The 2019 Singapore Convention of Mediation

The Convention of Mediation

On 07 August 2019 the United Nations Convention on International Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation was signed by the members of 46 countries at an official signing ceremony in Singapore including, Turkey, Qatar, the United states, China [1].  A full list of signatories is at the end of this post.

The Convention to be known as “Singapore Mediation Convention” aims to address the lack of a framework to facilitate the enforcement of international settlement agreements resulting from mediation. The Convention offers easier and more efficient enforcement of commercial settlements reached through mediation and will likely provide a regulatory foundation to support rise of mediation in resolving international commercial dispute alongside arbitration. It is the “New York Convention” of the mediation world as such. The Singapore Convention requires implementation in domestic legislation like the New York Convention.

Cross Border Mediation

Broadly, mediation is a means of alternative dispute resolution whereby an independent person (mediator) assists the parties to negotiate and resolve the dispute cost effectively and promptly. As such it is relatively informal, confidential and consensual i.e. resolution based on party interests rather than legal rights. In respect of domestic disputes the concept of mediation is not new. However the international use of mediation has not been significant.

In 2014 a survey was conducted to assess the extent to which a mediation enforcement convention is desired.  The results show that almost 93 % of the respondents were likely to mediate a dispute with a party from another country if they knew that country ratified an UN Convention on the enforcement of mediated settlements[2].

The Singapore Convention avoids any specific definition of mediation. It simply requires that an amicable settlement of a dispute was attempted with the assistance of a third party who has no authority to impose an outcome on the parties to the dispute.

If resolution is reached following a mediation, a settlement agreement is generally entered into by the parties to the dispute. Provided that one of the parties does not comply with its obligations under the settlement agreement, the other party must enforce the settlement through the means of dispute resolution provisions set out in the settlement agreement.  By way of an example, the parties to the settlement agreement may have agreed that disputes are to be resolved through litigation i.e. court proceedings in a specified jurisdiction or to arbitration. The party seeking enforcement would then need to commence court proceedings or arbitration.

Enforcement is rather straightforward in terms of domestic disputes when the parties to the dispute and the enforcement process are in the same jurisdiction[3]. However for international disputes the process is more complex.  This is where the Singapore Convention comes into play.

Enforcement Under the Convention

There are a number of conditions for enforcement under the Convention namely;

  • Settlement agreement must be in writing
  • Settlement agreement must have resulted from mediation
  • Settlement agreement is between two or more parties who have their place of business in different States; and
  • the place of business of each of the parties to the agreement is in a State that has acceded to or ratified the Convention.

The Convention applies only to commercial disputes but not to family, inheritance, employment, or consumer related disputes. Construction disputes to that extent is covered by the Convention.  We will elloborate further in a subsequent article as to what the Convention means for the Turkish construction industry which is the second largest in the world after China[4] .

It is expected that the Convention will come into force sometime within the spring of 2020.

What it means for the International Construction Industry?

Disputes arise in international construction industry are generally complex and expensive to resolve.

Sophisticated methods of alternative dispute resolution have been around and used by the industry for over decades.  The FIDIC 1999 Rainbow Suite for example requires binding adjudication. Much has been written by the scholars of dispute resolution world as to advantages and disadvantages of the ADRs over litigation and arbitration.  We will not go into detail in this article as such, however it is generally accepted that the ADRs are cost and time efficient.  International dispute resolution expert Metehan Sonbahar of EQUITAS, a leading specialist consultancy providing high quality expert advisory, consulting and dispute management services to the global engineering and construction industry, said: “mediation does not only provide significant time and money efficiency when compared with litigation and arbitration, but can also help prevent disputes leading to the termination of commercial relationships.”

Notwithstanding that, there are known enforcement issues in cross border transactions.  From the adjudication perspective for example, the general view is that the binding adjudication decision rendered under the conditions of the FIDIC 1999  Rainbow Suite  must be enforceable. That is also supported by the renowned Persero cases. That being said enforcement of an adjudication decision is not a straightforward process and it requires experienced counsel, dispute resolution consultants and judges / arbitrators. There is also a lack of an international framework for the enforcement process.

This is where we believe that the Singapore Convention will differentiate mediation from other alternative dispute resolution methods ,serving as an important tool encouraging cross-border mediation and  providing parties a framework for enforcement.

Signatories to the Convention as At 7 August 2019 (in alphabetic order)

Afghanistan, Belarus, Benin, Brunei, Chile, China, Colombia, Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eswatini, Fiji, Georgia, Grenada, Haiti, Honduras, India, Iran, Israel, Jamaica, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Laos, Malaysia, Maldives, Mauritius, Montenegro, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Palau, Paraguay, Philippines, Qatar, Republic of Korea, Samoa, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, USA, Uruguay, Venezuela[5]

 

[1] https://www.singaporeconvention.org/news-7aug-signing-ceremony.html

[2] https://www.imimediation.org/2017/01/16/users-view-proposal-un-convention-enforcement-mediated-settlements/

[3] Also note amendment to law no 7155 published in the Official Gazette on 19 December 2018  introducing mandatory mediation as condition precedent to litigation for commercial disputes under Turkish law

[4] https://www.enr.com/toplists/2019-Top-250-International-Contractors-1

[5] https://www.singaporeconvention.org/official-signatories.html