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Global Arbitration Recognition

Global Arbitration Recognition

Industry News: Global Arbitration Recognition & What It Means for Corporate Clients (TRW Perspective)

The global arbitration community is shaped by practitioners who consistently deliver rigorous advocacy, sound judgment, and pragmatic strategy across complex cross-border disputes. Each year, independent research publications release refreshed listings of standout arbitration lawyers worldwide, based on peer and client nominations and case experience. One such publication—the Lexology Index (formerly Who’s Who Legal)—has again highlighted leading names in international arbitration for its 2025 cycle, reaffirming the market’s attention on excellence, consistency, and innovation in dispute resolution.

This recognition cycle is a useful moment for general counsel, boards, and investors to reflect on what truly differentiates effective arbitration counsel, how to evaluate teams for high-stakes mandates, and how to future-proof dispute clauses and case strategies across key hubs like London and Dubai—two cities where Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm maintains an active presence alongside our headquarters in Dhaka.

If you’re scoping or refreshing dispute strategies, you can explore TRW’s broader dispute resolution insights and capabilities here: Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm.


Why Rankings Matter—And How Sophisticated Clients Read Them

Independent listings aggregate peer and client nominations, but seasoned in-house teams go a layer deeper. They ask:

  • Consistency: Has the practitioner delivered across multiple seats, rules, and industries over many years?
  • Complexity management: Can counsel tame multi-party/multi-contract proceedings, parallel court actions, emergency and interim measures, or enforcement against sovereign and SOE assets?
  • Commerciality: Will the team give board-grade advice on settlement windows, budget discipline, and risk-weighted outcomes (not just legal possibilities)?
  • Cross-hub coordination: Can the firm execute seamlessly across London (supervisory courts, funding, security for costs) and Dubai (DIFC/ADGM common-law courts, GCC enforcement pathways), while controlling costs via Dhaka-based engines for drafting, research, and evidence management?

Top recognitions tend to follow practitioners who check all of the above, and clients should treat these listings as screening tools, not endpoints.


What “Best-in-Class” Arbitration Looks Like in 2025

1) Seat-Savvy Strategy (London & Dubai)

  • London seat advantages include arbitration-supportive courts, sophisticated jurisprudence on funding and disclosure, and predictable supervisory oversight for UNCITRAL/LCIA matters.
  • DIFC/ADGM seats (Dubai) offer common-law courts inside the UAE, pragmatic recognition/enforcement, and a modern stance on funding and interim relief—ideal for GCC-bound enforcement campaigns.

TRW approach: We design seats around asset maps, interim measures, and enforcement theaters, not just boilerplate. That means deciding early whether to prefer ICSID (self-contained, treaty disputes) or a New York Convention route with a strategic seat (London/DIFC/ADGM).

2) Early Case Architecture

  • Emergency relief readiness (bond calls, asset-freeze, evidence preservation) with pre-baked affidavits and data trails.
  • PO1 (first procedural order) playbook that sets timetables, virtual hearings, translation protocols, confidentiality, data security, and discovery disciplines.
  • Consolidation/joinder foresight for construction, energy, and technology ecosystems that multiply parties and contracts.

3) Quantum Discipline

  • Damage theories aligned to treaty standards (investment) or contractual norms (commercial)—DCF, comparables, or cost-based models—stress-tested for sensitivity and contemporaneous business records.
  • Expert retention structured through counsel to preserve privilege and confidentiality.

4) Cost & Funding Pragmatics

  • ATE insurance, escrows, or parent guarantees ready to blunt security-for-costs applications.
  • Funding agreements aligned with seat-specific disclosure expectations and tribunal directions—without ceding undue control.

5) Enforcement-First Thinking

  • Sovereign and SOE immunity analysis, asset discovery strategy, targeted jurisdictions, and practical timelines—because an award’s value is its enforceability, not just its legal elegance.

Lessons for Foreign Companies from This Year’s Recognition Cycle

  1. Choose teams, not just names. The best outcomes come from integrated teams—partners, counsel, associates, quantum and industry experts—who can field matters in multiple time zones and languages.
  2. Local nuance + global execution. A Dhaka-anchored engine paired with London and Dubai execution often outperforms single-office boutiques on value, speed, and enforceability planning.
  3. Outcome orientation over process. Award writing and case theory are critical, but equally important are settlement inflection points, governance updates, and communications your board can act on.
  4. Future-proof your clauses. Add multi-contract compatibility, joinder/consolidation, emergency arbitrator, expedited tracks, and clear seat/language. Draft with interim relief and enforcement in mind from day one.

For a deeper dive into clause design and cross-border setup, visit: Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm.


How TRW Benchmarks Itself Against “Excellence” Criteria

  • Cross-border footprint: Dhaka (HQ) for cost-efficient drafting and evidence work; London for seat strategy, supervisory court interface, and funder relations; Dubai for GCC enforcement mapping and DIFC/ADGM proceedings.
  • Sector fluency: Construction and infrastructure, energy and renewables, technology/telecom, banking and finance, with playbooks for multi-party and multi-contract disputes.
  • Security for costs readiness: ATE/escrows/guarantees and transparent budgeting to keep cases moving.
  • Confidentiality and data governance: Article-level confidentiality frameworks, redaction protocols, and secure data rooms built to withstand tribunal scrutiny.
  • Enforcement pipeline: From award to assets, with early immunity analysis and targeted jurisdictional routes.

GC Toolkit: 12 Questions to Vet Your Arbitration Counsel

  1. Seat strategy: Which seat (and why) for this dispute? How does seat choice align with our enforcement map?
  2. Rules selection: ICSID vs. UNCITRAL vs. LCIA/ICC—what trade-offs do you foresee for timing, disclosure, and cost?
  3. Emergency/interim plan: What relief could we secure in the first 30 days? Court vs. tribunal?
  4. PO1 blueprint: What’s your standard proposal for timetable, confidentiality, and virtual hearings?
  5. Funding and security: If security for costs is sought, what’s our mitigation plan?
  6. Quantum theory: What damages model is best and why? What documents will the expert need in month one?
  7. Multi-party orchestration: How will you prepare for joinder/consolidation or parallel claims?
  8. Privilege protection: How will you structure expert and funder relationships to preserve privilege?
  9. Settlement windows: Where are the likely inflection points? What does a board-level offer strategy look like?
  10. Translation & evidence: Which languages, who authenticates, and how do we keep costs down?
  11. Scrutiny and publication: Any reason to opt in/out of award scrutiny or request anonymised publication?
  12. Enforcement drill: If we win, where do we go first? What’s the 90-day plan post-award?

A Note on Individual Recognitions and the Market

High-profile, repeat recognition of leading arbitration practitioners underscores a few truths about the market:

  • Arbitration is global and specialised. The best counsel work across rules and seats, adapt to new case-management approaches (e.g., expedited tracks), and keep pace with evolving disclosure and funding norms.
  • Reputation follows delivery. Peer and client endorsements typically track counsel who handle high-value, high-complexity disputes effectively, not just those who publish frequently.
  • Depth matters. Even the most decorated lead counsel requires an operationally tight team—case managers, junior counsel, experts, and translators who keep the momentum and the budget in check.

At TRW, we applaud genuine excellence in our field. At the same time, we remind clients that the most reliable predictor of success is the fit between your dispute’s specific demands and a counsel team’s methodical, sector-aware, enforcement-literate approach.


Ready to Future-Proof Your Dispute Strategy?

Whether you’re revisiting dispute clauses for a new regional roll-out, or you’re on the cusp of filing a claim that crosses Bangladesh–UK–UAE corridors, our arbitration team can help you:

  • Design seat and rules for speed, cost control, and enforceability.
  • Craft emergency and interim pathways that protect your position in the first 30–60 days.
  • Execute multi-party/multi-contract strategies without losing tempo.
  • Build a credible quantum story that aligns finance and legal from day one.
  • Navigate funding and security for costs without ceding control.
  • Move from award to assets with a realistic, jurisdiction-graded enforcement plan.

Explore more and contact us here: Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm.


TRW Law Firm — Contact

Phone (Bangladesh): +8801708000660 · +8801847220062 · +8801708080817
Email: info@trfirm.com · info@trwbd.com · info@tahmidur.com

Global Offices:

  • Dhaka: House 410, Road 29, Mohakhali DOHS
  • Dubai: Rolex Building, L-12 Sheikh Zayed Road
  • London (UK): 330 High Holborn, London WC1V 7QH, United Kingdom

This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. For matter-specific guidance, please contact TRW’s arbitration partners.

Taxation of International Arbitration Awards

Taxation of International Arbitration Awards

Taxation of International Arbitration Awards: A Complete TRW Law Firm Guide for Foreign Companies Operating Through Bangladesh, Dubai, and London

Audience: Foreign investors, EPC/O&M contractors, energy and infrastructure players, telecoms and data operators, trading houses, funds, and multinationals with exposure to Bangladesh and regional hubs in Dubai and London.

Why this guide: Parties spend months (and millions) to win an arbitration—only to see value eroded by unexpected tax on the award, interest, or costs. Tax can invert economics, trigger double taxation, derail repatriation, and complicate enforcement. This guide distils how to structure, argue, and collect arbitration awards net of unnecessary tax drag, with practical machinery for the Bangladesh ⇄ Dubai ⇄ London corridor.

Want a turn-key “award-to-cash” plan or a tax-hardened arbitration clause pack? TRW’s cross-border arbitration and tax team in Dhaka, Dubai, and London can help. Start here: Tahmidur Rahman | TRW Law Firm.


1) Why Tax Is Not a Footnote to Damages—It Is the Value

Arbitration seeks full reparation—to put the claimant in the position it would have been in absent the breach. But full compensation collapses if:

  • Damages were computed net-of-tax (e.g., using net profit) and the award itself is then taxed again.
  • Withholding tax applies on interest or principal when the award crosses borders.
  • A seat or enforcement jurisdiction treats the award as income, while the home country treats it as capital gain (or vice versa), creating mismatched credits.
  • Settlement mechanics shift allocation among principal, interest, costs, accidentally moving amounts into less favourable tax buckets.

Decisions you make before filing, and positions you take in submissions, profoundly influence the tax character of the eventual award.


2) The Moving Parts: What, Exactly, Gets Taxed?

2.1 The Award Components

  1. Principal damages
  • May be characterised as lost profits (often “income-like”), diminution in value (often “capital”), reliance expenditures, or restitution.
  • Characterisation drives rate, timing, and availability of credits.
  1. Interest
  • Pre-award interest compensates for time value up to the award date.
  • Post-award interest runs until payment.
  • Many jurisdictions tax interest differently from principal; some impose withholding when cross-border.
  1. Costs and legal fees
  • A costs award may be taxable to the recipient or deductible to the payer—but VAT/GST overlay matters.
  • If your law firm bills include VAT/GST, plan how that tax is recovered or offset.
  1. Currency gains
  • If the award is in a foreign currency, FX movement between breach, award, and collection can trigger gains/losses with their own tax profiles.

2.2 The Actors and Places That Matter

  • Seat of arbitration (e.g., London, DIFC/ADGM, Singapore) influences procedural aspects but typically not substantive tax.
  • Place of enforcement controls withholding and collection logistics.
  • Residence of payee/payor (claimant/respondent) determines domestic tax and treaty access.
  • Permanent establishment (PE) risk: prosecution or performance of the contract may have created (or be alleged to have created) a PE in the respondent’s jurisdiction, dragging the award into local tax.

3) Three Core Tax Questions Before You Plead Quantum

**Q1: What is the optimal *character* of my claim?**
Design the claim to support the most defensible, efficient tax outcome consistent with true loss—e.g., capital diminution vs. recurring income, or a blend with clear allocation.

**Q2: Where does *withholding* lurk?**
Cross-border payments of interest, fees, or even damages can face statutory withholding. Map domestic law and treaty relief—and write gross-up or net-of-tax mechanics into pleadings and draft awards.

**Q3: How will *double taxation* be avoided?**
Identify the applicable double tax agreement (DTA) early; align your damages theory and award drafting with the route to treaty relief, foreign tax credits, or exemptions.


