Commission launches public online consultation on investor protection in TTIP

27 March 2014

As part of its ongoing efforts to make its negotiations with the US the most open and transparent trade talks to date, the Commission launched a public consultation on investor protection and investor-to-state dispute settlement (ISDS) in the TTIP. (Includes link to Commissioner De Gucht statement.)

In addition, the European Commission felt it was necessary to launch this particular public consultation as a response to the growing public debate and increased concerns over ISDS within TTIP. The aim of the consultation is to define better the EU’s approach to investor protection and ISDS in the proposed TTIP negotiation by allowing all stakeholders an opportunity to provide their reflections.

The Commission intends to ensure that investment protection and ISDS reflect best practice, not just in the TTIP but in all new EU investment agreements. The aim is to make the situation regarding investor protection in TTIP and other future investment agreements signed by the EU much clearer than it is in the more than 3,000 investment agreements currently in force worldwide. The Commission also wants to make ISDS in TTIP more transparent and accountable than existing practice, including than that provided for in the current bilateral investment agreements between EU Member States and the US, which TTIP would replace. The same intention applies to other future investment agreements the EU signs with non-EU countries.

It is important to recognise that the European Commission negotiates investment provisions in TTIP following the instruction of its Member States. The issues of investor protection and ISDS are part of the negotiating directives unanimously given by EU Member States to the European Commission in June 2013. In the EU-US trade negotiations - as in all trade negotiations - it is the institutional role of the European Commission to negotiate on behalf of all the EU 28 member states under their supervision and democratic oversight. The European Parliament also provides democratic oversight during the negotiation process with access to all the same documents provided to the Member States. Most importantly, the European Parliament will decide ultimately through a vote at the end of the entire negotiation process whether the concluded deal should be accepted.

While the current public debate is very welcome and important, there have been a number of misconceptions and even misrepresentations as to the aims of ISDS within TTIP negotiations. For example, it is often claimed that investor protection being negotiated under the TTIP would allow business to sue governments whenever new laws reduced their profits. A number of high-profile ongoing cases, under existing international agreements have raised concerns about the right of governments to legislate to protect the environment or consumers without business challenging them in court.

The public consultation clarifies the points the EU aims to improve to ensure that ISDS in TTIP guarantees the right of governments to legislate in the public interest. The Commission's public consultation explains how it is seeking to have state-of-the-art investment protection and ISDS provisions in TTIP which can set a precedent for future trade agreements and asks respondents to provide their feedback and views on a series of detailed questions.

"I hope that when people look at the detail of what we want to put in the agreement, they will see that we are pushing for a better and improved system than exists at the moment", said EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht. "I now invite the interested public to share with us ideas and comments on whether the EU’s proposed approach for TTIP achieves the right balance between protecting investors and safeguarding the EU governments' absolute right and ability to regulate in the public interest."

Deadline 13 July  2014.

Press release

Commissioner De Gucht's full statement

Q&A

Access to consultation


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