Consortio Law Firm

Consortio Law Firm Consortio Law Firm is a full-service law firm based in Egypt, offering strategic legal solutions to local and international clients.

We specialize in corporate law, commercial transactions, dispute resolution, foreign investment, real estate… Consortio Law Firm is a full service law firm located in Egypt, specialized in providing legal advice for Egyptian and foreign companies. we provide expert legal services in a professional manner with the main concern of the care we provide to our clients through abiding our team to our in

ternal client care policy. We highly compete in the market though our innovative systems which allow our team to provide legal services in a timely manner; we can simply describe ourselves as the fastest in the market. What also distinguishes our firm is our ability to handle bureaucracy in governmental authorities; we highly understand the nature of dealing with official authority, we have high experience in getting licenses and approvals. Our attorneys are well organized, high skilled, have wide legal knowledge and more important various experience in the field. We believe that our role in the market as well as commitment to our clients is not represent and defend them before courts but, to avoid our clients to encounter any damages and losses due to legal issues, making sure that our client has a smooth business experience, since we fully understand the importance of cash flow and financial losses that a simple legal issue could lead to.

Time Limits in Arbitration: Speed with Structured Control ✳️ One of the main reasons parties choose arbitration is speed...
27/04/2026

Time Limits in Arbitration: Speed with Structured Control



✳️ One of the main reasons parties choose arbitration is speed.

But speed without structure can lead to uncertainty.

Egyptian Arbitration Law addresses this balance in Article (45) by setting clear time limits for issuing the final award.

📜 Article (45) provides:

(1) The arbitral tribunal must issue the final award within the period agreed by the parties. If no agreement exists, the award must be issued within twelve months from the commencement of arbitration. The tribunal may extend this period, provided that the extension does not exceed six months, unless the parties agree otherwise.

(2) If the award is not issued within this timeframe, either party may request the President of the competent court (under Article 9) to set an additional deadline or to terminate the arbitration proceedings. In such case, either party may bring the dispute before the court originally competent to hear it.

🔍 Legal Meaning

Article (45) establishes a structured timeline for arbitration:

Party autonomy first: The parties may freely agree on the duration of the arbitration.

Default rule second: If they remain silent, the law imposes a 12-month period from the start of proceedings.

Controlled extension: The tribunal may extend the deadline, but within a defined limit unless otherwise agreed.

This ensures that arbitration remains efficient while avoiding indefinite proceedings.

⚖️ Judicial Safeguard

The article also introduces an important safety mechanism:

➡️ If the tribunal fails to issue the award on time, the court may intervene—not to decide the dispute, but to:

grant an additional period, or

terminate the arbitration entirely.

This prevents arbitration from becoming a procedural deadlock.

⚖️ Practical Implications

For parties: Time limits create predictability and reduce the risk of prolonged disputes.

For tribunals: There is a clear obligation to manage proceedings efficiently and within defined deadlines.

For courts: Their role remains limited to ensuring that arbitration does not stall indefinitely.

💬 Conclusion

Article (45) reflects a key principle of modern arbitration:

efficiency must be guaranteed, not assumed.

By combining party autonomy, default time limits, and judicial safeguards, Egyptian arbitration law ensures that arbitration remains a timely and reliable method of dispute resolution.

🧠 This article is part of the series, highlighting how Egyptian arbitration law structures the process to deliver timely and enforceable outcomes.

Delivery and Confidentiality of Arbitral Awards: Finality with Privacy ✳️ The arbitral award marks the end of the disput...
19/04/2026

Delivery and Confidentiality of Arbitral Awards: Finality with Privacy



✳️ The arbitral award marks the end of the dispute—but its legal effect depends on proper delivery to the parties.
At the same time, one of arbitration’s key advantages is confidentiality, which must be preserved even after the award is issued.

These two principles are addressed in Article (44) of Egypt’s Arbitration Law No. 27 of 1994.

📜 Article (44) provides:
(1) The arbitral tribunal shall deliver to each party a signed copy of the award within thirty days from the date of its issuance.
(2) The arbitral award, or any part thereof, may not be published without the consent of both parties.

