CANADA AND THE REPUBLIC OF PERU, hereinafter referred to as the
"Parties" ,
RECOGNIZING that the promotion and the protection of investments of investors of
one Party in the territory of the other Party will be conducive to the stimulation of
mutually beneficial business activity, to the development of economic cooperation
between them and to the promotion of sustainable development,
HAVE AGREED AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION A - DEFINITIONS
ARTICLE 1
Definitions
For the purpose of this Agreement:
administrative ruling of general application means an administrative ruling or
interpretation that applies to all persons and fact situations that fall generally within its
ambit and that establishes a norm of conduct, but does not include:
(i) a determination or ruling made in an administrative or quasi-judicial
proceeding that applies to a particular person, good or service of the
other Party in a specific case; or
(ii) a ruling that adjudicates with respect to a particular act or practice.
affiliate a person is an affiliate of another person when:
(i) directly or indirectly, it controls or is controlled by that other person; or
(ii) it and the other person are both controlled, directly or indirectly, by the
same person;
Commission means the body established by the Parties under Article 50;
confidential information means business confidential information and information that
is privileged or otherwise protected from disclosure;
covered investment means, with respect to a Party. an investment in its territory of an
investor of the other Party existing on the date of entry into force of this Agreement, as
well as investments made or acquired thereafter;
cultural industries means persons engaged in any of the following activities:
(i) the publication, distribution, or sale of books, magazines, periodicals or
newspapers in print or machine readable form but not including the sole
activity of printing or typesetting any of the foregoing;
(ii) the production, distribution, sale or exhibition of film or video
recordings;
(iii) the production, distribution, sale or exhibition of audio or video music
recordings;
(iv) the publication, distribution, sale or exhibition of music in print or
machine readable form; or
(v) radio communications in which the transmissions are intended for direct
reception by the general public, and all radio, television or cable
broadcasting undertakings and all satellite programming and broadcast
network services.
days means calendar days, including weekends and holidays;
designate means to establish, designate or authorize, or to expand the scope of a
monopoly to cover an additional good or service after the date of entry into force of the
Agreement;
disputing investor means an investor that makes a claim under Section C;
disputing Party means a Party against which a claim is made under Section C;
disputing party means the disputing investor or the disputing Party;
enterprise means:
(i) any entity constituted or organized under applicable law, whether or not
for profit, whether privately-owned or governmentally-owned, including
any corporation, trust, partnership, sole proprietorship, joint venture or
other association; and
(ii) a branch of any such entity;
enterprise of a Party means an enterprise constituted or organized under the law of a
Party, and a branch located in the territory of a Party and carrying out business
activities there;
equity or debt securities includes voting and non-voting shares, bonds, convertible
debentures, stock options and warrants;
existing means in effect on the date of entry into force of this Agreement;
financial institution means any financial intermediary or other enterprise that is
authorized to do business and regulated or supervised as a financial institution under
the law of the Party in whose territory it is located;
financial service means a service of a financial nature, including insurance, and a
service incidental or auxiliary to a service of a financial nature;
government monopoly means a monopoly that is owned, or controlled through
ownership interests, by the national government of a Party or by another such
monopoly;
ICSID means the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes;
ICSID Convention means the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes
between States and Nationals of other States, done at Washington, March 18, 1965;
intellectual property rights means copyright and related rights, trademark rights,
rights in geographical indications, rights in industrial designs, patent rights, rights in
layout designs of integrated circuits, rights in relation to protection of undisclosed
information, and plant breeders' rights.
Inter-American Convention means the Inter-American Convention on International
Commercial Arbitration, done at Panama, January 30, 1975;
investment means:
(I) an enterprise;
(II) an equity security of an enterprise;
(III) a debt security of an enterprise
(i) where the enterprise is an affiliate of the investor, or
(ii) where the original maturity of the debt security is at least three
years,
but does not include a debt security, regardless of original maturity, of a state
enterprise;
(IV) a loan to an enterprise
(i) where the enterprise is an affiliate of the investor, or
(ii) where the original maturity of the loan is at least three years,
but does not include a loan, regardless of original maturity, to a state enterprise;
(V)
(i) notwithstanding subparagraphs (III) and (IV) above, a loan to or
debt security issued by a financial institution is an investment
only where the loan or debt security is treated as regulatory
capital by the Party in whose territory the financial institution is
located. and
(ii) a loan granted by or debt security owned by a financial
institution, other than a loan to or debt security of a financial
institution referred to in (i), is not an investment;
for greater certainty:
(iii) a loan to, or debt security issued by, a Party or a state enterprise
thereof is not an investment; and
(iv) a loan granted by or debt security owned by a cross-border
financial service provider, other than a loan to or debt security
issued by a financial institution, is an investment if such loan or
debt security meets the criteria for investments set out elsewhere
in this Article;
(VI) an interest in an enterprise that entitles the owner to share in income or
profits of the enterprise;
(VII) an interest in an enterprise that entitles the owner to share in the assets
of that enterprise on dissolution, other than a debt security or a loan
excluded from subparagraphs (III) (IV) or (V);
(VIII) real estate or other property, tangible or intangible, acquired in the
expectation or used for the purpose of economic benefit or other
business purposes; and
(IX) interests arising from the commitment of capital or other resources in the
territory of a Party to economic activity in such territory, such as under
(i) contracts involving the presence of an investor's property in the
territory of the Party, including turnkey or construction
contracts, or concessions, or
(ii) contracts where remuneration depends substantially on the
production, revenues or profits of an enterprise;
but investment does not mean,
(X) claims to money that arise solely from
(i) commercial contracts for the sale of goods or services by a
national or enterprise in the territory of a Party to an enterprise
in the territory of the other Party, or
(ii) the extension of credit in connection with a commercial
transaction, such as trade financing, other than a loan covered by
subparagraphs (IV) or (V); and
(XI) any other claims to money,
that do not involve the kinds of interests set out in subparagraphs (I) through
(IX);
investment of an investor of a Party means an investment owned or controlled
directly or indirectly by an investor of such Party;
investor of a Party1 means
(i) in the case of Canada:
(a) Canada or a state enterprise of Canada, or
(b) a national or an enterprise of Canada,
that seeks to make, is making or has made an investment; a natural
person who is a dual citizen shall be deemed to be exclusively a citizen
of the State of his or her dominant and effective citizenship; and
(ii) in the case of the Republic of Peru:
(a) a state enterprise of the Republic of Peru, or
(b) a national or enterprise of the Republic of Peru;
that seeks to make, is making or has made an investment; a natural
person who is a dual citizen shall be deemed to be exclusively a citizen
of the State of his or her dominant and effective citizenship;
investor of a non-Party2 means an investor other than an investor of a Party, that
seeks to make, is making, or has made an investment;
legal stability agreement means an agreement entered into by the national government
of a Party and an investor of the other Party or a covered investment of such investor
that accords certain benefits, including, but not limited to, a commitment to maintain
the existing income tax regime during a specified time;
measure includes any law, regulation, procedure, requirement, or practice;
monopoly means an entity, including a consortium or government agency, that in any
relevant market in the territory of a Party is designated as the sole provider or
purchaser of a good or service, but does not include an entity that has been granted an
exclusive intellectual property right solely by reason of such grant;
national means a natural person who is a citizen or permanent resident of a Party;
national government means:
(i) in respect of Canada, the federal level of government; and
(ii) in respect of the Republic of Peru, the national level of government;
New York Convention means the United Nations Convention on the Recognition and
Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, done at New York, 10 June 1958;
non-disputing Party means a Party that is not a party to an investment dispute under
Section C;
non-disputing party means a person of a Party, or a person of a non-Party with a
significant presence in the territory of a Party, that is not a party to an investment
dispute under Section C;
person means a natural person or an enterprise;
person of a Party means a national, or an enterprise of a Party;
public entity means a central bank or monetary authority of a Party, or any financial
institution owned or controlled by a Party;
Secretary-General means the Secretary-General of ICSID;
state enterprise means an enterprise that is owned or controlled through ownership
interests by a Party;
sub-national government means:
(i) in respect of Canada, provincial or local governments; and
(ii) in respect of the Republic of Peru, regional or local governments;
tax convention means a convention for the avoidance of double taxation or other
international taxation agreement or arrangement;
taxation authorities means the following until notice in writing to the contrary is
provided to the other Party:
(i) for Canada: the Assistant Deputy Minister, Tax Policy, of the
Department of Finance Canada; and
(ii) for the Republic of Peru: the Vice Minister of Economy, the Ministry of
Economy and Finance.
territory means
(i) in respect of Canada:
(a) the land territory of Canada, air space, internal waters and
territorial sea of Canada;
(b) those areas, including the exclusive economic zone and the
seabed and subsoil, over which Canada exercises, in accordance
with international law, sovereign rights or jurisdiction for the
purpose of exploration and exploitation of the natural resources;
and
(c) artificial islands, installations and structures in the exclusive
economic zone or on the continental shelf over which Canada has
jurisdiction as a coastal state; and
(ii) in respect of the Republic of Peru, the land territory, the islands, the
internal waters, as well as the airspace and the maritime domain which
includes the sea adjacent to its coast, its seabed and subsoil, to a distance
of 200 nautical miles measured from the baselines established by law,
and the corresponding continental shelf, over which the Republic of Peru
exercises sovereignty and jurisdiction in accordance with its domestic
law and international law;
Tribunal means an arbitration tribunal established under Article 27 (Submission of a
Claim to Arbitration) or Article 32 (Consolidation);
UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules means the arbitration rules of the United Nations
Commission on International Trade Law, approved by the United Nations General
Assembly on December 15, 1976; and
WTO Agreement means the Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization
done at Marrakesh on 15 April 1994.
SECTION B - SUBSTANTIVE OBLIGATIONS
ARTICLE 2
Scope and Application
- this agreement shall apply to measures adopted or maintained by a party
relating to:
(a) investors of the other Party; and
(b) covered investments.
- For greater certainty, the provisions of this Agreement do not bind a Party in
relation to any act or fact that took place or any situation that ceased to exist before the
date of entry into force of this Agreement for that Party.
ARTICLE 3
National Treatment
- Each Party shall accord to investors of the other Party treatment no less
favourable than that it accords, in like circumstances, to its own investors with respect
to the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation and sale
or other disposition of investments in its territory.
- Each Party shall accord to covered investments treatment no less favourable
than that it accords, in like circumstances, to investments of its own investors with
respect to the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation
and sale or other disposition of investments in its territory.
- The treatment accorded by a Party under paragraphs 1 and 2 means, with
respect to a sub-national government, treatment no less favourable than the treatment
accorded, in like circumstances, by that sub-national government to investors, and to
investments of investors, of the Party of which it forms a part.
ARTICLE 43 4
Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment
- Each Party shall accord to investors of the other Party treatment no less
favourable than that it accords, in like circumstances, to investors of a non-Party with
respect to the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation
and sale or other disposition of investments in its territory.
- Each Party shall accord to covered investments treatment no less favourable
than that it accords, in like circumstances, to investments of investors of a non-Party
with respect to the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct,
operation and sale or other disposition of investments in its territory.
ARTICLE 5
Minimum Standard of Treatment
- Each Party shall accord to covered investments treatment in accordance with the
customary international law minimum standard of treatment of aliens, including fair
and equitable treatment and full protection and security.
- The concepts of "fair and equitable treatment" and "full protection and security"
in paragraph 1 do not require treatment in addition to or beyond that which is required
by the customary international law minimum standard of treatment of aliens.
- A determination that there has been a breach of another provision of this
Agreement, or of a separate international agreement, does not establish that there has
been a breach of this Article.
ARTICLE 6
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel
- A Party may not require that an enterprise of that Party, that is a covered
investment, appoint to senior management positions individuals of any particular
nationality.
- A Party may require that a majority of the board of directors, or any committee
thereof, of an enterprise that is a covered investment be of a particular nationality, or
resident in the territory of the Party, provided that the requirement does not materially
impair the ability of the investor to exercise control over its investment.
- Subject to its laws, regulations and policies relating to the entry of aliens, each
Party shall grant temporary entry to nationals of the other Party, employed by an
investor of the other Party, who seek to render services to an investment of that
investor in the territory of the Party, in a capacity that is managerial or executive or
requires specialized knowledge.
ARTICLE 7
Performance Requirements
- Neither Party may impose or enforce any of the following requirements, or
enforce any commitment or undertaking, in connection with the establishment,
acquisition, expansion, management, conduct or operation of an investment of an
investor of a Party or a non-Party in its territory:
(a) to export a given level or percentage of goods;
(b) to achieve a given level or percentage of domestic content;
(c) to purchase, use or accord a preference to goods produced or services
provided in its territory, or to purchase goods or services from persons
in its territory;
(d) to relate in any way the volume or value of imports to the volume or
value of exports or to the amount of foreign exchange inflows associated
with such investment;
(e) to restrict sales of goods or services in its territory that such investment
produces or provides by relating such sales in any way to the volume or
value of its exports or foreign exchange earnings;
(f) to transfer technology, a production process or other proprietary
knowledge to a person in its territory, except when the requirement is
imposed or the commitment or undertaking is enforced by a court,
administrative tribunal or competition authority, to remedy an alleged
violation of competition laws or to act in a manner not inconsistent with
other provisions of this Agreement; or
(g) to supply exclusively from the territory of the Party the goods it
produces or the services it provides to a specific regional market or to
the world market.
- A measure that requires an investment to use a technology to meet generally
applicable health, safety or environmental requirements shall not be construed to be
inconsistent with paragraph 1(f). For greater certainty, Articles 3 and 4 apply to the
measure.
- Neither Party may condition the receipt or continued receipt of an advantage, in
connection with an investment in its territory of an investor of a Party or of a non Party,
on compliance with any of the following requirements:
(a) to achieve a given level or percentage of domestic content;
(b) to purchase, use or accord a preference to goods produced in its
territory, or to purchase goods from producers in its territory;
(c) to relate in any way the volume or value of imports to the volume or
value of exports or to the amount of foreign exchange inflows associated
with such investment; or
(d) to restrict sales of goods or services in its territory that such investment
produces or provides by relating such sales in any way to the volume or
value of its exports or foreign exchange earnings.
- Nothing in paragraph 3 shall be construed to prevent a Party from conditioning
the receipt or continued receipt of an advantage, in connection with an investment in its
territory of an investor of a Party, on compliance with a requirement to locate
production, provide a service, train or employ workers, construct or expand particular
facilities, or carry out research and development, in its territory.
- Paragraphs 1 and 3 shall not apply to any requirement other than the
requirements set out in those paragraphs.
- The provisions of:
(a) Paragraphs (1) (a), (b) and (c), and (3) (a) and (b) shall not apply to
qualification requirements for goods or services with respect to export
promotion and foreign aid programs;
(b) Paragraphs (1) (b), (c), (t) and (g), and (3) (a) and (b) shall not apply to
procurement by a Party or a state enterprise; and
(c) Paragraphs (3) (a) and (b) shall not apply to requirements imposed by an
importing Party relating to the content of goods necessary to qualify for
preferential tariffs or preferential quotas.
