Governance Information • Mar 31, 2022
Governance Information
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(traditional administration and control model)
Issuer: Avio S.p.A. Website: www.avio.com Report approval date: March 14, 2022

| GLOSSARY 4 |
|---|
| INTRODUCTION8 |
| 1PROFILE OF THE ISSUER9 |
| 2INFORMATION ON SHAREHOLDERS11 |
| 2.1 Share capital structure (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter A) CFA11 |
| 2.2 Restrictions on the transfer of shares (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter B), CFA)12 |
| 2.3 Significant holdings (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter C), CFA)12 |
| 2.4 Special control rights (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter D), CFA)13 |
| 2.5 Voting rights mechanism for any employee share ownership system (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter E), CFA)13 |
| 2.6 Voting rights restrictions (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter F), CFA) 13 |
| 2.7 Shareholder agreements (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter G), CFA)13 |
| 2.8 Change of control clause (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter H), CFA) and statutory provisions concerning public purchase offers (Article 104, paragraph 1- ter, and 104-bis, paragraph 1, CFA)13 |
| 2.9 Power to increase the share capital and authorisation to purchase treasury shares (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter M), CFA) 14 |
| 2.9.1. Share capital increases14 |
| 2.9.2. Treasury shares15 |
| 2.10 Management and co-ordination (as per Article 2497 and subsequent amendments of the Civil Code)16 |
| 3COMPLIANCE (AS PER ARTICLE 123-BIS, PAR. 2, LETTER A), CFA)16 |
| 4.1 Appointments and replacement (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 2, letter L), CFA) 17 |
| 4.2 Composition (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 2, letter D), CFA)23 |
| 4.2.1. Members of the Board of Directors23 |
| 4.2.2. Diversity policies35 |
| 4.2.3 Maximum number of offices permitted in other companies36 |
| 4.2.4 Induction programme 39 |
| 4.3 Role of the Board of Directors (as per Article 123-bis, paragraph 2, letter D), CFA)39 |
| 4.4 Self-assessment45 |
| 4.5 Executive Boards46 |
| 4.5.1 Chief Executive Officer46 |
| 4.5.2 Chairperson of the Board of Directors54 |
| 4.5.3 Executive Committee54 |
| 4.5.4. Reporting to the Board of Directors55 |
| 4.6 Other Executive Directors55 |
| 4.7 Independent Directors55 |

| 4.8 Lead Independent Director56 |
|---|
| 5PROCESSING OF CORPORATE INFORMATION 56 |
| 6INTERNAL COMMITTEES TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS60 |
| 7APPOINTMENTS AND REMUNERATION COMMITTEE61 |
| 8CONTROL AND RISKS COMMITTEE63 |
| 9 SUSTAINABILITY COMMITTEE66 |
| 10PLANNING AND SCENARIOS COMMITTEE68 |
| 11 DIRECTORS' REMUNERATION68 |
| 12. .INTERNAL CONTROL AND RISK MANAGEMENT SYSTEM68 12.1 Executive director in charge of the internal control and risk management system 73 |
| 12.2 Internal audit department manager74 |
| 12.3. Organisational model as per Legislative Decree No. 231 of 2001 75 |
| 12.4 Independent audit firm77 |
| 12.5. Executive officer for financial reporting77 |
| 12.6 Coordination of the parties involved in the internal control and risk management system78 |
| 13DIRECTORS INTERESTS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS 79 |
| 14 APPOINTMENT OF STATUTORY AUDITORS81 |
| 15COMPOSITION AND FUNCTIONING OF THE BOARD OF STATUTORY AUDITORS 84 |
| 16RELATIONS WITH SHAREHOLDERS 90 |
| 17. . SHAREHOLDERS' MEETINGS 91 |
| 18 FURTHER CORPORATE GOVERNANCE ACTIVITIES 94 |
| 19 CHANGES SUBSEQUENT TO THE YEAR-END95 |
| 20. CONSIDERATIONS ON THE LETTER OF DECEMBER 3, 2021 OF THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE95 |

