Legal updates and opinions
News / News
The International Arbitration Act spells opportunity for South Africa
With the coming into operation of the International Arbitration Act[1] (“Act”) on 20 December 2017, South Africa for the first time has a dedicated statute governing international arbitration. The Act brings South Africa into line with international best practice on international arbitration by providing for the incorporation of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) Model Law into South African Law.
The Model Law is the international “gold standard” for modern international arbitration statutes. It provides consistency and familiarity to foreign investors and international businesses, which generally prefer to have the same dispute resolution mechanisms in all their agreements, rather than having to deal with the unfamiliar law and procedure applied by domestic courts in each jurisdiction in which they do business. The Model Law provides an increasingly popular alternative to the divergent approaches taken in international arbitration statutes throughout the world; it has now been adopted by 11 countries in Africa and 78 globally, including many of our co-members in the Southern African Development Community, the African Union and the Commonwealth.
In addition to adopting the UNCITRAL Model Law, the Act re-commits South Africa to the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards, replacing the statute previously dealing with this. It does not however provide for South Africa’s accession to the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), as envisaged in the original version of the Act (drafted twenty years ago), because the South African government’s policy has in the meantime become somewhat more averse to international arbitration as an investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism. This is reflected in the Protection of Investment Act[2], which makes international arbitration voluntary but not compulsory for the SA government in ISDS matters.
The Act gives rise to at least two major opportunities for South Africa. Firstly, it is hoped that the Act will assist South Africa to attract foreign direct investment and boost South Africa as a business destination by giving international businesses the comfort and certainty of a familiar and trusted dispute resolution mechanism for the protection and enforcement of their rights. Secondly, and more ambitiously, the Act might be leveraged to promote South Africa as an international or regional arbitration venue of choice – bearing in mind that arbitration is a consensual process, and the parties are therefore at liberty to select their venue, with a neutral venue often being preferred in order to nullify any perception of home-ground advantage. With its developed-world legal apparatus, convenient geographic location and prospects of enormous costs savings compared to the traditional arbitration center’s such as Paris, London and New York, South Africa is now ideally positioned to market its major cities as international arbitration venues. Merely having the statutory and other infrastructure in place is no guarantee of immediate success in the development of an international arbitration venue, as the Mauritian experience has demonstrated. Nevertheless, the Act is a necessary and welcome first step towards unleashing South Africa’s legal resources to create a regional arbitration destination of choice.
[1] Act 15 of 2017
[2] Act 22 of 2015 – not yet proclaimed and hence not yet operative.
Latest News
Caught on the sidelines: The cost of employee sick leave abuse
Danelle Plaatjies - Candidate Attorney and Yendiswa Sithole - Candidate Attorney What is an employer to do when an employee [...]
Striking a balance: The impact of strike violence on protected strikes
Danelle Plaatjies - Candidate Attorney and Hanan Jeppie - Candidate Attorney Issue Whether a protected strike that was characterised [...]
Court orders un-redacted documents be provided to SARS
Section 46 of the Tax Administration Act, 2011 (TAA) allows SARS to request 'relevant material' in relation to a taxpayer [...]
The Competition Commission’s Revised Final Public Interest Guidelines: A Critical Framework for Merger Analysis
and Chiara Ferri - Candidate Attorney Introduction The South African Competition Commission ("Commission") has published its final revised Public Interest [...]
Constitutional Court considers evictions in the inner-city of Cape Town
On 27 February 2024, the Constitutional Court heard oral arguments in the matter of Charnell Commando and Others v City [...]
Newsflash: The Competition Authority of Kenya clarifies the position on Administrative Remedies and Settlement.
and Lwazi-Lwandile Simelane - Candidate Attorney On 21 March 2024, the Competition Authority of Kenya ("the CAK") announced that it [...]