Investment Arbitration and EU (Competition) Law – Lessons Learned from the
Micula Saga - European Investment Law and Arbitration Review View Investment Arbitration and EU (Competition) Law – Lessons Learned from the
Micula Saga by - European Investment Law and Arbitration Review Investment Arbitration and EU (Competition) Law – Lessons Learned from the
Micula Saga 5 1
On 19
February 2020, in the latest episode to date of the long-running Micula saga, the United Kingdom
(UK) Supreme Court gave its green light to the enforcement in the (UK) of the
award obtained by the Micula brothers against Romania (Award) under the 2002
Sweden-Romania Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT), despite the fact that the
question of whether this Award constitutes state aid prohibited under EU law
was pending before the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). The
Supreme Court ruled that the UK enforcement obligations under the ICSID
Convention could not be affected by the EU duty of sincere cooperation, as
the UK’s ratification of the ICSID Convention preceded its accession to the
EU. The UK Supreme Court judgment, and the prior main episodes of the Micula saga in the framework of
the ICSID, EU state aid and enforcement proceedings, offer a great
opportunity to explore the increasingly tumultuous relationship between
investment arbitration and EU (competition) law, in particular the
compatibility of intra-EU investment arbitrations under the ICSID Convention
with EU law and the coexistence of selective protections under international
investment law with EU state aid law. |
European Investment Law and Arbitration Review