Counterclaims in Investment Arbitration: Balancing Investor Rights and State Interests
This paper examines the role of counterclaims in international investment arbitration and argues that they are essential to balance investor protections with host State interests. Investment arbitration has traditionally prioritized investor protection, often leaving States with limited mechanisms to hold investors accountable for conduct that harms public interests, including environmental degradation, labour rights violations, tax avoidance, and human rights abuses. The paper reviews the legal framework for counterclaims, focusing on Article 46 of the ICSID Convention, relevant UNCITRAL provisions, and recent bilateral investment treaties that include counterclaim clauses. Through doctrinal analysis and case law, it shows how tribunals have tended to read the requirement that counterclaims arise out of the investment narrowly, producing jurisdictional and evidentiary barriers. The study identifies practical obstacles: the need for investor consent, uncertainty about the tribunal's jurisdictional scope, high evidentiary thresholds, and the imbalance in negotiating power between many host States and investors. To address these problems, the paper proposes practical reforms: treating counterclaims as admissible where they are materially connected to the original dispute, encouraging treaty language that expressly permits counterclaims, harmonising procedural rules across forums, and promoting collective bargaining by host States to strengthen treaty terms. The conclusion suggests that, if adopted carefully, these measures would improve accountability, protect public interests, and recalibrate investor-State relations without undermining legitimate investor protections. It also emphasises the importance of capacity-building and technical assistance to help developing States enforce counterclaims effectively in complex disputes. The paper offers targeted recommendations for treaty drafters, arbitral tribunals, and policy makers.