BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> The Federal Republic of Nigeria v Process & Industrial Developments Ltd [2023] EWHC 2638 (Comm) (23 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2023/2638.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2638 (Comm), [2023] WLR(D) 464 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [View ICLR summary: [2023] WLR(D) 464] [Help]
THE BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND & WALES
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
In an Arbitration Claim
Royal Courts of Justice, London |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
PROCESS & INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Lord Wolfson of Tredegar KC, Alexander Milner KC, Henry Hoskins and Max Evans (instructed by Quinn Emanuel) for Process & Industrial Developments Limited
Hearing dates:
16-19, 23-26, 30-31 January;
1-2, 6-9, 13-17, 20-24, 27 February;
6-9 March 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Robin Knowles J CBE:
Introduction
Some preliminary, general, points on the evidence
Dishonesty
"74. … When dishonesty is in question the fact-finding tribunal must first ascertain (subjectively) the actual state of the individual's knowledge or belief as to the facts. The reasonableness or otherwise of his belief is a matter of evidence (often in practice determinative) going to whether he held the belief, but it is not an additional requirement that his belief must be reasonable; the question is whether it is genuinely held. When once his actual state of mind as to knowledge or belief as to facts is established, the question whether his conduct was honest or dishonest is to be determined by the fact-finder by applying the (objective) standards of ordinary decent people. There is no requirement that the defendant must appreciate that what he has done is, by those standards, dishonest."
See also Royal Brunei Airlines Sdn Bhd v Tan [1995] AC 378 and Group
Seven Ltd v Nasir [2019] EWCA Civ 614, [2020] Ch 129.
"… at least in the context of this case – the prevailing standard against which the conduct of any given official must be judged is not one of scrupulous professionalism, or even reasonable diligence, but is (regrettably) one of abject incompetence."
I take the argument into account, and it is important in understanding why and how some things happened, but it is only of limited assistance where what is to be judged is honesty.
Business in Nigeria; the ICIL Group
"during the proceedings, some evidence of corrupt or apparently corrupt activity with the ICIL group of companies has come to light".
"… we gave them the money for their travel allowance for want of another description and they don't bring it with them, they leave it at home".
Ministry of Police Affairs
Ministry of Defence
Ministry of Defence (continued): Mrs Grace Taiga
Oil and gas, and Project Alpha
Nigeria's Gas Master Plan and the Accelerated Gas Development Project
"… to present a proposal, based in the main on the Addax available wet gas, for the Design, Installation & Operation of a Gas Processing facility, in the Calabar area".
"… there might be an excellent opportunity to utilise the Engineering Work on Project Alpha already completed and paid for in order to develop a similar Gas Stripping Plant at Calabar".
He invited the General to participate.
"The Project is being funded by South Atlantic Petroleum (SAPETRO) which is 100% owned by General T.Y.Danjuma (Rtd). To date in excess of $40 Mio has been invested in the Process Licenses and complete detailed engineering".
"three Engineering Contracts [which] represent over US$ 29 million of the over US$ 40 million expended to date, the balance being made up of the initial feasibility studies, smaller engineering studies and our internal Project Management Costs".
"many of the items are to be determined (TBD) and others are assumed. This is just a starting point, but it indicates the information we require to produce the Process Information Package".
It included "a block flow diagram (BFD) of the overall facility scope as we understand it" for the project at Calabar.
"The very fact that P&ID was refining and honing the concept for the Calabar Project – even though this required more engineering work to be carried out – is … further proof that this was a genuine project which P&ID intended to deliver. … The reality is that P&ID believed the necessary engineering work for the [project at Calabar] could and would be completed, just as it had been for Project Alpha. The reason P&ID honed and developed the concept was that it had every intention of delivering the [project at Calabar]".
Towards a Memorandum of Understanding
"As agreed at the meeting, we enclose a copy of our letter to the ministry dated the 18th of March 2009 detailing our expenditure of more than 40 million US dollars to date on the project"
He referred to P&ID's letter to President Yar'Adua dated 7 August 2008:
"wherein we identified our interest in procuring 50% of the associated wet gas we require for the project from [field] OML 123…".
"The objective of this MOU is to construct a Natural Gas Processing Plant and to incorporate two process streams with a total capacity of 400 MMSCuFD together with all utilities and storage facilities at Calabar".
"None of the engineering or licensing for Project Alpha will be used in the Calabar Project as the design is completely different".
And on 26 August 2009 P&ID produced an internal timeline concerning the "Feedstock Gas for Project Alpha". This stated, attributing a date of December 2008, that it was "clear that because the two projects are totally dissimilar"; adding:
"the Engineering work carried out for Project Alpha will not be applicable in any way to the Calabar Project. Similarly, the technology licensed for Project Alpha would be of no use for the Calabar Project".
"In respect of the Commercial Terms of the Gas Agreement, the Process & Industrial Developments standpoint remains unchanged to that presented at the various meetings, presentations and discussions to date, namely that the Government shall deliver to the Calabar site boundary, 400 MMSCuFD of Associated Gas having a minimum C3 (Propane) content of 3.5% mol and C4 (Butane) of 1.8% mol at No Cost, other than a nominal transmission fee (to be agreed). In turn, P&ID will process the gas, recompress the residual C1 and C2 (pipeline quality lean gas), representing approximately 85% of the wet gas feed, and make it available, for power generation, at the Calabar site boundary at No Cost to the Government."
"Herewith my draft of the agreement. I have drafted it on a government "lock-in" basis in respect of gas supply and commercial terms. From everything I am hearing, it is my belief that politically (both Federal and State) they have no where else to go in terms of gas supply for power generation. The other companies being considered for the Short Term Gas Agreements have not even clearly identified their requirements. On these grounds I believe that supply locations and delivery pipelines should be left in the Ministry's court at this juncture. The detail can be sorted out under the ongoing JOC."
"It was not necessary to resolve the issue of the precise composition and quantity of Wet Gas in OML 123 prior to entering in the GSPA because [Nigeria's] obligation under the GSPA as signed on 11 January 2010 was to supply a specified quantity and quality of gas, rather than gas from any particular source."
"The Ministry of Petroleum Resources assistance is now urgently required to ensure this Accelerated Gas Development Project is not delayed."
As with OML 123, the available contemporaneous documentation does not show whether and how this important matter was addressed to a conclusion before the GSPA was signed in the terms that it was.
"…there is nothing to show that upon suitable terms the Government could not have obtained gas from their fields, as provided for and contemplated in Article 3c) under the heading "Scope of the Work" [see below]. … There is nothing to show that the Government could not have obtained the gas from the other sources mentioned in recitals b) and c)."
The GSPA
"Both a Gas Processing Contract and construction contract will be more detailed and I guess these documents will follow in due course".
Mr Hitchcock's response, provided in markup, was "Not necessary, everything is up to us".
"Arcadia in discussions asked if there would be provision for a later more detailed contract covering specifications and delivery etc. I said yes but have not referred to it in the draft as I think it could introduce an element of conditionality".
"[Honourable Minister of Petroleum Resources],
1. Please refer to the Draft Agreement attached a.b.c between the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and Process and Industrial Developments Limited for your signature.
2. Please recall that the MOU signed between the Ministry and P&ID was for the purpose of constructing a Natural Gas Processing Plant and to incorporate two process streams with a total capacity of 400MMSCuFD together with all utilities and storage facilities at Calabar.
3. P&ID has set a bench mark for the Short Term Project, by granting Government 10% of the Equity free of charge.
4. Accordingly, P&ID at Article 8 of this Draft Agreement has agreed among other things to transfer to the Government or its nominee a total of 10% of the Equity of P&ID in the following manner:
I. Transfer to the Government or it's nominee five percent (5%) the Equity of P&ID upon the commencement of the delivery of not less than 150 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas to the Site as set forth as Phase 1 in Appendix A
ii. Transfer to the Government or its nominee a further five percent (5%) of the Equity of P&ID the said Equity to be transferred pro rata as the delivery of the remaining 250 MMSCuFD is successfully implemented as set forth as Phase 2 in Appendix A.
iii. All of the Equity to be transferred under Article 8 shall consist of fully-paid Ordinary Shares free of all liens and charges and no sums whatsoever shall be payable by the Government in respect of the Equity so transferred.
5. Most importantly, P&ID has agreed to build the Pipeline at no cost to the Government.
6. In addition the following concessions were made by P&ID:-
a. Article 5 dealing with the duration of the Agreement, P&ID submits that during the subsistence of this Agreement Government at all times have the right to audit the Accounts of P&ID.
b. Article 8 (e), dealing with Commercial Terms P&ID agrees that Government shall be given the right of first refusal where P&ID desires at any stage to dispose of its GPFs.
c. Article 8 (i) having agreed by Government and P&ID that the Project shall be designated a COM Project and by extension all earnings or revenues arising from the Project status will accrue 50% to P&ID and 50% to the Government
7. Noteably at back cover of the Agreement, P&ID has submitted Work Schedules/Programme up to its completion.
8. Subject to your comments to the contrary, I advise that [the Minister] signs these Agreements to ensure a leap forward for short Term Gas operations in the country as directed by Mr. President.
9. Submitted, please.
Mrs Grace E.O. Taiga
Director (Legal)
18th December 2009"
"what I meant by that is that I am submitting the agreement as having been duly prepared for your signature. That is usual civil service language. 'I advise' does not mean he's bound to take what I said, and I advised 'subject' … means that he is an icon in the oil industry, he knows better."
But on the evidence I heard, I find Mrs Grace Taiga certainly had a role in bringing about the GSPA.
"b) The Government of Nigeria has substantial undiscovered potential gas reserves, discovered but undeveloped gas reserves, developed gas reserves and associated gas reserves in its onshore and offshore territories largely in acreage allocated to international and indigenous operators."
"c) The Government through the NNPC owns approximately fifty-seven (57) percent of the gas resources in acreage allocated to the international operators."
"e) The Government is currently engaged in the development of a strategic natural gas policy, to ensure the smooth achievement of its objective for the effective development of gas in Nigeria to meet short term supply requirement for power generation."
"a) The Government holds as a key strategic objective, the production of adequate quantities of natural gas to satisfy the power generation and other domestic uses needed for national economic growth."
"d) The Government desires to develop and utilise its gas resources at optimal capacity to meet the growth in gas demand at the various sectors of the economy including domestic, regional and export markets."
"g) The Government has identified certain number of oil/gas flared points and desires to eliminate gas flaring and wishes to set up a domestic LPG production base as well as make the lean gas produced available for various other domestic uses".
"the establishment of the GPFs and the supply of Wet Gas thereto and the delivery of Lean Gas and their successful operation by the Parties as set out in this Agreement"
where, from the definitions in Article 1:
""GPFs" means the Gas Processing Facilities to be constructed and operated at the Site and off-shore from the site where applicable." (and "Site" means "the land in Calabar on which the GPFs are located")
""Wet Gas" means associated gas removed, during oil production, at the separator having a Propane content of not less than 3.5 mol percent and a Butane content of not less than 1.8 mol percent, compressed and delivered, via pipeline to the Site."
""Lean Gas" means pipeline quality gas having a composition of not less than 95 mol percent Methane and Ethane"
"f) The Government has explored viable structures that could be used to meet the highlighted objectives and considered P&ID as capable of implementing and executing the project."
"h) P&ID possesses the requisite finance, technology and has competence for the fast track development of the Project."
"i) P&ID has undertaken all necessary studies, including the identification of suitable associated gas fields and is ready to commence a fast track development of the project in accordance with the terms of this Agreement".
"j) The Parties are entering into this Agreement to ensure the Fastrack implementation of the Project and to ensure the timely provision of pipeline quality Lean Gas for power generation."
"vii. MMSCuFD" means Millions of Standard Cubic Feet per Day;"
"viii. "NGLs" means all hydrocarbons remaining after processing the Wet Gas removing the Lean Gas;"
"2. OBJECTIVE
The objective of this Agreement is to provide for the construction of Gas Processing Facilities by P&ID encompassing the provision of Wet Gas by the Government and the processing of the said Wet Gas by P&ID utilising two or more process streams with a total capacity of up to 400 MMSCuFD together with all utilities, support and maintenance facilities at the Site and the provision of Lean Gas by P&ID to the Government as set forth in this Agreement and its Appendices and to operate and maintain the facilities in an efficient manner."
"3. SCOPE OF THE WORK
The scope of works of this Agreement is as follows:
a. P&ID shall construct GPFs on the Site allocated to them by Cross River State Government with related ancillary plant and equipment off-shore as required. The GPFs shall be constructed on a timely basis to ensure the earliest possible delivery to the Government, or its nominees, of approximately 340 MMSCuFD Lean Gas for power generation and industrial use by third parties.
b. To ensure this Fastrack is achieved P&ID will construct and incorporate two or more process streams with a total capacity of 400 MMSCuFD together with all utilities, maintenance and support facilities at the Site in accordance with the schedule of works forming Appendix B hereto.
c. The Government shall make available at the P&ID Site boundary, 400 MMSCuFD Wet Gas (free of water) in the manner set out in Appendix A having a minimum C3 (Propane) content of 3.5% mol and C4 (Butane) content of 1.8% mol from [fields] OMLs 123 and OML 67 or such other locations as the Government may decide from time to time to ensure the ongoing feedstock delivery volume and quality requirements for the duration of this Agreement as defined under Article 5 of this Agreement.
d. P&ID will process the Wet Gas to be supplied by the Government and shall provide to the Government or its nominees approximately 85% of the wet gas feedstock molecular volume in the form of Lean Gas at the Site boundary."
"APPENDIX A
Delivery of Wet Gas to P&ID
Phase 1: During or before the last quarter of 2011 a continuous supply of 150 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas, having a minimum Propane content of 3.5 mol% and minimum Butane content of 1.8 mol% will be supplied to the Site for processing by P&ID.
Phase 2: On or before the third quarter of 2012 a further additional continuous supply of 250 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas, having a minimum Propane content of 3.5 mol% and minimum Butane content of 1.8 mol% will be supplied to the Site for processing by P&ID.
Delivery of Lean Gas to the Government
Phase 1: During the last quarter of 2011 following supply of the 150 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas to the Site, P&ID will process the gas and return to the Government, at the Site, a continuous supply of Lean Gas amounting to approximately 85% by volume of the Wet Gas provided. The Lean Gas will be compressed to 92 bar G.
Phase 2: On or before the third quarter of 2012 following supply of the additional 250 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas to the Site, P&ID will process the gas and return to the Government, at the site boundary, a continuous supply of Lean Gas amounting to approximately 85% by volume of the Wet Gas provided. The Lean Gas will be compressed to 92 bar G."
Appendix B to the GSPA was to comprise a schedule of works. Also annexed to the GSPA was a table of field OML 123 Gas Composition (see the Annex to this judgment).
"5. DURATION OF THE AGREEMENT
This Agreement shall come into being on the Effective Date being the date of signing of the Agreement as defined in Article 1 herein and shall remain in force for a period of twenty (20) years with effect from the Start Date of the Agreement after which it shall automatically terminate without prior notice to the Parties except where extended by a mutual agreement of the Parties or until the Capital Cost of the Project is fully repaid whichever occurs latest subject to the Government at all times having the right to audit the Accounts of the P&ID.
"9. JOINT OPERATING COMMITTEE
a. The Joint Operating Committee (JOC) established by the Parties under the previous Memorandum of Understanding dated 22nd July 2009 and comprising of two representatives from the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and two representatives from NNPC nominated by the Government and two representatives nominated by P&ID, shall meet at regular intervals during the Project implementation period to discuss in detail the implementation progress of the Project. Where deemed necessary by any JOC member of the Government or P&ID shall nominate such other expert support from other agencies as may be necessary to ensure that Project timelines are maintained.
b. The JOC shall carry out further activities as may be determined by the Parties.
c. Any cost that may accrue from the JOC activities shall be borne equally by the Parties."
"4. FUNDING
a. Save as otherwise provided in this Agreement, each Party shall bear the costs and expenses of its own personnel during the period of this Agreement. "
"6. RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE GOVERNMENT
a. The Government shall deliver to the Site boundary the agreed quantities and quality of gas as defined under Article 3c and in the manner set out in Appendix A of this Agreement.
b. The Government shall ensure that all necessary pipelines and associated infrastructure are installed and all requisite arrangements with agencies and/or third party are in place to ensure the supply and delivery of Wet Gas in accordance with Article 3 so as to facilitate the timely implementation of gas processing by the GPFs as provided for in this Agreement.
c. The Government agrees to assist P&ID, and where necessary intercede with the relevant Government agencies, to obtain all requisite permits, licenses and approvals required from the relevant Government agencies or others for the Fastrack implementation of this project.
d. If the Government or any of its agencies changes or amends any statute, rule, regulation, instrument or standards, and such change or amendment adversely affects the rights of P&ID under this Agreement, the Parties shall amend the terms of this Agreement in a manner that will restore the rights of P&ID. The Government shall grant to P&ID all such waivers and exemptions necessary to ensure that the rights of P&ID are not adversely affected by any change or amendment to statute, rule, regulation, instrument or standards."
