BANKING & PROJECT FINANCE IRAN SANCTIONS
The carrot and
the stick
Snapback provisions in this year’s nuclear deal are
not subject to grandfathering. That creates real risks
for foreign investors
he nuclear deal struck between Iran
and global powers in July this year
has caught the attention of many
businesses looking to enter the Middle
East’s second largest economy, once it is
legal to do so. However, they must carefully
weigh the risk of sanctions potentially
destroying their investments. It’s possible
that the sanctions could snapback once
lifted; and the agreement contains no
grandfathering clause.
Many US and EU sanctions that restrict
business in Iran’s financial and energy
sectors will be lifted when the International
Atomic Energy Agency issues a report
confirming that Iran has met its nuclear
commitments under the deal.
This is likely
to take place in the next few months, on
what is to be known as implementation
day.
T
“
This is because the deal does not protect
activities if sanctions prohibiting them are
reinstated. That’s the case even if those
activities are conducted pursuant to
contracts signed during a period when
sanctions had been lifted.
On this point there are, however, views
to the contrary. There is significant support
in published literature for the idea that
contracts under the nuclear deal are
grandfathered.
According
to
this
perspective it would be permitted, for
example, for a US or European business to
enter into a long-term energy contract with
the Iranian government once it is legal to
do so, and continue to perform obligations
under the contract even if sanctions
snapback into place at a later date.
This view is, however, quite wrong.
Performance under such contracts would
be a criminal offence in
the US and EU if the
contract
would
be
prohibited by sanctions
which are reinstated.
The
White House has stated
this point unequivocally
in its guidance on the
nuclear deal: ‘there is no
grandfathering clause…if
snapback does occur, there
are no exemptions from our sanctions for longterm contracts”. In contrast to the position
in the US, there is a notable lack of
European guidance on the nuclear deal.
However, White House guidance arguably
offers a clear view for Europeans also:
participant states should have the same
understanding of provisions which apply
equally to all participants.
The ambiguity arises as a result of
paragraph 37 of the nuclear deal, which
provides that:
‘[if sanctions are re-imposed, relevant
prohibitions] would not apply with
retroactive effect to contracts signed
between any party and Iran or Iranian
individuals and entities prior to the date
of application [of the re-imposed
prohibitions]’
Grandfathering under
sanctions law has never
extended to an unknown
and indeterminate range
of contracts
However, the nuclear agreement contains
a mechanism that permits sanctions to be
reinstated during the course of the next 10
years if Iran engages in behaviour that
another participant to the deal believes
amounts to ‘significant non-performance’
of its obligations. This can occur only after
the prescribed dispute resolution procedure
has been followed.
The concept of snapback, as it has come
to be known, therefore looks like a weighty
stick over Iran to accompany the carrot of
western investment.
At its most basic level,
the threat behind snapback is: adhere to the
terms of the deal, or once again be starved
of international capital.
Businesses may, however, not wish to
invest in the droves that have been
anticipated. Some may consider it too risky.
1 IFLR/December/January 2016
Similar language is repeated in the
Security Council resolution adopting the
nuclear deal. It is possible that the
draftspeople, not necessarily having
legislative drafting expertise, may not have
fully understood how the particular words
which were used might be interpreted.
Many people look at this wording and
understand it to mean that there is
grandfathering.
However, all this paragraph does is make
clear a basic rule of law point: that nobody
can be punished for an act which was legal
at the time it was carried out.
Indeed,
saying it carries little interpretative benefit
and has led to confusion.
Grandfathering of contracts carries this
basic, rule of law concept much further. It
protects activities entered into legally –
even though they would, at a later date, be
illegal – for any time after it becomes illegal
to conduct such activities. There are
examples of contracts being grandfathered
into new sanctions rules.
Most notably, in
2010 when the US exempted the North Sea
Rhum oil field project, owned by BP and
the National Iranian Oil Company, from
new US sanctions on Iran. However, such
cases are an aberration from normal
practice and are invariably a response to
very
specific
policy
concerns.
Grandfathering under sanctions law has
never extended to an unknown and
indeterminate range of contracts in relation
to a great number of possible areas of
commerce. This remains the case following
the Iran nuclear deal.
For businesses, therefore, investments
could be wasted, possibly resulting in total
loss.
This is particularly a concern for largescale, difficult-to-move and expensive
investments that are now being
contemplated by energy companies. US
and EU sanctions implemented in the past,
typically by a quick process that leaves little
time to react, have led to investment losses
in countries such as Sudan, Myanmar,
Syria, Iraq and also Iran. There may be a
grace period, as has been allowed in certain
instances whereby US and EU sanctions
authorities permit the wind-down of
investments over time rather than
immediately criminalise all activities
pursuant to contracts in newly-sanctioned
countries.
Nevertheless, such concessions
involve investment loss.
The snapback process
Snapback is far from a quick or snappy
process. Two months are needed to reinstate
sanctions, and the process could take even
longer if extensions are used by the various
committees and advisory boards that are
www.iflr.com
. IRAN SANCTIONS
obligations, the complainant may stop
complying with its commitments under the
deal, refer the matter to the Security
Council, or both.
