Singapore - Turkey FTA (2015)
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“disputing parties” means the claimant and the respondent;

“disputing party” means either the claimant or the respondent;

“enterprise” means any entity constituted or organised under applicable law, whether or not for profit, and whether privately or governmentally owned or controlled, including a corporation, trust, partnership, sole proprietorship, joint venture, association, or similar organisation; and a branch of an enterprise;

“enterprise of a Party” means an enterprise constituted or organised under the law of a Party, and a branch (15)  located in the territory of a Party and carrying out business activities there;

“freely useable currency” means any currency as determined by the International Monetary Fund under the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund and any amendments thereto;

“ICSID Additional Facility Rules” means the Rules Governing the Additional Facility for the Administration of Proceedings by the Secretariat of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes;

“ICSID Arbitration Rules” means the Rules of Procedure for Arbitration Proceedings (Arbitration Rules) as amended and in effect on 10 April 2006;

“ICSID Convention” means the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States, done at Washington, 18 March 1965;

“investment” means every kind of asset, owned or controlled, by an investor, that has the characteristics of an investment, (16) including such characteristics as the commitment of capital or other resources, the expectation of gain or profit, the assumption of risk, or a certain duration. Forms that an investment may take include: (17)

(a) an enterprise;

(b) shares, stock, and other forms of equity participation in an enterprise;

(c) bonds, debentures, loans and other debt instruments , (18) (19) of an enterprise;

(d) turnkey, construction, management, production, concession, revenue-sharing, and other similar contracts;

(e) claims to money or to other assets, or to any contractual performance having an economic value associated with an investment; (20)

(f) intellectual property rights and goodwill;

(g) licences, authorisations, permits, and similar rights conferred pursuant to applicable domestic law, including any concession to search for, cultivate, extract or exploit natural resources; (21) and

(h) other tangible or intangible, movable or immovable property, and related property rights, such as leases, mortgages, liens, and pledges; (22)

“investor of a Party” means a national or an enterprise of a Party, that attempts to make, is making, or has made an investment in the territory of the other Party, provided, however, that a natural person who possesses dual nationality shall be deemed to possess exclusively the nationality of the State of his or her dominant and effective nationality;

“investor of a non-Party” means, with respect to a Party, an investor that attempts to make, is making, or has made an investment in the territory of that Party, that is not an investor of either Party;

“measures” adopted or maintained by a Party includes those taken by:

(a) central, regional or local governments and authorities; and

(b) non-governmental bodies in the exercise of powers delegated by central, regional or local governments or authorities;

“New York Convention” means the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, adopted at the United Nations in New York on 10 June 1958;

“respondent” means the Party that is a party to an investment dispute;

“return” means an amount yielded by or derived from an investment, including profits, dividends, interest, capital gains, royalty payments, payments in connection with intellectual property rights, and all other lawful income. For the purposes of the definition of “investment”, returns that are invested shall be treated as investments and any alteration of the form in which assets are invested or reinvested shall not affect their character as investments; and

“UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules” means the arbitration rules of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law, as adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on 15 December 1976, as revised in 2010.

(15) For greater certainty, a branch of a legal entity of a non-Party shall not be considered as an enterprise of a Party.
(16) Where an asset lacks the characteristics of an investment, that asset is not an investment regardless of the form it may take.
(17) The term “investment” does not include an order or judgment entered in a judicial or administrative action.
(18) Some forms of debt, such as bonds, debentures, and long-term notes, are more likely to have the characteristics of an investment, while other forms of debt such as claims to payment that are immediately due and result from the sale of goods or services, are less likely to have such characteristics.
(19) For the purpose of this Agreement, “loans and other debt instruments” described in subparagraph (c) and “claims to money …or to any contractual performance” described in subparagraph (e) refer to assets which relate to a business activity associated with an investment and do not refer to assets which are of a personal nature, unrelated to any business activity associated with an investment.
(20) For the purpose of this Agreement, a claim to payment that arises solely from the commercial sale of goods and services is not an investment unless it is a loan that has the characteristics of an investment.
(21) Whether a particular type of licence, authorisation, permit, or similar instrument (including a concession, to the extent that it has the nature of such an instrument) has the characteristics of an investment depends on such factors as the nature and extent of the rights that the holder has under the law of the Party. For greater certainty, the foregoing is without prejudice to whether any asset associated with the licence, authorisation, permit, or similar instrument has the characteristics of an investment.
(22) For greater certainty, market share, access to market, expected gains, and opportunities for profit-making are not, by themselves, investments.

Section 12-A . INVESTMENT

Article 12.2. Scope and Coverage

1. This Chapter shall apply to measures adopted or maintained by a Party relating to:

(a) investors of the other Party;

(b) covered investments; and

(c) with respect to Article 12.7 (Performance Requirements), all investments in the territory of the Party.