4) Commercial vs. Investment Arbitration: Different Tax Terrain

  • Commercial arbitration (LCIA, DIAC, ICC, SIAC): tribunals are generally unlikely to micro-engineer tax results, but they can:
  • Allocate amounts (principal vs. interest vs. costs).
  • Recognise net-of-tax constructs where contractually agreed.
  • Acknowledge gross-up obligations for withholding if the contract so provides.
  • Investment arbitration (ICSID/UNCITRAL): tribunals are often reluctant to award gross-ups simply to counter generic tax exposure, but…
  • They may order the State not to tax the award, or
  • Frame the award as net of host-state tax, or
  • Respect treaty undertakings not to tax compensation.
    The outcomes hinge on treaty text, the record, and how you plead tax.

TRW practice: We tailor the quantum model and prayer for relief to the arbitration track. For commercial cases, contract-built tax clauses are king. For investment cases, we build a record that justifies either a net-of-host-tax award or clear State undertakings around taxation.


5) Bangladesh, Dubai, London: Regional Tax Realities You Must Build Around

5.1 Bangladesh (Dhaka)

  • Award receivables: Consider how the award will be recognised and remitted. Cross-border inflows can engage Bangladesh Bank approvals, foreign exchange regulations, and withholding on certain categories (especially interest).
  • Domestic characterisation: Depending on accounting and statutory treatment, damages for lost profits can be taxed as business income, while capital diminution may fall under capital gains rules.
  • VAT angle: Legal services attract VAT; costs awards can carry VAT/GST implications for recovery by the prevailing party.
  • Double tax treaties: Bangladesh’s DTAs can materially reduce withholding; the award and supporting documents should facilitate treaty claims.

5.2 United Arab Emirates (Dubai; onshore, DIFC, ADGM)

  • Corporate tax recentness: UAE’s corporate tax regime is newer compared to London/Dhaka. Classification of interest, damages, and gains should be reviewed against onshore federal rules and, where relevant, free zone regimes (DIFC/ADGM) and any qualifying income concepts.
  • Withholding: Historically limited in the UAE, but treaty networks and domestic law can still shape cross-border payments (particularly interest).
  • Enforcement: Dubai courts (onshore and free zones) are arbitration-supportive; plan tax-efficient payment flows once assets or receivables in the UAE are targeted.

5.3 United Kingdom (London)

  • Character matters: UK practice scrutinises whether an award is income (lost profits) or capital (loss in value of an asset/rights), with consequences for rates, loss offsets, and residence-based taxation.
  • Interest and withholding: UK domestic rules on withholding for cross-border interest can engage; structure the award and settlement deeds accordingly.
  • Costs awards: Potential UK tax treatment varies; align VAT position, input recovery, and timing.
  • Court support: Strong interim relief tools facilitate security and collections, but plan the tax on proceeds.

TRW point: These three hubs create a triangulation of tax considerations. We plan where the money lands, what legal label it bears, and how it exits to the right group entity with minimal tax friction.


6) Drafting the Contract Before the Dispute: Clauses That Save Millions

6.1 Net-of-Tax / Gross-Up Spine (Commercial Deals)

Net-of-Tax Outcome:

“All amounts payable pursuant to any judgment, award, or settlement shall be net of Taxes such that the recipient receives the amount it would have received absent such Taxes.”

Withholding & Gross-Up:

“If any deduction or withholding is required by applicable law from a payment, the payer shall gross up the payment so that the recipient receives the amount it would have received if no deduction or withholding had been required, except to the extent such withholding arises from the recipient’s specific tax status.”

Allocation Rule:

“Payments are applied first to principal damages, second to costs, and third to interest, unless the recipient instructs otherwise in writing.”

Tax Cooperation:

“Each party shall reasonably cooperate to obtain treaty relief, credits, or refunds, including provision of residency certificates, forms, and information.”

Survival & Priority:

“These tax provisions survive termination and prevail over conflicting terms, including boilerplate on payment mechanics.”

6.2 Investment Treaty Context

  • Seek State undertakings not to tax the award, or to refund any such tax.
  • Frame relief as net of host-state tax or request a declaration that host-state taxation of the award would breach treaty protections (expropriation, fair and equitable treatment) if used to confiscate compensation.

6.3 Interest Design

  • Define pre-award and post-award interest rates, compounding, and day count, mindful of withholding risk where paid cross-border.
  • Consider contractual characterisation of interest as compensatory (not penalty) to align with tax treatment.

7) Pleading Strategy: How to Present Tax in Your Memorials

  1. Pick a tax-defensible damages frame (e.g., capital diminution vs. profit replacement) and stick to it.
  2. Show your work: provide a tax module in the quantum model explaining assumed tax impacts, treaty access, and gross-up calculus if warranted.
  3. Evidence for treaty relief: include residency certificates, beneficial ownership proof, corporate substance (particularly in Dubai/London hubs), and any PE analysis showing no local taxable presence.
  4. Remedies paragraphs: ask the tribunal to (a) allocate principal/interest/costs; (b) recognise a net-of-withholding outcome consistent with the contract; (c) direct cooperation to perfect treaty claims.
  5. Don’t overreach: tribunals resist global “make-whole” tax gross-ups without a clear legal/contractual basis. Target specific, evidenced tax exposures.

8) Settlement and Consent Awards: Lock the Tax Before You Sign

  • Heads of Terms should allocate between principal, interest, and costs in a way that optimises tax for both sides (win-win is possible).
  • Tax representations: status of residency, absence of PE, beneficial ownership.
  • Withholding mechanics: treaty process, forms, timelines, escrow for disputed amounts, and refund undertakings upon receipt of clearance.
  • Consent award (if desired): can embed the allocation so that enforcement courts respect the characterisation, lowering tax ambiguity.

9) Collection Pathways: Getting Paid Without Losing Value

  1. Map the money route: Respondent’s payor entity, bank accounts, and jurisdictions where cash will originate.
  2. Pick the receiving entity: A treaty-resident entity with substance and no PE in the payor state; align with group tax and repatriation plans.
  3. Control the narrative in the award: Clear allocation simplifies bank compliance and tax in the enforcement jurisdiction.
  4. Regulatory windows (Bangladesh): Prepare Bangladesh Bank filings for inbound/outbound flows; align drawdown with FX rules and documentary requirements.
  5. Use interim relief to secure assets where necessary (London courts; DIFC/ADGM support), but anticipate tax on realised proceeds (e.g., interest on escrow).

10) Sector-Specific Tax Pitfalls (and Fixes)

Energy & Resources (LNG, offtake, royalties)

  • Pitfall: Price-related damages framed as lost profit become income-like.
  • Fix: Where defensible, anchor on asset value impairment, with a transparent bridge from price/volume shocks to valuation loss.

Telecom/Data/Tech (IRU, cloud, SaaS)

  • Pitfall: SLA credits are treated as income offsets; interest on late credits suffers withholding.
  • Fix: Structure dispute resolution to true-up service value, label amounts compensatory; pick a receiving entity with treaty relief for interest.

EPC/Construction (with O&M tails)

  • Pitfall: Delay LDs and rework costs blur into revenue.
  • Fix: Separate restitutive sums (cost to cure) from profits; obtain expert accounting to support classification.

11) Dubai & London: Tactical Choices That Change Tax

Dubai (DIAC; seats in DIFC/ADGM or onshore)

  • Use free-zone entities with real substance (people, premises, decision-making).
  • Frame awards and settlement flows through treaty-friendly routes when payments are made from outside the UAE.
  • For onshore enforcement, expect bank scrutiny—give them award allocation, residency certificates, and treaty forms upfront.

London (LCIA/ICC)

  • Seat in London supports interim measures to secure interest-bearing sums; plan the tax on that interest.
  • If claimant is UK-resident, decide early whether to capitalise losses in valuation (CGT route) or pursue lost profits (income route).
  • When using third-party funding or ATE insurance, consider tax on recoveries and deductibility of premiums.

12) VAT/GST on Costs: The Invisible Line Item

  • Inbound legal services can trigger reverse-charge VAT in some systems.
  • Costs awards may (or may not) include VAT; specify whether VAT is recoverable separately.
  • For Bangladesh-based operations, clarify VAT creditability and documentation; in the UK, ensure VAT invoices align to the costs order for recovery; in Dubai, square with VAT rules on legal services.

13) Evidence Pack for Tax-Efficient Enforcement

  • Residency certificates (current year).
  • Beneficial ownership and substance files (board minutes, staff, lease, payroll).
  • PE analysis memos (why no taxable nexus exists in payor’s state).
  • Award allocation (principal/interest/costs) in black and white.
  • Treaty forms (pre-completed), tax authority clearance requests, and anticipated timelines.
  • Bank letters explaining purpose and character of remittance.

14) Model Wording You Can Adapt (Commercial Contracts)

Net Recovery / Gross-Up Clause

All sums payable under or in connection with any award, judgment or settlement shall be made free and clear of all deductions or withholdings for Taxes, save as required by law. If any deduction or withholding is so required, the Payer shall increase the amount payable to ensure that the Payee receives the amount it would have received had no deduction or withholding been required, except to the extent such withholding arises solely due to the Payee’s particular connection with the taxing jurisdiction (other than receipt of the payment).

Interest & Allocation Clause

Pre-Award Interest accrues from the date of breach at [benchmark + x%] with [monthly/quarterly] compounding; Post-Award Interest accrues until payment at [benchmark + y%]. Payments shall be allocated first to principal, then costs, then interest, unless the Payee directs otherwise.

Tax Cooperation Clause

The Parties shall provide reasonable cooperation, including residency certificates, forms, information and declarations, to claim treaty benefits, credits, or refunds, and shall use reasonable endeavours to obtain any withholding tax clearances. Any refund of Taxes with respect to amounts grossed-up under this Agreement shall be remitted to the Payer to the extent of the gross-up.

Confidentiality & Disclosures

Confidentiality obligations shall not restrict disclosures to tax authorities, auditors, lenders or regulators, provided the receiving party is bound by confidentiality obligations no less protective.

(TRW will tailor the above for English law governance, UAE onshore/DIFC/ADGM interplay, and Bangladesh regulatory interfaces.)


15) Step-by-Step: From Filing to Funds in Your Account

  1. Pre-filing workshop (2–3 weeks): Select seat & forum, lock damages character, model tax path, prepare treaty documents.
  2. Memorials: Include a tax appendix; plead allocation and net outcome; evidence residency and no-PE.
  3. Interim security: If seeking escrow or security for costs, set interest/withholding rules for the escrow.
  4. Hearing & post-hearing: Ask tribunal to state allocation; request cooperation orders for tax paperwork.
  5. Award issued: Start clearances and treaty filings immediately; choose the collecting entity.
  6. Enforcement (if needed): In Dubai/London/Bangladesh, pair court tools with bank packs and tax documentation.
  7. Settlement variant: Use a consent award with tax-sensible allocation; attach withholding clearance steps and refund undertakings.

16) TRW Caseplay (Anonymised Scenarios)

A. Energy Offtake Award (London seat; Bangladesh buyer; Dubai trader)
Damages accepted as diminution in value (not net profits). Award stated principal vs. interest clearly. Payment routed to Dubai free-zone entity with substance; no PE in buyer state; treaty relief removed withholding on interest; funds upstreamed with minimal friction.

B. Telco SLA Arbitration (DIAC; DIFC seat; UK vendor; Bangladesh routes)
Chronic uptime failures → partial award of service credits + LDs. Settlement deed re-labelled sums as price adjustment (not income windfall), eliminating threatened withholding; consent award embedded allocation; banks released funds promptly.

C. EPC Delay & Cost Overrun (ICC; London seat; Bangladesh project)
Costs award and principal damages risked VAT confusion. TRW aligned VAT invoices with the costs order, enabling recovery; post-award interest ring-fenced with gross-up. Enforcement obtained against UK receivables; FX managed to avoid avoidable currency gains tax.


17) FAQs—Short, Practical Answers

Q1: Can tribunals award “gross-up” for tax?
Commercial: often yes where contract supports it. Investment: tribunals are cautious; better to seek net-of-tax orders or State undertakings not to tax.

Q2: Is interest always taxable?
Frequently, yes—and often subject to withholding cross-border. Structure the rate, allocation, and treaty process.

Q3: Can we avoid double taxation?
Often, yes via DTA relief—if you align award wording, residency, beneficial ownership, and no-PE evidence.

Q4: Our award is in USD; we report in local currency. Tax headache?
Potentially. Manage FX timing and consider hedging and functional currency elections where available.

Q5: Are costs awards taxable?
Depends. Plan with your VAT position and domestic income rules; ensure invoices and awards match.


