Arbitration Bill
- The Arbitration Bill will support more efficient dispute
resolution, attract international legal business, and promote UK
economic growth.
- It does so by enacting recent Law Commission recommendations
to reform arbitration law and bolster our world-leading domestic
and international arbitration sector.
What does the Bill do?
- This Bill will implement the recommendations made in a 2022
Law Commission review of Arbitration Law, with the key reforms
being:
-
clarifying the law applicable to arbitration
agreements that do not arise from
investor-state agreements, providing that the law
applicable will be those of the legal location chosen for
arbitration unless parties expressly agree otherwise. This
will ensure that, where arbitration is seated in England and
Wales, or Northern Ireland, it will be fully supported by our
arbitration law which is among the most supportive of
arbitration globally.
-
codifying a duty on arbitrators to disclose
circumstances that might give rise to justifiable doubts
about their impartiality, in line with international
best practice.
-
strengthening arbitrator immunity against liability
for resignations and applications for removal,
supporting arbitrators to make robust and impartial decisions
without fear of being sued by a disappointed party.
-
empowering arbitrators to make awards on a summary
basis on issues that have no real prospect of
success, avoiding nuisance claims and making
arbitrations more efficient.
-
empowering courts to make orders in support of
emergency arbitrators so they have the same routes
to enforce their orders as other arbitrators.
-
revising the framework for challenges where
the challenge alleges that the arbitral tribunal lacked
jurisdiction.
Territorial extent and application
- The Bill will extend and apply to England and Wales and
Northern Ireland.
Key facts
- Arbitration is a form of dispute resolution. If two or more
parties have a dispute which they cannot resolve themselves, they
might appoint a third person as an arbitrator to resolve the
dispute for them by issuing an award or they might appoint a
panel of arbitrators to act as an arbitral tribunal. Arbitration
allows people and businesses to resolve legal issues on their own
terms, often with more flexibility and privacy than protracted
court trials. Many contracts require arbitration to resolve
disputes.
- According to the Law Commission of England and Wales there
are at least 5,000 domestic and international arbitrations each
year in England and Wales, worth £2.5 billion to the British
economy in arbitration and legal fees alone. This Bill will give
businesses the confidence to know that any arbitration carried
out in England and Wales and Northern Ireland will be handled
effectively and consistently.
- The Arbitration Act 1996 must be modernised to continue
attracting international legal business. Other jurisdictions have
updated their legislation more recently: Singapore in 2023, Hong
Kong in 2022, and Sweden and Dubai in 2018. In 2021, Singapore
ranked equal first to London as the globally preferred choice for
international arbitration.