Lawyers from Reed Smith’s Energy and Natural Resources Group are explaining the rules around hydrogen as fuel in Pratt’s Energy Law Report, as part of the firm’s continuing series on key energy transition topics.
The article “Hydrogen Regulations by Jurisdiction and Changing Transmission Systems – Part 2” appears in the March 2023 edition of Pratt’s Energy Law Report, published by LexisNexis.
The lawyers who wrote this sweeping essay are: Simone Goligorsky, Simon Grieser, Colette Honorable, Eric Lin, Adela Mues, Hagen Rooke, Nicolas Walker, Karim Alhassan, Albertine Aquenin, Nicole Cheung, Tufayel Hussain and Zahir Sabur.
This is the second part of an article that examines the hydrogen regulations in key jurisdictions, including the European Union, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, China, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. The first part of the article, which appeared in the February 2023 issue of Pratt’s Energy Law Report, discusses the hydrogen regulatory regimes in the European Union, France, and Germany. This second part (and conclusion) of the article focuses on hydrogen regulation in the United Kingdom, China, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.
A copy of the article as it appears in the March 2023 Energy Law Report (pdf) is available to the public exclusively on this website.
The latest piece follows a special January 2023 Energy Law Report on 2023’s most important energy transition topics, written entirely by Reed Smith lawyers.
The lawyers who wrote this sweeping essay are: Simone Goligorsky, Simon Grieser, Colette Honorable, Eric Lin, Adela Mues, Hagen Rooke, Nicolas Walker, Karim Alhassan, Albertine Aquenin, Nicole Cheung, Tufayel Hussain and Zahir Sabur.
This is the second part of an article that examines the hydrogen regulations in key jurisdictions, including the European Union, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, China, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. The first part of the article, which appeared in the February 2023 issue of Pratt’s Energy Law Report, discusses the hydrogen regulatory regimes in the European Union, France, and Germany. This second part (and conclusion) of the article focuses on hydrogen regulation in the United Kingdom, China, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.
A copy of the article as it appears in the March 2023 Energy Law Report (pdf) is available to the public exclusively on this website.
The latest piece follows a special January 2023 Energy Law Report on 2023’s most important energy transition topics, written entirely by Reed Smith lawyers.