ARTICLE 8
Monopolies and State Enterprises
- Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent a Party from
designating a monopoly, or from maintaining or establishing a state enterprise.
- Where a Party intends to designate a monopoly5 and the designation may affect
the interests of persons of the other Party, the Party shall, wherever possible. provide
prior written notification to the other Party of the designation.
- Each Party shall ensure. through regulatory control, administrative supervision
or the application of other measures, that any privately-owned monopoly that it
designates and any government monopoly that it maintains or designates acts in a
manner that is not inconsistent with the Party's obligations under this Agreement
wherever such a monopoly exercises any regulatory, administrative or other
governmental authority that the Party has delegated to it in connection with the
monopoly good or service, such as the power to grant import or export licenses,
approve commercial transactions or impose quotas, fees or other charges6.
- Each Party shall ensure, through regulatory control, administrative supervision
or the application of other measures, that any state enterprise that it maintains or
establishes acts in a manner that is ~ot inconsistent with the Party's obligations under
this Agreement wherever such enterprise exercises any regulatory, administrative or
other governmental authority that the Party has delegated to it, such as the power to
expropriate, grant licenses, approve commercial transactions or impose quotas, fees or
other charges.
ARTICLE 9
Reservations and Exceptions
- Articles 3, 4, 6 and 7 shall not apply to:
(a) any existing non-conforming measure that is maintained by
(i) a national government, as set out in its Schedule to Annex
I, or
(ii) a sub-national government;
(b) the continuation or prompt renewal of any non-conforming measure
referred to in subparagraph (a);
(c) an amendment to any non-conforming measure referred to in
subparagraph (a) to the extent that the amendment does not decrease
the conformity of the measure, as it existed immediately before the
amendment, with Articles 3, 4, 6 and 7.
- Articles 3, 4, 6 and 7 shall not apply to any measure that a Party adopts or
maintains with respect to sectors, subsectors or activities, as set out in its schedule to
Annex II.
- Article 4 shall not apply to treatment accorded by a Party pursuant to
agreements, or with respect to sectors, set out in Annex III.
- In respect of intellectual property rights, a Party may derogate from Articles 3
and 4 in a manner that is consistent with the WTO Agreement.
- The provisions of Articles 3, 4 and 6 of this Agreement shall not apply to:
(a) procurement by a Party or state enterprise;
(b) subsidies or grants provided by a Party or a state enterprise, including
government-supported loans, guarantees and insurance;
- For greater certainty, Article 3 of this Agreement shall not apply to the granting
by a Party to a financial institution of an exclusive right to provide activities or services
forming part of a public retirement plan or statutory system of social security.
ARTICLE 10
General Exceptions
- Subject to the requirement that such measures are not applied in a manner that
would constitute arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination between investments or
between investors, or a disguised restriction on international trade or investment,
nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent a Party from adopting or
enforcing measures necessary:
(a) to protect human, animal or plant life or health;
(b) to ensure compliance with laws and regulations that are not inconsistent
with the provisions of this Agreement; or
(c) for the conservation of living or non-living exhaustible natural resources.
- Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent a Party from adopting
or maintaining reasonable measures for prudential reasons, such as:
(a) the protection of investors, depositors, financial market participants,
policy-holders, policy-claimants, or persons to whom a fiduciary duty is
owed by a financial institution;
(b) the maintenance of the safety, soundness, integrity or financial
responsibility of financial institutions; and
(c) ensuring the integrity and stability of a Party's financial system.
- Nothing in this Agreement shall apply to non-discriminatory measures of
general application taken by any public entity in pursuit of monetary and related credit
policies or exchange rate policies. This paragraph shall not affect a Party's obligations
under Article 7 (Performance Requirements) or Article 14 (Transfer of Funds).
- Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed:
(a) to require any Party to furnish or allow access to any information the
disclosure of which it determines to be contrary to its essential security
interests;
(b) to prevent any Party from taking any actions that it considers necessary
for the protection of its essential security interests
(i) relating to the traffic in arms, ammunition and implements of war
and to such traffic and transactions in other goods, materials,
services and technology undertaken directly or indirectly for the
purpose of supplying a military or other security establishment,
(ii) taken in time of war or other emergency in international
relations, or
(iii) relating to the implementation of national policies or international
agreements respecting the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons
or other nuclear explosive devices; or
(c) to prevent any Party from taking action in pursuance of its obligations
under the United Nations Charter for the maintenance of international
peace and security.
- Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to require a Party to furnish or
allow access to information the disclosure of which would impede law enforcement or
would be contrary to the Party's law protecting Cabinet confidences, personal privacy
or the confidentiality of the financial affairs and accounts of individual customers of
financial institutions.
- The provisions of this Agreement shall not apply to investments in cultural
industries.
- Any measure adopted by a Party in conformity with a decision adopted,
extended or modified by the World Trade Organization pursuant to Articles IX:3 or
IX:4 of the WTO Agreement shall be deemed to be also in conformity with this
Agreement. An investor purporting to act pursuant to Section C of this Agreement
may not claim that such a conforming measure is in breach of this Agreement.
ARTICLE 11
Health, Safety and Environmental Measures
The Parties recognize that it is inappropriate to encourage investment by
relaxing domestic health, safety or environmental measures. Accordingly, a Party
should not waive or otherwise derogate from, or offer to waive or otherwise derogate
from, such measures as an encouragement for the establishment, acquisition, expansion
or retention in its territory of an investment of an investor. If a Party considers that the
other Party has offered such an encouragement, it may request consultations with the
other Party and the two Parties shall consult with a view to avoiding any such
encouragement.
ARTICLE 12
Compensation for Losses
- Each Party shall accord to investors of the other Party, and to covered
investments, non-discriminatory treatment with respect to measures it adopts or
maintains relating to losses suffered by investments in its territory owing to armed
conflict, civil strife or a natural disaster.
- Paragraph (1) shall not apply to existing measures relating to subsidies or grants
that would be inconsistent with Article 3 but for Article 9(5)(b).
ARTICLE 137
Expropriation
- Neither Party shall nationalize or expropriate a covered investment either
directly, or indirectly through measures having an effect equivalent to nationalization
or expropriation (hereinafter referred to as "expropriation"), except for a public
purpose8
, in accordance with due process of law, in a non-discriminatory manner and
on prompt, adequate and effective compensation.
- Such compensation shall be equivalent to the fair market value of the
expropriated investment immediately before the expropriation took place ("date of
expropriation"), and shall not reflect any change in value occurring because the
intended expropriation had become known earlier. Valuation criteria shall include
going concern value, asset value including declared tax value of tangible property, and
other criteria, as appropriate, to determine fair market value.
- Compensation shall be paid without delay and shall be fully realizable and
freely transferable. Compensation shall be payable in a freely convertible currency and
shall include interest at a commercially reasonable rate for that currency from the date
of expropriation until date of payment.
- The investor affected shall have a right, under the law of the Party making the
expropriation, to prompt review, by a judicial or other independent authority of that
Party, of its case and of the valuation of its investment in accordance with the
principles set out in this Article.
- The provisions of this Article shall not apply to the issuance of compulsory
licenses granted in relation to intellectual property rights, or to the revocation,
limitation or creation of intellectual property rights, to the extent that such issuance,
revocation, limitation or creation is consistent with the WTO Agreement.
ARTICLE 14
Transfer of Funds
- Each Party shall permit all transfers relating to a covered investment to be made
freely, and without delay, into and out of its territory. Such transfers include:
(a) contributions to capital;
(b) profits, dividends, interest, capital gains, royalty payments, management
fees, technical assistance and other fees, returns in kind and other
amounts derived from the investment;
(c) proceeds from the sale of all or any part of the covered investment or
from the partial or complete liquidation of the covered investment;
(d) payments made under a contract entered into by the investor, or the
covered investment, including payments made pursuant to a loan
agreement;
(e) payments made pursuant to Articles 12 and 13; and
(f) payments arising under Section C.
- Each Party shall permit transfers relating to a covered investment to be made in
the convertible currency in which the capital was originally invested, or in any other
convertible currency agreed by the investor and the Party concerned. Unless otherwise
agreed by the investor, transfers shall be made at the rate of exchange applicable on the
date of transfer.
- Notwithstanding paragraphs 1 and 2, a Party may prevent a transfer through the
equitable, non-discriminatory and good faith application of its laws relating to:
(a) bankruptcy, insolvency or the protection of the rights of creditors;
(b) issuing, trading or dealing in securities;
(c) criminal or penal offences;
(d) reports of transfers of currency or other monetary instruments; or
(e) ensuring the satisfaction of judgments in adjudicatory proceedings.
- Neither Party may require its investors to transfer, or penalize its investors that
fail to transfer, the income, earnings, profits or other amounts derived from, or
attributable to investments in the territory of the other Party.
- Paragraph 4 shall not be construed to prevent a Party from imposing any
measure through the equitable, non-discriminatory and good faith application of its
laws relating to the matters set out in subparagraphs (a) through (e) of paragraph 3.
- Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs 1, 2 and 4, and without limiting
the applicability of paragraph 5, a Party may prevent or limit transfers by a financial
institution to, or for the benefit of, an affiliate of or person related to such institution,
through the equitable, non-discriminatory and good faith application of measures
relating to maintenance of the safety, soundness, integrity or financial responsibility of
financial institutions.
- Notwithstanding paragraph 1, a Party may restrict transfers in kind in
circumstances where it could otherwise restrict transfers under the WTO Agreement
and as set out in paragraph 3.
ARTICLE 15
Subrogation
- If a Party or any agency thereof makes a payment to any of its investors under a
guarantee or a contract of insurance it has entered into in respect of an investment, the
other Party shall recognize the validity of the subrogation in favour of such Party or
agency thereof to any right or title held by the investor.
- A Party or any agency thereof which is subrogated to the rights of an investor
in accordance with paragraph 1 of this Article, shall be entitled in all circumstances to
the same rights as those of the investor in respect of the investment. Such rights may
be exercised by the Party or any agency thereof, or by the investor if the Party or any
agency thereof so authorizes.
ARTICLE 16
Taxation Measures
- Except where express reference is made thereto, nothing in this Agreement shall
apply to taxation measures. For greater certainty, nothing in this Agreement shall
affect the rights and obligations of the Parties under any tax convention. In the event
of any inconsistency between the provisions of this Agreement and any such
convention, the provisions of that convention shall apply to the extent of the
inconsistency.
- Nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to require a Party to furnish or
allow access to information the disclosure of which would be contrary to the Party's
law protecting information concerning the taxation affairs of a taxpayer.
- The provisions of Article 13 shall apply to taxation measures unless the taxation
authorities of the Parties, no later than six months after being notified by an investor
that the investor disputes a taxation measure, jointly determine that the measure in
question is not an expropriation. The investor shall refer the issue of whether a
taxation measure is an expropriation for a determination to the taxation authorities of
the Parties at the same time that it gives notice under Article 24 (Notice of Intent to
Submit a Claim to Arbitration).
- If, in connection with a claim by an investor of a Party or a dispute between the
Parties, an issue arises as to whether a measure of a Party is a taxation measure, a
Party may refer the issue to the taxation authorities of the Parties. The taxation
authorities shall decide the issue, and their decision shall bind any Tribunal formed
pursuant to Section C or arbitral panel formed pursuant to Section D, as the case may
be, with jurisdiction over the claim or the dispute. A Tribunal or arbitral panel seized
of a claim or a dispute in which the issue arises may not proceed pending receipt of the
decision of the taxation authorities. If the taxation authorities have not decided the
issue within six months of the referral, the Tribunal or arbitral panel shall decide the
issue in place of the taxation authorities.
ARTICLE 17
Prudential Measures
- Where an investor submits a claim to arbitration under Section C, and the
disputing Party invokes Articles 10(2) or 14(6), the Tribunal established pursuant to
Article 22 (Claim by an Investor of a Party on its Own Behalf) or 23 (Claim by an
Investor of a Party on Behalf of an Enterprise) shall, at the request of that Party, seek a
report in writing from the Parties on the issue of whether and to what extent the said
paragraphs are a valid defence to the claim of the investor. The Tribunal may not
proceed pending receipt of a report under this Article.
- Pursuant to a request received in accordance with paragraph (1), the Parties
shall proceed in accordance with Section D to prepare a written report, either on the
basis of agreement following consultations, or by means of an arbitral panel. The
consultations shall be between the financial services authorities of the Parties. The
report shall be transmitted to the Tribunal, and shall be binding on the Tribunal.
- Where, within 70 days of the referral by the Tribunal, no request for the
establishment of a panel pursuant to paragraph (2) has been made, and no report has
been received by the Tribunal, the Tribunal may proceed to decide the matter.
ARTICLE 18
Denial of Benefits
- A Party may deny the benefits of this Agreement to an investor of the other
Party that is an enterprise of such Party and to investments of such investor if investors
of a non-Party own or control the enterprise and the denying Party adopts or maintains
measures with respect to the non-Party that prohibit transactions with the enterprise or
that would be violated or circumvented if the benefits of this Agreement were accorded
to the enterprises or to its investments.
- Subject to Article 19(3), a Party may deny the benefits of this Agreement to an
investor of the other Party that is an enterprise of such Party and to investments of such
investors if investors of a non-Party own or control the enterprise and the enterprise
has no substantial business activities in the territory of the Party under whose law it is
constituted or organized.
ARTICLE 19
Transparency
- Each Party shall, to the extent possible, ensure that its laws, regulations,
procedures. and administrative rulings of general application respecting any matter
covered by this Agreement are promptly published or otherwise made available in such
a manner as to enable interested persons and the other Party to become acquainted with
them.
- To the extent possible, each Party shall:
(a) publish in advance any such measure that it proposes to adopt; and
(b) provide interested persons and the other Party a reasonable opportunity
to comment on such proposed measures.
- Upon request by a Party, information shall be exchanged on the measures of the
other Party that may have an impact on covered investments.
ANNEX B.4
Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment
For greater clarity, treatment "with respect to the establishment, acquisition,
expansion, management, conduct, operation and sale or other disposition of
investments" referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article 4 does not encompass dispute
resolution mechanisms, such as those in Section C, that are provided for in
international treaties or trade agreements.
ANNEX B.13(1)
Expropriation
The Parties confirm their shared understanding that:
(a) Indirect expropriation results from a measure or series of measures of a Party
that has an effect equivalent to direct expropriation without formal transfer of title or
outright seizure;
(b) The determination of whether a measure or series of measures of a Party
constitutes an indirect expropriation requires a case-by-case, fact-based inquiry that
considers, among other factors:
(i) the economic impact of the measure or series of measures, although the
sole fact that a measure or series of measures of a Party has an adverse
effect on the economic value of an investment does not establish that an
indirect expropriation has occurred;
(ii) the extent to which the measure or series of measures interferes with
distinct, reasonable investment-backed expectations; and
(iii) the character of the measure or series of measures;
(c) Except in rare circumstances, such as when a measure or series of measures is
so severe in the light of its purpose that it cannot be reasonably viewed as having been
adopted and applied in good faith, non-discriminatory measures of a Party that are
designed and applied to protect legitimate public welfare objectives, such as health,
safety and the environment, do not constitute indirect expropriation.