"7. RESPONSIBILITIES OF P&ID
a. P&ID shall use best endeavours to ensure the fastrack implementation of this Project to construct and incorporate two or more process streams with a total capacity of 400 MMSCuFD together with all utilities maintenance and support facilities at the Site. Thereafter P&ID shall maintain and operate the GPFs on a professional basis to ensure a regular supply of Lean Gas (approximately 340 MMSCuFD) for power generation;
b. P&ID shall, during the Project implementation period, submit to the JOC as set out in Article 9 updated work programs or such other documentation as may be necessary to enhance the development of the Project;
c. P&ID shall do all that is necessary to obtain relevant approvals required for the success of the Project."
"8. COMMERCIAL TERMS
a. The Government shall deliver to the Site boundary, 400 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas as set out in Article 3 c) and in Appendix A of this Agreement having a minimum C3 (Propane) content of 3.5% mol and C4 (Butane) of 1.8% mol at No Cost of P&ID.
b. P&ID will process the Wet Gas, recompress the residual Lean Gas, representing approximately 85% of the Wet Gas feed, and make it available, for power generation or other Industrial usage at the discretion of the Government, at the Site boundary at No Cost to the Government.
c. Title to and ownership of the Wet Gas to be delivered by the Government to the Site shall remain vested in the Government and shall be delivered back to the Government at the Site boundary after processing in the form of Lean Gas but the NGLs removed from the Wet Gas during processing shall be retained by P&ID and shall be deemed the sole property of P&ID and the said NGLs may be sold by P&ID either domestically within Nigeria or exported in accordance with commercial criteria.
d. P&ID shall provide all funding necessary for the timely construction, implementation and efficient operation of the GPFs and the said GPFs will be the sole property of P&ID and may be sold or otherwise disposed of by P&ID subject always to the provisions of this Agreement PROVIDED that Government shall be given the right of first refusal.
e. As further consideration P&ID shall transfer to the Government or its nominee a total of ten percent (10%) of the Equity of P&ID in the following manner:
i. P&ID shall transfer to the Government or it's nominee five percent (5%) the Equity of P&ID upon the commencement of the delivery of no less than 150 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas to the Site as set forth as Phase 1 in Appendix A.
ii. P&ID shall transfer to the Government or its nominee a further five percent (5%) of the Equity of P&ID the said Equity to be transferred pro rata as the delivery of the remaining 250 MMSCuFD is successfully implemented as set forth in Phase 2 in Appendix A.
iii. All of the Equity to be transferred under this Article 8 (f) [sic] shall consist of fully paid Ordinary Shares free of all liens and charges and no sums whatsoever shall be payable by the Government in respect of the Equity so transferred.
f. Following the initial transfer of five percent (5%) Equity to the Government or its nominees as provided for at Article 8 (e) above no new shares whether Ordinary, Preference or otherwise may be issued without the written agreement of the Government such agreement not to be unreasonably withheld and the Government shall be entitled to representation on the Board of P&ID in proportion to the Equity held by the Government at any given time.
g. The Parties are aware that the 24 inch Adanga Pipeline presently under construction from the Addax [Petroleum] operated [field] OML 123 directly to Calabar and due for completion in 2010 will have a throughput capacity of 600 MMSCuFD and can adequately provide the required first delivery of 150 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas to the Site and that an additional pipeline of up to 70km in length may be required to link up to the Adanga pipeline in order to facilitate the delivery of the remaining 250 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas to the Site from other sources to be chosen by the Government. If such a requirement is necessary, P&ID undertakes to build and install the said additional pipeline to provide for the delivery of the remaining 250 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas to the Site, at no cost to the Government, and P&ID will retain the ownership and provide the maintenance for the pipeline.
h. P&ID shall enjoy Pioneer Status with no import duties, clearance charges or taxes payable within Nigeria in respect of all equipment and materials utilised in the construction and commissioning of the GPFs and with no taxes payable in respect of the operation of the GPFs for a period of five (5) years from the commencement of commercial operations at the GPFs.
i. The Government will actively support the designation of the Project as a CDM Project and P&ID will take all necessary steps to achieve such designation. All earnings or revenues arising from the Project status as a CDM Project will accrue 50% (fifty percent) to P&ID and 50% (fifty percent) to the Government."
(By Article 1, "CDM Project":
"means a clean development project as provided for in the Kyoto Convention and a CDM Project is duly authorised to engage in approved market based mechanisms in relation the Carbon Credits"
Bribery
"… shall not be given where, or to the extent that, the person against whom it is sought to be enforced shows that the tribunal lacked substantive jurisdiction to make the award ..."
(see section 66(3), set out in full in the Annex to this judgment).
"I wish to state again emphatically that in such a case as this it is an immaterial inquiry to what extent the bribe or the offer of it influenced the person to whom it was given or offered. A contrary doctrine would be most dangerous, for it would be almost impossible to ascertain what had been the effect of the bribe…"
And see further Novoship (UK) Ltd v Mikhaylyuk at [2012] EWHC 3586 (Comm) at [104]-[111] (Christopher Clarke J, as he then was), and Republic of Mozambique (acting through its Attorney General) v Privinvest Shipbuilding SAL (Holding) and Others [2023] UKSC 32 at [86]-[87] (Lord Hodge, with whom Lord Lloyd-Jones, Lord Hamblen, Lord Leggatt and Lord Richards agreed).
'For the purposes of the civil law a bribe means the payment of a secret commission, which only means (i) that the person making the payment makes it to the agent of the other person with whom he is dealing; (ii) that he makes it to that person knowing that that person is acting as the agent of the other person with whom he is dealing; and (iii) that he fails to disclose to the other person with whom he is dealing that he has made that payment to the person whom he knows to be the other person's agent.'
Third, I take the following from the analysis by Christopher Clarke J in Novoship that followed his own reference to the two definitions above:
106. The essential character of a bribe is, thus, that it is a secret payment or inducement that gives rise to a realistic prospect of a conflict between the agent's personal interest and that of his principal. The bribe may have been offered by the payer or sought by the agent. A bribe encompasses not just a payment of money but the conferring of any advantage or benefit, and may be an actual benefit or merely the promise of a benefit held out by the payer or an expectation of one.
…
108.The recipient of the bribe (or the person at whose order the bribe is paid) must be someone with a role in the decision-making process in relation to the transaction in question e.g. as agent, or otherwise someone who is in a position to influence or affect the decision taken by the principal."
Bribing Mrs Grace Taiga: the GSPA
From signing the GSPA to the commencement of the Arbitration: the first 6 months (January 2010-July 2010)
Land
"[t]his interim approval is given based on the fact that the Ministry is yet to receive the necessary plans for the project".
Finance
"It is entirely possible that the issue of finance will not be raised as it is not generally seen as a significant issue for the P&ID project. In such circumstance obviously we would not mention or refer to the issue in any way".
Engineering
"The engineering is also in place to fast track the building of the [Gas Processing Facilities]".
P&ID's letter of 14 May 2010 to NNPC also asserted that 90% of the engineering designs were completed. Mr Michael Quinn's letter of 20 June 2010 to the Ministry of Petroleum Resources also asserted completion of the bulk of the detailed engineering. By reference to the project the subject of the GSPA, rather than Project Alpha these assertions were not true.
From signing the GSPA to the commencement of the Arbitration: the next two years (July 2010-July 2012)
"… it was confirmed that Addax Petroleum was expected to supply the Wet Gas required under the [GSPA] from its operations of OML 123."
and that:
"it was agreed at the said meeting that Addax should sign a Letter of Undertaking to make the Wet Gas available to P&ID …".
"What is the likelihood of funds being available to re-start P&ID".
On 10 December 2010 there was a meeting at Mr Quinn's house in Ireland between Mr Michael Quinn, Mr Cahill and Mr Michael McElligott (a finance advisor retained by P&ID). Mr Niall Lawlor (another finance adviser retained by P&ID) and Mr David Cooke (a consultant and chemical engineer) also discussed the GSPA project.
"decided to withdraw their cooperation and wished to undertake the development of the non-associated gas themselves."
On 27 June 2012 P&ID wrote to the Ministry asking it to agree to a new contract involving the processing of non-associated gas, rather than associated gas, absent which P&ID would "consider all of its contractual options". A little further light is thrown on this by a passage in a later letter of advice dated 27 October 2015 from Nigeria's solicitors in the Arbitration in which it is suggested that:
"[P&ID] further made known to [Nigeria] that even the expected 100 MMSCuF Wet Gas could only be made available to it in year 2014 and as a result of this time frame, [P&ID] was offered non-associated gas by Addax as an alternative to the Wet Gas envisaged by the GSPA, an offer which according to [P&ID] it agreed to "in principle". The consequent failure of Addax Petroleum (a party not privy to the GSPA) to supply [P&ID] with non-associated gas ultimately led to the institution of the present arbitral proceedings."
The Arbitration
"P&ID has not shown the occurrence of and difference or dispute as to the interpretation performance of the [GSPA], and consequently has not satisfied [Article 3(3) of the First Schedule to the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 2004, of Nigeria]".
The author's "considered opinion and advice" is given. The document concludes "Submitted, please for your consideration and further directives".
"P&ID has offered no sensible explanation for why these documents were leaked by [Nigeria's] lawyers and has presented this Court with a conspiracy of silence. The obvious and correct inference is that they were obtained through corruption of [Nigeria's] legal advisers carried out by P&ID and Mr Adebayo. … Mr Murray all but admitted in his oral evidence that [they] were procured by corruption, and no P&ID witness proffered an otherwise honest explanation".
"[t]he money is a complete irrelevance here … [r]eputation and career are far more important to me than this notional money".
But that is now, and was not then. Even Mr Cahill and Mr Murray appreciated that P&ID should not have the documents. But their attitude was that this was the sort of thing you took advantage of if it happened. Mr Murray accepted that the receipt and use of Nigeria's Internal Legal Documents was "less than honest".
The termination of the GSPA
"On 3 October 2013 the Respondent served a Notice of Preliminary Objection in which it alleged that the GSPA was void under Nigerian law because the Ministry lacked legal capacity to contract and because the Claimant had failed to comply with section 54 of the Companies and Allied Matters Act Cap 20 LFN 2004. It also alleged that the arbitration agreement was itself void for lack of capacity and that the tribunal therefore lacked jurisdiction."
"The Respondent agrees that the question on whether or not the Tribunal has jurisdiction to decide upon the validity of the arbitration clause, is bound to involve an investigation of whether the contract was in fact void, therefore the Tribunal may decide on this latter point as a preliminary issue (but only in the event that it decides that it has jurisdiction to do so).
"(a) Whether the Tribunal has jurisdiction to rule upon its own jurisdiction to decide any of the matters in issue in the arbitration; (b) If the answer to question (a) is yes, whether it has jurisdiction to decide whether the contract is valid and binding upon the parties; If the answer to question (b) is yes, whether the contract is void for any of the reasons stated in the Notice of Preliminary Objection".
P&ID's evidence in the Arbitration: the witness statement of Mr Michael Quinn
"It is my submission that the position now, in this arbitration, is that the facts that are not challenged in Mr Quinn's witness statement are the factual basis of the arbitration".
"42. We set about the necessary preparatory engineering work required to construct a gas stripping plant capable of processing 400 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas and a polymer grade propylene plant capable of producing 250,000 metric tonnes per annum of polymer grade propylene.
43. The idea was that we would obtain Wet Gas and process it to remove the NGLs (principally propane and butane). The propane would be used as feedstock for the polymer grade polypropylene plant, and the remaining NGLs could be sold, either domestically or on international markets. The Lean Gas could be sold for domestic power generation.
44. The Project at this point was not location-specific although as explained below the Lagos area was initially regarded as an attractive location. This was not only because of the existence of a number of natural gas fields both on and off the coast but because of the existence of a ready domestic market in Lagos for the Lean Gas.
45. The Project would return a high percentage of the Wet Gas as Lean Gas – about 85% by volume. By contrast, the process of liquefaction of Lean Gas would leave much less of the Wet Gas as residue Lean Gas. The Project was designed to produce Lean Gas for the national grid within 2 years of Government approvals, whereas a typical liquefied natural gas solution would take much longer to produce Lean Gas.
46. As we worked on the Project, we developed the concept of taking advantage of the inherent value in the NGLs typically found in Wet Gas as the principal source of revenue. This came to coincide with an important policy principle for the Nigerian Government known as the "Liquids Based Pricing Approach". This is described in the Government's National Domestic Gas Supply and Pricing Policy as follows (page 10 of MQ1):
"(C) GAS PRICING REFORM - LIQUIDS BASED PRICING APPROACH A widely known characteristic of Nigerian gas is its relative richness in liquids i.e. NGLs. NGLs continue to attract a high price in international markets (similar trend in crude oil pricing). As a result of the potential high revenue that comes from NGLs produced in conjunction with residue dry gas, it is possible for a gas supply project to accommodate a relatively lower price for the residue dry gas and still be a profitable supply project. Residue dry gas is used mostly in the domestic market. This gas pricing policy aims to exploit this intrinsic value of NGLs in deriving a relatively low gas price for the strategic domestic sector - Power. It is recognized that not all gas resources in the country are rich in NGLs, consequently, it is intended that this philosophy be applied selectively - especially in the short term as the Power sector is currently unable to pay higher price for gas (in view of the low end user power tariff that currently obtains in Nigeria). It is however the expectation that in the medium term, power tariff will be more commercial and a higher gas price will be achievable."
"47. During the course of the next two years [from 2006], we made good progress and reached a very advanced stage of the preparatory engineering work necessary to implement such a project on the ground. I would estimate that the total costs sunk into the preparatory work during that period were in excess of $40 million, including initial feasibility studies, the cost of licences for the technology required to operate the gas stripping plant and the propylene plant respectively, the production of detailed engineering drawings and our own internal project management costs.
48. By way of example, extensive work was commissioned from various specialist engineering companies such as CB&I Lummus Technology Group in New Jersey, KRAN Developments in Johannesburg and ABB Limited in the UK. The cost of the work of these 3 companies alone was about $29 million. In addition our own internal costs were significant. I would say that, from the commencement of our work on the Project in mid-2006, substantially the whole of our internal resource was devoted full-time to the Project.
49. By the end of the first 2 years of our work on the Project [i.e. 2008], we had put together a completed engineering package ready for actual permit applications, procurement and construction, which comprised about 100 volumes of documentation, together with a 3-D software model of the plant which was in such high detail that it would have enabled the training of the plant staff even before completion of construction. An electronic copy of a video from the 3-D software model is enclosed with MQ1. …"
"102. The day after the signing of the GSPA, on 12 January 2010, I wrote to the Minister on behalf of P&ID to inform him that P&ID wished to commence work at once ...
103. I was keen to implement the GSPA as soon as possible ... I wished to minimise any delay which might be caused by the operators of the 2 concessions that had been identified as likely sources of Wet Gas for the project. P&ID required from the Government certain up to date information which would be critical to the construction of the gas processing facility which P&ID would be building in Calabar to strip the Wet Gas. For instance, the precise make-up of the Wet Gas (which was also relevant to the Government's contractual obligations to supply Wet Gas with a minimum propane and butane content) and the pressure at which it would be delivered into the gas pipeline which would transport it to Calabar ...
109. In the meantime [in February 2010], the site for the onshore plant at Calabar for the construction of the gas stripping plant and gas storage facilities had been selected by P&ID and secured from the Government of Cross River State. On 1 February 2010 Mr Hitchcock wrote to the Governor of Calabar requesting the formal allocation of the land upon which the plant would be constructed (pages 157 to 158 of MQ1). On 16 February 2010 approval was granted, by the Government of Cross River State, to P&ID, for the allocation of Parcels 1 & 2 of the Energy City (Industrial) at Adiabo in Odukpani Local Government Area, containing an area of about 50.662 hectares of land, for the industrial use of P&ID (pages 159 to 160 of MQ1).
