Lorenzo Bruttomesso, Oman LNG LLC

I am a multi-discipline corporate, commercial, projects (including financing), compliance, and oil and gas lawyer and I strive to be a trusted partner, guardian and team member to the organisation, management team and board of directors for legal and compliance support. My role is head of legal at Oman LNG LLC, thus leading, managing and developing an effective legal team to cater for the needs of the company.

Our challenges are including, but not limited to:

  • the implementation of robust compliance procedures to ensure that we are dealing and transacting with third parties who do not pose risk to Oman LNG and our stakeholders from a sanctions, bribery and corruption perspective;
  • adherence to the latest business practices and ISO standards, including ISO 45001;
  • keeping abreast of and complying with international laws and regulatory frameworks applicable to our international transactions, including retaining international legal counsel who have branches or offices within the jurisdictions where our trading partners conduct business, including anti-competition regulations;
  • the legal department being an integral part of the decision-making process.

Leading, managing and developing a small but effective legal team necessitates interacting and collaborating with external counsel, especially in matters of complex international finance transactions, multi-package plant construction projects, international acquisitions and mergers, and complex litigation and international arbitrations. External counsel also serve as the first port of call in relation to any legal and regulatory changes impacting the industry or jurisdictions where the company’s business is conducted, such counsel being local and international, depending on the needs.

Having been a practising attorney, notary and conveyancer for two decades prior to moving in-house has been very beneficial in my in-house roles, and is reflected in my relationship with and how I interact with various external legal counsel.

Having worked in South Africa previously, the essential difference, from a legal practice perspective, is that South Africa is a common law jurisdiction whilst Oman is a civil law jurisdiction. In addition, there is no doctrine of judicial precedent in Oman. Agreements concluded between Omani and international entities are thus governed by, predominantly, English law with dispute resolution by arbitration, usually to be held in London, Paris or Singapore.

Situated outside the Persian Gulf, Muscat is a business- and family-oriented city, with associated amenities. The Sultanate is home to diverse environments and topography, namely mountains, valleys, deserts and coasts, and flora and fauna unique to the Arabian Peninsula. The diversity and uniqueness of these environments are important with respect to sustainable growth and development, and they attract visitors, tourists, working professionals and families alike. Oman is often referred to as the Switzerland of the Middle East due to the fostering of neighbourly and peaceful relations. n

Richard McLaughlin, Oman Oil Company Exploration and Production

Oman, like many countries in this region, is highly dependent on oil revenues. Oman produces about a million barrels of oil per day, and about 80% of it is exported, mainly to China. The rest is exported into the local market to make petrol and aviation fuel.

Oman Oil Company Exploration and Production is only about 10 years old. It acts as both operator and non-operator in Oman and overseas. When the government issues exploration and production blocks here in Oman, the government often reserves for itself the ability to ‘back in’ to the development later. So they allow the foreign entity, usually, to invest and look for oil or gas and then if there is a successful development, the government can ‘back in’ at that point. We have been the de-facto recipient of those back- in rights, so we work very closely with the Ministry of Oil and Gas, either as a partner to incoming investors or as a party to these agreements.

My role is broad and covers the spectrum of general counsel, work and this includes significant commercial activities and transactions. A key challenge with large transactions is timing and resourcing them properly, because at times we have had numerous transactions happening simultaneously – so that can be a stretch, resource wise.

In Oman and the Middle East more widely, government entities are very influential. So if you look at Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Oman as examples, government-owned entities are highly visible. That is different from other places I have worked and brings with it a different dynamic.

There is a lot of interaction with the government and numerous other agencies as a result. Different government agencies have different drivers which have to be taken into account. Although you are a commercial entity, there are a lot of factors to consider. I think something you have to learn pretty quickly when you’re working in a government-dominated sector is that it is not always solely about commercial interests – and that’s quite different for many counsel.

Most of what we do is done in-house because we are specialist oil and gas lawyers. But we do seek external help from time to time. The usual things we seek external assistance on are either large transactions where we are looking for additional resource or large disputes.

Most oil and gas transactions, financings and partner agreements are governed by English law, but we often need a combination of English law and local law advice. The local law elements tend to be less significant in the overall context, but nevertheless they need to be checked. n

State of Qatar

The State of Qatar is an independent emirate located along the western coast of the Arabian Gulf. Among its vast shale and crude oil stockpiles, the country is known to have the third largest natural gas reserve in the world. Since becoming independent in 1971, Qatar has used its considerable natural resources to transform itself into an economically flourishing nation in the Gulf.

In a bid to become less vulnerable to the boom and bust cycles of oil and natural gas prices, Qatar has shifted its focus from the energy sector towards developing a robust financial industry and infrastructure portfolio.

In recent times, however, geopolitical pressures have forced the country to diversify its economy. In 2017, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Egypt cut diplomatic trade ties with Qatar, claiming – among other allegations – it supported terrorism. Although these claims have been vehemently denied by Qatar, a land, sea and air blockade remains in place today.

Despite the blockade, Qatar has maintained steady economic growth. According to Nasser Al Taweel, chief legal officer of Qatar Financial Centre Authority (QFCA), there are positives to be derived from the incident.

‘It was a major event that happened in the State of Qatar, but speaking about it three years after the blockade, it was a very good thing that it happened to us, simply because it was a wakeup call,’ explains Al Taweel.

‘It made us think a lot more about the future, thinking about cost efficiency in terms of whatever goods or services we need. It forced us to think about building our financial sector in a more robust manner and to think about depending less on others.’

Compared to neighbouring nations, Qatar has been slow to develop its now thriving economy. Making up for lost time, Qatar’s rich history has enabled it to adopt a uniquely global outlook as it continues to develop at a rapid pace.

‘The country has only become rich in the last 20 years. That has resulted in very quick changes, not just in the business environment, but to the economy and the look and feel of the city,’ says Christopher Berlew, chief legal officer of Qatari Diar.

As a result, in house counsel have been playing a crucial role behind the scenes to assist and facilitate such rapid change.

The build up

A major driver for change occurred in 2010, when Qatar won its bid to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The decision secured Qatar’s place in history as the first Middle Eastern country to host the event, while refocusing the nation’s infrastructure development agenda.

Leading legal operations for the property development branch of the State of Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund, Qatari Diar, is Christopher Berlew.

‘As part of the state sovereign wealth fund, we are quite a large player in the market here and we are playing an integral part to the preparations for the 2022 World Cup,’ he says.

‘We are building the Lusail City project, which is an enormous new city just north of Doha, which will become the new administrative capital of Qatar.’

The development will hold numerous sports arenas, five training fields and will be the location of the main stadium for the 2022 World Cup. Construction plans also include 22 hotels with fully equipped facilities to host teams, spectators and visitors.

‘We are ramping things up to get the key parts of the Lusail City project finished and operating by the time of the World Cup. The pace will continue to pick up until 2022 – the games are sort of at the end. We are targeting for everything we are building to be ready in the middle of summer, this time in three years.’

With the construction of several major stadiums and housing developments under way, Qatar has made a significant investment into upgrading its infrastructure networks. As the general counsel overseeing these developments, Berlew believes acting on behalf of a sovereign wealth fund gives rise to its own set of challenges and considerations.

‘What makes it uniquely interesting and challenging is: a sovereign wealth fund is not purely an economically rational actor. It doesn’t just chase the highest returns. It does not behave like a purely private investor. Although it has an interest in making good returns on the State’s money, it is interested in getting some perhaps non-monetary returns from some of its investments – whether that be diplomatic or charitable.’

On the right track

Experiencing similar challenges is Stephen Hibbert, general counsel of Qatar Rail, a state-owned and operated enterprise. Joining the team in 2012, Hibbert was tasked with the legal challenge of overseeing the construction of Qatar’s multibillion-dollar rail network.

‘In terms of the legal challenges, they were setting up and running a company and drafting all of the contracts from square one,’ he says.

“What makes it uniquely interesting and challenging is: a sovereign wealth fund is not purely an economically rational actor.”

‘This is not like Sydney Trains or National Rail, where you’ve got suites of contracts and you’ve got a library of technical specifications. Actually, nothing existed. You’re starting from a blank sheet of paper.’

The rail network is comprised of three major projects: the Doha Metro, the Lusail Tram, and the Long Distance Rail, which will connect to a wider rail network.

‘The legal challenges were primarily concerned with the drafting of big, complex contracts for an environment which had never seen this type of work before, and for contractors coming from overseas, many of whom had never worked in Qatar before.’

From a legal standpoint, the sheer management of such an endeavour would be a challenge for any in-house lawyer. Drawing from his past railway work in Australia and Asia, Hibbert explains that the key to success is providing support on every level.

‘We put people inside with government agencies, payment organisations, within the department of environment and we engage with them directly with the supply chain at various points, to make sure that our contractors were successful.’

Making financial cents

In addition to major infrastructure developments, Qatar has worked to strengthen its economy by building a robust and steady financial sector.

‘The financial sector in Qatar has been very stable. It’s one of the more stable financial sectors I think regionally, and I think it would be fair to say in the world. The financial sector is strong and is growing,’ explains Nasser Al Taweel, chief legal offer of Qatar Financial Centre Authority (QFCA).

The QFCA is a platform within which investors and business owners can set up a company in Qatar. It consists of an independent regulator, as well as an independent judiciary – which includes a civil and commercial court, in addition to a regulatory tribunal.

‘The QFCA has its absolute autonomy when it comes to regulations, when it comes to establishing businesses, when it comes to issuing licences,’ explains Al Taweel.

