-Caveat Lector-

 http://www.essential.org/monitor/mm2001/01april/corp1.html

The Multinational Monitor

April 2001 - VOLUME 22 - NUMBER 4
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T R A D E   M A D N E S S !
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NAFTA's Investor "Rights"
A Corporate Dream,
A Citizen Nightmare

By Mary Bottari

The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) includes an array of new
corporate investment rights and protections that are unprecedented in
scope and power. NAFTA allows corporations to sue the national government
of a NAFTA country in secret arbitration tribunals if they feel that a
regulation or government decision affects their investment in conflict
with these new NAFTA rights. If a corporation wins, the taxpayers of the
"losing" NAFTA nation must foot the bill. This extraordinary attack on
governments' ability to regulate in the public interest is a key element
of the proposed NAFTA expansion called the Free Trade Area of the Americas
(FTAA).

NAFTA's investment chapter (Chapter 11) contains a variety of new rights
and protections for investors and investments in NAFTA countries.
Specifically, Article 1110 of NAFTA guarantees foreign investors
compensation from the NAFTA governments for any direct government
expropriation (i.e., nationalization) or any other action that is
"tantamount to" an "indirect expropriation." In addition, Article 1102
provides for "national treatment," which means that governments must
accord to companies of other NAFTA countries no less favorable treatment
than they give to their own companies. Article 1105 contains a "minimum
standard of treatment" provision, which includes vague prose about fair
and equitable treatment in accordance with international law.

If a company believes that a NAFTA government has violated these new
investor rights and protections, it can initiate a binding dispute
resolution process for monetary damages before a trade tribunal offering
none of the basic due process or openness guarantees afforded in national
courts. These so-called "investor-to-state" cases are litigated in the
special international arbitration bodies of the World Bank and the United
Nations, which are closed to public participation, observation and input.
A three-person panel composed of professional arbitrators listens to
arguments in the case, with powers to award an unlimited amount of
taxpayer dollars to corporations whose NAFTA investor privileges and
rights they judge to have been impacted.

Corporate investors have used these unprecedented NAFTA investment
protections to challenge national and local laws, governmental decisions
and even governmental provision of services in all three NAFTA countries.
To date, companies have filed more than a dozen cases, claiming damages of
more than US$13 billion [see "The Chapter 11 Dossier"].

"TANTAMOUNT TO EXTORTION"

In the largest Chapter 11 suit yet brought against the United States, the
Canadian corporation Methanex in 1999 sued the U.S. government for $970
million because of a California executive order phasing out the sale of a
Methanex product. Methanex claims that California's phase-out of methyl
tertiary butyl ether (MTBE), a gasoline additive, violates the company's
special investor rights granted under NAFTA because the California
environmental policy limits the corporation's ability to sell MTBE. If a
NAFTA tribunal decides that California's environmental policy violates
NAFTA's investor protections, the U.S. government can be held liable for
the corporation's lost profits from not selling MTBE.

The case is "a clear threat to California state sovereignty and democratic
governance," says Martin Wagner of the California-based Earthjustice Legal
Defense Fund. If Methanex succeeds, California will be under pressure to
rescind its executive order, to lessen the damage award.

Associated with human neurotoxicological effects, such as dizziness,
nausea and headaches and found to be an animal carcinogen with the
potential to cause human cancer, MTBE has been found in ground water and
drinking wells around California. On March 25, 1999, California required
the removal of MTBE from gasoline sold in the state by December 31, 2002.
Governor Gray Davis declared that "on balance, there is significant risk
to the environment from using MTBE in gasoline in California."

Methanex claims that adding MTBE to gasoline reduces air pollution.
However, a 1998 University of California at Davis (UC-Davis) report, which
informed the government action, found that "there is no significant
additional air quality benefit to the use of oxygenates such as MTBE in
reformulated gasoline." The report found "significant risks and costs
associated with water contamination due to the use of MTBE." The report
noted that "MTBE is highly soluble in water and will transfer readily to
groundwater from gasoline leaking from underground storage tanks,
pipelines and other components of the gasoline distribution system." It
also noted that the use of MTBE in motor boat fuel results in
contamination of surface water. The report concluded that "[w]e are
placing our limited water resources at risk by using MTBE."

