The 1958 New York Convention has created an intemational framework under which the arbitral awards of international commercial arbitration may be recognised and enforced. No such an international legal framework exists for the enforcement of international consumer arbitration awards. Possible alternatives, such as enforcement trustmarks, enforcement evaluation, and enforcement based on sanction of domain loss, are inadequate. A sui generis solution to the enforcement problem may be the creation of a UDRPOCP based on the international credit card payment network and credit card chargeback process. It combines online arbitration with the online credit card payment process. This mechanism will involve the stipulation of procedural standards for online arbitral proceedings. Arbitration institutions involved should be accredited and put under supervision. The financial institutions involved in the online payment process must agree to be bound by the result of arbitration so that the proposed enforcement process can take place. Under this mechanism, the awards are to be enforced by a reversed online payment process with the cooperation of various financial institutions in accordance with their respective contractual obligation under the UDRPOCP. This enforcement mechanism can be efficient and does not invoke the traditional enforcement procedure in national courts.