Renegotiation of International Energy Investment Transactions: The Necessity of Contractual Flexibility
-
-
H.R. Younesi
Published 10 January 2022
Abstract
This article focuses on the extent to which renegotiation clauses deal with the vulnerability of the contractual equilibrium to disruption, as well as the obsolescing character of the resulting bargain in international energy investment agreements. Furthermore, it addresses the taxonomy, function and effect attached to such clauses by international arbitrations and major legal systems.
To read this article you need to be a subscriber
Subscribe
Fill in the registration form and answer a few simple questions to receive a quote.
Subscribe now
Suggested Citation
H.R. Younesi (2022, forthcoming) "Renegotiation of International Energy Investment Transactions: The Necessity of Contractual Flexibility"
(OGEL, ISSN 1875-418X) January 2022, www.ogel.org
Other recently published material:
China's State-controlled Approach to Cross-provincial Gas Pipeline Planning
7 February 2023
Addendum OGEL 5 (2022) - Lessons Learned from the Energy Activities in the Gulf of Mexico Region as a Guide for Accelerating and Financing Energy Activities in the Atlantic Region during the Energy Addition
7 February 2023
Changing the Conversation on Energy Transition - Aligning Interests or Mandating Actions to Combat Climate Change in Challenging Times
1 February 2023
Addendum OGEL 5 (2022) - WTO Law on Subsidies and Local Content Rules in the Offshore Renewable Energy Sector
16 January 2023
The Domestication of the Principle of Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources in the Tanzania Petroleum Industry: The Move Towards Nationalism is it a Sovereign Right or Wrong?
10 January 2023
Complete listing of Advance publication.