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Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly

DEFAULT STANDARDS FOR NON-ABSOLUTE OBLIGATION CLAUSES?

Man Yip* Yihan Goh*

KS Energy v BR Energy Electricity Generation v Woodside Energy

A “reasonable endeavours” undertaking, and its variants, are common features of commercial contracts. These clauses might be inserted into agreements to balance the interests of the parties where the achievement of the contractual object involves conditions beyond the obligor’s control, for example, the procurement of a third party’s performance. Equally common is the insertion of these clauses into contracts to resolve a negotiation stalemate where one party refuses to promise the absolute achievement of the contractual objective.
Notwithstanding their common usage, the general principles regarding the interpretation and scope of non-absolute obligation clauses remain mired in some uncertainty. In decisions delivered just a week apart, both the Singapore Court of Appeal and the High Court of Australia established general guidelines on the approach to be taken in respect of such clauses. Each case presented different aspects of the uncertainties surrounding non-absolute obligation clauses. In KS Energy Services Ltd v BR Energy (M) Sdn Bhd,1 the Singapore Court of Appeal pronounced on the general approach to a simple “all reasonable endeavours” clause, as well as its relationship with “best endeavours” and “reasonable endeavours” clauses. In Electricity Generation Corporation T/AS Verve Energy v Woodside Energy Ltd,2 the High Court of Australia considered a “reasonable endeavours” clause that was qualified by an explicit provision on how the obligor’s interests are to be balanced against the obligee’s interests. Both cases go some way towards resolving the confusion surrounding non-absolute obligation clauses.

KS Energy: Singapore Court of Appeal

In KS Energy, BR Energy had been awarded a contract to charter an oil rig to Petronas. The oil rig was to be delivered to Petronas by 21 March 2006. As it turned out, however, BR Energy’s original partners for the project had to pull out. BR Energy therefore approached KS Energy, which was in the business of chartering capital equipment in the oil and gas industry, to deliver the oil rig. KS Energy found a third-party contractor, Oderco, to construct the oil rig. It also formed a joint venture company with BR Energy to procure the oil rig and then charter it out, in fulfilment of BR Energy’s original contract with Petronas. The joint venture agreement stipulated that KS Energy was to:
“use all reasonable endeavours to procure the [oil rig] is constructed and ready for delivery in Abu Dhabi or other location specified by [KS Energy] within six months after the Charter Agreement is executed”.


CASE AND COMMENT

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