did not apply to
exports from Tierra del Fuego. In late 2006, Argentina retroactively (to 2002)
imposed export taxes on exports from Tierra del Fuego. Total says that its decision to
invest in Tierra del Fuego depended on the tax exemption for exports from this
region, as it planned to export much of the gas from this remote and geographically
extreme area to closer, more easily accessible markets.574 As a result, it says the
decision to impose export taxes from this region violated the promises contained in
Law 19.640, as confirmed by the 1981 Customs Code575 and violated Total’s rights
under Article 3 of the BIT.576
572
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 759.
573
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 763; MoE Resolution 11/02 dated 2 March 2002 and effective 30 September
2002 at Exhibit C-150; and Decree 645/04 dated 27 May 2004 at Exhibit C-212.
574
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 764 – 768.
575
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 766.
576
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 770 – 773.
577
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 778; Law 26.020 dated 8 April 2005 at Exhibit A RA 170.
578
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 779.
186
waived its rights to compensation and that Argentina should compensate it for the
damages flowing from the LPG Law.579
4. Argentina’s Position
406. Through the description above of Total’s allegations with respect to the impact of
Argentina’s measures on its investments in exploration and production of
Hydrocarbons, the Tribunal has already set forth Argentina’s position concerning
Total’s claims. This notwithstanding, for the sake of completeness, the Tribunal will
briefly sum up Argentina’s arguments in the following paragraphs.
407. In respect of Total’s claim as to its investments in this sector, the thrust of
Argentina’s defence is that all of Total’s rights under the concession, which are
described by Total in its submissions as absolute and unrestricted, are instead subject
to the fundamental principle of the priority of domestic market supply enshrined in
the Hydrocarbons Law.580 In this respect Argentina argues that:
(a) liquid hydrocarbons export is subject to prior supply to the domestic market;
(b) the Argentine Executive may allow the export of hydrocarbons or by-products
not required to satisfy the domestic market, provided that such exports are
performed are [sic] reasonable commercial prices; and
(c) in the event of allowing the export, the Argentine Executive may establish the
criteria governing transactions in the domestic market to assure self-supply and
an equitable participation of all producers in such supply.”581
408. The same is true also as to the export of gas and LPG pursuant to the Gas Law
and to the LPG Law, respectively.582 It is Argentina’s position that “… Presidential
Decree No. 214/94 establishes that the members of the Consortium (TOTAL among
them) enjoy title to and free availability of hydrocarbons but always pursuant to the
provisions of the Hydrocarbons Law.”583 Under Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law
(that the Concession Decree explicitly incorporates) broad powers are granted to the
579
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 780.
580
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 563.
581
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 100.
582
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 101.
583
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 103.
187
Executive such as those of establishing restrictions on exports, quotas and domestic
prices.584
409. Moreover, Argentina argues that Total is not entitled to receive compensation for
the restrictions on gas exports provided for Article 8 of the Concession Decree, in
light of the Executive’s ability under Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law, to delink
domestic prices of hydrocarbons from international prices “when oil international
prices are significantly increased due to exceptional circumstances … ”.585 According
to Argentina, “[T]hen, if the crude oil international price does not serve to fix
domestic market prices, it can neither serve as a reference to fix prices of gas sale to
the domestic market.”586 Furthermore, the conclusion in April 2004 of the Acta
Acuerdo between producers and the Executive, with the objective of restoring the
natural gas price, supports the fact that Argentina could fix the domestic price of gas
without having regard to its international price. In fact, the determination of domestic
prices of natural gas agreed under the Acta Acuerdo of 2004 took actual exploitation
costs of producers (rather than gas international price) as a benchmark. In turn, actual
exploitation costs were based on a SoE’s study on producers’ costs for exploration
and production of natural gas.587
410. As to the tax exemption claimed by Total, Argentina argues that there was no tax
stability agreement with Total and its partners. On the contrary, in accordance with
the terms of the concession, Total and its partners were subject to the general tax
system.588 It is Argentina’s position that the export duties introduced by Article 6 of
the Emergency Law were lawful and a legitimate exercise of State sovereignty not
giving rise to an obligation to compensate.589 Moreover, according to Argentina, the
charges on hydrocarbons export are reasonable in the context of Argentina’s crisis
during 2001/02, and also taking into account various surrounding circumstances.
Among these were the abandonment of the currency board system, the severe
584
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 104-106.
585
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 109-113.
586
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 114.
587
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 115-116.
588
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 131-136.
589
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 137-143 and Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, paras. 591 ff.
188
devaluation of the Argentine peso and the extraordinary increase of the crude oil
price in the international market.590
411. As to the elimination of Tierra del Fuego’s tax exemption, Argentina first objects
to the Tribunal’s jurisdiction on the basis of the “fork-in-the-road” provision
contained in Article 8(2) of Argentina-France BIT.591 In the event that the Tribunal
asserts jurisdiction to hear Total’s claim, Argentina suggests that the claim has to be
rejected for the following reasons. First of all, Law 19.640 expressly set forth the
possibility that a successive law could eliminate the exemption concerning Tierra del
Fuego. This occurred in 2007 through the enactment of Law no. 26.217. Second,
there was no tax stability agreement with Total that guaranteed against the
elimination of the tax exemption on exports from Tierra del Fuego such that its actual
elimination could not have frustrated Total’s legitimate expectation.592
412. Total claims that it has been treated in an unfair and inequitable manner contrary
to Article 3 of the Argentina-France BIT insofar as, by enacting the measures
referenced above, Argentina limited Total’s right to freely dispose of all
hydrocarbons produced.
413. In Total’s view, Argentina had specifically guaranteed this general right, and all
of the above-mentioned rights invoked by Total, in various instruments of general
and specific character, that is, the Concession Decree, which incorporates the terms
of the Acta Acuerdo agreed between Total and Argentina, the Deregulation Decrees,
the Reconversion Decree and the Gas Law. All of these rights (including Total’s right
to be compensated for limitations on its right to freely dispose of all hydrocarbons
that it produced) are enshrined in Argentina’s general enactments, as well as in a
specific bilateral arrangement agreed by Argentina with the investor, namely the
Concession Decree.
590
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 144-149.
591
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 150-159
592
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 160-166.
189
414. According to the Claimant, Argentina – under its own legal system – promised
that these rights would be respected . Therefore, all of Argentina’s ‘promises’,
contained in the Concession Decree, which in turn incorporates the relevant
provisions of Argentina’s law related to the Exploration and Production of
Hydrocarbons mentioned above, created Total’s legitimate expectations that this
regime would remain stable during the lifetime of its investment, and that any
detrimental change would be compensated as was provided for by Argentina’s legal
system.593
415. The Claimant contends that the measures enacted by Argentina as of January
2002 limit rights guaranteed to Total under Argentina’s own legal system and
specifically under the Concession Decree. Because the Claimant had relied upon
these rights (including the right to be compensated in the event of their limitation)
when it made its investment, these measures are in breach of the fair and equitable
treatment clause in the BIT since they impaired Total’s investment without
compensation for Total.
416. Due to the totality of the measures affecting its investments in exploration and
production of hydrocarbons, Total complains that it has suffered damages amounting
to a total net of US$575.4 million. The total net losses that Total claims to have
suffered are articulated in the LECG Addendum Report as follows: a) as to natural
gas US$192.9 million (up to December 2006); b) as to crude oil U.S.$260.6 million
(up to December 2006 and projections of future damages to 2012); and c) as to LPG
US$121.9. million (up to 2006 plus projections of future damages until 2012).594
417. As already emphasized in relation to Total’s claim concerning TGN, the import
of the Argentina’s law is crucial for at least two reasons. On the one hand, according
to Article 8(4) of the BIT, Argentina’s domestic law is part of the law to be applied
by the Tribunal, which accordingly has jurisdiction to interpret that law. On the other
hand, the Tribunal has to identify the precise content of Total’s pre-existing rights
under the Concession Decree, as governed by Argentina’s relevant legislation and its
amendments from time to time, in order to establish whether the measures were in
593
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 681, 684.
