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Relief from relief: Making handling relief events easier and more collaborative
Relief events clauses are included as standard provisions of most technology implementation, outsourcing and services contracts.
Global | Publication | March 2025
On February 25, 2025, the Department of Energy (DOE) issued an Order Granting Request for Rehearing and Clarification and Modifying Order (Order 5233-A) (the Modified Order) clarifying that DOE will no longer consider ship-to-ship transfers of liquified natural gas (LNG) used as a fuel for marine vessels an “export” for the purposes of Section 3 the Natural Gas Act of 1938 (the NGA) when the receiving ship is located in US ports, US waters or international waters.1
However, DOE reaffirmed its position that LNG bunkering occurring in the territorial waters of a foreign country or foreign port will be considered “exports” for the purposes of the NGA.
This is a significant development for the US LNG market because the export of LNG is regulated by DOE under Section 3 of the NGA, requiring exporters to submit applications and wait for approval prior to conducting their activities. The DOE’s more narrow interpretation of “exports” set forth in the Modified Order could significantly reduce the regulatory burden placed on the use of LNG as a marine fuel and on the US LNG industry at large. Read our full article here.
Publication
Relief events clauses are included as standard provisions of most technology implementation, outsourcing and services contracts.
Publication
Liability is often a contentious topic (and typically the last provision to be agreed) in a technology or outsourcing contract negotiation.
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Malaysia, where fossil fuels make up 96.6 percent of the country’s energy supply and whereby 2022 emissions reached 291 million tons of carbon dioxide, are working to play its part in the global fight against climate change and in the world’s sustainability endeavours and net zero ambitions
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