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Law, Policy & Markets

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Law, Policy & Markets: Milbank Conversations explores key business and legal trends in today's evolving global economy. With candor and a sophisticated understanding of the issues, host Allan Marks and other Milbank partners and guests delve into diverse topics, such as ESG and sustainability, cybersecurity, airlines and aviation, biopharma, global capital markets, climate change and the energy transition, cross-border workouts, private equity, cutting-edge litigation, enforcement policies in securities and antitrust, and values-based innovation in the legal profession. Discover what’s happening, what it means, and what’s next. More details at Milbank.com. Follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Google and Audible.
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The United States  Federal Energy  Regulatory Commission (FERC) regulates US  energy markets. FERC’s latest annual report on key market trends noted falling average prices for natural gas and electricity despite increased demand for both. New renewable energy and storage facilities are coming online at a brisk pace, making the grid cleaner and more efficient. FERC is about to get three new commissioners, who will face challenges of interregional transmission constraints and grid-integration of emerging technologies.In this new episode, “FERC-alicious: US Energy Market Trends & Regulatory Update,” host Allan Marks speaks with Milbank partner Jenna McGrath. They examine how recent FERC actions are impacting markets. They discuss trends in state and federal energy regulation, the expansion of energy storage to bolster grid stability and reliability, and strategies for alleviating transmission and interconnection bottlenecks for new renewable energy projects. They also assess the three new nominees for FERC Commissioner – Judy W. Chang, David Rosner and Lindsay See – and upcoming FERC actions and rulemaking.About the SpeakersJenna McGrath is a partner in the Washington, DC office of Milbank and a member of the firm’s Global Project, Energy and Infrastructure Finance Group. She advises developers, lenders, private equity, utilities and large industrial electricity customers (e.g., data centers and mining operations) on laws and regulations governing development of electric generation and transmission projects, and revenues for wholesale and retail electricity and transmission services.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
Originally broadcast: Tuesday, December 14, 2021.   A charity encounters surprising roadblocks to building a new cemetery for low-cost Muslim burials in Stafford County, Virginia. In this episode, host Allan Marks follows the cemetery’s path to justice with the lawyers who handled the civil rights case, Tawfiq Rangwala and Melanie Westover Yanez, and their pro bono client, the All Muslim Association of America, at the intersection of religious freedom, land use, and local politics in America today. For additional information, click here. About the SpeakersTawfiq Rangwala is a partner in Milbank’s New York office and a member of the firm’s Litigation & Arbitration Group. His practice focuses on the defense of US and international regulatory and criminal enforcement matters, as well as internal investigations across multiple jurisdictions and industries. He also has extensive experience handling federal and state court litigation of complex commercial cases involving securities and corporate law, contract disputes and financial restructuring.Melanie Westover Yanez is special counsel in the Washington, DC office and a member of the firm’s Litigation & Arbitration Group. She represents clients in federal and state courts in complex commercial litigation and financial restructuring litigation and has experience defending clients in individual and class action cases involving antitrust, securities, and commodities issues.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at both the Law School and the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
What impact will the 2024 presidential election have on antitrust policy, federal merger approvals, and foreign investment in the United States? Uncertainty about future federal policy makes investment decisions this year especially challenging. In this episode, host Allan Marks speaks with Milbank partners  Adam Di Vincenzo  and  John Beahn  about antitrust and CFIUS policy under the administrations of President Biden and former President Trump, discovering both sharp differences and some surprising similarities. They discuss how to anticipate regulators’ concerns and federal enforcement patterns in merger approvals amid political uncertainty in an election year. They analyze divergent trends in antitrust enforcement, highlighting tensions between economic goals that keep domestic markets competitive and national security goals that favor globally dominant US corporations with wide moats. And they explore how CFIUS, the FTC and DOJ are focusing on supply chains, domestic manufacturing, next-generation technology and AI, and the broader question of what it means to be competitive. About the SpeakersJohn Beahn is a partner in the Washington, DC office of Milbank LLP with a particular focus on matters related to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (“CFIUS”) and foreign direct investment (“FDI”). He has extensive experience representing clients in national security reviews before CFIUS, the “Team Telecom” executive branch agencies and the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency. Adam Di Vincenzo is a partner in the Washington, DC office of Milbank and a member of the Litigation & Arbitration Group. He has served as lead antitrust counsel for Fortune 500 public companies, and private equity sponsors and their portfolio companies, in dozens of antitrust matters before enforcement authorities in the United States (including the DOJ and FTC) and internationally.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