110. On 14 May 2010, I wrote to NNPC to update it on the progress made by P&ID. I pointed out that all of the project finance was in place, 90% of the engineering designs had been completed, a 50 hectare site had been allocated to P&ID by the Cross Rivers State Government, and that Addax Petroleum had confirmed to the DPR its readiness to supply to P&ID the Wet Gas that it was at that time flaring in [field] OML 123 in time for Phase 1 of the Project as set out in the GSPA. I asked the Group Managing Director of NNPC to authorise NAPIMS to oversee and conclude the necessary arrangements between P&ID and Addax [Petroleum], by which I meant the engineering logistics of delivery of the Wet Gas for Phase 1 from Addax [Petroleum], to enable work to proceed on the gas processing facility."
Land
"the question was … whether [P&ID] had followed through so as to put itself in a position to perform".
Yet the Tribunal did not take the evidence of Mr Michael Quinn on acquisition of the site as evidence of completed acquisition. What the Tribunal said, at paragraph 50 of its Final Award, was that:
"the evidence shows a high degree of likelihood that if the Government had been willing to perform, P&ID would have acquired the site and built the plant".
Finance
"On 14 May 2020, I wrote to NNPC to update it on the progress made by P&ID. I pointed out that all the project finance was in place …".
There is of course an echo here of recital (h) of the GSPA which stated that P&ID "possesses the requisite finance … for the fast track development of the Project."
Engineering design (including expenditure of US$ 40 million)
"the total costs sunk into the preparatory work during that period were in excess of $40 million"
and he gave the example of:
"extensive work … commissioned from various specialist engineering companies such as CB&I Lummus Technology Group in New Jersey, KRAN Developments in Johannesburg and ABB Limited in the UK".
Bribing Mrs Grace Taiga
"… if the arbitrator has not ordered disclosure of the documents which are said to have been withheld, it is difficult to argue that the respondent has acted in a reprehensible fashion by not disclosing them".
Respectfully, the observation is in my opinion open to question, or at least qualification, because context will be so important in this area. The present case contains the overwhelming context that the party was saying it was "explain[ing] how the GSPA came about".
To the Award on Liability (2014 to 2015)
"in view of the fact that NNPC (though not a party to the Arbitral Proceedings) is seised with the facts and obligations under the said Agreement, coupled with the funding constraints the Ministry is faced with, the Ministry would prefer that its legal defence be handled by Messrs. Alegeh & Co (SAN) and their legal fees paid by NNPC. Messrs. Alegeh & Co (SAN) had previously handled the defence of the Ministry and NNPC on similar matters and he is well seized of the subject."
"due to paucity of funds and in view of the fact that NNPC is not a party to this dispute, NNPC will not be able to pay for Counsel's engagement [in the arbitration]".
"[t]he lack of proper defence could lead to the award of the huge claim against the Ministry by the Tribunal".
"3. On 11 January 2010 Claimant and Respondent ("the parties") entered into a written Gas Supply and Processing Agreement ("GSPA") whereby the Government agreed that for a term of 20 years it would make to available to P&ID 400 MMScuFD of Wet Gas and P&ID agreed to process the gas and return approximately 85% by volume to the Government in the form of Lean Gas.
4. For the purpose of enabling the Wet Gas to be processed, P&ID agreed to construct two or more process streams with ancillary facilities.
5. The supply of Wet Gas by the Government was to take place in two phases. In Phase 1, the Government was to supply 150 MMScuFD "during or before the last quarter of 2011". In Phase 2, the remaining 250 MMScuFD were to be supplied "on or before the third quarter of 2012".
6. The Claimant alleges that the Government, in breach of its obligations, did not provide any Wet Gas by the dates stipulated or at all. On 20 March 2013, no Wet Gas having been delivered, P&ID wrote to the Ministry alleging that it had repudiated the GSPA and accepting the repudiation. It claims about US$ 6 billion damages for lost profits."
It is relevant and interesting to see the way in which the Tribunal was beginning to frame or see the dispute. It had received very little from Nigeria.
"… by virtue of the [GSPA] [P&ID] was to construct and operate a gas processing facility in Calabar for the purpose(s) of refining Associated Gas (or "Wet Gas") in order that the dissociated contents from the Associated Gas i.e. Methan[e]/Ethane Gas (the "Lean Gas" or "Non Associated Gas") could be used for the very critical power generation to supplement the National Grid. [The Ministry of Petroleum Resources] was to supply an agreed volume of Wet Gas from identified OML's: OML 123 (operated by Addax Petroleum); and OML 67 (operated by Exxon Mobil) via a Government pipeline to [P&ID's] proposed production facility in Calabar. P&ID in return was to construct and operate the production facility as well as remove the Natural Gas Liquids which comprises of Propane, Butane and Condensates from the Associated Gas and utilize it for its own benefit and subsequently return the remainder (Lean Gas) to [the Ministry] and [Nigeria], for use in power generation for the benefit of the entire nation. [The GSPA] was to run for twenty (20) years.
Ideally [the Ministry] should have provided the Wet Gas as promised, or in the event that the Gas was not available, (this non-availability was communicated to [P&ID] in a series of meetings between the Parties) its Defence could have been that of frustration or in the alternative, [the Ministry of Petroleum Resources] should have communicated to [P&ID] an event of Force Majeure that could have terminated [the GSPA].
However, there is no such evidence of any such exonerating event. Indeed there is record that the promised quality of gas was not available from the identified an promised OML 125 and OML 67. Furthermore there, is no evidence available to counsel that any investment decision necessary for the implementation of [the GSPA] had been made by the Federal Government.
In view of the foregoing [P&ID] commenced arbitration … claiming damages in the sum of U.S.$ 5,960226,233 ... as damages for loss of profits suffered in consequence of [the Ministry's] alleged breach of contract. [P&ID] also claims interest on sums awarded at such rate, to be determined by the tribunal.
The undersigned was appointed as lead counsel … In a series of correspondence to [the Ministry of Petroleum Resources], we requested for information and documentation to enable us prepare a Defence to this matter. We remain poised to take up the defence if available.
…
The consequence of [the Award on Jurisdiction] is that the matter will now be heard on the merits. However there appears to be a lack of exonerating facts or any documentary evidence with which to defend the Claim. We refer you to our letter dated 12th May 2014 and our several correspondence with [the Ministry of Petroleum Resources] seeking data documents and or information with which to defend.
In view of the financial exposure to the Federal Government, which stands at US$5,962,262.233 ... the absence of a Defence to defend [P&ID's] Claim could lead to a further unfavourable award against [Nigeria]
… a tribunal may award a range of damages subject to the terms of the substantive contract, the arbitration agreement or the applicable law, which in this case is the Arbitration and Conciliation Act … 2004 [of Nigeria]. Although the Act does not specify the measure of reliefs or damages which an arbitrator can award, in principle an arbitrator may award a range of remedies such as damages in the claimed sum.
Your kind and urgent intervention, including specifically a possible settlement of the claim for a compromised and significantly lower amount out of arbitration proceeding is required, in order to prevent avoidable embarrassment to the Federal Government of Nigeria."
"Also, we have been requested by the Ministry to provide comments on your recommendation that they seek amicable settlement of the case with [P&ID]. As we discussed at our meeting of 30th August 2014 we support the recommendation, but believe that while seeking to negotiate a settlement the Ministry should file a defence to the claim in order to maintain some leverage.
Defence of the Claim
As we discussed in Lagos, we believe the following defences should be made to the claim:
(1) Even though [the Ministry of Petroleum Resources] failed to meet its obligation to provide gas to [P&ID], contrary to the agreements between [the Ministry] and [P&ID], this failure was due to the actions of third parties such as Addax Petroleum. [The Ministry] and NNPC, in fact, hosted several meetings between [P&ID] and Addax Petroleum to facilitate gas supply to [P&ID] but were thwarted by Addax Petroleum. This is confirmed by [P&ID]'s own pleadings.
(2) A related defence would be that [the Ministry's] failure to supply gas was due to circumstances beyond its control, and is therefore excused by the force majeure provisions in the agreements between [the Ministry] and [P&ID]. In support of this defence, we will obtain information from Addax Petroleum and our affiliate NAPIMS on the reasons why the Adanga Pipeline, specifically referred to in paragraph 90 of [P&ID's] Statement of Case has not been completed. We suspect the reasons that the reasons for delay were likely buttress a plea of force majeure.
(3) A further defence would be that even if the Arbitral Tribunal finds that [the Ministry] was in breach of its obligations under the said agreements, the quantum of damages sought by [P&ID] i.e. $5.9 bn, is excessive and outrageous. From the Statement of Case, [P&ID] have arrived at this figure by estimating the profits they would have earned from the project over 20 years. As you know, this is not the correct measure of damages as [P&ID] are required under the law to mitigate their loss, e.g. by investing in other projects with the funds they claim to have set aside for the project, and cannot validly make a claim for 20 years of profits. To strengthen this defence, we intend to engage a renowned, internationally recognised expert, with a lot of credibility, … to provide an expert witness. The expert witness would review the basis for [P&ID's] claim, provide an alternative and more realistic measure of loss that is consistent with [P&ID's] obligation to mitigate their loss and testify for [the Ministry] at the Arbitral Tribunal if it becomes necessary.
Kindly obtain as much additional time as you can from the Arbitral Tribunal to enable us provide the information requested above. …"
On 5 September 2014 P&ID was provided with a copy of this letter of instruction. A further copy went to Mr Michael Quinn's wife. The letter of instruction became the next of Nigeria's Internal Legal Documents, plainly covered by legal professional privilege, to be retained by P&ID.
"had appraised this case and was of the reasoned opinion that the Ministry of Petroleum Resources does not have a good defence to the action".
"Post-Negotiation Meeting
The [Ministry of Petroleum Resources] Team comprising of Mrs … Adelore – Director Legal, [Ministry of Petroleum Resources]/ representative of [the Attorney General], Mr Ike Oguie – Secretary to the Corporation, NNPC and Mr … Shasore, SAN – Lead External Counsel to [the Ministry of Petroleum Resources] met on Friday 28th November, 2014 to deliberate and consider the offer of U.S.$1,500,000,000 … as full and final settlement. The P&ID has conveyed same officially along with Draft Deed of Settlement which both parties upon approval shall submit to the Arbitral Tribunal. …
Recommendation
26. In our view, the proposal of $1.5 billion made by P&ID is within the range which that could have been awarded by the Arbitral Tribunal if [the Ministry of Petroleum Resources] had contested at the least the quantum of damages claimed by P&ID. To that extent, it is a reasonable offer.
27. However the team believes that even though P&ID stated that the proposal is their final offer, there is room to reduce it further. An amicable settlement would increase P&ID's chances of the amount of settlement being paid within a reasonable time as opposed to there having to try to enforce a judgement against government. There are many potential impediments to such enforcement so P and ID is in a much better position if both sides reach an amicable settlement.
28. In our view the advantage of an amicable settlement over trying to enforce a contentious judgement, with the possibility of [the Ministry of Petroleum Resources] seeking to set aside the arbitral award, is a good reason to seek a further reduction from P&ID.
29. The team therefore recommends that [the Ministry] seek a further reduction of P&ID's final offer from $1.5 billion to $1.1 billion allowing for taxes, salaries and wages for five years in-action [sic]."
"Papa released d good news of the commencement of settlement sometime ago and was hoping to spend d Christmas hols in London!"
"Notwithstanding our line of defence, the Federal Government is still liable for failure to supply the requisite gas owing to the fact that the ownership of all crude oil, natural gas and their products and derivatives are vested in [Nigeria] through the NNPC. In addition, gas was never appropriated from OML 67, OML 123 or from any other source as agreed to by [Nigeria] in the GSPA."
He requested information and responses in relation to the Reply and documents which might support Nigeria's defence. On 7 April 2015, P&ID received a copy of the letter of advice, another of Nigeria's Internal Legal Documents retained by P&ID. Mr Shonibare, Mr Adebayo's employee, forwarded a copy to Mr Cahill.
"2. … I have been directed to request you to immediately propose to P&ID, a further mediated review of a figure below $500 million and in line with our discussion you may wish to propose $400 million.
3. In addition, P&ID is to also provide a realistic payment schedule in view of the fact that this Administration is winding down and the incoming Government will require ample time to consider the matter."
The letter was plainly subject to legal professional privilege. The same day a copy of the letter was received by P&ID. Mr Adebayo's employee, Mr Shonibare, sent copies to Mr Cahill and Mr Andrew. Mr Smyth also sent a copy. P&ID retained another of Nigeria's Internal Legal Documents.
" …to the effect that the Ministry entered into the [GSPA] with [P&ID] on the mistaken belief that gas was available".
She added:
"This line of defence, as feeble as it will appear, was adopted in the absence of a better line of defence".
The same day photographs of Ms Adelore's advice were received by P&ID, and retained as another of Nigeria's Internal Legal Documents.
"Without prejudice to legal arguments, one of my concerns on this matter is that Process & Industrial Developments (P&ID) Ltd is just one of the companies with such liabilities; former Minister Lukman signed Agreement with two Investors while the current Minister has signed with six Investors. In Nigeria, an extremely good initiative has been undermined by un-intended circumstances - making wet gas available for power generation has become a sore vexed matter as production is constantly compromised and thwarted by vandalization. Despite the huge resources at Egbin, Afam, etc Power Plants; domestic power generation is at the mercy of uninterrupted supply of gas which cannot be guaranteed."
"statement of any primary facts alleged in the evidence of Mr Michael Quinn which are challenged and of any other facts alleged to be relevant to the question of liability".
"[Nigeria] does not admit and challenges the following factual assertions:
1. [P&ID] became aware in 2008 that the Nigerian Government had initiated the building of a pipeline from [field] OML 123 to Calabar (the Adanga Pipeline) (paragraph 50-57 of the Witness Statement of Michael Quinn (MQ).
2. The Lagos area was initially regarded by [P&ID] as an attractive location for the project and [P&ID] had envisaged that it might build the Gas Processing Facilities in the Lagos area (paragraph 44-50 of MQ's Witness Statement).
3. The GSPA was entered into for the purpose of taking Wet Gas free of charge from [Nigeria]/the delivery of Wet Gas by [Nigeria] to [P&ID] (paragraph 65, 67 & 101 of MQ's Witness Statement).
4. The [Nigeria] Government had access to unlimited supplies of Natural gas in the vicinity of Calabar (paragraph 103 of MQ's Witness Statement). See paragraph 3 of Ikechunwkwu [sic] Oguine's Witness Statement.
5. Phase 1 was planned to take two years to implement after the grant of necessary approvals by the [Nigeria] Government (paragraphs 66 of MQ's Witness Statement).
6. [Nigeria] was obliged to deliver the wet gas free of charge to [P&ID's] project site (alleged in paragraph 65, 66 & 67 of MQ's Witness Statement.
[Nigeria] reserves all rights."
It would become apparent at the hearing on liability before the Tribunal that notwithstanding this document, Mr Shasore SAN intended to cross examine Mr Michael Quinn far more widely across his witness statement. However by that date Mr Michael Quinn was dead.
"I cannot approve at this time. Pls […] for the incoming govt to consider".
"repeated requests for adjournments on account of the paucity of information from the ministry and our inability to obtain responses to various requests for documents and facts".
He further stated that:
"Notwithstanding the foregoing, we have put forward the best defence in the circumstances".
"The circumstances in which [P&ID] came into contact with Government of Nigeria are set out in the Witness Statement of Mr Michael Quinn …",
referring to paragraphs 53-101. He also wrote that P&ID:
"relie[d] on the fact that, as late as mid-2012, the precise nature and location of the Gas Processing Facilities which [P&ID] would have to construct had not been finally determined."
"E. THE FINDINGS ON LIABILITY
29. Before considering the quantification of the Government's liability, it is necessary to be clear about the findings made by the Tribunal in its second Partial Final Award [the Award on Liability]. The evidence for P&ID at that stage consisted of a statement by Mr Michael Quinn dated 10 February 2014, the then chairman of P&ID, who died before the hearing on 1 June 2015. He gave account of what had happened after the signature of the GSPA:
[The Tribunal then set out substantially the whole of paragraphs 102, 103, 109 and 110 of Mr Michael Quinn's witness statement: these have been set out earlier in this judgment, at [234]].
30. The Government did not thereafter do anything to comply with its obligation under Article 6 b) of the GSPA to –
"ensure that all necessary pipelines and associated infrastructures are installed and all requisite arrangements with agencies and/or third party are in place to ensure that supply and delivery of Wet Gas in accordance with Article 3 so as to facilitate the timely implementation of gas processing by the GPFs as provided for in this Agreement."
