Thought leadership
A New Vision for Water: The Long-Awaited White Paper on Reform to the Water Sector
23 January 2026
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The Government’s goal of openness and transparency in UK corporates is again on the agenda with plans for Companies House reform. The plans will see Companies House play an expanded role in tackling economic crime and make it fit for purpose in a digital 21st century economy. Its role will evolve from being a mostly passive repository of information to a more proactive gatekeeper over company formations and custodian of better, more reliable data on companies and the people behind them.
A recent Government White Paper explains that, whilst Companies House is well regarded worldwide, recent years have seen a growing misuse of companies, concerns over the accuracy of the companies register and challenges safeguarding the personal data it holds. The Government asserts that the planned measures will help bear down on organised criminals that use opaque companies to abuse the UK’s financial system.
Plans include:
The government will consider whether any further restrictions should be imposed on the use of corporate members of LLPs and corporate general partners of LPs to mitigate the risk of their misuse, but, as things stand, any corporate member/GP will have to provide details of their own directors or a managing officer, whose identity must be verified.
The planned reforms will be implemented via an Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Bill and will form part of a wider package of legislative measures to tackle economic crime, including the recent headline-grabbing register of overseas entities (requiring those behind foreign companies which own UK property to reveal their identities), steps to help stop the use of limited partnerships as vehicles for facilitating international money laundering and illegal arms movements, and new powers to seize crypto assets more easily.
We will be following the progress of the Bill and implementation of the reforms in the coming months.
"The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Bill will tackle economic crime, strengthen our national security, and boost small businesses. Through the Bill, the government will crack down on the kleptocrats, criminals and terrorists who abuse our open economy. Stronger anti-money laundering rules, reforms to corporate law, and the biggest upgrade to the Companies House register in 170 years will root out wrongdoers so legitimate businesses can thrive."
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/beis-in-the-2022-queens-speech
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