18) What TRW Does Differently

  • Design-to-collect approach: we draft and plead with tax collection in mind.
  • Tri-hub execution: integrated Dhaka–Dubai–London teams coordinate seat strategy, banking, enforcement, and tax.
  • Bankability: we produce award bank packs (allocation letters, residency, treaty forms) to satisfy compliance swiftly.
  • Regulatory navigation: Bangladesh Bank approvals, UAE free-zone interactions, and UK court support—handled end-to-end.

19) Immediate Actions (If You’re in a Live or Looming Dispute)

  1. Commission a tax route memo (where the money will be paid, who receives it, treaty path).
  2. Re-cut your quantum to match a tax-efficient character, with clear allocation to principal/interest/costs.
  3. Amend prayer for relief to request allocation, cooperation orders, and where appropriate net-of-tax language.
  4. Build your evidence pack (residency, substance, no-PE, treaty forms).
  5. Plan collection (escrow mechanics, bank clearance, FX management).

20) Summary Table — Taxation of International Arbitration Awards (Bangladesh ⇄ Dubai ⇄ London)

TopicWhat to DecideTRW GuidanceWhy It Matters
Damages CharacterIncome vs. capital vs. restitutionChoose a defensible character aligned with lowest tax drag and evidenceSets rate, credits, and treaty access
InterestPre- & post-award rates; compounding; allocationDefine interest clearly; plan for withholding and treatyAvoid surprise withholding and disputes
AllocationPrincipal / Costs / Interest orderingHard-code allocation in award/settlementBanks and tax authorities rely on it
Withholding RiskWhere could it apply?Gross-up clause (commercial); treaty relief; clearance stepsPrevents net receipt shortfalls
Double TaxationDTA applicability and routeAlign residency, beneficial ownership, no-PE, and formsEnables credits/exemptions
Seat & ForumLondon vs. DIFC/ADGM vs. othersPick seat for interim relief and collection; not for tax per seSecures assets and speeds payment
Bangladesh InterfacesFX, remittance, VAT, local taxPrepare Bangladesh Bank and tax filings earlySmooth inflow/outflow logistics
UAE PositionOnshore vs. free zonesUse substance in receiving entity; route via treaty-friendly pathsMinimises tax friction
UK PositionCharacter, interest, costs VATMatch award allocation to UK tax and VAT recoveryProtects net recovery
Evidence & ProcessResidency, substance, PE, formsCreate award bank pack and tax packConverts award to cash efficiently

Contact TRW Law Firm

Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm — Global Offices
Dhaka: House 410, Road 29, Mohakhali DOHS
London: 330 High Holborn, London WC1V 7QH, United Kingdom
Dubai: Rolex Building, L-12, Sheikh Zayed Road

Call us: +8801708000660 · +8801847220062 · +8801708080817
Email: info@trfirm.com · info@trwbd.com · info@tahmidur.com

From strategy and drafting to award and collection, TRW aligns arbitration, tax, and enforcement so you keep what you win.

Arbitration and Long-Term Contracts

Arbitration and Long-Term Contracts

Arbitration and Long-Term Contracts: The TRW Law Firm Playbook for Foreign Companies (Bangladesh ⇄ Dubai ⇄ London)

Who this is for: Foreign investors, EPC contractors, energy and resources companies, telecom operators, infrastructure developers, distributors, tech and data providers, trading houses, sovereign and quasi-sovereign counterparties, funds and lenders engaging in long-horizon commercial relationships with Bangladeshi parties—or operating regionally through Dubai and London.

Why it matters: Long-term contracts are relationship architecture. They finance mines and LNG terminals, underpin telecom spectrum rollouts, anchor offtake/throughput at ports, keep industrial plants supplied, and secure multi-year data, cloud, and technology capacity. Because these agreements run for 5–25+ years, change is guaranteed—in prices, regulation, technology, markets, geopolitics, and corporate control. That is precisely why arbitration—flexible, confidential, enforceable—is the dispute clause of choice. Done right, arbitration supports continuity of performance and constructive renegotiation instead of scorched-earth litigation.

Need counsel now? Speak with TRW’s cross-border arbitration and projects team in Dhaka, Dubai, and London. Explore our work and get in touch via tahmidurrahman.com (internal).


1) Long-Term Contracts: What Makes Them Different (and Fragile)

Long-term contracts are not just “long” versions of short contracts. They are ecosystems with:

  • Interdependence: Performance in Year 7 depends on what happened in Year 2. Changes cascade across pricing, volume, specifications, logistics, and financing covenants.
  • Capital intensity: Debt, equity, vendor financing, and offtake securitisation create non-contractual stakeholders (banks, ECAs, bondholders) whose expectations must be managed.
  • Regulatory touchpoints: Approvals, licences, FX rules, subsidies, localisation, data residency, sanctions, competition/merger control—these evolve.
  • Operational complexity: Multi-party chains (operator, supplier, sub-contractors, JV partners, warehouse/terminal operators, carriers, labs, certifiers) multiply failure points.
  • Information asymmetry: Site-specific facts (ore quality, well productivity, fiber faults, weather windows), counterparties’ true costs, and shifting market indices influence behaviour and bargaining power.

These realities make disputes predictable: performance shortfalls, cost blowouts, market shocks, change-in-law, force majeure, price reopeners, early termination, and liability caps. The goal of contract design and dispute planning is not to avoid every dispute (impossible), but to shape how disputes play out so the relationship and asset continue to deliver value.


2) Why Arbitration Is the Natural Fit

Arbitration is the operating system for high-stakes, long-horizon deals because it offers:

  • Enforceability: Awards are recognised and enforceable under the New York Convention in most trading jurisdictions—critical where counterparties or assets are cross-border.
  • Neutrality: Parties avoid “home-court” litigation risk. Choosing a neutral seat (e.g., London, Dubai/DIFC, Singapore) averts forum battles.
  • Confidentiality: Protects pricing formulas, trade secrets, plant data, and sensitive renegotiation history.
  • Flexibility: Tailored procedures: technical hot-tubbing, document schedules, bifurcation, partial awards, emergency relief, agreed e-discovery scoping.
  • Continuity: Tribunals are comfortable issuing orders that preserve performance (e.g., provisional measures, “keep-the-gas-flowing” style directions) pending final award.
  • Expertise: Parties select arbitrators with sector expertise (energy pricing models; telco SLAs; mining offtake norms; data/AI contracts).

But arbitration works best when you design for it at signature: choose the right seat and rules, anticipate multi-party realities, wire in escalation, and make price and hardship mechanisms arbitrable with usable evidence standards.


3) The Sectors Where Long-Term = High-Stakes (and How Disputes Show Up)

  1. Energy & Resources (LNG, pipeline/throughput, PSCs, power PPAs, mining offtake/royalties).
  • Disputes: Take-or-pay, ship-or-pay, calorific value/quality disputes, index/hedge failures, change-in-law (carbon, royalties), force majeure vs. market collapse, delivery windows, measurement uncertainty.
  • Arb levers: Price reopeners tied to indices/baskets; expert determination for narrow pricing math; arbitration for broader contractual issues; technical hot-tubbing.
  1. Telecom & Digital Infrastructure (IRUs, data centers, cloud capacity, long-haul fiber, spectrum sharing).
  • Disputes: SLA non-conformance, latency/uptime credits escalations, cross-connect bottlenecks, relocation/upgrade obligations, data localisation shifts.
  • Arb levers: Tiered SLAs with capped credits + LDs; urgent interim relief to maintain service continuity; confidentiality walls for sensitive network maps.
  1. Industrial Supply & OEM/After-Sales (framework supply, MRO spares, service contracts).
  • Disputes: Obsolescence, spares inflation, change in standards, IP around upgrades/retrofits, warranty vs. misuse, “most-favoured pricing” arguments.
  • Arb levers: Technical expert panels, calibrated notice/inspection, carve-outs to caps for wilful misconduct or IP theft.
  1. Large-Scale Construction & EPC (with O&M tails).
  • Disputes: Delay/liquidated damages, design responsibility, interface risk, unforeseen ground conditions, change-in-law, early termination rights.
  • Arb levers: Dispute boards feeding into arbitration; records discipline (daily site logs; Primavera schedules); agreed delay analysis methodology.
  1. Technology, Data & AI (multi-year SaaS, data supply, training/computing capacity, algorithm performance).
  • Disputes: Performance drift, fairness/ethics obligations, data provenance, audit rights, model accuracy SLAs, export controls on chips/models.
  • Arb levers: Benchmarks and test harnesses; confidentiality/AEO regimes; emergency arbitrator for access preservation.

4) Bangladesh ⇄ Dubai ⇄ London: How TRW Aligns the Triangle

A foreign company dealing with Bangladeshi counterparties—and coordinating through Dubai and London—must harmonise governing law, seat, enforcement, and interim relief:

  • Governing law: English law is widely preferred for long-term commercial deals (predictable contract principles, sophisticated damages jurisprudence). UAE parties sometimes choose UAE law (or DIFC law) for onshore/offshore coherence. Bangladesh law may govern localised aspects (land, permits, tax incentives, labour), often via split governance (core commercial = English law; site/permit appendices = Bangladesh law compliance).
  • Seat of arbitration:
  • London (LCIA/ICC): Highly respected, strong court support for interim measures and evidence.
  • Dubai (DIAC; DIFC-LCIA legacy; ADGM/ADGM Arbitration): Neutral, increasingly sophisticated, regionally convenient for MENA operations and enforcement.
  • Singapore (SIAC): Often selected for Asia-centric trade or where counterparties have Asian footprints.
  • Interim relief: London, DIFC/ADGM, and Singapore courts are arbitration-friendly and adept at freezing orders, evidence preservation, and anti-suit relief—critical to protect receivables and avoid asset dissipation.
  • Enforcement planning: Identify the jurisdictions where assets live: Bangladesh plants/inventory; UAE receivables/stock; UK bank accounts. Draft the arbitration clause and seat to facilitate execution against those asset locales.

TRW designs seat + law + forum shopping coherently, not opportunistically: the selection must match enforcement geography, industry norms, bank/ECA expectations, and the remedies you’re most likely to need (e.g., specific performance vs. damages).


5) The Clause Architecture of Resilient Long-Term Contracts

Below is a TRW clause blueprint that we adapt per sector and transaction:

5.1 Price, Indexation, and Reopeners

  • Index baskets: Use blended baskets (e.g., Brent/JKM/HH + freight + local CPI) with floor/ceiling collars to dampen volatility.
  • Reopener triggers: “Material market change” thresholds (e.g., ±20–30% vs. baseline for X months), FX shock triggers, tax/carbon triggers.
  • Procedure: Good-faith negotiation → short expert determination on math (not legal interpretation) → arbitration for scope/termination/LDs.
  • Evidence: Agreed data sources (Platts/Argus/ICE), audit rights, API data snapshots escrowed.

5.2 Volume, Flexibility & Take-or-Pay / Ship-or-Pay

  • Flex windows: Seasonal/operational flexibility bands (e.g., +/-10% MQ).
  • Banking/Make-up: Under-lift and over-lift banked with expiry; carryover rules; credit offsets vs. LDs.
  • Excuse events: Plant outages, force majeure; evidence requirements; mitigation and substitution.

5.3 Change in Law / Tax & Royalty / Carbon

  • Scope: Define “change” (statute, regulation, binding guidance, court decisions; includes extraterritorial sanctions).
  • Adjustment: Pass-through mechanics; renegotiation window; if unresolved, arbitration limited to quantum/allocation; termination right only after cure/mitigation steps.

5.4 Hardship & Force Majeure (FM)

  • Hardship: Economic imbalance beyond agreed corridor → renegotiation → short expert opinion on impact magnitude → tribunal power to adapt/terminate on defined criteria.
  • FM: Event taxonomy (epidemics, export bans, cyberattacks, lawful strikes, catastrophic weather); notice clocks; alternative performance; partial FM; extended FM termination.
  • Interaction: Hardship ≠ FM. Draft to avoid overlap games.

5.5 Quality, Specifications & Testing

  • Specs: Objective parameters, sampling protocols, independent labs, tie-break labs, chain-of-custody.
  • Testing: Factory/site acceptance tests; failure consequences (cure, price reduction, replacement, LDs).
  • Data: Digitally signed logs, sensor telemetry, and “no-tamper” storage for evidentiary weight.

5.6 Service Levels (Telecom/Tech/Data)

  • KPIs: Uptime/latency/jitter/packet loss; support response/restore; scheduled maintenance rules.
  • Credits vs. damages: Credits not exclusive remedy for chronic breach; escalate to LDs and termination.
  • Security & compliance: ISO/SOC obligations; audit rights; incident reporting; data localisation/update obligations.