31. The Government's obligation under Article 3c. was to make available 400 MMSCuFD Wet Gas at the P&ID Calabar site boundary. By Appendix A it undertook to deliver a continuous supply of 150 MMSCuFD by the last quarter of 2011 and the remaining 250 MMSCuFD by the third quarter of 2012.
32. There followed discussions about the implementation of the Government's obligations but nothing came of them. The Government has never performed any of its obligations under Article 6 b). A compromise solution involving a possible variation of the GSPA was discussed but these negotiations were broken off in August 2012. P&ID served a Request for Arbitration but did not at that stage terminate the P&ID. On 20 March 2013 P&ID wrote to the Government saying that it treated the Government's continued failure to perform its obligations as a repudiation of the GSPA and accepted it as such.
33. By Procedural Order No 9 dated 6 May 2015 the Tribunal directed that the proceedings should be bifurcated and that there should first be a hearing on the question of liability and thereafter, if P&ID were successful, a hearing on damages. It directed the Government to serve "a statement of any primary facts alleged in the evidence of Mr Michael Quinn which are challenged and any other facts alleged to be relevant to the question of liability."
34. On 12 May 2015 the Government served a statement of the facts in Mr Quinn's statement which it challenged. None of them were the facts recited in paragraph 29 above [i.e. those at paragraphs 102, 103, 109 and 110 of Mr Michael Quinn's witness statement]. P&ID elected not to put in any further evidence and not to rely upon any of the challenged matters so far as they were denials of facts.
35. In its Part Final Award dated 17 July 2015 [the Award on Liability] the Tribunal dealt with a number of defences raised on the part of the Government which are not now relevant. However, a good deal of attention was given in submissions to the fact that P&ID had not actually acquired ownership of the designated site or built any of the gas processing facilities. The written submissions of Mr Olapo Shasore, then counsel for the Government, submitted that the failure of P&ID to acquire the site and build the GPFs was a "fundamental breach" and that no gas could be delivered until this had been done.
36. The Tribunal's finding on this point was that the Government's obligations under Article 6 b) were not conditional upon P&ID having constructed the GPFs:
"It would have been commercially absurd for P&ID to go to the expense of building GPFs when the Government had done nothing to make arrangements for the supply of the Wet Gas."
37. Mr Shasore also advanced a modified version of this argument, saying that P&ID should at least have acquired a site so as to enable the Government to identify the "site boundary" to which the Wet Gas should be delivered. The Tribunal said that this took the matter no further than the first version of the argument:
"Of course the Government could not actually deliver gas until there was a Site and, as we have said, until there was a plant to receive it. But that does not excuse the Government's failure to comply with 6 b). There is no suggestion that its failure to comply with these obligations was caused by uncertainty as to where the Site was going to be. It was assumed by everyone that it would be on the land allocated in Calabar."
38. After dismissing the other defences, the Tribunal found that the Government had repudiated its obligations under the GSPA and that P&ID had been entitled to accept the repudiation and claim damages for breach.
F. REPUDIATION AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
39. The effect of the acceptance by one party of the other party's repudiation is that the primary obligations of both parties (on the one hand, to supply gas, on the other, to process it) are discharged and come to an end. But the contract "remains alive for the awarding of damages either for previous breaches or for the breach which constitutes the repudiation." Thus any obligations which P&ID had to buy the site, build the GPFs, etc. came to an end when the repudiation was accepted. There is no claim that either party committed any breach before the Government's repudiation. The present question therefore is only the damage suffered by P&ID by reason of the Government's refusal to perform the contract."
"38. The following account of events which followed the signature of the GSPA is again taken from the uncontested parts of the affidavit [sic] of Michael Quinn:
(a) In March 2011 Mr Quinn was informed that Addax was unwilling to supply more than 100 MMSCuFD as it needed 50 MMSCuFD for reinjection to maintain pressure. Mr Quinn wrote to NNPC proposing variation by which P&ID would receive the 150 MMSCuFD of wet gas from the Addax field and return 50 MMSCuFD of lean gas to Addax for reinjection. It would thereby still be able to secure the NGLs from 150 MMSCuFD.
(b) This proposal was not acceptable to NNPC, which suggested instead that P&ID should be supplied with gas from a non-associated gas field. As such gas would not yield NGLs, the proposal was that P&ID should instead be paid for the lean gas supplied to the Government.
(c) P&ID was in principle willing to enter into such an arrangement but negotiations progressed slowly.
(d) Addax (on whose OML the associated gas would be found) was at first willing to agree but in June 2012 withdrew its support.
(e) On 27 July 2012 Mr Quinn wrote to the Government saying unless a formal amendment had been agreed and executed by 10 August 2012, the offer to amend the GSPA would be withdrawn. No formal amendment was executed.
(f) On 22 August 2022 P&ID delivered the Request for Arbitration."
(It will be recalled that it was on 20 March 2013 that P&ID stated that it accepted Nigeria's repudiatory breach of the GSPA.)
"(d) Did the Government not have to do anything till the GPFs had been built?
63. Mr Shasore submits that the Government had no obligation to deliver gas until there was a plant to receive it. That, no doubt, is true, but the Government's obligations were not confined to the delivery of gas. By Article 6b) it was also obliged to –
"ensure that all necessary pipelines and associated infrastructures are installed and all requisite arrangements with agencies and/or third party are in place to ensure the supply and delivery of Wet Gas in accordance with Article 3 so as to facilitate the timely implementation of gas processing by the GPFs as provided for in this Agreement."
64. There is nothing in the GSPA to suggest that these obligations were conditional upon the completion by P&ID of the construction of the GPFs. It would have been commercially absurd for P&ID to go to the expense of building GPFs when the Government had done nothing to make arrangements for the supply of the Wet Gas.
65. In his oral argument and written Final Submission, Mr Shasore put forward a modified version of this argument. Article 3(c) said that the Government was to deliver the gas at "the Site Boundary". The "Site" was defined as "the land at Calabar on which the GPFs are located". Mr Shasore says that the Government could not have complied with this obligation until P&ID had a site. It had, it is true, been allocated and offered a site but had not yet bought it. So there was no possibility of compliance with an obligation to deliver to the Site boundary until P&ID has a Site.
66. We think this argument takes the matter no further than the first version. Of course the Government could not actually deliver gas until there was a Site and, as we have said, until there was a plant to receive it. But that does not excuse the Government's failure to comply with 6 b). There is no suggestion that its failure to comply with those obligations was caused by uncertainty as to where the Site was going to be. It was assumed by everyone that it would be on the land allocated in Calabar."
"It would have been commercially absurd for P&ID to go to the expense of building GPFs when the Government had done nothing to make arrangements for the supply of the Wet Gas."
The Tribunal had accepted ("That, no doubt, is true") the argument by Mr Shasore SAN for Nigeria that "the Government had no obligation to deliver gas until there was a plant to receive it". But it used its finding about what "would have been commercially absurd" to support its conclusion that:
"There is nothing in the GSPA to suggest that these obligations [a reference to Nigeria's obligations under Article 6b), not, I think, Article 6a)] were conditional upon the completion by P&ID of the construction of the GPFs".
For the terms of Article 6a) and 6b), please see [148] above.
(1) Why was the GSPA so brief? On the face of things, this attracted no discussion from the Tribunal. Of course commercial parties are entitled to contract in the detail they choose. But the skeletal terms of the GSPA are truly striking in the context of a multi-billion dollar long term project of national significance. Arcadia's reaction when it saw it was a "Project Scoping Document" rather than a Gas Processing Contract.
(2) If the Tribunal's conclusion on liability was correct, how did Nigeria come to agree a GSPA in such catastrophic terms? The Tribunal's finding was that the Government's obligations under Article 6 b) were not conditional upon P&ID having constructed the GPFs. How did Nigeria come to allow itself to agree obligations that were not conditional in that way, especially where, as the Tribunal itself said, reflecting a submission of Mr Shasore:
"Of course the Government could not actually deliver gas until there was a Site and, as we have said, until there was a plant to receive it".
(3) On what it had been told, the Tribunal found itself expressing the view that:
"[i]t would have been commercially absurd for P&ID to go to the expense of building GPFs when the Government had done nothing to make arrangements for the supply of the Wet Gas."
Why was Nigeria not arguing, or arguing more forcefully, that the reverse also required consideration as part of the process of interpretation of the GSPA? The point is further reference above. I am left wondering how the Tribunal would have answered the question (if it could be persuaded of its relevance) whether it was also commercially absurd for the Government to instal pipelines and associated infrastructure and make arrangements when P&ID had not built the GPFs?
(4) I fully appreciate that P&ID was the one to allege and accept repudiatory breach first. But I question whether there is no room for argument that the law of damages today (and then) requires more than a race between the parties with a contract of this importance framed with such brevity.
(5) Given the vast sums of public money at issue why was Nigeria struggling to meet deadlines and bring forward evidence, factual and expert?
The quantum stage of the Arbitration (2015-2017)
"Straight accountancy re net present value of capital sum that they claim, and other figure work, interest rates, currency movements, etc etc.
Oil/gas market evidence (downstream) which will go to loss of profit alleged, which flows into past and future income streams, markets (past and future), likely destination of cargoes, shipping costs, competitive sources of product etc., etc - hopefully to show that the venture was not going to make very much money. (That said, it may have been such a sweet heart deal that they would have made a profit anyway - but let's see).
Oil/gas production evidence (upstream): capital and running costs of the plant, of 70k pipeline - and how MPR could have increased those (perhaps) by sourcing the gas from awkward and distant points.
Their whole case is a loss of a chance case, and such cases can be pulled apart, if good experts are involved.
As part of the process, we may well need fuller disclosure from claimant of their plans and costings."
"Investigation into P&IDs background and finances
Given the offshore structure of P&ID, its apparently small size and lack of significant track record, I would strongly recommend the Ministry to appoint a credible investigations company to carry out investigations into P&IDs history, its financial capabilities and general track record. This may assist the Ministry in the damages stage either directly or indirectly. …"
On 10 February 2016, Mr Adebayo sent to Mr Cahill and Mr Andrew and Mr Belgore SAN photographs of the letter of advice from Stephenson Harwood, one of Nigeria's Internal Legal Documents.
"ensure vigilant effective and supportive inter-ministerial co-ordination of this defence…as opposed to the present regime of multiple departments and allocation of responsibilities".
On 21 March 2016 the Minister of State wrote to Mr Malami SAN asking him to approve the engagement of experts and saying that the Ministry was willing to support the sourcing of the fees.
"2. The question of the seat of arbitration was first raised by the Government in its originating motion in the High Court in Lagos on 24 February 2016. It was contested by P&ID and the parties made their submissions to the Tribunal in letters or e-mails dated 8 March 2016 and 11 March 2016 (P&ID) and 11 and 13 March 2016 (the Government). P&ID, before the injunction granted by the Nigerian court, requested that the Tribunal give a ruling on the matter. The Tribunal considers that it must therefore consider the question of the seat of arbitration for the purpose of deciding the future conduct of the arbitration. The Tribunal has the power to determine its own jurisdiction (section 12 of the Nigerian Arbitration Act) and its opinion on the disputed question may also be of assistance to the Nigerian court."
"Investigation File Extracts: Interim Investigation of capacity of [P&ID] in respect of contract with the Ministry of Petroleum Resources for the conversion of wet gas to lead gas for electricity supply".
The report stated:
"3.8 That the process of the award of the contract was significantly hinged on the report of the technical committee of the Ministry of Petroleum resources, who after detailed analysis of P&ID and 8 other companies, certified their competence and capacity for the underlying contract and the Definitive Agreement.
3.9 That the process of award had the certification and recommendation of the legal unit of the Ministry and that the agreement was signed by the Legal Adviser, Grace Taiga, as a witness to the MoU and the Definitive Agreement."
"Conclusion and Recommendations of Interim Investigations:
(1)P&ID identified OML 123 and OML 67 operated by Addax and Exxon Mobile under production sharing contracts signed with NNPC as capable of producing the required volume of gas for the project. However, NNPC, Addax and Exxon Mobile were not parties to the Definitive Agreement.
(2)P&ID is not entirely blameless in this matter as there are key gaps noticed in the transaction for which it may be necessary to go beyond their capacity.
(3)It is definite that the award of the contract by the Ministry of Petroleum was a function of the recommendation of the technical committee of the Ministry. While the committee had experts, which should know better, the findings of gaps in the reasons for default by parties might require a further investigation.
(4)The Arbitral panel that adjudicated the matter relied on documents and at face value, it acted in accordance with the law. To investigate the panel might not be expedient for the difficulties of jurisdiction and would prejudice a judicial process.
(5)The team would need to and recommends a further detailed investigation of the circumstances surrounding the award of the contract and the key parties to the transaction."
"CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, if I may start from where my learned friend Mr Andrew stopped and which elicited quite a substantial conversation with the members of the parrel, my Lord, the position of the respondent is that there is no evidence at all of a final investment decision.
…
THE CHAIRMAN: What do you mean by "a final investment decision''?
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, that something would have been done outside the signing of the agreement to show that the claimant expects to make profit, expects to –
THE CHAIRMAN: What do you have in mind?
CHIEF AYORINDE: For example, my Lord, there was quite some conversation about building a plant. Your Lordship did contribute by saying, "Oh, they have taken away the cost of building the plant and it may not be necessary to have a white elephant project sitting down somewhere where there is no gas to come in".
THE CHAIRMAN: Yes.
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, I think it goes beyond that. There is simply no evidence of acquisition of the land.
THE CHAIRMAN: No.
CHIEF AYORINDE: Not at all. In fact, what your Lordship has before your Lordship is evidence that the government, another agency of government, actually offered land.
THE CHAIRMAN: Correct.
CHIEF AYORINDE: That is to be found at page 159 of volume 2.
THE CHAIRMAN: I remember. A site was found –
CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, a site was found.
THE CHAIRMAN: - and they designated it, but they didn't acquire the land.
CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, my Lord. The claimant was asked to come and pay 21 million naira to acquire the land. That 21 million naira was never paid, and we now have a claim for 6 billion. My Lord, apart from the land - so the plant is even far away. No evidence of engineering drawings in preparation for building a plant.
THE CHAIRMAN: No.
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, there is no evidence of offtake agreements for the products that you will have from the plant. They are not showing to this panel some company in Bolivia, in Brazil, in England, willing to take their products. So, the only thing they have – "
"THE CHAIRMAN: Let's consider the case on the assumption that, on the day after the contract was signed, you wrote them a letter saying, "We repudiate this contract" and at that stage they hadn't done anything, nothing. What would be the position then?
CHIEF AYOR1NDE: My Lord, the position is no different from the position that occurred on the day the claimant considered the contract as repudiated, because even as at that date, my Lord, nothing had been done, and our position would be the same.
THE CHAIRMAN: That's what I mean.
CHIEF AYORINDE: Thank you. my Lord. My Lord, the GSPA provides for a joint operating committee between the parties. There is no evidence of decisions taken. The committee never took off.
THE CHAIRMAN: No."
CHIEF AYORINDE: … My Lord, the best in expenses that the claimants can make claim to may be pre-contractual. where they were proposing to go into this programme like other companies. As of the time they signed the GSPA, they were not entitled -if they had never signed the agreement, they would not be entitled to anything."
"THE CHAIRMAN: As a matter of law, Mr Ayorinde, is there any authority for saying that if one party is willing to perform the contract but hasn't actually done anything, and the other party repudiates the contract, it is a condition of the other [sic] party to obtain any damages, any compensation, that he should have spent some money or done anything? Is there any authority for saying that that is a condition?
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, between the parties, the locus classicus is Hadley v Baxendale, between the parties, that is the authority that all other cases are premised upon.
THE CHAIRMAN: I don't think that case actually answers the question put to you."
"CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord. I would say that being entitled to damages, the damages will be assessed. That is why this hearing is taking place. Assessment of damages, my Lord, may be, at the extreme, everything they claim or, at the lower end, nominal damages, which your Lordships can decide upon, looking at all the evidence. So I do answer your Lordship in the affirmative, that if there is a breach, there is an entitlement to damages. But it is the quantum that we are talking about here. That is what your Lordship will decide. The quantum of damages, my Lord, following the jurisprudence in Hadley v Baxendale, my Lord, it even goes as far as saying that the respondent or the defendant can even deliberately be in breach. The government can look at the programme and say, "Oh, at this point, our partners have not done anything to be entitled to billions of dollars. Our partners, at this point, can only be entitled to nominal damages", and take a calculated decision to say. "Okay, we are putting a stop to this, but we are willing to pay you nominal damages if you make that kind of claim" So l do agree with your Lordship that –
CHIEF OJO: You agree. If you feel that way. why didn't you make them an offer for the nominal damages before now?