‘The role of chief legal officer at QFCA, in addition to the normal ins and outs that chief legal officers do – like ensuring contracts are drafted and reviewed, providing legal advice, managing legal matters and defending their organisations against any litigation – we have the role of the regulator.’

QFCA provides an independent legal and business framework that promotes the development of a capital market. Al Taweel believes an autonomous system that serves the interests of both regional and international investors will only strengthen Qatar’s economy.

‘For the system to work, what we need to do is have our own laws and regulations. Putting in these laws and regulations is the responsibility of the legal department. Therefore, we spend a lot of time basically drafting these regulations, making sure that they work, which is a completely different beast altogether compared to drafting a contract,’ says Al Taweel.

‘When I draft a contract, it’s a bilateral agreement, or sometimes multilateral. But when you have unidentified parties when you draft a law, it’s completely different, it’s a completely different set of skills.’

Although building a parallel and separate financial body is a challenge, it is an essential element needed in order to keep up with – and further promote, particularly internationally –Qatar’s economic growth story.

‘Since our financial sector is developing so rapidly, a lot of the development of that is a legal development. So, we are talking about amending laws, amending regulations and hence forth. I am involved in a number of committees, a number of engagements outside the boundaries of the QFCA, mainly to try and assist in basically upscaling the financial sector in the State of Qatar,’ says Al Taweel.

‘It’s not easy to make changes and improvements in any system, let alone the financial system, which is normally hard to amend and change because there are so many interests involved.’

A hotel takeover

In addition to establishing a secure financial sector, the State of Qatar has developed an enviable property portfolio – which is only set to expand in coming years. Overseeing part of this growth story is legal director of Katara Hospitality, Kushagra Priyadarshi.

‘Katara Hospitality is owned by the sovereign wealth fund of Qatar, which is the Qatar Investment Authority. They hold almost all of the luxury real estate in almost four continents. They also have a huge portfolio of luxury real estate in this country, which is Qatar,’ explains Priyadarshi.

Qatar’s property portfolio is currently valued at over USD$15bn and includes iconic hotels such as the Plaza in New York, the InterContinental Amstel Amsterdam, The Savoy in London, Raffles Hotel Singapore and The Peninsula Paris – just to name a few.

“Qatar is full of opportunities, endless opportunities. Every day you have something new. We are a very vibrant country, with a very young leadership.”

‘Most of the legal work happens from the head office where I am stationed. My work includes any transactional plus legal and compliance work that relates to all our properties and portfolios, which are basically under my oversight,’ says Priyadarshi.

‘My job here includes a whole spectrum of hospitality and luxury real estate work, which includes overseeing any mergers and acquisitions, any and all sorts of financing which relates either to deposit financing, corporate financing, acquisition financing, treasury matters and all of that. Then any litigation disputes.’

Katara Hospitality manages over 75 subsidiaries, which are spread all across the world. Managing these jurisdictions has been one of the biggest challenges, explains Priyadarshi.

‘One of the key challenges is the interaction between all of these different jurisdictions. Since all of it is being managed through the central location here from the head office [Doha], we need to have an overview of all jurisdictions and how they interact with each other to come up with a comprehensive legal strategy of compliances and conformity across these jurisdictions.’

Financing the future

Considerable oil and gas reserves, wise infrastructure investments, and a strong financial sector have secured Qatar as one of the wealthiest countries in the world on a per capita basis, and general counsel have played a vital role behind the scenes advising and assisting upon the nation’s continued growth.

‘I think a country that is undergoing a major development and a major improvement of their systems – for that country there will always be a role for in-house counsel,’ explains Al Taweel.

‘Qatar is full of opportunities, endless opportunities. Every day you have something new. We are a very vibrant country, with a very young leadership that is ambitious, that wants to change for the better and that is very well educated.’

The opportunities available to general counsel are also a reflection of Qatar’s outward-facing business agenda. Hosting the 2022 FIFA World Cup is not only a breakthrough for the Middle East, but strengthens Qatar’s global outlook.

‘I think the World Cup is going to change the map,’ says Al Taweel. ‘It’s going to change the way people are looking at business and the State of Qatar. I think a lot of people are now encouraged, compared to before Qatar was hosting the World Cup.’ n

Christopher Berlew, Qatari Diar

Qatar is quite a small country, but because of its wealth and strategic importance, not to mention a World Cup coming up, it has a much more global outlook than would normally be the case for such a small country, and such a small market.

I work as the chief legal officer of Qatari Diar, which is the property development arm of the State of Qatar sovereign wealth fund. We are wholly owned by the Qatar Investment Authority, which is the main sovereign wealth fund – and we engage in real estate property development and some investment, both here in Qatar – which is a big part of our operations – but also around the world.

Now we, as part of the state sovereign wealth fund, are quite a large player in the market here. We’re an integral part of the preparations for the 2022 World Cup, because we are building the Lusail City project. This is an enormous new city we are building just north of Doha (the existing capital), which will become the new administrative capital. It is also the home of the main stadium – the lead flagship stadium for the World Cup – which is where both the ceremonies and the final game will be played. We’re building a lot of the infrastructure that will be used as part of the 2022 World Cup, too.

We’re currently investing – and have already invested a huge amount of money – in Lusail, and we are really ramping things up to get it finished, but it is very much a work in progress. There are key parts of the Lusail City project that have been identified as priorities, that need to be finished and operating by the time the World Cup commences. So are a lot of things that go on with that. In terms of challenges, it really is to mobilise and get the necessary plans done, get the contractors mobilised and ensure that everything is finished in time.

The World Cup was awarded to Qatar back in 2010. Since then it has contributed in a major way to the process, which was already going on. Qatar is a very small country and began to develop quite late – even later than some of its neighbours here in the region.

The country only become wealthy in the last 20 years. That has resulted in very quick changes – not just in the business environment, but to the economy as well as the look and feel of the city. The options that are available to people, the size and composition of the population, have all changed, so it’s been a massive shift – not just to the business environment, but in all aspects of Qatar.

What you have is a country where the leadership is trying very hard to make up for lost ground and develop quickly into a modern country that can eventually sustain itself without relying so heavily on petrol dollars for its income. That means massive investment in infrastructure, education and housing. It means building a modern city with a modern outlook, and everything to take the country past and beyond the years after the World Cup.

The pace will continue to pick up until 2022. We are targeting for everything we are building to be ready in the middle of summer in three years’ time. Inevitably there will be delays, but the pace will continue to pick up until then. n

Kingdom of Bahrain

Bahrain is the smallest of all members of the Gulf Cooperation Council, with a population of a hair over 1.5 million – just more than half the population of the next-smallest GCC state, Qatar.

Like most of the region’s oil-dependent nations, Bahrain has long fought to diversify its economy and free itself from the volatility of global oil prices. Despite being the first country in the Middle East in which oil was found (1932), Bahrain has struck oil only once more since then and, with a portfolio of merely two oilfields, the need to diversify has always been particularly pressing for the country. As reserves have dropped, the leadership in Bahrain has taken great pains to pivot the economy away from oil and toward diversity.

This background informs the Bahraini approach to business today: innovation and doing more with less. It is no surprise, then, that the country’s in-house community has grown into a vibrant, mature, and business-critical component of a constantly changing business environment.

Bahrain’s trusted advisers

Today, the in-house role enjoys a high profile in Bahrain: many of its general counsel also enjoy senior positions either sitting on the board outright, or advising it directly in a secretarial capacity. Understandably, this high position gives the legal function more teeth than they otherwise might have.

‘Historically, it is not very common for large financial institutions, as it is difficult to find someone who is able and experienced enough to perform both roles,’ explains Jawad Zabar, group general counsel and board secretary at BFC Group Holdings. ‘However, in recent times, I have seen it slowly becoming more and more common as organisations also start looking at reducing cost.’

‘It is very important to involve the board on every research-critical matter. Having access to the board as well as directly interfacing with the CEO and CFO really helps, because I report to the CFO and, by extension, the CEO. This helps things move faster and more effectively,’ adds Bharat Kumar Mehta, general counsel and board secretary for APM Terminals in Bahrain.

‘It is very important that I, as legal person have knowledge about important activities in the business. This can only be possible if one is involved from the start of the process, and given the senior position; it really enables me to get that information across to the board, and it’s easier to get information from others, as there is less pushback.’

The argument in favour of having a legal adviser at board level can be made anywhere in the world but, in Bahrain, the need is particularly pertinent.

‘In Bahrain the regulatory environment is rapidly evolving. Bahrain is coming up with many more laws – every two months there is a new law. For example, we just came out with a new data protection law in line with GDPR, we’ve come out with a new competition law, a new economic standards law in July, then we have also come out with an online marketplace or ecommerce law. So, they are coming out with so many laws that, I don’t anticipate how a business can work without in-house legal departments.’

National innovation

In addition to the same general legislative and regulatory changes faced by any rapidly evolving nation, there is another reason why the legal environment in Bahrain is moving as fast as it is. Despite its size, the country has been able to carve out a name for itself as an innovator in areas where other, more prominent countries have lagged behind.

The Central Bank of Bahrain, for example, formally established a FinTech and Innovation Unit to ensure that the country was properly catering for and nurturing the development of its burgeoning fintech industry. Involved in this push was the establishment of a ‘regulatory sandbox’, in which fintech companies are enabled to develop their offerings in a virtual space. The Central Bank of Bahrain has also established the Global Financial Innovation Network, which is designed to help firms interact with regulators and navigate between different frameworks across multiple countries when looking to expand globally.

‘Bahrain is unique due to its small geographical size and its important role in the region as a financial and commercial hub,’ explains Zabar.