The push for cleaner energy has led to greater reliance on intermittent renewable energy resources, particularly solar and wind energy. To integrate these resources into a more efficient and reliable “smart grid” requires new investment in energy storage.  What are the best ways to provide resource adequacy and to bridge the gaps between when (and where) power is generated and when (and where) it is needed?  California is leading the way with massive new investments in innovative energy storage projects.  Developers and utilities are experimenting to optimize battery locations, improve project economics, reduce transmission constraints, and meet variable load requirements.  Regulators in California, Texas and elsewhere are taking divergent market design paths with an eye on reliability, efficiency, and affordability, especially as demand patterns and storage technologies evolve.In this episode, "Energy Storage at Utility Scale: California Goes All-in," host Allan Marks and four leading energy executives discuss the trajectory of California’s energy storage market.  The discussion includes Emad Alaydi (a professional engineer and Senior Director at Calpine), Karin Burns (Chief Executive Officer of San Diego Community Power), Howard Chang (President and Chief Operating Officer of Ava Community Energy), and Cathleen Colbert (Senior Director, Western Markets Policy Regulatory Affairs for Vistra Corp.) and was recorded before a live audience in Los Angeles at Voltility’s US Energy Storage Market Outlook 2024, hosted by Milbank LLP.Emad Alaydi is a Senior Director at Calpine Corp, America’s largest generator of electricity from natural gas and geothermal resources.Karin Burns is Chief Executive Officer at San Diego Community Power, the second largest Community Choice Aggregate (CCA) program in the state of California.Howard Chang is Chief Operating Officer of Ava Community Energy, a not-for-profit public agency serves the cities of Albany, Berkeley, Dublin, Emeryville, Fremont, Hayward, Livermore, Newark, Oakland, Piedmont, Pleasanton, San Leandro, Tracy, and Union City.Cathleen Colbert is a Director at Vistra Corp., a Fortune 500 competitive retail electricity provider serving nearly five million customers.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
What blind spots are we missing in the global conversation about energy and geopolitics?  In this episode, The Geopolitics of Energy: “Shifting Sands,” Allan Marks hosts a fireside chat with Dr. Carolyn Kissane, a professor at NYU’s SPS Center for Global Affairs. Public policies in Europe, the US and China are stimulating massive capital investment in renewable energy, EVs, batteries and the energy transition, and India is a rapidly rising economy. Mr. Marks and Dr. Kissane look at these interrelated issues and the outsized effects of wars and climate change on global resource security, energy use, water supplies and demographics. They also assess the challenges of climate risks, increased electricity demand, uneven economic growth, national security risks, and the controversial roles of natural gas and hydrogen in decarbonization. The dynamics of the world’s manufacturing powers are shifting.  About the SpeakersDr. Carolyn Kissane is Associate Dean of the graduate programs in Global Affairs and Global Security, Conflict and Cybercrime at NYU’s Center for Global Affairs and is a Clinical Professor where she teaches graduate-level courses examining the geopolitics of energy, comparative energy politics, energy, environment and resource security, and climate change and security. She is the Founding Director of the SPS Energy, Climate Justice and Sustainability Lab, Coordinator of the Energy and Environment concentration at the Center, and a faculty adviser to the Energy Policy International Club. She serves on the boards of the New York Energy Forum, New York Energy Week, and the Clean Start Advisory Board. Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
How is espionage evolving between China, Russia and the United States?  What should a board director ask corporate management about AI, state-sponsored cyberattacks, and political risk in making strategic decisions?  Host Allan Marks sits down with former FBI Special Agent Holden Triplett for a candid, wide-ranging and practical conversation about how companies and policymakers can better manage national security risks in a world of shifting geopolitics and disruptive technologies. While at the FBI, Holden was posted to Moscow and Beijing and acted as the Director for Counterintelligence at the National Security Council.  From boardroom to intelligence briefing, his experience makes for a lively and insightful discussion.  About the SpeakersHolden Triplett is a founder of Trenchcoat Advisors, a firm that helps businesses protect themselves from nation-state threats. From 2017 to 2018, Holden was the Director for Counterintelligence at the National Security Council. He led the FBI office in Beijing from 2014 to 2017 and was deputy head of the FBI office in Moscow from 2012 to 2014. Holden was also the FBI Faculty Chair at the National Intelligence University, where he taught courses in Counterintelligence, National Security Law, and Intelligence, and Chinese Intelligence and Information Warfare. He is currently an adjunct professor at Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
