Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • The courts of the seat of an arbitration have exclusive supervisory jurisdiction, which is analogous to an exclusive jurisdiction clause. It follows that any challenge to the validity of an arbitral award can only be brought in the courts of the seat of the arbitration.
  • Anti-suit injunctions will be granted to restrain attempts to pre-emptively challenge or undermine the validity or effect of a London-seated arbitral award in a foreign court.
  • Article V(1) of the New York Convention operates as a shield to resist the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards at the enforcement stage. It cannot be used as a sword to pre-emptively challenge the validity or effect of an arbitral award.
  • Attempts to frame foreign proceedings as “recognition and enforcement” actions under the New York Convention will be scrutinised for their true substance and effect rather than their form.

Factual summary

The dispute arose from a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) entered into in 2012 between Star Hydro Power Limited (SHPL), a Pakistani-incorporated power producer ultimately owned by South Korean shareholders, and the National Transmission and Despatch Company Limited (NTDCL), a Pakistani state entity responsible for electricity transmission. The PPA provided for the construction and operation of a hydroelectric plant with NTDCL agreeing to purchase electricity generated by SHPL for 30 years.

The PPA included a detailed tariff adjustment mechanism and an arbitration clause, which provided for disputes to be referred to a London-seated arbitration under the rules of the London Court of International Arbitration (LCIA). The PPA was governed by Pakistani law.

A dispute arose regarding the correct tariff to be applied at the plant’s commercial operation date. SHPL claimed entitlement to a higher tariff under the PPA, while NTDCL argued that the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority had exclusive statutory authority to determine tariffs, and had set a lower tariff. SHPL commenced LCIA arbitration in London, and the sole arbitrator issued a final award in May 2024, finding in SHPL’s favour on the contractual tariff and ordering NTDCL to pay the difference.

NTDCL then commenced proceedings in the Lahore High Court, seeking, under the guise of the New York Convention, partial recognition and enforcement of the award, but in substance challenging the arbitrator’s jurisdiction and seeking to nullify the award’s effect. SHPL sought an anti-suit injunction from the English courts to restrain NTDCL from pursuing the Lahore proceedings. SHPL argued that NTDCL’s application under the New York Convention was, in fact, an attempt to challenge the substance of the award and not an application that sought to recognise or enforce the award.