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Navigating international trade and tariffs
Recent tariffs and other trade measures have transformed the international trade landscape, impacting almost every sector, region and business worldwide.
Global | Publication | April 2015
Many are concerned about South Africa’s change in approach to investment protection, in particular the protection afforded to investors against expropriation. There is still uncertainty about what the final legal framework will look like, but investors can derive some comfort from reports that their concerns are being addressed.
Since the mid-1990s, foreign investments in South Africa have in many instances been protected from expropriation through bilateral investment treaties (BITs). They have also been protected by South African common law, local legislation and the South African Constitution.
South Africa’s approach to investment protection is changing. This follows a review South Africa conducted of its BIT obligations. The review led to a decision by the South African cabinet in July 2010 to
At the beginning of October 2012, South Africa cancelled its BITs with Belgium–Luxembourg, Spain, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Denmark. It is reported that South Africa will soon be cancelling its remaining European BITs. Discussions are apparently ongoing regarding the future of the China–South Africa BIT.
South Africa is one of a number of developing countries moving away from the traditional form of investment protection offered by BITs. Indonesia intends to terminate more than 60 BITS, and Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia have already withdrawn from the ICSID Convention. Australia has apparently raised concerns about international dispute resolution mechanisms.
South Africa published a draft Promotion and Protection of Investment Bill for public comment in October 2013 (the Bill). The Bill sets out to promote and protect investment in a manner that reflects public interest and that strikes a balance between the rights and obligations of all investors. Various stakeholders, including many of South Africa’s trading partners, raised concerns that the protection afforded to foreign investors under the Bill will be less than that currently afforded under BITs.
After the receipt of public comment, the Bill was referred to the National Economic Development and Labour Council (NEDLAC) for discussion. It has been reported that NEDLAC has responded favourably to foreign investors’ concerns regarding the expropriation and dispute settlement provisions of the Bill.
The revised draft Bill has not yet been released.
South Africa’s trading partners expressed the following concerns about the Bill in its draft form:
The latest version of the Bill is still to be published. If reports are correct, South Africa’s trading partners can be optimistic that some of their concerns about the draft Bill have been addressed. It has been reported that the provisions contained in the current Bill which relate to expropriation have been removed and will be dealt with in the new Expropriation Act and that the exclusion of ‘deprivation’ from the definition of “expropriation” (referred to above) has been removed.
South Africa’s change in approach to the protection of foreign investments will be regulated not only by the Bill (once it becomes a formal Act) but also by the new Expropriation Act (which will amend the 1975 Expropriation Act). The new Expropriation Act has yet to be promulgated, but it has been published in the form of a bill for public comment. The Expropriation Bill states that the Minister of Public Works may expropriate property “for a purpose connected with the execution of his or her mandate or upon request of an organ of state” but that this is “subject to the obligation to pay compensation which is just and equitable”.
The Expropriation Bill states that the compensation payable to an expropriated owner must also reflect an equitable balance between the public interest and the interests of the expropriated owner, having regard to all relevant circumstances, including the following (most of which are required by the Constitution)
The Expropriation Bill is the subject of public comment and further parliamentary debate. There is much uncertainty about what the revised Bill and Expropriation Act will contain and investors should continue to monitor the situation.
The President of South Africa announced in the 2015 State of the Nation Address that measures will be taken to limit foreign ownership of agricultural land and that there will be a move to a system of long-term leasehold. This is not currently addressed in either of the bills discussed above.
However, investors should derive some comfort that both pieces of legislation will be subject to the supremacy of the South African Constitution, which prohibits any form of expropriation except as against payment of just and equitable compensation, based on the factors mentioned.
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Recent tariffs and other trade measures have transformed the international trade landscape, impacting almost every sector, region and business worldwide.
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Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa is acting on behalf of the Helen Suzman Foundation (HSF) in its application to be admitted as an amicus curiae in the ongoing High Court litigation regarding the state’s failure to prosecute apartheid-era crimes.
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