Milbank LLP partner Alexandra Johnson created the firm’s innovative training program for junior transactional lawyers, Deals@Milbank. In this new podcast episode, Training Transactional Lawyers in New Ways: “What’s the Deal with That?”, she sits down with host Allan Marks to talk about lessons learned teaching drafting, negotiating, creativity, collaboration and commercial judgment to new lawyers. Sometimes teachers learn from their students, too, in pleasantly surprising ways.About the Speakers Alexandra Johnson is a partner in the New York office of Milbank and Practice Group Leader of the firm’s Transportation and Space Group. She regularly represents underwriters, issuers, lenders, lessors, borrowers, credit insurers and equity and debt investors. She has worked on some of the most complex and innovative financings involving aircraft, including many that have been recognized by industry publications as “Deals of the Year.” Alexandra helped lead the creation and implementation of, and is the lead instructor for, the Deals@Milbank Transactional Drafting Series for junior associates at Milbank.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
What do law students today think about values, workplace culture, technology, privacy, work/life balance, and conflicting opinions?  Host Allan Marks explores these issues in a candid, wide-ranging roundtable discussion with five 2023 summer associates at Milbank:  Heaven Johnson-Branch; Konstantina Katsimeni; Harrison Makaruk; Isabela Motta; and Vishnu Nagireddy.  They also share their experiences and opinions on related, timely topics:How new technologies (such as AI and blockchain) and shifting privacy norms will influence the practice of law in the next decadeWhat aspiring law students should know about building relationships of trust with mentors and peersHow law schools succeed or miss the mark in preparing law students for diverse legal careersAbout the Speakers: Heaven Johnson-Branch is a law student at Georgetown University Law Center. Konstantina Katsimeni is a law student at Columbia Law School. Harrison Makaruk is a law student at Harvard Law School. Isabela Motta is a law student at University of Chicago Law School. Vishnu Nagireddy is a law student at Northwestern University - Pritzker School of Law.  Podcast host  Allan Marks  is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
The justice gap represents the difference between the civil legal assistance available to low-income individuals and the assistance that they need. Alexander (“Alex”) Forger, former Chairman and retired partner at Milbank, has spent much of his career ensuring that working-class people have equal access to legal representation and that the federal Legal Services Corporation (LSC) – which he headed – can thrive as an essential resource to fund pro bono legal services nationally.  Now 100 years old, Alex remains outspoken about what it takes to make the justice system fair.  Host Allan Marks talks with Alex about his longstanding dedication to helping others and what drives this top Wall Street trusts and estates lawyer to fight for those less privileged.  Topics they cover include: Successfully challenging opponents in Congress to preserve the LSC – what it means to protect equal access to legal representation for poor peopleThe critical role of lawyers in expanding justice and democracy – and why it is morally imperative to do so The value of pro bono work – both to volunteer or public interest attorneys and to the indigent clients they serveCareer advice – for younger lawyers and for retired lawyers alike About the SpeakersAlex Forger is a World War II veteran and renowned trusts and estates lawyer who has represented several well-known clients, including Jacqueline Onassis, Rachel “Bunny” Mellon, as well as the Johnson, Duke and Rockefeller families. Under his leadership as Chairman, Milbank was the first law firm in New York City to offer same-sex partner benefits in 1992. Alex served as President of the New York State Bar Association, as director, president and chair of the New York Legal Aid Society, and on countless committees for minority advancement, gay rights and HIV anti-discrimination initiatives, legal services for the poor, and campaign finance reform. He institutionalized Milbank’s pro bono program, which has set a model for other top law firms nationally. After four decades in private practice, Alex went to Washington to serve under President Bill Clinton as president of the Legal Services Corporation, a federally funded program that gives poor people meaningful access to the courts and qualified legal representation. Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School andFor more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
ESG #15: Treaties and international tribunals interpreting and applying those treaties can impact how governments behave and how companies invest, bringing about concrete effects in the real world. Today, international courts are being summoned to answer questions about responsibility and liability for climate change impacts under international law. In December 2022, the Commission of Small Island States on Climate Change and International Law asked the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea for an advisory opinion. In March 2023, the UN General Assembly asked the ICJ for an advisory opinion on state responsibilities to mitigate climate change. The decisions of these panels could have far-reaching effects, influencing climate change litigation in regional tribunals and national courts. They will shape and maybe accelerate global initiatives to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, to adapt to climate change, and to compensate for losses and damages.  