5.7 ESG, Sanctions, and Export Controls

  • Sanctions: Warranties on ultimate beneficial ownership and end-use; snap-off termination; cost allocation for lawful cessation.
  • ESG: Compliance with anti-corruption, modern slavery, environmental and human rights standards; audit and remediation plans; step-in rights for critical breaches.
  • Export/tech controls: Licensing cooperation; suspension mechanisms where licences delayed/denied.

5.8 IP/Technology, Licensing & Upgrades (Tech and Industrial)

  • Licence scope: Field of use, territories, sublicensing, open-source policies.
  • Upgrades: Roadmaps, backward compatibility, deprecation windows, LTS (long-term support).
  • Escrow: Source code/data escrow for catastrophic vendor failure.

5.9 Title, Risk & Security

  • Title: Retention of title (where valid) vs. security interests/charges; registration obligations.
  • Risk: Align with Incoterms where physical goods are involved; transitional risk during testing/replacement periods.
  • Insurance: Mandatory coverages; endorsements; loss payee; subrogation waivers.

5.10 Termination & Step-In

  • Cure ladders: Notice → cure → supervised cure → step-in/escrow release → termination.
  • Step-in: For critical infrastructure or regulated services; detailed operator handover; IP rights and indemnities; reversion.
  • Exit: Unwind logistics, return of data/parts, IP wind-down, tail support.

6) The Arbitration Clause: What Foreign Companies Must Get Right

A. Institution and Rules
Choose rules that support the measures you will likely need:

  • LCIA (London): efficient case management, strong emergency/expedited tools.
  • DIAC (Dubai): modernised rules post-reform; regionally sensible; compatible with DIFC/ADGM support.
  • ICC/SIAC: Versatile, strong emergency arbitrator and consolidation powers.

B. Seat of Arbitration
Seat governs court supervision and the legal framework. London and DIFC/ADGM are arbitration-supportive and commercially sophisticated. The seat is not the same as venue. State the seat expressly.

C. Multi-Tier Escalation

  • Tier 1: Senior-level negotiation (time-boxed).
  • Tier 2: Mediation (optional) with no prejudice.
  • Tier 3: Arbitration (with emergency arbitrator availability).
    Draft to avoid pathological preconditions—make time limits clear; state that failure to complete prior tiers does not bar emergency relief.

D. Consolidation & Joinder
Long-term projects spawn multi-contract disputes (EPC, O&M, supply, offtake). Provide for consolidation and joinder across related agreements (ensure compatible arbitration clauses across the suite). Otherwise you end up with parallel proceedings and inconsistent awards.

E. Interim & Emergency Relief
Express tribunal power to grant interim measures and authorise applications to competent courts without waiving arbitration. For service continuity contracts, this is existential.

F. Confidentiality
Make confidentiality obligations explicit and carve out disclosures to regulators, lenders, auditors, and rating agencies.

G. Remedies
Empower tribunals to award specific performance (subject to enforceability in the chosen seat), injunctions, declaratory relief, price adjustments, and ongoing performance orders. In English-law seated arbitrations, tribunals typically have broad powers; DIFC/ADGM frameworks are also supportive.

H. Costs & Funding
Adopt “costs follow the event” with tribunal discretion. Permit third-party funding with disclosure obligations to avoid conflicts.

Model Spine (illustrative, to be tailored by TRW):

Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration under the [LCIA/DIAC/ICC/SIAC] Rules, which Rules are deemed incorporated by reference. The seat (legal place) of arbitration shall be [London/DIFC/ADGM/Singapore]. The tribunal shall consist of [one/three] arbitrator(s). The language of arbitration shall be English. The parties may seek interim or conservatory measures from any court of competent jurisdiction without waiver of arbitration. The tribunal may order specific performance, injunctive, declaratory or other equitable relief where appropriate.


7) Managing Disputes Without Breaking the Relationship

Long-term contracts must be resilient to “dispute while performing.” Here is TRW’s choreography:

  1. Evidence discipline from Day 1:
  • Agreed document maps (what exists where), naming conventions, and retention.
  • Digital logs, SCADA/PLC exports, test videos, lab certificates with chain-of-custody.
  • Email/notice hygiene—who sends/receives, “without prejudice” markers, and dashboarding.
  1. Early case assessment (ECA):
  • Identify merits, money, timeline, PR/regulatory impact, and settlement corridor within 14–21 days of flare-up.
  • Stress-test whether you need emergency relief (service continuity; asset preservation).
  1. Dual-track strategy:
  • Keep the plant running or service delivered while the pricing/quality dispute is arbitrated.
  • Use partial awards to stabilise issues (e.g., liability split; interim price formula; performance parameters).
  1. Expert evidence done right:
  • Appoint experts early; lock methodology (e.g., delay analysis technique, sampling protocol).
  • Consider hot-tubbing to reduce “ships passing in the night.”
  1. Negotiation windows preserved:
  • Build in reopener checkpoints and standstill agreements to let business teams trade economics for continuity.

8) Dubai Focus: Onshore vs. DIFC/ADGM and Practical Pointers

  • Choice of law: Onshore UAE law vs. DIFC/ADGM law (common-law style) can materially affect remedies and interpretation. Where a project spans both (e.g., onshore plant + free zone financing), split governance with a master arbitration clause works well.
  • Institution selection: DIAC is now the leading onshore institution; ADGM has its own arbitration reg. Opt for the forum that matches your operational center of gravity and asset enforcement paths.
  • Sanctions & re-export: Dubai trading houses must be vigilant about trans-shipment and ultimate end-use; contracts should hard-wire KYC/UBO diligence and audit rights.
  • VAT and customs: Use the contract to route documentary flows (commercial invoice, CoO, e-gate customs entries) to support zero-rating/export reliefs and speed refunds.

9) London Focus: English Law Governance and Court Support

  • Predictability: English law’s emphasis on freedom of contract and textual interpretation pairs well with complex long-term drafting.
  • Interim relief: The English courts are renowned for freezing orders, third-party disclosure, and anti-suit injunctions in support of arbitration.
  • Market benchmarks: English law’s damages doctrines (e.g., Hadley v Baxendale foreseeability, mitigation) reward parties who keep evidence and act commercially.
  • Funding & costs: A sophisticated TPF and ATE insurance market reduces budget shocks for protracted arbitrations.

10) Bangladesh Touchpoints You Should Not Miss

  • Regulatory perimeter: BIDA/BEPZA/Hi-Tech Park approvals, environmental clearances, customs/VAT exemptions, and land/title issues can quietly become contract performance blockers.
  • FX controls and remittances: Ensure the contract supports Bangladesh Bank approvals for cross-border flows (dividends, service fees, royalty, arbitration award proceeds).
  • Localisation & tax: Draft gross-up, WHT sharing, and permanent establishment (PE) mitigants when foreign personnel or onshore activities are extended.
  • Courts and interim relief: While foreign-seated arbitration is typical for neutral enforcement, plan for on-shore protective measures (e.g., security for costs; preservation orders) where Bangladesh assets are at stake.

11) Ten Drafting Mistakes Foreign Companies Keep Making (and How We Fix Them)

  1. Pathological arbitration clauses (missing seat; conflicting institutions; non-existent rules).
    Fix: TRW’s vetted clause library; cross-agreement harmonisation.
  2. Inconsistent dispute clauses across the contract suite (EPC vs. O&M vs. offtake).
    Fix: Consolidation/joinder mechanics; identical seats/rules where possible.
  3. Price reopeners without evidence rails (which index? which timestamp? which API?).
    Fix: Data sources, snapshots, escrow; “math to expert, law to arbitrator.”
  4. Force majeure that doubles as hardship (ambiguous drafting).
    Fix: Separate, non-overlapping provisions; decision trees and burdens.
  5. Silence on sanctions/export controls (no snap-off termination or cost allocation).
    Fix: Warranties, audit, termination, cost recovery, and evidence obligations.
  6. Notice provisions divorced from operations (wrong recipients; unrealistic clocks).
    Fix: Role-based addresses; dashboards; time-zones; multiple channels (email + portal).
  7. No step-in rights in critical services (the system goes dark if vendor fails).
    Fix: Step-in triggers, IP licences, staff novation, escrow and reversion.
  8. Jurisdictionally invalid security/ROT (title clauses unenforceable).
    Fix: Proper local registrations; intercreditor alignment; warehousing receipts.
  9. Arbitration clause bans interim court relief (accidentally).
    Fix: Express carve-out for court interim measures.
  10. Confidentiality that blocks lenders/regulators (you can’t disclose when you must).
    Fix: Carve-outs with NDA backstops; clean disclosure protocols.

12) From Kick-Off to Award: TRW’s Lifecycle Support

  1. Deal framing: We set the governing law/seat and compliance perimeter, align the contract suite, and pre-wire evidence.
  2. Bankability: We build document grids (conditions precedent, drawdown packs, expected notices) and align with lender/ECA covenants.
  3. Operationalisation: Playbooks for SLAs, QA/QC, price/volume management, force majeure notices, and sanctions screening.
  4. Early dispute management: ECA within 2–3 weeks; negotiation corridors; emergency relief scripts; hold-separate protocols.
  5. Arbitration conduct: Efficient pleadings, targeted disclosure, calibrated expert work, and partial awards to stabilise performance.
  6. Enforcement: Asset mapping, recognition, security, and collections across Bangladesh, UAE, UK, and beyond.
  7. Reset/renegotiation: Convert awards or imminent outcomes into workable resets that keep projects alive.

13) Practical Checklists (Print-and-Use)

A) Pre-Signature Checklist

■ Define price formula, index basket, FX, and reopener triggers with data sources.
■ Lock volume bands, banking/make-up, and storage/throughput.
■ Separate hardship from force majeure; articulate evidentiary thresholds.
■ Fix governing law, seat, institution, consolidation/joinder, emergency relief.
■ Harmonise dispute clauses across EPC, O&M, supply, offtake.
■ Map regulatory approvals (Bangladesh, UAE, UK) and build change-in-law mechanics.
■ Draft sanctions/export clauses; due diligence pack and audit rights.
■ Secure IP licences, escrow, step-in, and exit plans.
■ Validate security/ROT in each asset locale; align with financing docs.
■ Embed notice logistics (addresses, time-zones, portals) and evidence rails.

B) Live-Contract Dispute Checklist

■ Trigger ECA and identify emergency measures.
■ Preserve status quo performance where possible; seek partial awards if needed.
■ Appoint experts early; lock testing/sampling/delay methodology.
■ Maintain confidentiality; carve-outs for banks/regulators.
■ Document mitigation to protect damages claim.
■ Keep renegotiation doors open with formal standstills.


14) Illustrative Scenarios (Anonymised)

Scenario 1: Gas Supply with Index Shock (Bangladesh buyer, Dubai seller, London seat)
Price spiked 45% for six months; buyer invoked hardship; seller said market volatility ≠ hardship. Contract had a corridor with a reopener at 30% sustained over 90 days. Parties used the agreed math expert (10 days) → confirmed trigger. Tribunal then arbitrated scope of adjustment and duration. Partial award reset price temporarily; operations continued; final award set a new formula for 18 months.

Scenario 2: Fiber IRU SLA Failures (Dubai hub, Bangladesh routes, DIAC rules, DIFC seat)
Chronic latency breaches and disputed credits. TRW deployed emergency arbitrator to compel interim routing while repairs proceeded. Credits applied; tribunal later found chronic breach → LDs activated; no termination as step-in proved effective and service stabilised.

Scenario 3: Mining Offtake Quality (Bangladesh mine, global trader, SIAC)
Sampling protocol gaps led to duelling assays. We enforced the tie-break lab provision and chain-of-custody. Award granted price reduction for a subset of shipments; rejected broad termination claim; parties agreed on a refined protocol post-award.


15) Frequently Asked Questions (Straight Answers)

Q1: We prefer English law. Should we still say “CISG excluded”?
Yes—belt and braces. Keep your governing law clean.

Q2: Can arbitrators order specific performance?
Often yes (subject to the seat and local enforceability). Draft the clause to permit equitable relief; pick a supportive seat (e.g., London, DIFC/ADGM).

Q3: Our contract suite has different arbitration clauses. Is that fatal?
Not fatal, but risky. Harmonise and add consolidation/joinder power; otherwise, parallel proceedings can undermine outcomes.