On the basis of the UC-Davis findings, California moved to ban MTBE.
Methanex's response was to drag the California policy into NAFTA Chapter
11 litigation, demanding MTBE be allowed or $970 million be paid.

In its amended claim, Methanex alleges that the California ban
discriminates against MTBE in favor of ethanol, a similar U.S. product,
and is therefore a violation of NAFTA's national treatment rules. As
evidence, Methanex cites the executive order which requires the California
Energy Commission to look into development of a California ethanol
facility. Methanex alleges that Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), a principal
producer of ethanol in the United States, influenced the governor's
decision with $210,000 in campaign contributions, arguing that the ban
stands in violation of NAFTA's fair and equitable treatment rules.
Finally, Methanex claims that the ban was not the "least trade
restrictive" method to fix the water contamination problem, and thus
violates NAFTA requirements that companies be treated fairly and "in
accordance with international law." The relevant laws cited by Methanex
are the rules of the World Trade Organization, which require countries to
use the least trade restrictive means to achieve environmental and public
health goals.

"These cases are tantamount to extortion," says Martin Wagner. "This is a
situation in which someone is causing a harm and then making the assertion
that they will stop that harm only upon payment of a fee. In the
California case, Methanex is selling a chemical and saying to the U.S.
government, 'If you want us to stop, you have to pay us.' This is even
more appalling when you consider that the victims of this extortion are
the people of California, who don't want their drinking water contaminated
by MTBE."

The California case has drawn comparisons to the 1998 case brought against
Canada by the U.S.-based Ethyl Corporation [see "Another NAFTA Nightmare,"
Multinational Monitor, October 1996]. In that case, Ethyl sued Canada for
$250 million after Canada banned the gasoline additive
methylcyclopentadienyl manganese tricarbonyl (MMT) because of health
risks. The state of California had banned MMT and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) was working on a similar regulation. Ethyl claimed
the Canadian ban violated NAFTA because it "expropriated" future profits
and damaged Ethyl's reputation. After learning that the NAFTA tribunal was
likely to rule against its position, the Canadian government revoked the
ban, paid Ethyl $13 million for lost profits to date, and, as part of a
settlement with Ethyl, agreed to issue a public statement declaring that
there was no evidence that MMT posed health or environmental risks.

Methanex brought its NAFTA case to the United Nations Commission for
International Trade and Law (UNCITRAL), the arbitration regime of the
United Nations. The case is now pending. Under UNCITRAL rules, not only
are the citizens of California shut out of this proceeding, but so are the
governor and the attorney general of California, the state whose policy is
in question. California officials must rely on the Office of the U.S.
Trade Representative (USTR) to defend the interests of California
residents in this closed tribunal.

DELIVER THIS

In a case that seeks to push the limits of Chapter 11, the U.S.-based
United Parcel Service (UPS) is pursuing a NAFTA Chapter 11 case against
Canada for $100 million, arguing that the fact of the Canadian postal
service's involvement in the courier business infringes upon the
profitability of UPS operations in Canada.

In this case, the first NAFTA investor-to-state case against a public
service, UPS is attempting to stretch the NAFTA Chapter 11 provisions in
an entirely new direction. Canada Post is a "Crown corporation" owned by
the people of Canada. Canada Post has not received direct taxpayer support
for about a decade and has been paying income tax since 1994.