“Bahrain is unique due to its small geographical size and its important role in the region as a financial and commercial hub. It is ever evolving.”

‘It is ever evolving, especially with the introduction of disruptive technologies. However, Bahrain is always looking to take a welcoming stance on these technologies and adapt to add value to the country, and simplify or foster frictionless transactions while promoting business growth.’

These latest innovations are only the latest entries in a long record of Bahrain leading the way in the region. Particularly in the financial sector, Bahrain is renowned for being ahead of the curve, and such long-term thinking enabled Bahrain to establish itself as a banking hub as early as the 1970s. It was among the first in the region to draft and implement a trusts law, and was the first country in the GCC to implement an investment limited partnership law, long used around the world specifically for investment in collective investment funds.

This appetite for innovation trickles down to the in-house counsel working on the ground in Bahrain, and challenges them to step-up in their professional lives.

‘As a result, the depth of international exposure you experience as a legal counsel in Bahrain is a great opportunity. Bahrain is always at the forefront of adopting international best practices. Recent examples include being the first in the region to introduce the regulatory sandbox for fintech products, creating one of the first fintech hubs in the region, introducing personal data protection laws and groundbreaking electronic transaction laws,’ says Zabar.

‘Therefore, the unique challenge is being able to navigate the ever changing legal and regulatory landscape; however, as with every unique challenge, it is also a unique opportunity.’

Foreign investment

Bahrain’s tilt towards innovation has proved vital in moving the country beyond oil and towards other sources of economic prosperity. Progressive efforts on the part of the leadership – such as the regulations that led to Bahrain’s prominence as a financial centre – have gone a long way towards attracting foreign investment.

‘Bahrain has always tried to work toward a better regulatory environment. They want to be in line with all EU requirements, for instance, because they want to promote Bahrain as an investment centre,’ says Mehta.

‘To attract international investments or foreign investments, they will need to establish a proper legal regulatory environment, because if they don’t have, for example, a proper anti-corruption and bribery law, then the entities in Europe or other countries will not be able to invest in Bahrain. That is where they want to build the regulatory environment up to the speed of any developed country: in order to get the best rating, and in order to improve ease of business and compliance with international laws.’

Religiously competitive

Similar to many countries in the region, Bahrain’s official religion is Islam and, as such, Sharia law plays a large role in the country’s constitution. Article 2 of Bahrain’s 2002 Constitution declares Sharia as the primary source of legislation. Though Sharia courts typically handle matters of family law, the civil courts of Bahrain are required to look to Sharia in cases where legislation is unclear on a particular matter.

While the role of Sharia is limited in commercial matters, the fact that Bahrain is an overwhelmingly Muslim country means that lawyers still need to be cognisant of the religious law.

‘Having worked in an investment firm, we had investors who were Sharia and, to deal with Sharia investors, we had to ensure we had Sharia-compliant funds,’ explains Mehta. ‘Understanding Sharia concepts, coming from a non-Sharia country, was a new experience.’

The presence of Sharia law in Bahrain’s legal code also serves as yet another example of how Bahrain manages to gain a competitive edge in the international marketplace, maintaining its status as an attractive destination for foreign investment. In 2017, the Central Bank of Bahrain introduced some of the most advanced rules governing Islamic banks by requiring them to undergo independent and external audits in order to verify compliance with Sharia. Compare this to most banks in the GCC, which are typically free to rely on their own in-house religious scholars to ensure that products being offered are indeed Sharia compliant. The first audit reports, which are required to be made public, are expected in 2020.

“The presence of Sharia law in Bahrain’s legal code also serves as yet another example of how Bahrain manages to gain a competitive edge in the international marketplace.”

‘Bahrain, along with Dubai and Kuala Lumpur, are as seen as leaders in the area of Islamic finance in particular,’ says one general counsel for a private investment fund in Bahrain. ‘For its size, Bahrain has a huge piece of the global Islamic banking market, at just under 2%.’

Visions for the future

Like many Gulf countries, Bahrain has set out its vision for the future in a 26-page document entitled Bahrain Economic Vision 2030. Launched in 2008, the vision marked the beginning of renewed reforms and liberalisation in Bahrain, and continues the country’s long arc towards a diverse, oil-independent economy. Increased volatility in global oil prices in recent years has only shone further light on the urgency of this diversification.

This vision has manifested in countless regulatory and legislative changes over the past few years and even decades. Most private companies enjoy tax-free status, and many sectors allow for 100% foreign ownership, such as in the technology and manufacturing sectors. The Kingdom has also reduced the minimum capital requirements for incorporating in Bahrain, specifically to open the door more widely to foreign investment.

In keeping with Bahrain’s tradition of being a first mover, in 2019 Bahrain became the first country to adopt the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL)’s model e-commerce laws. Among many other things, the laws puts electronic documents – bills of lading and promissory notes, for instance – on the same legal footing as their paper equivalents. Together with improving supply-chain efficiency throughout the economy, the law also paves the way toward a blockchain-backed future.

The New Arbitration Law in 2015 introduced UNCITRAL’s model law on international commercial arbitration into the Bahrain legal system, applying it to all arbitration cases, whether or not the arbitration takes place in Bahrain or abroad.

These are but a few of the reformations flowing down from Bahrain’s vision 2030, and the breakneck pace at which the Vision is being implemented is largely welcomed by the in-house community.

‘It gets difficult, keeping abreast of the legal changes in Bahrain, but business by and large understands the necessity. The changes that have been made have, to my knowledge, all been necessary and will, I think, be very positive for Bahrain,’ says one general counsel for a private investment fund in Bahrain.

Zabar is similarly optimistic: ‘In the next five years, the ever increasing prevalence of legal tech, and the continued roll-out of groundbreaking initiatives and laws and regulations governing electronic transactions and digitisation – as a result, Bahrain will continue to be a unique destination to attract foreign direct investment and sponsor business growth in the region.’

There are still creases yet to be ironed out. According to the World Bank, Bahrain ranks 62nd out of 190 countries in its 2019 Ease of Doing Business rankings.

‘One problem which we see is lack of precedence on basic matters,’ explains Mehta. ‘If the authorities are not very clear, then it can hinder business. They need to create that clarity across the authorities as well as across the entities or organisations in order to ensure the smooth implementation of such laws. It creates difficulty.’

One example that Mehta gives is the country’s labour laws relating to annual leave: a new law introduced in 2012 increased the minimum annual leave entitlement to 30 days, but a lack of clarity on whether this meant working days or calendar days left businesses in a state of confusion until further clarity was provided.

‘The company needs one answer. They need to know what they have to do. That is a challenge which an in-house counsel will face every day, and we have to come up with our right interpretation, what makes sense for the company, so we have to move ahead regardless,’ he says.

‘From the regulatory perspective, I think they still need to evolve quite a lot when compared to other developed or developing nations.’ n

Stephen Hibbert, Qatar Rail

I started with Qatar Rail in February 2012. As of August 2019, we have just opened the first metro line in Doha and we look forward to opening the rest of the network, 37 stations – 31 of which are underground – by November 2019.

One of the great challenges for Qatar Rail is doing a railway project in a country that has never seen a train, has no laws relating to railways, no rail safety and no experience in anything in rail. Everything you work on is like starting on a blank sheet of paper.

In terms of some statistics, during the course of the project we brought into the country 21 tunnel boring machines – which has gone into the Guinness World Records. We tunnelled 140km under the city of Doha to build the network. To do that in a country with the heat in summer, that’s a real challenge – and, at its peak in 2018, we had 84,000 people working on the project. So the sheer management of that in any country would be tough.

With regards to the legal challenges, we were setting up and running a company and drafting all of the contracts from square one. This is not like Sydney Trains or Network Rail, where you’ve got suites of contracts and you’ve got a library of technical specifications. Rather, nothing existed – so we had to import it all. Qatar Rail is a company that consists of people who have been working on rail projects all around the world.

The legal challenges included drafting big, complex contracts for an environment which had never seen this type of work before and for contractors coming from overseas – many of whom had never worked in Qatar – to undertake these type of projects. So they were complex from a technical specifications point of view and an engineering point of view. They were a challenge certainly from conditions of contract, the contract style and approach to the procurement.

The challenges in the Middle East, firstly, is the environment; it is quite hostile for three, or four, or five months of the year. Secondly, everything depends on the maturity of the industry you’re working in; if you are working on a rail project in Qatar, then the supply chain can be challenging. For example, the local industries have never made precast concrete rings – let alone 4 million of them. We have never imported tunnel boring machines, set them up and run them under the city. If it’s a fully designed, architecturally specified hotel, then it’s fine. But when it’s new, and it’s different – every aspect of it is a challenge. The government authorities who have to issue approvals and review designs and documents may never have seen some of these things before, so they needed support at every level. We put people inside with government agencies, payment organisations, within the department of environment, and we engage with them directly with the supply chain at various points, to make sure that our contractors were successful. n

Bharat Kumar Mehta, APM Terminals

I believe that in-house legal personnel now have to be a business partner, and not just a legal adviser. I try to partner with each department and establish good relationships with each stakeholder, be it internal departments or external parties – which include regulators, investors and vendors. Because everyone is a partner, without everyone’s support we will fall. So it’s important that everyone is speaking the same language and has the same objectives. We have to ensure stakeholder management and that is where I try to get buy-in from everyone and, accordingly, provide a solution that doesn’t create any unnecessary hassle for them, while also protecting the company.