Q4: Is mediation worth it in long-term deals?
Yes, if time-boxed and paired with the ability to seek emergency relief. It preserves relationships and can narrow issues.

Q5: Can we keep performing while arbitrating price?
Yes. Use partial awards and interim measures. Draft to mandate status-quo performance with escrow/true-up.

Q6: How do we future-proof against sanctions?
Warranties, KYC/UBO diligence, audit rights, snap-off termination, and cost allocation. Keep an eye on re-export risk through Dubai.

Q7: What about data/AI long-term contracts?
Define metrics (accuracy, bias, drift), audit, update cadence, and export controls on chips/models. Arbitration should include protective confidentiality and expert protocols.


16) How TRW Partners with You

  • Dhaka: We navigate Bangladesh regulatory pathways, on-the-ground enforcement, and government interfaces.
  • Dubai: We structure MENA trading hubs, DIAC/DIFC/ADGM arbitration, sanctions/compliance, and logistics.
  • London: We draft English-law master agreements, LCIA/ICC strategies, TPF/ATE planning, and court-support plays.

We deliver coordinated, multi-seat strategy—not isolated local advice. Your board sees one integrated risk picture; your deal teams get one practical playbook.


17) Next Steps (Actionable)

  1. Run a seat/law audit on your existing long-term contracts; harmonise clauses and add consolidation/joinder.
  2. Install a price & hardship dashboard: indices, FX, carbon, and tax trackers tied to reopener triggers and notice clocks.
  3. Stand up an evidence SOP: sampling/testing, site logs, telemetry, notice templates, and e-vaulting.

If you want, TRW can deliver this as a turn-key “Dispute-Ready Contract” programme across your portfolio in 4–6 weeks, with pilot contracts first.


Summary Table — Arbitration & Long-Term Contracts at a Glance

TopicWhat to DecideTRW Guidance (Bangladesh ⇄ Dubai ⇄ London)Why It Matters
Governing LawEnglish vs. UAE/DIFC/ADGM vs. local splitsEnglish for core commercial; local for permits/tax; clear splitPredictability + compliance
Seat & RulesLondon (LCIA/ICC), DIFC/ADGM (DIAC/ADGM), Singapore (SIAC)Pick seat for enforcement geography and remedy needsCourt support, neutrality, enforcement
Price & ReopenersIndices, corridors, triggers, expert vs. tribunalBasket indices; math to expert; legal scope to tribunalAvoids stalemate; keeps performance
Hardship vs. FMSeparate triggers and remediesHardship = economic imbalance; FM = impediment; distinctStops opportunistic claims
Quality & TestingSpecs, labs, chain-of-custody, FAT/SATTie-break labs, chain-of-custody, test harnessesEvidence clarity wins cases
SLAs (Telco/Tech)KPIs, credits, LDs, chronic breachCredits not exclusive remedy; emergency relief enabledService continuity
Sanctions/ESGWarranties, audits, snap-off terminationKYC/UBO diligence, export controls, ESG auditsCompliance + reputational defence
Consolidation/JoinderMulti-contract disputesHarmonise clauses; allow consolidationAvoids fragmented proceedings
Interim MeasuresEmergency arbitrator; court supportKeep court relief without waiverProtects cash and assets
ConfidentialityScope + carve-outsPermit lender/regulator disclosureFinancing and compliance friendly
Title/Risk/SecurityROT or security interests; insuranceLocal registrations; Incoterms alignmentRecoverability and risk clarity
Evidence SOPWhat to keep and howLogs, labs, notices, e-vaultLowers cost, raises credibility

Contact TRW Law Firm

Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm — Global Offices
Dhaka: House 410, Road 29, Mohakhali DOHS
London: 330 High Holborn, London WC1V 7QH, United Kingdom
Dubai: Rolex Building, L-12, Sheikh Zayed Road

Call us: +8801708000660 · +8801847220062 · +8801708080817
Email: info@trfirm.com · info@trwbd.com · info@tahmidur.com

From drafting multi-year contracts to winning cross-border arbitrations—and, more importantly, keeping your projects running—TRW is your partner across Bangladesh, Dubai and London.

Frivolous Claims in Arbitration

Frivolous Claims in Arbitration

Frivolous Claims in Arbitration: Using ICSID Rule 41(5) and Rule 41 to Shut Weak Cases Down Early

(Bangladesh, Dubai and London perspectives for foreign investors and cross-border companies)


Executive summary

Early dismissal of frivolous or clearly unmeritorious claims is no longer a theoretical aspiration in investor–State arbitration—it is an operational tool you can and should plan for. Under the ICSID framework, the 2006 Rule 41(5) (and its successor, Rule 41 in the 2022 update) empowers tribunals to dispose of claims at the outset where they are “manifestly without legal merit” and, now, also where jurisdiction or the tribunal’s competence is clearly lacking. For corporates and sovereign counterparties alike, the business value is straightforward: time saved, costs contained, and leverage gained.

For foreign investors with footprints in Bangladesh, Dubai, and London—or contracts that choose these seats or institutions—this article translates Rule 41(5)/Rule 41 into a practical playbook: how to draft for it, when to invoke it, how to structure evidence, what to expect procedurally, and how to align your strategy with local textures across these key hubs. We also show how to blend ICSID practice with summary/early determination mechanisms now found in several leading commercial rulesets, and how to integrate modern concerns—third-party funding, sanctions, data privacy, and AI usage—into early-dismissal advocacy.

For broader arbitration strategy and enforcement pathways, see TRW’s resource page on International Arbitration (internal link). For recognition and execution of awards in Bangladesh, our detailed guide on Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards in Bangladesh (internal link) will help your in-house team plan the end-game as you plan the beginning.


The threshold screening you don’t control—Article 36(3)

At the pre-registration stage, the ICSID Secretary-General can refuse to register a request that is manifestly outside ICSID’s jurisdiction (e.g., the dispute is not between a Contracting State and a national of another Contracting State; there is no “investment”; or written consent is absent). This is a limited filter. Many weak cases pass this initial screen because they are not manifestly deficient at that preliminary glance.

Once registered, you are in proceedings—unless you can leverage early-dismissal tools before full pleadings and evidence turn your case into a multi-year cost sink. That is where Rule 41(5) and Rule 41 come in.


What Rule 41(5) (2006) created—and what Rule 41 (2022) refined

The 2006 architecture (Rule 41(5))

  • Who may object: Either party.
  • Ground: A claim is manifestly without legal merit.
  • Timing: No later than 30 days after constitution of the tribunal and, in any event, before the first session.
  • Process: Briefing on the objection; tribunal decides at or soon after the first session.
  • Effect: The tribunal can dispose of all or part of the claim(s). The decision is without prejudice to other preliminary objections or later merits arguments.

The 2022 update (Rule 41)

  • Broader scope: The objection may now target (i) the substance, (ii) the jurisdiction of ICSID, and/or (iii) the competence of the tribunal—not just legal merit on substance.
  • Timing re-set: 45 days from tribunal constitution to bring the objection.
  • Decision timeline discipline: The tribunal should render its decision/award within 60 days after the later of (a) tribunal constitution or (b) the last submission on the objection.
  • Without prejudice: As before, early dismissal does not preclude other jurisdictional/merits objections later, nor does it block the tribunal’s ability to revisit issues with a fuller record if appropriate.

What that means for you: If a claim—substantive or jurisdictional—is obviously defective, you can (and should) push for a fast, focused determination on a short record, rather than bankrolling discovery, quantum analysis, fact witness rounds, or a sprawling expert architecture.


The legal standard: “manifestly” and “without legal merit”

Tribunals apply a high bar: the defect must be clear, obvious, and capable of being shown swiftly. “Manifestly” does not mean “after a mini-trial”; it means apparent on a summary review. “Without legal merit” focuses on law, but tribunals may reject factual assertions that are plainly incredible or legal conclusions dressed up as “facts”. In the 2022 version, the same “manifest” concept informs jurisdiction and competence objections: where the treaty text, consent instrument, investor nationality, or the “investment” requirement plainly fails on undisputed or incontestable material, a summary disposal should follow.

Practical tip: If winning requires weighing credibility or choosing between competing factual narratives, early dismissal is harder to achieve. If winning turns on documents of indisputable authenticity (e.g., the nationality certificate, the corporate tree, the treaty clause, the consent instrument’s scope, a time bar baked into treaty text), you are in early-dismissal territory.


Why Rule 41(5)/Rule 41 matters to foreign investors and States

  • Cost & time compression: Early knockout lowers outside counsel, expert, and tribunal costs; it also improves cash-flow certainty for finance and reserves.
  • Negotiation leverage: A credible early-dismissal brief can catalyse settlement or narrow the case.
  • Reputational clarity: Public or stakeholder scrutiny is easier to manage when an obviously unsustainable claim is disposed of quickly.
  • Portfolio consistency: For repeat players (funds, insurers, energy majors), early dismissal is a governance tool that enforces discipline across a docket.

From theory to practice: building an early-dismissal record

Early dismissal is won or lost in your first 60–90 days. Treat it like a fast-track case:

1) Case triage (Day 0–10)
■ Identify binary legal fail points: nationality/ownership at the critical time, existence of “investment” under the Convention/instrument, consent defects (no MFN import, scope carve-outs), time bars, fork-in-the-road provisions, express exclusions (tax, procurement, pre-investment).
■ Mark documentary anchors: registries, certified corporate documents, treaty text, exchange of consents, undisputed contemporaneous instruments.
■ Map what you do not need: avoid issues requiring credibility calls.

2) Evidence pack (Day 10–25)
■ Assemble short-form exhibits: certified corporate tree, investor nationality proof, contract annexes, treaty excerpts, ministerial approvals, board minutes.
■ Set up authentication: basic declarations establishing provenance (keep it lean).

3) Legal skeleton (Day 25–35)
■ Draft a laser-focused memorandum: identify the dispositive provision(s), apply the undisputed record, and show why the claim cannot succeed as a matter of law.
■ Pre-empt predictable counter-moves: MFN arguments, “evolving” investment definitions, equity pleas, or attempts to convert factual disputes into jurisdictional camouflage.

4) Remedies & cost strategy (Day 30–45)
■ Request dismissal with prejudice (where appropriate) and early cost shifting to discourage speculative claims.
■ In the alternative, seek to trim claims or heads of loss that are manifestly untenable.

5) Tone and brevity
■ Tribunals expect discipline: a small set of core exhibits and a short brief that is easy to decide.


How Rule 41 interacts with other fast-track tools

Commercial arbitration has increasingly adopted early determination or summary disposal powers (under various labels). While each set of rules differs, they share a common DNA with ICSID’s early-dismissal paradigm: if an issue is manifest, the tribunal can dispose of it early. Strategically, companies should:

  • Draft for optionality: where you choose non-ICSID rules, adopt institutions that expressly empower early disposal.
  • Harmonise protocols: whether ICSID or commercial rules apply, your internal playbook (triage, exhibits, timeline) should look the same.

Annulment and revision: carrying early-dismissal DNA into post-award stages

ICSID’s procedural architecture applies—with necessary modifications—to interpretation, revision, and annulment. As a result, tribunals and ad hoc committees have treated the early-dismissal logic as available to dispose of clearly unmeritorious post-award applications that seek to relitigate or facially exceed the exceptional limits of those remedies. For investors and States, this means: keep your summary-disposal muscle memory active beyond the award.


Bangladesh, Dubai, London—how the seat shapes early-dismissal strategy

Bangladesh seat (or Bangladesh-connected disputes)

Local realities:

  • Courts emphasise procedural fairness and tribunal independence. Efficient case management—especially when the tribunal shows it took a structured, reasoned approach to early dismissal—tends to withstand review.
  • Parties appreciate clear timetables: investors and SOEs alike often operate under budget/public-oversight constraints.

Foreign-company playbook:
■ Draft arbitration clauses that acknowledge the tribunal’s power to dispose of manifestly unmeritorious claims or defences at an early stage, mirroring ICSID’s approach.
■ During Procedural Order No. 1 (PO1), propose tight, realistic deadlines for early-dismissal briefing and decision windows.
■ Keep a lean, authenticated record: corporate registries, investment approvals, board resolutions, and the consent instrument.
Cost sensitivity: Request interim cost orders to discourage adventurism.
■ Anticipate stakeholder optics (state entities; public companies) and draft orders that explain the tribunal’s methodology succinctly.