The main terms used in the Report are presented below. These terms, except where otherwise specified, are defined as follows:
| Shareholders' Meeting | The Shareholders' Meeting of the Issuer |
|---|---|
| Borsa Italiana | Borsa Italiana S.p.A., a London Stock Exchange Group company, with registered office at Piazza degli Affari No. 6, Milan. |
| Civil Code | Legislative Decree No. 262 of March 16, 1942 - XX and subsequent amendments and supplements. |
| Code or CG Code | The Corporate Governance Code for listed companies approved in January 2020 by the Corporate Governance Committee. |
| Inside Information Processing Policy |
The Inside Information Processing Policy aimed at regulating, in accordance with Regulation (EU) No. 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of April 16, 2014, market abuse conduct and related delegated and executive regulations. The Code was last updated and approved at the March 3, 2022 Board meeting. |
| Board of Statutory Auditors |
The Board of Statutory Auditors of the Issuer. |
| CG Committee | The Italian Committee for the Corporate Governance of listed companies, promoted by Borsa Italiana S.p.A., ABI, ANIA, Assogestioni, Assonime and Confindustria. |
| Control and Risks Committee |
Internal committee to the Board of Directors set up in accordance with Article 6 of the Corporate Governance Code. |
| Appointments and Remuneration Committee |
Internal committee to the Board of Directors set up in accordance with Articles 4 & 5 of the Corporate Governance Code. |
| Planning and Scenarios Committee |
Internal committee to the Board of Directors set up in accordance with Article 12.2 of the Company By-Laws. |
| Board or Board of Directors |
The Board of Directors of the Issuer. |
| Sustainability Committee | Internal committee to the Board of Directors set up in accordance with Article 6 of the Corporate Governance Code. |
| Consob | The National Commission for Companies and the Stock Exchange, with registered office in Rome, Via G.B. Martini No. 3. |

| Effective Merger Date | April 10, 2017. |
|---|---|
| Listing Date | The commencement date of trading of ordinary shares and warrants of Space2 on the MIV professional segment, i.e. July 31, 2015. |
| NFS | The 2021 Consolidated Non-Financial Statement published, as required by Legislative Decree No. 254/2016, by the Issuer for the purpose of reporting on the Group's performance for the year ended December 31, 2021. |
| Issuer, Avio or Company | Avio S.p.A., with registered office at via Leonida Bissolati No. 76, Rome, enrolled at the Rome Companies Registration No. 27 and Tax No. 09105940960. |
| ESA | European Space Agency. |
| The year | The fiscal year 2021 |
| EXM | Euronext Milan, a market managed by Borsa Italiana on which shares, SIIQs, convertible bonds, option rights and warrants are traded. |
| DPCM 24/11/2016 | Prime Ministerial Decree of November 24, 2016 on the exercise of special powers for the defence and national security system with respect to the significant transaction regarding the merger between Space2 and Avio, approved by Space2's Shareholders' Meeting on December 1, 2016. |
| Merger | The merger by incorporation of the Incorporated Company into Space2, approved by the Extraordinary Shareholders' Meeting of Space2 and that of the Incorporated Company on December 1, 2016, and completed on the Effective Merger Date. |
| Avio Group or Group | Collectively, Avio S.p.A. and its subsidiaries pursuant to Article 2359 of the Civil Code and Article 93 of the Consolidated Finance Act and IFRS 10 – Consolidated Financial Statements. |
| In Orbit | The Company In Orbit S.p.A., with registered office at via Latina SP 600 Ariana Km 5.2 SNC, Colleferro (Rome), Rome Companies Registration Office No. 14029441004. |
| Stock Exchange Instruction Regulation |
The Instructions to the Regulation for Markets organised and managed by Borsa Italiana, in force at the reporting date. |
| Leonardo | Leonardo S.p.A., a joint-stock company governed by Italian law, with registered office at Piazza Monte Grappa No. 4, Rome. |
| Golden Power Regulations | Decree-Law No. 21 of March 15, 2012, transposed into Italian Law No. 56 of May 11, 2012 setting forth "Provisions on special |