In this newest episode, Milbank partner Viren Mascarenhas speaks with host Allan Marks about what’s at stake in international climate change litigation. They discuss the potential impact of international climate change litigation decisions on economic policies and environmental laws, and explore the complex interrelationships among international courts, multilateral treaties and bilateral investment treaties. About the Speakers Viren Mascarenhas is a partner in Milbank’s NY office and a member of the firm’s Litigation & Arbitration Group. He specializes in international arbitration, public international law, and business and human rights. He has nearly two decades of experience acting as counsel in domestic and international arbitration proceedings under the major institutional arbitral rules as well as ad hoc arbitral rules in a broad range of industries, including chemicals, energy (LNG, oil, nuclear, electricity, power, renewables), and mining and metals. He teaches international arbitration at Columbia Law School, is a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators, sits as arbitrator, and has been recognized for his accomplishments in the field by the major directories, including Chambers and Legal 500.  Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Allan serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
ESG #14:  By 2030, renewables (mainly wind and solar power) are forecast to generate most of Europe’s power and almost half the power in the US and China. Other sectors – like transportation and heavy industry – are also decarbonizing. What drives this energy transition away from fossil fuels toward cleaner energy sources and greater energy efficiency? New regulations are discouraging greenhouse gas emissions, and government policies and market forces are stimulating massive new investment in clean technologies and green energy. Energy security threats and price volatility associated with vulnerable fossil fuel supply chains and climate risks have become more evident. But inflation, rising interest rates and ambivalent politics are still capable of hindering this fundamental shift in how the planet generates and uses energy.In this new episode, The Energy Transition in Europe and the United States: “Blue Skies Ahead?,” Project, Energy and Infrastructure Finance Group partners Matt Brown and Allan Marks compare notes on the energy transition and the state of the market in the US, the UK and Europe. They analyze in detail some of the tailwinds accelerating green investment (including European climate regulations and the US Inflation Reduction Act), affected technologies (including green steel, natural gas and LNG, hydrogen, renewables, nuclear power, batteries and mining), and the role of different sources of capital (including cross-border investment, private credit funds, banks and tax equity). About the SpeakersMatt Brown is a partner in the Project, Energy and Infrastructure Finance Group, based in London. He represents sponsors, lenders, export credit agencies, and governments on all aspects of energy and infrastructure development and finance matters world-wide. He has a significant focus on energy transition matters (including battery gigafactories, battery storage, hydrogen and other green industrial projects) as well as oil and gas, LNG, and conventional and renewable power matters.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex energy and infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Many of his transactions relate to ESG and sustainability, innovative clean technologies, and sophisticated contractual risk allocation. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas SFor more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
New York City jails are falling short of the minimum legal standard of access for needed medical care, with thousands of incarcerated people at Rikers Island and other city jails routinely deprived of adequate treatment.  Costs per inmate are up, but uniformed correctional staffing is down.  The result: an overburdened jail system that is ineffective, inefficient, and inhumane.In the latest episode, Contemptible Conditions: The Fight For Decent Medical Care in NYC Jails, Milbank Litigation partner Katherine Fell speaks to host Allan Marks about the harsh impact of inmates’ loss of access to critical medical care. She discusses how recent state court decisions have confirmed that the City’s Department of Corrections has failed to provide timely treatment in emergencies and for chronic conditions, and how her work on ongoing litigation aims to remedy the situation.About the SpeakersKatherine Fell is a partner in the Litigation & Arbitration Group, based in New York. Her practice includes complex commercial and class action litigation, securities litigation, private and regulatory antitrust matters, regulatory investigations, and internal investigations. She has represented clients across a broad variety of industries, including in the fields of finance, media and entertainment, healthcare and pharmaceuticals.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
The new year holds practical challenges and the promise of resilience for the German economy and the Eurozone.  In the latest episode, Germany Economic Outlook for 2023: "Strength Lies in Being Calm," Frankfurt-based partner Mathias Eisen examines the state of the German economy, European debt capital markets, and corporate restructurings. Along with host Allan Marks, he explores how companies and creditors are managing uncertainty in markets and the liquidity challenges wrought by inflation, rising interest rates, deglobalization and supply chain disruptions. They also outline key recent legal developments and new tools affecting workouts, restructurings and bankruptcies in the world’s fourth largest economy.About the Speakers:Mathias Eisen is a partner in the Financial Restructuring group, based in Frankfurt. He specializes in acquisition finance, corporate finance and financial restructurings, and advises financial institutions, investors, sponsors and corporate clients on all aspects of leveraged buyouts, general syndicated lending, debt capital markets transactions, asset finance transactions and financial restructurings.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
