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The Climate Litigation Database

Antaris Solar GmbH and Dr. Michael Göde v. The Czech Republic

Geography
Year
2013
Document Type
Litigation

About this case

Filing year
2013
Status
Decided in favor of State (Award - 2 May 2018)
Court/admin entity
Arbitral TribunalPermanent Court of Arbitration
Case category
Suits against governments (Global)Trade and Investment (Global)Rollback of climate-justified measures (Global)
Principal law
International LawEnergy Charter TreatyInternational LawGermany - Czech and Slovak Republic BIT
At issue
Whether the rollback of subsidies by the Czech Republic government to the renewable energy sector, along with the introduction of the Solar Levy, violates the fair and equitable treatment of the ECT
Topics
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Documents

Summary

The arbitration case involved Antaris GmbH, a German commercial company, and Dr. Michael Gode ("Claimants") against the Czech Republic ("Respondent"). The Claimants filed a claim against the Czech Republic concerning alleged violations of the Energy Charter Treaty (ECT) and the bilateral investment treaty between Germany and the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic, signed on October 2, 1990. Specifically, they argued that legislative changes made by the Respondent—specifically, measures introduced by the Czech government to address the financial burden caused by the solar energy boom—negatively impacted their investments in photovoltaic power plants. These changes included the implementation of the Solar Levy, which was a tax imposed on solar installations receiving excessive feed-in tariffs (FiTs), and the removal of the 5% cap on the reduction of FiTs for solar plants connected to the grid from 2011 onward. The Respondent argued these changes were necessary due to - among other things - concernd over state aid rules under EU law. Consequently, the Claimants requesed that the Tribunal issued a declaration stating that the Respondent's actions constitute unfair treatment in violation of the ECT and the German BIT; they also sought compensation for losses incurred due to these breaches. The Respondent, in turn, requests the dismissal of all claims on the grounds including of lack of jurisdiction over taxation measures under the ECT. The Tribunal found that Solar Levy did not qualify as a taxation measure under Czech law or within the meaning of Article 21(7) ECT. Despite being administered like a tax and titled 'levy', substantial considerations suggest otherwise. The Tribunal found no requirement for an express stabilisation provision to establish a legitimate expectation. However, it concluded that investors should have been aware that dealing with the solar boom was a fast-moving political issue and legislative changes were possible. Finally, three-quarters of arbitration costs should be borne by Claimants while Respondent should be awarded legal costs. All claims made by Claimants were dismissed, and they were ordered to pay within 28 days a sum of US$1.75 million and GBP 178,125.50 to the Respondent.

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Group
Topics
Target
Policy instrument
Impacted group
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Economic sector
Finance