UPS claims that by integrating the delivery of letter, package and courier
services, Canada Post has cross-subsidized its courier business in breach
of NAFTA rules. For example, UPS argues that permitting consumers to drop
off courier packages in Canada Post letter mail postal boxes unfairly
advantages Canada Post as against other courier services. Other alleged
forms of cross-subsidization include:
 * Using letter carriers to pick up courier packages from the mail boxes
and "transport them in vehicles that form part of the infrastructure of
the Canada Post monopoly."
 * Sorting courier packages at "Canada Post's letter mail monopoly sorting
facilities across Canada."
 * Transporting courier packages on airplanes and trucks chartered by the
mail service.
 * Selling courier services at post offices.
 * "Precluding franchisees at Canada Post retail outlets from selling of
any courier product other than Canada Post's."
 * Permitting courier consumers to use postal stamp meters on courier
packages.
 * "Having the regulatory definition of 'letter' changed from 450 grams to
500 grams in order to expand its letter mail monopoly."

"UPS is entitled to receive the best treatment available in Canada with
respect to the treatment of its investment," UPS argues in its claim.
"This treatment would include having equal access to the postal
distribution system provided" to the postal service's courier operations.
Failure to provide such equal treatment, UPS alleges, violates the
national treatment obligations of Chapter 11.

In a cable by the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa that Public Citizen obtained
under a Freedom of Information Act request, UPS Canada Legal and Public
Affairs Vice President Allan Kaufman was characterized as "very confident
the Government of Canada stood to lose its fourth and largest Chapter 11
challenge with the UPS case," and Kaufman signaled that the corporation
would be open to settlement.

Former Canadian Foreign Minister Don Mazankowski responded to these
arguments in a February 2001 column in the Globe & Mail. He argued that
Canada treated UPS with an even hand by allowing UPS access to the market
on the same terms as any Canadian corporation, that UPS is not subject to
any additional taxes or duties and that the company is governed by the
same laws as any Canadian corporation.

"The UPS claim is unique. Unlike the other NAFTA-based foreign investor
claims which have sought to recoup investments, UPS is using NAFTA Chapter
11 provisions in a strategic offensive to secure a greater share of the
Canadian market," asserts Canadian trade attorney Steve Shrybman. "UPS is
arguing that because Canada Post provides public mail services, it
shouldn't also be providing integrated parcel and courier services. In an
era when monopoly and commercial service delivery is commingled, few
public services including health care and education would be immune from
similar corporate challenges."

This case is also proceeding under UNCITRAL rules and the Canadian Union
of Postal Workers and other interested parties are attempting to
intervene.

THE FAST TRACK TO EXPANDED CHAPTER 11

The "expropriations" that have been challenged under Chapter 11 are
nothing like the government seizure of property that is generally conveyed
by the term. Instead, corporations have used the provision to challenge or
seek compensation for what are called "regulatory takings" in the United
States - regulations which supposedly take away the entire value of a
property. While a conservative legal movement has worked for two decades
to espouse the theory of regulatory takings, with some success, regulatory
takings suits continue to face significant judicial hurdles in U.S.
courts. The Chapter 11 cases take this "regulatory takings" logic to a new
extreme.

While these expansive investor rights currently are included only in
NAFTA, plans are underway to incorporate similar provisions in the FTAA.
FTAA is a proposed NAFTA expansion to all 34 countries of the Western
Hemisphere (but for Cuba). The Bush administration has signaled that it
wants the controversial fast-track trade negotiating authority in order to
negotiate the FTAA. Once Congress delegates its trade negotiating
authority to the president via fast track, it limits its own role to a
single up-or-down vote on trade agreements' implementing legislation,
which cannot be amended.

There is no guarantee the Bush administration will succeed in its effort
to win fast track, or in its attempts to impose investment provisions in
the FTAA.

Canada, which has been badly burned in a series of Chapter 11 cases, is no
longer a believer. Canadian Trade Minister Pierre Pettigrew has declared
that Canada will not sign FTAA if investor-to-state enforcement of broad
regulatory takings rights are included, and Canada has called for a review
of Chapter 11 within NAFTA.