594
See LECG Report on Damages, at p. 33-58; LECG Addendum on Damages, Table II at p. 8.
190
breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard, having frustrated Total’s legal
expectations based on those rights.
419. The Hydrocarbons Law is dated 1967 and covers all hydrocarbons (both liquid-
oil and non liquid-gas). It was intended to regulate a state-run or controlled sector,
reflecting that, at the relevant time, the state owned YPF, had the monopoly in the
sector. The successive decrees of 1989 (from which the privatization proceeded and
on which Total’s concession was based) reversed the system, without however
abrogating the Hydrocarbons Law. On the contrary, the “Deregulation decrees” of
1989 and, in particular, decree 1589/89 refer to various articles of that law. After the
Emergency, Argentina again enacted stricter regulations, weakening the liberalized
regime created in 1989. Argentina invokes its powers under the Hydrocarbons Law
to sustain the legality of the measures challenged by Total.596
420. A core question which the Tribunal has to deal with is whether, under
Argentina’s legal system as it existed up until 2002, the producers’ right to freely
dispose of crude oil and natural gas entails both the right to sell these commodities to
anyone they choose and the right to freely fix their prices. The starting point of this
analysis is an examination of the content of the Concession Decree in which Total’s
right of free disposal of hydrocarbons and the right to be compensated are
specifically enshrined.
595
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 636.
596
The Tribunal notes that, by making its investments in Argentina’s gas sector, Total was aware that the
Hydrocarbons Law was the fundamental regulation of the natural gas industry. The Information Memorandum
dated September 1992 in respect of the IPO of Gas del Estado, submitted to the Tribunal by Total as Exhibit C-50,
made clear during the privatization process that “… The Hydrocarbons Law continues to be the primary legislation
governing the upstream industry…” (para. 1.3 at page 6)
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421. The Concession Decree stated that Total, as one of the holders of the
hydrocarbons exploration and production concession in Tierra del Fuego, holds “the
ownership and the free availability” of the hydrocarbons produced “under” the
Hydrocarbons Law and the Deregulations Decrees (i.e., Decrees No. 1055/89, No.
1589/89, and No. 2411/91). According to the Concession Decree (Article 6), the
rights of the holders of the concession are explicitly made subject to the
Hydrocarbons Law and the above referenced decrees. Moreover, according to Article
8 of the Concession Decree, every restriction on the “free availability” of the
hydrocarbons produced, granted to the holders of the concession pursuant to Article
6, entitles them to receive for the time of the restriction an amount that shall not be
less than that determined under Article 6 of Decree No. 1589/89.
422. In turn, Article 6 of Decree No. 1589/89 envisages two different types of
restrictions on producers’ rights, each of which entails a different amount of
compensation. In the case of government imposed restrictions on the export of crude
oil, compensation is due to oil producers, refiners and exporters in accordance with
Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law. The text of Article 6, paragraph 1 of Decree No.
1589/89 (quoted above at paragraph 354) provides that this compensation shall be
equivalent to an amount, per product unit, not less than that of petroleum and
petroleum by-products of a similar nature. By contrast, according to Article 6,
paragraph 2 of the same decree, in the case of government imposed restrictions on
the right freely to dispose of natural gas (which is not restricted to cases of shortages
in the domestic market), compensation shall be an amount not less than that of 35%
of the international price of a cubic meter of Arabian Light Petroleum of 34° API.
423. The Concession Decree refers, therefore, to different regulations and standards of
compensation under the Hydrocarbons Law and the applicable Deregulation Decrees.
On the one hand, it refers to limitations on the export of petroleum and petroleum by-
products, and, on the other hand, to restrictions on the right of free disposal of natural
gas.
424. As to government imposed restrictions to the export of crude oil and its by-
products, Article 6 of Decree No. 1589/89 provides that: a) the Executive has to give
12 months’ notice of projected restrictions prior to their coming into force (paragraph
3); and b) in case of such a restriction, Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law shall be
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applicable “by virtue of which producers, refiners, and exporters shall receive, per
product unit an amount not less than that of petroleum, and derivatives of similar
nature.”597 However, Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law, to which Article 6 of
Decree No. 1589/89 specifically refers, actually provides for more detailed
regulation. According to Article 6, paragraph 3, first sentence of the Hydrocarbons
Law, (quoted above at paragraph 348) when national production does not cover
domestic needs, the Executive may fix the crude oil price in the domestic market to
be equal to that established for crude oil produced by the state owned company,
which, in any case, cannot be lower than the price of imported crude oil of a similar
condition (“de condiciones similares”). However, this rule shall not be applied when
imported crude oil prices significantly increase due to exceptional circumstances
(Article 6, para 3, second sentence). In this case, international crude oil prices shall
not be taken into account when fixing the price in the domestic market. Instead
domestic prices shall be based on the actual exploration costs, any amortization and a
reasonable interest on updated and depreciated investments.
597
The meaning of this phrase is obscure and has not been clarified by the parties during the arbitration. In any
case, as specified hereafter at paragraph 434, the Tribunal has found that this provision is not applicable in casu.
193
hydrocarbons shall be mandatory” (Article 6, paragraph 2). Conversely, the
Executive shall authorise the export of hydrocarbons and their by-products provided
that they are not required to satisfy domestic needs (Article 6, paragraph 4). Finally,
Article 6 paragraph 3, which is expressly incorporated in Total’s concession, grants
the government the power to fix the domestic sale price of crude oil in case of
domestic supply problems, without regard to the international price of crude oil.
426. Some conclusions can be drawn from this overview. It is true that Article 9 of
Decree No. 1212/89 provided that “oil prices shall be freely agreed upon” and also
that the regulation implementing Articles 2 and 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law contained
in Decree No. 1055/89 was aimed at replacing governmental intervention in price
setting with a market-oriented mechanism of setting prices based on supply and
demand. However, it is also true that Article 6 of Decree No. 1589/89 expressly
incorporates the rule contained in Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law. Therefore,
even after the enactment of the Deregulation Decrees, the government reserved to
itself the power to restrict producers’ rights freely to dispose of petroleum and
petroleum by-products both domestically and internationally. Thus, under
Argentina’s legal regime (as it existed when Total acquired the concession), the
government could fix the domestic price of those products (even without having
regard to the international price in certain circumstances). Further, it was required
that the petroleum produced be used to meet domestic needs first, such that
petroleum could be exported only if the domestic market did not need it.
427. In light of the above, Total’s right freely to dispose of petroleum does not entail
the right freely to fix its prices or to export it without limitations. Contrary to Total’s
statements that “the Concession Decree lays out the guarantee of export without
restriction as set out in Decree No. 1589, which is incorporated by reference in
Article 6 of the Concession Decree”598 and that “[I]n the Concession Decree, Total
was promised the right to full ownership and free disposal of the crude oil it
produced under the relevant concessions,”599 there was no guarantee that oil could be
exported or absolute freedom to negotiate the commercialization price under the
concession.
598
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 748.
599
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 733.
