Publication
2025 in review: A few M&A things you might have missed
Before you get lost in the festive-season cheer, we’ve captured some of the key trends from an Australian M&A and capital markets perspective this year.
Global | Publication | March 2025
The Department for Energy Security & Net Zero published a consultation paper setting out its plans to develop a framework to support its ambition to “drive the development of an internationally-leading offshore clean energy industry, which ensures good, long-term jobs, growth and investment in communities across the North Sea – boosting the country’s economy and energy security”. The consultation notes that responses will support the “delivery of the government’s commitment not to issue new licences to explore new fields, whilst not revoking existing licences and partnering with business and workers to manage our existing fields for the entirety of their lifespan”.
The scope of the consultation is very broad and includes the following areas (amongst others): planned investment in clean energy industries (including carbon capture, usage and storage and hydrogen industries); securing local workers in the new energy sectors (including the transition of oil and gas workers to clean energy and other industrial strategy sectors); the barriers for current oil and gas supply chains to transition to alternative sectors and measures to support such transition; the licensing of onshore and offshore activities; and the proposed revision to the principal objective of the North Sea Transition Authority.
The full consultation can be found here.
Publication
Before you get lost in the festive-season cheer, we’ve captured some of the key trends from an Australian M&A and capital markets perspective this year.
Publication
21 airlines (the Airlines) have committed to change their practices on environmental claims and statements that were considered misleading by the Consumer Protection Cooperation (CPC).
Publication
For the sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) industry, the key initiative to emerge from COP30 was the “Belém 4x Pledge”, spearheaded by Italy, Japan, India and Brazil and supported by 23 other countries, to quadruple sustainable fuel production and use by 2035. The pledge focused on the need to take comprehensive domestic action to support sustainable fuel development and strengthen international collaboration, whilst ensuring that efforts to scale-up production are conducted in an environmentally and socially responsible manner.
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