Publication
US/Ukraine minerals deal: Digging into the detail
The United States and Ukraine governments have announced the signature of an agreement of a minerals deal for Ukraine.
United States | Publication | November 2, 2021
Although the Biden Administration has faced difficulties finding legislative success for its climate change initiatives, the Administration remains committed to its plan to achieve "net-zero emissions no later than 2050." A key element of this plan is forcing carbon-emitting companies to "bear the full cost of the carbon pollution they are emitting."
Many companies whose business strategies require offsets of carbon emissions, as well as internal carbon footprint reductions, are now reallocating funds and developing infrastructure to support trading carbon credit contracts in order to achieve on-paper net-zero emissions. Companies, however, should be mindful of how such actions can trigger questions from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
While much attention has been focused on what the SEC's forthcoming ESG rule proposal may include, companies should not overlook how their current or prior statements regarding net-zero goals might be scrutinized.
Companies should assess whether their investments in carbon reductions or carbon offsets should be incorporated into their public financial reporting. If companies "silo" their ESG activities, there can be a risk that the ESG reporting will not receive sufficient attention and scrutiny when the company is preparing its public financial reporting or other types of public statements. This could lead to potential problems, including the following:
Firms should also consider that multiple organizations, such as the International Standards Organization with the proposed 14068 standard for sustainability, are calling for greater accountability and controls for monitoring the achievement of stated corporate sustainability and net-zero carbon targets. As the standards develop, they may create potential risks associated with prior public statements of corporate sustainability and carbon reduction initiatives as well as mandate greater conformity in controls and reporting systems.
Although the foregoing considerations implicate accounting and other specialized skills, the development of strategies and the documentation of discretionary conclusions—and the basis for these conclusions—should be grounded on sound securities law advice given the potential liabilities under existing and potential legislation and regulations. Moreover, many companies might benefit from having candid evaluations and deliberations regarding their ESG processes and controls in the context of seeking legal advice within the scope of the attorney-client privilege.
CFTC jurisdiction and regulations apply to both carbon credit futures transactions and the markets underlying the pricing of carbon credits traded on US exchanges. We have observed that market participants are not always aware of the wide spectrum of legal exposure generated by the physical transaction marketplaces underlying the futures markets that the CFTC oversees. Nor are market participants always attuned to the specific risks associated with CFTC oversight of these physical markets.
Companies that are trading carbon futures contracts such as GEO and N-GEO or that are performing bi-lateral carbon offset transactions through the registries underlying the US exchange-based carbon futures should consider that:
Just as with the SEC considerations, it will be important to ensure that carbon offset transaction activities do not become "siloed." Otherwise, appropriate controls—both risk and compliance—may fail to be implemented to provide adequate oversight of these transactions or to prevent inadvertent violations of regulatory requirements or exposure to US jurisdiction for non-US entities.
The registries underlying US carbon futures are some of the largest in the world and function as the legal foundation for multiple voluntary carbon transactions. This means that a wide variety of transactions that might otherwise not fall under US jurisdiction now present a legal risk to the companies interested in joining this fast-developing contracting zone without exposure to US jurisdiction and regulation.
Norton Rose Fulbright stands on the cutting edge of identifying the legal risk associated with the fast-developing carbon markets. We have a wealth of regulatory and investigatory experience to help US and non-US firms create and revise policies, procedures and process to address SEC and CFTC requirements and expectations. Our risk advisory team can audit data and process controls to confirm that they are functioning properly and effectively. Working together, our legal and risk advisory teams can help those clients who make disclosures, or are planning to make disclosures, create strategies and programs for internal controls and reporting to cover any forward-looking statements, and validate milestones and progress towards stated goals to protect against potential liability. Finally, for companies that have already made disclosures, we can develop strategies to analyze prior disclosures, revise prior disclosures if necessary, develop appropriate controls for restating prior ESG reporting errors and substantiate necessary restatements to protect against potential liability.
We stand ready to perform in-depth reviews of transactions and business structures to identify and mitigate associated risk factors. For companies interested in how best to create corporate structures to make questions of jurisdiction readily determinable, Norton Rose Fulbright has both the experience and knowledge to craft the basis for strategies and controls for your ESG carbon market activities.
Project Manager - Regulatory Compliance Thomas Lord, based in our Washington, DC office, contributed to the preparation of this content. Thomas provides assistance to lawyers practicing in Regulatory Compliance.
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The United States and Ukraine governments have announced the signature of an agreement of a minerals deal for Ukraine.
Publication
On 15 April 2025, Ofgem approved the National Energy System Operator’s (NESO) Target Model Option 4 (TMO4+) package of reforms.
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In mid-March 2025, Cognia Law and Norton Rose Fulbright’s Legal Operations Consulting team co-hosted a second roundtable event that brought together senior leaders, including GCs, COO and head of legal operations, from across the legal industry to discuss how to drive meaningful change within the legal ecosystem.
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