Where to learn more: TRW’s hub on International Arbitration and our guide to Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards in Bangladesh (internal links) cover seat-specific enforcement considerations that dovetail with early-dismissal strategy.

Dubai seat (DIAC/DIFC ecosystem)

Local realities:

  • UAE parties frequently include multi-tier dispute clauses (negotiation/mediation), and tribunals enforce time-bar and precondition failures where manifestly unmet.
  • The DIFC (common-law island) and onshore courts offer complementary paths; Dubai arbitrations often involve regional conglomerates, SPVs, funders, and repeat experts—a rich field for manifest jurisdiction/consent defects.

Foreign-company playbook:
■ At contracting, include express early-determination powers in the clause (mirroring ICSID’s language) to eliminate any doubt.
■ In early-dismissal motions, use network maps to show why a claimant lacks standing, nationality, consent or why carve-outs (e.g., tax or public procurement) plainly apply.
■ Request procedural efficiency guardrails in PO1: page limits, exhibit caps, decision within 45–60 days of the last submission.
■ Keep an eye on funding: demand identity and interest disclosures early; funder–party overlaps often produce manifest competence issues.

London seat (English law context)

Local realities:

  • Tribunals and counsel expect granular, disciplined advocacy. Written reasons explaining why a claim is manifestly untenable, against a stable, undisputed record, are the norm.
  • Summary tools exist across leading institutions; parties and tribunals are comfortable using them.

Foreign-company playbook:
■ Draft clauses that codify early-determination powers and reference short decision windows.
■ Put jurisdictional binaries up front: nationality, investment, consent, fork-in-the-road, limitation periods.
■ Provide precise certificates and uncontested registries.
■ Seek adverse costs for speculative filings; English-law costs culture supports calibrated deterrence.


Model clause language you can adopt (and adapt)

Early Determination / Summary Disposal
The tribunal shall have the power, upon application of a party made within 45 days of its constitution (or within such time as the tribunal may direct in Procedural Order No. 1), to dismiss in whole or in part any claim or defence that is manifestly without legal merit, is manifestly outside the jurisdiction of the Centre/institution, or is manifestly outside the competence of the tribunal. The tribunal shall adopt an expedited procedure for such application, including page limits and focused exhibits, and shall issue a reasoned decision or award within 60 days after the last submission on the application, without prejudice to other objections available under the applicable rules.

Why this works: It mirrors ICSID’s architecture, gives the tribunal express permission to move quickly, and sets clear expectations on timing and brevity.


Procedural Order No. 1 (PO1) — the right scaffolding

  • Calendar: Fix the application date (e.g., Day 45 post-constitution) and set simultaneous or sequential submissions with firm page limits.
  • Evidence discipline: Permit authenticated, limited exhibits only; decline sprawling witness rounds unless the tribunal requests them.
  • Decision window: 60 days from the last submission for a reasoned decision/award.
  • Without prejudice: Preserve the parties’ ability to raise other preliminary objections or revisit intertwined issues on fuller records.
  • Costs: Allow the tribunal to apportion costs in the early decision, with liberty to adjust at the end if appropriate.

Ten archetypal early-dismissal fact patterns (investor–State)

  1. No consent: The instrument excludes the sector, or consent was never perfected.
  2. No “investment”: The asserted activity falls outside the Convention/instrument’s scope (e.g., pre-investment steps).
  3. Nationality defect: Corporate structuring or effective nationality plainly fails the test at the critical time.
  4. Time bar: A clear limitation in the instrument is indisputably exceeded.
  5. Fork-in-the-road: The claimant indisputably elected a domestic court route foreclosing arbitration.
  6. Tax carve-out: The treaty excludes tax measures; the claim is essentially tax policy re-packaged.
  7. Procurement exception: A sovereign procurement clause expressly removes arbitral recourse for the dispute class.
  8. Illegality at entry: Undisputed documents show regulatory non-compliance vitiating protection.
  9. Res judicata: A final, binding adjudication on the same cause and parties is undisputed.
  10. Abuse of process: A last-minute restructuring to manufacture jurisdiction is documentarily obvious.

Caveat: Where the defense needs fact-finding beyond undisputed records, expect tribunals to decline Rule-41 relief and fold the issue into a fuller preliminary phase.


Evidence you need (and don’t need) for Rule-41 success

You need
Certified corporate documents showing nationality and control at the relevant times.
■ The consent instrument (treaty/contract) with relevant carve-outs.
Regulatory approvals/permits (or their absence).
Date anchors: limitation periods, notice dates, pre-conditions.
Public registries with certified extracts.

You don’t need (usually)
■ Credibility-heavy witness statements.
■ Full quantum worksheets.
■ Expansive expert reports (unless the “expert” is authenticating a public register or explaining an objective legal definition).


Third-party funding (TPF), sanctions, data & AI—folding modern risk into early dismissal

  • TPF identity & portfolio: Press for early disclosure of funder identity and any portfolio affiliations with parties/experts/tribunal candidates. Overlaps can generate manifest competence/jurisdiction issues or independence concerns.
  • Sanctions screening: If sanctions bar payment or render performance illegal, and this is clear on uncontested materials, a manifest lack of legal merit may arise for certain relief.
  • Data & confidentiality: If a claim cannot proceed without violating non-derogable data laws (on uncontested facts), tribunals may treat aspects as inadmissible or manifestly untenable.
  • AI usage transparency: Advocate for tribunal and party protocols confirming that no confidential materials are fed into external AI systems and that human verification is used for any AI-assisted drafting. Lack of adherence—if undisputed—can justify procedural containment and, in extreme cases, summary rejection of tainted submissions.

Cost strategy: make early dismissal pay for itself

  • Ask early for adverse costs if the claim is knocked out at Rule-41 stage. Tribunals increasingly use costs to discourage speculative filings.
  • Security for costs: Where there are clear red flags (asset-light claimant; failed to pay advances; funder opacity), use the Rule-41 calendar as a platform to sequence a swift security-for-costs application.

Cross-over with commercial arbitration (your non-ICSID contracts)

Even where ICSID is not chosen, you can still design for early disposal:

  • Adopt rules that expressly empower tribunals to decide manifestly unmeritorious issues early.
  • Copy the ICSID cadence: a 45-day window to apply; a short, authenticated record; a 60-day decision target.
  • Unify internal workflow: Whether the seat is Dhaka, Dubai, or London, your legal ops should run the same internal checklist.

Illustrative scenario mapping (generic names, real-world textures)

Scenario A: “Delta Holdings” vs “Republic of Sundar” (Dubai seat; investment treaty claim)
The investor’s corporate tree shows that, at the treaty’s critical time, the controlling shareholder was a national of a non-Contracting State. Public registries and the investor’s own annual report confirm this. A Rule-41 application (or its DIAC equivalent) points to the undisputed record. The tribunal grants early dismissal on jurisdiction.

Scenario B: “Amanat Energy” vs “People’s Republic of N.” (London seat; contract-based ICSID clause)
The consent instrument excludes tax measures. The claim challenges a withholding-tax redesign, plainly within the exclusion. No factual conflict exists about the measure’s nature. Early dismissal granted: manifest lack of legal merit.

Scenario C: “Bharat Infra SPV” vs “State of Padma” (Bangladesh seat; BIT claim)
The investor filed a domestic court writ on the same dispute six months earlier. The BIT includes a fork-in-the-road clause. The certified writ petition and order sheet are uncontested. The tribunal disposes of the treaty claim at the threshold.

These are exactly the sorts of binary gateways Rule-41 procedures were designed to close.


Governance for repeat players: build the habit

  • Arbitration Intake Playbook: A 2–3 page SOP for the first 30 days (triage, evidence map, draft skeleton).
  • Clause Bank: Pre-approved model language (early determination; TPF disclosure; sanctions co-operation; AI/data protocols).
  • PO1 Template: A standing template with deadlines and page limits for early determination.
  • Training: Short internal briefings so business units recognise triage triggers (fork-in-the-road, time bars, consent gaps) and alert Legal immediately.
  • Disclosure Diary: If you are respondent-State or SOE, maintain a central log of earlier disputes, funding relations, and expert reuse—useful for both conflicts and early-dismissal story-building.

How TRW runs Rule-41 missions for clients

  • Front-loaded diagnostics: Within two weeks, we identify binary kill-points and the authenticated documents needed.
  • Seat-tuned drafting: We calibrate tone and authorities to Dhaka, Dubai, or London expectations.
  • PO1 engineering: We negotiate decision windows and exhibit discipline that help tribunals decide fast.
  • Cost leverage: We pursue adverse costs where appropriate and align early tactics with final enforcement strategy from day one.

Explore our International Arbitration hub (internal link) or contact us using the details below for a rapid early-dismissal feasibility review on any pending notice or registered case.


Frequently asked questions (board-ready)

1) Is early dismissal “anti-due-process”?
No. It targets manifest defects on a short, transparent record. Tribunals still solicit both sides’ submissions and provide reasons.

2) Can we bring Rule-41 objections and still run other preliminary objections later?
Yes. Rule-41 decisions are without prejudice to other jurisdiction/merits objections and case-management phasing.

3) What if the tribunal thinks facts are disputed?
Then it may decline Rule-41 disposal and push the issue to a preliminary phase or full merits. Your triage should avoid fact patterns that require credibility choices.

4) Can only respondents use Rule-41?
Either party can bring an early-dismissal application. In practice, respondents use it more, but claimants can also target manifestly inadmissible counterclaims.

5) How soon will we get a decision?
Under the 2022 framework, the target is 60 days from the last submission on the objection. In drafting PO1, insist on this cadence.

6) Does this help with settlement?
Yes. A credible, document-heavy early-dismissal brief is a pressure multiplier that often narrows issues or steers parties to the table.


One-page field checklist (print and staple to PO1)

Triage (Week 1):
■ Identify binary grounds (consent, investment, nationality, time bar, fork-in-the-road, carve-outs).
■ Flag uncontested documents that prove them.

Record (Weeks 1–3):
■ Gather certified registries, corporate tree, treaty excerpts, approvals.
■ Prepare short witness declaration only for authentication.

Drafting (Weeks 3–4):
■ 12–20 pages, focused; annex only core exhibits.
■ Pre-empt MFN, equity, and “factual” re-labelling defences.

PO1:
■ Fix application window (by Day 45).
■ Page/exhibit limits; 60-day decision clock.
■ Costs follow outcome but open to interim shifts now.

Follow-through:
■ If denied, repurpose the work into preliminary-issues skeletons.
■ Keep the disclosure diary for annulment/revision phases.


Bangladesh • Dubai • London — quick-reference map

  • Bangladesh: Courts expect process discipline. Keep an impeccable audit trail in the record; tailor drafts to local sensitivities around public bodies.
  • Dubai (DIAC/DIFC): Use network mapping (SPVs, funders, experts) to reveal manifest defects; draft bilingual nomenclature where helpful.
  • London: Lean into granularity and timeliness. Ask for adverse costs to deter speculative Rule-41 resistance.

Strategic integration with enforcement

Early-dismissal strategy should be planned with enforcement in mind from day one. If you short-circuit a claim for manifest reasons, your cost orders and reasoned dismissal become part of a clean record that supports recognition and, where applicable, security for costs or asset-preservation moves during or after the case. See TRW’s internal resource on Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards in Bangladesh for how dismissal and cost orders play out locally.


Closing takeaways for foreign companies

  • Design for it: Bake early-determination language into your arbitration clause and PO1.
  • Move fast: The first 45 days decide your Rule-41 fortunes.
  • Be boring (by design): Use uncontroversial documents to prove binary points.
  • Think portfolio: Treat early dismissal as a governance standard across all disputes.
  • Align end-to-end: Connect early dismissal to cost leverage and enforcement strategy at the start.

If you need a same-week assessment of whether Rule-41 relief is realistic in your dispute, TRW can mobilise a seat-tuned team across Dhaka, Dubai, and London to evaluate, draft, and execute an early-dismissal plan that is lean, lawful, and persuasive.


