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Allan B. Moore

Allan B. Moore practices in the areas of international arbitration and insurance coverage. He co-chairs the firm’s Energy Industry Group and previously co-chaired the firm’s Arbitration Practice Group for 10 years. Allan has helped clients recover more than $2 billion in commercial and insurance coverage disputes. Described by clients as “a wonderful lawyer” with “deep knowledge,” he “articulates positions clearly” and “focuses on the key issues” (Chambers). Allan was a runner-up for “Litigator of the Week” in The American Lawyer’s Litigation Daily in May 2020 for a victory for ExxonMobil, and he has been recognized as a leading lawyer by Chambers Global, Chambers USA, Best Lawyers in America, and The Legal 500.

Clients in major cases include BP, for whom Allan was lead insurance recovery counsel in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill litigation, ExxonMobil, Merck, Komatsu, Norfolk Southern, Plains All American Pipeline, Samsung, S&P Global, TotalEnergies, and UBS. Allan has served as lead counsel before courts and tribunals throughout the United States and for disputes in Europe, Canada, the UK, East Asia, the Middle East, Australia, and Africa. He has extensive experience with “Bermuda Form” arbitrations and has served as lead counsel for successful parties in ICC, ICSID, UNCITRAL, DIFC-LCIA, SCC, AAA, CPR, and ad hoc arbitrations, as well as in ICC expert proceedings. Allan also occasionally sits as an arbitrator.

Allan is a member of the Executive Committee of the Institute for Transnational Arbitration (ITA); a former Member of the LCIA Court; a peer-selected “Distinguished Neutral” for arbitration and mediation with the International Institute for Conflict Prevention and Resolution (CPR); a rostered arbitrator with the Institute for Energy Law (IEL); and a member of the CPR Council. He coaches law students in oral advocacy and is a frequent speaker on insurance coverage and arbitration topics.

Project development agreements with states and state-owned enterprises (SOEs) are often governed by the law of the host country (sometimes with freezing, stabilization, or other limiting clauses), while also being subject to arbitration seated in a neutral venue.  The assumption is that the courts of the neutral venue will have exclusive jurisdiction to supervise the arbitration and confirm, or set aside, any arbitral award.

A decision issued last week by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in P&ID v. Nigeria puts that assumption in doubt by suggesting that an award can also be set aside by the courts of the state whose substantive law applies to the merits of the dispute.  Together with recent judgments in other jurisdictions, the decision underscores the importance for investors of:  (i) resisting selection of the host state’s substantive law where possible; and (ii) particularly where that is not possible, including express language confirming the parties’ agreement that, notwithstanding the choice of the host state’s law to govern interpretation of the contract, the arbitration process will be governed by the law of the arbitral seat.
Continue Reading D.C. Circuit Decision Underscores Need for Careful Drafting of Choice of Law Clauses in Host Country Agreements