SECTION C - SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES BETWEEN AN INVESTOR AND THE HOST PARTY
ARTICLE 20
Purpose
Without prejudice to the rights and obligations of the Parties under Section D
(State to State Dispute Settlement Procedures), this Section establishes a mechanism for
the settlement of investment disputes.
ARTICLE 21
Limitation of Claims with Respect to Financial Institutions
With respect to:
(a) financial institutions of a Party; and
(b) investors of a Party, and investments of such investors, in financial
institutions in the other Party's territory,
this Section applies only in respect of claims that the other Party has breached an
obligation under Articles 13, 14 or 18.
ARTICLE 22
Claim by an Investor of a Party on Its Own Behalf
- An investor of a Party may submit to arbitration under this Section a claim that:
(a) the other Party has breached an obligation under Section B, other than
an obligation under Article 6(3), 8(1), 8(2), 11 or 19, or
(b) the other Party has breached a legal stability agreement referred to in
paragraph 3 of this Article,
and that the investor has incurred loss or damage by reason of, or arising out of, that
breach.
- An investor may not make a claim if more than three years have elapsed from
the date on which the investor first acquired, or should have first acquired, knowledge
of the alleged breach and knowledge that the investor has incurred loss or damage.
- A claim by an investor that a tax measure of a Party is in breach of a legal
stability agreement between the national government authorities of a Party and the
investor concerning an investment may be submitted to arbitration under this Section
unless:
(a) the legal stability agreement between the national government authorities
of a Party and the investor preceded the entry into force of this
Agreement; or
(b) the taxation authorities of the Parties, no later than six months after being
notified by the investor of its intention to submit the claim to arbitration,
jointly determine that the measure does not contravene such legal stability
agreement. The investor shall refer the issue of whether a taxation
measure does not contravene a legal stability agreement for a
determination to the taxation authorities of the Parties at the same time that
it gives notice under Article 24 (Notice of Intent to Submit a Claim to
Arbitration) .
ARTICLE 23
Claim by an Investor of a Party on Behalf of an Enterprise
- An investor of a Party, on behalf of an enterprise of the other Party that is a
juridical person that the investor owns or controls directly or indirectly, may submit to
arbitration under this Section a claim that:
(a) the other Party has breached an obligation under Section B, other than
an obligation under Article 6(3), 8(1), 8(2), 11 or 19, or
(b) the other Party has breached a legal stability agreement referred to in
paragraph 3 of this Article,
and that the enterprise has incurred loss or damage by reason of, or arising out of, that
breach.
- An investor may not make a claim on behalf of an enterprise described in
paragraph 1 if more than three years have elapsed from the date on which the
enterprise first acquired, or should have first acquired, knowledge of the alleged breach
and knowledge that the enterprise has incurred loss or damage.
- A claim by an investor, on behalf of an enterprise of the other Party that is a
juridical person that the investor owns or controls directly or indirectly, that a tax
measure of that Party is in breach of a legal stability agreement between the national
government authorities of that Party and said enterprise may be submitted to arbitration
under this Section unless:
(a) the legal stability agreement. between the national government authorities
of a Party and the enterprise preceded the entry into force of this
Agreement; or
(b) the taxation authorities of the Parties, no later than six months after being
notified by the investor of its intention to submit the claim to arbitration,
jointly determine that the measure does not contravene such legal stability
agreement. The investor shall refer the issue of whether a taxation
measure does not contravene a legal stability agreement for a
determination to the taxation authorities of the Parties at the same time
that it gives notice under Article 24 (Notice of Intent to Submit a Claim to
Arbitration).
- Where an investor makes a claim under this Article and the investor or a non controlling
investor in the enterprise makes a claim under Article 22 (Claim by an
Investor of a Party on Its Own Behalf) arising out of the same events that gave rise to
the claim under this Article, and two or more of the claims are submitted to arbitration
under Article 27 (Submission of a Claim to Arbitration), the claims should be heard
together by a Tribunal established under Article 32 (Consolidation), unless the Tribunal
finds that the interests of a disputing party would be prejudiced thereby.
- An investment may not make a claim under this Section.
ARTICLE 24
Notice of Intent to Submit a Claim to Arbitration
- The disputing investor shall deliver to the disputing Party written notice of its
intent to submit a claim to arbitration at least 90 days before the claim is submitted,
which notice shall specify:
(a) the name and address of the disputing investor and, where a claim is
made under Article 23 (Claim by an Investor of a Party on Behalf of an
Enterprise), the name and address of the enterprise;
(b) the provisions of this Agreement alleged to have been breached and any
other relevant provisions;
(c) the issues and the factual basis for the claim, including the measures at
issue; and
(d) the relief sought and the approximate amount of damages claimed.
- The disputing investor shall also deliver, with its Notice of Intent to Submit a
Claim to Arbitration, evidence establishing that it is an investor of the other Party.
ARTICLE 25
Settlement of a Claim through Consultation
- Before a disputing investor may submit a claim to arbitration, the disputing
parties shall first hold consultations in an attempt to settle a claim amicably.
- Consultations shall be held within 30 days of the submission of the notice of
intent to submit a claim to arbitration, unless the disputing parties otherwise agree.
- The place of consultation shall be the capital of the disputing Party, unless the
disputing parties otherwise agree.
ARTICLE 26
Conditions Precedent to Submission of a Claim to Arbitration
- A disputing investor may submit a claim to arbitration under Article 22 (Claim
by an Investor of a Party on Its Own Behalf) only if:
(a) the investor consents to arbitration in accordance with the procedures set
out in this Agreement;
(b) at least six months have elapsed since the events giving rise to the claim;
(c) not more than three years have elapsed from the date on which the
investor first acquired, or should have first acquired, knowledge of the
alleged breach and knowledge that the investor has incurred loss or
damage thereby;
(d) the investor has delivered the Notice of Intent required under Article 24
(Notice of Intent to Submit a Claim to Arbitration), in accordance with
the requirements of that Article, at least 90 days prior to submitting the
claim; and
(e) the investor and, where the claim is for loss or damage to an interest in
an enterprise of the other Party that is a juridical person that the investor
owns or controls directly or indirectly, the enterprise waive their right to
initiate or continue before any administrative tribunal or court under the
law of any Party, or other dispute settlement procedures, any
proceedings with respect to the measure o·f the disputing Party that is
alleged to be a breach referred to in Article 22 (Claim by an Investor of
a Party on Its Own Behalf), except for proceedings for injunctive,
declaratory or other extraordinary relief, not involving the payment of
damages, before an administrative tribunal or court under the law of the
disputing Party.
- A disputing investor may submit a claim to arbitration under Article 23 (Claim
by an Investor of a Party on Behalf of an Enterprise) only if:
(a) both the investor and the enterprise consent to arbitration in accordance
with the procedures set out in this Agreement;
(b) at least six months have elapsed since the events giving rise to the claim;
(c) not more than three years have elapsed from the date on which the
enterprise first acquired, or should have first acquired, knowledge of the
alleged breach and knowledge that the enterprise has incurred loss or
damage thereby;
(d) the investor has delivered the Notice of Intent required under Article 24
(Notice oflntent to Submit a Claim to Arbitration), in accordance with
the requirements of that Article, at least 90 days prior to submitting the
claim; and
(e) both the investor and the enterprise waive their right to initiate or
continue before any administrative tribunal or court under the law of any
Party, or other dispute settlement procedures, any proceedings with
respect to the measure of the disputing Party that is alleged to be a
breach referred to in Article 23 (Claim by an Investor of a Party on
Behalf of an Enterprise), except for proceedings for injunctive,
declaratory or other extraordinary relief, not involving the payment of
damages, before an administrative tribunal or court under the law of the
disputing Party.
- A consent and waiver required by this Article shall be in the form provided for
in Annex C.26, shall be delivered to the disputing Party and shall be included in the
submission of a claim to arbitration.
- An investor may submit a claim relating to taxation measures covered by this
Agreement to arbitration under this Section only if the taxation authorities of the
Parties fail to reach the joint determinations specified in Articles 16(3), 22(3)(b) and
23(3)(b) within six months of being notified in accordance with these provisions.
- A waiver from the enterprise under paragraph l(e) or 2(e) shall not be required
only where a disputing Party has deprived a disputing investor of control of an
enterprise.
- Failure to meet any of the conditions precedent provided for in paragraphs 1
through 4 shall nullify the consent of the Parties given in Article 28 (Consent to
Arbitration).
ARTICLE 27
Submission of a Claim to Arbitration
- Except as provided in Annex C.27, a disputing investor who meets the
conditions precedent provided for in Article 26 (Conditions Precedent to Submission of
a Claim to Arbitration) may submit the claim to arbitration under:
(a) the ICSID Convention, provided that both the disputing Party and the
Party of the disputing investor are parties to the Convention;
(b) the Additional Facility Rules of ICSID, provided that either the disputing
Party or the Party of the disputing investor, but not both, is a party to
the ICSID Convention;
(c) the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules; or
(d) any other body of rules approved by the Commission as available for
arbitrations under this Section.
- The Commission shall have the power to make rules supplementing the
applicable arbitral rules and may amend any rules of its own making. Such rules shall
be binding on a Tribunal established under this Section, and on individual arbitrators
serving on such Tribunals.
- The applicable arbitration rules shall govern the arbitration except to the extent
modified by this Section, and supplemented by any rules adopted by the Commission
under this Section.
ARTICLE 28
Consent to Arbitration
- Each Party consents to the submission of a claim to arbitration in accordance
with the procedures set out in this Agreement.
- The consent given in paragraph I and the submission by a disputing investor of
a claim to arbitration shall satisfy the requirement of:
(a) Chapter II of the ICSID Convention (Jurisdiction of the Centre) and the
Additional Facility Rules for written consent of the parties;
(b) Article II of the New York Convention for an agreement in writing; and
(c) Article I of the Inter-American Convention for an agreement.
ARTICLE 29
Arbitrators
- Except in respect of a Tribunal established under Article 32 (Consolidation),
and unless the disputing parties agree otherwise, the Tribunal shall comprise three
arbitrators, one arbitrator appointed by each of the disputing parties and the third, who
shall be the presiding arbitrator, appointed by agreement of the disputing parties.
- Arbitrators shall:
(a) have expertise or experience in public international law, international
trade or international investment rules, or the resolution of disputes
arising under international trade or international investment agreements;
(b) be independent of, and not be affiliated with or take instructions from,
either Party or the disputing investor; and
(c) comply with any Code of Conduct for Dispute Settlement as agreed by
the Commission.
- Where a disputing investor claims that a dispute involves measures adopted or
maintained by a Party relating to financial institutions of the other Party, or investors
of the other Party and investments of such investors, in financial institutions in a
Party's territory, then
(a) where the disputing parties are in agreement, the arbitrators shall, in
addition to the criteria set out in paragraph 2, have expertise or
experience in financial services law or practice, which may include the
regulation of financial institutions; or
(b) where the disputing parties are not in agreement,
(i) each disputing party may select arbitrators who meet the
qualifications set out in subparagraph (a), and
(ii) if the Party complained against invokes Articles 14(6) or 17, the
chair of the panel shall meet the qualifications set out in
subparagraph (a).
- The disputing parties should agree upon the arbitrators' remuneration. If the
disputing parties do not agree on such remuneration before the constitution of the
Tribunal, the prevailing ICSID rate for arbitrators shall apply.
- The Commission may establish rules relating to expenses incurred by the
Tribunal.
ARTICLE 30
Constitution of a Tribunal When a Party Falls to Appoint an Arbitrator or the Disputing parties Are Unable to Agree on a Presiding Arbitrator
- The Secretary-General shall serve as appointing authority for an arbitration
under this Section.
- If a Tribunal, other than a Tribunal established under Article 32
(Consolidation), has not been constituted within 90 days from the date that a claim is
submitted to arbitration, the Secretary-General, on the request of either disputing party,
shall appoint, in his or her discretion, the arbitrator or arbitrators not yet appointed,
except that the presiding arbitrator shall not be a national of either Party.
ARTICLE 31
Agreement to Appointment of Arbitrators
For purposes of Article 39 of the ICSID Convention and Article 7 of Schedule
C to the ICSID Additional Facility Rules, and without prejudice to an objection to an
arbitrator based on a ground other than citizenship or permanent residence:
(a) the disputing Party agrees to the appointment of each individual member
of a Tribunal established under the ICSID Convention or the ICSID
Additional Facility Rules;
(b) a disputing investor referred to in Article 22(1) (Claim by an Investor of
a Party on Its Own Behalf) may submit a claim to arbitration, or
continue a claim, under the ICSID Convention or the ICSID Additional
Facility Rules, only on condition that the disputing investor agrees in
writing to the appointment of each individual member of the Tribunal;
and
(c) a disputing investor referred to in Article 23(1) (Claim by an Investor of
a Party on Behalf of an Enterprise) may submit a claim to arbitration, or
continue a claim, under the ICSID Convention or the ICSID Additional
Facility Rules, only on condition that the disputing investor and the
enterprise agree in writing to the appointment of each individual member
of the Tribunal.
ARTICLE 32
Consolidation
- A Tribunal established under this Article shall be established under the
UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules and shall conduct its proceedings in accordance with
those Rules, except as modified by this Section.
- Where a Tribunal established under this Article is satisfied that claims submitted
to arbitration under Article 27 (Submission of a Claim to Arbitration) have a question
of law or fact in common, the Tribunal may, in the interests of fair and efficient
resolution of the claims, and after hearing the disputing parties, by order:
(a) assume jurisdiction over, and hear and determine together, all or part of
the claims; or
(b) assume jurisdiction over, and hear and determine one or more of the
claims, the determination of which it believes would assist in the
resolution of the others.
- A disputing party that seeks an order under paragraph 2 shall request the
Secretary-General to establish a Tribunal and shall specify in the request:
(a) the name of the disputing Party or disputing investors against which the
order is sought;
(b) the nature of the order sought; and
(c) the grounds on which the order is sought.
- The disputing party shall deliver to the disputing Party or disputing investors
against which the order is sought a copy of the request.
- Within 60 days of receipt of the request, the Secretary-General shall establish a
Tribunal comprising three arbitrators. The Secretary-General shall appoint the
presiding arbitrator, from the ICSID Panel of Arbitrators, a presiding arbitrator who is
not a national of any of the Parties. The Secretary-General shall appoint the two other
members from the ICSID Panel of Arbitrators. To the extent arbitrators are not
available from that Panel, appointments shall be at the discretion of the Secretary General.
One member shall be a national of the disputing Party and one member shall
be a national of the Party of the disputing investors.
- Where a Tribunal has been established under this Article, a disputing investor
that has submitted a claim to arbitration under Article 27 (Submission of a Claim to
Arbitration) and that has not been named in a request made under paragraph 3 may
make a written request to the Tribunal that it be included in an order made under
paragraph 2, and shall specify in the request:
(a) the name and address of the disputing investor;
(b) the nature of the order sought; and
(c) the grounds on which the order is sought.
- A disputing investor referred to in paragraph 6 shall deliver a copy of its
request to the disputing parties named in a request made under paragraph 3.
