Mindset shift needed in SA to unleash the true potential of arbitration

11th June 2018

Mindset shift needed in SA to unleash the true potential of arbitration

Speed, cost-efficiency and the ability to tailor the process to fit the parameters of the dispute are among the most often-cited reasons why parties choose to arbitrate.

In South Africa, however, these objectives are frequently not achieved. Parties who have been promised a faster and more efficient procedure than they would get in the High Court nevertheless find themselves mired in a wasteful, drawn-out process that closely resembles litigation.

This is all the more frustrating because it is unnecessary.

South Africa now has a modern international arbitration statute incorporating the UNCITRAL (The United Nations Commission on International Trade Law) Model, reflecting best international practice.

This includes giving the arbitrator wide powers to determine the procedure to be followed when the parties have not agreed on it. The only strictures placed on the arbitrator are that he treat the parties with equality and afford each party a full opportunity of presenting its case. Neither does the 1965 Arbitration Act, which continues to govern domestic arbitration, impose any formal procedural requirements; by implication, the arbitrator is at liberty to determine an appropriate procedure in the absence of the parties' agreement, subject only to the requirements of natural justice. Therefore, South African arbitrators have always had the statutory green-light to mould the proceedings in accordance with the needs of the specific case. But this power is often not used. Commercial arbitrators in SA often revert by default to the familiar forms and processes of litigation.

A mindset shift is needed to unleash the true potential of arbitration. Lawyers and parties from modern arbitral jurisdictions will expect proceedings in South Africa to conform to international best practice, as our governing statute now does. Arbitrators and practitioners must consciously avoid trying to impose an ill-fitting litigation paradigm onto arbitration proceedings, and start taking advantage of the procedural flexibility that arbitration offers. Some of the practical ways to achieve this are:

In short, South African arbitrators and practitioners need to become comfortable wielding the various tools and methods at their disposal to tailor the procedure for maximum efficiency and to suit the needs of the specific matter. Merely having a modern statute on the books is not enough; only by consciously releasing ourselves from the shackles of litigation-paradigm thinking will we be able to tap into arbitration's true potential and give rise to a vibrant and booming industry that will attract foreign entities to conduct their international arbitrations here, turning South Africa into the regional arbitration hub that it ought to be.

Written by Pierre Burger, director and arbitration specialist at Werksmans Attorneys