Summary table (quick scan)

TopicWhat to knowBangladesh seatDubai seat (DIAC/DIFC)London seat
Article 36(3) screenPre-registration filter onlyLimited; many weak cases passSameSame
Rule 41(5) → Rule 41From merits-only to merits + jurisdiction + competence; 45-day filing; 60-day decision windowTribunals value clean, reasoned ordersInstitutions and courts support efficiencyHigh comfort with early disposal
Standard: “Manifestly”High bar; obvious on short recordKeep audit trail for reviewUse network maps for SPVs/fundersExpect granular reasoning
Best early groundsConsent gaps, no “investment”, nationality defects, time bars, forks, carve-outsAuthentic documents winBilingual names; funder overlapsAdverse costs pressure
PO1 designFix windows; page/exhibit caps; 60-day decisionYesYesYes
Evidence packCertified registries; treaty/contract excerpts; approvals; date anchorsEmphasise authenticationMap regional corporate websPrecise certificates
CostsSeek costs on dismissal; consider security for costsCourts receptive to disciplineYesYes
Enforcement alignmentDismissal/costs feed recognition strategySee TRW enforcement guideSupportive frameworkMature ecosystem

TRW Law Firm — contact

Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm
Bangladesh (Dhaka HQ): House 410, Road 29, Mohakhali DOHS, Dhaka
Dubai: Rolex Building, L-12 Sheikh Zayed Road
United Kingdom: 330 High Holborn, London WC1V 7QH, United Kingdom

Phones: +8801708000660 · +8801847220062 · +8801708080817
Emails: info@trfirm.com · info@trwbd.com · info@tahmidur.com

Explore our internal resources on International Arbitration and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards in Bangladesh to plan your early-dismissal strategy with the end-game in mind.

Revised 2025 SIAC Arbitration Rules

Revised 2025 SIAC Arbitration Rules

The Revised 2025 SIAC Arbitration Rules — A Foreign Company’s Field Guide (with Bangladesh, Dubai, and London Contexts)

Effective hearing strategies, clause drafting tips, and enforcement planning under SIAC’s 2025 Rules—designed for in-house teams operating across Bangladesh, the UAE (Dubai) and the UK (London).


Foreign companies contracting in or with Bangladesh increasingly choose institutional arbitration to manage cross-border risk. The Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) remains a leading forum for South Asia, the Middle East, and English-law governed transactions. Its 2025 Rules (the 7th edition) modernise procedure around urgency, efficiency, funding transparency, consolidation/coordination, and tribunal powers. For multinational teams who coordinate decision-making from Dhaka, Dubai, and London, the new rulebook is a chance to tighten your dispute architecture—from clause drafting to award enforcement.

As Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm, with teams in Bangladesh, the UAE, and the UK, we distil what the 2025 Rules mean for commercial actors: what has actually changed, why it matters operationally, and how to convert the rule innovations into concrete advantages before, during, and after a dispute.

Need Bangladesh-anchored arbitration advice with cross-border reach? Explore our Arbitration & Dispute Resolution service page on tahmidurrahman.com to see how we plan, prosecute, and enforce awards across jurisdictions.
Internal link: TRW – Arbitration & Dispute Resolution


1) Why SIAC 2025 matters for foreign companies active in Bangladesh, Dubai, and London

Strategic fit. SIAC has long been a preferred institutional seat for deals touching South Asia and the GCC while remaining comfortable for English-law governed contracts. The 2025 update pushes three corporate priorities:

  • Speed: emergency routes, streamlined pathways for low-value/low-complexity disputes, early case-dispositive tools.
  • Clarity: explicit third-party funding disclosure to preserve tribunal integrity; sharper frameworks for coordination of related arbitrations.
  • Power: codified tribunal powers around security for costs and security for claims, and firmer control of case management.

Operational implications. For businesses with contracting centres in Dhaka, finance desks in London, and project delivery in Dubai, the 2025 rules make it easier to front-load case theory, contain costs, and protect assets (or prevent dissipation) when things turn adversarial.


2) Core architecture of the 2025 Rules—what changed and how to leverage it

The Rules continue to cover: commencement, tribunal formation, procedure, tribunal powers, the award, and costs. The headline upgrades are below, followed by practical moves for in-house counsel.

A. Preliminary Determination (early, binding decisions on discrete issues)

What it is. A party may apply for a final and binding preliminary determination on a discrete issue where the parties agree, or where the applicant shows it is likely to save time and costs, or case circumstances warrant it. This is not merely a “case management nudge”—it’s a potential early merits decision that can collapse the dispute’s complexity.

Why it matters.

  • Contractual preconditions (e.g., whether a notice or condition precedent was met).
  • Time bars/limitation issues that kill or narrow claims.
  • Governing law or jurisdictional forks that otherwise drag on for months.

How to use it (Dhaka–Dubai–London):

  • Bangladesh-touching projects: use it to resolve stamping/registration or condition-precedent skirmishes early, avoiding sprawling evidence.
  • Dubai projects: resolve change-order preconditions or liquidated damages triggers at the outset.
  • London finance: leverage to crystallise interpretation questions (e.g., default interest triggers) before expensive expert battles.

B. Emergency Arbitrator (EA) & Ex Parte Protective Preliminary Orders

Emergency Arbitrator. Before tribunal constitution, a party can seek emergency interim relief on a fast clock. The application may even precede a Notice of Arbitration subject to tight filing follow-ups. Appointment is designed to be rapid, with the EA empowered to run an urgent mini-procedure and issue an order/award swiftly.

Ex parte protective preliminary orders. In truly urgent cases (e.g., risk of asset dissipation or evidence tampering), applicants can seek ex parte protective orders without notice to the opponent, with stringent post-order notification duties and short expiry safeguards if service confirmations aren’t met.

How to use it (Dhaka–Dubai–London):

  • Asset-risk transactions from Bangladesh into the UAE or UK: where there is concrete evidence of impending transfers, line up documentary trails and banking snapshots to justify ex parte relief.
  • Trade/LC disputes: EA measures can stabilise status quo around goods release or standby credits while the main case forms.
  • Corporate control fights: consider limited ex parte directions to prevent board or share registry interference pending tribunal constitution.

C. Streamlined Procedure (for low-value/low-complexity disputes)

What it is. A sole arbitrator procedure by default, built for disputes under a defined quantum threshold or where the parties agree pre-constitution. It presumes written submissions only, no document production, and no witness/expert statements, with hearings only if necessary (often remote). The award target is three months from constitution (subject to limited extensions).

Corporate benefits.

  • Cost certainty for tail-risk claims that would never justify a full-blown arbitration.
  • Speed: quick disposal frees management bandwidth.

How to use it (Dhaka–Dubai–London):

  • Add to your playbook: if you face many small receivables/distributor claims, pre-agree streamlined applicability in those contracts.
  • In UAE franchise or distribution portfolios, deploy streamlined clauses to prevent counterparties from gaming delay.
  • For English-law governed vendor agreements, treat streamlined arbitration as the “small claims track” of your commercial ecosystem.

D. Coordinated Proceedings

What it is. When the same tribunal is constituted across related arbitrations and there are common issues of law or fact, the tribunal can order coordinated management: concurrent or sequential conduct, aligned procedural steps, or suspension of one case pending determination in another—while keeping awards and records separate.

Why it matters.

  • Multi-contract projects (EPC, O&M, supply chains) with parallel arbitrations.
  • Complex corporate structures (parent guarantees, SPVs, back-to-back contracts).
  • Avoids duplication and inconsistent process while preserving separate enforceability.

How to use it:

  • In infrastructure matters touching Bangladesh and the GCC, ask counsel to map the contract stack and seek a single tribunal slate across them where feasible.
  • Align submissions calendars and evidence to lower expert duplication and prevent inconsistent factual findings.

E. Third-Party Funding (TPF) Disclosure

What it is. Parties must disclose the existence of TPF and the identity of the funder early (in the Notice/Response or as soon as practicable). Late-stage funding that creates a conflict of interest can be policed by the tribunal, including directions to unwind relationships; sanctions may issue for non-compliance.

Corporate angle.

  • Protects award integrity and neutrality of arbitrators.
  • Helps calibrate security for costs arguments (while the rule cautions against inferring financial fragility merely from funding).

How to use it:

  • If you are funded, disclose promptly and keep conflict checks clean.
  • If you suspect opaque funding is distorting conduct, ask the tribunal to sequence TPF disclosure before heavy procedural steps.

F. Security for Costs and Security for Claims (express powers)

Security for costs. Classic tool to protect a respondent’s ability to recover costs if it wins.
Security for claims. Less common but significant: a claimant (or counter-claimant) can be directed to post security to protect the enforceability of a future merits award in the other party’s favour (e.g., where there is a credible risk of asset flight or hollow shells).

How to use it:

  • Dubai: deploy security for claims in asset-dissipation scenarios, especially with cross-border flows.
  • London finance: security for costs where counterparties are offshore SPVs with thin balance sheets.
  • Bangladesh: frame applications with local FX/procurement realities to show real recoverability risk or to resist over-broad security demands.

3) Drafting arbitration clauses post-2025: what to put in (and out)

Keep it clean and modular. Avoid “pathological” clauses. For cross-border Bangladesh deals with London or Dubai touchpoints, specify:

  1. Institution & Rules: “Any dispute shall be referred to arbitration administered by SIAC under the SIAC Arbitration Rules (2025)…”
  2. Seat (not just venue): e.g., Singapore (for SIAC default), but consider London (England & Wales) if you want English court support, or DIFC if you plan to exploit its common-law courts for interim relief/enforcement springboards. For Bangladesh-centric contracts where local court support is vital, consider Dhaka as seat—but model the enforcement path early.
  3. Governing Law: match your commercial risk (English law often preferred for predictability in cross-border finance/commodities).
  4. Number of Arbitrators: one for small/medium disputes; three for high-stakes technical matters.
  5. Language: standardise on English, but anticipate certified translations where Bangla or Arabic records will exist.
  6. Fast Tracks:
  • Opt-in language for Preliminary Determination on clause preconditions/time bars.
  • Opt-in/opt-out positioning for Streamlined Procedure under quantum thresholds (e.g., below USD 1m).
  1. Coordination/Consolidation: allow coordination where there are common issues and the same tribunal can be appointed across related contracts.
  2. Interim Relief: confirm that parties may seek EA relief and supportive court measures without waiver.
  3. Confidentiality & Cyber: hard-code a cybersecurity protocol reference and confidentiality undertakings binding affiliates and vendors.
  4. TPF: incorporate TPF disclosure timing and conflict-management expectations.

Internal link: If you are redrafting a suite of contracts, talk to our Corporate & Commercial team to align arbitration, governing law, and enforcement with your supply-chain, FX and compliance posture.
TRW – Corporate & Commercial


4) Choosing the seat and venue: Singapore, London, DIFC… or Dhaka?

Singapore (with SIAC Rules). Neutral and efficient seat with supportive courts, highly regarded in Asia-GCC corridors. Good default for international partnerships where counterparties want a non-home court.

London (England & Wales). If your deal is English-law governed—especially banking, energy, or M&A—a London seat allows access to sophisticated supervision and interim court powers (e.g., freezing/anti-suit orders).

Dubai (DIFC). DIFC Courts offer a common-law judiciary and a friendly path for recognition/enforcement, often used as a gateway in the UAE. DIAC remains a major institution for regional disputes.

Dhaka (Bangladesh). For Bangladesh-centric contracts (e.g., infrastructure, EPC, local supply or services), a Dhaka seat can make sense if you understand the supportive-court interface and enforcement optics. Many foreign companies still prefer a foreign seat (e.g., Singapore/London) with local performance—TRW models the enforcement route from the start to avoid surprises.

Mix and match: Your seat drives curial law; the hearing venue can be Dubai or Dhaka for convenience without changing the seat. Use this to reduce travel burdens and keep key witnesses comfortable.


5) Evidence, privilege, and translations across three legal cultures

Document production. SIAC tribunals typically adopt narrow, issue-focused disclosure (IBA-style). Build custodian maps early (email, messaging apps, shared drives). Enforce legal hold in Bangladesh operations and overseas affiliates.

Privilege. Alignment is critical:

  • England & Wales: robust doctrines for legal advice litigation privilege; in-house can be protected if tests are met.
  • UAE: professional secrecy rules differ; be disciplined about confidentiality markings and counsel engagement structures.
  • Bangladesh: coordinate with TRW so third-party consultants are engaged through counsel to maintain protection.

Translations & interpreters. Budget for certified translations of Bangla or Arabic tech/finance documents into English. Brief interpreters on acronyms and industry terms. A shared glossary (updated bi-weekly in live matters) prevents contradictions at hearing.


6) Using the new tools tactically at each stage

At notice/response: Flag Preliminary Determination issues (time bars, conditions precedent, agreed damages interpretation) and EA readiness (evidence preserved for urgency).