- A Tribunal established under Article 27 (Submission of a Claim to Arbitration)
shall not have jurisdiction to decide a claim, or a part of a claim, over which a
Tribunal established under this Article has assumed jurisdiction.
- On application of a disputing party, a Tribunal established under this Article,
pending its decision under paragraph 2, may order that the proceedings of a Tribunal
established under Article 27 (Submission of a Claim to Arbitration) be stayed, unless
the latter Tribunal has already adjourned its proceedings.
ARTICLE 33
Notice to the Non-Disputing Party
A disputing Party shall deliver to the other Party a copy of the Notice of Intent
to Submit a Claim to Arbitration and other documents, such as a Notice of Arbitration
and Statement of Claim, no later than 30 days after the date that such documents have
been delivered to the disputing Party.
ARTICLE 34
Documents
- The non-disputing Party shall be entitled, at its cost, to receive from the
disputing Party a copy of:
(a) the evidence that has been tendered to the Tribunal;
(b) copies of all pleadings filed in the arbitration; and
(c) the written argument of the disputing parties.
- The Party receiving information pursuant to paragraph 1 shall treat the
information as if it were a disputing Party.
ARTICLE 35
Participation by the Non-Disputing Party
- On written notice to the disputing parties, the non-disputing Party may make
submissions to a Tribunal on a question of interpretation of this Agreement.
- The non-disputing Party shall have the right to attend any hearings held under
this Section, whether or not it makes submissions to the Tribunal.
ARTICLE 36
Place of Arbitration
Unless the disputing parties agree otherwise, a Tribunal shall hold an arbitration
in the territory of a Party that is a party to the New York Convention, selected in
accordance with:
(a) the ICSID Additional Facility Rules, if the arbitration is under those
Rules or the ICSID Convention; or
(b) the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules, if the arbitration is under those
Rules.
ARTICLE 37
Preliminary Objections to Jurisdiction or Admissibility
Where issues relating to jurisdiction or admissibility are raised as preliminary
objections, a Tribunal shall, wherever possible, decide the matter before proceeding to
the merits.
ARTICLE 38
Public Access to Hearings and Documents
- Hearings held under this Section shall be open to the public. To the extent
necessary to ensure the protection of confidential information, including business
confidential information, the Tribunal may hold portions of hearings in camera.
- The Tribunal shall establish procedures for the protection of confidential
information and appropriate logistical arrangements for open hearings, in consultation
with the disputing parties.
- All documents submitted to, or issued by, the Tribunal shall be publicly
available, unless the disputing parties otherwise agree, subject to the deletion of
confidential information.
- Notwithstanding paragraph 3, any Tribunal award under this Section shall be
publicly available, subject to the deletion of confidential information.
- A disputing party may disclose to other persons in connection with the arbitral
proceedings such unrelated documents as it considers necessary for the preparation of
its case, but it shall ensure that those persons protect the confidential information in
such documents.
- The Parties may share with officials of their respective national and sub-national
governments all relevant unrelated documents in the course of dispute settlement
under this Agreement, but they shall ensure that those persons protect any confidential
information in such documents.
- As provided under Article 10(4) and (5), the Tribunal shall not require a Party
to furnish or allow access to information the disclosure of which would impede law
enforcement or would be contrary to the Party's law protecting Cabinet confidences,
personal privacy or the financial affairs and accounts of individual customers of
financial institutions, or which it determines to be contrary to its essential security.
- To the extent that a Tribunal's confidentiality order designates information as
confidential and a Party's law on access to information requires public access to that
information, the Party's law on access to information shall prevail. However, a Party
should endeavour to apply its law on access to information so as to protect information
designated confidential by the Tribunal.
ARTICLE 39
Submissions by a Non-Disputing party
- Any non-disputing party that wishes to file a written submission with a Tribunal
(the "applicant") shall apply for leave from the Tribunal to file such a submission, in
accordance with Annex C.39. The applicant shall attach the submission to the
application.
- The applicant shall serve the application for leave to file a non-disputing party
submission and the submission on all disputing parties and the Tribunal.
- The Tribunal shall set an appropriate date for the disputing parties to comment
on the application for leave to file a non-disputing party submission.
- In determining whether to grant leave to file a non-disputing party submission,
the Tribunal shall consider, among other things, the extent to which:
(a) the non-disputing party submission would assist the Tribunal in the
determination of a factual or legal issue related to the arbitration by
bringing a perspective, particular knowledge or insight that is different
from that of the disputing parties;
(b) the non-disputing party submission would address a matter within the
scope of the dispute;
(c) the non-disputing party has a significant interest in the arbitration; and
(d) there is a public interest in the subject-matter of the arbitration.
- The Tribunal shall ensure that:
(a) any non-disputing party submission does not disrupt the proceedings;
and
(b) neither disputing party is unduly burdened or unfairly prejudiced by such
submissions.
- The Tribunal shall decide whether to grant leave to file a non-disputing party
submission. If leave to file a non-disputing party submission is granted, the Tribunal
shall set an appropriate date for the disputing parties to respond in writing to the non disputing
party submission. By that date, the non-disputing Party may, pursuant to
Article 35 (Participation by the Non-Disputing Party), address any issues of
interpretation of this Agreement presented in the non-disputing party submission.
- The Tribunal that grants leave to file a non-disputing party submission is not
required to address the submission at any point in the arbitration, nor is the non disputing
party that files the submission entitled to make further submissions in the
arbitration.
- Access to hearings and documents by non-disputing parties that file applications
under these procedures shall be governed by the provisions pertaining to public access
to hearings and documents under Article 38 (Public Access to Hearings and
Documents).
ARTICLE 40
Governing Law
- A Tribunal established under this Section shall decide the issues in dispute in
accordance with this Agreement and applicable rules of international law.
- Subject to the other terms of this Section, when a claim is submitted to
arbitration for a breach of a legal stability agreement referred to in Articles 22 (3) and
23 (3), a Tribunal established under this Section shall apply:
(a) the rules of law specified in the legal stability agreement, or as the
disputing parties may otherwise agree; or
(b) if the rules of law have not been specified or otherwise agreed:
(i) the law of the disputing Party, including its rules on the conflict
of laws;9 and
(ii) such rules of international law as may be applicable.
- An interpretation by the Commission of a provision of this Agreement shall be
binding on a Tribunal established under this Section, and any award under this Section
shall be consistent with such interpretation.
ARTICLE 41
Interpretation of Annexes
- Where a disputing Party asserts as a defence that the measure alleged to be a
breach is within the scope of a reservation or exception set out in Annex I, Annex II or
Annex III, on request of the disputing Party, the Tribunal shall request the
interpretation of the Commission on the issue. The Commission, within 60 days of
delivery of the request, shall submit in writing its interpretation to the Tribunal.
- Further to Article 40(3) (Governing Law), a Commission interpretation
submitted under paragraph 1 shall be binding on the Tribunal. If the Commission fails
to submit an interpretation within 60 days, the Tribunal shall decide the issue.
ARTICLE 42
Expert Reports
Without prejudice to the appointment of other kinds of experts where authorized
by the applicable arbitration rules, a Tribunal, at the request of a disputing party or,
unless the disputing parties disapprove, on its own initiative, may appoint one or more
experts to report to it in writing on any factual issue concerning environmental, health,
safety or other scientific matters raised by a disputing party in a proceeding, subject to
such terms and conditions as the disputing parties may agree.
ARTICLE 43
Interim Measures of Protection
A Tribunal may order an interim measure of protection to preserve the rights of
a disputing party, or to ensure that the Tribunal's jurisdiction is made fully effective,
including an order to preserve evidence in the possession or control of a disputing party
or to protect the Tribunal's jurisdiction. A Tribunal may not order attachment or
enjoin the application of the measure alleged to constitute a breach referred to in
Article 22 (Claim by an Investor of a Party on Its Own Behalf) or 23 (Claim by an
Investor of a Party on Behalf of an Enterprise). For purposes of this paragraph, an
order includes a recommendation.
ARTICLE 44
Final Award
- Where a Tribunal makes a final award against the disputing Party, the Tribunal
may award, separately or in combination, only:
(a) monetary damages and any applicable interest;
(b) restitution of property, in which case the award shall provide that the
disputing Party may pay monetary damages and any applicable interest
in lieu of restitution.
The Tribunal may also award costs in accordance with the applicable arbitration rules.
- Subject to paragraph I, where a claim is made under Article 23(1) (Claim by an
Investor of a Party on Behalf of an Enterprise):
(a) an award of monetary damages and any applicable interest shall provide
that the sum be paid to the enterprise;
(b) an award of restitution of property shall provide that restitution be made
to the enterprise; and
(c) the award shall provide that it is made without prejudice to any right that
any person may have in the relief under applicable domestic law.
- A Tribunal may not order a disputing Party to pay punitive damages.
ARTICLE 45
Finality and Enforcement of an Award
- An award made by a Tribunal shall have no binding force except between the
disputing parties and in respect of that particular case.
- Subject to paragraph 3 and the applicable review procedure for an interim
award, a disputing party shall abide by and comply with an award without delay.
- A disputing party may not seek enforcement of a final award until:
(a) in the case of a final award made under the ICSID Convention:
(i) 120 days have elapsed from the date the award was rendered and
no disputing party has requested revision or annulment of the
award, or
(ii) revision or annulment proceedings have been completed; and
(b) in the case of a final award under the ICSID Additional Facility Rules or
the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules:
(i) 90 days have elapsed from the date the award was rendered and
no disputing party has commenced a proceeding to revise, set
aside or annul the award, or
(ii) a court has dismissed or allowed an application to revise, set
aside or annul the award and there is no further appeal.
- Each Party shall provide for the enforcement of an award in its territory.
- If the disputing Party fails to abide by or comply with a final award, the
Commission, on delivery of a request by the Party of the disputing investor, shall
establish an arbitral panel under Section D (State-to-State Dispute Settlement
Procedures). The requesting Party may seek in such proceedings:
(a) a determination that the failure to abide by or comply with the final
award is inconsistent with the obligations of this Agreement; and
(b) a recommendation that the disputing Party abide by or comply with the
final award.
- A disputing investor may seek enforcement of an arbitration award under the
ICSID Convention, the New York Convention or the Inter-American Convention
regardless of whether proceedings have been taken under paragraph 5.
- A claim that is submitted to arbitration under this Section shall be considered to
arise out of a commercial relationship or transaction for purposes of Article I of the
New York Convention and Article I of the Inter-American Convention.
ARTICLE 46
General
Time when a Claim is Submitted to Arbitration
- A claim is submitted to arbitration under this Section when:
(a) the request for arbitration under paragraph (1) of Article 36 of the
ICSID Convention is received by the Secretary-General;
(b) the notice of arbitration under Article 2 of Schedule C of the ICSID
Additional Facility Rules is received by the Secretary-General; or
(c) the notice of arbitration given under the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules
is received by the disputing Party.
Service of Documents
- Delivery of notice and other documents on a Party shall be made to the place
named for that Party below.
|
For Canada: |
Office of the Deputy Attorney General of Canada Justice Building 239 Wellington Street Ottawa, Ontario KIA OR8, CANADA |
|
|
For the Republic of Peru: |
Dirección General de Asuntos de Economia Internacional, Competencia e Inversi6n Privada Ministerio de Economia y Finanzas Jirón Lampa # 277 piso 5 Lima 1, PERU |
Receipts under Insurance or Guarantee Contracts
- In an arbitration under this Section, a disputing Party shall not assert, as a
defence, counterclaim, right of set off or otherwise, that the disputing investor has
received or will receive, pursuant to an insurance or guarantee contract,
indemnification or other compensation for all or part of its alleged damages.
ANNEX C.26
Standard Waiver and Consent in Accordance with Article 26 of this Agreement10
In the interest of facilitating the filing of waivers as required by Article 26 of this
Agreement, and to facilitate the orderly conduct of the dispute resolution procedures set
out in Section C, the following standard waiver forms shall be used, depending on the
type of claim.
Claims filed under Article 22 (Claim by an investor of a Party on Its Own Behalf) must
be accompanied by either Form 1, where the investor is a national of a Party, or Form
2, where the investor is a Party, a state enterprise thereof, or an enterprise of such
Party.
Where the claim is based on loss or damage to an interest in an enterprise of the other
Party that is a juridical person that the investor owns or controls directly or indirectly,
either Form 1 or 2 must be accompanied by Form 3.
Claims made under Article 23 (Claim by an Investor of a Party on Behalf of an
Enterprise) must be accompanied by either Form 1, where the investor is a national of
a Party, or Form 2, where the investor is a Party, a state enterprise thereof, or an
enterprise of such Party, and Form 4.
Form 1
Consent and waiver for an investor of a Party bringing a claim under Article 22 or
Article 23 (where the investor is a national of a Party) of the Agreement between
Canada and the Republic of Peru for the Promotion and Protection of Investments
of (date of entry-into-force):
I, (Name of investor) , consent to arbitration in accordance with the
procedures set out in this Agreement, and waive my right to initiate or continue before
any administrative tribunal or court under the law of any Party to the Agreement, or
other dispute settlement procedures, any proceedings with respect to the measure of
(Name of disputing Party) that is alleged to be a breach referred to in Article 22 or
Article 23, except for proceedings for injunctive, declaratory or other extraordinary
relief, not involving the payment of damages, before an administrative tribunal or court
under the law of (Name of disputing Party).
(To be signed and dated)
Form 2
Consent and waiver for an investor of a Party bringing a claim under Article 22 or
Article 23 (where the investor is a Party, a state enterprise thereof, or an
enterprise of such Party) of the Agreement between Canada and the Republic of
Peru for the Promotion and Protection of Investments of (date of entry-into-force):
I, (Name of declarant) , on behalf of (Name of investor) , consent to
arbitration in accordance with the procedures set out in this Agreement, and waive the
right of (Name of investor) to initiate or continue before any administrative
tribunal or court under the law of any Party to the Agreement, or other dispute
settlement procedures, any proceedings with respect to the measure of (Name of
disputing Party) that is alleged to be a breach referred to in Article 22 or Article
23, except for proceedings for injunctive, declaratory or other extraordinary relief, not
involving the payment of damages before an administrative tribunal or court under the
law of (Name of disputing Party).
I hereby solemnly declare that I am duly authorised to execute this consent and waiver
on behalf of (Name of investor).
(To be signed and dated)
Form 3
Waiver of an enterprise that is the subject of a claim by an investor of a Party
under Article 22 of the Agreement between Canada and the Republic of Peru for
the Promotion and Protection of Investments of (date of entry-into-force):
I, (Name of declarant), waive the right of (Name of the enterprise) to initiate
or continue before any administrative tribunal or court under the law of any Party to
this Agreement, or other dispute settlement procedures, any proceedings with respect
to the measure of (Name of disputing Party) that is alleged by (Name of
investor) to be a breach referred to in Article 22, except for proceedings for
injunctive, declaratory or other extraordinary relief, not involving the payment of
damages, before an administrative tribunal or court under the law of (Name of
disputing Party).
