A coalition of human rights and environmental organizations file an amicus curiae brief in an investment arbitration concerning access to water and sanitation in Buenos Aires, Argentina

April 5, 2007

On April 4, 2007, four human rights organizations in Argentina, the Centro de Estudios Legales y Sociales (CELS), the Asociación Civil por la Igualdad y la Justicia (ACIJ), Consumidores Libres, and the Unión de Usuarios y Consumidores, and the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL) filed an amicus curiae brief in English and Spanish to a Tribunal of the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID). The ICSID Tribunal is hearing a water-related investment arbitration initiated by a corporate consortium against Argentina.

This investment dispute before an ICSID Tribunal is at the heart of the controversy between the Argentine Government and a consortium of transnational water companies including Suez (France), Vivendi Universal (France), AWG Group (United Kingdom), and Aguas de Barcelona (Spain). The dispute concerns the provision of water and sanitation in the City of Buenos Aires and 17 districts of the Province of Buenos Aires (the largest concession area in the world), in relation to the emergency measures freezing tariffs adopted by Argentina amidst its economic and social crisis of 2001.

The brief emphasizes that human rights law recognizes the right to water and its close linkages with several other human rights, including the right to life, health, housing, and an adequate standard of living. The brief further notes that human rights law requires that Argentina adopt measures to ensure access to water to the population, including physical and economic access. Under this light, the freezing of the tariff levels amidst an economic crisis allowed the population to have access to water and sanitation, and thus the measures complied with Argentina’s requirements under human rights law.

The amicus
curiae brief
notes that human rights law requires Argentina
to ensure access to water and sanitation to the population, and
that the rationale underlying the freezing of tariff levels amidst
an economic and social crisis is relevant for the interpretation
and application of the standards of treatment in the relevant BITs.


On February 12, 2007, the ICSID Tribunal decided
to allow a coalition of NGOs to submit an amicus curiae brief, despite objections by the claimant. This decision was preceded by the Tribunal’s decision of May 19, 2005, which ruled that it had the power to accept amicus curiae briefs from civil society organizations, even in the face of objections from parties. The two decisions set a landmark precedent by recognizing the public interest involved in this water-related investment arbitration, which will influence water concessions around the world. Also, the Tribunal’s decisions make a key contribution to introducing greater openness in international investment arbitration, which has been traditionally inaccessible to civil society.

For more information, please contact:

IN WASHINGTON DC:
Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL), Marcos Orellana, +1
202 785 8700, morellana@ciel.org

IN ARGENTINA:
Centro de Estudios Legales y Sociales, (CELS)
Gastón Chillier, Jimena Garrote, Carolina Fairstein, +54 11 4334
4200
Asociación Civil por la Igualdad y la Justicia (ACIJ), Ezequiel
Nino, + 54 911 5624 2334
Unión de Usuarios y Consumidores, Horacio Luis Bereten, ++ 54 911
4400 7035