At CMC: Invite the tribunal to lay a lean timetable; propose chess clocks; request coordinated proceedings across related contracts (same tribunal). Offer early TPF disclosure sequencing.

During the case:

  • If the other side’s conduct suggests resource asymmetry or opacity, consider security for costs.
  • If you fear asset dissipation, push for security for claims or EA steps with calibrated relief that won’t be viewed as punitive.

Settlement lens: Use Preliminary Determination outcomes or interim measures as settlement inflection points—build without-prejudice pathways into your playbook.


7) Hearing format—hybrid/virtual by default, in-person when decisive

Virtual/hybrid reduces cost/time but demands cyber hygiene: locked rooms, no back-channeling to witnesses, disabled local recordings, watermarking, and split-screen setups for counsel. In Dhaka or project-site contexts, prepare backup power and redundant connectivity.

In-person remains best where credibility is central (e.g., project managers on causation, traders on market practice). Use Dubai as an accessible hub for GCC/South Asia teams, or London for English-law gravity and premium hearing centres.


8) Costs and budgeting under SIAC 2025—how to brief your board

What changes: The revised regime clarifies deposits and updates filing/admin schedules; combined with streamlined and preliminary determination tracks, total case spend becomes more predictable.

Budget template (what your CFO wants):

  • Pleadings & disclosure (legal + vendor).
  • Experts (scoping options: desktop analysis vs. full delay/quantum build).
  • Hearing (venue/tech/transcript/interpretation).
  • Post-hearing (briefs/costs submissions).
  • Contingencies (security applications, EA, coordination motions).

Always link spend to time saved through preliminary determination, coordinated proceedings, or streamlined tracks.


9) Sector playbooks

Infrastructure & EPC (Bangladesh ↔ GCC):

  • Embed coordination language across EPC, subcontract, PCM, and supply contracts.
  • At dispute onset, triage for Preliminary Determination (e.g., notice triggers, LD clauses).
  • Get a delay/quantum expert scoped in phases; don’t over-buy too early.

Banking & trade finance (London ↔ Dhaka):

  • Use preliminary determination on interpretation and time bars.
  • Keep deal room records and valuation inputs ready for security for claims/costs.
  • For receivables, deploy streamlined arbitration to hammer through small but numerous disputes.

Technology & IP (Dubai ↔ Dhaka):

  • Confidentiality and cyber clauses should dovetail with SIAC procedure; consider ex parte orders to shield trade secrets.
  • For SLAs/API disputes, prepare demonstratives that align logs/metrics to contract thresholds.

10) Enforcement planning—reverse-engineer from Day 0

Bangladesh. For foreign awards, plan for translation, authentication, and public-policy sensitivities. Tie your relief to local performance (e.g., how cash is to be paid, FX in/out, banking channels). TRW models enforcement with Bangladesh Bank and courts in mind.

UAE. Consider whether DIFC recognition (as a common-law court) offers a better springboard for execution. Ensure your award and arbitration agreement are properly authenticated and translated.

England & Wales. Strong recognition culture; draft the award with precise interest, costs, and currency articulation to ease conversion and execution.

Practical rule: draft relief in a way that any court clerk can understand what to enforce and how to compute it (dates, rates, currency, netting).


11) Governance for in-house teams—how to be SIAC-ready year-round

  1. Clause inventory. Catalogue your active clauses and mark those that need 2025-style upgrades.
  2. Evidence discipline. Company-wide legal holds and messaging-app governance (Bangladesh operational teams often live on WhatsApp/Imo/Signal).
  3. Rapid-response protocol. If an injunction/EA may be needed, pre-assign a playbook squad (legal, treasury, IT, external counsel).
  4. Interpreter & translation bench. Keep an approved panel for Bangla↔English and Arabic↔English with NDAs and case-term glossaries.
  5. Expert panel. Pre-screen delay/quantum, valuation, and technical experts to avoid scramble bias.

12) TRW’s SIAC 2025 toolkit for foreign companies

  • Clause lab: We retrofit your templates with Preliminary Determination triggers, Streamlined thresholds, and Coordination lanes across contract stacks.
  • Seat & venue matrix: We map Singapore/London/DIFC/Dhaka choices to your regulatory and enforcement realities.
  • Urgency engine: Evidence packs and affidavits prepared in advance for EA/ex parte readiness.
  • Hearing craft: Cross-exam scripts, demonstratives, and transcript-driven post-hearing briefs that make enforcement easy.
  • Enforcement routes: Bangladesh, GCC, UK, and beyond—with FX, banking, and security overlays pre-modelled.

Internal link: Book a strategy session with our disputes team to align your contracts and playbooks with SIAC 2025.
Contact TRW


13) Frequently asked questions (foreign companies)

Q1: Can we still hold the hearing in Dubai if the seat is London or Singapore?
Yes. Seat governs law and court supervision; venue is logistics. Holding a hearing in Dubai (or Dhaka) does not change a Singapore or London seat.

Q2: Should we opt in to Streamlined Procedure?
If you face many small claims (e.g., receivables, warranty), yes—time and cost savings are material. For complex disputes, keep full procedure.

Q3: How fast can we get interim relief?
Emergency Arbitrator routes are built for hours/days, not weeks—provided you prepare evidence and service mechanics. Ex parte protective orders require strict post-order notifications.

Q4: Does third-party funding help or hurt optics?
Funding is neutral in principle. Disclose early to clear conflicts. If you suspect abusive conduct funded from the shadows, invite disclosure sequencing and, if necessary, security for costs.

Q5: What seat should we choose for Bangladesh-heavy projects?
Case-by-case: Singapore offers neutrality; London fits English-law deals; DIFC offers UAE proximity and common-law courts; Dhaka can be viable with the right enforcement modelling. We often reverse-engineer from your enforcement targets.


14) Common mistakes—and how SIAC 2025 helps you avoid them

  1. Pathological clauses that blur seat/venue or name the wrong institution—fix with TRW’s 2025 templates.
  2. Under-using early merits tools—deploy Preliminary Determination to shrink disputes.
  3. Waiting too long for relief—trigger EA or ex parte options when you have credible dissipation risk.
  4. Letting small claims balloon—switch to Streamlined where value/complexity is low.
  5. Ignoring related cases—press for coordinated proceedings to cut duplication.
  6. Fuzzy funding—comply with TPF disclosure and seek sanctions if opponents hide the ball.
  7. Security blind spots—seek security for claims/costs when counterparties show solvency red flags.
  8. Translation drift—lock a glossary and brief interpreters; inconsistency kills credibility.
  9. Loose remedies—draft precise interest, currency, netting and performance terms for enforcement.
  10. No cyber hygiene—codify virtual hearing protocols; avoid witness coaching optics at all costs.

15) A sample SIAC 2025 arbitration clause (illustrative only)

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Contract, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) in accordance with the SIAC Arbitration Rules 2025 for the time being in force, which Rules are deemed to be incorporated by reference into this clause.
The seat of arbitration shall be [Singapore / London (England & Wales) / DIFC / Dhaka]. The tribunal shall consist of [one/three] arbitrator(s). The language of the arbitration shall be English.
The parties agree that any party may apply for relief under the Emergency Arbitrator provisions and, where appropriate, for ex parte protective preliminary orders.
The parties further agree that, where the amount in dispute is USD [X] or less, the arbitration shall proceed under the Streamlined Procedure under the SIAC Rules 2025, unless the President determines otherwise.
Where multiple arbitrations involve common questions of law or fact and the same tribunal is constituted, the tribunal may order coordinated proceedings while maintaining separate records and awards.
The parties shall disclose the existence and identity of any third-party funder promptly in accordance with the SIAC Rules 2025.”

Note: This is a template starting point only; TRW tailors language to sector, value, governing law, compliance, and enforcement priorities.


16) How TRW runs your SIAC 2025 dispute (Dhaka–Dubai–London)

  1. Pre-dispute mapping of clause enforceability and award routes (Bangladesh, UAE, UK).
  2. Emergency readiness: draft affidavits, banking snapshots, and asset-trail packages for EA or ex parte motions.
  3. Early merits squeeze: identify Preliminary Determination issues that can lop off 60–80% of hearing time.
  4. Coordination across sister arbitrations for multi-contract projects; same tribunal where viable.
  5. Streamlined track for small claims portfolios—keep your litigation budget sane.
  6. Evidence engine: disciplined disclosure, privilege preservation across jurisdictions, and interpreter-briefs.
  7. Hearing craft: split-screen demonstratives, cross-examination built around the five documents that win.
  8. Post-hearing clarity: transcript-anchored briefs that make enforcement easy for courts and banks.
  9. Enforcement execution: Bangladesh, DIFC/onshore UAE, and England—calendared, translated, and authenticated.

Summary Table — SIAC 2025: What Foreign Companies Should Do Now

TopicWhat SIAC 2025 OffersYour Immediate ActionDhaka AngleDubai AngleLondon Angle
Early MeritsPreliminary Determination on discrete issuesIdentify time bars/CPs ripe for early decisionFix stamping/registration and notice disputesClarify LDs/change-order triggersResolve interpretation points early
Urgent ReliefEmergency Arbitrator + Ex Parte protective ordersPrepare asset/evidence packs; service planPreserve local evidence; FX overlaysFreeze dissipation risk via EALeverage English-law affidavits
Small DisputesStreamlined ProcedureOpt in via thresholds; portfolio playClean receivables for local suppliersFranchise/distributor clean-upVendor disputes under English law
Multi-Case EfficiencyCoordinated ProceedingsAlign tribunals and calendarsEPC stack under one slateSupply-chain alignmentGroup corporate/SPV disputes
Funding TransparencyTPF DisclosureDisclose funders; request sequencingManage optics in local courtsLink to security applicationsFold into costs narrative
Risk ProtectionSecurity for Costs/ClaimsBuild or resist applicationsShow recoverability limitsTarget asset-light entitiesTie to valuation evidence
Evidence & PrivilegeIBA-style disclosure normsLegal holds, custodian mapsBangla↔English translationsArabic↔English interpretersIn-house privilege guardrails
Hearing FormatHybrid/virtual by defaultCyber & integrity protocolsRedundant power/connectivityHub venue conveniencePremium hearing centres
EnforcementAward clarity for conversionDraft precise relief/interestLocal public-policy opticsDIFC gateway optionsPredictable recognition

Work with TRW (Dhaka • Dubai • London)

Tahmidur Remura Wahid (TRW) Law Firm combines Bangladesh execution with London and Dubai reach. Whether you are structuring SIAC-ready contracts or managing a live dispute, we design seat/venue, early merits, EA, coordination, and enforcement strategies that protect your commercial outcomes.

Contact TRW – Arbitration & Disputes
Phones: +8801708000660 · +8801847220062 · +8801708080817
Emails: info@trfirm.com · info@trwbd.com · info@tahmidur.com
Dhaka: House 410, Road 29, Mohakhali DOHS
Dubai: Rolex Building, L-12 Sheikh Zayed Road
London: 330 High Holborn, London WC1V 7QH, United Kingdom

Internal link: Start here for Bangladesh-anchored international arbitration with cross-border enforcement planning:
TRW – Arbitration & Dispute Resolution


Structured Table — TRW Engagement Snapshot for SIAC 2025 Matters

PhaseTRW DeliverableClient Inputs NeededTimeline GuideOutcome
Clause AuditRedrafted SIAC 2025 clauses (seat/venue, streamlined, coordination, EA, TPF)Sample contracts, risk appetite, enforcement targets1–2 weeks (portfolio-wide plans staged)Clean, enforceable templates
Pre-Dispute PlanningSeat/venue matrix, EA readiness pack, evidence hold planOrg chart, data maps, banking relationships1–3 weeksRapid response capability
Commencement/ResponseWin-theme, early merits list, EA/ex parte roadmapFactual chronology, key documents2–4 weeksStrong posture and optics
Case ManagementChess clocks, coordination motion, disclosure planWitness list, interpreters, glossary2–6 weeksLean timetable, lower costs
HearingOpenings, cross-examination plans, demonstrativesWitness prep availabilityAs directed by tribunalPersuasive record
Post-HearingTranscript-anchored briefs, costs submissionsApprovals on settlement corridors2–8 weeks post-hearingRelief structured for enforcement
EnforcementRoute map (BD, UAE, UK), translations, filingsAward copy, board sign-offsJurisdiction-dependentConversion to money/performance

This article is provided for general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Specific facts and jurisdictions vary; please consult TRW for tailored advice on your SIAC 2025 strategy.