Publication
Lexis+ Energy: Competition law and energy
Susanna Rogers, Mark Mills and Jack Jeffries from our London antitrust and competition team have updated the Lexis+ Energy practice note on “competition law and energy”.
Global | Publication | January 2024
On 1 September 2023, the Luxembourg law of 14 July 2023 establishing a mechanism for the national screening of foreign direct investments (the Law) entered into force. Transactions signed on or after that date, as well as transactions that were signed before that date but have not yet closed, will now be subject to a mandatory notification to the Luxembourg Ministry of Economy (the Ministry) if they meet the following notification requirements.
Notification requirements
Prior notification to the Ministry is required for investments of any kind resulting in “foreign investors”’ acquiring “control” over entities established in Luxembourg that carry out “critical activities” in Luxembourg.
A “foreign investor” is broadly defined as a natural or legal person governed by foreign (non-EEA) law.
“Critical activities” include:
The following activities are also encompassed in the scope of “critical activities”:
A foreign investor is deemed to acquire control over a Luxembourg entity where it, directly or indirectly:
Review procedure
Reportable investments must be notified to the Ministry prior to their implementation. As an exception, where the investor reaches the 25% threshold of voting rights due to events modifying the distribution of the capital, the investor has 15 calendar days to notify the Ministry of the event.
The review process by the Ministry consists of two phases:
The above time limits can be prolonged in case of requests for additional information, which suspend the relevant review periods.
The Ministry’s decision may be appealed before the Luxembourg administrative tribunal within one month following notification of the decision.
Sanctions for non-compliance
In case of non-compliance with the Law, the Ministry may impose administrative measures and sanctions. Administrative measures can include, amongst others, a modification order, unwinding, and revocation of the authorization (in case of failure to implement conditions prescribed by the authorization decision). In addition, the Ministry may impose fines of up to EUR 1 million if the foreign investor is a natural person and up to EUR 5 million if the foreign investor is a legal person.
Publication
Susanna Rogers, Mark Mills and Jack Jeffries from our London antitrust and competition team have updated the Lexis+ Energy practice note on “competition law and energy”.
Publication
On November 26, 2025 the SFO published updated guidance on its evaluation of compliance programmes (the Guidance). The Guidance follows on from the updated Corporate Prosecution Guidance published in August (and which was covered in our recent horizon scan), the SFO corporate cooperation guidance published in April (see here), and the Home Office Guidance on reasonable procedures to prevent fraud.
Publication
In King Crude Carriers SA & Ors v Ridgebury November LLC & Ors [2025] UKSC 39, the Supreme Court overturned the Court of Appeal and held that the claimant sellers (the Sellers) were not entitled to claim the deposits promised under sale contracts as a debt
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