🔍 Legal Meaning
Article (44) establishes two essential rules:

1️⃣ Formal Delivery of the Award

The tribunal must provide each party with a signed copy of the award within a defined timeframe.
This step is not merely administrative—it is a procedural requirement that triggers important legal consequences, such as:

the commencement of time limits for annulment actions, and
the ability to proceed with enforcement.
2️⃣ Protection of Confidentiality

The article reinforces a core feature of arbitration: privacy.
Unlike court judgments, arbitral awards are not public documents. Their publication—whether in full or in part—requires the express consent of both parties.

⚖️ Practical Implications

For parties: Timely receipt of the award is critical to preserve procedural rights and determine next steps.
For arbitral tribunals: Compliance with delivery requirements is essential to avoid disputes over timing or validity.
For confidentiality: The rule protects sensitive commercial information and encourages parties to choose arbitration over public litigation.

💬 Conclusion
Article (44) reflects two defining features of arbitration:
finality and confidentiality.

By ensuring prompt delivery of the award and restricting its publication, Egyptian arbitration law protects both the procedural integrity of the process and the privacy of the parties.

This balance reinforces arbitration as a discreet, efficient, and enforceable mechanism for resolving commercial disputes.

🧠 This article is part of the series, highlighting how Egyptian arbitration law safeguards both the effectiveness and the confidentiality of arbitral outcomes.

Form and Reasoning of Arbitral Awards: What Makes an Award Legally Valid ✳️ An arbitral award is the culmination of the ...
05/04/2026

Form and Reasoning of Arbitral Awards: What Makes an Award Legally Valid



✳️ An arbitral award is the culmination of the arbitration process.
But its enforceability does not depend only on the tribunal’s decision—it also depends on how the award is written, reasoned, and formally issued.

These requirements are clearly set out in Article (43) of Egypt’s Arbitration Law No. 27 of 1994.

📜 Article (43) provides:
(1) The arbitral award must be issued in writing and signed by the arbitrators. Where the tribunal consists of more than one arbitrator, the signatures of the majority are sufficient, provided the reasons for any missing signature are recorded.
(2) The award must contain reasons unless the parties agree otherwise or the procedural law governing the arbitration does not require reasoning.
(3) The award must include the names and addresses of the parties, the names, nationalities, and capacities of the arbitrators, a copy of the arbitration agreement, a summary of the parties’ claims and submissions, the operative part of the award, and the date and place of issuance, along with the reasoning where required.

🔍 Legal Meaning
Article (43) establishes the formal structure of a valid arbitral award.
These requirements serve several purposes:

ensuring transparency in the tribunal’s decision-making process,

allowing courts to verify the procedural integrity of the award, and

safeguarding the parties’ right to understand how the dispute was resolved.

The rule that majority signatures are sufficient reflects the collective nature of arbitral tribunals while ensuring that dissent or refusal to sign does not paralyze the process.

⚖️ Practical Implications

For arbitrators: Careful drafting and compliance with formal requirements are essential to avoid challenges to the award.

For parties: A properly reasoned award provides clarity on how the tribunal assessed the evidence and legal arguments.

For enforcement: Courts reviewing an award for recognition or annulment rely on these formal elements to verify its validity.

💬 Conclusion
Article (43) highlights that arbitration is not merely about reaching a decision—it is about delivering a structured, transparent, and enforceable award.

By defining the form and essential contents of the arbitral award, Egyptian arbitration law ensures that the final decision reflects both procedural discipline and legal credibility, strengthening confidence in arbitration as a reliable dispute-resolution mechanism.

🧠 This article is part of the series, highlighting how Egyptian arbitration law structures the arbitral process to ensure that awards are clear, reasoned, and capable of enforcement.

Partial and Interim Awards: Deciding Issues Before the Final Decision ✳️ Arbitration does not always end with a single c...
29/03/2026

Partial and Interim Awards: Deciding Issues Before the Final Decision



✳️ Arbitration does not always end with a single comprehensive decision.
In complex disputes, certain issues may be resolved earlier than others, allowing the tribunal to clarify key matters while the rest of the case continues.