I hereby solemnly declare that I am duly authorised to execute this waiver on behalf of
(Name of the enterprise).
(To be signed and dated)
Form 4
Consent and waiver of an enterprise that is the subject of a claim by an investor of
a Party under Article 23 of the Agreement between Canada and the Republic of
Peru for the Promotion and Protection of Investments of (date of entry-into-force):
I, (Name of declarant), on behalf of (Name of enterprise), consent to
arbitration in accordance with the procedures set out in this Agreement, and waive the
right of (Name of enterprise) to initiate or continue before any administrative
tribunal or court under the law of any Party to the Agreement, or other dispute
settlement procedures, any proceedings with respect to the measure of (Name of
disputing Party) that is alleged by (Name of investor) to be a breach referred
to in Article 23, except for proceedings for injunctive, declaratory or other
extraordinary relief, not involving the payment of damages before an administrative
tribunal or court under the law of (Name of disputing Party).
I hereby solemnly declare that I am duly authorised to execute this consent and waiver
on behalf of (Name of the enterprise).
(To be signed and dated)
ANNEX C.27
Submission of a Claim to Arbitration
- An investor of Canada may not submit to arbitration under Section C a claim
that the Republic of Peru has breached an obligation under Section B:
(a) on its own behalf under Article 22(1)(a), or
(b) on behalf of an enterprise of the Republic of Peru that is a juridical
person that the investor owns or controls directly or indirectly under
Article 23(1)(a),
if the investor or the enterprise, respectively. has aIleged that breach of an obligation
under Section B in proceedings before a court or administrative tribunal of the
Republic of Peru.
- An investor of Canada may not submit to arbitration under Section C a claim
that the Republic of Peru has breached a legal stability agreement referred to in
Articles 22(3) and 23(3):
(a) on its own behalf under Article 22(l)(b), or
(b) on behalf of an enterprise of the Republic of Peru that is a juridical
person that the investor owns or controls directly or indirectly under
Article 23(l)(b),
if the investor or the enterprise, respectively, has aIleged that breach in proceedings
before a court or administrative tribunal of the Republic of Peru or has submitted that
claim to any other binding dispute settlement proceedings.
- For greater certainty, if an investor of Canada elects to submit:
(a) a claim described in paragraph 1 to a court or administrative tribunal of
the Republic of Peru, or
(b) a claim described in paragraph 2 to a court or administrative tribunal of
the Republic of Peru or to any other binding dispute settlement
proceedings,
that election shall be definitive and the investor may not thereafter submit the same
claim to arbitration under Section C.
ANNEX C.39
Submissions by Non-Disputing parties
- The application for leave to file a non-disputing party submission shall:
(a) be made in writing, dated and signed by the person filing the
application, and include the address and other contact details of the
applicant;
(b) be no longer than 5 typed pages;
(c) describe the applicant, including, where relevant, its membership and
legal status (e.g., company, trade association or other non-governmental
organization), its general objectives, the nature of its activities, and any
parent organization (including any organization that directly or indirectly
controls the applicant);
(d) disclose whether the applicant has any affiliation, direct or indirect, with
any disputing party;
(e) identify any government, person or organization that has provided any
financial or other assistance in preparing the submission;
(f) specify the nature of the interest that the applicant has in the arbitration;
(g) identify the specific issues of fact or law in the arbitration that the
applicant has addressed in its written submission;
(h) explain, by reference to the factors specified in Article 39(4), why the
Tribunal should accept the submission; and
(i) be made in a language of the arbitration.
- The submission filed by a non-disputing party shall:
(a) be dated and signed by the person filing the submission;
(b) be concise, and in no case longer than 20 typed pages, including any
appendices;
(c) set out a precise statement supporting the applicant's position on the
issues; and
(d) only address matters within the scope of the dispute.
SECTION D - STATE-TO-STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT PROCEDURES
ARTICLE 47
Disputes between the Parties
- Either Party may request consultations on the interpretation or application of
this Agreement. The other Party shall give sympathetic consideration to the request.
Any dispute between the Parties concerning the interpretation or application of this
Agreement shall, whenever possible, be settled amicably through consultations.
- If a dispute cannot be settled through consultations, it shall, at the request of
either Party, be submitted to an arbitral panel for decision.
- An arbitral panel shall be constituted for each dispute. Within two months after
receipt through diplomatic channels of the request for arbitration, each Party shall
appoint one member to the arbitral panel. The two members shall then select a national
of a third State who, upon approval by the two Parties, shall be appointed Chairman of
the arbitral panel. The Chairman shall be appointed within two months from the date
of appointment of the other two members of the arbitral panel.
- If within the periods specified in paragraph (3) of this Article the necessary
appointments have not been made, either Party may invite the President of the
International Court of Justice to make the necessary appointments. If the President is a
national of either Party or is otherwise prevented from discharging the said function,
the Vice-President shall be invited to make the necessary appointments. If the VicePresident
is a national of either Party or is prevented from discharging the said
function, the Member of the International Court of Justice next in seniority, who is not
a national of either Party, shall be invited to make the necessary appointments.
- Arbitrators shall:
(a) have expertise or experience in public international law, international
trade or international investment rules, or the resolution of disputes
arising under international trade or international investment agreements;
(b) be independent of, and not be affiliated with or take instructions from,
either Party; and
(c) comply with any Code of Conduct for Dispute Settlement as agreed by
the Commission.
- Where a Party claims that a dispute involves measures relating to financial
institutions, or to investors or investments of such investors in financial institutions,
then
(a) where the disputing Parties are in agreement, the arbitrators shall, in
addition to the criteria set out in paragraph 5, have expertise or
experience in financial services law or practice, which may include the
regulation of financial institutions; or
(b) where the disputing Parties are not in agreement,
(i) each disputing Party may select arbitrators who meet the
qualifications set out in subparagraph (a), and
(ii) if the Party complained against invokes Articles 14(6) or 17. the
chair of the panel shall meet the qualifications set out in
subparagraph (a).
- The arbitral panel shall determine its own procedure. The arbitral panel shall
reach its decision by a majority of votes. Such decision shall be binding on both
Parties. Unless otherwise agreed, the decision of the arbitral panel shall be rendered
within six months of the appointment of the Chairman in accordance with paragraphs
(3) or (4) of this Article.
- Each Party shall bear the costs of its own member of the panel and of its
representation in the arbitral proceedings; the costs related to the Chairman and any
remaining costs shall be borne equally by the Parties. The arbitral panel may,
however, in its decision direct that a higher proportion of costs be borne by one of the
two Parties, and this award shall be binding on both Parties.
- The Parties shall, within 60 days of the decision of a panel, reach agreement on
the manner in which to resolve their dispute. Such agreement shall normally
implement the decision of the panel. If the Parties fail to reach agreement, the Party
bringing the dispute shall be entitled to compensation or to suspend benefits of
equivalent value to those awarded by the panel.
SECTION E - FINAL PROVISIONS
ARTICLE 48
Consultations
A Party may request in writing consultation with the other Party regarding any
actual or proposed measure or any other matter that it considers might affect the
operation of this Agreement.
ARTICLE 49
Extent of Obligations
The Parties shall ensure that all necessary measures are taken in order to give
effect to the provisions of this Agreement, including their observance, except as
otherwise provided in this Agreement, by sub-national governments.
ARTICLE 50
Commission
- The Parties hereby agree to establish a Commission, comprising cabinet-level
representatives of the Parties or their designees.
- The Commission shall:
(a) supervise the implementation of this Agreement;
(b) resolve disputes that may arise regarding its interpretation or application;
(c) consider any other matter that may affect the operation of this
Agreement; and
(d) adopt a Code of Conduct for Arbitrators.
- The Commission may take such other action in the exercise of its functions as
the Parties may agree, including amendment of the Code of Conduct for Arbitrators.
- The Commission shall establish its rules and procedures.
ARTICLE 51
Exclusions
The dispute settlement provisions of Sections C or D of this Agreement shall
not apply to the matters referred to in Annex E.51 (Exclusions from Dispute
Settlement).
ARTICLE 52
Application and Entry into Force
- The Annexes hereto shall form integral parts hereof.
- Each Party shal1 notify the other in writing of the completion of the procedures
required in its territory for the entry into force of this Agreement. This Agreement
shall enter into force on the date of the latter of the two notifications.
- This Agreement shall remain in force unless either Party notifies the other Party
in writing of its intention to terminate it. The termination of this Agreement shall
become effective one year after notice of termination has been received by the other
Party. In respect of investments or commitments to invese11 made prior to the date
when the termination of this Agreement becomes effective, the provisions of Articles 1
to 51 inclusive, as well as paragraphs (1) and (2) of this Article, shall remain in force
for a period of fifteen years.
ANNEX E.51
Exclusions from Dispute Settlement
- A decision by Canada following a review under the Investment Canada Act,
with respect to whether or not to pennit an acquisition that is subject to review, shall
not be subject to the dispute settlement provisions under Sections C or D of this
Agreement.
- Issues relating to the administration or enforcement of Canada's Competition
Act, its regulations, policies and practices, or any successor legislation, policies and
practices and any decision pursuant to the Competition Act made in any cases or
patterns of cases by the Commissioner of Competition, Attorney General of Canada,
the Competition Tribunal, the responsible Minister or the courts, shall not be subject to
the dispute settlement provisions under Sections C or D of this Agreement.
- Issues relating to the administration or enforcement of Peru's Legislative Decree
N° 701, Law 26876, and Supreme Decree N° 039-2000-ITINCI to the extent that it
relates to false or misleading representations and deceptive marketing practices, their
regulations, policies and practices, or any successor legislation, policies and practices
and any decision pursuant to Legislative Decree N° 701, Law 26876, and Supreme
Decree N° 039-2000-ITINC1 to the extent that it relates to false or misleading
representations and deceptive marketing practices made in any cases or patterns of
cases by the Instituto Nacional de Defensa de la Competencia y de la Protecci6n de la
Propiedad Intelectual12 (lNDECOPI) or the Ministerio Publico13,
the responsible Minister or the courts, shall not be subject to the dispute settlement provisions under
Sections C or D of this Agreement.
- A decision by a Party to prohibit or restrict the acquisition of an investment in
its territory by an investor of the other Party, or its investment, pursuant to Article
10(4) shall not be subject to the provisions of Sections C or D of this Agreement.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undergoing, duly aullrorised, have sicned this
Agreement.
DONE in duplicate at Hanoi this 14th day of November, 2006 in the
English, French and Spanish languages, all texts being equally authentic.
_[signature]_ FOR CANADA |
_[signature]_ FOR THE REPUBLIC OF PERU |
ANNEX I - Reservations for Existing Measures and Liberalization Commitments
Headnote
- The Schedule of a Party sets out, pursuant to Article 9 (1), the reservations
taken by that Party with respect to existing measures by a Party that do not conform
with obligations imposed by:
(a) Article 3 (National Treatment);
(b) Article 4 (Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment);
(c) Article 6 (Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of
Personnel);
(d) Article 7 (Performance Requirements).
- Each reservation sets out the following elements:
(a) Sector refers to the general sector in which the reservation is taken;
(b) Sub-Sector refers to the specific sector in which the reservation is taken;
(c) Industry Classification refers, where applicable, to the activity covered
by the reservation according to domestic industry classification codes;
(d) Type of Reservation specifies the obligation referred to in paragraph 1
for which a reservation is taken;
(e) Measures identifies the laws, regulations or other measures, as
qualified, where indicated, by the Description element, for which the
reservation is taken. A measure cited in the Measures element:
(i) means the measure as amended, continued or renewed as of the
date of entry into force of this Agreement, and
(ii) includes any subordinate measure adopted or maintained under
the authority of and consistent with the measure;
(f) Description sets out the non-conforming aspects of the existing
measures for which the reservation is taken. It may also set out
commitments for liberalization.
- In the interpretation of a reservation, all elements of the reservation shall be
considered. A reservation shall be interpreted in the light of the relevant provisions of
the Articles against which the reservation is taken. To the extent that:
(a) the Measures element is qualified by a liberalization commitment from
the Description element, the Measures element as so qualified shall
prevail over all other elements; and
(b) the Measures element is not so qualified, the Measures element shall
prevail over all other elements, unless any discrepancy between the
Measures element and the other elements considered in their totality is
so substantial and material that it would be unreasonable to conclude that
the Measures element should prevail, in which case the other elements
shall prevail to the extent of that discrepancy.
- The listing of a measure in this Annex is without prejudice to a future claim that
Annex II may apply to the measure or some application of the measure.
- For the purposes of this Annex:
CPC means Central Product Classification (CPe) numbers as set out in Statistical
Office of the United Nations, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 77, Provisional Central
Product Classification, 1991; and
SIC means Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) numbers as set out in Statistics
Canada, Standard Industrial Classification, fourth edition, 1980.
ANNEX I
Schedule of Canada
|
|
Sector: |
AII Sectors |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industry Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Measures: |
Investment Canada Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 28 (1st Supp.)
Investment Canada Regulations, SOR/85-611
As qualified by paragraphs 8 through 12 of the Description element |
Description: |
- Under the Investment Canada Act, the following acquisitions of
Canadian businesses by "non-Canadians" are subject to review by the
Director of Investments:
(a) all direct acquisitions of Canadian businesses with assets of C$5
million or more;
(b) all indirect acquisitions of Canadian businesses with assets of
C$50 million or more; and
(c) indirect acquisitions of Canadian businesses with assets between
C$5 million and C$50 million that represent more than 50
percent of the value of the assets of all the entities the control
of which is being acquired, directly or indirectly, in the
transaction in question.
- A "non-Canadian" is an individual, government or agency
thereof or an entity that is not "Canadian". "Canadian" means a
Canadian citizen or permanent resident, government in Canada or
agency thereof or Canadian-controlled entity as provided for in the
Investment Canada Act.
- In addition, specific acquisitions or establishment of new
businesses in designated types of business activities relating to Canada's
cultural heritage or national identity, which are normally notifiable,
may be reviewed if the Governor in Council authorizes a review in the
public interest.
- An investment subject to review under the Investment Canada
Act may not be implemented unless the Minister responsible for the
Investment Canada Act advises the applicant that the investment is
likely to be of net benefit to Canada. Such a determination is made in
accordance with six factors described in the Act, summarized as
follows:
(a) the effect of the investment on the level and nature of economic
activity in Canada, including the effect on employment, on the
utilization of parts, components and services produced in Canada,
and on exports from Canada;
(b) the degree and significance of participation by Canadians in the
investment;
(c) the effect of the investment on productivity, industrial efficiency,
technological development and product innovation in Canada;
(d) the effect of the investment on competition within any industry or
industries in Canada;
(e) the compatibility of the investment with national industrial,
economic and cultural policies, taking into consideration
industrial, economic and cultural policy objectives enunciated by
the government or legislature of any province likely to be
significantly affected by the investment; and
(f) the contribution of the investment to Canada's ability to compete
in world markets.
- In making a net benefit determination, the Minister, through the
Director of Investments, may review plans under which the applicant
demonstrates the net benefit to Canada of the proposed acquisition. An
applicant may also submit undertakings to the Minister in connection
with any proposed acquisition which is the subject of review. In the
event of non-compliance with an undertaking by an applicant, the
Minister may seek a court order directing compliance or any other
remedy authorized under the Act.
