Memorandum on Possible Implications under Denmark’s Investment Treaty
Commitments of the Draft Bill to Amend the Danish Continental Shelf Act
(submitted for public consultation on 23 June 2017)
Prof. Dr. Stephan Schill, LL.M. (NYU)*
Executive Summary
The proposed amendment of the Danish Continental Shelf Act raises concerns as to its lawfulness
under the obligations Denmark has undertaken under the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT) as it would
apply to the pending application for a construction permit by Nord Stream 2 AG. The ECT applies to
Nord Stream Pipeline 2 (NSP2) because both Denmark and Switzerland are Contracting Parties to the
ECT, and because Nord Stream 2 AG qualifies as a Swiss investors (under Article 1(7)(a)(ii) ECT) that
has made an ‘investment’ in Denmark pursuant to Article 1(6) ECT. Only with respect to the part of
the pipeline that is set to be built in Denmark, Nord Stream 2 AG has spent sums in the order of 60
million Euros for administrative steps, contracts and expenditures, including for permitting, surveying
and logistics.
The ECT provides for protection under international law to investments in the energy sector
made by investors from another contracting state. This protection is independent of Denmark’s
domestic, including constitutional law and the law of the European Union. The ECT protects, inter
alia, against expropriations and measures having an equivalent effect that are not accompanied by
compensation (Article 13 ECT). It also requires contracting states to provide for ‘stable’ and
‘transparent’ investment conditions and ‘fair and equitable treatment’ (Article 10(1) ECT). Moreover,
under Article 10(12) ECT states have to provide in their domestic law for ‘effective means for the
assertion of claims and the enforcement of rights with respect to investments’. Foreign investors can
claim for any damages resulting from breach of these commitments through the investor-state
dispute settlement mechanism provided for in Article 26 ECT.
The introduction of the new requirement arguably has an effect that is equivalent to an
expropriation, if applied retroactively to deny NSP2, thus contravening Article 13 ECT. Since NSP2
cannot be implemented without the construction permit, an amendment of the Danish Continental
Shelf Act that would allow the refusal of the applied-for permit would destroy Nord Stream 2 AG’s
investment. Such a refusal would only be legal under Article 13(1) ECT if accompanied by
compensation. In addition, the fact that no reasons have to be provided by the Ministry for Foreign
Affairs in providing its recommendation against a project prevents Nord Stream 2 AG from having
recourse to the prompt review required by Article 13(2) ECT.
The proposed amendment of the Danish Continental Shelf Act arguably also violates the right
to stable and transparent investment conditions and to stability under the fair and equitable
treatment granted by Article 10(1) ECT. This provision protects against unreasonable and
*
Professor of International and Economic Law and Governance, University of Amsterdam; Rechtsanwalt
(RAK Frankfurt); Attorney-At-Law (New York); Member of the List of Conciliators of the International Centre for
Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID); Editor-in-Chief of The Journal of World Investment & Trade.
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