ESG #13: How will investors and policymakers move forward on climate change in 2023 after an eventful 2022?  In this episode, host  Allan Marks and London partner Chris Taufatofua, both members of Milbank's Project, Energy and Infrastructure Finance group, share personal reflections from their participation at the COP27 UN Climate Change Conference, look at trends from 2022 and preview 2023. They discuss global clean energy investment, the special role of oceans, negotiations for a new international fund to redress the “loss and damage” from climate change impacts, and the gap between climate pledges and progress in reducing global greenhouse gas emissions. Strong hurricanes, costly wildfires, widespread flooding, drought and heat waves plague the globe. In 2022, the United States enacted the landmark Inflation Reduction Act, making good on President Joe Biden’s promise to enact sweeping climate legislation. Billions of dollars in new government incentives will support investment in renewable energy, innovative clean technologies and advanced manufacturing. The European Union announced new ESG and climate reporting rules. Many nations signed on to the US Ocean Conservation Pledge at COP27. In 2023, the US SEC is likely to promulgate new climate risk disclosure rules. IFRS is finalizing the new ISSB (International Sustainability Standards Board) sustainability and disclosure standards. And the world will meet later this year at the next climate conference: COP28 in Dubai. Do climate conferences really move the needle?  Allan and Chris go inside.About the Speakers:Chris Taufatofua is a partner in the Project, Energy and Infrastructure Finance group, based in London. He has significant experience advising lenders, sponsors, governments and contractors on a variety of international transactions in the energy, power, infrastructure and renewables sectors. Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
The $9.5 billion New Terminal One at New York's John F. Kennedy Airport -- developed, financed and built by a private consortium – will be the largest terminal at the airport when completed, with state-of-the-art technology, sustainability and capacity upgrades. Construction financing for the new terminal closed this summer, followed by the official groundbreaking in September 2022.  The members of the public-private partnership overcame myriad challenges – the global pandemic, volatile air traffic forecasts, supply chain challenges, and rising interest rates – to close the largest single-asset P3 project financing so far in the US.  In this episode, JFK Airport’s New Terminal One: “We Have Lift Off,” host Allan Marks (who led Milbank’s team representing the banks that are providing over $6.6 billion in construction loans) goes behind the scenes of the project financing with two of its architects: Pete Taylor, a partner at Carlyle, which led the sponsor group developing the new terminal, and Dan Seltzer, a Managing Director at MUFG Bank, Ltd., who acted as the Financial Advisor to the developers.About the Speakers:Peter Taylor is Partner and Co-Head of the Carlyle Global Infrastructure Opportunity Fund (CGI). He is based in Washington, DC.Dan Seltzer is Managing Director for Project Finance in the Global Corporate & Investment Banking group at MUFG in New York.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
In 2020, leading aircraft lessor Nordic Aviation Capital (NAC) navigated the sudden collapse in air traffic due to the pandemic with help from its creditors and an Irish court. Two years later, the company went through a chapter 11 restructuring, emerging from bankruptcy in June 2022. In this episode, Restructuring an Aircraft Lessor: “NAC DAC is Back,” host Allan Marks speaks with Jim Cameron, Karen McMaster and Tyson Lomazow about restructuring the company and its subsidiaries, each with its own pools of aircraft and credit facilities. They discuss the impacts of the pandemic on global aviation, the rise of the leasing market, and lessons learned.About the Speakers:James Cameron, who leads Milbank’s Transportation and Space Group in London, is a top-ranked practitioner with extensive experience acting on a variety of asset leasing and financing transactions involving aircraft, ships, oil rigs, rolling stock and other movable equipment. Karen McMaster, a partner in the firm’s Financial Restructuring Group, assists buy side and distressed investors structure, negotiate and implement investments in distressed, stressed or special situation credits.Tyson Lomazow is a partner in the New York office of Milbank and a member of the firm's Financial Restructuring Group. He represents debtors and creditors in chapter 11 reorganization cases and out-of-court restructurings, both in the US and internationally. Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
ESG #12: How can law firms, corporations and other employers foster a culture of opportunity that encourages success for everyone? For diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives to succeed, they must be grounded in authenticity, intentionality, respect and trust. In this episode, host Allan Marks speaks with Mikeisha Anderson Jones, Milbank’s global Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Officer, about uniting people, passion and purpose to create a cohesive workplace community that appreciates differences, reinforces common goals and values, and promotes professional growth.  About the Speakers:Mikeisha Anderson Jones is the global Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Officer of Milbank LLP. She leads the firm’s global DEI strategy working closely with offices across the Americas, Europe and Asia on the unique challenges and opportunities in each region. She previously served as Vice President of Global Inclusion & Diversity at American Express, and is a frequent speaker on career development and inclusion. Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google and Audible. DisclaimerFor more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