- Non-Canadians who establish or acquire Canadian businesses,
other than those that are subject to review, as described above, must
notify the Director of Investments.
- The Director of Investments will review an "acquisition of
control", as defmed in the Investment Canada Act, of a Canadian
business by an investor of the other Party if the value of the gross
assets of the Canadian business is not less than the applicable threshold.
- The higher review threshold, calculated as set out in paragraph
13, does not apply to acquisitions in the following sectors: uranium
production and ownership of uranium producing properties; financial
services; transportation services; and cultural businesses.
- Notwithstanding the definition of "investor of a party" in Article
1, only investors who are nationals, or entities controlled by nationals
as provided for in the Investment Canada Act, of the other Party may
benefit from the higher review threshold.
- An indirect "acquisition of control" of a Canadian business in
any sector other than those sectors identified in paragraph 8 by an
investor of the other Party is not reviewable.
- Notwithstanding Article 7, Canada may impose requirements, or
enforce any commitment or undertaking, in connection with the
establishment, acquisition, expansion, conduct or operation of an
investment of an investor of the other Party or of a non-Party for the
transfer of technology, production process or other proprietary
knowledge to a national or enterprise, affiliated to the transferor, in
Canada, in connection with the review of an acquisition of an
investment under the Investment Canada Act.
- Except for requirements, commitments or undertakings relating
to technology transfer as set out in paragraph II, Article 7 shall apply
to requirements, commitments or undertakings imposed or enforced
under the Investment Canada Act. Article 7 shall not be construed to
apply to any requirement, commitment or undertaking imposed or
enforced in connection with a review under the Investment Canada Act,
to locate production, carry out research and development, employ or
train workers, or to construct or expand particular facilities, in Canada.
- For direct acquisitions of control by investors of the other Party
or for investors of a non-Party where the Canadian business is
controlled by an investor of the other Party, the applicable threshold for
review is C$265 million for the year 2006 and for each year thereafter
the amount determined by the Minister in January of that year arrived
at by using the following formula:
Annual Adjustment =
|
Current Nominal GDP
at Market Prices
---------------------------------------------------- x
Previous Year Nominal GDP
at Market Prices
|
amount determined for
previous year
|
"Current Nominal GDP at Market Prices" means the average of the
Nominal Gross Domestic Products at Market Prices for the most recent
four consecutive quarters.
"Previous Year Nominal GDP at Market Prices· means the average of
the Nominal Gross Domestic Product for the four consecutive quarters
for the comparable period in the year preceding the year used in
calculating the "Current Nominal GDP at Market Prices".
The amounts determined in this manner will be rounded to the nearest
million dollars.
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|
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Sector: |
All Sectors |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industry Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
As set out in the Description element |
Description: |
Canada or any province, when selling or disposing of its equity
interests in, or the assets of, an existing state enterprise or an existing
governmental entity, may prohibit or impose limitations on the
ownership of such interests or assets, and on the ability of owners of
such interests or assets to control any resulting enterprise, by investors
of the other Party or of a non-Party or their investments. With respect
to such a sale or other disposition, Canada or any province may adopt
or maintain any measure relating to the nationality of senior
management or members of the board of directors.
For purposes of this reservation:
(a) any measure maintained or adopted after the date of entry into
force of this Agreement that, at the time of sale or other disposition,
prohibits or imposes limitations on the ownership of equity interests
or assets or imposes nationality requirements described in this
reservation shall be deemed to be an existing measure; and
(b) "state enterprise" means an enterprise owned or controlled
through ownership interests by Canada or any province and includes
an enterprise established after the date of entry into force of this
Agreement solely for the purposes of selling or disposing of equity
interests in, or the assets of, an existing state enterprise or
governmental entity.
|
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|
|
Sector: |
All Sectors |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industry Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Canada Business Corporations Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C44
Canada Corporations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C32
Canada Business Corporations Act Regulations, SOR179-316 |
Description: |
"Constraints" may be placed on the issue, transfer and ownership of
shares in federally incorporated corporations. The object is to permit
corporations to meet Canadian ownership requirements, under certain
laws set out in the Canada Business Corporations Act Regulations, in
sectors where ownership is required as a condition to operate or to
receive licenses, permits, grants, payments or other benefits. In order
to maintain certain "Canadian" ownership levels, a corporation is
permitted to sell shareholders I shares without the consent of those
shareholders, and to purchase its own shares on the open market.
"Canadian" is defined in the Canada Business Corporations Act
Regulations. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
All Sectors |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industry Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
Canada Business Corporations Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-44
Canada Business Corporations Act Regulations, SOR179-316
Canada Corporations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-32
Special Acts of Parliament incorporating specific companies |
Description: |
The Canada Business Corporations Act requires, for most federallyincorporated
corporations, that 25 per cent of directors be resident
Canadians. A simple majority of resident Canadian directors is required
for corporations in prescribed sectors. These sectors include: uranium
mining; book publishing or distribution; book sales, where the sale of
books is the primary part of the corporation's business; and film or
video distribution. Similarly, corporations that, by an Act of Parliament
or Regulation, are individually subject to minimum Canadian
ownership requirements are required to have a majority of resident
Canadian directors.
For purposes of the Act, "resident Canadian" means an individual who
is a Canadian citizen ordinarily resident in Canada, a citizen who is a
member of a class set out in the Canada Business Corporations Act
Regulations, or a permanent resident as defined in the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act other than one who has been ordinarily resident
in Canada for more than one year after he or she became eligible to
apply for Canadian citizenship.
In the case of a holding corporation, not more than one-third of the
directors need be resident Canadians if the earnings in Canada of the
holding corporation and its subsidiaries are less than five percent of the
gross earnings of the holding corporation and its subsidiaries.
Under Part IV of the Canada Corporations Act, a simple majority of
the elected directors of a Special Act corporation must be resident in
Canada and citizens of a Commonwealth country. This requirement
applies to every joint stock company incorporated subsequent to June
22, 1869 by any Special Act of Parliament.
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|
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Sector: |
All Sectors |
Sub-Sector: |
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Industry Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Citizenship Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-29
Foreign Ownership of Land Regulations, SOR179-416 |
Description: |
The Foreign Ownership of Land Regulations are made pursuant to the
Citizenship Act and the Alberta Agricultural and Recreational Land
Ownership Act. In Alberta, an ineligible person or foreign-owned or
controlled corporation may only hold an interest in controlled land
consisting of not more than two parcels containing, in the aggregate,
not more than 20 acres. An "ineligible person" is:
(a) an individual who is not a Canadian citizen or permanent
resident;
(b) a foreign government or agency thereof; or
(c) a corporation incorporated elsewhere than in Canada.
"Controlled land" means land in Alberta but does not include:
(a) land of the Crown in right of Alberta;
(b) land within a city, town, new town, village or summer village;
and
(c) mines or minerals.
|
|
|
Sector: |
All Sectors |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industry Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Air Canada Public Participation Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 35 (4th Supp.)
Canadian Arsenals Limited Divestiture Authorization Act, S.C. 1986, c. 20
Eldorado Nuclear Limited Reorganization and Divestiture Act, S.C. 1988, c. 41
Nordion and Theratronics Divestiture Authorization Act, S.C. 1990, c.4 |
Description: |
A "non-resident" or "non-residents" may not own more than a
specified percentage of the voting shares of the corporation to which
each Act applies. For some companies the restrictions apply to
individual shareholders, while for others the restrictions may apply in
the aggregate. Where there are limits on the percentage that an
individual Canadian investor can own, these limits also apply to nonresidents.
The restrictions are as follows:
Air Canada: 25 percent in the aggregate;
Cameco Limited (formerly Eldorado Nuclear Limited): 15 percent per
individual non-resident, 25 percent in the aggregate;
Nordion International Inc.: 25 percent in the aggregate;
Theratronics International Limited: 49 percent in the aggregate;
Canadian Arsenals Limited: 25 percent in the aggregate.
"Non-resident" generally means:
(a) an individual, other than a Canadian citizen, who is not
ordinarily resident in Canada;
(b) a corporation incorPorated, formed or otherwise organized
outside Canada;
(c) the government of a foreign state or any political subdivision
thereof, or a person empowered to perform a function or duty
on behalf of such a government;
(d) a corporation that is controlled directly or indirectly by nonresidents
as defined in any of paragraphs (a) through (c);
(e) a trust
(i) established by a non-resident as defined in any of
paragraphs (b) through (d), other than a trust for the
administration of a pension fund for the benefit of
individuals a majority of whom are residents, or
(ii) in which non-residents as defined in any of paragraphs (a)
through (d) have more than 50 percent of the beneficial
interest; or
(f) a corporation that is control1ed directly or indirectly by a trust
referred to in paragraph (e).
|
|
|
Sector: |
Business Service Industries |
Sub-Sector: |
Customs Brokers |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 7794 - Customs Brokers |
Type of Reservation: |
Senior Management. Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp.)
Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations, SOR/86-1067
|
Description: |
To be a licensed customs broker in Canada:
(a) an individual must be a Canadian citizen or permanent
resident;
(b) a corporation must be incorporated in Canada with a majority
of its directors being Canadian citizens or permanent
residents; and
(c) a partnership must be composed of persons who are Canadian
citizens or permanent residents, or corporations incorporated
in Canada with a majority of their directors being Canadian
citizens or permanent residents.
|
|
|
Sector: |
Business Service Industries |
Sub-Sector: |
Duty Free Shops |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 6599 - Other Retail Stores, Not Elsewhere Classified (limited to
duty free shops) |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp.)
Duty Free Shop Regulations, SOR/86-1072 |
Description: |
- To be a licensed duty free shop operator at a land border crossing
in Canada, an individual must:
(a) be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident;
(b) be of good character;
(c) be principally resident in Canada; and
(d) have resided in Canada for at least 183 days of the year
preceding the year of application for the license.
- To be a licensed duty free shop operator at a land border crossing
in Canada, a corporation must:
(a) be incorporated in Canada; and
(b) have all of its shares beneficially owned by Canadian citizens
or permanent residents who meet the requirements of
paragraph 1.
|
|
|
Sector: |
Business Service Industries |
Sub-Sector: |
Examination Services relating to the Export and Import of Cultural
Property |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 999 - Other Services, Not Elsewhere Classified (limited to
cultural property examination services) |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Cultural Property Export and Import Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-51 |
Description: |
Only a "resident of Canada" or an "institution" in Canada may be
designated as an "expert examiner" of cultural property for purposes
of the Cultural Property Export and Import Act. A "resident of
Canada" is an individual who is ordinarily resident in Canada, or a
corporation that has its head office in Canada or maintains one or
more establishments in Canada to which employees employed in
connection with the business of the corporation ordinarily report for
work. An "institution" is an institution that is publicly owned and
operated solely for the benefit of the public, that is established for
educational or cultural purposes and that conserves objects and
exhibits them. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Business Service Industries |
Sub-Sector: |
Patent Agents and Agencies |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 999 - Other Services, Not Elsewhere Classified (limited to patent
agency) |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Measures: |
Patent Act, R.S. C. 1985, c. P-4
Patent Rules, C.R. C. 1978, c. 1250
Patent Cooperation Treaty Regulations, SOR/89-453 |
Description: |
To represent persons in the presentation and prosecution of
applications for patents or in other business before the Patent Office, a
patent agent must be resident in Canada and registered by the Patent
Office.
A registered patent agent who is not resident in Canada must appoint a
registered patent agent who is resident in Canada as an associate to
prosecute an application for a patent.
An enterprise may be added to the patent register provided that it has
at least one member who is also on the register. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Business Service Industries |
Sub-Sector: |
Trade-Mark Agents |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 999 - Other Services, Not Elsewhere Classified (limited to trademark
agency) |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Measures: |
Trade-Marks Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. T-13
Trade-mark Regulations (1996), SOR/96-195 |
Description: |
To represent persons in the presentation and prosecution of
applications for trade-marks or in other business before the TradeMark
Office, a trade-mark agent must be resident in Canada and
registered by the Trade-Mark Office.
A registered trade-mark agent who is not resident in Canada must
appoint a registered trade-mark agent who is resident in Canada as an
associate to prosecute an application for a trade-mark.
A firm may be added to the list of trade-marks agents provided that it
has at least one member who is also on the register. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Energy |
Sub-Sector: |
Oil and Gas |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 071 - Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas Industries |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Canada Petroleum Resources Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 36 (2nd Supp.)
Territorial Lands Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. T-7
Federal Real Property and Federal Immovables Act, s.C. 1991, c. 50
Canada-Newfoundland Atlantic Accord Implementation Act, S.C. 1987, c. 3
Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Resources Accord Implementation Act, s.C. 1988, c. 28
Canada Oil and Gas Land Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, c. 1518 |
Description: |
This reservation applies to production licenses issued with
respect to "frontier lands" and "offshore areas" (areas not under
provincial jurisdiction) as defIned in the applicable measures.
Persons who hold oil and gas production licenses or shares
therein for discoveries made after March 5, 1982, must be
corporations incorporated in Canada.
The Canadian ownership requirements for oil and gas production
licenses for discoveries made prior to March 5, 1982, are set out
in the Canada Oil and Gas Land Regulations. |
|
|
Sector: |
Energy |
Sub-Sector: |
Oil and Gas |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 071 - Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas Industries |
Type of Reservation: |
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Measures: |
Canada Oil and Gas Production and Conservation Act, R.S.C. 1985,
c.O-7, as amended by Canada Oil and Gas Operations Act, S.C. 1992, c.35
Canada - Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Resources Accord Implementation Act, S.C. 1988, c. 28
Canada - Newfoundland Atlantic Accord Implementation Act, S.C. 1987, c.3
Measures implementing Yukon Oil and Gas Accord
Measures implementing Northwest Territories Oil and Gas Accord |
Description: |
- Under the Canada Oil and Gas Operations Act, the approval of the
Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources of a "benefits plan" is
required to receive authorization to proceed with any oil and gas
development project.
- A "benefits plan" is a plan for the employment of Canadians and for
providing Canadian manufacturers, consultants, contractors and service
companies with a full and fair opportunity to participate on a
competitive basis in the supply of goods and services used in any
proposed work or activity referred to in the benefits plan.
The Act permits the Minister to impose an additional requirement on
the applicant, as part of the benefits plan, to ensure that disadvantaged
individuals or groups have access to training and employment
opportunities or can participate in the supply of goods and services used
in any proposed work referred to in the benefits plan.
- The Canada - Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Resources Accord
Implementation Act and the Canada - Newfoundland Atlantic Accord
Implementation Act have the same requirement for a benefits plan but
also require that the benefits plan ensure that:
(a) prior to carrying out any work or activity in the offshore area,
the corporation or other body submitting the plan establish in
the applicable province an office where appropriate levels of
decision-making are to take place;
(b) expenditures be made for research and development to be
carried out in the province, and for education and training to be
provided in the province; and
(c) first consideration be given to goods produced or services
provided from within the province, where those goods or
services are competitive in terms of fair market price, quality
and delivery.
