Irish Region
A new broadly-cast UK national security and investment regime (“the UK Regime”) could catch Irish transactions, including deals with an Irish buyer and/or target.
A new broadly-cast UK national security and investment regime (“the UK Regime”) could catch Irish transactions, including deals with an Irish buyer and/or target.
A new broadly-cast UK national security and investment regime (“the UK Regime”) could catch Irish transactions, including deals with an Irish buyer and/or target.
The UK Regime, enacted by the National Security and Investment Act 2021, came into force on 4 January 2022, but has potential retrospective effect for deals closed since 12 November 2020.
The UK government expects between 1000 and 1800 deals to be caught every year – a large number by any measure. By comparison, UK merger authorities formally review around 100 deals a year under UK competition rules.
Important for Irish deal-makers:
Mandatory notification will arise where a transaction involves:
Energy; Transport; Civil Nuclear; Communications; Data Infrastructure; Defence; Artificial Intelligence; Autonomous Robotics; Computing Hardware; Cryptographic Authentication; Advanced Materials; Quantum Technologies; Engineering Biology; Critical Supplier to government; Critical Supplier to the Emergency Services; Military or Dual-Use Technologies; and Satellite and Space Technologies.
Further details of the mandatory notification requirements for these 17 sectors can be found in the UK Regime Regulations.
The UK Regime also provides jurisdiction for the UK Government to investigate other deals with a nexus to the UK, either following voluntary notification or following UK Government-initiated investigations.
The UK Government has stated that this power will be used solely to safeguard the UK’s national security, although the circumstances in which national security is likely to be affected are not defined.
In practice the Investment Security Unit (“ISU”) within the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (“BEIS”) will monitor market news and announcements and will have 5 years to investigate non-notified deals post-closing (or 6 months after becoming aware of the deal).
Accordingly, deals (i) considered likely to touch on UK national security, or (ii) involving (or adjacent to) any of 17 defined sensitive sectors, should be considered for possible voluntary notification.
Plans by the Irish Government to introduce an equivalent investment screening regime here are proceeding, even if draft legislation appears stalled. Since 2021, an Investment Screening Bill for this purpose has been listed as “priority legislation”.