In previous roles, I was doing standard commercial work, but it was mostly investment on the private equity side and therefore we were dealing with the Cayman Islands and private equity transaction documents. When I moved to APM Terminals, I had to deliver an IPO in a very short span, which is a different market all together – dealing with capital markets and so on. But getting to grips with a new set of laws was an exciting challenge.

Overall, my transition was fascinating, because once you get comfortable in a role, the excitement is gone. But, fortunately, that is where in-house legal roles usually get more and more exciting – every day is a new day. APM offers another challenge – being part of an international group. Being based in 200 countries, it did mean that it was a challenge to integrate their international policies within the APM brand locally – but it was one I felt I was able to rise to.

Also unique was the fact that the APMT brand had a very fresh legal department – it was only two years old. Before that, there was no legal department in APMT per se. APMT Bahrain has over 500 employees, so to establish the department and the right documentation across the different segments was in itself a great learning experience, and has developed me into a better professional.

In setting up the legal department here, the structuring was really a good experience in terms of deciding how and what we should do, what kind of communication we had with each department, and what kind of role we should play in helping each department.

In terms of supporting investment, I think Bahrain will succeed faster and faster. They have actually liberalised quite a lot of commercial laws and requirements in particular. For example, earlier, the minimum capital requirement for any small entity to be incorporated was 20,000 BD, which equates to around $55,000. Now, they have reduced this substantially to $300.

From a regulatory perspective, I think Bahrain still needs to evolve quite a lot when compared to other developed or developing nations – like for example, India, which has a robust regulatory environment or Europe, where they have a more robust regulatory environment still. But Bahrain is going in the right direction, at least. I would say they are getting closer to most developed regulatory environments, but it still needs some work. n

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

Despite Saudi Arabia often being compared to neighbours such as the UAE, the Kingdom stands alone in the region in many respects – culturally and economically. But the winds of change blowing in from the rest of the Gulf are making their mark and, if the Kingdom can be compared to the likes of the UAE, it is because the ruling classes are embracing change as a necessity – albeit the speed and shape that such change is taking may be unique.

The headline differentiators are inherently contradictory: on the one hand, you have Saudi Arabian women being granted the right to drive amidst a swathe of liberalisations; while on the other hand, you have Skype and WhatsApp – both rapidly becoming key tools in the arsenal of businesses around the world – being banned in the Kingdom. But to focus on the areas where Saudi Arabia may be lagging behind some of its closest neighbours is to paint an incomplete picture of a country that, in actuality, is undertaking a rapid period of modernisation. At the centre of this transformation are the general counsel (both born locally and expatriated from abroad) who are finding ways to partake in the oncoming new era, which is providing opportunities to meaningfully affect the course of business in Saudi Arabia to a degree rarely seen in other jurisdictions.

Saudi Vision 2030

Like many other countries in the region, Saudi Arabia has been vocal about its plans to create and introduce the next era for the country. Unlike, say, the UAE’s Vision 2021, however, Saudi Arabia’s equivalent – Saudi Vision 2030 – is both much newer and operating on a longer time scale.

Introduced in 2016 by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the vision is intended to reduce the Kingdom’s dependence on oil, diversify its economy, and massively invest in public infrastructure across the country, with a focus on healthcare, education, recreation and tourism. This has created a flurry of development across the country, with a frenzy of economic activity vastly changing the physical and metaphorical landscape of Saudi Arabia.

‘Saudi Arabia has initiated five-year development plans since 1975, so that the recent 2030 vision plan of modernisation is built on the progress of its antecedents, so that each generation benefits from the progress of the past,’ explains Dr Saleh Al-Oufi, general counsel at Taqnia Holding.

‘Nevertheless, a new generation of leaders brings with them new challenges and impetus for development, such as the Crown Prince unveiled Vision 2030 – an ambitious programme of development for the Kingdom. The Crown Prince noted that “Our Vision is a strong, thriving, and stable Saudi Arabia that provides opportunity for all”.’

A key part of the diversification of the Saudi Arabian economy is the growth of the private sector, which is unusually small compared to the Kingdom’s substantial public sector. Saudi Arabia has fought to achieve this by reducing red tape, improving the efficiency of the courts, and lowering the barriers for foreign entities to enter the Saudi Arabian market. As the private sector does grow, so too does the chance for in-house counsel – both locally born lawyers looking to leave the public sector or foreign lawyers that have been lured to the country by increasing opportunities – to play a meaningful role in business within one of the region’s most exciting economies.

‘The region is so dynamic, with things constantly changing all around us. It’s not just social, not just economic and it’s not just political. There are so many aspects of change,’ says Shaun Johnson, director (legal) of Vision Invest (formerly ACWA Holding) in Riyadh.

‘Saudi is transforming into one of the world’s most competitive economies and attracts expat workers from around the globe,’ adds Farah Zafar, chief legal officer for the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia.

“The region is so dynamic, with things constantly changing all around us. It’s not just social, not just economic and it’s not just political.”

‘As a result, the working environment is very multicultural and welcoming. The people of Saudi Arabia are just amazing – they’re hospitable, hardworking, focused and are looking to the future in so many ways. They are witnessing a transformative era in their history and the excitement and momentum is infectious. This results, therefore, in an opportunity to exchange cultures across people, ideas, and experiences, in order to learn and grow together – to achieve the unimaginable.’

Al-Oufi echoes this sentiment and is bullish on the opportunities enjoyed by in-house counsel thanks to Saudi Arabia’s ambition.

‘I see my role and the role of every legal professional increasing, as the Vision 2030 outlines economic development among several specific goals and initiatives for the Kingdom to achieve,’ he says.

‘In the economic sector, regulations have been streamlined to encourage foreign investment and that will lead to the emergence of key opportunities for partnership in a number of industries such as manufacturing, and technology transfer. These efforts will provide all Saudi legal professionals better opportunities to participate in the execution of Vision 2030 for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.’

Shaun Johnson began his career working in private practice on large infrastructure deals in Australia. Finding himself working in a similar industry in Saudi Arabia, Johnson is in a unique position not only to contrast the in-house role with that of his former life, but also to contrast Australia’s approach to infrastructure development with that of Saudi Arabia’s.

‘Working in the Middle East is a stark contrast to working in other jurisdictions and with other governments. In prior roles I’ve experienced situations where some objectives relating to infrastructure were good for the national interest, but those objectives would often get mired in political football. Of course many Middle Eastern countries are not ruled by elected parliaments, but the unimpeded political desire to want to do better is certainly present,’ he explains.

‘When we look at some of the ambitious development programmes in Saudi Arabia, what we’re basically asking is, is this supported from the top down? And I think what we’ve got here in this region, and in particular in Saudi Arabia, is that the top are saying, “We are ambitious because we want the world’s best practice. We want to achieve international standards. How can you help us make this become a reality?” So there is a strong desire and a willingness to make things happen. That is what Saudi Arabia set out in their Vision 2030 publication. The next step has to be how to implement it. I think public sector capacity building, privatisation and private sector corporatisation will allow both the public and private sectors to achieve the national goals. Of course that’s going to take a bit of time, but I see progress happening every day.’

Megaprojects

The efficiency and drive from the top to transform Saudi infrastructure has manifested in a number of large-scale megaprojects, that not only would usually have been achievable under these timeframes, but perhaps not achievable at all. These giga-projects form a core part of Vision 2030 and include initiatives such as the planned Neom, a smart city powered entirely by renewable energy sources that is expected to cost in excess of USD$500bn, as well as an entertainment resort in Riyadh named Qiddiya, which is expected to cost USD$8bn. All are designed to effect Saudi 2030’s ambition of increasing spending across a diverse array of industries within the Kingdom.

Farah Zafar is chief legal officer for Amaala, a giga-project launched by the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia. Set to play a key role in the delivery of Saudi Vision 2030, Amaala is intended to serve as an ‘uber-luxury’ tourism destination, ultimately covering 3,800km2 of land, mixing the natural (and largely unseen, globally speaking) beauty of the Kingdom with state-of-the-art construction.

‘Amaala will curate truly authentic end-to-end journeys for its visitors and transcend national boundaries, to conceptualise, build and operate an integrated destination that shall become a year-long, exclusive, by-invitation-only, global, purpose-driven community of connoisseurs, pioneers and thought leaders, all connected by a shared commitment to the practice of advancement of arts and culture, wellness and environmental preservation,’ she says.

Given the gargantuan size of these giga-projects and the average length of time to completion (Phase 1 of Amaala is set to open Q4 2020, with a final completion date set for 2028), the need for a steady hand is great. For Amaala, Zafar is that steady hand and, as with many in-house legal roles, the boundaries of Zafar’s responsibilities have long since expanded beyond a purely legal remit.

‘As chief legal officer for Amaala, I am responsible for creating and establishing the regulatory and governance framework required to deliver luxury resorts of this nature in the Kingdom, together with all legal, commercial, construction, infrastructure, development and investment matters thereof,’ explains Zafar.

The role is varied, to be sure, but Zafar brings a wealth of experience managing similar infrastructure projects in the region. This experience includes working directly for the Engineers Office of His Highness Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum in Dubai, serving as the head of capital transactions for Dubai Holding – where Zafar was able to bring in AED 11.3bn worth of project capital to the city – and has acted on behalf of the governments of Dubai, Oman, the Emirate of Ajman and Qatar.

‘I feel as if my past experience has culminated in me being blessed with this role, as I see everything with the clarity required to make Amaala successful from a feasibility, investment, infrastructure, development and construction stand point, not just legal,’ she says.

“I believe recruiting lawyers from different backgrounds and training provides for an excellent working environment.”