- The Boards administering the benefits plan under these Acts may
also require that the plan include provisions to ensure that
disadvantaged individuals or groups, or corporations owned or
cooperatives operated by them, participate in the supply of goods and
services used in any proposed work or activity referred to in the plan.
- In addition, Canada may impose any requirement or enforce any
commitment or undertaking for the transfer of technology, a production
process or other proprietary knowledge to a person of Canada in
connection with the approval of development projects under the
applicable Acts.
- Provisions similar to those set out above will be included in laws or
regulations to implement the Yukon Oil and Gas Accord and Northwest
Territories Oil and Gas Accord which for purposes of this reservation
shall be deemed, once concluded, to be existing measures.
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Energy |
Sub-Sector: |
Oil and Gas |
TIndustry Classification: |
SIC 071 - Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas Industries |
Type of Reservation: |
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Measures: |
Canada - Newfoundland Atlantic Accord Implementation Act., S.C. 1987, c. 3
Hibernia Development Project Act, S.C. 1990, c. 41 |
Description: |
Pursuant to the Hibernia Development Project Act, Canada and the
"Hibernia Project Owners" may enter into agreements whereby the
Project Owners undertake to perform certain work in Canada and
Newfoundland and to use their "best efforts" to achieve specific
Canadian and Newfoundland "target levels" in relation to the
provisions of any "benefits plan" required under the Canada-Newfoundland
Atlantic Accord Implementation Act. "Benefits plans"
are further described in Schedule of Canada, Annex I.
In addition, Canada may impose in connection with the Hibernia
project any requirement or enforce any commitment or undertaking for
the transfer of technology, a production process or other proprietary
knowledge to a national or enterprise in Canada.
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Energy |
Sub-Sector: |
Uranium |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 0616 - Uranium Mines |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) Most-favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4) |
Measures: |
Investment Canada Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 28 (ist Supp.)
Investment Canada Regulations, SORJ85-611
Policy on Non Resident Ownership in the Uranium Mining Sector, 1987 |
Description: |
Ownership by "non-Canadians", as defmed in the Investment Canada
Act, of a uranium mining property is limited to 49 percent at the stage
of first production. Exceptions to this limit may be permitted if it can
be established that the property is in fact "Canadian controlled" as
defined in the Investment Canada Act.
Exemptions from the policy are permitted, subject to approval of the
Governor in Council, only in cases where Canadian participants in the
ownership of the property are not available. Investments in properties
by non Canadians, made prior to December 23, 1987, and that are
beyond the permitted ownership level, may remain in place. No
increase in non-Canadian ownership is permitted.
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Fisheries |
Sub-Sector: |
Fish Harvesting and Processing |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 031 - Fishing Industry |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4) |
Measures: |
Coastal Fisheries Protection Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C33
Fisheries Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F14
Coastal Fisheries Protection Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, c. 413
Policy on Foreign Investment in the Canadian Fisheries Sector, 1985
Commercial Fisheries Licensing Policy |
Description: |
Under the Coastal Fisheries Protection Act, foreign fishing
vessels are prohibited from entering Canada's Exclusive
Economic Zone except under authority of a license or under
treaty. "Foreign" vessels are those which are not "Canadian" as
defined in the Coastal Fisheries Protection Act. Under the
Fisheries Act, the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans has
discretionary authority with respect to the issuance of licenses.
Fish processing enterprises that have a foreign ownership level
of more than 49 percent are prohibited from holding Canadian
commercial fishing licenses. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Transportation |
Sub-Sector: |
Air Transportation |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 451 - Air Transport Industries |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Most-favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4) |
Measures: |
Canada Transportation Act, S. C. 1996, c.10
Aeronautics Act, R.S. C. 1985, c.A-2
Canadian Aviation Regulations
Part II "Aircraft Markings & Registration"
Part IV "Personnel Licensing & Training"
Part VII "Commercial Air Services" |
Description: |
The Canada Transportation Act, in Section 55, defines "Canadian" in
the following manner:
"... 'Canadian' means a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident
within the meaning of the immigration and Refugee Protection Act, a
government in Canada or an agent ofsuch a government or a
corporation or other entity that is incorporated or formed under the
laws of Canada or a province. that is controlled in fact by Canadians
and of which at least seventy-jive per cent, or such Jesser percentage as
the Governor in Council may by regulation specify, of the voting
interests are owned and controlled by Canadians...."
Regulations made under the Aeronautics Act incorporate by reference
the definition of "Canadian" found in the Canada Transportation Act.
These Regulations require that a Canadian operator of commercial air
services operate Canadian-registered aircraft. These regulations require
an operator to be Canadian in order to obtain a Canadian Air Operator
Certificate and to qualify to register aircraft as "Canadian".
Only "Canadians" may provide the following commercial air
transportation services:
(a) "domestic services" (air services between points, or from and
to the same point, in the territory of Canada, or between a
point in the territory of Canada and a point not in the territory
of another country) ;
(b) "scheduled international services" (scheduled air services
between a point in the territory of Canada and a point in the
territory of another country) where those services have been
reserved to Canadian carriers under existing or future air
services agreements;
(c) "non-scheduled international services" (non-scheduled air
services between a point in the territory of Canada and a point
in the territory of another country) where those services have
been reserved to Canadian carriers under the Canada
Transportation Act.
(d) "specialty air services" (include, but are not limited to: aerial
mapping, aerial surveying, aerial photography, forest fire
management, fire-fighting, aerial advertising, glider towing,
parachute jumping, aerial construction, heli-logging, aerial
inspection, aerial surveillance, flight training, aerial sightseeing
and aerial crop spraying).
No foreign individual may own a Canadian-registered aircraft for
private use.
A corporation incorporated in Canada but that does not meet the
Canadian ownership and control requirements may only register an
aircraft for private use when the corporation is the sole owner of the
aircraft. The Canadian Aviation Regulations also have the effect of
limiting "non-Canadian" corporations operating foreign-registered
private aircraft within Canada to the carriage of their own employees. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Transportation |
Sub-Sector: |
Water Transportation |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 4541 |
Freight and Passenger Water Transport Industry |
SIC 4542 |
Ferry Industry |
SIC 4543 |
Marine Towing Industry |
SIC 4549 |
Other Water Transport Industries |
SIC 4553 |
Marine Salvage Industry |
SIC 4559 |
Other Service Industries Incidental to Water Transport |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Canada Shipping Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. S-9. Part 1 |
Description: |
(1) To register a ship in Canada, the owner of that ship or the person
who has exclusive possession of that ship must be:
(a) a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident within the meaning
of subsection 2(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act,
(b) a corporation incorporated under the laws of Canada or a
province, or
(c) when the ship is not already registered in another country, a
corporation incorporated under the laws of a country other than
Canada if one of the following is acting with respect to all
matters relating to the ship. namely,
i. a subsidiary of the corporation that is incorporated under
the laws of Canada or a province,
ii. an employee or director in Canada of any branch office of
the corporation that is carrying on business in Canada, or
iii. a ship management company incorporated under the laws
of Canada or a province.
(2) A ship registered in a foreign country which has been bareboat
chartered may be listed in Canada for the duration of the charter while
the ship's registration is suspended in its country of registry, if the
charterer is:
(a) a Canadian citizen or permanent resident as defined in
subsection 2(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
or
(b) a corporation incorporated under the laws of Canada or a
province.
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Transportation |
Sub-Sector: |
Water Transportation |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 4541 |
Freight and Passenger Water Transport Industry |
SIC 4542 |
Ferry Industry |
SIC 4543 |
Marine Towing Industry |
SIC 4549 |
Other Water Transport Industries |
SIC 4553 |
Marine Salvage Industry |
SIC 4554 |
Piloting Service, Water Transport Industry |
SIC 4559 |
Other Service Industries Incidental to Water Transport |
|
Type of Reservation: |
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
Canada Shipping Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. S-9, Part 11
Marine Certification Regulations, SOR 97-391 |
Description: |
Masters, mates, engineers and certain other seafarers must hold
certificates granted by the Minister of Transport as a requirement of
service on Canadian registered ships. Such certificates may be granted
only to Canadian citizens or permanent residents. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Transportation |
Sub-Sector: |
Water Transportation |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 4554 |
Piloting Service, Water Transport Industry |
|
Type of Reservation: |
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
Pilotage Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. P-14
General Pilotage Regulations, SORI2000-132
Atlantic Pilotage Authority Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, c. 1264
Laurentian Pilotage Authority Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, c. 1268
Great Lakes Pilotage Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, c. 1266
Pacific Pilotage Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, c. 1270 |
Description: |
A licence or a pilotage certificate issued by the relevant regional
Pilotage Authority is required to provide pilotage services in the
compulsory pilotage waters of the territory of Canada. Only Canadian
citizens or permanent residents may obtain such a licence or pilotage
certificate. A permanent resident of Canada who has been issued a
pilot's licence or pilotage certificate must become a Canadian citizen
within five years of receipt of such licence or pilotage certificate in
order to retain it. |
ANNEX I
Schedule of the Republic or Peru
|
|
Sector: |
All Sectors |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Constitución Politica del Perú (1993), Articulo 71.
Decreto Legislativo N° 757, Diario Oficial "El Peruano" del 13
de noviembre de 1991, Ley Marco para el Crecimiento de la
Inversión Privada, Articulo 13. |
Description: |
No foreign national, enterprise organized under foreign law or
enterprise organized under Peruvian law and owned in whole or
part, directly or indirectly, by foreign nationals may acquire or
own by any title, directly or indirectly, land or water (including a
tiline, forest land, or energy sources) located within 50 kilometers
of the Peruvian border. Exceptions may be authorized by
Supreme Decree approved by the Council of Ministers in cases of
expressly declared public necessity.14 |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Notary Services |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Decreto Ley N° 26002, Diario Oficial El Peruano del 27 de
Diciembre de 1992, Ley del Notariado, Artículos 5 (modificado
por Ley N° 26741) Y Artículo 10 (modificado por Ley N° 27094). |
Description: |
Only a Peruvian national by birth may supply notary services.
Accordingly, foreign persons cannot be notaries, nor own a notary firm in the Republic of Peru. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Architecture Services |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Measures: |
Ley N° 14085. Diario Oficial "EI Peruano" del 30 de junio de
1962, Ley de Creaci6n del Colegio de Arquitectos del Perú.
Ley N° 16053, Diario Oficial "EI Peruano" del 14 de febrero de
1966, Ley del Ejercicio Profesional, Autoriza a los Colegios de
Arquitectos e Ingenieros del Perú para supervisar a los
profesionales de Ingeniería y Arquitectura de la República,
Articulo 1.
Acuerdo del Consejo de Arquitectos, del 06 de octubre de 1987. |
Description: |
To obtain temporary registration, non-resident foreign architects
must have a contract of association with a Peruvian architect residing in Republic of Peru. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Security Services |
Type of Reservation: |
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
Decreto Supremo N° 005-94-IN, Diario Oficial "El
Peruano" del 12 de mayo de 1994, Reglamento de Servicios de Seguridad Privada, Artículos 81 y 83. |
Description: |
Senior managers of an enterprise that supplies security services must be Peruvian nationals by birth and be
residents of the Republic of Peru. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Transportation Air Transport Specialty Air Services |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
Ley N° 27261, Diario Oficial "El Peruano" del 10 de mayo del 2000, Ley de Aeronáutica Civil, Artículo 79.
Decreto Supremo N° 05D-2001-MTC, Diario Oficial "El Peruano" del 26 de diciembre de 2001, Reglamento de la Ley de
Aeronáutica Civil, Artículos 147, 159, 160 y VI Disposición Complementaria. |
Description: |
National Commercial Aviation Service is reserved to a
Peruvian natural or juridical person. National Commercial
Aviation Service includes specialty air services.
For purposes of this entry, a Peruvian juridical person is an
enterprise that fulfils the following requirements:
(a) is constituted under Peruvian law, specifies commercial
aviation as its corporate purpose, is domiciled in the
Republic of Peru, and has its principal activities and
administration located in the Republic of Peru;
(b) at least half plus one of the directors, managers, and
persons who control or manage the enterprise are
Peruvian nationals or have permanent domicile or are
normally resident in the Republic of Peru; and
(c) at least 51 percent of the capital must be owned by
Peruvian nationals and be under the real and effective
control of Peruvian shareholders or partners
permanently domiciled in the Republic of Peru. (This
limitation shall not apply to the enterprises constituted
under law N° 24882, which may maintain the
ownership percentages set in such law). Six months
after the date of authorization of the enterprise to
provide commercial air transportation services, foreign
nationals may own up to 70% of the capital of the
enterprise.
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Transportation Water Transportation |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
Ley N° 28583, Ley de Reactivación y Promoción de la Marina
Mercante Nacional, Diario Oficial "El Peruano" del 22 de julio de 2005, Artlculos 4.1,6.1,7.1,7.2,7.4 Y 13.6.
Decreto Supremo N° 028 DE/MGP, Diario Oficial "El Peruano"
de 25 de mayo de 2001, Reglamento de la Ley N° 26620,
ArtIculo I-010106, literal a). |
Description: |
- Only a "National shipowner" or "National Ship
Enterprise" may supply maritime cabotage services.15 A
"National shipowner" or "National Ship Enterprise" means
a Peruvian national or juridical person organized under
Peruvian law, with its principal domicile and real and
effective headquarters in the Republic of Peru, whose
business is to provide water transportation services for
cabotage or international traffic and which is the owner or
lessee under a financial lease or a bareboat charter, with an
obligatory purchase option, of at least one Peruvian flag
merchant ship and that has obtained the relevant Operation
Permit from the General Aquatic Transport Directorate.
- At least 51 percent of the subscribed and paid-in capital
must be owned by Peruvian citizens.
- The chairman of the board of directors, a majority of the
directors, and the General Manager of a National Ship
Enterprise must be nationals and resident in the Republic of
Peru.
- The captain of the Peruvian-flagged vessels must be a
Peruvian national and the crew must have at least 80% of
Peruvian nationals authorized by the "Direcci6n General de
Capitanias y Guardacostas". In cases where there is no
duly qualified Peruvian captain, a foreign national may be
authorized to serve as captain.
- Only a Peruvian national may be a licensed harbour pilot.
- Cabotage is exclusively reserved to Peruvian flagged
vessels owned by a National Shipowner or National Ship
Enterprise or leased under a financial lease or a bareboat
charter, with an obligatory purchase option, except that:
(i) Twenty-five per cent of the transport of hydrocarbons
in national waters is reserved for the boats of the
Peruvian Navy; and
(ii) Foreign-flagged vessels may be used by a National
Shipowner or National Ship Enterprise for a period of
no more than six months for water transportation
exclusively between Peruvian ports or cabotage when
such an entity does not own its own vessels or lease
vessels.
|
|
|
Sector: |
All Sectors |
Type of Reservation: |
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of
Personnel (Article 6) |
Measures: |
Decreto Legislativo N° 689, Ley para la Contratación de Trabajadores Extranjeros, Diario Oficial "El Peruano" del 05
de noviembre de 1991, Artlculos 1, 2 , 4, 5 (modificado por Ley N° 26196) y 6. |
Description: |
All employers in the Republic of Peru, independently of their activity or nationality, shall give preferential treatment to
nationals when hiring its employees.
