Australia's Legal Bill For Fighting Philip Morris Corporate Sovereignty Case: $35 million -- So Far
from the heads-you-win,-tails-I-lose dept
Back in 2012, we wrote about Philip Morris using corporate sovereignty provisions in trade agreements to sue Australia and Uruguay over their attempts to reduce the number of deaths from smoking through plain packaging and other health measures. Since then, the case has become a textbook example of all that is wrong with investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS).
For example, even though Philip Morris lost its battle in the Australian High Court to stop the introduction of plain packaging, it did not simply accept the ruling, but sought to use ISDS to nullify the court's decision. The natural instrument would be the trade agreement between the US and Australia, but the Australian government had wisely refused to accept a corporate sovereignty chapter there. So Philip Morris used an obscure 1993 trade agreement between Australia and Hong Kong, which did have ISDS, claiming that its business activities in the latter territory gave it the right to invoke the treaty -- a classic example of "treaty shopping".
Since those events from a few years back, we've heard nothing about how the Philip Morris ISDS case is proceeding -- until now, since The West Australian newspaper has discovered the following fact:
More than [AU]$50 million [about US$35 million] of taxpayer money is expected to go up in smoke defending cigarette plain packaging in a secretive international tribunal in Singapore.
That's because the hearing will move on to the main issues, summarized here on the official Australian government Web page for the case:
But costs will pile much higher if Australia loses on its first defence that Philip Morris indulged in cynical "venue shopping" by shifting its headquarters to Hong Kong to sue Australia.Philip Morris Asia is arguing that Australia's tobacco plain packaging measure constitutes an expropriation of its Australian investments in breach of Article 6 of the Hong Kong Agreement. Philip Morris Asia further argues that Australia's tobacco plain packaging measure is in breach of its commitment under Article 2(2) of the Hong Kong Agreement to accord fair and equitable treatment to Philip Morris Asia's investments. Philip Morris Asia further asserts that tobacco plain packaging constitutes an unreasonable and discriminatory measure and that Philip Morris Asia's investments have been deprived of full protection and security in breach of Article 2(2) of the Hong Kong Agreement.
The information obtained by The West Australian is significant, because it reveals the scale of the costs that a government must contemplate when defending itself against a corporate sovereignty claim. Given that background, it's easy to see why governments in these cases may choose to settle quickly, and to give the companies what they want, rather than risk mounting costs and a huge fine.
It's that fact that gives the lie to the claim that ISDS cannot force a government to change its laws. While that's true in theory, in practice governments are very likely to choose capitulation as the cheaper and easier option, recognizing that the whole process is biased against them. After all, unlike companies, a government can never win an ISDS case: the best it can hope for is not to lose.
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Filed Under: australia, corporate sovereignty, hong kong, isds, plain packs, trade agreements
Companies: philip morris
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A modest proposal.
Preferably just when its senior executives are visiting the country, so that they can be seized and interned in a PoW camp.
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Re: A modest proposal.
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Re: A modest proposal.
That may actually be a viable option! I don't know Australia's legal system but it wouldn't a formal declaration of war suspend all treaties, relations and commerce. Let Philip Morris stick that in there business model and smoke it!
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What If.
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Red herring
You are looking for a smoking gun at a shooting range. The whole point and motivation of an ISDS is to override local laws, so there cannot sensibly be a debate about whether this could occur as a side effect.
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Not to mention that no matter what treaties exist and say, opening a branch in a more favourable country to exploit a treaty is essentially free.
So maybe we should have a few contradicting treaties set up in some accommodating countries and then pick and choose which we'd like to apply. Checkmate national laws, now pay up while we do what we want!
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Since more copyright means less music, films, ... to store, and thus lost profit for the storage seller.
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Nice slogan.
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That kind of slogan should sit well with people who believe the key to their personal safety to lie with easy accessibility of lethal weapons.