Airlines in Asia have been slow to recover since the pandemic slammed the brakes on the fastest growth market for global aviation. In this episode, host Allan Marks speaks with Milbank Transportation and Space partner Paul Ng about the current state of Asia’s aviation market, recent restructurings and prospects for future growth in air traffic.  They explore the shape of the recovery for airlines, passengers and air cargo, manufacturers and lessors of aircraft – and some reasons for optimism – despite uncertain demand, high fuel costs, tight labor markets and ongoing supply chain disruptions. Sit back, relax, and enjoy the flight.About the Speakers:Paul Ng is a partner in the Singapore office of Milbank LLP. He is a member of the global Transportation and Space Practice and leads the aviation and asset finance practice in Asia. He has led on many complex and first-in-the-industry asset-backed structured and receivables financings. He has an in-depth understanding of the financing and leasing of aviation and maritime assets, rolling stock and other moveable assets and extensive experience of financing of such assets, including tax-based, leveraged Islamic and export credit.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at the Law School and previously at the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google and Audible.DisclaimerFor more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
A Canadian scandal holds a mirror up to media and politics in Canada, with implications for the US and other advanced democracies, and it's not a pretty picture.In this episode, host Allan Marks speaks with Milbank Litigation partner Tawfiq Rangwala about his new book What WE Lost: Inside the Attack on Canada’s Largest Children’s Charity, misinformation and political gamesmanship. What WE Lost, which is a national bestseller in Canada, offers a behind-the-scenes account of the rise and fall of WE Charity, a Canada-based non-profit focused on youth empowerment programs and international development work. In 2020, WE Charity became embroiled in a political scandal that almost brought down the government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.About the Speakers:Tawfiq Rangwala is a partner in Milbank’s New York office of Milbank and a member of the firm’s Litigation & Arbitration Group. His practice focuses on defense of US and international regulatory and criminal enforcement matters, as well as internal investigations relating to business activities and sensitive cultural topics. He has extensive experience handling federal and state court litigation of complex commercial cases involving securities and corporate law, contract disputes and financial restructuring.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at both the Law School and the Haas School of Business.For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google and Audible.DisclaimerFor more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
ESG Series #11: Investors, borrowers and financial institutions are using Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) principles and metrics to shape the ways they attract capital, screen investments, set terms in complex transactions, and meet evolving compliance and disclosure requirements. The trend to incorporate ESG and sustainability considerations into debt issuances seems likely only to grow. In Europe specifically, the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) and the EU Taxonomy Regulation are designed to reorient capital towards a more sustainable economy and to prevent greenwashing while promoting accountability and transparency. In this episode, host  Allan Marks speaks with Milbank partners Alexandra Grant and  Ana Grbec from the firm’s London-based European Leveraged Finance & Capital Markets group.  They discuss how ESG factors have evolved despite market volatility and uncertainty, the difference between green bonds and sustainability-linked debt instruments, and what to expect in capital markets, banking, acquisition finance, and institutional lending. About the Speakers Alexandra Grant is a European Leveraged Finance/Capital Markets partner in Milbank’s London office. She has extensive experience of advising both lenders and sponsors/borrowers on a wide range of complex and cross-border leveraged acquisition, public to private, and infrastructure financings and restructurings, across the full spectrum of products. Ana Grbec is a Capital Markets partner in Milbank’s London office of Milbank LLP. She advises on public and private capital markets and finance transactions with a focus on high-yield bonds and cross-border securities offerings across a broad range of sectors and jurisdictions.Podcast host Allan Marks is one of the world's leading project finance lawyers. He advises developers, investors, lenders, and underwriters around the world in the development and financing of complex infrastructure projects, as well as related acquisitions, restructurings and capital markets transactions. Mr. Marks also serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley at both the Law School and the Haas School of Business. For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google and Audible. For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including For more information and insights, follow us on social media and podcast platforms, including Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart, Google and Audible.Disclaimer
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