‘I am therefore in a unique position to be able to support each and every work stream in Amaala, provide the platform of what they need to deliver,and, with this in mind, I actually drafted a comprehensive project plan which details 1177 deliverables and over 34 work streams to be delivered over the next 9-12 months. That is called clarity.”

Clarity is a word often associated with Saudi Arabia’s vision for the future, and so it is easy to understand why someone with Zafar’s background has been entrusted with a project so vital to that future.

Barriers

Although there is plenty of drive from the top and a glut of talent on the ground able to give teeth to that change, there are still barriers standing between Saudi Arabia and its 2030 Vision.

While Saudi Vision 2030 is intended to ween the Kingdom off oil, the fact remains that it is the largest oil exporter in the world – being home to the second-largest petroleum reserves and fifth-largest natural gas reserves in the world. As such, the status of Vision 2030 is largely contingent on the stability of regularly fluctuating resource prices. Saudi Vision 2030 was announced at a time when oil prices were hitting troughs, and the need to diversify was both apparent and easily sold to the country at large. Oil prices have been steadily rising since that trough and, as such, initiatives aimed at curbing oil dependence (such as fuel tariffs and related price increases) are not as easy for Saudi society to digest.

There is also the purely logistical consideration of the capability of a relatively newly opened business sector to facilitate the kinds of changes envisioned by the Government.

‘There’s a strong desire there and there’s a willingness to make things happen – Saudi Arabia has set this out in its Vision 2030 mission statement – but the next step has to be how do you implement it correctly and efficiently,’ cautions Johnson.

‘I think the public sector is getting up to speed, but putting those processes in place to allow the private sector to come in and help the government achieve its goals will take a little bit of time – but it is happening.’

Culture

To many, Saudi Arabia might be most easily distinguished by its conservatism, which frames public life in a way that isn’t seen to the same degree elsewhere in the region. But this, as with the business sphere, is changing, according to Zafar.

‘The legal arena in Saudi Arabia is taking great strides towards increased diversity. I myself am a major champion of diversity in the workplace, having built a team consisting of women and men from all corners of the world, including the Middle East, Europe, Africa and South America,’ she explains.

‘I believe recruiting lawyers from different backgrounds and training provides for an excellent working environment, as there is rarely a legal issue that arises which one of us hasn’t come across or managed. It is great to also see the increase of women in the workplace in the Kingdom and the talented Saudi women that are big contributors, hardworking and incredibly professional across sectors.’

Dr Al-Oufi agrees, and sees this as an inevitable change in the coming years, as Saudi Arabia works towards its lofty Vision 2030 goals – a factor which will inevitably require the gradual opening of the Kingdom.

‘In general, Saudi Arabia will become a more open society, with more modern education and healthcare, which are the fundamentals of any society. In addition, employment opportunities for both male and female will expand, as society will become more open and accepting of a working environment in which females and males work side by side.’

The imagination gap

‘… the more human activities disrupt the climate, the greater the risks of severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems, and long-lasting changes in all components of the climate system.

… we have the means to limit climate change and its risks, with many solutions that allow for continued economic and human development. However, stabilizing temperature increase to below 2°C relative to pre-industrial levels will require an urgent and fundamental departure from business as usual. Moreover, the longer we wait to take action, the more it will cost and the greater the technological, economic, social and institutional challenges we will face.’*

*IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] 2014: Climate Change 2014: Synthesis Report. Contribution of Working Groups I, II and III to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Core Writing Team, R.K. Pachauri and L.A. Meyer (eds.)]. IPCC, Geneva, Switzerland, 151 pp.

Rising temperatures and sea levels, shrinking ice sheets and sea ice, extreme weather events. They’re all mainstays of today’s news cycles with a worrying – and intensifying – frequency.

‘The more you read about the shape of our planet and the state of our biodiversity, it’s inevitable that you become concerned, it’s inevitable that you want to do something. The only way I think you can exist nowadays in an unengaged way, as a non-activist if you will, is by shutting yourself off completely from all this information,’ says Jasper Teulings, general counsel of Greenpeace International.

But concern no longer lies solely with environmental organisations. Hand in hand with alarming predictions for food and water supply, health and the survival of masses of animal and plant species constitute a range of potential – and in some cases, current – shocks to the global economy, financial systems and corporate world.

In September 2015, Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, gave a landmark speech to Lloyd’s of London in which he detailed the ‘mega risk’ to financial stability that climate change poses. Carney laid out what he called ‘the tragedy of the horizon’ – the implications for carbon emitters and extractors, insurers, investors and other actors of failing to take a longer-term view:

‘The horizon for monetary policy extends out to two-three years. For financial stability it is a bit longer, but typically only to the outer boundaries of the credit cycle – about a decade. In other words, once climate change becomes a defining issue for financial stability, it may already be too late.’

He identified three ways in which climate change could disturb financial stability:

‘First, physical risks: the impacts today on insurance liabilities and the value of financial assets that arise from climate- and weather-related events, such as floods and storms that damage property or disrupt trade;

‘Second, liability risks: the impacts that could arise tomorrow if parties who have suffered loss or damage from the effects of climate change seek compensation from those they hold responsible. Such claims could come decades in the future, but have the potential to hit carbon extractors and emitters – and, if they have liability cover, their insurers – the hardest;

‘Finally, transition risks: the financial risks which could result from the process of adjustment towards a lower-carbon economy. Changes in policy, technology and physical risks could prompt a reassessment of the value of a large range of assets as costs and opportunities become apparent.’

When facing down the physical, investment, regulatory and transition risks inherent as the world adjusts to the reality of a changing environment, lawyers are situated at the heart of corporate, government and regulatory life, and are therefore uniquely situated to support and deliver the systemic change likely to occur.

Teulings is clear about the value lawyers can bring to the climate change table:

‘What is required for us to effectively combat climate change is a systemic change, and a lot of lawyers are in very influential positions in very influential companies, and in government positions – and that’s where they can contribute to the systemic change that we need,’ he says.

‘In terms of government roles, it means supporting regulation that reduces our emissions and supporting any form of regulation that speeds up the energy transition that is needed. Also, I think it’s about shifting money that is currently still in a disproportionate amount invested in fossil fuel infrastructure or exploration and development. There are still more subsidies going into fossil fuels at the global level than into renewable energy. That’s bizarre.’

James Thornton, CEO of ClientEarth – a charity composed of lawyers and environmental experts who use the law to hold governments and other organisations accountable over climate change, nature loss and pollution – is also passionate about the importance of legal professionals, especially those in-house.

‘General counsel are among the most important actors in the whole financial system in moving society towards proper action about climate change,’ he says.

‘Because of their trusted position as advisers to senior management and boards, they are in a remarkable position to say, “I’ve understood the legal implications of the financial risk of climate change, and here’s how we need to manage for them”. They can either be enablers or blockers.’

But work remains to be done to translate an awareness of climate change risk into readiness for it. Earlier in 2019, the Dutch Association of In-House Counsel (NGB), in conjunction with Dutch law firm Houthoff, approached nearly 3,500 in-house counsel. Despite nearly half of respondents claiming to see climate change risks, only around 15% said they were ‘prepared’ or ‘very well prepared’ for them. In addition, only 7% of them saw themselves as a ‘pioneer’ within their organisation in this area (figures taken from Climate Change and the Role of the In-house Counsel, Houthoff).

Some corporate counsel find themselves in a different set of circumstances, however. For those lawyers, climate change is such an inexorable fact that their organisations have made a mission statement out of avoiding it, building the company around products or services that aim to fight it.

Bills into mills

Ecotricity is one such enterprise. Founded in 1996, it was the world’s first green energy company, and it generates a substantial amount of its supply of green energy rather than buying it on the market. The company builds its own generation assets, like wind turbines and solar parks, supplying electricity and gas to around 200,000 domestic and business customers.

Ecotricity has irons in many (fossil-free) fires, including a wind turbine manufacturing and maintenance company called Britwind, and Ecotalk, a green mobile deal that uses customers’ bills to buy land previously used for intensive farming and turn it into havens for nature. Last year it launched a vegan food company, Devil’s Kitchen, which supplies plant-based food to schools and colleges around the UK. Ecotricity also established and now runs one of the UK’s largest electric car charger networks.

‘That’s part of our ethos,’ says head of legal, Elspeth Vincent. ‘Bills into mills: whatever we receive by way of income, it’s ploughed straight back into all kinds of green initiatives, including building and maintaining renewable assets in order to power green electricity into the grid.’

‘We’re taking the plants directly and turning them into meat.’

Unusually, the company also has its own professional football club: Forest Green Rovers. The club has electric car chargers, solar panels and even a solar-powered robot lawnmower. In 2018, it was presented with a ‘Climate Neutral Now’ award by the UN.

‘There are three principles that we hold as core to our business as being as green as we can be – food, transport and energy, and the football club has those aims at its heart as well. The pitch is organic, and the food is all vegan, which can be quite contentious sometimes for your average football fan that comes travelling here,’ says Vincent.

Outside of sporting greatness, Ecotricity’s goal is to find new ways to bring the green agenda to business and commerce. But cuts to renewable subsidies in the UK pose a challenge to the company’s asset-building model, because despite falling costs for producing wind and solar power, the scale at which viable projects need to be built can be prohibitive for operators, amounting to what Vincent terms a ‘harsh renewable landscape’.

Every little bit helps

Corporate counsel supporting companies with a green mission have an obvious role to play in battling climate change, and for those who want to contribute to environmental sustainability in the most direct way, the time is nigh, as many companies are innovating solutions in a wide range of sectors.