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@6
now lets see all those wankers yap
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Re: @6
Try "view in thread" and "reply to this"
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No cigarettes for you!
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You see PM's problem is they aren't thinking big enough.. If they win this case, the High court will most likley then grant absolute ability for any Australian to sue individually or in class PM in its entirety (and any and all prior and present directors) for any health problems that 'on balance' resulted from their products..
Oha nd then they have the comity problems when the courts grant just compensations since PM as odffices in all countries with comity agreements with Australia.. PM would have to declare chapter 11/bankruptcy..
I personally would shed no ttears for the fuckers who are basically killers worse than terrorists..
Oh also, it's impossible for any Australian to defame a company. PM and all it's competitors are the scum of the earth and ARE Criminals and murderers and terrorists (in the absolute definition of the word) and are basically in the same league as peadophiles.
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There is a solution
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1) The War on Drugs.
2) The UK hand gun ban.
Therfore:-
The tobacco companies would still have cigarettes sold in Australia, Via the smugglers, and would also use IDS to get Australia to pay for their lost profits due to the ban, allowing them to profit twice from the Australian citizens, and increasing their tax bill to pay for anti-smuggling efforts.
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Untenable
Australia should leave the tribunal and save its money, then enforce the laws that are best for the citizens of the country. File a formal withdrawal from the treaty to tidy it up. Nobody can force the country to do otherwise.
The idea that companies could override the laws of a country is preposterous. If that was the way that it worked in the past, we would all be driving cars that get 7 miles to the gallon, without seatbelts, smoking cigarettes advertised as good for your health, standing by as companies dumped toxic chemicals into any river they wanted.
People would be sick and dying from pollution and food containing hazardous chemicals and maimed by faulty cars and any other products with a motor.
However, it is all a moot point. After a while of corporations in control of countries, few people would have any money to buy anything.
The idea that health and safety laws are injurious to companies is untenable. No government should even pretend to engage in this system. The Australian government needs to tell its citizens what is going on and withdraw from the tribunal.
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Re: Untenable
Let's just say he knighted a prince, thinks coal is the future (bc wind turbines as ugly) and threatened to assault (shirtfront) Validimir Putin at the G20 held in Australia in 2014.
http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2015/feb/03/how-giving-prince-philip-a-knighthood-lef t-australias-pm-fighting-for-survival
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-06-12/tony-abbott-launches-anot her-attack-against-wind-farms/6541952
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/24/tony-abbott-shirtf ront-putin-dictionary-definition-change
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Wrong currency
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Naive
In bilateral treaties, you have agreed sanctions in trade between the two parties and in things like the TPP it's worse because if one party violates the treaty then all the other parties apply sanctions.
In their 'pure' form, ISDS clauses are a direct response to bad-actor countries like this. If your company is convinced to invest a large amount of money to operate in a country who you then discover is tilting the playing field deliberately and unfairly, you would want a right to recover damages.
The problem with the inclusion of these clauses in the TPP is that this is not generally the case in larger and more advanced economies with a strong rule of law.
Now, having said that, Techdirt regularly publishes articles that almost make the case *for* inclusion of ISDS clauses - articles detailing blatant favoritism/nepotism/field-tilting within these so-called advanced governments. The caveat is that the industries on the receiving end of this favoritism are also those most likely to abuse ISDS clauses.
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Sounds like trade agreements with ISDS clauses are not a viable solution to the problems they're supposed to solve.
The Phillip Morris case presents an example of why a nation might be better off refusing to engage in trade agreements in the first place, since their only end function is to leave the people open to abuse as consumers. Sanctions for failing to do so might actually be preferable to being stuck in a one sided nation-wide TOS agreement.
A nation's government entering a trade agreement at all can, hence, be interpreted as a symptom of government failure.
In the meantime, while Australia is stuck in hardball with Phillip Morris, it would be a shame if of PMs imports got stuck on the ships due to a bureaucratic snarl in customs. The great down under is not so far from Japan not to know that tactic.
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