2. This Chapter shall not apply to:

(a) services supplied in the exercise of governmental authority within the territory of the respective Party. For purposes of this Chapter, a service supplied in the exercise of governmental authority means any service which is supplied neither on a commercial basis, nor in competition with one or more service suppliers;

(b) subsidies or grants provided by a Party, or to any conditions attached to the receipt or continued receipt of such subsidies or grants, whether or not such subsidies or grants are offered exclusively to investors of the Party or investments of investors of the Party, including government-supported loans, guarantees and insurance; and

(c) measures adopted or maintained by a Party to the extent that they are covered by Chapter 10 (Financial Services).

3. In the event of any inconsistency between this Chapter and another Chapter, the other Chapter shall prevail over this Chapter to the extent of the inconsistency.

4. The requirement by a Party that a service provider of the other Party post a bond or other form of financial security as a condition of providing a service into its territory does not of itself make this Chapter applicable to the provision of that cross-border service. This Chapter applies to that Party’s treatment of the posted bond or financial security, to the extent that such bond or financial security is a covered investment.

5. For greater certainty, the provisions of this Chapter do not impose any obligation on either Party in relation to any act or fact that took place or any situation that ceased to exist before the date of entry into force of this Agreement.

Article 12.3. Minimum Standard of Treatment

1. Each Party shall accord to covered investments treatment in accordance with customary international law minimum standard of treatment of aliens, (23) including “fair and equitable treatment” and “full protection and security”.

2. For greater certainty, paragraph 1 prescribes the customary international law minimum standard of treatment of aliens as the minimum standard of treatment to be afforded to covered investments. The concepts of “fair and equitable treatment” and “full protection and security” do not require treatment in addition to or beyond that which is required by that standard, and do not create additional substantive rights. The obligation to provide:

(a) “fair and equitable treatment” includes the obligation not to deny justice in criminal, civil or administrative adjudicatory proceedings in accordance with the principle of due process embodied in the principal legal systems of the world; and

(b) “full protection and security” requires each Party to provide the level of police protection required under customary international law.

3. A determination that there has been a breach of another provision of this Agreement, or of a separate international agreement, does not establish that there has been a breach of this Article.

(23) Customary international law results from a general and consistent practice of States that they follow from a sense of legal obligation. With regard to this Article, the customary international law minimum standard of treatment of aliens refers to all customary international law principles that protect the economic rights and interests of aliens.

Article 12.4. National Treatment

1. Each Party shall accord to investors of the other Party treatment no less favourable than that it accords, in like circumstances, to its own investors with respect to the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation, and sale or other disposition of investments in its territory.

2. Each Party shall accord to covered investments treatment no less favourable than that it accords, in like circumstances, to investments in its territory of its own investors with respect to the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation, and sale or other disposition of investments.

Article 12.5. Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment

1. Each Party shall accord to investors of the other Party treatment no less favourable than that it accords, in like circumstances, to investors of any non-Party with respect to the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation, and sale or other disposition of investments in its territory.

2. Each Party shall accord to covered investments treatment no less favourable than that it accords, in like circumstances, to investments in its territory of investors of any non-Party with respect to the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation, and sale or other disposition of investments.

3. For greater certainty, paragraphs 1 and 2 shall not be construed as granting to investors options or procedures for the settlement of disputes other than those set out in Section 12-B (Investor-State Dispute Settlement).

4. Notwithstanding paragraphs 1 and 2, in the case of supply of services in the territory of a Party by covered investments, each Party shall:

(a) accord to investors of the other Party treatment no less favourable than that it accords, in like circumstances, to investors of any non-Party with respect only to the management, conduct, operation, and sale or other disposition of investments in its territory; and

(b) accord to covered investments treatment no less favourable than that it accords, in like circumstances, to investments in its territory of investors of any non-Party with respect only to the management, conduct, operation, and sale or other disposition of investments.

Article 12.6. Compensation for Losses

1. Investors of one Party whose covered investments in the territory of the other Party suffer losses owing to war or other armed conflict, revolution, a state of national emergency, insurrection, riot, or any other similar event in the territory of the latter Party, shall be accorded by the latter Party treatment, as regards restitution, indemnification, compensation or other settlement, no less favourable than that which the latter Party accords to investments of its own investors or investments of investors of any non-Party, whichever is more favourable, to the covered investment of the investor of the former Party. All payments that may result shall be deemed freely transferable.

2. Notwithstanding paragraph 1, if an investor of a Party, in the situations referred to in paragraph 1, suffers a loss in the territory of the other Party resulting from:

(a) requisitioning of its covered investment or part thereof by the latter’s forces or authorities; or

(b) destruction of its covered investment or part thereof by the latter’s forces or authorities, which was not required by the necessity of the situation,

the latter Party shall provide the investor restitution, compensation, or both, as appropriate, for such loss.