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6. Measures Challenged by the Claimant Relating to Crude Oil
428. With regard to the domestic sale of crude oil and crude oil by-products, the
Tribunal notes that the measures challenged by Total are the pesification of its long-
term contracts with distributors (Article 11 of the Emergency Law)600 and the
imposition by Argentina of export taxes on crude oil starting from January 2002.601
429. As concerns pesification, the Tribunal recalls its findings in respect of Total’s
claim concerning TGN.602 The pesification was a measure of general application to
all sectors of Argentina’s economy and to all legal obligations expressed in monetary
terms within the country. It was a devaluation and redenomination of the national
currency within the monetary sovereignty of the State. Moreover, this measure was
taken in good faith in a situation of recognized economic emergency of an
exceptional nature. In this context, a series of measures, having harsh effects on the
population (such as the blocking of withdrawals from banks – corralito), was taken
in order to avoid a general collapse of the economy, and hence of the State and
society, and to foster a progressive recovery. As already stressed by the Tribunal, this
measure and its application cannot be considered as being unfair in the
circumstances, considering the inherent flexibility of fair and equitable treatment
standard. Unfairness must be evaluated in respect of the measures challenged, in the
light of both their objective effects and the reasons that have led to their adoption
(subjective good faith, proportionality to the aims and legitimacy of those aims
according to general practice). It is, therefore, not possible to share Total’s view,
developed in particular in the LECG Report, that pesification was a breach of Total’s
treaty rights, the effects of which must be factored for in the calculation of damages
suffered by Total for which it claims compensation under the BIT. Such changes in
general legislation, in the absence of specific stabilization promises to the foreign
investor, reflect a legitimate exercise of the host State’s governmental powers that are
not prevented by, and do not breach, the fair and equitable treatment obligation under
600
Total refers to pesification and its effects when it claims that its freedom to negotiate domestic prices with
distributors was suppressed, see above para. 390.
601
See Total’s claim as set forth above paras. 397-404.
602
See above paras. 163-165.
195
a BIT. The general character, good faith and absence of discrimination by Argentina,
as well as the exceptional circumstances that led Argentina to adopt the measures at
issue, in the Tribunal’s view, objectively preclude a finding that Argentina thereby
breached the fair and equitable treatment obligations incumbent on it under the BIT.
430. As mentioned previously, the pesification of the economy, that is the elimination
of the fixed link to the US dollar, necessarily also entailed the de-dollarisation of
private contracts and public service tariffs The 1:1 rate reflected the impossibility for
holders of debt in US dollars to pay the market rate for the US dollar when all of their
claims, income, etc., had been converted forcibly and necessarily at the official rate
while the peso had devaluated by two-thirds. The de-dollarisation of contracts was
thus a non-discriminatory measure of general application applied to all the sectors of
the economy and to all inhabitants of Argentina. The Tribunal notes that the
Emergency Law, while having pesified all private contracts, provided that they could
be renegotiated to mitigate negative effects. In fact, Total renegotiatied existing crude
oil contracts with its customers as reported by the LECG Report on Damages.603
431. Therefore the Tribunal is of the view that, contrary to Total’s claim, the
pesification of oil domestic sale contracts does not entail a breach of the fair and
equitable standard treatment by Argentina. As a consequence, Total’s claim of
indemnification of losses due to the pesification of the domestic oil prices must be
dismissed.
432. As to the export taxes on crude oil imposed by Argentina as from January 2002,
Article 6 of the Emergency Law authorised the government to increase the direct
taxes on the export of hydrocarbons to increase the government revenues needed to
address the emergency in the banking and financial sector. According to the
Claimant, following Argentina’s enactment of successive measures (implementing
603
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 170 at p. 89.
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Article 6 of the Emergency Law), “[d]epending on the international price of oil, the
nominal rates of export withholding taxes now range from 25% to 45%”.604
433. Total complains both of the direct effects of the imposition of crude oil export
taxes on its exports and of their indirect effects on its domestic sales. According to
Total, the export taxes on crude oil had the general effect of curtailing exports and
were “in violation of the export guarantees of the Concession Decree and the
Deregulation Decrees requiring one year’s notice and compensation for any
restriction or duty imposed on the export of liquid hydrocarbons”.605 However, Total
has not alleged that the imposition of those export taxes has actually interfered with
or restricted existing or planned crude oil export contracts. Total rather complains in
abstracto of the general effect of those taxes as limiting exports and claims that
Argentina’s introduction of the export taxes amounts to an export “restriction” that is
in breach of its rights under the Concession Decree.
434. In any case, as already outlined above at paragraphs 426-427, Argentina did not
grant Total absolute freedom to export crude oil under the concession. Total has not
proved (nor in fact claims) that Argentina has actually enacted “restrictions” on
exports of crude oil that specifically and in concreto have impaired Total’s crude oil
exports. The export taxes challenged cannot be considered as “restrictions” under
Argentina’s relevant regime. They are rather fiscal measures (to which oil producing
and exporting countries normally have recourse) that are generally applicable to
crude oil exporters (and not addressed specifically to Total nor especially affecting
Total’s export contracts). Moreover, these export taxes are part of “general fiscal
legislation” to which Total is subject in accordance with Article 9, first sentence, of
the Concession Decree. Total’s argument that the export taxes are contrary to Article
9, second sentence of the Concession Decree appears to be groundless. According to
this provision, Total is not subject to “the provisions that may be imposed in a
discriminatory way on or specifically in relation with the person, the judicial
condition, or the activity of the permit holder or the assets intended for the execution
of the respective areas.”. This means that Total cannot be subject to taxes and duties
imposed only on its operations or specifically linked to the areas to be exploited by
Total under the relevant concession, such as local and provincial taxes. By contrast
604
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 175 at p. 92.
605
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 739.
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Total may be subject, in accordance with Article 9, first sentence, to state taxes of
general application, as are crude oil export taxes, which are not contrary to Article 9,
second sentence of the Concession Decree. Therefore, by imposing them Argentina
has not acted in breach of its obligation to accord fair and equitable treatment to
Total’s investments to which Total is entitled under Article 3 of the BIT.
435. The principal complaint of Total as to crude oil export taxes is, rather, the alleged
indirect negative effect of such taxes on the domestic price of oil. Total contends that
the measures imposing export taxes on crude oil had the effect of reducing its
domestic price, limiting Total’s right to sell crude oil (and crude oil by-products) at a
freely negotiated price in the domestic market.606 Also this argument is not
convincing for the following reasons. First, the imposition by Argentina of crude oil
export taxes does not prevent Total from selling crude oil (and crude oil by-products)
in the domestic market (or abroad) or from choosing its counterparties. Secondly,
even if it were accepted that the export taxes had the indirect effect of reducing the
domestic price of oil as Total alleges, this is not contrary to Total’s right of free
disposal of crude oil (and crude oil by-products). This is because this right was
subject to the potential for government intervention in accordance with Article 6 of
the Hydrocarbons Law. This law provided explicitly that the Executive may fix the
domestic price of crude oil in case of a significant increase in the price of imported
crude oil (which obviously reflects international prices) due to exceptional
circumstances. Thirdly, the crude oil export taxes imposed by Argentina had the
purpose (as stated in the Emergency Law) of providing additional resources to the
State in the crisis situation taking place in 2002. The further increase in 2007 was
intended to recoup resources from the extra profits of exporters and specifically to
disconnect the domestic oil market from the extraordinary increase in international
prices.607 Total asserts that this last tax “is discriminatory, confiscatory and has its
purpose the manipulation of the national hydrocarbons market”.608 Absent any
evidence that this “disconnection” was arbitrary or confiscatory, this alleged purpose
606
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 740 ff. and LECG Report on Damages, para. 178 ff. See the text of Article
9 of the Concession Decree at paragraph 359 above.
607
See the Preamble of Resolution 394/07, at Exhibit C-708(d).
608
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 759.
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is irrelevant.609 Nor can Total invoke any promise by Argentina to be exempt from
application of its general fiscal legislation because the concession does not promise
such fiscal stability. Additionally, the Tribunal notes that such “windfall profit taxes”
on oil are currently common and have been introduced in many oil producing
countries including in the industrialized world.610
436. For all of the above-mentioned reasons, the Tribunal concludes that the crude oil
export taxes were not enacted by Argentina in violation of Total’s rights and,
consequently, that the taxes are not in violation of Total’s legitimate and reasonable
expectations. Thus the measures are not in breach of the fair and equitable treatment
standard.
437. With respect to the elimination of the tax exemption, Total complains that
Argentina, by Resolution 776/06,611 from the time of the enactment of the Emergency
Law, retroactively eliminated the exemption from customs duties that was applicable
to production in Tierra del Fuego.612 Total complains that Argentina thereby
“eviscerated the immunity from customs duties it had guaranteed to Total with
respect to investments made in Tierra del Fuego.”613
438. In fact, Resolution 776/06 eliminated retroactively the exemption by stating that
Article 6 of the Emergency Law intended ab origine to subject all oil exports,
including those from Tierra del Fuego, to the newly established export tax.
