Consultation outcome

The Singapore Convention on Mediation

This was published under the 2019 to 2022 Johnson Conservative government
This consultation has concluded

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Detail of outcome

This is the government’s response to its consultation on the United Nations Convention on International Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation (New York, 2018) (the ‘Singapore Convention on Mediation’).


Original consultation

Summary

This consultation seeks views on whether the UK should sign and ratify the Singapore Convention on Mediation 2018.

This consultation ran from
to

Consultation description

The mediation sector in the UK was estimated to be worth £17.5 billion in 2020, and it is estimated that mediation can save businesses around £4.6 billion per year in management time, relationships, productivity and legal fees.

The Singapore Convention is a Private International Law agreement which establishes a uniform framework for the effective recognition and enforcement of commercial mediated settlement agreements across borders. It provides a process whereby someone seeking to rely upon a mediated settlement agreement can apply directly to the competent authority of a Party to the Convention to enforce the agreement.

The Convention was negotiated by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) and came into force on 12 September 2020. It currently has 55 signatories and 9 parties have ratified it.

Documents

Updates to this page

Published 2 February 2022
Last updated 2 March 2023 + show all updates
  1. Government response published.

  2. First published.

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