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International Restructuring Newswire
Welcome to the Q3 2025 edition of the Norton Rose Fulbright International Restructuring Newswire.
United Kingdom | Publication | July 2025
On July 21, 2025, the Government announced the re-introduction of the Pensions Commission in a drive to boost pension saving. The relaunched Commission will explore the barriers that stop people from saving enough for retirement, with a final report due in 2027.
The original Commission of 2006 was a “huge success”, enabling the roll-out of auto-enrolment, resulting in 88 per cent of eligible employees are now saving, up from 55 per cent in 2012.
The revived Commission will:
According to Government analysis, the incomes of retirees are set to fall over the next few decades if nothing changes, with 45 per cent of working age adults saving nothing at all into a pension, and with lower earners, the self-employed and some ethnic minorities particularly at risk.
Alongside the Commission’s terms of reference, also published were a policy paper assessing the state of Britain’s pensions landscape, the results of a survey on “Planning and preparing for later life” and analysis of future pension incomes.
The DWP's relaunch of the Pensions Commission has been generally welcomed as a means of addressing the current “retirement crisis”. There appear to be three broad areas of concern: whether to raise the minimum level of auto-enrolment contributions; the pensions of groups at risk of poor outcomes; and the need to address the state pension age, which, as noted below, is undergoing its third review.
The latest State Pension Age Review was launched on July 21, 2025, commissioning two independent reports for consideration when deciding the state pension age for future decades.
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Welcome to the Q3 2025 edition of the Norton Rose Fulbright International Restructuring Newswire.
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Canada is well-positioned to be a leader in Carbon Capture and Storage (“CCS”).
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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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