‘There are increasingly a lot of interesting companies out there that are attracting investment and having success with building more sustainable ways for us to conduct ourselves as a civilisation – whether that’s our dietary practices, our energy sources, our transit systems – that need good lawyers to help them succeed. Of course, companies don’t have a monopoly – there are regulatory organisations and non-profits – and if you’re interested in working in this field it is probably the best time in recent memory to go out and find an interesting opportunity,’ says Wagner.

But even for legal departments in companies without a direct green mandate or involvement in regulating those that do, there is scope for making changes to reduce adverse climate impact. Reducing paper use, rethinking policies for corporate travel, investment in technology and providing pro bono advice to NGOs or non-profits can all have an impact, as can ensuring that the company is aligned with the UN’s Paris Agreement on climate change.

At Ecotricity, Vincent raises the idea that companies could use their buying power to encourage external providers of legal services to take a supply of green energy – in much the same way as corporates often use the power of the purse to encourage diversity among panel firms.

‘I actually heard this from another GC at a conference, and it really made me think. It was a much bigger company than Ecotricity, with a far greater panel of law firms, and therefore the ability to choose competitively was at their fingertips a little bit more,’ she recalls.

‘But when they were asking law firms to provide a proposal, one of the deciding criteria for whether or not they would get the job was whether they procured a supply of green energy for their building.’

‘If we are continuing to be a renewable developer – a company that invests in a green economy – then that comes with a degree of innovation. As a legal team, we have to be live to that – we have to be able to understand difficult technical concepts and difficult commercial prospects that haven’t necessarily been done before,’ she explains.

‘That comes with a very novel approach to commercial contracts or to understanding long-held legal principles, and then bringing them into a new framework for a different kind of technology or a supply of electricity. You have to be fleet of foot.’

The legal team supports the company in putting its mouth where its money is, lobbying on climate issues and partnering with organisations like Extinction Rebellion and anti-fracking campaigners. Most recently, evidencing concerns about the climate risks of a no-deal Brexit, the company’s owner and founder, ‘Dale Vince’, was seen in the Scottish courts alongside others seeking to compel the UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, to comply with the Benn Act and send a letter to the European Council requesting an extension to the Brexit date or to authorise an official of the court to do so.

Scaling the impossible

In the US, California-based Impossible Foods is trying to solve the climate conundrum from a different perspective. Pat Brown, a Stanford biochemist, set himself the challenge of finding the most important problem facing the world that he could solve with science. He came up with climate change – and took a novel approach. Brown recognised the impact that human appetite for meat was having on resource consumption, fresh water use and greenhouse gas emissions, but that climate change alone was not convincing large enough numbers of people to switch to a plant-based diet. He set about using his skills to create ‘meat’ made from entirely plant-based ingredients. The company’s ground beef analogue and its ‘Impossible Burger’ have been available in restaurants since 2016 – counting the likes of Burger King among its customers – and recently went on sale in retail outlets. The company eventually aims to launch plant-based versions of a full range of meat, poultry, fish and dairy.

‘It is an animal-free product, but it is meat chemically and in terms of its content, just instead of feeding plants to a cow and having it break them down, we’re taking the plants directly and turning them into meat,’ says chief legal officer, Dana Wagner.

‘We wanted to create food from plants that satisfies people’s existing tastes rather than asking them to change their tastes.’

As such, Impossible Foods has set itself a substantial task – persuading meat-lovers that a plant-based product can be as satisfying as an animal one in terms of flavour, texture, and nutritional content. But Wagner believes that, despite the ongoing R&D challenges, the potential for iterating its products to improve on nutritional content is a big advantage in the long term over animal-based foods.

‘The cow doesn’t really change very much and its product hasn’t really changed for thousands of years. Earlier this year we released the second-generation version of our burger product and we were able to the reduce levels of saturated fat and sodium and increase the protein. We can optimise and use science and technology to make an even better item of food,’ explains Wagner.

But tinkering with one US cultural icon – the hamburger – has led to a confrontation with another: the cowboy.

‘Last year there were a number of initiatives at the state level in the United States led by various cattlemen organisations to restrict how plant-based foods may label and market themselves to consumers – they were trying to restrict, among other things, the use of the word “meat”,’ says Wagner.

‘We certainly think that definition was at odds with the English language and the idea that people would be confused into thinking a plant-based meat came from an animal are very low – companies like ours are loud and proud about the fact that no animals are involved; that’s our selling point to consumers, actually.’

On the regulatory side, thus far, things have been smoother. As developers of entirely plant-based foods, the company sits comfortably within existing food regulatory frameworks, unlike cell-based lab-grown ‘clean meat’, which has faced more regulatory uncertainty.

The armour, the sword and the shield

But some organisations are involving their legal teams in a targeted way, weaponising the law in the fight against climate change. One such entity is Greenpeace, an NGO well known for direct action on environmental issues, as well as its lobbying and investigative work. Greenpeace International is the global governing body for the organisation’s 26 national and regional organisations, and has an 11-strong legal team of barristers offering support to their local activities, led from Amsterdam.

As with any organisation, the legal team acts as Greenpeace’s ‘armour’. This means ensuring compliance with local regulations in areas such as charities law, tax, IP, governance and labour law.

‘We can optimise and use science and technology to make an even better item of food.’

‘In order for us to be the risk-taking organisation that we like to be, we need to ensure that we’re compliant, because that’s an expression of our core values,’ says Teulings.

‘But it is also necessary because we know that as a campaigning organisation, we’re often subjected to additional scrutiny.’

In addition, the team functions as the organisation’s ‘shield’, dealing with reactions to Greenpeace campaigns.

‘All of those actions are covered by fundamental freedoms such as free speech and freedom of association and assembly, but sometimes they trigger responses from either governments or corporations in the form of disproportionate penalties and sanctions imposed on activists and activism, such as “SLAPP” suits – strategic litigation against public participation,’ Teulings explains.

An example of the ‘shield’ in action is the case of the Arctic 30: 28 Greenpeace activists and two journalists who sailed through Arctic waters in 2013 to protest against a drilling platform operated by Gazprom. Russian authorities boarded Greenpeace vessel ‘The Arctic Sunrise’, detained those onboard and transported them to Russia, where they were remanded in custody and charged with piracy, later converted to hooliganism, before being freed two months later. The Dutch government successfully sought an order from an international tribunal arguing that the matter was a violation of the international Law of the Sea, and a declaratory judgment that the Russian authorities had violated international law.

‘We collaborated intensively with the Dutch government and provided full information at a very detailed level on what happened, and we made our own submissions in those proceedings,’ says Teulings.

‘As a result of that, the right to peaceful protest at sea in those two rulings was recognised, advanced and secured in international law. That’s a way you could say that a strategic defence to a disproportionate response to our campaign activities can actually be used to advance fundamental rights – and that’s exactly what the shield is about.’

‘Strategic litigation can have an impact that goes well beyond national borders.’

The ‘sword’ refers to supporting strategic litigation to further the organisation’s activism on climate change and biodiversity. Greenpeace commissions scientific research, at times using it to bring litigation – often in partnership with academics or other NGOs – such as People vs Arctic Oil. In this case, Greenpeace Nordic and Nature and Youth, another NGO, brought a constitutional challenge against the Norwegian government arguing that the licences it had granted for further oil and gas exploration in Arctic waters violated not only Norway’s own constitution, but also its obligations under the UN’s Paris Agreement on climate change.

‘In the first instance, the Oslo District Court ruled in favour of the Norwegian government – it did recognise for the first time that the right to a healthy environment is a claimable right with teeth, but it found that the government had not violated this right. The case has been appealed and the appeal will be dealt with this Autumn, so that’s clearly a priority for us,’ says Teulings.

Another example is the matter brought by Greenpeace Philippines and local organisations before the Philippines Commission on Human Rights, following loss of life during Typhoon Haiyan in 2013. The Commission was asked to investigate the responsibility of fossil fuel companies in contributing to the devastation. The investigation has been completed and a report is awaited.

‘Strategic litigation can have an impact that goes well beyond national borders, and I think this case is expected to have a similar impact,’ says Teulings.

‘Even though it won’t lead to an enforceable claim for damages against these companies, it will hopefully constitute a key building block in the further building of creating climate accountability at the global level.’

Strategic cases like these, he explains, ‘inspire other organisations, they inspire judicial audacity – and that’s the level of audacity that’s needed to tackle this global problem.’

Wielding the sword

Perhaps no one knows more about strategic litigation than ClientEarth – and founder James Thornton (himself a lawyer) is passionate about the potency of pursuing legal avenues in climate issues. He first came across environmental lawyers when editing the Law Review at NYU School of Law.

‘In my third year, one of my colleagues came in and said, “James, I’ve just done a clinical programme with this group of environmental lawyers, NRDC [Natural Resources Defense Council, a US-based non-profit].” So then I did a clinical programme with them, and I saw that they were working to the highest legal standards and that this was a new idea – to have lawyers use their skills to protect the environment.’

After qualifying, Thornton worked on Wall Street for a while, before working for NRDC full time. But nowadays, his organisation has only one client, the Earth.

‘Lawyers have an absolutely pivotal role to play in the climate fight. Law is the first language of governments and business. Campaigning and mobilising public opinion is key to persuading the courts of the public mandate to act,’ he says.

‘But, ultimately, it is the patient, painstaking work of lawyers that identifies wrongdoing, finds the right legal lever, and brings about positive change by compelling compliance in court.’

ClientEarth uses scientific research to develop policy, and then lobbies institutions like the UK, Polish and European parliaments to turn policy into law, battling subsidies to fossil fuel industries and working towards legislation that gives incentives to renewable energies. Crucially, it mobilises its repository of legal experience to help enforce that legislation.