Article 12.7. Performance Requirements (24)

1. Neither Party may, in connection with the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation, or sale or other disposition of an investment of an investor of a Party or of a non-Party in its territory, impose or enforce any requirement or enforce any commitment or undertaking: (25)

(a) to export a given level or percentage of goods or services;

(b) to achieve a given level or percentage of domestic content;

(c) to purchase, use, or accord a preference to goods produced in its territory, or to purchase goods from persons in its territory;

(d) to relate in any way the volume or value of imports to the volume or value of exports or to the amount of foreign exchange inflows associated with such investment;

(e) to restrict sales of goods or services in its territory that such investment produces or supplies by relating such sales in any way to the volume or value of its exports or foreign exchange earnings;

(f) to transfer a particular technology, a production process, or other proprietary knowledge to a person in its territory; or

(g) to supply exclusively from the territory of the Party the goods that such investment produces or the services that such investment supplies to a specific regional market or to the world market.

2. Neither Party may condition the receipt or continued receipt of an advantage, in connection with the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation, or sale or other disposition of an investment in its territory of an investor of a Party or of a non-Party, on compliance with any requirement:

(a) to achieve a given level or percentage of domestic content;

(b) to purchase, use, or accord a preference to goods produced in its territory, or to purchase goods from persons in its territory;

(c) to relate in any way the volume or value of imports to the volume or value of exports or to the amount of foreign exchange inflows associated with such investment; or

(d) to restrict sales of goods or services in its territory that such investment produces or supplies by relating such sales in any way to the volume or value of its exports or foreign exchange earnings.

3. (a) For greater certainty, nothing in paragraph 1 shall be construed to prevent a Party from, in connection with the establishment, acquisition, expansion, management, conduct, operation or sale or other disposition of an investment of an investor of a Party or of a non-Party in its territory, imposing or enforcing a requirement or enforcing a commitment or undertaking to employ or train workers in its territory, provided that such employment or training does not require the transfer of a particular technology, production process, or other proprietary knowledge to a person in its territory.

(b) For greater certainty, nothing in paragraph 2 shall be construed to prevent a Party from conditioning the receipt or continued receipt of an advantage, in connection with an investment in its territory of an investor of a Party or of a non-Party, on compliance with a requirement to locate production, supply a service, employ or train workers, construct or expand particular facilities, or carry out research and development, in its territory.

(c) The provisions of subparagraph 1(f) do not apply:

(i) when a Party authorises use of an intellectual property right in accordance with Article 31 (26) of the TRIPS Agreement, or to measures requiring the disclosure of proprietary information that fall within the scope of, and are consistent with, Article 39 of the TRIPS Agreement; or

(ii) the requirement is imposed or the commitment or undertaking is enforced by a court, administrative tribunal, or competition authority to remedy a practice determined after judicial or administrative process to be anti-competitive under the Party’s competition laws. (27)

(d) Subparagraphs 1(a), 1(b), 1(c), 1(d), 2(a) and 2(b), do not apply to qualification requirements for goods or services with respect to export promotion and foreign aid programs.

(e) Subparagraphs 2(a) and 2(b) do not apply to requirements imposed by an importing Party relating to the content of goods necessary to qualify for preferential tariffs or preferential quotas.

4. For greater certainty, paragraphs 1 and 2 do not apply to any commitment, undertaking, or requirement other than those set out in those paragraphs.

5. This Article does not preclude enforcement of any commitment, undertaking, or requirement between private parties, where a Party did not impose or require the commitment, undertaking, or requirement.

(24) For greater certainty, Article 12.7 (Performance Requirements) shall not apply to subsidies or grants provided by a Party as specified in subparagraph 2(c) of Article 12.2 (Scope and Coverage).
(25)  For greater certainty, a condition for the receipt or continued receipt of an advantage referred to in paragraph 2 does not constitute a “requirement” or a “commitment or undertaking” for the purposes of paragraph 1.
(26)  The reference to “Article 31” includes footnote 7 to Article 31.
(27)  The Parties note that a patent does not necessarily confer market power.

Article 12.8. Senior Management and Boards of Directors

1. Neither Party may require that an enterprise of that Party that is a covered investment appoint to senior management positions natural persons of any particular nationality.

2. A Party may require that a majority of the board of directors, or any committee thereof, of an enterprise of that Party that is a covered investment, be of a particular nationality, or resident in the territory of the Party, provided that the requirement does not materially impair the ability of the investor of the other Party to exercise control over its investment.

Article 12.9. Non-Conforming Measures

1. Articles 12.4 (National Treatment), 12.5 (Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment), 12.7 (Performance Requirements) and 12.8 (Senior Management and Board of Directors) do not apply to:

(a) any existing non-conforming measure that is maintained by a Party as set out in its Schedule to Annex 7-A.