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, there was no claim for that. The claim before your Lordship is for billions of dollars.
CHIEF OJO: What I'm saying is, before this stage, if you feel the way from this submission that you just made. Why didn't you do that much earlier? Maybe we wouldn't have been here now.
CHIEF AYORINDE: Maybe we wouldn't have been here. I do agree with your Lordship. However, my Lord, the point I'm making is that the claim is not for nominal damages. If their claim was for nominal damages, we wouldn't be here.
THE CHAIRMAN: "Nominal damages" means a shilling or a pound or something like that. That is not what we are talking about."
"CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, my Lord. Paragraph 18(1) states the law under the ambit of the locus classicus, the Hadley v Baxendale case. However, my Lord, that case also says that it is what is in the contemplation of the parties. Therefore, my Lord, at the time of the breach — in Hadley v Baxendale my Lord, and your Lordship has that in your Lordship's bosom, the facts and what happened in that case —
THE CHAIRMAN: It must have been in the contemplation of the parties that if you didn't give them any gas, they wouldn't be able to make any NGLs.
CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, my Lord. My Lord, at that point if we didn't give them any gas, they had nothing to receive the gas in order to make the profit in the billions.
THE CHAIRMAN: That's correct.
CHIEF AYORINDE: That's correct, my Lord. I'm with your Lordship. In the liability hearing, your Lordships were right, very right, to say, "Oh, you are in breach", fine. But with regards to quantum of damages hearing, your Lordship must now consider, as at the time of that breach for which we are liable, were they in contemplation, were they ready with - had they done things to be able to make the kind of profit and claim the damages they are now claiming? My Lord, the answer is no, from our side.
THE CHAIRMAN: Yes."
"CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, the claimant's submissions this morning have been largely based on a review of the experts' reports from both sides. Respectfully, I take a different view, and that is to say that the claimant has woefully failed to clear the first and important hurdle, that it was in the position to make a profit as at the time of the breach. The review of the experts' reports, my Lord, is based on the assumption that the event had happened to entitle the claimant to have damages naturally flowing from the event of the breach, which is after the signing of the GSPA. The question is, has anything happened after that to entitle the claimant to expect such huge amounts in profit? My Lord, at this point, going back to the GSPA, and this is without prejudice to - we cannot even refer to the liability hearing, that is done. The claimant was not even in the position to make any revenue, not to talk of profit, and that was part of my earlier submission with regards to the first step, acquisition of land, not to mention the building of the plant and other things. My learned friend referred to the warranty in the agreement as to obligations of the government and all that. My Lord –
THE CHAIRMAN: Can you tell us, what would have prevented them from acquiring the land and building the plant?
CHIEF AYORINDE: Absolutely nothing, my Lord. In fact –
THE CHAIRMAN: That's what they say.
CHIEF AYORINDE: They were offered the land. The only evidence before your Lordship –
THE CHAIRMAN: You said there is no evidence that they were in a position to make the profits.
CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, my Lord.
THE CHAIRMAN: What would have prevented them from making the profits?
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, if they had come before your Lordship and showed your Lordship evidence of acquisition of the land, then they are on the way, they are free to go.—
THE CHAIRMAN: Yes. I see.
CHIEF AYORINDE: That's the point, my Lord.
THE CHAIRMAN: This is the same as your first point, then?
CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, my Lord. I have referred to the effort by the government to give them the land, an effort which they rejected or which they did not countenance. That is the only evidence before your Lordship.
…
CHIEF AYORINDE: … Article 22, my Lord. My Lord, it says: "Each party represents and warrants that it has the right and authority to enter into this agreement and to perform and observe all of its obligations under this agreement." "Each party". My Lord, your Lordship has found on liability. On quantum of damages, your Lordship, with respect, ought to ask the claimant, "Your responsibilities under this agreement, which one did you meet?"
THE CHAIRMAN: Yes.
CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, my Lord. It is an important question, because -;
THE CHAIRMAN: Which one do you say they didn't meet?
CHIEF AYORINDE: Everything. They did not acquire land, my Lord. They did not build any plant. They did not prepare to go. Short of signing the agreement –
THE CHAIRMAN: Why was that a breach of contract?
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, at the time of the breach, the respondent had done nothing.
THE CHAIRMAN: Yes.
CHIEF AYORINDE: They were under an obligation to have done a lot of things in order to give effect to this agreement. My Lord, I am not talking about liability now. We are talking about assessing what profit they would have made as at the point of the breach. They had nothing to point at that will expect them to have an income for 20 years.
THE CHAIRMAN: Really. Chief Ayorinde, this is a point you have already made at least two or three times.
CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, my Lord, I come back to it because it is very strong. All the other points I am making. My Lord, always lead back at that point.
THE CHAIRMAN: Right.
CHIEF OJO: You want to tell us you don't want to sow, you want to reap.
CHIEF AYORINDE: You cannot reap where you do not sow. That is a very Nigerian saying. Not even in preparation to reap. My Lord, Sir Anthony did ask the pertinent question with regards to, how would it look at the end of the day when all we have done is to sign a document, and we can't- I mean you have this big award. I mean, my Lord has several decades of experience. I don't know where this would happen.
THE CHAIRMAN: There is a passage in I think it is Shakespeare's Henry VI where one of the rebels says, "Isn't it terrible that people should be able to get into such trouble just by signing a document? Let's kill all the lawyers"."
"CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, if I may refer your Lordship to - I think Sir Anthony also asked the question about tax. My Lord, the issue of tax is regulated by law. Tax is not by agreement. If the government says you pay tax, you pay tax. There is no evidence before your Lordships that the claimant applied for pioneer status in order to be entitled to tax-free years. There is absolutely no evidence. I do not want to be accused of going back to that point, which is they did nothing. They did not even apply for tax status."
"CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, at this point, I wish to just round up my submissions, except if your Lordship wishes to direct any questions of me. My Lord, I just wish to round up and to say that your distinguished panel should decide whether it is reasonable, whether it is just or equitable, for the claimant - having considered all the evidence before this panel, whether the claimant should be entitled to such a colossal sum of money.
Yes, I concede that it is a commercial transaction, but, again, we cannot take out the fact that the government is involved, and that money will have to be paid from taxpayers' money. So at this point, for doing next to nothing, if I may say that, can the claimant be entitled to $6 billion? From my position here, it would be extremely unfair. Thank you."
"CHIEF AYORINDE: Your Lordship will see that our position has mainly been to rely on law when it concerns damages, and we have not made heavy weather of the reports, because we believe that the reports come after there has been a decision that the claimant is entitled to damages other than nominal damages.
My Lord, your question brings me to -if I may I refer your Lordship to the author Chitty On Contracts. The 29th edition is the quote I have here, volume 1 at page 1402, paragraphs 24 to 52.
…
It says clearly that, upon discharge, the primary obligation of the party in default is to perform any of the promises made by him, and the remaining unperformed come to an end as this right or obligation to perform them stops to exist. My Lord, the next step is the secondary obligation to pay the other party.
THE CHAIRMAN: That's right.
CHIEF AYORINDE: It only pays the other party a sum of money to compensate him for the loss he has sustained as a result of the failure to perform. My Lord, in answer to your Lordship's question, from the signing of the contract until the repudiation is accepted by the injured party, your Lordship will determine, using quantum meruit, what the injured party is due to be paid.
At that point, the injured party upon acceptance also is not under any obligation to incur any further losses, 'That is where the law of [mitigation] kicks in. Therefore, my Lord, I answer your Lordship in that, yes maybe between the execution and the repudiation there is a period of about three years and it is limited to that, not 20 years. Maybe that is where 17 years goes away."
"THE CHAIRMAN: I have to admit, I have some difficulty in following that. You made reference to mitigation. What do you say they should have done about mitigation?
CHIEF AYORINDE: Yes, my Lord. They have a problem in mitigation because they haven't done anything.
THE CHAIRMAN: What do you say they ought to have done?
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, if they had acquired land and suddenly they see that the other contracting party is not going to go ahead —
THE CHAIRMAN: How would that have mitigated their loss?
CHIEF AYORINDE: They could have sold the land. They could have said, "This is not going on any further. We are not just going to wait here".
THE CHAIRMAN: That would have been a zero sum transaction. If they had bought the land and sold it.
CHIEF AYORINDE: My Lord, if they had bought the land and three years down the line they see that nothing is going to happen, at that point they have an obligation not just to keep the land within there and say, "Oh, one day, after 20 years, we are going to get paid".
THE CHAIRMAN: Okay. Thank you."
"… if the evidence had showed that for some reason, even if the Government was ready and willing to perform the contract, P&ID would never have been able to acquire the site or build the plant, then it would not be able to recover more than nominal damages."
It recognised that:
"In some cases the fact that a party had not done anything by way of performance of the contract for three years, as in the present case, might be evidence that it was unable or did not intend to do so."
"It would have been commercially absurd for P&ID to go to the expense of building GPFs when the Government had done nothing to make arrangements for the supply of the Wet Gas."
"In fact, the evidence shows a high degree of likelihood that if the Government had been willing to perform, P&ID would have acquired the site and built the plant".
The majority found that P&ID was fully prepared to acquire the land and start constructing the plant. Here the Tribunal relied on what Mr Quinn had said in his witness statement at [42], [47], [48] [49], [102] and [110]. The majority pointed out that Nigeria did not dispute any of the matters mentioned from these paragraphs. And that Upstream, the Government's expert witnesses, "do not appear to have been shown Mr Quinn's evidence." The majority concluded that "P&ID thus showed every sign of being willing, indeed anxious, to implement the project".
"the prospective profits were such as to create a substantial financial incentive to go ahead. Mr Quinn estimated that the project would produce a profit of $5 to $6 billion for P&ID over a 20 year period."
"If the contract had been performed, P&ID would have received for 20 years an income from the sale of natural gas liquids extracted from the wet gas supplied by the Government. As against that income, it would have had to finance the necessary capital expenditure to acquire the site and construct the gas processing facilities ("CAPEX") and incur revenue expenditure in operating the plant ("OPEX"). The loss is therefore the value of the stream of net profit which P&ID would have made if the Government had performed the contract according to its terms. As the damages have to be assessed once and for all, it is necessary to estimate the value of that stream of profit at the time of the breach, making an appropriate discount for the fact that P&ID will be awarded immediate payment in place of sums which would actually have been received over a 20 year period. The Tribunal will in due course consider whether the valuation at the date of breach may take into account what is known to have happened since that date."
"There are no grounds upon which to reject his estimate of [CAPEX of] $579,990,000 or the adequacy of the $65,890,000 contingency which he included within it."
"Mr Dare, in oral evidence after Mr Wolf had concluded his testimony, produced a number of points which had not previously mentioned in the Upstream report or otherwise: performance would be "sub-optimal" on account of having to employ Nigerian personnel, precautions would be needed to protect the condensate before export, stolen condensate could cause pollution and the government "will come after you". The claimants had no opportunity to comment on any of these matters."
"An estimation of future income requires a calculation of (a) the yield of NGLs which the plant would have recovered from the incoming gas and (b) the prices at which they could have been sold. The resulting figure must then be discounted to allow for the award being for an immediate lump sum rather than income spread over 20 years."
"Even assuming that the GSPA was about exporting oil, a 50% reduction in operating time would have been a remarkable figure. The Upstream report offers no actual evidence of (1) the incidence of militant attacks in the Calabar region and its effect on oil production (2) if the attacks were against oil pipelines, how this would affect the production of associated gas at the wells (3) whether there had been any interference with gas pipelines"
"In any case, the Upstream calculation is based upon a misapprehension, evident throughout the report and the submissions on behalf of the Government, about the nature of the calculation which the Tribunal has to make. It fails to appreciate that the calculation must be made on the assumption that the Government will perform its obligations under the contract. Except so far as the Government would be entitled to plead force majeure (as to which no argument was presented to the Tribunal) it must be assumed to have delivered the necessary quantities of Wet Gas to P&ID's site and taken the Lean Gas for its power stations. If militancy makes it difficult to obtain the gas from one field, it must find the gas somewhere else."
"91. The price of NGLs is closely linked to the price of oil which is, like that of most commodities, cyclical - sometimes dramatically so. It is not easy to predict the future movement of prices. But such predictions have to be made, because investment decisions depend upon them. Likewise, they have to be made by the Tribunal to determine the loss which has been caused to P&ID by the repudiation of the contract."
"First, he assumed that they would be sold f.o.b. Nigeria into the north west European market. So he took into account the cost of shipping the liquids to Europe. Secondly, he assumed that NGL prices would closely follow oil prices."
"He was not cross-examined on this estimate, save to secure the admission that forecasting oil prices 20 years ahead was difficult."
"However, when Mr Dare gave oral evidence, he said that there were several forecasts available on web sites which were different from the New Policies scenario. He did not however identify these or produce them to the Tribunal. The Tribunal did not have the benefit of Mr Ede's comments because none of this material (if such it was) had been put to him in cross-examination."
"the exercise which the Tribunal has to undertake. It is to make the best estimate which would be made today of the income stream which P&ID would have received from the sale of NGLs if the Government had performed its side of the bargain."
It then said that:
"The only estimates of what might happen to oil prices that the Tribunal has actually seen are those in the IEA report relied upon by Mr Ede."
"an intergovernmental organization that provides reporting and analysis on international energy markets. Included in their work is analysis of future trends and developments in the oil and gas industries and as such they regularly publish forecasts of prices for these commodities. Companies operating in the oil and gas industries regularly make use of IEA forecasts when benchmarking price forecasts and analysis. I believe that this is...reasonable."
"101. Mr Ede is an economist who has for 15 years specialized in energy markets. His evidence is that IEA's New Policies scenario is the one most appropriate to be used in forecasting. None of this was challenged in cross-examination.
102. By contrast, Mr Dare has said only that there are other forecasters in the business who have arrived at different hut unspecified conclusions. No such forecasts were actually made available to the Tribunal, still less to Mr Ede.
103. The Tribunal considers that there is no material upon which it can come to a conclusion different from that of Mr Ede's second estimate, which gave effect to all the information presently available about the movement of oil prices. Accordingly, it accepts the forecasts of prices (in real 2013$ terms) in the second BRG Report"
"105. The Upstream Report contains no explanation of why it (a) ignored the 5 years Pioneer Status granted by the GSPA and (b) reduced the standard rate of tax to 20%. In the circumstances the Tribunal will accept the BRG calculation, which in fact results in a lower award of damages than the Upstream calculation."
"… for the reasons given by the Government, 7% is the correct rate of interest to apply to the Government's obligation to pay damages which crystallised at the date of repudiation. It is not a risk free rate but reflects what P&ID would have had to pay to borrow the money or could have earned by investment in Nigeria."
"Of course in the valuation of a business, estimated future earnings may also be discounted to reflect the risk that they will not materialise. The Government submits that such a discount should also be applied to the estimate of future profits in this case, to reflect the risk of investing in Nigeria. For this purpose, as well as the time value of money, Upstream proposes a discount rate of 7%."
"On the other hand, for the reasons given by the Government, 7% is the correct rate of interest to apply to the Government's obligation to pay damages which crystallised at the date of repudiation. It is not a risk free rate but reflects what P&ID would have had to pay to borrow the money or could have earned by investment in Nigeria."
"109. The Government submits that only three years loss of income should be taken into account because by that time P&ID should have found some other profitable investment and thereby mitigated its loss. There is no suggestion of what this other investment would have been. Nor is there any explanation of why, if found, this would have mitigated the loss caused by repudiation of the GSPA. Even if P&ID could have found some other unspecified investment opportunity, there is no reason why this should be treated as mitigation of its loss. An employee who is dismissed can mitigate his loss by finding another full time job. But there is no reason why P&ID should not have pursued more than one investment opportunity. The burden of proving that loss could have been mitigated is upon the party who has broken its contract: see Roper v Johnson {1873) LR 8 CP 167; Geest plc v. Lansiquot [2002] 1 WLR 3111 (Privy Council). The Government has not suggested, let alone proved, what the Claimant might have done to earn the equivalent profit. This is not surprising because the law does not require the innocent party to take risks in an endeavour to save the party in breach from having to pay damages: Banco de Portugal v Waterlow & Sons Ltd [1932] AC 452 at 506 (Lord Macmillan). For all these reasons, the Tribunal considers that in this context the argument as to mitigation is misplaced."
110. The effect of the Tribunal's decisions on what P&ID's expenditure and income would have been if the GSPA had been duly performed is that the net present value of the profits which would have been earned is $6,597,000,000. This is the measure of damages. It is a very large sum because (a) it is the present value of income which would have been earned over a long period and (b) the GSPA would have been very profitable for P&ID and (although the Tribunal has not had to make any findings on the point) probably for the Government as well."
