We use cookies to customise content for your subscription and for analytics.
If you continue to browse Lexology, we will assume that you are happy to receive all our cookies. For further information please read our Cookie Policy.
Lexology logo
  Request new password

Search results

Order by most recent / most popular / relevance

Results: 1-5 of 5

Flying free of the ETS: EU won't include international flights in its ETS (for now)

  • Clayton Utz
  • -
  • Australia, European Union
  • -
  • November 22 2012

For now, Australian international flights will not be subject to a carbon price, either in Australia, or the EU

Carbon price mechanism and EU carbon scheme linkage - more details revealed

  • Clayton Utz
  • -
  • Australia, European Union
  • -
  • September 27 2012

Business now has greater certainty to manage its forward carbon liability, and, if the international carbon price remains at current levels, reduced compliance costs

Australian carbon scheme to link to European carbon scheme - carbon floor price scrapped

  • Clayton Utz
  • -
  • Australia, European Union
  • -
  • August 28 2012

On 28 August 2012, Australian Climate Change Minister Greg Combet announced a linkage of the Australian carbon scheme to the European Union's carbon scheme, intended to be effective from 1 July 2018, with an interim one-way linking effective from 1 July 2015

European Court holds no legal privilege for in-house lawyers

  • Clayton Utz
  • -
  • Australia, European Union
  • -
  • September 17 2010

The decision by the European Court of Justice in Akzo Nobel Chemicals Ltd and Akcros Chemicals Ltd v Commission of the European Communities (C-55007P) earlier this week held that internal communications by company employees with in-house counsel do not satisfy the lawyerclient test

European Google AdWords case - a win both for trade mark owners and for Google

  • Clayton Utz
  • -
  • European Union
  • -
  • April 29 2010

In a victory for owners of trade marks in the European Union, the EU's highest court, the European Court of Justice (ECJ), has recently found that the purchase, from a search engine, of a keyword associated with someone else's trade mark could amount to trade mark infringement by the purchaser