Legal Guidance and Research / Experts / Dalia Majumder-Russell

Dalia Majumder-Russell

Dalia is a partner in the CMS Energy & Climate Change Team, specialising in complex process power and renewable projects. Over the last 10 years she has advised developers, investors, funders and governments throughout Europe, Africa and North America on a wide range of renewable energy transactions, commercial agreements and the regulatory frameworks within which such projects operate, across all stages of the project lifecycle. She is passionate about the decarbonisation agenda across the energy, heat and transport sectors, and has a particular focus on carbon capture, usage and storage (CCUS) and hydrogen technologies.
 
Dalia regularly speaks at industry events on CCUS, hydrogen and related matters and is a member of a number of industry expert groups helping to catalyse the development of new regulation, legal frameworks and contractual standards in the sector.

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2011

Experience

  • Partner - CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP (2020 - Present)
  • Senior Associate - CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP (2019 - 2020)
  • Managing Associate – Linklaters LLP (2016 - 2019)
  • Senior Associate - CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP (2009 - 2016)

Membership

  • The Law Society

Qualifications

  • LPC (2009)
  • GDL (2008)
  • BScH Biology; second major English (2005)

Education

  • BPP Law School, London (2009)
  • BPP Law School, London (2008)
  • Acadia University, Canada (2005)

1 Contributions by Dalia Majumder-Russell

UK CCUS: legal, regulatory and policy framework—cluster sequencing, transport and storage licensing, and revenue support models (DPA, ICC, LCHA, BECCS, GGR) under the Energy Act 2023
PRACTICE NOTES
UK CCUS: legal, regulatory and policy framework—cluster sequencing, transport and storage licensing, and revenue support models (DPA, ICC, LCHA, BECCS, GGR) under the Energy Act 2023
For detailed commentary on the regulation, consenting and incentivisation of the net zero energy transition under the laws of England and Wales, see also: Collinson and Hockman on Energy Law: Regulating, Consenting and Incentivising the Energy Transition. The textbook supplies thorough analysis of matters addressed in this Practice Note. This Practice Note presents an outline of the law and policy concerning carbon capture usage and storage (CCUS) in the UK. It examines: what CCUS entails and the principal categories of technologies it covers the main drivers, barriers and risks associated with deploying CCUS the progress of CCUS clusters within the UK current and past government policy and legislative developments to boost CCUS deployment, including creating business models to introduce an incentive mechanism for CCUS projects policy progress on repurposing existing oil and gas assets for CCUS projects selected funding routes for CCUS projects, including the Carbon Capture and Storage Infrastructure Fund the prevailing national and international legislative framework supporting CCUS projects This summary reflects the matters discussed throughout this Practice Note and provides further context for readers considering CCUS policy and law. For more information on the following specific aspects of CCUS: planning framework applicable to CCUS projects, see Practice...
Energy
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