(1) Nigeria's expert witnesses, Upstream, did not, in the view of the Tribunal, appear to have been shown Mr Michael Quinn's evidence: see [369] above. Further it was the fact, known to the Tribunal and of course the fault of Nigeria, that Upstream had had very little time to prepare written reports in a case of this enormous possible damages award. But part of their function as independent experts was to assist the Tribunal and time must have compromised their ability to provide that assistance: see [373], [375], [376], [379], [381], [386], [387], [389] and [395] above.
(2) It was, respectfully, clear that Nigeria's Leading Counsel, Chief Ayorinde SAN did not understand what the Tribunal was putting to him; this is not through any lack of clarity on the part of the Tribunal: see [354], [356], [359], [360] and [363]-[364] above. Leading the case for Nigeria, time and again matters were not put by him to P&ID's experts, with major consequences on key issues as the majority decision shows: see [373], [375], [376], [380], [384], [385] and [386] above. The air of unreality is compounded by a "statement of fees" appearing to bear the signature of Chief Ayorinde SAN and billing Naira 200 million for "Quantum of damages hearing" and US $197.5 million for "negotiation of arbitral award".
(3) There does not seem to have been argument, and consideration of argument, whether over 20 years profitability might deteriorate for reasons not concerned with Nigeria's compliance with its obligations, for example a hardening adverse position for gas in the context of a developing global response to climate change. Or (save perhaps at [395] above, which again contains points of law and fact that Nigeria did not test; note also [372] above) of the possibility that P&ID might at least in time have devoted profitably elsewhere the time and energies it would otherwise have had to devote here. These might test conventional legal opinion, and be unsuccessful, but they were not attempted where so much turned on it for both parties. The common law in relation to prospective loss after repudiation continues to be found or developed: see by way of relatively recent example Flame SA v Glory Wealth Shipping PTE [2013] 2 Lloyd's Rep 653; [2013] EWHC 3153 (Comm) (Teare J). Reference was made to an article by Professor Edwin Peel discussing that decision (see LQR 2015, 131 (Jan) 29-34) but it would be interesting to see what Professor Peel (and Sir Nigel Teare) made of a case with the facts and circumstances of the present one.
(4) Interest (see [392]-[394] above) was a point of very real importance. Nigeria found its own (unsuccessful) argument on discount rate rebounding on it, rather than a closer analysis being pressed for. Billions of dollars would turn on this. There was no attempt to test the conventional idea of "what P&ID would have had to pay to borrow the money or could have earned by investment in Nigeria" when dealing with sums so vast that in no real circumstance would P&ID be borrowing them or would have invested them in Nigeria.
(5) In the background was the fact that P&ID's estimate of its loss of profit at the commencement of the Arbitration was US$1.992 billion. The figure was three times higher by the time of the Awards. Of course these uplifts can happen, and the case is decided on the evidence, but the point adds to concern. Further, and although the Tribunal was not to know, no-one within the parties believed in a figure anywhere near US$6 billion as they discussed settlement: the drop to US$850 million was particularly rapid: see [281]-[292] above.
Bribing Mrs Grace Taiga: the Arbitration
After the Final Award
"support and assist in the investigation and unravelling of the identity/origin of funds as the need might arise in the course of investigation by the EFCC",
on condition that he would not be prosecuted. On 18 December 2019 the Federal High Court in Abuja granted an application by the EFCC to extradite Mr Adam Quinn on 25 counts, including money laundering.
The alleged "middlemen": Mr Kuchazi and Mr Adebayo
Mr Kuchazi
Mr Adebayo
Mr Adam Quinn and Mr Smyth
Mr Adam Quinn
Mr Smyth
"[t]he proper inference is that Mr Smyth, if truthful, would have confirmed that bribery and illegality was the modus operandi of those behind P&ID, including that bribes were paid to Mrs Grace Taiga in connection with the entry of the GSPA".
It is not necessary to draw this inference from Mr Smyth's absence as a witness in order to establish that bribes were paid to Ms Grace Taiga. I do not consider his absence justifies the broader inference claimed, that bribery and illegality was the modus operandi of those behind P&ID.
Mr Bernard McNaughton
"[point] out the type of people VR are now assisting and my intentions to turn over all of the information I have to EFCC Nigeria".
"On my part I will make a legal undertaking not to disseminate any information on ICIL work practise or activities by [sic] any individual working for ICIL".
Nigeria's allegations against its lawyers
Mr Shasore SAN
Mr Dikko, Ms Belgore, Ms Adelore and Mr Oguine
"In a particularly extraordinary episode in late 2014 and early 2015, Mr Adebayo persuaded Ms Adelore, Mr Oguine and Mr Shasore to lobby their superiors relentlessly for a settlement of US$1.1 billion. This figure was concocted without any serious attempt to value P&ID's claim. Both Mr Cahill and Mr Andrew said in cross-examination that it was inconceivable that a settlement at that level could have been achieved, certainly before any finding on liability, yet Mr Adebayo almost managed it, with Ms Adelore, Mr Shasore and Mr Oguine recommending (in privileged advice improperly shared immediately in draft with P&ID on 28 November 2014) that [Nigeria] pay that sum. They were stymied only by the President refusing to sign-off on the proposed settlement in late May 2015. It is no coincidence that huge amounts of cash were withdrawn by Mr Adebayo, and deposited by Ms Adelore and Mr Shasore, over the same period."
Nigeria's Internal Legal Documents
Nigeria's allegations against others
Mr Tijani
Dr Lukman, Dr Ibrahim, Mr Mjiddah and Ms Aderemi
Mr Malami SAN, and witness evidence for Nigeria
"… The absence of witnesses means that there is no material to support essential aspects of [Nigeria's] case, or contradict essential aspects of P&ID's evidence as shown [in P&ID's closing]. In those circumstances, all three of [Nigeria]'s surviving fraud claims … necessarily fail on the facts." (original emphasis).
I have not been able to accept this broad argument, but it has properly drawn attention to the importance of close examination of the evidence in each aspect of the case.
"[1.] The circumstances in which the GSPA came to be signed, including what the responsibilities of Mrs Grace Taiga and Mr Tijani were, and whether the process that was followed was any different from the process for concluding any other Nigerian contract, and in particular any of the other [Accelerated Gas Development Project] contracts which were concluded at around the same time."
"[2.] [Nigeria]'s … inept handling of the arbitration, and in particular the reasons why it failed to mount the arguments which it now says would have won it the case, despite the urging of its internal and external advisers.
"[5.] [Nigeria]'s failure, over a period of several years, to carry out any investigation into the bribery allegations they eventually advanced in December 2019; and in particular Mr Malami's complete failure to act on the EFCC's advice in 2016 to carry out a "detailed investigation into the circumstances surrounding the award of the contract" to P&ID."
"[7.] The shameful persecution of three of P&ID's witnesses – all highly vulnerable individuals – in an attempt to generate false evidence to support [Nigeria]'s case (referred to at trial only in passing and facetiously: "poor Grace has been bashed up").
"[8.] [Nigeria]'s especially depraved treatment of Mr Kuchazi, in denying him access to cancer treatment and forcing him to stand trial, even though [Nigeria]'s own counsel submitted within minutes of his cross-examination starting that he was "obviously unwell" and incapable of understanding the process. [although later the suggestion by Nigeria was that Mr Kuchazi was only pretending not to understand the questions put to him]. The offences with which he is charged are ridiculously technical, do not involve any allegations of bribery or corruption or anything relating to P&ID, and are obviously trumped-up …" (original emphasis).
"[13.] The steps taken by [Nigeria] (no doubt also on Mr Malami's initiative) to cause criminal proceedings to be instituted against Mr Cahill in Ireland, in order to harass and intimidate him."
"[9.] Mr Malami's decision to put forward a false and dishonest case in his evidence before Sir Ross Cranston about the alleged corruption of Mr Shasore SAN, which has only been abandoned sub silentio in the course of this trial."
"[10.] Mr Malami's decision to put forward a false case (surely also dishonest, and also now quietly abandoned) to the effect that the GSPA was a sham, when the Ministry plainly knew that to be untrue."
"[11.] [Nigeria]'s fabrication of obviously false evidence for the hearing before Sir Ross Cranston, in the form of Mr Tijani's witness statement, in an attempt to make its bribery case coherent, and the circumstances in which that false evidence came to be fabricated.
"[14.] [Nigeria]'s deliberate suppression of documents which exposed its case as false and dishonest, and its broader failure to collect and disclose relevant documents, including any electronic documents from huge swathes of [Ministry] officials."
"Challenging the award: serious irregularity": section 68 of the Arbitration Act 1996
The jurisdiction
"Challenging the award: serious irregularity.
(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award. A party may lose the right to object (see section 73) and the right to apply is subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant—
… (g) the award being obtained by fraud or the award or the way in which it was procured being contrary to public policy."
"The s. 68 jurisdiction is structured and circumscribed and, for sound reasons of policy, requires a close focus on the parties' conduct in the arbitration and the process by which the award was obtained."
I respectfully agree.
"(a) the object of arbitration is to obtain the fair resolution of disputes by an impartial tribunal without unnecessary delay or expense;
(b) the parties should be free to agree how their disputes are resolved, subject only to such safeguards as are necessary in the public interest;
(c) in matters governed by this Part the court should not intervene except as provided by [Part I of the Arbitration Act 1996]".
"Considerations of public policy can never be exhaustively defined, but they should be approached with extreme caution … It has to be shown that there is some illegality or that the enforcement of the award would be clearly injurious to the public good or, possibly, that enforcement would be wholly offensive to the ordinary reasonable and fully informed member of the public on whose behalf the powers of the state are exercised."
Bribery and the GSPA
"… whilst bribery is clearly contrary to English public policy … as a matter of English public policy contracts which have been procured by bribes are not unenforceable".
(As Phillips J (as he then was) made clear in Sinocore v RBRG Trading (UK) Ltd [2017] 1 CLC 601 at [36] the point here was that "contracts which have been procured by bribes are not unenforceable but voidable".)
"… there is no blanket rule that it will never be contrary to English public policy to enforce an award arising out of a contract procured by bribes. … The question of whether enforcement of a particular award would offend public policy is, by its nature, one which will depend on the facts of each case."
Nigeria's point that the answer to the question "will depend on the facts of each case" where the subject is enforcement helps one understand that the contention that "there is no blanket rule" does not reframe the question (whether under section 68(2)(g) or section 103) as a question about the contract rather than a question about the Award.
"The bribes paid by P&ID around the time of the GSPA induced Nigeria's officials to award a contract on terms which purported to place the risk of failing to supply (non-existent) gas on the government (a "government lock-in basis") … on the premise of lies about (i) P&ID's readiness and ability to perform and (ii) the fact that suitable sources of gas had already been identified by P&ID".
"Bribes that P&ID allegedly paid to procure the GSPA are a very long way from the Awards: a huge number of contingencies had to be satisfied, including Nigeria's failure to perform, P&ID's acceptance of that repudiatory breach, and then the entirety of the arbitral process leading to P&ID successfully obtaining the Awards. To find that pre-GSPA payments from (say) 2009 were the reason why P&ID obtained the Final Award dated 2017 is to give no real meaning to the causal link in the phrase "obtained by fraud"".
An overall fraudulent enterprise?
Knowingly false evidence, continued bribery and retention of Nigeria's Internal Legal Documents
"Serious" irregularity: "substantial injustice"
"30. As was explained in the 1996 Report on the Arbitration Bill (which became the 1996 Act) of the Departmental Advisory Committee on Arbitration Law ("the DAC"), the test of serious irregularity was intended to limit intervention to "extreme" cases where it could be said that "the tribunal has gone so wrong in its conduct of the arbitration that justice calls out for it to be corrected". As set out at para 280 of the DAC Report:
"280. Irregularities stand on a different footing. Here we consider that it is appropriate, indeed essential, that these have to pass the test of causing 'substantial injustice' before the court can act. The court does not have a general supervisory jurisdiction over arbitrations. We have listed the specific cases where a challenge can be made under this Clause. The test of 'substantial injustice' is intended to be applied by way of support for the arbitral process, not by way of interference with that process. Thus it is only in those cases where it can be said that what has happened is so far removed from what could reasonably be expected of the arbitral process that we would expect the court to take action. The test is not what would have happened had the matter been litigated. To apply such a test would be to ignore the fact that the parties have agreed to arbitrate, not litigate. Having chosen arbitration, the parties cannot validly complain of substantial injustice unless what has happened simply cannot on any view be defended as an acceptable consequence of that choice. In short, Clause 68 is really designed as a long stop, only available in extreme cases where the tribunal has gone so wrong in its conduct of the arbitration that justice calls out for it to be corrected." (Emphasis added)"
31. In accordance with this guidance the test of serious irregularity has been recognised as imposing a "high threshold" or "high hurdle" - see, for example, Lesotho at para 28 (Lord Steyn); ABB AG v Hochtief Airport GmbH [2006] EWHC 388 (Comm); [2006] 1 All ER (Comm) 529 at para 63 and the cases there cited (Tomlinson J).
32. The focus is on due process, not the correctness of the decision reached: see, for example, Petroships Pte Ltd v Petec Trading and Investment Corpn (The Petro Ranger) [2001] 2 Lloyd's Rep 348 at 351; Abuja International Hotels Ltd v Meridien SAS [2012] EWHC 87 (Comm); [2012] 1 Lloyd's Rep 461, at para 49; Primera Maritime (Hellas) Ltd v Jiangsu Eastern Heavy Industry Co Ltd [2013] EWHC 3066 (Comm); [2014] 1 All ER (Comm) 813 at para 6. As Lord Steyn stated in Lesotho at para 29, referring to section 68 of the 1996 Act which is equivalent to section 90 of the 2009 Act:
"… nowhere in section 68 [90] is there any hint that a failure by the tribunal to arrive at the 'correct decision' could afford a ground for challenge."
33. Even if a case is shown to fall within one or more of the kinds of irregularities listed in section 90 this will only amount to a serious irregularity if the court considers that it "has caused or will cause substantial injustice". This means more than some injustice. As Colman J explained in Bulfracht at p 687:
"… those who framed the bill contemplated that the courts' intervention would be engaged not merely in those cases where some injustice has been caused to the applicant by the incidence of the serious irregularity but where the substance and nature of the injustice goes well beyond what could reasonably be expected as an ordinary incident of arbitration."
34. There will be substantial injustice where it is established that, had the irregularity not occurred, the outcome of the arbitration might well have been different: see, for example, Vee Networks Ltd v Econet Wireless International Ltd [2004] EWHC 2909 (Comm); [2005] 1 All ER (Comm) 303 at para 90 (Colman J). It is not necessary to show that the outcome would "necessarily or even probably be different": Cameroon Airlines v Transnet Ltd [2004] EWHC 1829 (Comm); [2006] TCLR 1, at para 102 (Langley J). As stated by Akenhead J in Raytheon at para 33(i):
"(i) For the purposes of meeting the 'substantial injustice' test, an applicant need not show that it would have succeeded on the issue with which the tribunal failed to deal or that the tribunal would have reached a conclusion favourable to him; it [is] necessary only for him to show that (i) his position was 'reasonably arguable', and (ii) had the tribunal found in his favour, the tribunal might well have reached a different conclusion in its award …"
35. Some irregularities may be so serious that substantial justice is "inherently likely" or "likely in the very nature of things" to result. As Toulson J stated in Ascot Commodities NV v Olam International Ltd [2002] CLC 277 at pp 284F-285A:
"Since the whole process of arbitration is intended as a way of determining points at issue, it is more likely to be a matter of serious irregularity if on a central matter a finding is made on a basis which does not reflect the case which the party complaining reasonably thought he was meeting, or a finding is ambiguous, or an important issue is not addressed, than if the complaints go simply to procedural matters.
…
It is inherently likely to be a source of serious injustice if irregularities occurred of the kind to which I have referred. Since the purpose of arbitration is to determine central issues between the parties, if there has been a flaw in that this has not been done, that is likely in the very nature of things to be a matter of serious injustice." (Emphasis added)
36. In such cases substantial injustice may be inferred from the nature of the irregularity and that inference may be so strong that "it almost goes without saying": see Raytheon at para 61. In that case the arbitrators had failed to deal with "key issues" which may well have impacted on an award of some £126m.
37. In general, there will, however, be no substantial injustice if it can be shown that the outcome of the arbitration would have been the same regardless of the irregularity - see, for example, Raytheon para 33 (last sub-paragraph)."
