By Stuart Bruce and Juliette Huard-Bourgois, King & Wood Mallesons’ London Office

Large-scale investments made in foreign jurisdictions face many risks, particularly when the investments are in countries with high levels of political and regulatory risk or developing judicial systems, as is often a concern for international investors entering certain African states. In such\ circumstances, investors are particularly concerned about the legal protections that are available to them during the life of their investments. Bilateral and multilateral investment treaties (“BITs”, “MITs”) have become the principle vehicle to overcome these challenges and mitigate the risks of government intervention.

BITs are international law instruments – treaties – agreed between two states. MITs are treaties agreed between more than two states. The purpose of BITs and MITs is to create a stable legal environment that fosters foreign direct investment. This is achieved by the “host state” (i.e. the state in which the investment is made) agreeing to provide certain guarantees and standards of protection to the investments of private foreign investors (i.e. those with the nationality of, or incorporation in, the “home state”). The investor is also provided with the opportunity to enforce its rights under the investment treaty against the host state through independent international investment arbitration. This is the major innovation of investment treaties, as traditionally it was only states that had standing to bring claims against one another.
Continue Reading Maximising Investment Protection in Africa: the Role of Investment Treaties and Investment Arbitration

By Susan Ning  Hazel Yin and Ruohan Zhang  King&Wood Mallesons’ Antitrust Group

untitleduntitledOn May 4, 2015, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) published the Notice on Reinforcing Supervision over Drug Prices (“Notice”). The Notice includes a range of specific issues on the supervision over drug price, including immediately launching special inspections into illegal conducts

By Elaine Gibson-Bolton and Rahul Saha, King & Wood Mallesons’ London Office

gibson-bolton_eThis article provides an overview of the unbundling obligations under the European Union (“E.U.”) Third Energy Liberalisation Reform Package (“the Third Directive” or the “Third Package”) as applied to Transmission System Operators (“TSOs”) and describes the Great Britain (“GB”) reforms to these rules, following a 2013 European Commission working paper.

The Third Directive, introduced by the Commission in 2009, actually comprises two directives: Directive 2009/72 concerning common rules for the internal market in electricity1[i] (the “Electricity Directive”); and Directive 2009/73 concerning common rules for the internal market in natural gas[ii] (the “Gas Directive”). E.U. Member States were required to implement the directives by 3 March 2011[iii]except for the provisions on unbundling TSOs, where Member States were given until 3 March 2012 for implementation.[iv]
Continue Reading UNBUNDLING UNDER THE E.U. THIRD ENERGY PACKAGE – E.U. AND UK REFORM

By Peng Ya King&Wood Mallesons’ Dispute Resolution Group

peng_yaThe essential feature of electronic signatures is digital certification technology. Any technique that can verify one party’s identity and recognize electronic data in the course of electronic communications falls within the category of electronic signature. Electronic signatures have become widely used to secure financial transactions which are

By King & Wood Mallesons

01Welcome to read Dial into China – Insights for investing in China telecommunication produced by the global law firm King & Wood Mallesons. This brochure summarises the main changes to the rules for foreign investment in telecommunications in China as a result of the establishment of Shanghai’s pilot Free Trade

By Max Bonnell King & Wood Mallesons’ Sydney Office

bonnell_mOn 16 February 2015, the Mars One mission announced the first 100 finalists, the “Mars 100”, from the Astronaut Selection Process. These 100 hopefuls have been shortlisted for a mission to Mars to establish a permanent human settlement by 2025. Amidst the buzz surrounding the announcement

作者:Max Bonnell 金杜律师事务所悉尼办公室

bonnell_m2015年2月16日,“火星一号”计划公布了经航天员选拔过程选择的首批100名候选人——“火星100人”。这100名种子选手入围飞往火星的计划,该计划的目标为到2025年在火星上建立一个人类永久定居点。在围绕公布这些鼓舞人心的先驱者名单的喧闹中,一个关键问题浮出水面,“谁将拥有火星?

在一个受国际公法及少数国际条约制约的领域,任何人如果曾经真诚地设想会由一家私人非盈利实体尝试殖民火星,而且该私人实体的资金部分来自众筹平台Indiegogo以及一部电视真人秀节目,这都是令人怀疑的。单次太空旅行耗资达数十亿美元,并需要丰富的知识、专业能力以及专业设备。“火星一号”(Mars One)计划还需要50名志愿者参加前往一个荒凉的行星的单程飞行。然而,尽管存在极大的困难,“火星一号”仍然实现了这个关键性的里程碑。火星殖民地不再让人觉得如光年般遥远,但也引起了各种有趣的问题:私营公司能主张对火星的所有权吗?第一批火星人应受地球上的法律约束吗?谁有权在火星上采矿?火星会被依法承认为一个单独的国家吗?
Continue Reading 30秒飞向火星:银河系投资者指南

By King & Wood Mallesons

001Welcome to the third edition of Crossing Borders, a periodic review of developments in international arbitration across the world produced by the global law firm King & Wood Mallesons. In this edition, we discuss a number of important developments in international arbitration. We address the latest updates on anti-bribery and

By King & Wood Mallesons

13 April 2015, King & Wood Mallesons (“KWM”) advised Greenland Group (“Greenland”) on its successful initial issuance of “Greenland Di Chan Bao” on Guizhou Greenland Financial Exchange, a subsidiary of Greenland Financial Exchange. Greenland’s first online debt product was offered through Zhaocaibao – a platform owned by Ant Financial. Offering

By Moses Chan, King & Wood Mallesons

General situation of PRC law translations in the publication market 

The general situation is: In the past decades, it is “difficult” to locate good quality and timely versions of PRC law translation.

Only the Constitution of the PRC was come with an official English version, and it is not the responsibility of the PRC government to provide its own English translation of all promulgated laws of all levels, from the “basic laws” (e.g. the “Civil Code”, or the “Criminal Code”), to the numerous administrative regulations, and to the implementing rules for both the laws and the regulations. But, in commercial reality, both the non-Chinese reading foreign lawyers and investors needs copies of PRC law in good legal English, not to mention students of foreign law schools which provide “PRC law” classes. 
Continue Reading A Brief Note On PRC Law Research