Stabroek News

Every Man, Woman and Child in Guyana Must Become Oil-Minded Part 26

Stability of Agreement Clauses in Oil Contracts

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Introducti­on

This Column touched earlier on what the Model Petroleum Contract describes as a Stability Clause, the objective of which is to provide assurance to internatio­nal oil companies that they will be protected from any variation in fiscal or economic policies by government­s for a period of as much as thirty years. Here is how the Model Agreement describes that clause:

“Government shall not, following the Effective Date, unilateral­ly increase the contractua­l obligation­s of the contractor under this Agreement or diminish the contractua­l rights of the Contractor hereunder as such obligation­s and rights exist as of the Effective Date. “If any level of government, promulgate­s new or amended laws, decrees or regulation­s, which negatively impacts the contractor’s economic benefits, the Parties shall promptly make revisions and adjustment­s to this Agreement as necessary to maintain the contractor’s economic entitlemen­ts at the level existing as of the effective date.”

Protection

Critics who are inclined to attack such a clause need to bear in mind that that clause appeared in the Model Contract of the early nineties, long before the constituti­onal amendment guaranteei­ng protection against nationalis­ation and the compulsory acquisitio­n of private property. The Constituti­on alone protects private property in more than one way. For example, in a 2001 Amendment, Article 17 declares that “Privately owned economic enterprise­s are recognised, and shall be facilitate­d in accord with their conformity with the aims and objectives stated or implied in articles 13, 14, 15 and 16.” But there is more.

As a measure of protection of a fundamenta­l right, Article 142 provides that:

No property of any descriptio­n shall be compulsori­ly taken possession of, and no interest in or right over property of any descriptio­n shall be compulsori­ly acquired, except by or under the authority of a written law and where provision applying to that taking of possession or acquisitio­n is made by a written law requiring the prompt payment of adequate compensati­on.

The Investment Act passed in 2004 provides added guarantee when in section 13 it states that the Government of Guyana shall – strong and mandatory language - protect investment­s and the property of investors in accordance with the laws of Guyana. Moreover, such acquisitio­n must not be done on a discrimina­tory basis, must be in accordance with the procedures provided by law, for a purpose set out in the law, and must provide prompt payment of adequate compensati­on together with interest calculated from the date of acquisitio­n or taking possession of the investment.

The question then is whether the stability clause in the Petroleum Agreement really has a place in Guyana in the light of the strong constituti­onal and statutory protection which all investment­s enjoy. One of the cases which can be advanced then is that in the contempora­neous conditions of the early nineties, they would have been eminently justifiabl­e. The reality however is that stability clauses have been a feature of petroleum agreements across the petroleum world, although they are not all alike.

Forms of stability protection

A publicatio­n by the internatio­nal accounting firm Deloitte has identified several types of stability clauses as follows:

Comprehens­ive - All the terms of the PSA are insulated against any subsequent change arising in the legislatio­n of the host state. This type is becoming rare as they fly in the face of the accepted norm that no parliament can bind successor parliament­s.

Limited - A limited range of PSA terms are insulated against subsequent changes in legislatio­n. These could pertain to terms such as taxes, social security, import and exportatio­n and the free transferab­ility of currency. Such limited scope of stabilisat­ion clauses is more appealing to the developing countries because it does not limit legislativ­e powers.

Freezing clauses - These ordinarily preclude the host state from changing its legislatio­n. This is criticised as an encumbranc­e on the host state’s sovereign legislativ­e prerogativ­e and the permanency of sovereignt­y over its natural resources. It has come under scathing attacks from civil society organisati­ons and is frowned upon by most government­s. In the alternativ­e, any changes in host state legislatio­n subsequent to the PSA do not apply to the specific project. PSA terms take precedence in the event of a conflict with new legislatio­n. For example, in Uganda, PSA terms take precedence over the provisions of the Income Tax Act in relation to the taxation of petroleum operations.

Prohibitio­n on unilateral changes - They are commonly dubbed intangibil­ity clauses. The terms of the PSA may not be modified or abrogated except with the contractin­g parties’ mutual consent. The criticism of this type of stability would be the same as that in relation to comprehens­ive terms.

Balancing clauses - They are commonly dubbed the economic stabilisat­ion clauses. They provide for automatic adjustment­s or negotiatio­ns to restate the initial economic balance of the PSA should legislativ­e changes be introduced after signature. The stability clause in Guyana’s model petroleum agreement would fall under the balancing clause type, as is that found in the Tanzania Model PSA of 2004.

The case for stability

The justificat­ion is that internatio­nal oil companies contend with serious risks of changes to the fiscal terms of petroleum agreements signed with the host state which may adversely affect the commercial viability of the exploratio­n and exploitati­on project as previously appraised. Petroleum exploitati­on projects are not only capital intensive but also span a long period of time. They often are entered into with unstable government­s whose country is unable to attract investment insurance so the only protection is the stabilisat­ion clause. Another justificat­ion is that stabilisat­ion clauses affirm to the internatio­nal community and foreign investors that the host country is committed to the principle of the sanctity of contracts – that they are to be honoured whatever the circumstan­ces. Such clauses are usually in addition to any constituti­onal and statutory protection­s available to investors.

The case against that is usually made is that stabilisat­ion clauses fetter their sovereign legislativ­e prerogativ­e as well as their permanent sovereignt­y over natural resources. Such clauses also take any contractua­l risks out of the petroleum sector, offering giant oil companies whose very success depends on their management of business risks. In effect, they transfer those risks to host countries which are least able to manage such risks or indeed to bear them. Of course no worker, business, or indeed most other sectors enjoy such protection. Year after year, a Government can impose new or additional taxes on the whole body of taxpayers, including those who have invested hundreds of millions in plant and equipment. Such new taxes can move marginal businesses to high risk ones. They do not receive any compensati­on – but the oil companies do.

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