Egyptian Arbitration Law recognizes this procedural flexibility in Article (42).

📜 Article (42) provides:
The arbitral tribunal may issue interim awards or awards deciding part of the claims before rendering the final award that terminates the entire dispute.

🔍 Legal Meaning
Article (42) grants arbitral tribunals the authority to issue partial or interim awards during the course of the proceedings.

These awards may address specific issues that can be decided independently from the rest of the dispute, such as:

jurisdictional questions,

liability determinations,

specific claims within a broader dispute, or

procedural matters requiring immediate resolution.

This mechanism allows arbitration to proceed in a structured and efficient manner, especially in disputes involving multiple claims or complex factual questions.

⚖️ Practical Implications

For parties: Partial awards may clarify the legal position early in the proceedings and sometimes encourage settlement once key issues are resolved.

For arbitral tribunals: The power to decide issues progressively helps manage complex cases without waiting for every aspect of the dispute to be fully developed.

For enforcement: Depending on their nature, certain partial awards may carry legal effects similar to final awards with respect to the issues they resolve.

💬 Conclusion
Article (42) reflects a practical reality of modern arbitration: disputes often unfold in stages.
By allowing tribunals to resolve issues progressively, the law promotes efficiency, procedural clarity, and better case management.

This flexibility ensures that arbitration remains adaptable to the complexity of commercial disputes while maintaining a structured path toward the final award.

🧠 This article is part of the series, highlighting how Egyptian arbitration law equips tribunals with procedural tools that enhance efficiency and clarity in resolving complex disputes.

Opening a private school in Egypt involves more than classrooms and curricula.Licensing, ownership rules, land approvals...
27/03/2026

Opening a private school in Egypt involves more than classrooms and curricula.
Licensing, ownership rules, land approvals, and ongoing regulatory oversight determine whether a school can operate legally.
This carousel explains the legal framework that governs private schools in Egypt and what investors need to understand before starting.
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Settlement During Arbitration: When Agreement Becomes an Enforceable Award ✳️ Arbitration is often viewed as a path to a...
22/03/2026

Settlement During Arbitration: When Agreement Becomes an Enforceable Award



✳️ Arbitration is often viewed as a path to a final award.
Yet in practice, many disputes are resolved before the tribunal renders its decision, once the parties reassess their positions during the proceedings.

Egyptian Arbitration Law recognizes this reality and provides a structured mechanism for formalizing settlements in Article (41).

📜 Article (41) provides:
If the parties reach a settlement during the arbitration proceedings that terminates the dispute, they may request the arbitral tribunal to record the terms of the settlement. In such case, the tribunal shall issue a decision incorporating the settlement terms and terminating the proceedings, and this decision shall have the same enforceability as an arbitral award.

🔍 Legal Meaning
Article (41) introduces what is commonly known in international arbitration as a “consent award.”

Instead of merely ending the case informally, the parties may request the tribunal to record their settlement within a formal arbitral decision.
Once issued, that decision carries the same legal force as any arbitral award.

This transforms the settlement from a private agreement into a legally enforceable instrument.

⚖️ Practical Implications

For parties: A settlement recorded by the tribunal becomes directly enforceable, avoiding the need for separate litigation if a party later breaches the agreement.

For arbitral tribunals: The tribunal’s role shifts from adjudicating the dispute to formally confirming the agreed terms.

For enforcement: The resulting decision benefits from the same enforcement mechanisms applicable to arbitral awards.

💬 Conclusion
Article (41) reflects an important principle of modern dispute resolution:
the ultimate goal of arbitration is not necessarily a judgment, but a resolution.

By allowing settlements to be transformed into enforceable arbitral decisions, Egyptian arbitration law encourages negotiated outcomes while preserving legal certainty and enforceability.

🧠 This article is part of the series, highlighting how Egyptian arbitration law supports efficient dispute resolution by combining procedural flexibility with strong enforcement mechanisms.

