Bengaluru, May 18 -- The Singapore International Commercial Court (SICC) on May 5 set aside an arbitral award worth Rs.80.29 crore after finding that a tribunal of retired Indian judges delivered its decision with a "closed mind", copying large sections from previous awards without independent analysis. The ruling marks a blow to the credibility of international arbitration panels comprising retired Indian judges following the Court of Appeal of the Singapore Supreme Court's April decision to uphold the annulment of an award chaired by former Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra on similar grounds. In a scathing 85-page judgment earlier this month, SICC judge Roger Giles ruled that the tribunal majority-identified only as "judge A" and "judge C"-had "extensively reproduced reasoning from earlier related awards rather than conducting fresh analysis". The case concerned a 2016 contract termed 'CTP-11' between a government-owned special purpose vehicle (SPV) in India and a consortium of three infrastructure companies for the construction of a segment of India's Dedicated Freight Corridor. The claimant SPV had approached the SICC alleging that the majority arbitrators "had not applied their mind to the specific facts and submissions relevant to the case" and had engaged in "cut-and-paste" reasoning from earlier awards in related but separate arbitrations. The SPV even flagged that the majority arbitrators had cited a "non-existent" contractual clause to support their award. The SICC found that of 176 substantive paragraphs in the CTP-11 award, 157 had been copied either verbatim or with minor editorial changes from the previous CTP-13 award-the very same decision that had already been set aside by the Singapore Supreme Court last month. That award, in turn, had drawn from two other decisions- the "CP-301 and CP-302"- in which Judge C was also involved. "This was not merely a clerical error but a clear indication of reliance on past reasoning without fresh analysis," the SICC stated. In one glaring example, paragraph 150 of the award reproduced a price adjustment formula from the CP-302 contract rather than from the CTP-11 agreement. Further compounding the issue, the tribunal applied Indian law instead of Singapore law to determine pre- and post-award interest, again mirroring past rulings without justification....