| or Legs. Decree 21/2012 | powers concerning the ownership structure of companies in the defence and national security sectors, as well as strategic activities in the energy, transport and communications sector" and relative implementing provisions. |
|---|---|
| Transaction | The significant transaction approved by Avio S.p.A.'s Shareholders' Meeting on December 1, 2016, principally the Merger. |
| SMEs | Small and medium-sized issuers of listed shares pursuant to Article 1, paragraph 1, letter w-quater1), of the CFA. |
| General Shareholder Dialogue Policy |
The Policy approved - upon proposal of the Chairperson in agreement with the Chief Executive Officer, as well as subject to the favourable opinion of the Control and Risks Committee - by the Issuer's Board of Directors on March 3, 2022, also taking into account the commitment policies adopted and notified to the public by institutional investors and active managers and in line with Recommendation No. 3 of the CG Code. |
| Policy on qualitative and quantitative criteria |
The Policy on qualitative and quantitative criteria for assessing the independence requirements of Directors and Statutory Auditors, adopted by the Issuer on March 14, 2022, pursuant to Recommendation 7, first sentence, points c) and d) of Article 2 of the CG Code. |
| RPT Policy | The Related Party Transactions Policy adopted by the Issuer in compliance with the provisions of Article 2391-bis of the Civil Code and the Related Parties Regulation. |
| Stock Exchange Regulation |
The Regulation of Markets organised and managed by Borsa Italiana, approved by the Borsa Italiana Board of Directors, in force at the reporting date. |
| Issuers' Regulation | The enacting regulation of the CFA concerning the governance of issuers, adopted by Consob with motion No. 11971 of May 14, 1999 and subsequent amendments and supplements. |
| MAR Regulation | Regulation (EC) No. 596/2014 of the European Parliament and Council of April 16, 2014 on market abuse which nullifies Directive 2003/6/EC of the European Parliament and Council and Directives 2003/124/EC, 2003/125/EC and 2004/72/EC of the Commission. |
| Consob Market Regulation |
The Market Regulation issued by Consob Resolution No. 20249 of December 28, 2017. |
| RPT Regulation | The regulation incorporates the related party transactions provisions adopted by Consob Motion No. 17221 of March 12, 2010 (as subsequently amended and supplemented). |
| Report | The present Corporate Governance and Ownership Structure Report, prepared in accordance with Article 123-bis of the |

| CFA. | |
|---|---|
| Remuneration Report | The Remuneration Policy and Report that companies are required to prepare and publish in accordance with Article 123- ter of the CFA and Article 84-quater of the Consob Issuers' Regulation. |
| Subsidiary Companies | The companies directly or indirectly controlled by the Company pursuant to Article 93 of the CFA. "Control" and "to control" have the corresponding meanings. |
| Auditors' Report | The independent audit firm listed in the special register of independent auditors managed by the Ministry of Economy and Finance, pursuant to Legislative Decree No. 39 of January 27 2010, tasked with the independent audit of the Issuers' accounts. |
| Incorporated Company | Avio S.p.A., with registered office at via No. Leonida Bissolati No. 76, Rome, operating office at SP Ariana Km 5.2, Colleferro (RM), Tax, VAT and Rome Companies Office Registration No. 05515080967, REA No. 1177979. |
| Space2 | Space2 S.p.A., with registered office in Milan, Via Mauro Macchi, No. 27, Milan Companies Registration Office and Tax No. 09105940960. |
| Space Holding S.r.l. | Space Holding S.r.l., with registered office at Piazza Cavour No. 1, Milan, the Company establishing Space2 as sole shareholder on May 28, 2015, promoting its listing on the MIV. |
| By-Laws | The By-Laws of the Company in force at the reporting date. |
| CFA | The "Consolidated Finance Act", adopted under Legislative Decree No. 58 of February 24, 1998, as subsequently amended and supplemented. |