Marine and offshore operations in Egypt involve more than technical expertise.Licensing, safety requirements, environmen...
20/03/2026

Marine and offshore operations in Egypt involve more than technical expertise.
Licensing, safety requirements, environmental compliance, and regulator coordination all play a critical role in whether operations are allowed to continue.
This carousel explains the compliance framework marine and offshore service providers must understand to operate legally and risk-free in Egypt.
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Which Law Governs the Dispute? Party Autonomy and the Tribunal’s Choice ✳️ One of the most strategic questions in arbitr...
15/03/2026

Which Law Governs the Dispute? Party Autonomy and the Tribunal’s Choice



✳️ One of the most strategic questions in arbitration is not procedural but substantive:
Which law governs the dispute?

The answer may determine how contracts are interpreted, how damages are assessed, and even whether certain claims are valid.
Egyptian Arbitration Law No. 27 of 1994 addresses this issue clearly in Article (39).

📜 Article (39) provides:
(1) The arbitral tribunal shall apply the legal rules chosen by the parties. If they agree on the law of a specific state, the tribunal shall apply its substantive rules, excluding conflict-of-law rules unless otherwise agreed.
(2) If the parties do not agree on the applicable law, the tribunal shall apply the substantive rules of the law it considers most closely connected to the dispute.
(3) In all cases, the tribunal must take into account the terms of the contract and the prevailing trade usages relevant to the transaction.
(4) If the parties expressly authorize it, the tribunal may decide the dispute according to principles of equity and fairness rather than strict legal rules.

🔍 Legal Meaning
Article (39) establishes a clear hierarchy for determining the applicable law:

1️⃣ Party autonomy comes first.
The parties are free to choose the governing law of their contract and dispute.

2️⃣ Tribunal determination comes second.
If the parties remain silent, the tribunal identifies the law most closely connected to the dispute.

3️⃣ Contractual terms and trade usages remain central.
Even when applying national law, tribunals must consider the agreement itself and the commercial practices governing the transaction.

4️⃣ Equity-based decision-making is possible.
But only if the parties explicitly authorize the tribunal to decide the case ex aequo et bono (according to fairness).

⚖️ Practical Implications

For parties: Choosing the governing law in advance can significantly reduce uncertainty in cross-border disputes.

For arbitral tribunals: Article (39) provides both a legal framework and flexibility when no choice has been made.

For international arbitration: The rule aligns Egyptian arbitration law with widely accepted international arbitration principles.

💬 Conclusion
Article (39) reflects a core philosophy of modern arbitration:
the law governing the dispute should follow the will of the parties whenever possible.

Where that will is absent, the tribunal ensures that the dispute is resolved under the legal system most closely connected to it—while still respecting contractual terms and commercial practices.

🧠 This article is part of the series, highlighting how Egyptian arbitration law combines party autonomy, legal certainty, and practical flexibility in resolving complex commercial disputes.

Zero-rated VAT is not automatic in Egypt — even if you are serving a foreign HQ.For many Egypt-based hubs and back offic...
13/03/2026

Zero-rated VAT is not automatic in Egypt — even if you are serving a foreign HQ.
For many Egypt-based hubs and back offices, VAT risks appear years later during tax audits, leading to backdated liabilities, penalties, and interest.
This carousel explains why VAT classification matters, how service agreements play a critical role, and why fixing it later rarely works.
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Parallel imports don’t involve fake products — but they can seriously damage your brand.In Egypt, unauthorized channels ...
06/03/2026

Parallel imports don’t involve fake products — but they can seriously damage your brand.
In Egypt, unauthorized channels can undermine pricing, distributor relationships, and customer trust if brand protection is not structured properly.
This carousel explains how parallel imports arise, why trademarks alone are not enough, and what foreign brand owners can do to protect their position in the market.
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Judicial Assistance in Arbitration: Enforcing Evidence Without Interfering ✳️ Arbitration is based on party autonomy, bu...
01/03/2026

Judicial Assistance in Arbitration: Enforcing Evidence Without Interfering



✳️ Arbitration is based on party autonomy, but it does not operate in isolation from the state’s judicial system.
Certain procedural powers—especially those involving coercive authority—remain exclusively within the domain of the courts.
This balance is clearly reflected in Article (37) of Egypt’s Arbitration Law No. 27 of 1994.