609
In its Counter-Memorial (at p. 157), Argentina has supplied a graphic (shown also as a slide at the Hearings in
the merits) which indicates that, when the export tax was introduced in 2002, the price of oil was around $20. In
2006, the price increased to more than $60, of which about $20 went into taxes.
610
See Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, para. 617 listing a number of oil producing and exporting countries which
have adopted such increases in recent years. See also The Economist, 20 Sept. 2008, Special Report on
Globalization, p. 18. See T. Wälde, A. Kolo, Investor-State Disputes: The Interface Between Treaty-Based
International Investment Protection and Fiscal Sovereignty, 35 Intertax (2007) 424, 443. The two authors point to
‘normal’ state practice in tax matters as a yardstick to judge whether or not host states’ conduct in tax matters is in
breach of an investment treaty regime.
611
See Exhibit C-575.
612
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 764 ff.
613
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 765.
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Fuego, Total also complains of the express elimination of the exemption granted in
Law 19.640 of 1972 by Law 26.217 in 2007. 614
440. As to the elimination of the exemption granted in Law 19.640 of 1972 by Law
26.217 of 2007,615 the Tribunal does not see any basis for concluding that the 1972
Tierra del Fuego exemption could not be revoked by a later statutory enactment. The
1972 Law did not guarantee any minimum period of application (it had remained in
force in any case for 30 years). On the contrary, Article 13(c) of Law 19.640
expressly stated that future taxes would be applicable if the legislative acts
introducing them explicitly provided that this was the case. Therefore, the
elimination in 2007 of the exemption from customs duties concerning Tierra del
Fuego is applicable to Total (and its investments) since Law 26.217 of 2007
explicitly so provides. As a conclusion, this law is not in breach of Total’s rights
under the BIT. Total also objects to the elimination of the tax exemption, relying on
an exemption, which Argentina obtained from the MERCOSUR Council in 1994,
that allowed Argentina to maintain the special Tierra del Fuego custom regime until
2013.616 This authorisation did not, however, compel Argentina to retain the
exemption until 2013 nor could it create a right or form the basis for a legitimate
expectation by a private beneficiary such as Total that the regime would remain in
force until 2013.617
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competent authorities had confirmed by those statements the non-applicability of the
new taxes (specifically in response to Total’s request) for almost four years. This
makes the change of position of Argentina’s authorities in 2006 a breach of a specific
promise made to Total and, therefore, a breach of the fair and equitable treatment
clause in the BIT. Furthermore, the Tribunal recalls that Articles 13(c) of Law 19.640
of 1972619 requires an express legislative enactment to effect a future elimination of
the export tax exemption. Since the Emergency Law did not contain such an explicit
statement, Resolution 776/06 could not by way of interpretation cure the absence of
the specific provision required to eliminate the exemption from customs duties
applicable to Tierra del Fuego in conformity with Law 19.640.
442. The claim by Argentina that Total is liable to pay back taxes under Resolution
776/06 is thus in breach of the obligation to accord fair and equitable treatment in
Article 3 of the BIT. Clearly no argument of necessity can be entertained to oppose
such a conclusion. Total has explained that the collection of the tax for 2002-2006 is
currently suspended while Total Austral has engaged in a judicial domestic challenge
of the tax claim. In view of the Tribunal’s conclusion above, if Argentina’s
authorities enforce Resolution 776/06 and obtain from Total Austral the payment of
the export taxes from 2002 to 2007 (i.e., as of the date of entry into force of Law
26.217) through domestic litigation or otherwise, Argentina would thereby commit
an additional breach of Total’s rights under Article 3 of the BIT. In such an event,
Total would be entitled to recover, as damages, whatever amount Total Austral
would have been compelled to pay and any costs incidental thereto.
619
Law 19.640/72 at Exhibit C-292.
620
In accordance with Article 8 of Argentina-France BIT, an investor of either Contracting Party can choose to
submit “any dispute relating to investments made under this Agreement” with the other Contracting Party to the
domestic courts thereof or to ICSID or UNCITRAL arbitration. However, according to Article 8(2) “once an
investor has submitted the dispute to the courts of the Contracting Party concerned or to international arbitration,
the choice of one or the other of these procedures is final.” See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras 151 ff. On 16
November 2010 Argentina submitted to the Tribunal the text of a decision dated 25 August 2009 by the “Cámara
Contenciosa Administrativa Federal” which in the recourse by Total’s subsidiary mentioned in the text has declared
Resolution 776/2006 unconstitutional. The Claimant has commented on 30 November 2010 that this decision has
been revoked by an attached decision of the Supreme Court of 18 November 2010, submitting that these decisions
“are of no relevance to the proceedings”. The Tribunal recalls that it has decided not to take into consideration new
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application of the afore-mentioned export taxes from Tierra del Fuego in Argentina’s
courts, Total is precluded from raising this claim in this arbitration under the BIT.
Total rejects the invocation of Article 8(2) by Argentina because the present
arbitration was initiated before the domestic litigation so that its claim concerning
this issue must be viewed as predating the domestic proceedings. Total explains that
its specific claim against Argentina’s demand for the tax payment at issue is ancillary
to Total’s initial arbitration request, to which it was added when Argentina requested
payment of those taxes in 2006, while these proceedings were pending. The Tribunal
does not need to deal with this issue because it considers that the two proceedings
have a different object. The object of the arbitration before this Tribunal is the
alleged breach of the BIT by Argentina’s demand for retroactive tax payment; the
claim before Argentina’s domestic courts is that the demand is in breach of
Argentina’s law. Further, the claimant in the domestic proceedings for amparo is
Total’s subsidiary, Total Austral, and not Total itself. It is the Tribunal’s view
therefore that Article 8.2 of the BIT is not applicable.
444. In view of the above, the Tribunal concludes that the retroactive elimination of
the Tierra del Fuego tax exemption effected by Argentina through the enactment of
Resolution 776/06 is in breach of the fair and equitable treatment clause of the BIT.
Consequently, any Argentine authorities’ request of payment of export taxes
addressed to Total for its exports from Tierra del Fuego concerning the period from
2002 to the entry into force of Law 26,217 in 2007 would be in breach of the BIT.
445. The Tribunal recalls (as stated above in paragraph 383) that Total’s claims in this
respect are based on Argentina’s guarantee to Total of full property rights over, and
full rights freely to dispose of, hydrocarbons produced that is enshrined in Article 6
of the Concession Decree. According to Total, this guarantee must be understood as
evidence and arguments submitted by the Parties subsequent to the post-hearings briefs (see para. 20 above) and
determines that the submission of Argentina of 30 November 2010 is in any case irrelevant.
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entailing “the right to sell the hydrocarbons it extracts to its willing counterparties in
the amount and for the price it negotiates.”621
446. As to its private law contracts for the domestic sale of natural gas, Total has
claimed that the following measures are in breach of the fair and equitable treatment
clause: (i) the pesification of all private law contracts (including Total’s private law
contracts) through Article 11 of the Emergency Law because it eviscerated “Total’s
all property rights over hydrocarbons produced, including the right freely to dispose
of its hydrocarbons by artificially re-denominating the price that had been freely
negotiated between the contracting parties”622; (ii) the pesification of the gas tariffs
(including the reference price used to calculate the well-head price component of the
Consumer Gas Tariff) because it “limited the revenues of Total’s distributor
customers for the sale of gas to consumers and, therefore, rendered renegotiation of
Total’s pesified contracts futile”;623 (iii) the freezing of the gas tariffs at 2001 levels
because Argentina, by establishing a maximum reference price that distributors could
charge for the well-head price component of the Consumer Gas Tariff, nullified any
possibility that Total could have had to renegotiate its supply contracts with
distributors.624 As stated by LECG Report on Damages, “this measure meant the de-
facto intervention of wellhead price formation in the natural gas market.”625
447. As to the pesification of Total’s private contracts and the pesification of the gas
tariffs (the reference gas price included), the Tribunal recalls its finding and
reasoning concerning the same measure in relation to Total’s claim regarding its
investments in TGN at paragraphs 159-165 above; namely, the Tribunal has
concluded that the pesification was not in breach of the BIT, being a measure of
general application justified by the circumstances and applied without discrimination.