‘Litigation is very important because it’s a way of sending powerful signals to vested interests who have never been challenged before successfully. It’s also a very powerful way of getting governments to comply with their own laws,’ says Thornton.

In 2018, for example, the UK’s High Court found against the UK government in litigation over air quality in 33 towns and cities, ordering the government to force these local authorities to deal with illegal pollution levels.

‘In a real way [the UK government] are doing it – too slowly – the steps that will lead to cleaner air, which they clearly never would have done without the order. And we’re doing this in more than ten countries across Europe, so we’re holding the governments across Europe to their own commitments, their own legal duties,’ says Thornton.

Outside Europe, Thornton has advised members of the Chinese Supreme Court, congress, legislature and the Ministry of Ecology and Environment in connection with the development of a pioneering law allowing Chinese environmental NGOs to sue polluting companies, and training of environmental court judges and prosecutors.

For Thornton, it’s all about using lawyers to make, enforce and change the rules if necessary – sometimes in creative ways. In its case against Enea, co-owner of a project to build a new coal-fired power station in Poland, ClientEarth bought shares in the company and commissioned financial analysis used to present concerns at a shareholders meeting, demonstrating that the investment was flawed. When the project proceeded anyway, the organisation brought a successful shareholders suit.

‘When it comes to climate change, or environment more broadly, for general counsel, the questions are: what should I tell my CEO? What should I tell my board of directors? What sort of duties do we have? People have been saying we should do the right thing, but nobody has been saying this is actually a fiduciary duty and if you make the wrong decision, you’ll be liable for it. We think this should become the turning point, when general counsel are able to say, look, climate change equals financial risk, which equals fiduciary duty, which requires you to manage for the risk. And if you start managing for climate change risk, you think about it in a very different way,’ says Thornton.

Thornton believes that the next challenge for in-house counsel is to bridge what he calls the ‘imagination gap’:

‘It is one thing to accept the proposition that climate change risk triggers fiduciary duties. But what does that mean for you when you go to work on Monday morning? What does it mean when you advise the directors on a Thursday afternoon? How do you move down from the abstract principle to the detailed advice?’

Translating the abstract into the concrete is the very raison d’etre of lawyers. And if more of them, be they in organisations with a mission to combat climate change or not, begin to apply this skill – the results could be world-changing.

Getting a work out: agile in in-house teams

Business is full of buzzwords, and among the buzziest of the last few years is ‘agile’.

The traditional project management approach is ‘waterfall’. But, in contrast to the dynamism of the term, the waterfall process can actually be quite rigid. After a long period of requirement gathering and planning, the project is developed in a linear way, journeying through multiple phases and functional silos. A final product is delivered after an often lengthy process, perhaps measured in months or years, but with little opportunity for adaptation once the process has begun.

‘It is difficult to adjust and change anything mid-course, it is very difficult to adapt if customer needs change, for instance,’ explains Carine Simon, senior lecturer in operations research and statistics at MIT Sloan School of Management.

Enter agile – an alternative approach to project management that was crystallised in 2001, when a group of software developers agreed upon the Agile Manifesto. It strives to build in flexibility as customer requirements evolve, and provide more opportunity for managing expectations.

‘It’s taking large, complex problems, breaking them down into smaller increments, then prioritising those increments based on relative value. As they’re completing pieces of work, agile teams are soliciting customer and stakeholder feedback along the way, so they can adapt accordingly,’ explains Will Poindexter, leader of Bain & Company’s technology and agile innovation practices in the Americas.

Agile works in iterations – or ‘sprints’ – in which teams undertake short, focused bursts of activity – perhaps as little as a day or as long as a month – each resulting in a new version of the product. This ‘minimum viable product’ can be tested and reviewed by the client on a regular basis, and adjustments easily made without wasted work.

The team assigned to a sprint is often called a ‘Scrum team’, led by a product manager or owner and, crucially, it is cross-functional – in contrast to the waterfall process, in which working sequentially through separate departments can make communication a challenge.

Working in this way, says Poindexter, not only increases the likelihood of the project’s success by as much as four to six times, it speeds up the process of getting a product to market, and instils more motivation, engagement and satisfaction into team members.

‘There’s much more ownership given to the team, and the fact that it’s cross-functional means that communication and knowledge barriers are broken down,’ says Simon.

To be agile, or not to be agile?

Over the past five years, agile has moved out of the realms of IT, with partial or even wholesale adoption in fields and functions as diverse as marketing, construction and manufacturing.

Having seen agile working first-hand during her time in the corporate strategy team at Liberty Mutual, Carine Simon believes there are no obvious drawbacks to the approach other than the necessity to get buy-in and to train people on how to work in an agile mode. But that doesn’t mean it’s for everyone. If a task doesn’t typically see a lot of waste – for example, if work does not need to be repeatedly tested or redone, client feedback is not an important component, or if changes to the deliverable are easily made – then the iterative components of agile might not add much value. Also less prime for agile disruption, Simon says, are heavily regulated areas where the opportunity for rethinking might be stymied by the necessity of baking in non-negotiable elements of compliance.

‘Agile is not a Swiss Army Knife; it should be a tool in your toolbox versus the tool that you apply to every single problem,’ says Poindexter.

Agile teams are soliciting customer and stakeholder feedback along the way, so they can adapt accordingly.

He has found it best suited to highly innovative, customer-centric organisations where speed to market is paramount; organisations looking to break out of creeping bureaucracy; or those looking to ‘change-the-business’ functions – such as technology, product development or marketing – rather than ‘run-the-business’ ones, like legal. But if businesses adopt agile in a partial way without at least fostering an awareness among the latter functions, bottlenecks can arise. For this reason, during an agile roll-out, Poindexter often works with legal teams to build an understanding of agile and identify opportunities to harmonise across the different delivery methods.

‘One example in legal would be: can I create guardrails that we can work within from a legal perspective, and when things start to bump up against those guardrails, that’s where agile teams need to pull someone in from the legal team to help advise. It allows them a certain level of autonomy within the guardrails, without having to slow them down so that every time there’s something from a legal standpoint they have to go and look for help. That’s one way we work with “support and control” functions to help them adopt an agile mindset, even though the legal team may not be running sprints and fully shifting to an agile model,’ he explains.

But Simon sees some potential for direct agile application in legal teams:

‘If there would be a benefit to having the customer see multiple early versions or drafts of the contract and give feedback in an iterative fashion, if there’s a lot of interdependencies between different parts of the contract, such as changing one thing at the end would cascade to changing multiple parts of the document, then that would be an area where having an iterative agile process might help,’ she says.

And some corporate legal teams are seeing for themselves just how using agile methods can transform service delivery.

Sprinting to the finish

At pharmaceutical and medical device company B. Braun group, the legal team has reorganised into task-based teams, utilising Scrum, digital Kanban boards – charts that help teams to visualise and maintain workflow in terms of tasks to be done – and other collaboration-enabling software.

‘Before, each person was responsible for their areas of responsibility and, although there was interaction between each other regarding different topics, everyone was more working individually. Now, we are working more and more in teams, solving problems together,’ says junior legal counsel Vanessa Weis.

At B. Braun, a Scrum team might be composed of people with knowledge of a topic, and another who is a complete outsider, bringing a level of neutrality and objectivity to a sprint.

‘This person sometimes has the best ideas. It’s like the saying “You cannot see the wood for the trees” – sometimes that’s really true. I think we have got more open-minded on topics, and share more thoughts, even if it’s not our responsibility. We are sharing topics and responsibilities we have,’ Weis adds.

The Agile Manifesto

We are uncovering better ways of developing software by doing it and helping others do it. Through this work we have come to value:

  1. Individuals and interactions over processes and tools
  2. Working software over comprehensive documentation
  3. Customer collaboration over contract negotiation
  4. Responding to change over following a plan

That is, while there is value in the items on the right, we value the items on the left more.

© 2001-2019 Agile Manifesto Authors

The team’s sprint approach has brought efficiency to the process of problem-solving by concentrating the efforts of the Scrum team into focused sessions – stripped of distractions such as phones or other meetings – that might last two or three hours, or even days depending on the size of the task.

‘We want to solve that problem during these hours or these days, and not work on it for weeks or for months, never getting things ready. In the past, someone would start a project and then you would be working in weekly or monthly project meetings,’ says Weis.

Opening minds

Gerd Pleuhs, general counsel of multinational snack company Mondelēz International, has organised his legal team into ‘centres of excellence’, which operate on a global basis. When local issues arise, these teams can quickly organise to collaborate with local business units, providing advice and training without the need for legal resources deployed permanently in each jurisdiction.

‘I think it creates a very trustful relationship with the finance side of the business, because they can see that it is a very efficient way of how you organise yourself and how you lower the cost of the service delivery while actually improving the quality,’ says Pleuhs.

The Mondelēz legal centres of excellence are grouped around subject areas – marketing, social media, data privacy and corporate governance – and so are perhaps not cross-functional in the strictest sense. But Pleuhs has found that the challenge of working flexibly across a full range of geographical jurisdictions exposes team members to cross-curricular problem-solving.

‘If you look at the traditional career development, you’re growing up in a department in your area of expertise over time. Now, with agile teams, what changes dramatically is the scope of work that you’re exposed to. You can have experiences which are completely different compared to the on-the-job experiences you have if you only focus on one geographical area or one subject,’ he says.