(b) the continuation or prompt renewal of any non-conforming measure referred to in subparagraph (a); or

(c) an amendment to any non-conforming measure referred to in subparagraph (a) to the extent that the amendment does not decrease the conformity of the measure, as it existed at the date of the entry into force of this Agreement, with Articles 12.4 (National Treatment), 12.5 (Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment), 12.7 (Performance Requirements) and 12.8 (Senior Management and Board of Directors).

2. Articles 12.4 (National Treatment), 12.5 (Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment), 12.7 (Performance Requirements) and 12.8 (Senior Management and Board of Directors) do not apply to any measure that a Party adopts or maintains with respect to sectors, subsectors, or activities, as set out in its Schedule to Annex 7-B.

3. Neither Party may, under any measure adopted after the date of entry into force of this Agreement and covered by its Schedule to Annex 7-B, require an investor of the other Party, by reason of its nationality, to sell or otherwise dispose of an investment existing at the time the measure becomes effective.

4. Articles 12.4 (National Treatment) and 12.5 (Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment) do not apply to any measure that is an exception to, or derogation from, a Party’s obligations under Chapter 15 (Intellectual Property) and the TRIPS Agreement, as specifically provided for in that Agreement.

5. Articles 12.4 (National Treatment), 12.5 (Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment), 12.7 (Performance Requirements) and 12.8 (Senior Management and Board of Directors) do not apply to government procurement.

Article 12.10. Special Formalities and Treatment of Information

1. Nothing in Article 12.4 (National Treatment) shall be construed to prevent a Party from adopting or maintaining a measure that prescribes special formalities in connection with covered investments, such as residency requirements for registration or a requirement that covered investments be legally constituted under its laws or regulations, provided that such formalities do not materially impair the protections afforded by the Party to investors of the other Party and covered investments pursuant to this Chapter.

2. Notwithstanding Article 12.4 (National Treatment) and Article 12.5 (Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment), a Party may require an investor of the other Party or its covered investment to provide information concerning that investment solely for informational or statistical purposes. The Party shall protect such business information that is confidential from any disclosure that would prejudice the competitive position of the investor or the covered investment. Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to prevent a Party from otherwise obtaining or disclosing information in connection with the equitable and good faith application of its law.

Article 12.11. Expropriation (28)

1. Neither Party shall nationalise, expropriate or subject to measures having effect equivalent to nationalisation or expropriation (hereinafter referred to as “expropriation”) a covered investment unless such a measure is taken on a non-discriminatory basis, for a public purpose, in accordance with due process of law and Article 12.3 (Minimum Standard of Treatment), and upon payment of compensation in accordance with this Article.

2. The expropriation shall be accompanied by the payment of prompt, adequate and effective compensation. Compensation shall be equivalent to the fair market value of the expropriated investment immediately before the expropriation or impending expropriation became public knowledge. Such compensation shall be effectively realisable, freely transferable in accordance with Article 12.12 (Transfers) and made without delay. The compensation shall include interest at an appropriate and reasonable rate for that currency, accrued from the date of expropriation until the date of payment.

3. Notwithstanding paragraphs 1 and 2, any measure of expropriation relating to land, which shall be as defined in the existing domestic legislation of the expropriating Party on the date of entry into force of this Agreement, shall be for a purpose and upon payment of compensation in accordance with the aforesaid legislation.

4. This Article does not apply to the issuance of compulsory licences granted in relation to intellectual property rights in accordance with the TRIPS Agreement, or to the revocation, limitation, or creation of intellectual property rights, to the extent that such issuance, revocation, limitation, or creation is consistent with Chapter 15 (Intellectual Property) and the TRIPS Agreement. (29)

(28) Article 12.11 (Expropriation) is to be interpreted in accordance with Annex 12-A (Expropriation). Paragraph 1 of Article 18.5 (Taxation) shall not apply to this Article and Annex 12-A (Expropriation).
(29) For greater certainty, the Parties recognise that, for the purposes of this Article, the term “revocation” of intellectual property rights includes the cancellation or nullification of such rights, and the term “limitation” of intellectual property rights includes exceptions to such rights.

Article 12.12. Transfers

1. Each Party shall permit all transfers relating to a covered investment to be made freely and without delay into and out of its territory. Such transfers include:

(a) the initial capital and additional amounts to maintain or increase a covered investment;

(b) profits, dividends, capital gains, and proceeds from the sale of all or any part of the covered investment or from the partial or complete liquidation of the covered investment;

(c) interest, royalty payments, management fees, and technical assistance and other fees;

(d) payments made under a contract entered into by the investor, or its covered investment, including payments made pursuant to a loan agreement;

(e) payments made pursuant to Article 12.6 (Compensation for Losses) and Article 12.11(Expropriation); and

(f) payments arising under Section 12-B (Investor-State Dispute Settlement).

