WFW promotes seven to partnership for 2024
The partners' expertise ensures WFW continues to expand and succeed through 2024 and beyond.
We provide practical, high quality legal advice to clients developing and operating infrastructure assets worldwide. Our long-standing experience means we understand the complex issues that can arise in sector, enabling us to act not only as a legal advisor, but also as a strategic partner to help clients meet their business objectives.
We have a wealth of experience advising on assets and projects ranging from airports, digital and E-infrastructure, ports and terminals, roads, bridges and tunnels, rail and social infrastructure, as well as a wide range of energy-related infrastructure, such as gas networks, pipelines and storage, and renewable energy assets.
Our infrastructure practice is a natural extension of our work advising on the financing and investing in large capital assets. We act for sponsors and developers, banks, institutional investors, financial advisors, operators and a wide range of infrastructure, pension, private equity and sovereign wealth funds on domestic and cross-border matters.
Our advice spans all legal and regulatory specialisms from finance (project, asset, acquisition, equity and structured) to corporate and M&A, joint ventures, private equity, privatisations and commercial contracts as well as project development work (planning, environmental, construction and real estate), tax and insolvency advice, competition and regulatory, employment and dispute resolution.
Our multi-disciplinary team, based across our global network of offices, has the perfect mix of skills and experience to provide first-rate advice and guidance to all participants in the infrastructure sector.
The partners' expertise ensures WFW continues to expand and succeed through 2024 and beyond.
In this article, the fifth in our “The Future of EV Charging Infrastructure: Spotlight on” series, we provide an overview of the main pieces of regulation governing the development of EV charging infrastructure in Italy.
National Grid is planning to build two primarily offshore transmission cable routes to carry clean energy from Scotland to demand centres in England.