‘It changes the work for the individual involved and it becomes by far more interesting and colourful. If you are working in an agile team on resolving project X, once it’s done and you move on to the next one, it’s completely opened up a new chapter of your professional life. You’re building your own career and capabilities. You get more and more qualifications that then qualify you to become a more and more trusted and valued adviser within the company.’

Just add liquid

Global digital solutions provider Avanade, a joint venture of Microsoft and Accenture, has applied agile methods since 2011 and claims to employ more scrum masters than any other organisation in the world. The legal team has been no exception, plugging in and creating what general counsel David Oskandy calls a ‘liquid workforce’. Team members have a specific set of skills, often in core areas such as commercial and intellectual property law but, by virtue of working in an agile way, many have developed a sub-level of expertise.

For Avanade, the liquid workforce translates to a team of 60 lawyers working globally, enabled by a digital platform where team members can request assistance or pick up work, easing handover and communication across time zones. Some proponents of agile, like Poindexter, have found that co-location is important to productivity, but recognise the reality that this isn’t always feasible given globally dispersed teams, and that technology such as video conferencing can help bridge the gap. And, as cutting-edge technology shrinks distances, Oskandy believes that both skills and collegial bonds can flourish across borders.

‘Roughly speaking, 50% of our lawyers are playing a cross-border or global role. They can become really familiar with a new legal system, with perhaps a different area of law than they’re used to practising, and this is something that my team members tell me is life-changing for them, because [in the past] so many lawyers have been confined to or pigeonholed to the role they were hired in,’ says Oskandy.

Avanade’s legal team also creates thought-leadership taskforces – to prepare for GDPR, for example.

‘The task forces are visibly expanding the roles and responsibilities of many, if not most, of our lawyers. They’re building themselves into bigger profiles, both substantively and in terms of leadership. They’re getting more visibility within the company because they’re able to advise on areas that previously they felt were off limits to them. It enhances their career within the company and within the industry overall,’ says Oskandy.

The liquid workforce: Avanade’s application of agile methodology

‘The liquid workforce has allowed us to handle a 26% increase in master service agreements – the basic kind of operating arrangement with our clients – as well as developing new offerings, new alliances and enhancing our ability to keep up with new laws and trends. This last aspect is really important in our space, with greater rigour over data privacy and data protection laws as the legal field catches up to technology in terms of the requirements of complying with industry.

It has allowed us to lead the company as well. The best example is that we were at the forefront of developing our position on digital ethics. We set up a framework, put together a cross-functional taskforce and we’ve developed a point of view on digital ethics. Thought leadership is a really critical component in our company and I think this is pervasive in the tech industry. Technology changes so very fast – we notice big changes once every three months. You’ve got to be as swift as those changes to stay ahead of them, and this model encourages our lawyers to do that.

A knock-on effect of the liquid workforce is that we’re more readily leveraging offshore resources, contractors, interns and bots. That set of resources for lower-risk work has enabled us to purify our time and maximise our focus on the highest risk and highest potential.

The liquid workforce makes us congruent with the day-to-day culture of the business. Because we understand and operate with agile as a legal team, we speak the same language and we have the same muscle memory as the business, which I think is really important in terms of keeping up with them and maintaining credibility with them. We’re well integrated with the business team, we’ve got a bigger voice, and this allows us to participate in developing strategy, which is a bigger role for a lawyer than simply acting as the problem solver or the risk manager.

The feedback that I’ve gotten back from the CEO and the rest of the business is “highly efficient” and “productive”. They recognise that we have really transformed ourselves into the highest value-add team that we possibly could create.’

But an organisational style that invites frequent changes of scenery – be it changes of project or jurisdiction – requires a certain flexibility in the mindset of recruits.

‘What we are looking for is people who are more willing to be a generalist than a specialist. You still need the specialists and subject matter experts. But in dealing with the general kind of work that a company of ours has to manage on a daily basis, you want to have people who are curious, who want to learn, who want to build a career on making an experience in different parts of the law in order to become a more rounded lawyer,’ says Pleuhs.

Are you a believer?

There is no doubt that deciding to implement agile requires full commitment from the top to the bottom in order to make a success of what is, unavoidably, a substantial change management effort.

‘To really bring people with you in this effort, to convince others and sustain your own energy in the persistence and insistence you need to make this happen, you’ve got to be a true believer,’ says Oskandy.

‘With agile teams, what changes dramatically is the scope of work that you’re exposed to.’

At this point, many readers might look away, thanks to the received wisdom that the legal mindset is not always best adapted to changes of process.

‘In the beginning, I really struggled with how much time it took to convince people and how much investment you have to make in the process to convince folks to join you on that journey. There’s a fear coming with it because you have to give up certain things and invest in certain other stuff,’ says Pleuhs.

‘If I give my knowledge to an agile working group, I have to be willing to not spend time on stuff that I used to do and rely on my colleagues to help me get those things done. And that is a little bit of a learning curve – you have to let the trust build in the system and that it works.’

Being agile about being agile

As with other organisational change management projects, a good way to create buy-in can be to do a ‘proof of concept’ – identify suitable teams or functions for a pilot, and then use success to develop advocates who can sell the idea elsewhere.

‘It might be a little meta, but have an agile way of implementing agile, so it’s not all areas of the company at once, it’s iteratively starting where it makes more sense,’ says Simon.

‘We have seen some organisations that have tried a “big bang roll-out”, and they are big and flashy and they make headlines. But the results really tell a different story. What you find is it creates a lot of disruption and a lot of churn,’ adds Poindexter.

On the functional level, a gradual approach can be a good rule of thumb, too. Oskandy’s legal team, for example, deployed agile initially in the Nordic region, then extended across the globe following a successful transition.

Being iterative might also mean listening carefully to the experiences of those on the frontline.

And being iterative might also mean listening carefully to the experiences of those on the frontline – even if they’re not customers.

‘When we started to use the different agile methods, a lot of people were sceptical. But [B. Braun general counsel] Dr Daum said, “If it’s not working, then that’s also fine. But let’s try this.” That was a really good beginning, because all the time we had the feeling we could say “It’s not good for us, it’s not helping, it’s time-consuming,” recalls Weis.

This reassurance was instrumental in winning over doubters, in part because it allowed for no-strings experimentation, which then revealed the methods most likely to enjoy greatest longevity in the department.

‘At the beginning we did a lot of sprints, because we wanted to try that out, and maybe we will decrease the amount of sprints in the future. In any case, we will keep using sprint, Scrum, the Kanban board, as we learned that we can organise our work efficiently using these methods. That’s a very good outcome, because at the beginning a lot of people were doubting that this could be a good approach. Now more and more people are convinced,’ she says.

The Mondelēz team took a similarly democratic approach to developing the vision for its future legal function.

‘What normally happens in an organisation with a more traditional mindset is you take the leadership teams and maybe their direct reports, and then you have a conference. We’ve been embarking on a different journey. We bring together teams from across the globe at different levels of hierarchy – so it’s not only the leaders, we have highly talented people who are somewhere else in the department, very junior people assigned to certain jobs. We get together in a facilitated environment for three days and try to hammer out a plan, which then we will present and implement to the entire department,’ Pleuhs explains.

‘Rather than “leaders are imposing it on me”, we have people who are “one of us” working on it – and they are wonderful ambassadors to implement what they have helped to design. I believe it is one way to really motivate a small group for the benefit of the entire department.’

Selling the value proposition

None of this is to say that the role of the leader should vanish in a fog of self-organisation – although those with very top-down, detail-oriented leadership styles might perceive team empowerment as loss of control.

‘We’ve seen a number of agile efforts that have not reached full potential because the leadership didn’t change their behaviours. I think it’s important to get the leadership on the same page with the actual team in terms of what are we trying to accomplish, what do we need to change?’ says Poindexter.

‘I think agile allows leaders to actually focus on what they should be doing, which is setting strategic direction, freeing up resources to actually work on the highest priority things, and removing impediments so that their teams can be productive.’

Oskandy agrees that the leadership is fundamental in supporting cultural change.

‘The value proposition has got to be right in order for people to really buy into it. But that’s a big learning – you’ve got to have that growth and mindset firmly in mind to encourage people to take steps beyond their core role, which they are very comfortable in. You’re requiring more time from them, more effort, more thought, more bandwidth,’ he explains.

Avanade works with Scrum.org, founded by software developer and consultant Ken Schwaber – one of the original Agile Manifesto authors – and has access to 2,000 trained Scrum professionals plus 60 agile coaches. It also conducts training on a continuous basis, often with immediate practical application baked into the process.

‘The lead on a task force will also be the lead for the agile-based training and it’s a very interactive methodology. They’ll set aside a specific time, ideally in person but quite often virtually, and create space for people to go through that process together. The training embeds itself so much more effectively when you’ve got people engaged not only in learning something really substantive, but also how we are going to deploy this,’ explains Oskandy.

‘You’re incorporating planning and giving people the opportunity to become part of that process, so they’re learning something new substantively, but they’re also contributing as they’re learning to how do we set this up for the company, how do we train others, what is it that other people need to know, and how do we communicate this? It’s all part of one effort.’

Carine Simon believes that getting team buy-in for agile methodology outside of the software development sphere might soon be a problem of the past, as new graduates without preconceived project management ideas enter the job market.

‘Then it becomes a much more natural way of doing work – it’s not like a big change where people switch from one mode of functioning that they’ve done for the past 20 years to a new mode. I think agile may become the new project management technique that is part of the standard toolbox of graduate students,’ she says.

Agile might not be for everyone, but some legal teams are deciding that it is – and if other business units have already walked the same path, it could be a critical tool for establishing a common language, common ground – and credibility.