2. Each Party shall permit such transfers to be made in a freely convertible currency at the market rate of exchange prevailing at the time of transfer.

3. Each Party shall permit returns in kind relating to a covered investment to be made as authorised or specified in an investment authorisation or other written agreement between the Party and a covered investment or an investor of the other Party.

4. Notwithstanding paragraphs 1, 2, and 3, a Party may delay or prevent a transfer through the equitable, non-discriminatory, and good faith application of its laws relating to:

(a) bankruptcy, insolvency, or the protection of the rights of creditors;

(b) issuing, trading, or dealing in securities, futures, options, or derivatives;

(c) financial reporting or record keeping of transfers when necessary to assist law enforcement or financial regulatory authorities;

(d) criminal or penal offences;

(e) ensuring compliance with orders or judgments in judicial or administrative proceedings; or

(f) social security, (30) public retirement or compulsory savings schemes.

5. Nothing in this Chapter shall affect the rights and obligations of the members of the International Monetary Fund under the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund, including the use of exchange actions which are consistent with such Articles of Agreement, provided that a Party shall not impose restrictions on any capital transactions inconsistently with its obligations under this Chapter regarding such transactions, except under Article 18.6 (Restrictions to Safeguard the Balance-of-Payments) of Chapter 18 (Institutional, General and Final Provisions) or at the request of the International Monetary Fund.

(30) For greater certainty, social security schemes include compulsory health insurance schemes.

Article 12.13. Subrogation

1. If a Party (or any agency, institution, statutory body or corporation designated by it) makes a payment to any of its investors under a guarantee, a contract of insurance or other form of indemnity it has granted in respect of a covered investment, against non-commercial risks, the other Party shall recognise the subrogation or transfer of any right or title in respect of such investment. The Party or its designated Agency is entitled by virtue of subrogation to exercise the rights and enforce the claims of that investor. The subrogated or transferred right or claim shall not be greater than the original right or claim of the investor.

2. Where a Party (or any agency, institution, statutory body or corporation designated by it) has made a payment to an investor of that Party and has taken over rights and claims of the investor, that investor shall not, unless authorised to act on behalf of the Party or the designated agency of the Party making the payment, pursue those rights and claims against the other Party.

Section 12-B. INVESTOR-STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT

Article 12.14. Scope

1. This Section shall apply to disputes between a Party and an investor of the other Party (31) concerning an alleged breach of Articles 12.3 (Minimum Standard of Treatment), 12.4 (National Treatment), 12.5 (Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment), 12.6 (Compensation for Losses), paragraph 1 of 12.7 (Performance Requirements), 12.8 (Senior Management and Boards of Directors), paragraph 3 of 12.9 (Non-Conforming Measures), 12.10 (Special Formalities and Treatment of Information), 12.11 (Expropriation), 12.12 (Transfers), and 12.13 (Subrogation), which causes loss or damage to the investor or its covered investment.

2. This Section shall not apply to any dispute concerning any measure adopted or maintained or any treatment accorded to investors or investments by a Party in respect of tobacco or tobacco-related products, (32) that is aimed at protecting or promoting human health.

(31) For greater certainty, a natural person possessing the nationality or citizenship of a Party shall not pursue a claim against that Party under this Agreement.
(32) For the purpose of this Chapter, “tobacco products” means products under HS Chapter 24 (Tobacco and Manufactured Tobacco Substitutes) and tobacco-related products falling outside HS Chapter 24 (Tobacco and Manufactured Tobacco Substitutes).

Article 12.15. Institution of Arbitral Proceedings

1. The disputing parties shall initially seek to resolve the dispute by consultations and negotiations.

2. Where the dispute cannot be resolved as provided for under paragraph 1 within 6 months from the date of a written request for consultations and negotiations, the claimant may submit to arbitration:

