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Understanding hydrogen in Japan
The Japanese government passed the Hydrogen Society Promotion Act (the Hydrogen Act) on 17 May 2024, which implements a ‘twin-track’ approach to subsidising the hydrogen economy
Canada | Publication | June 20, 2023
On May 30, the Competition Bureau released its final wage-fixing and no-poaching enforcement guidelines (the Guidelines). The Guidelines outline the Competition Bureau’s enforcement approach to the new criminal provisions in the Competition Act (Act), which will come into effect on June 23, 2023.
The Bureau’s Guidelines were published following a public consultation process that took place earlier this year. For more information, please see our earlier update on the consultation and draft guidance.
As of June 23, 2023, new Section 45(1.1) of the Act will criminalize agreements or arrangements between unaffiliated employers:
Employers who participate in illegal wage-fixing or no-poach agreements risk significant criminal penalties, including 14 years in jail or fines at the discretion of the court, or both. Employers also face potential civil lawsuits for damages under the Act.
With the new criminal wage-fixing and no-poach provisions coming into effect later this month, the Guidelines provide some welcome insight into the Bureau’s enforcement approach towards wage-fixing and no-poach agreements:
Although the Guidelines’ text was revised following the public consultation earlier this year, the substance remains largely the same. The Guidelines continue to allow the Bureau broad enforcement discretion and leave open key questions such as the treatment of agreements between employers that were entered into before June 23, 2023.
Going forward, wage-fixing and reciprocal no-poach agreements and clauses in commercial agreements must be carefully drafted. To ensure these types of agreements comply with the new provisions and can benefit from the ancillary restraints defence, they should be carefully considered to ensure they are reasonably necessary to the larger agreement or arrangement to which they are related. Although the Guidelines provide some guidance to parties regarding the Bureau’s enforcement approach, they are not legally binding and the burden is ultimately on the parties to demonstrate – with evidence – that the restraint can shelter under this defence. Given the risk of criminal liability, employers should seek legal advice on applying the defence in the particular circumstances of each agreement.
Agreements that aren’t caught by the criminal provisions may still be examined by the Bureau under the civil provisions of the Act where there is a substantial lessening or prevention of competition in a market.
Section 4(c) of the Act contains an exception for agreements between employers that pertain to collective bargaining with their employees in respect of salary or wages and terms or conditions of employment.
The Guidance suggests that arrangements between franchisees to recoup training costs related to “poached” employees would not normally be considered problematic by the Bureau under the criminal provisions of the Act.
Publication
The Japanese government passed the Hydrogen Society Promotion Act (the Hydrogen Act) on 17 May 2024, which implements a ‘twin-track’ approach to subsidising the hydrogen economy
Publication
As the world embraces the ideals of sustainability and works towards reduced reliance on fossil fuel sources of energy and reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, Singapore has set out how it plans to cut emissions to meet its 2030 Nationally Determined Contribution climate targets – with carbon capture technology expected to be among the most effective measures.
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Singapore launched its National Hydrogen Strategy on 25 October 2022. The Singapore government believes that low-carbon hydrogen has the potential to be a major decarbonisation pathway to support Singapore’s accelerated transition towards net zero by 2050, while strengthening its energy security and resilience. It foresees low-carbon hydrogen playing an important role in:
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