Netherlands to Pull Out of Treaty Protecting Energy Investments
The Netherlands will
follow Spain in pulling out of the Energy Charter Treaty protecting investments
in the sector, its energy ministry said on Wednesday.
In force since 1998,
the treaty, which has more than 50 signatories including the European Union,
allows investors to sue governments over policies that jeopardise their
investments.
But in recent years
it has been used by fossil fuel and renewable energy companies to sue
governments for regulatory changes that threaten returns on specific
investments.
In announcing the
decision, Dutch Minister for Climate and Energy Policy Rob Jetten
told parliament the treaty is not in line with the Paris climate accord and
that efforts to re-negotiate it have been unsuccessful, a spokesperson said on
Wednesday.
"For that
reason, the Netherlands, preferably with the entire EU, will leave the ECT.
When the Netherlands will officially leave is still to be determined," the
spokesperson added.
Italy withdrew from the treaty in 2016.