"The latter point (important influence on the result) takes effect within the statutory requirement that the irregularity has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant (Thyssen at [65]).").
In Takhar v Gracefield Developments Ltd [2019] UKSC 13, [2020] AC 450 at [56]-[57], [67], 76] and [104], the Supreme Court approved and discussed the summary (identified by Newey J at first instance) of the principles governing applications to set aside judgments for fraud by Aikens LJ in Royal Bank of Scotland plc v Highland Financial Partners lp [2013] 1 CLC 596 at [106].
"so material that its production [at trial] would probably have affected the result and (when the fraud consists of perjury) is so strong that it would reasonably be expected to be decisive at the re-hearing and if unanswered must have that result."
"[There] is no support in [RAV] for the suggestion that in a section 68 application a finding of apparent bias in an arbitration tribunal will lead as a matter of course to a finding of substantial injustice. Rather, as we have seen, the effect of the Privy Council advice is that a case within section 68(2)(a) will not constitute a serious irregularity unless the court considers that it has caused substantial injustice, although the nature of the irregularity may be such that the inference of substantial injustice almost goes without saying. Moreover, there will be no substantial injustice if it can be shown that the outcome of the arbitration would have been the same regardless of the irregularity."
"Loss of right to object": section 73 of the Arbitration Act 1996
Section 73
"(1) If a party to arbitral proceedings takes part, or continues to take part, in the proceedings without making, either forthwith or within such time as is allowed by the arbitration agreement or the tribunal or by any provision of this Part, any objection … (a) that the tribunal lacks substantive jurisdiction … or (d) that there has been any other irregularity affecting the tribunal or proceedings … he may not raise that objection later, before the tribunal or the court, unless he shows, at the time he took part or continued to take part in the proceedings, he did not know and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered the grounds for the objection."
"The effect of this section is that a party to an arbitration must act promptly if he considers that there are grounds on which he could challenge the effectiveness of the proceedings. If he fails to do so and continues to take part in the proceedings, he will be precluded from making a challenge at a later date. Moreover, it is clear from the language of sub-s. (1) itself that it is unnecessary for an applicant to have had actual knowledge of the grounds of objection in order for him to lose his right to challenge the award. If the respondent can show that the applicant took part or continued to take part in the proceedings without objection after the grounds of objection had arisen, the burden passes to the applicant to show that he did not know, and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered, those grounds at the time. It may often be necessary, therefore, to consider the applicant's conduct of the proceedings against the background of his developing state of knowledge."
Section 73 with section 68(2)(g)
Takhar, in the UK Supreme Court
"… as a matter of law, it is not open to a fraudster who has obtained a judgment by fraud, including through perjured evidence, to profit from it by contending that the innocent party has acted negligently in failing to uncover his fraud sooner".
Lord Wolfson KC for P&ID properly accepted that a reasonable diligence requirement "now doesn't apply when you are applying to set aside a judgment for fraud" at common law or equity.
54. "… In my view, it ought now to be recognised that where it can be shown that a judgment has been obtained by fraud, and where no allegation of fraud had been raised at the trial which led to that judgment, a requirement of reasonable diligence should not be imposed on the party seeking to set aside the judgment.
55. Two qualifications to that general conclusion should be made. Where fraud has been raised at the original trial and new evidence as to the existence of the fraud is prayed in aid to advance a case for setting aside the judgment, it seems to me that it can be argued that the court having to deal with that application should have a discretion as to whether to entertain the application. .... The second relates to the possibility that, in some circumstances, a deliberate decision may have been taken not to investigate the possibility of fraud in advance of the first trial, even if that had been suspected. If that could be established, again, I believe that a discretion whether to allow an application to set aside the judgment would be appropriate but, once more, I express no final view on the question."
"66. I would leave open the question whether the position as I have summarised it is any different where the fraud was raised in the earlier proceedings but unsuccessfully. My provisional view is that the position is the same, for the same reasons. If decisive new evidence is deployed to establish the fraud, an action to set aside the judgment will lie irrespective of whether it could reasonably have been deployed on the earlier occasion unless a deliberate decision was then taken not to investigate or rely on the material."
"183. If it had been necessary to decide the issue, it seems to me that Mr Howard has the best of the arguments. It is a fundamental principle of our law that, as Lord Bingham said in HIH Casualty and General Insurance Ltd v Chase Manhattan Bank [2003] UKHL 6, [2003] 2 Lloyd's Rep 61 - referring to what Rix LJ had said in the Court of Appeal - that fraud is a thing apart, it unravels all: [15]. There seems to be no reason why the finality of arbitration awards should be afforded greater importance than the finality of judgments in circumstances of fraud. The statutory bar in section 73 is limited to irregularities discoverable during the arbitration. Otherwise, the effect of section 81(1) of the [Arbitration] Act [1996] is to preserve the right to challenge the enforcement of an award on public policy grounds under the common law. As Mr Howard contended, there is no reason to interpret the Act so that Takhar is confined to common law public policy challenges and not to those under section 68(2)(g)."
In the passage from the speech of Lord Bingham, to which Sir Ross referred, Lord Bingham had continued:
"It also reflects the practical basis of commercial intercourse. Once fraud is proved, "it vitiates judgments, contracts and all transactions whatsoever": Lazarus Estates Ltd v Beasley [1956] 1 QB 702 at 712, per Denning LJ. …"
"… there is no principled basis to distinguish between the test for extending time under s.80(5), which is a test of reasonable diligence, and the test under s.73, which is also a test of reasonable diligence. Takhar applies to both."
"Where any provision of this Part requires an application or appeal to be made to the court within a specified time, the rules of court relating to the reckoning of periods, the extending or abridging of periods, and the consequences of not taking a step within the period prescribed by the rules, apply in relation to that requirement."
It is one thing to draw on Takhar in interpreting section 80(5); it is another to do so in interpreting section 73.
Reasonable diligence
"… proceedings of this kind are abusive only where the point at issue and the evidence deployed in support of it not only could have been raised in the earlier proceedings but should have been: see Johnson v Gore-Wood & Co, at p 31 (Lord Bingham of Cornhill) and Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd v Zodiac Seats UK Ltd, para 22 (Lord Sumption). As Lord Bingham observed in the former case, it is "wrong to hold that because a matter could have been raised in earlier proceedings it should have been, so as to render the raising of it in later proceedings necessarily abusive." The "should" in this formulation refers to something which the law would expect a reasonable person to do in his own interest and in that of the efficient conduct of litigation. However, the basis on which the law unmakes transactions, including judgments, which have been procured by fraud is that a reasonable person is entitled to assume honesty in those with whom he deals. He is not expected to conduct himself or his affairs on the footing that other persons are dishonest unless he knows that they are. That is why it is not a defence to an action in deceit to say that the victim of the deceit was foolish or negligent to allow himself to be taken in: Central Railway Company of Venezuela v Kisch (1867) LR 2 HL 99, 120 (Lord Chelmsford); Redgrave v Hurd (1881) 20 Ch D 1, 13-17 (Jessell MR). It follows that unless on the earlier occasion the claimant deliberately decided not to investigate a suspected fraud or rely on a known one, it cannot be said that he "should" have raised it."
(Lord Hodge, Lord Lloyd-Jones and Lord Kitchen agreed with the speech of Lord Sumption; but cf. on this point Lord Briggs at [88].)
"Although some of the cases have spoken in terms of reasonable diligence only being required once the claimant is on notice that there is something to investigate (the "trigger"), it is more accurate to say that the requirement of reasonable diligence applies throughout".
The passage addresses section 32(1)(a) of the Limitation Act 1980 but I accept that it informs the correct approach in the present context too.
This case: preliminary
"If the respondent can show that the applicant took part or continued to take part in the proceedings without objection after the grounds of objection had arisen, the burden passes to the applicant to show that he did not know, and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered, those grounds at the time".
The fact remains that Nigeria invokes section 68 and section 73 requires Nigeria to:
"show[] at the time [it] took part or continued to take part in the proceedings, [it] did not know and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered the grounds for the objection."
That is what I should examine. In doing so I keep in mind that Nigeria does not call a witness, available to be cross examined, as to its knowledge and as to any factual circumstances bearing on what reasonable diligence required.
This case: substance
"… in August 2012, [Nigeria] was (on its own case) faced with a potential exposure of several billion dollars, under a "deeply suspicious oil and gas contract, signed by the wrong Minister, during a period of "endemic corruption in Nigeria, and most particularly in the oil and gas sector", imposing an essentially unqualified obligation on [Nigeria] to supply gas to a BVI company which had no apparent assets, no industry experience, had carried out no work, had no engineering designs, had no finance, had no land, had misrepresented that sufficient gas for the project would be available, and might reasonably have been suspected of having "friends in government" who would do its bidding."
"… what this means is that never mind during the arbitration, in August 2012 on its own case, eight points we know were alive.
First, Nigeria was being sued for $6 billion. Second, by a BVI company, something that we are told any Nigerian Minister or official would know was in breach of Nigerian law. Third, with no apparent assets, experience or finance. Fourth, under a deeply suspicious contract, to use Mr Malami's phrase. Five, signed by the wrong Minister. Six, at a time and in a sector when corruption was endemic. Seven, imposing an essentially unqualified obligation on Nigeria to supply gas. And eight, containing an "unorthodox", according to Mr Malami, arbitration clause which breached Nigerian public policy."
Conclusion
"(3) If there is shown to be serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award, the court may—
(a) remit the award to the tribunal, in whole or in part, for reconsideration,
(b) set the award aside in whole or in part, or
(c) declare the award to be of no effect, in whole or in part.
The court shall not exercise its power to set aside or to declare an award to be of no effect, in whole or in part, unless it is satisfied that it would be inappropriate to remit the matters in question to the tribunal for reconsideration."
Reflecting on the Agreement (the GSPA), the Arbitration and the Awards
"to provide for the construction of Gas Processing Facilities by P&ID encompassing the provision of Wet Gas by the Government and the processing of the said Wet Gas by P&ID utilising two or more process streams with a total capacity of up to 400 MMSCuFD together with all utilities, support and maintenance facilities at the Site and the provision of Lean Gas by P&ID to the Government as set forth in this Agreement and its Appendices and to operate and maintain the facilities in an efficient manner."
(1) Drafting major commercial contracts involving a state
(2) Disclosure or discovery of documents
(3) Participation and representation in arbitrations over major disputes involving a state
(4) Confidentiality in significant arbitrations involving a state
Endnote
Contents:
(1) Remaining parts of the GSPA
(2) Full text of Arbitration Act 1986 ss. 1, 66-70, 73, 80, 81, 103
(1) Remaining parts of the GSPA
1.DEFINITIONS AND INTERPRETATIONS
i. "Affiliate" means with respect to a Party, any company or legal entity that Controls, or is controlled by, such Party or is controlled by a company or legal entity that also controls such Party. For purposes of this Agreement, "control" means the right, directly or indirectly, to exercise fifty percent (50%) or more of the voting rights in the election of directors, or if there are no such voting rights, ownership of fifty percent (50%) or more of the equity share capital or other ownership interests, and "controls" and "controlled" shall be construed accordingly.
…
iii. "CDM Project" means a clean development project as provided for in the Kyoto Convention and a CDM Project is duly authorised to engage in approved market based mechanisms in relation the Carbon Credits;
iv. "Effective Date" means the date of signing of this Agreement;
…
x. "Pioneer Status" means tax free status in Nigeria for P&ID and its assignees in relation to the Project encompassing the provision of equipment and materials for the project and as operators of the plant for the first 5 years of operations;
…
xii. "Project Team" means the management team appointed by P&ID to carry out the implementation of the Project and shall include the P&ID nominees to the Joint Operating Committee.
xiii. "Proprietary information" means all data and information generated pursuant to the work carried out by the parties including but not limited to reports, documents, drawings and graphs, and any patentable inventions made during and as a result of all work carried out by P&ID Project Management Team for this project, inclusive of any and all patents or patent applications with regard thereto;
…
xv. "Start Date" means the earliest date on which the Government commences the regular supply and delivery of not less than 150 MMSCuFD of Wet Gas to the Site;
…
10. NIGERIAN CONTENT
a. The Nigerian content of project development, construction and operation shall be maximised to the extent reasonably possible without detracting from the fastrack implementation schedule.
11. FORCE MAJEURE
a. Any failure or delay on the part of either Party in the performance of its obligations or duties under this Agreement, shall be excused to the extent attributable to force majeure save for obligations to pay sums due and payable. A force majeure situation includes delays, defaults or inability to perform under this Agreement due to any event beyond the reasonable control of either Party. Such event may be, but is not limited to, any act, event, happening, or occurrence due to natural causes, acts or perils of navigation, fire, hostilities, war (declared or undeclared), blockage, labour disturbances, strikes, riots, insurrection, civil commotion, quarantine restrictions, epidemics, storms, floods, earthquakes, accidents, blowouts, lightning, and, acts of or orders of the Government. If activities under this Agreement are delayed, curtailed or prevented by force majeure, then the time for carrying out the obligation and duties thereby affected, and rights and obligations hereunder, shall be extended for a period equal to the period of such delay.
b. The Party who is unable to perform its obligations as a result of the force majeure event shall promptly notify the other party thereof not later than forty-eight (48) hours after becoming aware of the establishment of the force majeure event, stating the cause, and both Parties shall do all that is reasonably within their powers to remove such cause.
12. CONFIDENTIALITY
Each of the Parties, their employees, agents and representatives hereby undertake that they shall not, whether during the period of this Agreement or at any time after the expiration or termination thereof, disclose any information acquired by it, from or through the other Party (either directly or indirectly, oral or written) to any person, firm or company. Such information shall include all information, data, designs, drawings, computer programmes, recordings, writings, correspondences and any other technical commercial or operational information relating to the other Party's business and activities or any of its Affiliate companies ("Confidential Information").
The above provisions shall not extend to information which:
i. Prior to the time of disclosure or acquisition has become lawfully in the public domain or was obtained by the Party disclosing it without any confidentiality obligations, or was obtained from a third party who is lawfully entitled to be in possession of such information;
ii. Any Party shall disclose, where such disclosure is demanded by an order of a court of competent jurisdiction, or a tax authority, or a lawfully constituted commission of inquiry, provided that prior to making such disclosure, written notification of the demand received by such Party has been given to the other Party and thereafter the Party being compelled to make the disclosure can do so.
13. PROPRIETARY INFORMATION
i. All intellectual property and other proprietary rights in and to the Proprietary Information shall be the joint property of the Parties;
ii. The Parties and their Affiliates shall only be entitled to use the Proprietary Information in the evaluation, pursuit and development of the project and for no other purpose.
iii. The Parties agree that Proprietary information shall be confidential and that no Party or its Affiliates shall use, copy, sell, trade, publish or otherwise disclose the Proprietary information to anyone save as otherwise provided in this Agreement or with the written approval of the other Party. Notwithstanding the foregoing, a Party may disclose Proprietary information if and to the extent:
a. that such information is already in the public domain, other than as a result of a breach of the obligation with respect to Proprietary information and Confidential Information under this Agreement by any of the Parties;
b. required to be disclosed under applicable laws including rules of applicable stock exchange, tax authority, Governmental authorities or courts or competence panel of enquiry;
c. such disclosure is to be made to its Affiliates and the directors agents, officers and employees of the Party and their Affiliates; and
d. such disclosure to professional advisers and consultants of any Party and its Affiliates on a need to know basis."
14. INDEMNITY
Each Party shall be responsible for any claims made by or injury to its representative(s) and·in respect of damage to such Party's property while such representative is providing services arising from the activities under this Agreement. In that regard, each Party agrees to indemnify, defend and hold harmless the other Party from and against any claims, or causes of action arising out of or in connection with such personal injury or damage to property.
15.CHANGES TO AGREEMENT
No amendments, modifications or changes to this Agreement shall be valid unless approved in writing by both parties.
16.ASSIGNMENT
Either Party may assign its rights and obligations to an Affiliate as defined in this Agreement or to a designated financial institution where such an assignment comprises an integral constituent element of the financing structure of the Project but assignment to a non-affiliate shall not be permitted without the written consent of the other party such consent not to be unreasonably withheld but in all cases of assignment the assignor shall not be released of any of its liabilities and responsibilities under this Agreement.
17.THIRD PARTIES
a. This Agreement is intended for the Parties hereto, and nothing contained in this Agreement shall be construed to create any duty to, standard of care with reference to, or rights in any person not a Party to this Agreement. This Agreement shall not confer any right to any third party claiming the right to entitlement or benefits under this Agreement.
b. No Partnership: None of the provisions of this Agreement shall be deemed to constitute a Partnership between the Parties, and no Party shall have the authority to bind or shall be deemed to be the agent of the other Parties in any way.
