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    Decision No 1/2026 of the CETA Joint Committee of 5 March 2026 adopting supplemental rules on expedited procedures for the resolution of investment disputes between investors and states, in particular for natural persons or small and medium-sized enterprises [2026/1468]

    Decision No 1/2026 of the CETA Joint Committee establishes a specialized, expedited framework for resolving investment disputes specifically tailored for natural persons and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). By introducing streamlined procedures, shorter timelines, and the use of a sole Tribunal member, the act aims to significantly reduce the financial and administrative burdens that typically hinder smaller entities from accessing international investment arbitration. This initiative fulfills a long-standing commitment to ensure that the CETA investment protection mechanism remains accessible and inclusive for all market participants, regardless of their size. ****: This decision is highly relevant for Ukrainian businesses and investors operating within the EU-Canada trade framework, as it provides a more viable legal pathway for smaller Ukrainian enterprises to protect their investments under CETA.

    ### Structure and Main Provisions
    The Decision is structured into ten articles that define the procedural lifecycle of an expedited dispute:

    * **Scope and Eligibility (Articles 1-2):** Defines the objective of cost reduction and sets out the criteria for requesting an expedited procedure. Claimants must provide detailed financial and ownership data, and the respondent is required to give “sympathetic consideration” to requests where damages do not exceed SDR 40 million.
    * **Tribunal Constitution (Article 3):** Replaces the standard multi-member tribunal with a sole Member of the Tribunal to minimize costs and complexity.
    * **Procedural Schedule (Articles 4-5):** Implements a strict, time-bound schedule for written submissions and hearings, including page limits for documents and specific deadlines for the final award.
    * **Flexibility and Exit Clauses (Article 5):** Provides mechanisms for the Tribunal to manage evidence, limit submissions, and allows for the transition back to standard procedures under specific conditions, such as the discovery of misleading information.
    * **Consolidation and Mediation (Articles 6-7):** Encourages the consolidation of similar claims to save resources and mandates that respondents give sympathetic consideration to mediation requests for eligible SMEs.
    * **Review and Entry into Force (Articles 8-10):** Establishes a framework for periodic review of the Decision’s effectiveness and sets the conditions for its entry into force alongside the broader CETA investment dispute resolution section.

    ### Key Provisions for Practical Application
    For legal practitioners and businesses, the following elements are the most critical for operational use:

    1. **The “Sympathetic Consideration” Standard:** While the respondent is not automatically bound to grant an expedited request, the requirement to provide a written justification for any rejection creates a high threshold for denial, effectively favoring the claimant’s access to the expedited track.
    2. **Financial Threshold:** The SDR 40,000,000 cap is a pivotal filter. It ensures that the expedited procedure is reserved for disputes where the complexity and financial stakes are manageable within a condensed timeframe.
    3. **Strict Procedural Timelines:** The schedule is aggressive (e.g., 90-day windows for submissions and a 180-day deadline for the final award after the hearing). This requires claimants to be fully prepared with their evidence and legal arguments at the outset of the claim.
    4. **Sole Member Efficiency:** The appointment of a sole Member of the Tribunal is a significant departure from standard practice, designed to reduce the costs associated with party-appointed arbitrators and the administrative overhead of larger panels.
    5. **SME Definition:** The Decision explicitly references the EU’s 2003/361/EC Recommendation for defining SMEs, providing a clear, pre-existing legal benchmark for determining eligibility, which adds legal certainty for European and, by extension, Ukrainian entities seeking to utilize these rules.

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