448. The Tribunal will deal now with the freezing of the Consumer Gas Tariff. The
Tribunal recalls that it has in part analyzed the legal regime for the sale of natural
gas, when it dealt with the provisions of the Hydrocarbons Law and those contained
in the Concession Decree referring explicitly to the Hydrocarbons Law and the
621
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 69.
622
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 689.
623
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 70 (b) and 690-694.
624
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 70 (c).
625
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 90 b at p. 45.
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Deregulation Decrees (at paragraphs 421-425 above). For this reason, the Tribunal
will focus here only on the features of the legal regime for the sale of natural gas that
are relevant in order to evaluate whether the freezing of gas tariffs effected by
Argentina was in breach of Total’s rights under the BIT.
449. The Tribunal recalls that the Hydrocarbons Law is referred to in Article 6 of the
Concession Decree. Pursuant to Article 6, paragraph 7 of the Hydrocarbons Law of
1967, “gas commercialization and supply is subject to the further regulations set out
by the Executive”. These further regulations are contained in the Deregulation
Decrees of 1989 and in the Gas Law of 1992.
450. In turn, Article 10, paragraph 1 of Decree No. 1212/89 provided that “natural gas
prices for users and producers shall be determined on a monthly basis by the
MINISTRY OF PUBLIC WORKS AND SERVICES, through the SECRETARY OF
ENERGY, until multiple suppliers market conditions are generated.” According to
Article 10, paragraph 4, first sentence, the Consumer Gas Tariff has to be fixed
“based on the producer price, plus conditioning, transport and distribution costs”. If
the Consumer Gas Tariff is fixed below the latter basis, “the amount of the
corresponding subsidy shall be determined, with charge to general profits” (Article
10 paragraph 4 second sentence). Finally, “the producer price shall be determined on
a “netback” basis, with transport and conditioning costs based on international
values” (Article 10 paragraph 5). This regulation was, however, superseded in 1992
by the successive enactment of the Gas Law.626
626
Article 1, paragraph 1 of the Gas Law states that it applies to transport and distribution of natural gas while the
Hydrocarbons Law remains applicable to its production, extraction and treatment. According to Article 1, paragraph
2 of the Gas Law the Hydrocarbons Law is applicable also to transport and distribution of natural gas only when the
Gas Law refers expressly to its provisions.
204
transportation tariff; and c) the gas distribution tariff.” In addition, Article 38(c)
provides that the gas sale price that distributors charge to consumers shall include the
cost of gas purchases. With regard to the contracts concluded after the coming into
force of the Law, ENARGAS may prevent these costs from being charged to
consumers if it determines that they are higher than the gas supply prices negotiated
by other distributors in similar conditions.
452. On the basis of the analysis above, the Tribunal concludes that the Argentine
natural gas market (as it existed when Total acquired the relevant concession) was
not a free market. Instead, it was a state regulated market in accordance with both
Decree 1212/89 and the subsequent Gas Law (as well as the Hydrocarbons Law). The
Tribunal notes also that, from an economic point of view, the LECG Report on
Damages acknowledges that [natural gas] “[…] unlike crude oil or LPG, is not a fully
tradable commodity” and, therefore, “its prices are not necessarily linked to
international parity levels (that is, neither import nor export prices have to be the
same as prices in the domestic market).”627
453. After having given an overview of the relevant legal regime, the Tribunal will
turn now to the evaluation of the freezing of the Consumer Gas Tariff under the BIT.
Total specifically contends that Argentina, by fixing the well-head price component
of the Consumers Gas Tariff from June 2002 to August 2004 (ENARGAS Resolution
2612/02 dated 24 June 2002 and successive Resolutions628), acted contrary to the Gas
Law629 and Total’s rights under the relevant concession. In particular, these measures
prevented Total from negotiating the domestic natural gas price with its
counterparties and fixed such a depressed gas price as to be unsustainable and
incapable of allowing producers to receive an acceptable rate of return.630
454. It is true that the concession accorded Total the right to dispose of the natural
gasi. However, this right was not absolute, taking into account the content of
Argentina’s general legal enactments governing the gas market incorporated by
reference in the concession, as outlined above. This results from the text of Article 6
627
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 92.
628
These successive ENARGAS Resolutions are referred to by the Tribunal at note 532 above and are listed in
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, footnote 823 at page 270.
629
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 696.
630
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 705.
205
of Decree 1589/89. Specifically, Article 6 of Decree 1589/89 envisages restrictions
being imposed on the “free availability” of gas by the government. The provision
states, however, in this case that “the price of ONE THOUSAND CUBIC METERS
(1000 m3) of gas at NINE THOUSAND THREE HUNDRED KILOCALORIES
(9,300 kilocalories) shall not be inferior to THIRTY PERCENT (35%) of the
international price for a cubic meter of Arabian Light at 34o API.” In applying this
rule, the gas prices fixed by Argentina should not have been below “(35%) of the
international price for a cubic meter of Arabian Light at 34o API.”631
455. Total complains that the domestic gas prices resulting from the measures
mentioned above were unsustainable from the gas producing companies’ point of
view and were incapable of allowing producers to receive an acceptable rate of
return.632 The Tribunal understands that the 35% of the international price per cubic
meter of Arabian light oil, 34° API was precisely a guarantee to producers of a given
minimum price in case of future restrictions. Nevertheless, while invoking the 35%
of the international price per cubic meter of Arabian light oil, 34° API as a
benchmark for compensation in case restrictions are imposed, Total does not submit
any evidence enabling the Tribunal to gather that the price resulting from the
measures was below 35% of the international price per cubic meter of Arabian light
oil, 34° API. Nor does Argentina give any indication to the Tribunal that the price
resulting from the measures was above this benchmark. In the light of the analysis
above, the Tribunal considers that, in so far as Argentina has fixed the domestic price
of gas below the relevant benchmark without providing for compensation to Total as
required by Article 6 of Decree 1589/89, Argentina has breached the fair and
equitable treatment standard of the BIT. This would constitute an unfair and
unreasonable interference with Total’s rights under Articles 6 and 8 of the
Concession.
456. If this is, in fact, the case, Total is entitled to damages for this breach of the fair
and equitable treatment standard amounting to the difference between the actual price
and the benchmark price. Argentina’s breach of the fair and equitable treatment -
subject to evidence showing that domestic gas prices resulting from the enacted
631
This is stressed by Total in its Post Hearing Brief, paras. 73 and 714.
632
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 705 where Total also refers to the study on the effect of Argentina’s
Measures conducted by Mr Guichón, Argentina’s witness on the Exploration and Production sector.
206
measures were below 35% of the international price per cubic meter of Arabian light
oil, 34° API - took place from June 2002 to April 2004. This is because of the Price
Path Recovery Agreement agreed between the government and gas producers (Total
included) that was signed on 2 April 2004.633 The Price Path Recovery Agreement
provided for progressive increases by the SoE of the well-head price of natural gas
applicable to industrial consumers between May 2004 and July 2005, with the aim of
liberalising the well-head prices for industrial consumers as of August 2005. It set out
a different recovery regime for prices for residential consumers, providing for the
liberalisation of those prices as of January 1, 2007.634
457. There is no reason for the Tribunal to consider that Total has not validly agreed
to the recovery system described above by signing the Price Path Recovery
Agreement with Argentina’s authorities. Total has not challenged the validity of this
Agreement. Instead Total has complained that, although during the course of the
negotiations “the producers sought a full recovery of the market-based method for
determining the price of natural gas at the well-head, and compensation for the losses
incurred in the aftermath of the Measures … Argentina refused to compensate the
producers for past losses.”635 The Tribunal, therefore, concludes that Total’s right to
invoke the 35% of the international price per cubic meter of Arabian light oil (34°
API) standard of compensation concerns the period from June 2002 to April 2004.
