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Home News

Government unveils new changes to electronic document execution

The government has released draft legislation on reforms to make electronic execution signing measures and virtual AGMs permanent.

by Tony Zhang
June 28, 2021
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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The exposure draft legislation aims to support companies and their officers using technology to satisfy Corporations Act 2001 requirements. 

Specifically, this legislation will facilitate the use of technology in meetings to execute company documents and send meeting-related materials.

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“These reforms make permanent the temporary measures put in place during the COVID-19 pandemic relating to electronic execution of company documents and meeting notifications, which received overwhelming stakeholder support,” Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said.

“Building on the reforms to facilitate the use of technology in meetings, the exposure draft will also make it clear that companies can hold hybrid meetings and make it clear that members, as a whole, must be given a reasonable opportunity to participate in meetings whether the meeting is a physical meeting, a hybrid meeting or a virtual meeting.”

Meanwhile, changes will also ensure that using a show-of-hands is the default method for voting at both physical and hybrid meetings and allow members who hold at least 5 per cent of voting capital to have polls independently scrutinised.

These changes will provide shareholders with enhanced opportunities to both participate in and scrutinise company meetings. 

The exposure draft legislation also includes further reforms to modernise business communications by allowing sole directors who are not also appointed as the company secretary to electronically execute documents, delivering on a commitment under the government’s deregulation agenda to improve the technology neutrality of Treasury portfolio laws.

This comes as Commonwealth, state and territory governments had recently announced they were working towards a common approach to modernise document execution across the federation.

Tags: LegislationNews

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