Whether Canada will hold to these positions, and whether it can organize
other countries to join it amidst the complex FTAA negotiations in which
the United States is the dominant player, remains to be seen. In the
meantime, environmentalists, public health groups, California residents
and many others concerned about the broad regulatory takings provisions
will continue to press for their removal from NAFTA and their exclusion
from the FTAA. Mary Bottari is director of Global Trade Watch's
Harmonization Project.

The chapter 11 dossier:

Corporations exercise their investor "rights"

Corporations have filed more than a dozen cases under NAFTA's Chapter 11
investment provisions, which enable corporations to sue governments for
infringements of their "investor rights." Since they are conducted in
confidential arbitral processes, inaccessible to public scrutiny and
participation (in contrast to open proceedings in domestic courts),
information on ongoing cases is sketchy. Available information on 15 of
the cases is summarized below.

SUITS AGAINST CANADA

ETHYL CORPORATION

In this first investor-state case, Ethyl Corporation of the United States
sued the Canadian government for $250 million and obtained, in 1998, a
settlement of $13 million for the Canadian ban on the gasoline additive,
MMT, a nerve toxin [see "Another NAFTA Nightmare," Multinational Monitor,
October 1996]. The ban was reversed.

S.D. MYERS

In October 1998, U.S.-based S.D. Myers Inc., which treats transformers
containing toxic PCBs, filed a claim for $30 million for losses it claims
to have incurred during a one-and-one-half-year ban (1995 to 1997) on the
export of PCB wastes from Canada. The Canadian federal government states
that Canada is bound by international conventions that stipulate that PCBs
must be destroyed in an environmentally sound manner, and that U.S.
standards for PCB disposal are not as high as Canada's. The wastes were
destroyed in a Canadian facility in Alberta, and the export ban was
revoked in 1997. The U.S. government also controls cross-border movement
of PCBs. In November 2000, the arbitral tribunal found that the ban did
contravene the investment chapter regarding national treatment and minimum
standards of treatment of foreign investors, and it is now determining
whether S.D. Myers suffered damages. In the meantime, the Canadian
government has applied to the (domestic) Federal Court to have the
tribunal's partial award set aside, arguing that the case concerned
cross-border trade, not a Canadian investment, and that the award
conflicts with a well-established Canadian policy requiring disposal of
PCBs and PCB wastes in Canada to comply with the Basel Convention on the
Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal.

SUN BELT WATER INC.

This California-based company is suing Canada for the decision of the
provincial government of British Columbia to refuse consent for the
company to export bulk water from BC. The government subsequently enacted
the Water Protection Act, which bans bulk water exports and inter-basin
diversions by domestic and foreign investors alike. In a colorful claim
which alleges a decade of "smelly" actions by successive BC governments,
Sun Belt Water expounds on the growing world-wide demand for water,
assumes that water export must be a positive benefit (ignoring
environmental and conservation requirements) and makes extreme claims of
improprieties by the BC government and BC courts. In a BC court action,
Sun Belt did not achieve its desired result. It is therefore using NAFTA
Chapter 11 to seek damages of "between" $1 billion and $10.5 billion.
Besides using the investment chapter for very dubious business practices,
the case raises the fundamental issues of the uses of the investment
chapter to evade the result of an action in a domestic court, and to
challenge a non-discriminatory policy and legislation by a subnational
(provincial) government.