Further details, including the relevance, if so, of Argentina not having fully
implemented the Price Path Recovery Agreement, as Total complains, should be left
to the quantum phase.636
633
The Price Path Recovery Agreement that had as an object “la Implementación del Esquema de Normalización de
los Precios del Gas Natural en Punto de Ingreso al Sistema de Trasporte…” to be completed by 31 December
2006, was concluded on April 2, 2004 and then approved by the Ministry of Federal Planning, Public Investments
and Services with Resolution 208/04 dated 21 April 2004 (Exhibit C-208).
634
See Total’s Memorial, paras 159-160; Total’s Reply, para. 242 (as to the Acta Acuerdo see also See Total’s Post-
Hearing Brief, paras. 705-709).
635
See Total’s Memorial, para 158 and Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 708-709. Mr. Grosjean, who signed the Price
Path Recovery Agreement for Total, testified at the Hearing on the merits that Total did not waive any rights vis-à-
vis Argentina by signing the Agreement, despite Argentina having asked the producers to do so (Transcript
(English) Day 3, 892:13-22-893:1-3). In the Tribunal’s view, this statement, which is not reflected in the text of the
Agreement or any other contemporary document, cannot invalidate the content of the Price Path Recovery
Agreement in respect to the gas prices agreed by the parties according to its terms. Cf. the cross-examination of Mr.
Grosjean, Transcript (English) Day 4, 935:10-22; 936: 1-4.
636
See paras. 371, 390 above and Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 708-709. The Price Path Recovery Agreement
was later extended by another agreement (Resolution SE 599/07 dated 14 June 2007, Exhibit A RA 269).
207
458. Total makes two claims regarding the limitation of gas exports. First, Total
complains of the negative effect on its revenue due to the introduction by Argentina
of natural gas export taxes.637 Second, Total claims that the measures that Argentina
enacted in March 2004 to respond to the gas shortage in the domestic market – such
as SoE Resolution 265 and Undersecretary of Fuels Disposition 27/04 (together, the
Gas Rationing Program) and SoE Resolution 659/04 (which replaced in June 2004
the Gas Rationing Program with a new one) – interfered with the export contracts
that Total had entered into with various Chilean companies to the point of preventing
Total from performing those contracts.638 These export contracts had been authorised
in accordance with Article 3 paragraph 2 of the Gas Law (no objections had been
made to the export contracts submitted by Total within 90 days).639 In particular,
Total contends that “as a direct result of Resolution 659, Total suffered losses for the
redirection of natural gas originally destined for export to Chile, which was sold
instead to specific consumers in the domestic market below export price. In short,
Argentina put Total in a position where it had no choice but to breach the contracts
with its Chilean counterparties and to receive as much as two-thirds less per MBTUs
from the customers to whom it was ordered to sell its gas.”640 In addition, Argentina
had not provided for the compensation it had guaranteed to Total under the
Concession Decree.
459. As to the first complaint concerning the negative effect on its revenue due to the
introduction by Argentina of natural gas export taxes, the Tribunal recalls its
previous findings based on Argentina’s regime applicable to the subject matter. The
Tribunal considers therefore that export limitations imposed to ensure domestic
supply were lawful under the applicable legislation so that their application (however
unwise they might have been from an economic point of view) cannot be considered
per se in breach of the BIT. Furthermore, gas export taxes cannot be labelled as
restrictions on Total’s rights of free disposition of gas. The Tribunal concludes,
therefore, that the export limitations imposed by Argentina to ensure domestic supply
are not in breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard.
637
For a more detailed description of the effect of the natural gas export taxes, see LECG Report on Damages,
paras. 103-105 and 111-112.
638
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 722-725.
639
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 75-78.
640
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 726.
208
460. However, the Tribunal reaches a different conclusion regarding Total’s second
claim concerning its export contracts.641 The Tribunal recalls here that, under
Argentina’s legal framework, the export of natural gas should be authorised by
ENARGAS within 90 days “on the basis of sufficiency of supply in the internal
market”. Taking into account this mechanism for authorisation, Argentina’s
interference with Total’s export contracts was in breach of Argentina’s own law..642
It is the Tribunal’s view that once an export contract had been duly authorised
pursuant to the domestic applicable legal regime, the subsequent withdrawal of those
contractual rights at least constitutes unfair treatment as Total has argued.643
Argentina’s argument that Total has prevailed in the litigations started by its Chilean
buyers for breach of the export contract, because Total successfully invoked “force
majeure” on the basis of Argentina’s interference, appears irrelevant to the
Tribunal.644 Total is entitled in any case to be compensated by Argentina for its loss
of reasonably expected profits under these contracts since this loss is due to
Argentina’s interference with Total’s export contracts in breach of the fair and
equitable treatment clause of the BIT. In respect of the above-mentioned breach,
Total’s damages should be based on the difference between the domestic prices it
received for the gas redirected and sold in the domestic market and the export prices
agreed in export contracts.645 As to the duration of Total’s export contracts, the
relevant period will have to be determined in the quantum phase based on the
evidence that the parties submit.
461. For the reasons stated above, the Tribunal concludes that the export taxes
introduced by Argentina after 2002, and the limitations on gas exports in general, are
not in breach of Total’s rights under the BIT. In contrast the Tribunal concludes that
the measures by which Argentina has specifically interfered with Total’s gas export
contracts that had been duly authorised by Argentina’s authorities are in breach of
Total’s rights under the BIT.
641
In respect of these export contracts see extensively supra para. 361 and note 488.
642
The Tribunal addresses Argentina’s plea of necessity at paras. 482 ff. hereunder.
643
The Tribunal considers that Argentina’s conduct at issue here could also be labelled as (and could amount to) an
expropriation of contractual rights without compensation. In this respect Total has, however, invoked the breach of
Article 3 of the BIT rather than the breach of Article 5.2 of the BIT.
644
See Argentina’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 633.
645
In any case, the exact calculation of Total’s damages and its basis will have to be dealt with in the quantum
phase, avoiding any double recovery.
209
9. Pricing of LPG
462. In its final claim related to hydrocarbon exploration and production, Total argues
that Law 26,020 of 2005 (the so-called LPG Law)646 and subsequent resolutions
violated its rights under the Concession Decree of full ownership and free disposal of
crude oil.647
463. Before dealing with Total’s claim regarding LPG production and sale, the
Tribunal considers it useful to clarify two points. First, as is apparent from Total’s
submissions, Total submits that the same legal regime governing crude oil also
applies in respect of LPG production and commercialization, LPG being considered
as an oil derivative.648 Second, while Argentina has pointed out that Total has waived
any right it could be entitled to when it signed the LPG Agreement,649 Total makes
clear that it “… has no claims for losses under the LPG Agreement. Its losses arise
under the LPG Law.”650 It is Total’s view that Argentina’s enactment of the LPG
Law breached the Total’s rights because the LPG Law prevented Total from
negotiating free market prices for the LPG that it produced.
464. In any case, the Tribunal notes that Total has not elaborated in detail its claim
with respect to the LPG sector either in its Post-Hearing Brief or in its previous
submissions. On the other hand, Mr. M. A. Abdala and Mr. T. Spiller, the experts
appointed by Total, dealt more extensively with Total’s claim concerning LPG in
their Report than Total itself in its memorials. In particular the LECG Report
considers as government measures, the impact of which it takes into account for the
purpose of calculating Total’s damages, the following measures: the introduction of
export taxes on LPG since March 2002; the imposition in 2006 of taxes on
hydrocarbon exports from Tierra del Fuego; and the enactment of the LPG Law.651 It
646
Law 26.020 dated 8 April 2005 at Exhibit A RA 170.
