
Publication
International Restructuring Newswire
Welcome to the Q3 2025 edition of the Norton Rose Fulbright International Restructuring Newswire.
United Kingdom | Publication | May 2025
On May 19, 2025, the Regulator launched a new support service which it says will “unlock” pensions industry innovation with the aim of boosting saver outcomes.
In its press release the Regulator explains that the service aims to reduce “unnecessary regulatory barriers” to pensions innovation by enabling early, transparent discussions with pensions innovators.
Two areas of particular focus will be administration and member experience (particularly in the decumulation phase).
The new support service will offer:
The Regulator has provided a link for access to the service which includes the various resources and information on upcoming events.
One of the areas in which the Regulator is particularly keen to encourage innovation is decumulation options. Its Interim Director of Policy and Public Affairs, Patrick Coyne, made a speech at the launch of a report from the Pensions Policy Institute (commissioned by the Regulator) on decumulation and value for money.
Mr Coyne suggested that savers require "a sat nav for retirement", and the Regulator’s innovation hub aims to facilitate and test a range of services with the market, including those relating to decumulation.
New decumulation duties on trustees are due to be enacted in the forthcoming Pension Schemes Bill. These are likely to require trustees to provide decumulation services themselves or offer access to such services from other providers.
Publication
Welcome to the Q3 2025 edition of the Norton Rose Fulbright International Restructuring Newswire.
Publication
Canada is well-positioned to be a leader in Carbon Capture and Storage (“CCS”).
Publication
Hydrogen has long been of interest as a low emission or emission-free energy source. For Canada, its use, production, and transportation loom as a new energy disruptor. As a fuel, hydrogen is a clean power source that when combusted, produces no carbon dioxide emissions, only water vapour. Some methods used to produce hydrogen do, however, generate emissions.
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