Pinsents loses out as National Grid completes panel review
FTSE 100 energy giant National Grid has finalised its UK-based general commercial and disputes panel with historic adviser Pinsent Masons missing out on a place on the main roster. Wragge & Co and Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP) have won places as general advisers to National Grid, with Eversheds mandated to advise on commercial litigation and construction work. National rival Hammonds will advise on general commercial and health and safety matters. Pinsents, while missing out on a formal place on the panel, will continue to provide competition advice.
March 13, 2008 at 01:43 AM
2 minute read
FTSE 100 energy giant National Grid has finalised its UK-based general commercial and disputes panel with historic adviser Pinsent Masons missing out on a place on the main roster.
Wragge & Co and Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP) have won places as general advisers to National Grid, with Eversheds mandated to advise on commercial litigation and construction work. National rival Hammonds will advise on general commercial and health and safety matters. Pinsents, while missing out on a formal place on the panel, will continue to provide competition advice.
National Grid's main corporate advisers, CMS Cameron McKenna and Linklaters, are unaffected by the reshuffle, while Denton Wilde Sapte and Martineau Johnson will continue to provide specialist energy and regulatory work.
Meanwhile, Land Securities Trillium (LST) has culled two-thirds of its preferred external legal advisers, following the property outsourcing giant's first-ever formal panel review.
Allen & Overy and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer won roles as LST's main strategic advisers at the top of a three-tier panel system.
City firms Ashurst, BLP, Camerons and Lovells have been handed places alongside Pinsents on the second-tier panel and will advise on interdisciplinary transactional work including real estate, M&A and private finance initiatives.
LST has also named a third tier of firms to look after regeneration and public-private partnerships, with top 10 UK firm Eversheds among a clutch of national firms given the nod.
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