POPE AND TALBOT

The US-based lumber company Pope and Talbot has sued Canada, claiming
approximately $510 million for alleged breaches of the NAFTA investment
chapter related to changes in the profitability of its timber export
business in Canada. Softwood lumber exports from Canada to the United
States have been a source of contention and repeated trade disputes for
decades. Forest products are among the most important exports from Canada,
representing billions of dollars in export earnings, and over 90 percent
of these products are exported to the United States. In 1996, in yet
another attempt to resolve the ongoing timber wars, the Canadian and U.S.
federal governments signed the Canada-US Softwood Lumber Agreement,
governing exports of softwood lumber from four Canadian provinces, British
Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec. The agreement, which will expire at
the end of March 2001, establishes quotas for exports for each province,
and requires producers to provide certain information regarding exports
and pay an export levy if their exports exceed their particular quota. In
arriving at such export agreements, the Canadian government consults
extensively with industry. Pope and Talbot claimed that Canada has
breached the NAFTA investment requirements regarding national treatment,
most-favored nation treatment, minimum standard of treatment and
performance requirements. The company's lawyers are critical of the
Canadian government for its public release of the Notice of Intent to
Submit a Claim, calling the release a "serious breach of international
procedure." Pope and Talbot's operations are located in British Columbia.
During the period of the softwood memorandum, BC's share of total softwood
exports has declined relative to total Canadian softwood exports; Pope and
Talbot argue that this decline is related to the agreement, and amounts to
a breach of the NAFTA chapter. (Others point to the loss of BC's
traditional markets in Asia, related to the Asian economic crisis.) In an
interim award, the tribunal rejected the claim that expropriation had
occurred, but decided to continue hearings on claims relating to national
treatment and minimum standards of treatment. This case is an important
indication of how far-reaching the impacts of the NAFTA investment chapter
are and of how broadly multiple governmental powers and decisions may be
challenged by an individual corporation for a huge compensatory claim.

UNITED PARCEL SERVICE

UPS has filed a notice of intent to sue Canada for $100 million, alleging
that Canada favors the public postal service, Canada Post, regarding
provision of courier services [see "NAFTA's Investor "Rights""].

KETCHAM INVESTMENTS & TYSAM INVESTMENTS

U.S.-based Ketcham Investments and Tysam Investments jointly own West
Fraser Mills, a timber company. Ketcham and Tysam allege in a December
2000 notice of intent to file a claim that their timber quota under the
U.S.-Canada Softwood Lumber Agreement was arbitrarily cut, denying them
rights afforded Canadian companies. They are seeking C$10 million in
damages.

Suits Against the United States

LOEWEN

The B.C-based Loewen Group is suing for compensation arising from alleged
discrimination, denial of minimum standard of treatment and expropriation,
claiming that a $500 million Mississippi state court verdict against it
amounts to a breach of NAFTA. The verdict came in a suit brought against
Loewen by a Mississippi company, O'Keefe, alleging fraudulent practices
and other anti-competitive practices. Loewen was denied an appeal of the
court decision due to a state law which requires an appellant to post 125
percent of the damage award ($625 million in this case) which Loewen could
not post. (Loewen eventually settled the claim for $175 million.) The
company seeks to recover $775 million in damages, interest and legal
expenses through this investor-state claim and alleges that the
Mississippi decision against it was based on anti-Canadian bias. A
tribunal has agreed to hear the case. This case demonstrates, as does Sun
Belt, the use by a corporation of the NAFTA Investment chapter to
essentially reverse the results of domestic court proceedings, and to
circumvent the course of normal commercial civil litigation. Having lost
to a competitor in the courts, it claims compensation from the U.S.
federal government.

METHANEX CORP.

In June 1999, this Vancouver-based company announced that it will sue the
U.S. government for $970 million due to a California order to phase out
use of the chemical MTBE (methyl tertiary butyl) a methanol-based gas
additive, by late 2002 [see "NAFTA's Investor "Rights""].

MONDEV

In September 1999, Mondev International Ltd., a Montreal-based real estate
development firm, filed a claim against the U.S. government for $16
million. The case arises from the refusal of the city of Boston to permit
it to expand a mall into a vacant lot in the 1980s although Mondev had a
contract with the city. Mondev successfully sued the city and its
redevelopment authority for $16 million, but the court decision was
reversed on appeal due to state law protecting the redevelopment authority
from liability. Mondev seeks to recover the damages through the NAFTA
Chapter 11 investor-state route.

