Publication
The next frontier: Offshore wind development in Asia
In the face of significant global headwinds in the sector, green shoots are emerging in 2025 for offshore wind in Asia after a turbulent 24 months.
Australia | Publication | February 2025
The article is co-authored by Tiffany Austin.
On 20 February 2025, now halfway through her initial tenure as Chair of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), Gina Cass-Gottlieb unveiled the ACCC’s 2025-26 compliance and enforcement priorities. The overarching theme of the priorities this year is addressing the growing challenge of market concentration in the Australian economy, spanning the supermarkets, retail and aviation sectors as well as many essential services including telecommunications, electricity and gas – sectors the ACCC views as having a significant impact on the cost of living and doing business in Australia.
Other priorities identified recognise the ongoing potential for digital transformation and disruption and the transition to net zero to open the door to misleading and deceptive conduct and consumer welfare issues. Greenwashing, for example, continues to be a key investigation and enforcement priority.
Overall, the themes for the upcoming year are fairly familiar. It is clear that another real focus of the ACCC over that period will be successfully implementing the changes to the merger control regime. In her speech announcing the priorities, Ms Cass-Gottlieb also took the opportunity to remind business of the impact the upcoming merger reforms will have on their activities. She also mentioned the ACCC’s continued advocacy for the introduction of a prohibition on ‘unfair trading practices’, to cover concerning business conduct that is not currently illegal, but distorts consumer decision-making, causing harm and eroding trust.
Some of the ACCC’s key enforcement and compliance priorities include:
The new merger regime will come into effect from 1 January 2026, however voluntary notification is available from 1 July 2025. The shift from a voluntary, judicially enforced model to a mandatory, administrative regime places the ACCC as the first instance decision-maker on each notified acquisition – a significant change to its operations for which the ACCC will have to prepare over the coming year. The ACCC will commence consultation on draft process guidelines and draft analytical guidelines before the end of March 2025 to assist businesses with the transition arrangements.
For further insights into the operation of the new merger control regime and how it may affect your business, please refer to our previous publication.
We work with our clients to advise on these matters on a daily basis. Please contact us for further information, assistance or customised training via our award-winning online legal compliance training program, Compliance Manager.
Publication
In the face of significant global headwinds in the sector, green shoots are emerging in 2025 for offshore wind in Asia after a turbulent 24 months.
Publication
Charlotte Hillyard, Senior Innovation Lawyer in the Innovation Design and Technology team and one of Norton Rose Fulbright's Generative AI leads, will be sharing her insight at several prominent legal technology events in the coming week.
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We are delighted to be participating in Marine Money Week New York 2025. As one of the landmark events for the global shipping finance community, and with the global shipping and maritime industry at such a pivotal juncture, we look forward to catching up with clients and contacts to continue discussions around navigating the current challenges and opportunities.
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