18.LANGUAGE
The language for the purposes of administering this Agreement shall be English.
19.WRITTEN PRESS RELEASES
The Parties shall consult, coordinate and agree on the release of any written press releases, announcements or responses to media enquiries concerning this Agreement in advance of any such announcement. If a Party or its Affiliate wishes to issue or make a press release, it shall not do so unless prior to its release, such Party furnishes to the other Party a copy of such press release for its review and written approval (which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld).
The Party shall provide a copy of such press release and related background information to the other Party within a minimum of seven (7) days, if practical, but in any event not less thank seventy-two (72) hours, prior to its planned release.
20. APPLICABLE LAW and DISPUTE RESOLUTION
The Agreement shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
The Parties agree that if any difference or dispute arises between them concerning the interpretation or performance of this Agreement and if they fail to settle such difference or dispute amicably, then a Party may serve on the other a notice of arbitration under the rules of the Nigerian Arbitration and Conciliation Act (Cap A18 LFN 2004) which, except as otherwise provided herein, shall apply to any dispute between such Parties under this Agreement. Within thirty (30) days of the notice of arbitration being issued by the initiating Party, the Parties shall each appoint an arbitrator and the arbitrators thus appointed by the Parties shall within fifteen (15) days from the date the last arbitrator was appointed, appoint a third arbitrator to complete the tribunal. In the event that the arbitrators do not agree on the appointment of such third arbitrator within the aforementioned fifteen (15) days, or any extension of such deadline that the Parties may mutually agree, such an arbitrator shall be appointed by the President of the Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce ("ICC") in accordance with the releant ICC rules on the application of either Part (notice of the intention to apply having been duly issued to the other) and, when appointed, the third arbitrator shall convene meetings of the arbitration panel, act as chairman thereof and decide the differences or dispute should the arbitrators fail to reach a unanimous decision. No arbitrator shall be appointed by either of the Parties or their respective Affiliates within five (5) years prior to the notice of arbitration.
When an arbitrator refuses or neglects to act, or is incapable of acting or dies, a new arbitrator shall be appointed in his place and the above provisions of appointing arbitrators shall, mutatis mutandis, govern the appointment of such arbitrator.
The arbitration award shall be final and binding upon the Parties. The award shall be delivered within two months after the appointment of the third arbitrator or within such extended period as may be agreed by the Parties. The costs of the arbitration shall be borne equally by the Parties. Each Party shall, however, bear its own lawyers' fees.
The venue of the arbitration shall be London, England or otherwise as agreed by the Parties. The arbitration proceedings and record shall be in the English language.
The Parties shall agree to appropriate arbitration terms to exclusively resolve any disputes arising between them from this Agreement."
21. ENTIRE UNDERSTANDING
This Agreement including Appendix A and Appendix B comprises the full and complete understanding of the Parties hereto with respect to all the matters addressed in this Agreement and the said Appendix A and Appendix B form an integral part of this Agreement.
22. WARRANTIES
Each Party represents and warrants that it has the right and authority to enter into this Agreement and to perform and observe all of its obligations under this Agreement and that the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement has been duly and validly authorised by all necessary corporate or other action, and that by entering into this Agreement, it will not violate, conflict with, or cause a material default under any other contract, agreement, indenture, decree, judgement, undertaking, conveyance, lien or encumbrance to which it is a party or by which it may become subject.
23. NOTICES
Any notice, request, demand or other correspondence required under this Agreement or any notice which either Party may desire to give to the other Party shall be in writing and shall be hand-delivered, sent by facsimile, or similar means of delivery to the Party intended to receive the same, as the case may be, and shall be effective upon receipt at the following address:
If to Government:
Honourable Minister of Petroleum Resources
NNPC Towers
Herbert Macaulay Way
Abuja, Nigeria
If to: Process and Industrial Development Limited (P&ID)
The Chairman
Process and Industrial Development Limited
15B Buchanan Crescent
Off Aminu Kano Crescent
Wuse II, Abuja
FCT, Nigeria
Attention: Mr Neil C. Hitchcock, Projects Director
EXHIBIT 'A'
[An email from Addax Petroleum (Nigeria) Limited to Mr Hitchcock dated 18 November 2009 stating "Neil, Attached – basis of current compression facilities design" with the schedule below]
Gas Component |
OML 123 Gas Composition Low MW Case High MW case |
OML 123 Gas Composition Low MW Case High MW case |
C1 | 0.9562 | 0.9207 |
C2 | 0.0222 | 0.0347 |
C3 | 0.0103 | 0.0240 |
C4 | 0.0021 | 0.0063 |
C5 | 0.0010 | 0.0025 |
C6 | 0.0004 | 0.0022 |
C7 | 0.0006 | 0.0021 |
CO2 | 0.0065 | 0.0065 |
H2O | 0.0002 | 0.0002 |
H2S | 0.0000 | 0.0000 |
N2 | 0.0005 | 0.0008 |
1.0000 | 1.0000 |
(2) Arbitration Act 1996
Section 1:
"General principlesThe provisions of this Part are founded on the following principles, and shall be construed accordingly—
(a) the object of arbitration is to obtain the fair resolution of disputes by an impartial tribunal without unnecessary delay or expense;
(b) the parties should be free to agree how their disputes are resolved, subject only to such safeguards as are necessary in the public interest;
(c) in matters governed by this Part the court should not intervene except as provided by this Part."
Section 66:
"Enforcement of the award.
(1) An award made by the tribunal pursuant to an arbitration agreement may, by leave of the court, be enforced in the same manner as a judgment or order of the court to the same effect.
(2) Where leave is so given, judgment may be entered in terms of the award.
(3) Leave to enforce an award shall not be given where, or to the extent that, the person against whom it is sought to be enforced shows that the tribunal lacked substantive jurisdiction to make the award.
The right to raise such an objection may have been lost (see section 73).
(4) Nothing in this section affects the recognition or enforcement of an award under any other enactment or rule of law, in particular under Part II of the Arbitration Act 1950 (enforcement of awards under Geneva Convention) or the provisions of Part III of this Act relating to the recognition and enforcement of awards under the New York Convention or by an action on the award."
Section 67:
"Challenging the award: substantive jurisdiction.
(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court—
(a) challenging any award of the arbitral tribunal as to its substantive jurisdiction; or
(b) for an order declaring an award made by the tribunal on the merits to be of no effect, in whole or in part, because the tribunal did not have substantive jurisdiction.
A party may lose the right to object (see section 73) and the right to apply is subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(2) The arbitral tribunal may continue the arbitral proceedings and make a further award while an application to the court under this section is pending in relation to an award as to jurisdiction.
(3) On an application under this section challenging an award of the arbitral tribunal as to its substantive jurisdiction, the court may by order—
(a) confirm the award,
(b) vary the award, or
(c) set aside the award in whole or in part.
(4) The leave of the court is required for any appeal from a decision of the court under this section."
Section 68:
"Challenging the award: serious irregularity.
(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award. A party may lose the right to object (see section 73) and the right to apply is subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant—
(a) failure by the tribunal to comply with section 33 (general duty of tribunal);
(b) the tribunal exceeding its powers (otherwise than by exceeding its substantive jurisdiction: see section 67);
(c) failure by the tribunal to conduct the proceedings in accordance with the procedure agreed by the parties;
(d) failure by the tribunal to deal with all the issues that were put to it;
(e) any arbitral or other institution or person vested by the parties with powers in relation to the proceedings or the award exceeding its powers;
(f) uncertainty or ambiguity as to the effect of the award;
(g) the award being obtained by fraud or the award or the way in which it was procured being contrary to public policy;
(h) failure to comply with the requirements as to the form of the award; or
(i) any irregularity in the conduct of the proceedings or in the award which is admitted by the tribunal or by any arbitral or other institution or person vested by the parties with powers in relation to the proceedings or the award.
(3) If there is shown to be serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award, the court may—
(a) remit the award to the tribunal, in whole or in part, for reconsideration,
(b) set the award aside in whole or in part, or
(c) declare the award to be of no effect, in whole or in part.
The court shall not exercise its power to set aside or to declare an award to be of no effect, in whole or in part, unless it is satisfied that it would be inappropriate to remit the matters in question to the tribunal for reconsideration.
(4) The leave of the court is required for any appeal from a decision of the court under this section."
Section 69:
"Appeal on point of law
(1) Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, a party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) appeal to the court on a question of law arising out of an award made in the proceedings.
An agreement to dispense with reasons for the tribunal's award shall be considered an agreement to exclude the court's jurisdiction under this section.
(2) An appeal shall not be brought under this section except—
(a) with the agreement of all the other parties to the proceedings, or
(b) with the leave of the court.
The right to appeal is also subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(3) Leave to appeal shall be given only if the court is satisfied—
(a) that the determination of the question will substantially affect the rights of one or more of the parties,
(b) that the question is one which the tribunal was asked to determine,
(c) that, on the basis of the findings of fact in the award—
(i) the decision of the tribunal on the question is obviously wrong, or(ii) the question is one of general public importance and the decision of the tribunal is at least open to serious doubt, and
(d) that, despite the agreement of the parties to resolve the matter by arbitration, it is just and proper in all the circumstances for the court to determine the question.
(4) An application for leave to appeal under this section shall identify the question of law to be determined and state the grounds on which it is alleged that leave to appeal should be granted.
(5) The court shall determine an application for leave to appeal under this section without a hearing unless it appears to the court that a hearing is required.
(6) The leave of the court is required for any appeal from a decision of the court under this section to grant or refuse leave to appeal.
(7) On an appeal under this section the court may by order—
(a) confirm the award,
(b) vary the award,
(c) remit the award to the tribunal, in whole or in part, for reconsideration in the light of the court's determination, or
(d) set aside the award in whole or in part.
The court shall not exercise its power to set aside an award, in whole or in part, unless it is satisfied that it would be inappropriate to remit the matters in question to the tribunal for reconsideration.
(8) The decision of the court on an appeal under this section shall be treated as a judgment of the court for the purposes of a further appeal.
But no such appeal lies without the leave of the court which shall not be given unless the court considers that the question is one of general importance or is one which for some other special reason should be considered by the Court of Appeal.
Section 70:
"Challenge or appeal: supplementary provisions.
(1) The following provisions apply to an application or appeal under section 67, 68 or 69.
(2) An application or appeal may not be brought if the applicant or appellant has not first exhausted—
(a) any available arbitral process of appeal or review, and
(b) any available recourse under section 57 (correction of award or additional award).
(3) Any application or appeal must be brought within 28 days of the date of the award or, if there has been any arbitral process of appeal or review, of the date when the applicant or appellant was notified of the result of that process.
(4) If on an application or appeal it appears to the court that the award—
(a) does not contain the tribunal's reasons, or
(b) does not set out the tribunal's reasons in sufficient detail to enable the court properly to consider the application or appeal,
the court may order the tribunal to state the reasons for its award in sufficient detail for that purpose.
(5) Where the court makes an order under subsection (4), it may make such further order as it thinks fit with respect to any additional costs of the arbitration resulting from its order.
(6) The court may order the applicant or appellant to provide security for the costs of the application or appeal, and may direct that the application or appeal be dismissed if the order is not complied with.
The power to order security for costs shall not be exercised on the ground that the applicant or appellant is—
(a) an individual ordinarily resident outside the United Kingdom, or
(b) a corporation or association incorporated or formed under the law of a country outside the United Kingdom, or whose central management and control is exercised outside the United Kingdom.
(7) The court may order that any money payable under the award shall be brought into court or otherwise secured pending the determination of the application or appeal, and may direct that the application or appeal be dismissed if the order is not complied with.
(8) The court may grant leave to appeal subject to conditions to the same or similar effect as an order under subsection (6) or (7).
This does not affect the general discretion of the court to grant leave subject to conditions."
Section 73:
"Loss of right to object
(1) If a party to arbitral proceedings takes part, or continues to take part, in the proceedings without making, either forthwith or within such time as is allowed by the arbitration agreement or the tribunal or by any provision of this Part, any objection—
(a) that the tribunal lacks substantive jurisdiction,
(b) that the proceedings have been improperly conducted,
(c) that there has been a failure to comply with the arbitration agreement or with any provision of this Part, or
(d) that there has been any other irregularity affecting the tribunal or the proceedings,
he may not raise that objection later, before the tribunal or the court, unless he shows that, at the time he took part or continued to take part in the proceedings, he did not know and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered the grounds for the objection.
(2) Where the arbitral tribunal rules that it has substantive jurisdiction and a party to arbitral proceedings who could have questioned that ruling—
(a) by any available arbitral process of appeal or review, or
(b) by challenging the award,
does not do so, or does not do so within the time allowed by the arbitration agreement or any provision of this Part, he may not object later to the tribunal's substantive jurisdiction on any ground which was the subject of that ruling.
Section 80:
"Notice and other requirements in connection with legal proceedings
(1) References in this Part to an application, appeal or other step in relation to legal proceedings being taken "upon notice" to the other parties to the arbitral proceedings, or to the tribunal, are to such notice of the originating process as is required by rules of court and do not impose any separate requirement.
(2) Rules of court shall be made—
(a) requiring such notice to be given as indicated by any provision of this Part, and
(b) as to the manner, form and content of any such notice.
(3) Subject to any provision made by rules of court, a requirement to give notice to the tribunal of legal proceedings shall be construed—
(a) if there is more than one arbitrator, as a requirement to give notice to each of them; and
(b) if the tribunal is not fully constituted, as a requirement to give notice to any arbitrator who has been appointed.
(4) References in this Part to making an application or appeal to the court within a specified period are to the issue within that period of the appropriate originating process in accordance with rules of court.
(5) Where any provision of this Part requires an application or appeal to be made to the court within a specified time, the rules of court relating to the reckoning of periods, the extending or abridging of periods, and the consequences of not taking a step within the period prescribed by the rules, apply in relation to that requirement.
(6) Provision may be made by rules of court amending the provisions of this Part—
(a) with respect to the time within which any application or appeal to the court must be made,
(b) so as to keep any provision made by this Part in relation to arbitral proceedings in step with the corresponding provision of rules of court applying in relation to proceedings in the court, or
(c) so as to keep any provision made by this Part in relation to legal proceedings in step with the corresponding provision of rules of court applying generally in relation to proceedings in the court.
(7) Nothing in this section affects the generality of the power to make rules of court."
Section 81:
"Saving for certain matters governed by common law
(1) Nothing in this Part shall be construed as excluding the operation of any rule of law consistent with the provisions of this Part, in particular, any rule of law as to—
(a) matters which are not capable of settlement by arbitration;
(b) the effect of an oral arbitration agreement; or
(c) the refusal of recognition or enforcement of an arbitral award on grounds of public policy.
(2) Nothing in this Act shall be construed as reviving any jurisdiction of the court to set aside or remit an award on the ground of errors of fact or law on the face of the award."
Part III Section 103:
"Refusal of recognition or enforcement
(1) Recognition or enforcement of a New York Convention award shall not be refused except in the following cases.
(2) Recognition or enforcement of the award may be refused if the person against whom it is invoked proves—
(a) that a party to the arbitration agreement was (under the law applicable to him) under some incapacity;
(b) that the arbitration agreement was not valid under the law to which the parties subjected it or, failing any indication thereon, under the law of the country where the award was made;
(c) that he was not given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator or of the arbitration proceedings or was otherwise unable to present his case;
(d) that the award deals with a difference not contemplated by or not falling within the terms of the submission to arbitration or contains decisions on matters beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration (but see subsection (4));
(e) that the composition of the arbitral tribunal or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties or, failing such agreement, with the law of the country in which the arbitration took place;
(f) that the award has not yet become binding on the parties, or has been set aside or suspended by a competent authority of the country in which, or under the law of which, it was made.
(3) Recognition or enforcement of the award may also be refused if the award is in respect of a matter which is not capable of settlement by arbitration, or if it would be contrary to public policy to recognise or enforce the award.
(4) An award which contains decisions on matters not submitted to arbitration may be recognised or enforced to the extent that it contains decisions on matters submitted to arbitration which can be separated from those on matters not so submitted.
(5) Where an application for the setting aside or suspension of the award has been made to such a competent authority as is mentioned in subsection (2)(f), the court before which the award is sought to be relied upon may, if it considers it proper, adjourn the decision on the recognition or enforcement of the award.
It may also on the application of the party claiming recognition or enforcement of the award order the other party to give suitable security."