647
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 95. In any case, the Tribunal recalls here that the first relevant measure enacted
by Argentina as to the LPG sector was the LPG Agreement of 2002 (the “Acuerdo de Estabilidad en el Precio
Mayorista de Gas Licuado de Petroleo en el Mercado Argentino”) between the Executive and LPG producers,
Total Austral included (in this regard see below para. 474).
648
See also LECG Report on Damages, footnote 163 at page 97.
649
Resolution 196/02 (at Exhibit A RA 113).
650
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 96 (a).
651
See LECG Report on Damages, para 65, points c), d) and e). As to the introduction of export taxes on LPG and
the elimination of the tax-exemption concerning Tierra del Fuego, see more extensively LECG Report on Damages,
paras. 81-85 and 184-185. As to the price intervention through the enactment of the LPG Law, see more extensively
LECG Report on Damages, paras. 86-89 and 186-188.
210
is noteworthy that, with the exception of the measures relating to the LPG Law and
the export taxes, Total’s memorials did not present arguments relating to the above
mentioned measures listed in the LECG Report in support of its claim with respect to
LPG.652
465. Summing up, the Tribunal has inferred from the brief part of Total’s Post-
Hearing Brief concerning LPG claim that the thrust of Total’s argument in this
respect is that Argentina’s regulatory intervention through the LPG Law653 interfered
with Total’s right of free disposition of crude oil (its derivatives included) as
enshrined in the Concession Decree. The Tribunal is familiar with this legal
argument in spite of its brief exposition given by Total in respect to LPG claim,
because Total developed it extensively in respect of the hydrocarbon sector in general
and the Tribunal has already discussed it in detail above. However, the LECG Report
bases the quantum calculation concerning LPG on further alleged breaches resulting
from other measures besides the LPG Law and export taxes.
467. As to the pesification of LPG prices, as already stated with regard to the other
claims submitted by Total and for the same reasons, the Tribunal does not consider
that the pesification effected by Argentina was in breach of Total’s rights under the
BIT. As a consequence, the Tribunal considers Total’s claim of indemnification of
losses due to pesification as unfounded also in respect of LPG operations.
652
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 763.
653
Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, paras. 778-779.
211
468. As to Argentina’s imposition of taxes on hydrocarbon exports from Tierra del
Fuego in 2006, and any demand for payment thereof by Argentina, the Tribunal has
already stated above that the retroactive elimination of the Tierra del Fuego tax
exemption effected by Argentina through the enactment of Resolution 776/06 is in
breach of the fair and equitable treatment clause of the BIT. Furthermore, the
Tribunal has already concluded above that any Argentine authorities’ request for
payment of export taxes addressed to Total for its exports from Tierra del Fuego
concerning the period from 2002 to 2007 would be in breach of the BIT. The same
Tribunal’s findings and holdings have to be applied with regard to any export of LPG
from Tierra del Fuego carried out by Total Austral.
469. According to the LECG Report on Damages, Total’s claim relating to the export
taxes imposed by Argentina on LPG as of 2002 has two prongs. More specifically,
the LECG Report on Damages states that “the imposition of withholding taxes on
LPG exports has effects analogous to those imposed for the crude oil market.”654 The
claim is that, on the one hand, Argentina’s introduction of taxes on the export of LPG
reduced the prices received by producers for sale of LPG in the international market,
thereby limiting their exports of the product and reducing their revenues. On the
other hand, the same taxes artificially reduced LPG prices in the domestic market.
470. As to the negative impacts of the export taxes on both Total right to export LPG
without limitations and on Total’s revenue, the Tribunal considers it appropriate to
recall its findings regarding the crude oil export taxes at paragraph 434. The
challenged export taxes imposed by Argentina cannot be considered as “restrictions”
under Argentina’s regime. They are instead fiscal measures (to which oil producing
and exporting countries normally have recourse) generally addressed to the exporters
of crude oil and their derivatives (not specifically to Total). These export taxes are
part of “the general fiscal legislation” to which Total is subject in accordance with
Article 9, first sentence, of the Concession Decree. Moreover, the Tribunal notes that
these export taxes did not affect directly Total’s operations or any LPG export
contract concluded by Total with other counterparties. On the contrary, even if it
were accepted that the export taxes could be classified as restrictions, they negatively
affected Transportadora de Gas del Sur (TGS) transactions as Total’s experts
654
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 184.
212
conceded.655 TGS is a company unrelated to Total, which processes most of the LPG
produced by Total Austral in Argentina, and carries out all of the export sales of that
product.
471. For the reasons already stated above, it is the Tribunal’s view that the
introduction of LPG export taxes was not in breach of Total’s rights under the
Concession Decree either directly as “restrictions” on exports or indirectly because of
their depressing effect, if any, on domestic prices.
472. The Tribunal must now address Total’s main claim concerning LPG prices,
namely that the LPG Law set prices in breach of Total’s right under the Concession
Decree to sell LPG at freely negotiated prices in the domestic market. In this respect,
the Tribunal recalls its conclusions in the previous paragraphs, that Total had not an
absolute right to negotiate the commercialization price of crude oil and its derivatives
under the Concession Decree. Total’s right of free disposal of crude oil and its
derivatives (LPG included) was subject to the possibility of government interventions
under Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law.
473. In this respect, Argentina points out that the legal regime applicable to crude oil
authorises governmental intervention in pricing and that the massive increase of LPG
consumption by the families hit by the crisis justified such intervention. It is
undisputed that LPG is the fuel most easily substituted for residential natural gas
consumption. According to the data supplied by Total’s experts, as of 2001, LPG is
the primary source of fuel for 45.8% of households in Argentina because they are not
connected to gas networks.656 As the LECG Report also indicates, “customers
without access to natural gas distribution networks rely primarily on LPG for heating
and cooking purposes. Retail LPG prices in domestic currency doubled in 2002 as
compared to the previous year (from AR$9.0 per 10 kg container to AR$18.0)”.657
According to same Report, domestic currency prices received by LPG producers
increased during 2002 and the export price increased by 162,8%.658
655
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 82.
656
See LECG Report on Damages, footnote 193 at page 111.
657
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 215.
658
See LECG Report on Damages, para. 216. The Tribunal notes that the LECG Report further states that
“Measured in US dollars, the export price received by LPG producers dropped by 18.6%. The export parity price
for LPG was affected by the introduction of an export withholding tax, which reduced the net price received by
213
474. The Tribunal also notes that, in June 2002, well before the enactment of the LPG
Law in 2005, the LPG Agreement was entered into with the objective of procuring
the supply of LPG at agreed prices in the domestic market. This agreement was
concluded between Argentina’s Executive (represented by Mr. Roberto Lavagna, the
then Minister of Economy) and the major producers/distributors in the sector
(including Total Austral, which was represented by Mr. Grosjean and Mr. Pera) in
order to stabilize LPG prices in the domestic market during the period from June 1,
2002 to September 30, 2002. According to the resolution implementing the
Agreement, producers committed to sell LPG to Argentina’s “empresas
fraccionadoras” (bottling companies) at an average price of LPG not above
$(pesos)/TN 600. In addition, producers committed to supply to distributors and sub-
distributors, upon the Ministry of Economy’s request, a quantity of LPG amounting
to 33.000 TN at a price of $(pesos)/TN 300.659 One of the producers’ main conditions
on entering into the Agreement, was the reduction of the export tax on LPG from
20% to 5% with retroactive effect from June 1, 2002.660 This condition was fulfilled
by Argentina by means of Resolution 196/02 (Articles 2 and 4).
475. According to Total, before the LPG Law was enacted, the LPG price was not
fixed by governmental interventions but was freely established in the market.661
However, the conclusion of the LPG Agreement between LPG producers and the
Executive in 2002 undermines this argument. Total claims that it accepted the
Agreement “under protest” and “with a full reservation of rights.”662 The Tribunal
notes, however, that this does not result from the text of the agreement submitted to
the Tribunal or from any other written documents. Conversely, the LPG agreement
entailed advantages for the producers, such as being subject to export taxes on LPG
at a lower level than that which would have applied without the agreement.
