Editor's Choice
Santos receives takeover offer from Abu Dhabi-led consortium
Santos has received a non-binding $8.89 per share cash offer from the XRG Consortium, led by XRG P.J.S.C., a subsidiary of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ANDOC), alongside Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth fund ADQ and US private equity firm Carlyle.
What do the best-functioning boards look like?
The best-functioning boards are future thinkers, understand their ESG responsibilities and are able to show their "battle scars," according to two governance experts.
Funding lifts for climate, health, people startups
While funding for impact startups has broadly declined, those operating in climate, health and people has seen funding levels improve compared to three years ago, according to the Impact Startups Benchmark Report 2025.
Mind the gap: Investors' role in balancing fairness and competitiveness in executive pay
Investors have a significant role to play in helping to move the dial on executive remuneration, aiming to increase fairness and reduce inequality.
There are several comments to be made about investor question over CSG.
1) Whilst companies have a need to know their environmental obligations so that they can determine the risk factors of particular projects, commonsense would suggest that they should allow a significant tolerance for unknown environmental impacts that do not form part of the original framework.
2) A gas supplier's negligence should include not only issues related to the formal environmental guidelines and requirements but should also include events which occur and that could have reasonably been predicted such as water table and air quality issues.
3) If miners think that this is an issues related to CSG and other unconventional operations then they had better think again. As Gunns Ltd found out a project which fails to obtain a social licence to operate can devastate a company's bottom line and result in the death of the company itself.
Woodside have therefore made the right decision albeit late.
4) It is not really that surprising that the Greens and farmers should form an alliance. Both groups are concerned about the environment - one group depends on it for earning their livelihood, the other for the well being of society. With food consumers more and more interested in where their food comes from and how it is produced I, for one, expect that farmers and green groups will become regular partners.