  • Chapter   1 OBJECTIVES AND GENERAL DEFINITIONS 1
  • Article   1.1 Establishment of a Free Trade Area 1
  • Article   1.2 Objectives 1
  • Article   1.3 Definitions of General Application 1
  • Chapter   2 NATIONAL TREATMENT AND MARKET ACCESS FOR GOODS 1
  • Section   2-A COMMON PROVISIONS 1
  • Article   2.1 Objective 1
  • Article   2.2 Scope 1
  • Article   2.3 National Treatment 1
  • Article   2.4 Customs Duty 1
  • Article   2.5 Classification of Goods 1
  • Section   2-B REDUCTION AND/OR ELIMINATION OF CUSTOMS DUTIES 1
  • Article   2.6 Reduction and/or Elimination of Customs Duties on Imports 1
  • Article   2.7 Elimination of Customs Duties and Taxes on Exports 1
  • Article   2.8 Standstill 1
  • Section   2-C NON-TARIFF MEASURES 1
  • Article   2.9 Import and Export Restrictions 1
  • Article   2.10 Fees and Formalities Connected with Importation and Exportation 1
  • Article   2.11 Import and Export Licensing Procedures 1
  • Article   2.12 Publication 1
  • Article   2.13 State Trading Enterprises 1
  • Section   2-D SPECIFIC EXCEPTIONS RELATED TO GOODS 1
  • Article   2.14 General Exceptions 1
  • Chapter   3 TRADE REMEDIES 1
  • Section   3-A ANTI-DUMPING AND COUNTERVAILING MEASURES 1
  • Article   3.1 General Provisions 1
  • Article   3.2 Transparency and Information Exchange 1
  • Article   3.3 Lesser Duty Rule 1
  • Article   3.4 Exclusion from Bilateral Dispute Settlement and Mediation Mechanism 1
  • Section   3-B COOPERATION IN PREVENTING CIRCUMVENTION 1
  • Article   3.5 Areas of Cooperation 1
  • Section   3-C GLOBAL SAFEGUARD MEASURES 1
  • Article   3.6 Application of Global Safeguard Measures 1
  • Section   3-C BILATERAL SAFEGUARD CLAUSE 2
  • Article   3.7 Definitions 2
  • Article   3.8 Application of Bilateral Safeguard Measure 2
  • Article   3.9 Conditions and Limitations 2
  • Article   3.10 Provisional Measures 2
  • Article   3.11 Compensation 2
  • Chapter   4 SANITARY AND PHYTOSANITARY MEASURES 2
  • Article   4.1 Objectives 2
  • Article   4.2 Scope 2
  • Article   4.3 Definitions 2
  • Article   4.4 Rights and Obligations 2
  • Article   4.5 General Principles 2
  • Article   4.6 Competent Authorities 2
  • Article   4.7 Trade Facilitation 2
  • Article   4.8 Transparency 2
  • Article   4.9 Emergency Measures 2
  • Article   4.10 Equivalence 2
  • Article   4.11 Import Requirements 2
  • Article   4.12 Coordinators 2
  • Article   4.13 Sub-committee on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures 2
  • Article   4.14 Technical Cooperation 2
  • Article   4.15 Final Provisions 2
  • Chapter   5 TECHNICAL BARRIERS TO TRADE 2
  • Article   5.1 Objectives 2
  • Article   5.2 Scope and Definitions 2
  • Article   5.3 Affirmation of the TBT Agreement 2
  • Article   5.4 Joint Cooperation 2
  • Article   5.5 International Standards 2
  • Article   5.6 Technical Regulations 2
  • Article   5.7 Conformity Assessment Procedures 3
  • Article   5.8 Transparency 3
  • Article   5.9 Market Surveillance 3
  • Article   5.10 Marking and Labelling 3
  • Article   5.11 Coordinators 3
  • Article   5.12 Final Provisions 3
  • Chapter   6 CUSTOMS AND TRADE FACILITATION 3
  • Article   6.1 Agreement on Trade Facilitation 3
  • Article   6.2 Advance Rulings 3
  • Article   6.3 Single Window 3
  • Article   6.4 Transparency 3
  • Article   6.5 Temporary Admission of Goods 3
  • Article   6.6 Technical Cooperation 3
  • Article   6.7 Customs Contact Points 3
  • Chapter   7 CROSS BORDER TRADE IN SERVICES 3
  • Article   7.1 Definitions 3
  • Article   7.2 Scope and Coverage 3
  • Article   7.3 National Treatment (4) 3
  • Article   7.4 Market Access 4
  • Article   7.5 Local Presence 4
  • Article   7.6 Non-Conforming Measures 4
  • Article   7.7 Domestic Regulation 4
  • Article   7.8 Recognition 4
  • Article   7.9 Transfers and Payments 4
  • Article   7.10 Denial of Benefits 4
  • Article   7.11 Review of Commitments 4
  • Chapter   8 TELECOMMUNICATIONS 4
  • Article   8.1 Definitions 4
  • Article   8.2 Scope and Coverage 4
  • Article   8.3 Access to and Use (6) of Public Telecommunications Services 4
  • Article   8.4 Competitive Safeguards on Major Suppliers 4
  • Article   8.5 Interconnection 4
  • Article   8.6 Interconnection with a Major Supplier 4
  • Article   8.7 Co-Location by Major Suppliers 4
  • Article   8.8 Access to Poles, Ducts, Conduits, and Rights-of-way Owned or Controlled by Major Suppliers 4
  • Article   8.9 Licensing Process 4
  • Article   8.10 Allocation and Use of Scarce Resources 4