📜 Article (37) provides:
Upon the request of the arbitral tribunal, the President of the competent court referred to in Article (9) shall have jurisdiction to:
(a) Impose the penalties prescribed under Articles 78 and 80 of the Egyptian Evidence Law on witnesses who fail to appear or refuse to testify.
(b) Order judicial assistance (letters rogatory).

🔍 Legal Meaning
Article (37) recognizes a practical reality:
➡️ Arbitral tribunals lack coercive powers.

While tribunals may summon witnesses and manage evidence, they cannot compel attendance, enforce testimony, or impose penalties.
These powers belong to the judiciary alone.

Accordingly, the law creates a targeted channel of judicial support, activated only at the tribunal’s request and limited strictly to evidentiary assistance.

⚖️ Scope of Judicial Intervention
The court’s role under Article (37) is functional, not supervisory:

It may sanction witnesses who fail to appear or refuse to answer, applying the same penalties available in court litigation.

It may issue orders of judicial delegation (letters rogatory) to assist in obtaining evidence that lies beyond the tribunal’s reach.

Crucially, the court does not examine the merits of the dispute, assess evidence, or interfere with the tribunal’s procedural discretion.

⚖️ Practical Implications

For arbitral tribunals: Article (37) provides an enforcement mechanism that ensures witness cooperation and effective fact-finding.

For parties: It prevents obstruction through witness non-appearance or refusal to testify.

For courts: It confirms a supportive role limited to enforcement, preserving arbitral independence.

💬 Conclusion
Article (37) exemplifies the correct balance between arbitration and judicial authority.
It preserves arbitral autonomy while ensuring that the process is not undermined by procedural deadlocks or evidentiary resistance.

By confining judicial involvement to clearly defined assistance functions, Egyptian arbitration law reinforces a modern principle:
courts support arbitration where force is needed—but never replace it where judgment is required.

🧠 This article is part of the series, highlighting how Egyptian arbitration law integrates judicial support mechanisms without compromising the independence or efficiency of arbitral proceedings.

The Future of Legal Counsel is Vocal: Introducing the Consortio AI AgentLaw is built on tradition, but it is driven by i...
26/02/2026

The Future of Legal Counsel is Vocal: Introducing the Consortio AI Agent

Law is built on tradition, but it is driven by innovation. Today, Consortio Law Firm is proud to announce a paradigm shift in how clients interact with legal services in the Middle East.

We are thrilled to introduce the Consortio AI Agent—one of the very first fully vocal, multilingual AI legal assistants deployed by a law firm in the MENA region.

Designed to be a seamless, 24/7 extension of our firm, the Consortio AI Agent is not a standard chatbot. It is a highly sophisticated vocal assistant capable of conversing in the world's most widely spoken languages, day or night, weekends included.

What the Consortio AI Agent Can Do For You:

Comprehensive Knowledge: The agent is trained on our proprietary database. It can instantly explain our core legal services, our operational methodology, the intricacies of the Consortio client experience, and our firm's policies and terms.

Action-Driven Integration: It doesn't just talk; it executes. The AI Agent is directly integrated into Consortio’s internal IT systems. You can use it to book a consultation with our partners or instantly submit a formal legal request directly into our secure network.

Absolute Security & Privacy: As your "Safe House," client confidentiality is our highest mandate. The AI Agent provides expert guidance based on our legal frameworks, but it does not retain or store your personal data or private case information. Your interactions are entirely secure and strictly confidential.

The Human Element Remains Paramount
While the AI Agent is an unprecedented tool for accessibility and general legal knowledge, it is important to note that interacting with the AI does not constitute a formal attorney-client relationship. All specific legal advice and strategic ex*****on will always be verified, confirmed, and handled by Consortio's expert human lawyers.

We are proud to set a new standard for technological integration and client accessibility in the MENA legal sector. The future of legal communication is here, and it is ready to take your call.

Address

7 Abdelhamid Badawy Street, Sheraton, Heliopolis
Cairo

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 6pm
Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Sunday 10am - 6pm

Telephone

01028806061

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