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EU operational resilience—timeline This timeline shows key developments relating to EU operational resilience requirements for financial services firms from January 2024 onwards. For earlier developments, see Operational resilience—timeline [Archived] 2025 Date Source Document Description 15 April 2025 FSB FSB finalises the common Format for Incident Reporting Exchange (FIRE) The Financial Stability Board (FSB) has published its finalised format for incident reporting exchange (FIRE), which aims to standardise and streamline cyber and operational incident reporting. Developed with private sector collaboration, FIRE addresses fragmentation in reporting requirements across multiple jurisdictions and supports phased implementation. It is interoperable with existing systems and applicable to a wide range of incidents, including those involving third-party service providers. The initiative promotes convergence in cyber incident reporting, reduces the reporting burden for firms, and improves communication among authorities.See: LNB News 15/04/2025 37. 24 March 2025 European Commission COMMISSION DELEGATED REGULATION (EU) …/... supplementing Regulation (EU) 2022/2554 of the European Parliament and of the Council with regard to regulatory technical standards specifying the elements that a financial...
DPA suitability checklist Court's oversight of the interests of justice and fairness, reasonableness and proportionality The UK deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) regime provides for judicial oversight of DPAs. After negotiations as to the terms of a DPA have commenced and before it has been concluded, the court must determine: • whether it is likely to be in the interests of justice, and • that its proposed terms are fair, reasonable and proportionate Therefore, each factor must be supported by clear and persuasive proof in order to seek to persuade the court to approve the DPA. The declarations given under Schedule 17 Part 1, para 8 to the Crime and Courts Act 2013 (CCA 2013) to date provide insight into the court's approach as to when a DPA is suitable and this has, in turn, fed into the prosecutor's approach (see Practice Note: The SFO's approach to Deferred Prosecution Agreements (DPAs) [Archived]). For detailed information on DPAs in general, the process followed by the court when considering whether to...
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Managing conflicts of interest in pensions THIS PRACTICE NOTE APPLIES TO TRUST-BASED OCCUPATIONAL PENSION SCHEMES Legal requirements in relation to conflicts of interest Pension scheme trustees have a duty to act in the best interests of the scheme's beneficiaries. However, trustees may owe duties to other parties or have personal interests which conflict with that duty. It is a general principle of trust law that trustees should not put themselves in a position where their duty to act in the best interests of beneficiaries conflicts with duties that they owe to other parties or with their personal interests. If trustees make decisions while subject to a conflict of interest that has not been appropriately managed, there is a risk that those decisions may be challenged by scheme members or overturned by the courts. It is important that the members of a scheme should perceive a conflict or potential conflict as having been properly managed. The directors of a company that acts as a trustee of a...
Development of EU climate change policy Context Humans are increasingly influencing the climate and the earth's temperature by burning fossil fuels, cutting down rainforests and farming livestock. All of this adds enormous amounts of greenhouse gases to those naturally occurring in the atmosphere, increasing the greenhouse effect and global warming. Some gases in the earth's atmosphere act a bit like the glass in a greenhouse, trapping the sun's heat and stopping it from leaking back into space. Many of these gases occur naturally but human activity is increasing the concentrations of some of them in the atmosphere, in particular: • carbon dioxide (CO2) • methane • nitrous oxide • fluorinated gases CO2 is the greenhouse gas most commonly produced by human activities and it is responsible for the majority of man-made global warming. Other greenhouse gases, such as methane and nitrous oxide, are emitted in smaller quantities, but they trap heat far more effectively than CO2. Rising emissions are caused by: • burning fossil fuels (ie coal, oil...
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Ireland—Notice of an extraordinary general meeting of a private limited company This is a precedent notice of a general meeting of a private company limited by shares. The notice provisions are as follows: • an annual general meeting or an extraordinary general meeting for the passing of a special resolution must be called by giving notice of at least 21 days • any other extraordinary general meeting must be called by giving notice of at least seven days Company number: [insert number] [insert company name] limited (the Company) Notice of Extraordinary general meeting Details of extraordinary general meeting The notice must state the date, time, place and general business of the meeting. Special measures were introduced by the government in August 2020 to mitigate the COVID-19 pandemic’s effect on corporate governance, among the measures introduced was a dispensation which allowed companies in Ireland to hold general meetings virtually, in whole or in part, during the interim period as long as all attendees have a reasonable opportunity to participate...
Ireland—Deed of assignment and conveyance—unregistered—freehold and leasehold Commencement Section 64(2)(a) of the Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Act 2009 (Ireland) (LCLRA 2009 (IRL)), provides that one of the criteria for establishing if a document is a deed is whether the document is described at its head with the appropriate wording such as ‘Conveyance’, ‘Assignment’, ‘Indenture’, ‘Deed’, etc. Date While it is usual practice to date a deed on the date of completion a deed actually takes effect on the date of its delivery. The concept of delivery means that it is possible for a deed to be valid even if it has not been dated. If a deed is not dated, external evidence is admissible to prove the correct date from which it was intended to operate. Where a date is inserted, it is presumed that this date is the date on which the deed took effect. However, this presumption may be rebutted by evidence to the contrary. See: Browne v Burton (1847) 17 LJQB 49 (not reported by Lexis+® UK). It is good...
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Is it acceptable for a liquidator and the only creditor in an insolvency situation to be represented by the same solicitor? Or is this a conflict? Both insolvency practitioners (IPs) and solicitors are members of professions that are governed by separate ethics codes. Both IPs and solicitors, before accepting an appointment or an instruction, should carry out documented procedures to ensure that there would not be a conflict of interest or breach of their ethics code in accepting the appointment or instruction. The question does not specify whether the conflict concerned would be for the solicitor or the IP and although both issues are considered, this answer deals primarily with the IP and whether the IP would have a conflict of interest. The insolvency ethics code sets out a framework approach that is to be followed in all cases to establish whether there is a conflict of interest. The IP should first of all assess whether there are any threats to the fundamental principles of integrity,...
If an unincorporated association refuses to disclose its membership, who should be named as the defendant in proceedings where the limitation period is about to expire? An unincorporated association is not a legal entity and so, in theory at least, cannot sue or be sued in its own name. This was the position set out in London Association for Protection of Trade v Greenlands Limited. The legal position was considered in some detail in Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford v Broughton. This case involved a campaign by the Animal Liberation Front and associated organisations. The normal way forward would be to obtain a representation order whereby a named member or members or officers of the association would be made parties ‘on behalf of the members of the association’. However, it may not be possible to seek and obtain such a representation order before the limitation period expires and therefore, the potential claimant may wish to know whether it can join...
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Construction analysis: The Scottish Government introduced the Building Safety Levy (Scotland) Bill into the Scottish Parliament on 5 June 2025. The bill seeks to introduce a new tax: the Scottish Building Safety Levy (SBSL). The levy will be charged on the construction or conversion of residential property developments, and used to fund building safety expenditure by the Scottish Government. In this article, we give an overview of the background to the bill and its key provisions.
Law360: The High Court has granted approval for a challenge to the government's decision on compensation for failure to inform women that their pension age had changed, a move activists have termed a 'landmark moment'.
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