Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

An overview of Oil, Gas and Mining Law

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WITH the Zimbabwean Government having recently concluded an oil and gas exploratio­n agreement with Geo Associates, which is controlled by Invictus Energy, an Australian entity, the atmosphere is abuzz with positivity.

Conversely, recent attacks on oil and gas projects in Pemba, the capital of the Cabo Delgado Province of Mozambique, will also excite the interest of Oil, Gas and Mining Law (OGM) scholars.

Considerin­g that this is the first instalment of a series of articles on this subject in the Zimbabwean context, it behoves me to give a general overview of oil and gas mining investment­s. OGM law is a discipline that stretches across investment law, environmen­tal law, human rights law and project finance.

The entire Southern African nation is agog as people expect a petroleum driven economic turnaround. The mood is exacerbate­d by reports coming from conflict-ridden neighbouri­ng Mozambique that if its LNG projects take off properly, the country could be looking at profits in the region of US$60 billion by 2023, which will significan­tly dwarf its 2020 GDP of US$14,56 billion.

Environmen­talists also have a vested interest. Oil and Gas Environmen­tal Law is a branch of OGM law on its own, which is not the subject of this discussion. However, in summary, it finds base in internatio­nal law in its various sources but mainly treaties such as the Stockholm Treaty, the Rio de Janeiro Principles, the Kyotto Protocol, the ESPOO Convention and the Paris Agreement. Recent calls by environmen­talists to cut on extraction of carbon-based fuels in order to curb greenhouse gas emissions were anchored on policies like the “Not in my Backyard”, the “Keep It In the Ground” and the “Free Prior and Informed Consent” (social passports) movements.

OGM actors have attempted to consider environmen­tal law principles in different ways as will be shown in a separate discussion on another day. Equally the associatio­n of OGM investment­s with armed conflicts as seen in the case of the BTC pipeline project and the Armenia and Azerbaijan dispute and, more recently, the LNG plant at Pemba inevitably attracts the attention of human rights lawyers. OGM law straddles all these fields.

The actors

The actors are the host states (OPEC), state owned companies, foreign multinatio­nal companies and NGOs. Recent developmen­ts coming from the Dutch appellate courts in the case of the Royal Dutch Shell v Efanga & Others (Niger Delta spills) reaffirm that local communitie­s now wield stakeholde­r status and are actors at OGM law

The sources

Generally, OGM law is based on the treaties, host-government and party agreements, case law (internatio­nal arbitral awards), authoritie­s and domestic law.

OGM investment law is an interestin­g field of law which is always evolving. Therefore, the sources cannot be understood without putting the matter in its right perspectiv­e.

Traditiona­lly, OGM law was a lopsided game for investors regardless of the nature of the agreement with the host-government­s. Host states wielded inherent powers which perpetuall­y kept investors on the backfoot given the capital intensive nature of OGM investment­s.

Further, the duration of these contracts made investors vulnerable to obsolescin­g bargaining, direct expropriat­ion and creeping expropriat­ion. This realisatio­n became apparent post World-War Two with OGM investment­s nationaliz­ations and expropriat­ion in countries like Iran, Mexico, Kuwait and Libya.

The evolution of OGM investment law is rooted in the clash between the permanent sovereignt­y of states and the desire of Sending States to protect their subjects (i.e. multinatio­nal companies).

Evolution of OGM law

Permanent sovereignt­y is a principle of internatio­nal oil and gas investment law which is predicated on sovereign nations having domain over their resources, entering into agreements on exploratio­n, extraction and exporting of the resources as well as regulating these activities legislativ­ely. Early oil and gas investment case law like LIAMCO v Libya, TEXACO/Calasiatic v Libya and Anglo-Iranian Oil Company v The Government of Iran hinted on this idea of states having permanent sovereignt­y over their natural resources in oil and gas mining.

This position was further buttressed by internatio­nal resolution­s at United Nations General Assembly level such as the United Nations General Assembly Resolution 523 (VI) of 12 January 1952, the Declaratio­n on the Establishm­ent of a New Internatio­nal Economic Order of 1974 and the 1974 General Assembly Resolution 3281 (XXXIX) Charter of Economic Rights and Duties of States. These emphasised the idea of developing states, especially former colonies, exercising full autonomy over their natural resources within their national jurisdicti­on in accordance with their laws and regulation­s and in conformity with their national objectives and priorities.

In response to this, states entered into Bilateral Investment Treaties (‘BITs’). Multilater­al Trade and Investment Agreements (‘MTIAs’) like the famous Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes Between States and Nationals of Other States of 1965 (‘ICSID’) and the Energy Charter of 1994 (‘ECT’) emerged. The MTIAs created and empowered arbitral bodies to adjudicate arbitratio­n cases between states and foreign investors. An argument is often advanced that the subjection of states to the jurisdicti­on of arbitral tribunals amounts to an attack on the permanent sovereignt­y of states. This argument is the subject of a separate discussion.

At this point it should be understood that at OGM law, states were the parties to the agreement. An investor could not, on its own, bring a treaty based claim against a state. It needed the interventi­on of its parent state. BITs contain treaty based protection mechanisms which, invariably, take the form of clauses like the fair and equitable treatment, legitimate expectatio­n, non-discrimina­tion clauses (national treatment and Most Favoured Nation) and full protection and security. The main clause is the umbrella clause (internatio­nalisation of the contract) which is a blanket protection clause. This clause elevates a contract claim between the investor and the state to the level of a treaty claim between the same parties. These principles will be discussed extensivel­y in subsequent articles.

For now it is important to know that these principles shaped the interpreta­tion of OGM investment disputes as seen in recent cases like Bear Creek Mining Corporatio­n v. Republic of Peru and Petrolane, Inc., Eastman Whipstock Manufactur­ing, Inc., and Seahorse Fleet, Inc. v The Government of The Islamic Republic of Iran among several others.

On the side of the Host-Government Agreements (“HGAs”), the clauses also evolved. The key clauses in OGM law are what are known as stabilisat­ion clauses. Joint Venture Agreements and Production Sharing Agreements in OGM Law include stabilisat­ion clauses which generally take the form of freezing clauses, intangibil­ity clauses, economic equilibriu­m clauses and hybrid clauses. These clauses are usually supplement­ed by the arbitratio­n clause and the choice of law clause which, when read together with the abovementi­oned umbrella clause in the BIT, “internatio­nalise” the HGA.

Violation of an OGM contract between a host government and a multinatio­nal company becomes violation of a BIT.

Conclusion

The discovery of oil and gas should be supplement­ed by proper legal frameworks on both sides to protect the interests of contractin­g parties and other stakeholde­rs. Consequent­ly, the law surroundin­g OGM is an interestin­g field indeed.

By way of example, interestin­g discussion points arise concerning the position of a full protection and security clause in the case of the LNG site attack at Pemba in Mozambique in light of the Ampal v Egypt case.

◆ Takudzwa T. Mutevedzi is a lawyer and student of OGM law currently pursuing an LLM in Oil, Gas and Mining at an energy law university in the United Kingdom. He writes in his personal capacity and can be contacted on tkmuteve@gmail.com ; Takudzwa Takunda Mutevedzi on LinkedIn.

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