Briefings
A recent ruling by the English High Court in BILTA v RBS1, concerning EU Emissions Allowances (“EUAs” or “carbon-credits”) trading has re-opened the debate on when materials forming part of an internal investigation can benefit from litigation privilege. The decision further undermines the restrictive approach taken by Andrews J in SFO v ENRC2 when applying the “sole or dominant purpose test” to dual-purpose communications.
Background – Emissions Trading Fraud
United Kingdom, Energy & Natural Resources, Environment & Climate Change, Insolvency & Restructuring, Legal Practice, Litigation, Tax, White Collar Crime, HFW, Value added tax, Emissions trading, HM Revenue and Customs (UK)