Angle For Arbitration During Gas Supply Renegotiations

Law360, New York (February 10, 2015, 10:44 AM EST) -- The uncertain geopolitical landscape of today's natural gas markets has led increasingly to renegotiation of long-term gas supply contracts. Such contracts, which can be worth billions of dollars, often include price adjustment mechanisms that are intended to ensure that over the lifetime of the contract the contractual price can be adjusted to reflect changes in the market. Those mechanisms can provide for negotiations with a backstop of arbitration. While negotiations will be the preferred method to respond to minor changes in the market, when market fluctuations are volatile enough one (or both) parties may be incentivized to push instead for arbitration. This may be a significant roll of the dice, and some recent arbitral awards show that arbitral tribunals are not afraid of determining the appropriate price in accordance with the underlying contract and price review mechanism....

Law360 is on it, so you are, too.

A Law360 subscription puts you at the center of fast-moving legal issues, trends and developments so you can act with speed and confidence. Over 200 articles are published daily across more than 60 topics, industries, practice areas and jurisdictions.


A Law360 subscription includes features such as

  • Daily newsletters
  • Expert analysis
  • Mobile app
  • Advanced search
  • Judge information
  • Real-time alerts
  • 450K+ searchable archived articles

And more!

Experience Law360 today with a free 7-day trial.

Start Free Trial

Already a subscriber? Click here to login

Related Sections

Law Firms

Government Agencies

Hello! I'm Law360's automated support bot.

How can I help you today?

For example, you can type:
  • I forgot my password
  • I took a free trial but didn't get a verification email
  • How do I sign up for a newsletter?
Ask a question!