My Lords, I am very grateful for all contributions and I thank especially the noble Lord, Lord Sharpe, for supporting these regulations. As he knows, the work was undertaken by the previous Government and we have made it a legal entity and brought forward the power to implement the legislation. I am sure there is common ground here. We all want to fight economic crime and ensure that privacy and transparency are balanced.
I will respond to the questions from the noble Lord, Lord Sharpe. On the use of the judicial factor, this basically relates to Scotland. The judicial factor is an officer of the court whose role is to protect the estate itself. This applies only in Scotland. On the issue of identity verification, work is being done and we hope to see proposals at some point next year.
On the wider question of Companies House reform, let me share with noble Lords what has been done so far. From March 2024, the registrar has to be able to query a request for information, remove material from a register of their own volition or on application in a more timely way, analyse information for the purpose of crime prevention or detection, disclose information from anyone for the purpose of the exercise of the registrar’s function, and move the registered office address, service address, and principal office address to default addresses.
Companies now have to comply with the new rules about company and business names. A company must not be registered by a name that is intended to facilitate criminal purposes and Companies House has greater powers to direct a company to change its name or to change the name if the company is not compliant, to declare its lawful purpose, notify and maintain an appropriate registered office address and registered email addresses and confirm new information in annual confirmation statements.
Companies House has commenced a process to remove names and addresses used without consent. This includes the removal of officers and people with significant control, where previously those wishing to have their details removed would have had to apply to the courts. So far, Companies House has removed 50,400 registered office addresses, 39,600 office addresses and 36,700 PSC addresses, redacted 37,100 incorporation documents to remove personal data used without consent and removed 7,800 documents from the register, including 800 false mortgage satisfaction filings that would have previously required a court order. So Companies House has done a lot, but there is further to go. The reform of Companies House is ongoing and more instruments will be brought to the House, I hope, next year.