China FTA includes rights for investors to sue governments over changes in domestic law but full text remains secret
“After all the positive news about access for Australian farmers to Chinese markets, the government summary of the China-Australia Free trade agreement briefly mentions that it includes special rights for foreign investors to sue governments for damages if a change in domestic law can be claimed to harm their investment, known as ISDS,” Dr
Patricia Ranald, Coordinator of the Australian Fair Trade and Investment Network (AFTINET) said today.
“We could face a scenario where Chinese investors could sue local, State or Federal governments for damages over a
change in environmental or other regulation. We have also opposed this provision in the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement with the US, Japan and nine other Pacific Rim countries, because ISDS is clearly against the national
interest,” said Dr Ranald.
“The Philip Morris tobacco company is currently using such rights in an obscure Australia-Hong Kong investment agreement
to sue the Australian government over plain packaging legislation, despite the fact that the Australian High Court found
that they were not entitled to compensation under Australian law. Australian High Court Chief Justice French has recently criticised the impact of ISDS cases on national court decisions,” said Dr Ranald.
“The reports of three Australian Parliamentary inquiries show that these international tribunals lack the independence and
consistency of national legal systems They are made up of investment law experts who can be lawyers one month and
arbitrators the next, and there is no system of precedents or appeals, resulting in inconsistent decisions which
generally favour investors,” added Dr Ranald.
“Claimed ‘safeguards’ for health and environment legislation in ISDS clauses in recent agreements have not prevented
foreign investors from suing governments over health and environmental laws. The US Lone Pine mining company is sing the
Québec provincial government over environmental regulation of gas mining. The Eli Lilly pharmaceutical company is suing
the Canadian national government because of a court decision refusing a patent. And the French company the Veolia is
suing the Egyptian government over a contract dispute which includes a rise in the minimum wage for workers,” said Dr
Ranald.
“It is a predictable pattern with this government that we have a grand announcement that deal has been completed but the
text remains secret and the details cannot be scrutinised. All we have is the government’s own summary which emphasises
the positives. With trade agreements, the devil is always in the detail. We call for the full text of the China free
trade agreement to be released well before it is signed for public and parliamentary scrutiny,” said Dr Ranald.
ENDS