Moreover, this preferential treatment guaranteed by Argentina to LPG producers,
producers.” The Tribunal notes that these statements provide the basis in the LECG Report for calculating losses
suffered by Total as to LPG operations. However, the Tribunal has rejected Total’s claims that either the
pesification or the introduction of the export taxes were in breach of Total’s rights under the BIT.
659
See Resolution 196/02 (Exhibit A RA 113), Annexed Agreement, point 2º) and point 3º).
660
See Resolution 196/02 (Exhibit A RA 113), Annexed Agreement, point 6º).
661
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 95.
662
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 96 (b) with reference to the oral testimony of Mr. Grosjean who signed the
Agreement on behalf of Total Austral. (Transcript (English) Day 4, 985:4 – 987: 18).
214
namely to be subject to an export tax rate of 5% (instead of 20%), lasted until 2004,
that is beyond the term of the LPG Agreement.663
476. Subsequently, in 2005, Argentina passed the LPG Law, which explicitly
supplements both the Hydrocarbons and the Gas Laws. As stated in Article 1 of the
LPG Law, the legislation aimed first of all to ensure regular and affordable LPG
supply to residential users of modest economic means.664 At the same time, the price
mechanism it introduced was meant to allow players in the LPG market (producers
included) to obtain a price sufficient to cover their efficient costs and to allow a
reasonable return. More specifically, according to Article 34, paragraph 2, the
reference price of LPG for a typical 45 kilogram LPG unit, to be fixed by the
competent authority each semester, should be calculated:
“…, in order for active subjects to have a retribution for their efficient costs and a
reasonable rate of return, based on the monthly price of LPG in bulk at the exit of
the producer plant calculated in accordance with the principles established in
Article 7(b), the values sent by the corresponding bulk-breakers, under a sworn
statement of sale, the distribution market information and the estimates made by
the Applicable Authority.”
477. Total contends that its rights under the concession to full ownership and free
disposal of the crude oil that it produced were breached by this regulation because
“… the LPG Law capped Total’s ability to negotiate free market prices for its
product.”665 The Tribunal notes to the contrary that the pricing rules set by the LPG
Law are consistent with the powers that Argentina’s Executive had under the
Hydrocarbons Law, which was in force in 1994, when the concession on whose
terms Total relies was concluded. The Tribunal recalls its previous reasoning
examining in detail the references in the concession to the various Deregulation
Decrees, which in turn referred to the Hydrocarbons Law.666 Specifically, the
Tribunal recalls that under Article 6 of the Hydrocarbons Law in times of domestic
scarcity preference must be given to domestic needs. Moreover, domestic prices
could be set at a lower level than international prices when the latter had significantly
increased due to exceptional circumstances. In this respect the Tribunal recalls its
663
In this respect see also LECG Report on Damages, para. 81.
664
Article 7 letter b) of the LPG Law provides that the supply of LPG must be guaranteed to the domestic market at
prices for consumers not above export parity prices in order to guarantee domestic supply and availability of LPG
for consumers.
665
See Total’s Post-Hearing Brief, para. 95.
666
See above paras. 421-427.
215
conclusions at paragraph 472 above, and the data referred to in the LECG Report
mentioned above, concerning the LPG market from 2002 onwards.667 The pricing
rules contained in the LPG Law correspond to the afore-mentioned principles of the
Hydrocarbons Law on the pricing of crude oil and its derivatives in the domestic
market, including the requirement that the producers’ costs be covered and a
reasonable return be ensured.668 Furthermore, the pricing principles of the LPG Law
appears similar to the pricing principles of the Gas Law.
478. Total has not submitted to the Tribunal evidence that would show that LPG
prices in accordance with the LPG Law669 were below those agreed by Total under
the LPG Agreement or were insufficient to cover costs, and include a reasonable
return, contrary to the principles of Article 34 of the LPG Law. In any case the legal
framework in place before the enactment of the LPG Law did not guarantee to
producers such as Total the right to sell domestically at international prices. By
contrast the LECG Reports on Damages670 are based principally on the difference
between the projected future prices of LPG, calculated on the basis of the variations
in the international price of LPG in US dollars, and the actual prices paid to Total
Austral by TGS which processes and trades Total’s LPG in the export market.671
479. Based on the analysis above of the facts and the legal arguments submitted by the
parties, the Tribunal concludes that the price mechanism introduced by the LPG Law
is not, as concerns Total, in breach of the fair and equitable treatment standard of the
BIT and, therefore, it rejects Total’s claim under Article 3 of the BIT as to its
operations in the LPG sector.
480. Finally, the Tribunal has to examine Total’s claim that Argentina breached
Article 4 of the BIT in treating its investments in the energy sector in general (its
667
See above para. 473.
668
In this regard see Article 34 of the LPG Law quoted above at para. 476.
669
These prices are set as follows: for residential users prices could not exceed US$32 for a typical 45 kilogram
LPG unit and for the rest of the sales, a cap was set equal to the average price of LPG sold in the previous 24
months. See above para. 405.
670
See LECG Addendum on Damages, Table II at page 8 which estimates Total’s damages in respect to LPG to
US$ 121.9 million in US$ of December 2006.
671
See LECG Report on Damages, paras 186-187 (see also para. 86).
216
investments in exploration and production of hydrocarbons included) in a
discriminatory way.672 As Total explained in its Reply,
481. The Tribunal recalls its discussion of Total’s claim of discrimination concerning
its investments in TGN and in power generation. On the basis of the principles
highlighted above at paragraphs 210-217, the Tribunal is of the view that Total has
not demonstrated that it has been treated in a legally relevant discriminatory manner
as concerns its investments in exploration and production of hydrocarbons. The
Tribunal therefore concludes that Argentina has not breached in this respect Article 4
of the BIT.
482. Argentina has raised the defence of necessity under customary international law
also in respect of Total’s claims as to its investments in exploration and production of
hydrocarbons.674 As in the case of Total’s other investments, the Tribunal must
therefore examine this defence in the light of the criteria stated in Article 25 ILC
Articles on State Responsibility as it relates to measures adopted by Argentina in
breach of the BIT.675
483. As to the retroactive elimination of the Tierra del Fuego tax exemption (discussed
at paragraph 447 ff. above), Argentina’s request for payment of back taxes pursuant
to Resolution 776/06 for the period 2001-2006 can in no way be considered required
“to safeguard an essential interest” of Argentina “against a grave and imminent
peril”. Nor did Argentina present any evidence to the contrary. The same can be said
of the fixing of the domestic price of gas below the relevant benchmark without
672
See Total’s Memorial, paras. 344-345; Total’s Reply, paras. 7-29 and 499 ff. and Post-Hearing Brief paras. 620
ff.
673
See Total’s Reply, para. 499.
674
Argentina has raised the defence of necessity against all of Total’s claims generally, as far as the Tribunal would
have considered them a violation of the BIT; see Argentina’s Counter-Memorial, paras. 876 ff. The essential
interest alleged by Argentina there is “the preservation of the State own existence and that of its population at times
of public emergency.”
675
See the analysis by the Tribunal at paras. 220 ff. above.
217
providing for compensation to Total in accordance with Article 6 of Decree 1589/89,
as addressed by the Tribunal at paragraph 455 above. Providing for such
compensation to Total could not have impaired an essential interest of Argentina.
Again, Argentina did not present any evidence to the contrary.
676
See paragraphs 372, 395 above.
218
Part V - Decision of the Tribunal on Liability
485. Based on the above reasoning and findings, the Tribunal, partially granting
Total’s claims, DECIDES as follows:
b) All other claims by Total, including those under Articles 4 and 5 of the
BIT, are rejected;
219
Mr. Luis Herrera Marcano
Arbitrator
Date: Dc!ce"f,~ '1 "l,:2 0(0
Subject to the attached dissenting opinion Subject to the attached concurring opinion