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Independent Power Projects in Developing Countries: Legal Investment Protection and Consequences for Development


ISBN13: 9789041131782
Published: December 2009
Publisher: Kluwer Law International
Country of Publication: The Netherlands
Format: Hardback
Price: £173.00



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For developing countries, a stable and secure supply of electricity is crucial for industrial and commercial development, and for the well-being of their populations. Since the early 1990s, the main mechanism for constructing power generation facilities in developing countries has been the independent power project (IPP) model, where a foreign private entity enters into long term investment contracts with host government entities. This model has succeeded in attracting investment, but raises complex regulatory and contractual challenges in addition to public concerns.

This book – drawing on project contracts, available information about relevant contractual practices (including private interview sources), case law from disputes between investors and host countries, and literature commenting on the legal and economic aspects of the investment’s structure – analyzes the IPP model’s consequences for development.

The author argues that these consequences for development can be improved without detrimentally compromising the private sector’s willingness to continue to invest.

This book contains a hand-book approach to the investment protection measures within the traditional IPP model. However, with its in-depth analysis of the legal relationship among the various parties (an interlinked web of criss-crossing rights and obligations of contractual, corporate and financial natures, which cannot be viewed independently from each other), its detailed description of the IPP marketplace (consisting of host developing country buyers and multinational corporation sellers, adjudicated mainly through international arbitration) including how the conditions in this market compares to (and differs from) the assumptions of the basic competitive model, and its insightful observation of the ‘facts on the ground’, this book will find a ready welcome among practitioners, policymakers, and scholars in the fields of law, economics and development theory. Moreover, any lawyer will find food for thought here in the light the work sheds on the contractual role of risk allocation, the threat of moral hazard, the analysis of IPP caselaw, the ‘neutrality’ of international investment arbitration, and the suggestions for strategic legal argumentation during dispute resolution.

Subjects:
Construction Law, Energy and Natural Resources Law
Contents:
Part I. Introduction.
1. Foreign Direct Investment in Power Generation in a Developing Country. Part II. A Multi-faceted Investment Protection: Legal Structure and Risk Allocation.
2. The Developing Country’s Power Sector and the Need for Investment Protection.
3. Legal and Financial Structure.
4. Passing through the Project Company’s Obligations.
5. The Project Company’s Remuneration: Firm Capacity.
6. Protection against Changes in Law and Changes in Tax.
7. Breach of Contract, Remedies and Host Government Responsibility.
8. External Investment Protection Measures.
9. Legal Characterizations of the IPP Model’s Investment Protection. Part III. The IPP Model’s Consequences for Development.
10. The International IPP Market: Can It Maximize Social Welfare? 11. Risk-bearing Superiority and Exposure to Market Risks.
12. The Host Country’s Procurement Process Decides the Sponsors’ Incentives.
13. The East Asian Crisis and the IPP Model’s Experiences.
14. An Analysis of IPP Case Law.
15. A Scope for Proactive Legal Adjudication.
16. The Role of Political Risk Coverage.
17. The IPP Model’s Consequences for Development: A Mixed Record.
18. Will Rectification Compromise the Private Sector’s Willingness to Invest? Part IV. Conclusions and Perspectives.
19. The Interaction between Investment Protection and Development. List of Sources. Cases. Claim Determinations for Political Risk Coverage. Bibliography.Index

Series: Energy and Environmental Law and Policy Series

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