ADF GROUP

ADF, a Canadian fabricator of structural steel for complex structures, is
suing the United States, seeking $90 million in compensation. ADF entered
into a contract with Shirley Contracting Corporation to provide materials
for construction of a Virginia highway interchange. ADF sought to
fabricate products in Canada, using U.S.-made steel. U.S. federal
government authorities held that this arrangement ran afoul of a "Buy
America" requirement. ADF proceeded to attempt to fulfill the contract
using its U.S. facilities and subcontracting to other U.S. facilities. It
alleges the Buy America rules violate Chapter 11 requirements for national
treatment and for bans on performance requirements.

SUITS AGAINST MEXICO

METALCLAD

This case involves a claim by U.S.-based Metalclad, a waste-disposal
company, that the Mexican state of San Luis Potosi breached Chapter 11 of
NAFTA in refusing permission for a waste disposal facility.

The governor deemed the plant an environmental hazard to surrounding
communities, and ordered it closed down on the basis of a geological audit
performed by environmental impact analysts at the University of San Luis
Potosi. The study had found that the facility is located on an alluvial
stream and therefore would contaminate the local water supply. Eventually,
the governor declared the site part of a 600,000 acre ecological zone.

Metalclad sought compensation of some $90 million for expropriation and
for violations of national treatment, most favored nation treatment and
prohibitions on performance requirements. This figure is larger than the
combined annual income of every family in the county where Metalclad's
facility is located.

In August 2000, a tribunal found that Mexico had breached the Investment
chapter and awarded Metalclad $16.7 million, the amount it had spent in
the matter. In this case, Metalclad proceeded to begin construction of the
facility without having local approvals, claiming that it had assurances
from the Mexican federal government. The case raises important questions
about whether governments retain the authority to enact environmental
controls on foreign investors and about the powers of local governments.

The Mexican government has appealed the award to the Supreme Court of
British Columbia, since hearings of the case were held in British
Columbia, and the Canadian government and government of Quebec have
intervened.

WASTE MANAGEMENT INC.

This case involves a claim filed in 1998 against the Mexican government
for $60 million by Waste Management, Inc. It concerns an exclusive 15-year
concession to its subsidiary to provide solid waste management to
Acapulco. The company claims that it was guaranteed payment by the state
of Guerrero and the Mexican federal development bank, Banobras, and that
the obligations have not been met, constituting actions tantamount to
expropriation.

DESONA/AZINIAN

U.S.-based DESONA and its individual investors, Robert Zinian et. al.
filed this claim for over $14 million and costs in 1997 against the
Government of Mexico. The claim related to a waste management business in
Mexico. Desona claimed that a long series of unfair and conflicting
decisions and actions by local authorities contributed to its losses, and
culminated in the forcible removal of its managers from its waste
collection and landfill business in Naucalpan, a suburb of Mexico City on
four days notice.

The case was dismissed by the arbitral panel in November 1999, in a
scathing decision critical of the company's actions and record of
dishonesty. However, since the case turned on the finding of invalidity of
the contract on which the claim was based, it does not assist governments
and citizens regarding the problem of the impact of Chapter 11 claims on
legislative actions.

CEMSA/FELDMAN

This is the first NAFTA investor-state suit involving a tax issue. U.S.
investor Feldman, sole owner of the corporation CEMSA, filed a claim
against the Mexican government in May 1999 for $50 million, alleging that
his company was wrongly denied excise tax rebates and export rights for
its cigarette exporting business. Again, allegations of numerous irregular
actions by Mexican authorities are made, including that CEMSA was required
to provide invoices from its vendors which stated the amount of tax
included in the purchase price. However, CEMSA claims that the tax
authorities did not require that manufacturers provide this information,
so that CEMSA could not comply with the requirement.

ADAMS

This case involves a dispute over title to and use of land on which U.S.
investors had built vacation homes. A group of Mexican landowners won a
claim in Mexican courts that the disputed land had been illegitimately
taken from them by the Mexican government, which later authorized its use
by the U.S. investors. The Mexican Supreme Court ordered the land returned
to the landowners, and Mexican authorities did subsequently return the
land, including the vacation homes on it. The U.S. investors are seeking
$75 million in compensation under Chapter 11.

- Michelle Swenarchuk

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