  • Article   8.11 Universal Service 4
  • Article   8.12 Number Portability 4
  • Article   8.13 International Submarine Cable Systems 4
  • Article   8.14 Independent Regulators 5
  • Article   8.15 International Mobile Roaming 5
  • Article   8.16 Resolution of Telecommunications Disputes 5
  • Article   8.17 Transparency 5
  • Article   8.18 Flexibility In the Choice of Technology 5
  • Article   8.19 Relationship to other Chapters 5
  • Chapter   9 ELECTRONIC COMMERCE 5
  • Article   9.1 Definitions 5
  • Article   9.2 Scope and General Provisions 5
  • Article   9.3 Customs Duties 5
  • Article   9.4 Non-Discriminatory Treatment of Digital Products 5
  • Article   9.5 Domestic Electronic Transactions Framework 5
  • Article   9.6 Electronic Authentication and Electronic Signatures 5
  • Article   9.7 Personal Data Protection (9) 5
  • Article   9.8 Paperless Trading 5
  • Article   9.9 Cooperation 5
  • Chapter   10 FINANCIAL SERVICES 5
  • Article   10.1 Definitions 5
  • Article   10.2 Scope and Coverage 5
  • Article   10.3 National Treatment 6
  • Article   10.4 Market Access for Financial Institutions 6
  • Article   10.5 Cross-Border Trade In Financial Services 6
  • Article   10.6 Non-Conforming Measures 6
  • Article   10.7 New Financial Services (12) 6
  • Article   10.8 Regulatory Transparency 6
  • Article   10.9 Recognition of Prudential Measures 6
  • Article   10.10 Self-Regulatory Organisations 6
  • Article   10.11 Payment and Clearing Systems 6
  • Article   10.12 Transfers of Information and Processing of Information 6
  • Article   10.13 Treatment of Certain Information 6
  • Article   10.14 Exceptions 6
  • Article   10.15 Consultation 6
  • Article   10.16 Dispute Settlement 6
  • Article   10.17 Modification or Addition of Reservations 6
  • Chapter   11 TEMPORARY MOVEMENT OF NATURAL PERSONS 6
  • Article   11.1 Objectives and Scope 6
  • Article   11.2 Definitions 6
  • Article   11.3 Grant of Entry and Temporary Stay 6
  • Article   11.4 Provision of Information 6
  • Article   11.5 Expeditious Application Procedures 6
  • Article   11.6 Dispute Settlement 6
  • Chapter   12 Investment 6
  • Article   12.1 Definitions 6
  • Section   12-A INVESTMENT 7
  • Article   12.2 Scope and Coverage 7
  • Article   12.3 Minimum Standard of Treatment 7
  • Article   12.4 National Treatment 7
  • Article   12.5 Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment 7
  • Article   12.6 Compensation for Losses 7
  • Article   12.7 Performance Requirements (24) 7
  • Article   12.8 Senior Management and Boards of Directors 7
  • Article   12.9 Non-Conforming Measures 7
  • Article   12.10 Special Formalities and Treatment of Information 7
  • Article   12.11 Expropriation (28) 7
  • Article   12.12 Transfers 7
  • Article   12.13 Subrogation 7
  • Section   12-B INVESTOR-STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT 7
  • Article   12.14 Scope 7
  • Article   12.15 Institution of Arbitral Proceedings 7
  • Article   12.16 Constitution of Arbitral Tribunal 8
  • Article   12.17 Place of Arbitration 8
  • Article   12.18 Conduct of the Arbitration 8
  • Article   12.19 Interim Measures of Protection and Diplomatic Protection 8
  • Article   12.20 Award 8
  • Article   12.21 Consolidation 8
  • Section   12-C FINAL PROVISIONS 8
  • Article   12.22 Denial of Benefits 8
  • Article   12.23 Publication of International Agreements 8
  • Article   12.24 General Exceptions (36)  8
  • Article   12.25 Savings Clause 8
  • Article   12.26 Term of Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement 8
  • Annex 12-A  EXPROPRIATION 8
  • Chapter   13 GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT 8
  • Article   13.1 Definitions 8
  • Article   13.2 Scope and Coverage 8
  • Article   13.3 Security and General Exceptions 9
  • Article   13.4 General Principles 9
  • Article   13.5 Industry Development 9
  • Article   13.6 Information on the Procurement System 9
  • Article   13.7 Notices 9
  • Article   13.8 Conditions for Participation 9
  • Article   13.9 Qualification of Suppliers 9
  • Article   13.10 Technical Specifications and Tender Documentation 10
  • Article   13.11 Time Periods 10
  • Article   13.12 Negotiations 10
  • Article   13.13 Limited Tendering 10
  • Article   13.14 Electronic Auctions 10
  • Article   13.15 Treatment of Tenders and Awarding of Contracts 10
  • Article   13.16 Transparency of Procurement Information 10
  • Article   13.17 Disclosure of Information 10