The Security Council may then vote on a
resolution, ostensibly to be conducted in
accordance with normal Security Council
voting procedures. Critically, the resolution
is not to restore sanctions, but instead ‘to
continue the sanctions lifting’. So the veto
right is flipped around from its usual
construction. The complainant, even acting
alone, has the power to veto any attempt to
maintain sanctions.
Effectively, no
participant state can block the
reinstatement of sanctions at the initiative
of another participant state, which disrupts
the usual way of doing things in the UN
Security Council. There is no precedent for
a Security Council disenfranchising future
Security Councils who may wish to veto a
proposal on the basis of the intentions of a
single Security Council member.
Finally, if the Security Council resolution
is not adopted within 30 days of the
complaint’s referral, then provisions of the
old Security Council resolutions would be
reinstated. Confusingly, this is subject to
the caveat of ‘unless the Security Council
decides otherwise’.
The deal does not set
out in any detail what this exception might
mean. However its wording suggests that,
as a practical matter, reinstating sanctions
could be more complex than the short,
albeit dense, paragraph on dispute
resolution might suggest.
Preparing for the worst
The main comfort for businesses is that
snapback is very unlikely to be employed. It
would require Iran to do something so serious
IFLR
The practical and open approach of IFLR is its
great strength and its characteristic contribution
to international financial law.
“
James Leavy, corporate counsel, Weil Gotshal
www.iflr.com
as to suggest it wished to be free of the deal in
any case.
An example of such a violation
would be an increase of the country’s
uranium stockpile beyond agreed limitations,
which would trigger concerns that it is only
doing so to develop a nuclear weapon.
If sanctions are snapped back, Iran would
immediately walk away from the deal.
Indeed, it explicitly makes clear that its
government may do so. Iran would, at this
point, have had the benefit of many billions
“
Effectively, no participant state can block
the reinstatement of sanctions at the
initiative of another participant state
“
responsible for opining in response to a
complaint.
The snapback process is as follows.
A participant to the deal complains to the
UN Security Council that another
participant has not performed its
commitments under the deal. There are no
prescribed grounds for snapback.
This
permits a large amount of subjectivity on the
part of a complainant as to whether an act
constitutes significant, non-performance of
obligations under the deal. The process is
almost certainly intended to address the
possibility of the US complaining about Iran,
but could also include the UK, Germany,
France, or Iran as complainants against any
other participant state.
A number of stages follow in which a
joint commission and advisory board
provide opinions on the matter. The joint
commission, composed of representatives
of each participant state to the deal, would
look at the matter and within 15 days
would issue its opinion on how it should be
resolved.
The time period may be extended
by consensus of the joint commission. If
the complainant feels that the issue has not
been resolved, it can take the matter to the
foreign ministers of the participant states.
The ministers have 15 days to resolve the
complaint, but can agree to extend the
timeframe by consensus. At the request of
the complainant or the complained-about
state, the matter is then delivered to an
advisory board composed of one member
appointed by the US, one by Iran and a
third ‘independent’ member.
They issue a
non-binding opinion, which must be
delivered within 15 days. If the matter is
not resolved, the joint commission has five
days to consider the board’s opinion. This
takes the process to at least 35 days, and up
to 50 days with all of the extensions.
There is no guarantee that the various
consultations and opinions in these stages
would resolve the complaint.
If the
complainant holds to its view that Iran has
engaged in actions that constitute
‘significant non-performance’ of its
of dollars of assets being unfrozen on
implementation day (estimates range from
$50 billion to $150 billion), and would no
longer be restricted under the deal in
relation to nuclear activities. Further,
sanctions do not work very well unless they
comprise co-ordinated efforts between
major powers. Imposing new sanctions
alone is likely to have very little coercive
effect over a target, particularly one that is
a major regional economy such as Iran.
Businesses should consider how to deal
with sanctions snapping back in contracts
signed with Iranians after implementation
day to ensure that, among other things,
winding down or exiting Iranian business
does not breach contractual arrangements.
On this issue, the US Office of Foreign
Assets Control has advised US businesses
that contract with Iranians include
provisions to terminate in full in the event
that sanctions are snapped back.
European
businesses may also wish to consider doing
this to enhance their contractual certainty.
Arguably, however, agreeing such terms
could be unrealistic. Iranian counterparties
may be unwilling to accept the re-imposition
of sanctions as a specific termination event in
a contract, as they may have little control
over the snapback decision. Iranians may
therefore also wish to ensure that snapback
does not fall within boilerplate force majeure
provisions in contracts.
As such, US and
European businesses may wish to consider, in
practical terms and with detailed strategies,
how they would wind-down or exit any
Iranian business in the worst-case scenario,
given that the nuclear deal offers no
grandfathering.
By Shearman & Sterling partner Barney
Reynolds in London, of counsel Danforth
Newcomb in New York, and associate James
Campbell in London
Read online at iflr.com/snapback
IFLR/December/January 2016 2
.