Foreign natural persons who are service providers and who are
employed by service-provider companies may provide said
services in the Republic of Peru upon execution of a written
employment agreement for a set period of time not to exceed 3
years, which may be subsequently extended for like periods of
time. Service-providing companies must show proof of the
commitment to train national personnel in the same occupation.
Foreign natural persons may not represent more than 20 per
cent of the total number of employees of an enterprise, and their
pay may not exceed 30 per cent of the total payroll for wages
and salaries. These percentages will not apply in the following
cases:
* When the foreign nationals providing services are the
spouse, parent, child, or sibling of a Peruvian national;
* Foreign employees working for foreign companies
providing international land, air and water transport under a
foreign flag and registration;
* Foreign employees of multinational service companies or
banks, subject to the laws governing specific cases16;
* Foreign investors, whenever its investment permanently
maintains in the Republic of Peru at least 5 tributary tax
units during the life of their contrad17;
* Artists, athletes or other service-providers engaged in public
performances in Peruvian territory, for a maximum of three
months a year;
* Foreign nationals with immigrant visa;
* Foreign nationals whose countries have labour reciprocity or
double nationality agreements with the Republic of Peru;
* Foreign personnel providing services in the country on
behalf of bilateral or multilateral agreements celebrated by
the Peruvian Government.
Employers may request waivers for the percentages related to
the number of foreign employees and their share of the
company's payroll in those cases involving:
* Specialized professional or technical personnel;
* Directors or management personnel for new or converted
business activities;
* Teachers hired for post secondary education, or for foreign
private elementary and high schools; or for foreign language
teaching in local private schools; or for specialized language
centers;
* Personnel working for public or private companies with
contractual agreements with Public institutions;
* In any other case determined by supreme decree pursuant to
specialization, qualification or experience criteria.
|
Annex II - Reservations for Future Measures
Headnote
- The Schedule of a Party sets out, pursuant to Article 9 (2), the reservations
taken by that Party with respect to specific sectors, sub-sectors or activities for which it
may maintain existing, or adopt new or more restrictive, measures that do not conform
with obligations imposed by:
(a) National Treatment (Article 3);
(b) Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4);
(c) Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel
(Article 6);
(d) Performance Requirements (Article 7);
- Each reservation sets out the following elements:
(a) Sector refers to the general sector in which the reservation is taken;
(b) Sub-Sector refers to the specific sector in which the reservation is taken;
(c) Industry Classification refers, where applicable, to the activity covered
by the reservation according to domestic industry classification codes;
(d) Type of Reservation specifies the obligation referred to in paragraph 1
for which a reservation is taken;
(e) Description sets out the scope of the sector, sub-sector or activities
covered by the reservation; and
(f) Existing Measures identifies, for transparency purposes, existing
measures that apply to the sector, sub-sector or activities covered by the
reservation.
- In the interpretation of a reservation, all elements of the reservation shall be
considered. The Description element shall prevail over all other elements.
- For the purposes of this Annex:
CPC means Central Product Classification (CPC) numbers as set out in Statistical
Office of the United Nations, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 77, Provisional Central
Product Classification, 1991; and
SIC means Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) numbers as set out in Statistics
Canada, Standard Industrial Classification, fourth edition, 1980.
ANNEX II
Schedule of Canada
|
|
Sector: |
Aboriginal Affairs |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industry Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure denying
investors of the other Party and their investments any rights or
preferences provided to aboriginal peoples. |
Existing Measures: |
Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B of the Canada Act 1982 (U.K.), 1982, c. 11 |
|
|
|
Sector: |
All Sectors |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industry Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure relating to
residency requirements for the ownership by investors of the other
Party, or their investments, of oceanfront land. |
Existing Measures: |
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Communications |
Sub-Sector: |
Telecommunications Transport Networks and Services, Radiocommunications and Submarine Cables |
Industry Classification: |
CPC 752 |
Telecommunications Services |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure:
(a) permitting foreign investment in facilities-based
telecommunications service suppliers up to no more than a
cumulative total of 46.7% of voting shares (based on 20%
direct investment and 33.3% indirect investment);
(b) requiring that facilities-based telecommunications service
suppliers be controlled in fact by Canadians;
(c) requiring that at least 80 percent of the members of the board
of directors of facilities-based telecommunications service
suppliers be Canadian;
(d) subjecting facilities-based telecommunications service suppliers
that exceeded the permissible cumulative foreign investment
level on 22 July 1987 and continue to exceed this level to
restrictions.
Exceptions to this reservation are:
(a) foreign investment is allowed up to 100% for suppliers
conducting operations under an international submarine cable
licence;
(b) mobile satel1ite systems owned and controlled up to a level of
100% by a foreign service provider may be used by a Canadian
service provider to provide services in Canada; and
(c) fixed satellite systems owned and controlled up to a level of
100% by foreign service providers may be used to provide
services between points in Canada and all points outside of
Canada.
|
Existing Measures: |
Telecommunications Act, S.c. 1993, c. 38
Canadian Telecommunications Common Carrier Ownership and Control Regulations SOR/94-667
Radiocommunication Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. R-2
Radiocommunication Regulations SOR/96-484
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Communications |
Sub-Sector: |
Telecommunications Transport Networks and Services,
Radiocommunications
Telecommunication Services
|
Industrial Classification: |
CPC 7529 |
Other Telecommunication Services |
CPC 7549 |
Other Telecommunications Services Not Elsewhere Classified |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel
(Article 6) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure
relating to the provision of or investment in telecommunications
services classified in CPC 7529, excluding mobile services, and
CPC 7549. |
Existing Measures: |
Radiocommunication Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. R-2
Radiocommunication Regulations SOR/96-484
Telecommunications Act. S.C. 1993, c. 38
Canadian Telecommunications Common Carrier Ownership and Control Regulations SOR/94-667 |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Communications |
Sub-Sector: |
Telecommunications Transport Networks and Services,
Radiocommunications |
Industrial Classification: |
CPC 752 |
Telecommunications Services |
CPC 7543 |
Connection Services |
CPC 7549 |
Other Telecommunications Services Not Elsewhere Classified (limited to telecommunications transport networks and services) |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure that
may limit competition in the provision of interexchange voice
telephone service in the serving areas of Northwestel Inc.,
Ontario Northland Transportation Commission, and Prince
Rupert City Telephones. |
Existing Measures: |
Telecommunications Act, S.C. 1993, c.38
Radiocommunication Act, R.S.C. 1985. c. R-2 |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Communications |
Sub-Sector: |
Telecommunications Transport Networks and Services |
Industrial Classification: |
CPC 752 |
Telecommunications Services |
CPC 7543 |
Connection Services |
CPC 7549 |
Other Telecommunications Services Not Elsewhere Classified (limited to telecommunications transport networks and services) |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure that may
limit competition in the provision of local wireline telephone services in
the serving areas of Northwestel Inc., Ontario Northland Transportation
Commission, Prince Rupert City Telephones, Telus Communications
(Edmonton) Inc. and the other independent telephone companies listed
in CRTC Telecom Public Notice 95-15. |
|
Existing Measures: |
Telecommunications Act, S.C. 1993, c. 38 |
|
|
Sector: |
Government Finance |
Sub-Sector: |
Securities |
Industrial Classification: |
SIC 8152 - Finance and Economic Administration |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure
relating to the acquisition, sale or other disposition by nationals
of the other Party of bonds, treasury bills or other kinds of debt
securities issued by the Government of Canada, a province or
local government. |
Existing Measures: |
Financial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-11 |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Minority Affairs |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industrial Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure according
rights or preferences to socially or economically disadvantaged
minorities. |
Existing Measures: |
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Services |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industrial Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure that is not
inconsistent with Canada's obligations under Articles XVI, XVII and
XVIII of the WTO General Agreement on Trade in Services. |
Existing Measures: |
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Social Services |
Sub-Sector: |
|
Industrial Classification: |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6) |
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure with respect
to the provision of public law enforcement and correctional services,
and the following services to the extent that they are social services
established or maintained for a public purpose: income security or
insurance, social security or insurance, social welfare, public education,
public training, health, and child care. |
Existing Measures: |
|
|
|
|
Sector: |
Transportation |
Sub-Sector: |
Water Transportation |
Industry Classification: |
SIC 4129 |
Other Heavy Construction (limited to dredging) |
SIC 4541 |
Freight and Passenger Water Transport Industry |
SIC 4542 |
Ferry Industry |
SIC 4543 |
Marine Towing Industry |
SIC 4549 |
Other Water Transport Industries |
SIC 4552 |
Harbour and Port Operation Industries (limited to berthing, bunkering and other vessel operations in a port)
|
SIC 4553 |
Marine Salvage Industry |
SIC 4554 |
Piloting Service, Water Transport Industry |
SIC 4559 |
Other Service Industries Incidental to Water Transport (not including landside aspects of port activities) |
|
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6)
Performance Requirements (Article 7)
|
Description: |
Canada reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure relating to
investment in or provision of maritime cabotage services, including:
(a) the transportation of either goods or passengers by ship between
points in the territory of Canada or above the continental shelf
of Canada, either directly or by way of a place outside Canada;
but with respect to waters above the continental shelf of Canada,
the transportation of either goods or passengers only in relation
to the exploration, exploitation or transportation of the mineral
or non-living natural resources of the continental shelf of
Canada; and
(b) the engaging by ship in any other marine activity of a
commercial nature in the territory of Canada and, with respect
to waters above the continental shelf, in such other marine
activities of a commercial nature that are in relation to the
exploration, exploitation or transportation of the mineral or nonliving
natural resources of the continental shelf of Canada.
|
Existing Measures: |
Coasting Trade Act, S.C. 1992, c. 31
Canada Shipping Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. S-9
Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp.)
Customs and Excise Offshore Application Act, R.S.C.1985, c. C-53 |
ANNEX II
Schedule of the Republic or Peru
|
|
Sector: |
Indigenous Communities, Peasant, Native, and Minority Affairs |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Description: |
The Republic of Peru reserves the right to adopt or maintain any
measure according rights or preferences to socially or
economically disadvantaged minorities and ethnic groups. For
purposes of this entry, ethnic groups means: indigenous and
native communities; minorities includes peasant (campesinos)
communities. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Fishing |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Description: |
The Republic of Peru reserves the right to adopt or maintain any
measure relating to artisanal fishing. |
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|
|
Sector: |
Handicraft Industries |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Description: |
The Republic of Peru reserves the right to adopt or maintain any measure relating to the design, distribution, retailing, or
exhibition of handicrafts that are identified as Peruvian handicrafts.
Performance requirements shall in all cases be consistent with the
WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Jewellery Design Theater arts Visual arts Music |
Type of Reservation: |
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Description: |
The Republic of Peru reserves the right to adopt or maintain any
measure conditioning the receipt or continued receipt of
government support18 for the development and production of
jewellery design, theatre arts, visual arts and music on the
recipient achieving a given level or percentage of domestic
creative content.
For greater certainty, this entry does not apply to advertising.
For greater certainty, this reservation is without prejudice to the
scope and application of the exception relating to investments in
cultural industries. |
|
|
|
Sector: |
Social Services |
Type of Reservation: |
National Treatment (Article 3)
Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment (Article 4)
Senior Management, Boards of Directors and Entry of Personnel (Article 6)
Performance Requirements (Article 7) |
Description: |
The Republic of Peru reserves the right to adopt or maintain any
measure with respect to the provision of law enforcement and
correctional services, and the following services to the extent that
they are social services established or maintained for a public
purpose: income security and insurance, social security, social
welfare, public education, public training, health, and childcare.
|
ANNEX III
Exceptions from Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment
- Article 4 shall not apply to treatment accorded under all bilateral or multilateral
international agreements in force or signed prior to the date of entry into force of this
Agreement.
- Article 4 shall not apply to treatment by a Party pursuant to any existing or
future bilateral or multilateral agreement:
(a) establishing, strengthening or expanding a free trade area or customs
union; or
(b) relating to:
(i) aviation;
(ii) fisheries;
(iii) maritime matters, including salvage.
- For greater certainty, Article 4 shall not apply to any current or future foreign
aid programme to promote economic development, whether under a bilateral
agreement, or pursuant to a multilateral arrangement or agreement, such as the OECD
Agreement on Export Credits.
Footnotes
Article 1
1 For greater certainty, it is understood that an investor ·seeks to make an investment" only when the
investor has taken concrete steps necessary to make said investment, such as when the investor has made
an application for a permit or license authorizing the establishment of an investment.
2 For greater certainty. it is understood that an investor "seeks to make an investment" only when the
investor has taken concrete steps necessary to make said investment, such as when the investor has made
an application for a permit or license authorizing the establishment of an investment.
Article 4
3 For greater certainty, the treatment accorded by a Party under this Article means, with respect to a subnational
government, treatment accorded, in like circumstances, by that sub-national government to
investors, and to investments of investors, of a non-Party.
4 For greater certainty, Article 4 shall be interpreted in accordance with Annex B.4.
Article 8
5 Nothing in this Article shall be construed to prevent a monopoly from charging different prices in
different geographic markets. where such differences are based on normal commercial considerations,
such as taking account of supply and demand conditions in those markets.
6 A delegation includes a legislative grant. a government order, directive or other act transferring to the
monopoly. or authorizing the exercise by the monopoly of. governmental authority.
Article 13
7 For greater certainty, Article 13(1) shall be interpreted in accordance with Annex B.13(1) on the
clarification of indirect expropriation.
8 The term "public purpose" is a treaty term to be interpreted in accordance with intemationallaw. It is
not meant to create any inconsistency with the same or similar concepts in the domestic law of the
Parties.
Article 40
9 The "law of the disputing Party" means the law that a domestic court or tribunal of proper jurisdiction
would apply in the same case.
Annexe C.26
10 Subjecllo Annex C.27.
Article 52
11 For the purposes of this Article, commitments to invest means concrete steps taken by an investor to
make an investment. according to footnote 1.
Annexe E.51
12 The National Institute for the Defence of the Competition and Protection of the Intellectual Property.
13 "Ministerio PUblico" is the counterpart to "Attorney General of Canada" referred to in paragraph 2.
Annexe I - Schedule of the Republic or Peru
14 Investors may request an exception by filing a request with the relevant Ministry. For example, authorizations have been granted in the mining sector.
15 I' For greater certainty, maritime cabotage services includes transport by lakes and rivers.
16 At the moment, there is no entity covered by this exception.
17 The Tributary Tax Unit (UIr) is an amount of reference that is used in the tributary norms in order to
maintain in constant values the taxes basis. deductions. affectation limits and other aspects of the tributes
that the legislator considers convenient.
Annexe II - Schedule of the Republic or Peru
18 For purposes of this entry, "goverrunent support" means tax incentives, incentives on mandatory
contributions, goverrunent grants, government supported loans, guarantees, or trusls, or insurance
provided by a government, irrespective of whether a private entity is wholly or partially responsible for
its management. However, a measure is not covered by this entry to the extent that it is inconsistent
with Article 16 (Taxation Measures).
|