  • Article   13.18 Domestic Review Procedures 10
  • Article   13.19 Modifications and Rectifications to Coverage 10
  • Chapter   14 COMPETITION AND RELATED MATTERS 11
  • Article   14.1 Principles 11
  • Article   14.2 Implementation 11
  • Article   14.3 Cooperation and Coordination In Law Enforcement 11
  • Article   14.4 Confidentiality 11
  • Article   14.5 Consultation 11
  • Article   14.6 Dispute Settlement 11
  • Chapter   15 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 11
  • Section   15-A PRINCIPLES 11
  • Article   15.1 Scope and Definitions 11
  • Article   15.2 Exhaustion 11
  • Section   15-B STANDARDS CONCERNING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS 11
  • Subsection   15-B-1 COPYRIGHT AND RELATED RIGHTS 11
  • Article   15.3 Protection Granted 11
  • Article   15.4 Term of Protection 11
  • Article   15.5 Presumptions Relating to Copyright and Related Rights 11
  • Article   15.6 Cooperation on Collective Management of Rights 11
  • Article   15.7 Protection of Technological Measures 11
  • Article   15.8 Protection of Rights Management Information 11
  • Subsection   15-B-2 TRADEMARKS 11
  • Article   15.9 International Agreements 11
  • Article   15.10 Registration Procedure 11
  • Article   15.11 Well-Known Trademarks 11
  • Article   15.12 Exceptions to the Rights Conferred by a Trademark 11
  • Subsection   15-B-3 GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS (46) 11
  • Article   15.13 Scope 11
  • Article   15.14 System of Protection of Geographical Indications 11
  • Subsection   15-B-4 DESIGNS 11
  • Article   15.15 Requirements for Protection of Registered Designs 11
  • Article   15.16 Rights Conferred by Registration 11
  • Article   15.17 Term of Protection 11
  • Article   15.18 Exceptions 11
  • Subsection   15-B-5 PATENTS 11
  • Article   15.19 International Agreements 11
  • Article   15.20 Patents and Public Health 11
  • Subsection   15-B-6 PROTECTION OF TEST DATA 11
  • Article   15.21 Protection of Test Data Submitted to Obtain an Administrative Marketing Approval to Put an Agricultural Chemical Product on the Market 11
  • Subsection   15-B-7 PLANT VARIETIES 11
  • Article   15.22 International Agreements 11
  • Section   15-C ENFORCEMENT 11
  • Article   15.23 Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights 11
  • Section   15-D COOPERATION 11
  • Article   15.24 COOPERATION 11
  • Chapter   16 TRANSPARENCY 11
  • Article   16.1 Definitions 11
  • Article   16.2 Publication 11
  • Article   16.3 Notification and Provision of Information 12
  • Article   16.4 Administrative Proceedings 12
  • Article   16.5 Review of Administrative Actions 12
  • Article   16.6 Specific Rules 12
  • Chapter   17 DISPUTE SETTLEMENT 12
  • Article   17.1 Objective 12
  • Article   17.2 Scope 12
  • Article   17.3 Choice of Forum 12
  • Article   17.4 Consultations 12
  • Article   17.5 Initiation of Arbitration Procedure 12
  • Article   17.6 Terms of Reference 12
  • Article   17.7 Composition and Establishment of the Arbitration Panel 12
  • Article   17.8 Proceedings of the Arbitration Panel 12
  • Article   17.9 Arbitration Panel Report 12
  • Article   17.10 Implementation of the Arbitration Panel Report 12
  • Article   17.11 Compensation and Suspension of Concessions or other Obligations 12
  • Article   17.12 Review of Any Measure Taken to Comply after the Suspension of Concessions or other Obligations 12
  • Article   17.13 Suspension and Termination of Arbitration Procedures 12
  • Article   17.14 Mutually Agreed Solution 12
  • Article   17.15 Rules of Procedure 12
  • Article   17.16 Rules of Interpretation 12
  • Article   17.17 Expenses 12
  • Chapter   18 INSTITUTIONAL, GENERAL AND FINAL PROVISIONS 12
  • Article   18.1 Joint Committee 12
  • Article   18.2 Committees and Working Groups 12
  • Article   18.3 Evolving WTO Law 12
  • Article   18.4 Decision-making 12
  • Article   18.5 Taxation 13
  • Article   18.6 Restrictions to Safeguard the Balance-of-Payments 13
  • Article   18.7 General Exceptions 13
  • Article   18.8 Security Exceptions 13
  • Article   18.9 Disclosure of Information 13
  • Article   18.10 Amendments 13
  • Article   18.11 Entry Into Force 13
  • Article   18.12 Duration 13
  • Article   18.13 Annexes, Appendices, Joint Declarations and Protocols 13
  • Article   18.14 Relations with other Agreements 13
  • Article   18.15 Territorial Application 13
  • Article   18.16 Contact Points 13
  • Article   18.17 Authentic Texts 13