This Report, approved by the Board of Directors on March 14, 2022, provides a comprehensive overview on the Issuer's Corporate Governance at March 14, 2022, pursuant to Article 123-bis of the CFA and in light of the Code's provisions, as well as the "Format for the report on corporate governance and ownership structure" document (IX Edition, January 2022) prepared by Borsa Italiana.
On April 10, 2017, the Merger became effective - i.e. the merger by incorporation of the Incorporated Company into Space2 (now Avio S.p.A.), as a result of which Space2 (now Avio S.p.A.), assumed all rights and obligations of the Incorporated Company and was renamed "Avio S.p.A.". The definitions "Company", "Avio" and "Issuer" refer in this Report to the Company resulting from the Merger.
On March 29, 2017, Borsa Italiana approved, effective as of April 10, 2017, the listing of ordinary Avio shares on the MTA ("Mercato Telematico Azionario") market, now "Euronext Milan", STAR segment, with the simultaneous discontinuation of trading on the MIV market.
* * *

The Avio Group is the leader in the manufacturing and development of solid and liquid propulsion systems for launchers, acting as sub-contractor and prime contractor for the Ariane and Vega space programmes, both funded by the ESA. These space programs seek to develop and manufacture launchers to position useful loads in geostationary and low orbit respectively.
Avio intends to contribute to precise ESG - Environmental, Social and Governance objectives through a progressive improvement of its performance, correlated to business objectives and in line with the SDGs.
In this regard, during the Board meeting of July 22, 2021, Avio approved the Sustainability Policy, initiating a concrete path to strengthen and implement the values of ethics, integrity and responsibility in respect of people, the environment and society as a whole, and in order to integrate sustainability in the strategy and management of its business, defining with the different Company departments, the Sustainability Committee and the Board of Directors, the objectives to be enhanced in a Sustainability Plan aligned to the Business Plan and the Audit Plan.
Moreover, it is committed to managing dialogue with all its shareholders through fair, transparent and differentiated forms of engagement, believing that establishing and maintaining a constant and ongoing relationship with all the main stakeholders is in its own specific interest, as well as a duty towards the market.
In this sense, on March 3, 2022, Avio's Board of Directors approved an ad hoc policy in order to conform the rules of corporate governance and the management of the dialogue with the Shareholders to the principles established by the Corporate Governance Code. In fact, the Policy intends to pursue the objective of raising the level of transparency and involvement of investors, as promoted by the Shareholder Rights Directive II with reference to institutional investors and asset managers, as a functional instrument to guarantee the sustainable success of Avio, which is substantiated by the creation of long-term value to the benefit of Shareholders, taking into account the interests of all other stakeholders and the impacts that its operations may have at an environmental, social and economic level.
Pursuant to Legislative Decree No. 254/2016, the Company published the 2021 Non-Financial Statement (available at www.avio.com).
Pursuant to the provisions of Article 1, paragraph 1, letter w-quater.1) of the CFA and Article 2 ter of the Issuers' Regulation, the Company was an SME from the year 2015 to-date.
The existence of the requisites to qualify as an SME, as required by the CFA, are confirmed on the basis of:
It should be noted that at the approval date of the Report for the Company:

281,005,185 in the year 2016; (iii) Euro 330,788,938 in the year 2017; (iv) Euro 351,624,262 in the year 2018; (v) Euro 330,029,472 in the year 2019; (vi) Euro 359,001,888 in the year 2020 and (vii) Euro 321,534,597 in the year 2021;
Pursuant to Article 2-ter, paragraph 5 of the Issuers' Regulation, Consob publishes the list of SMEs on the basis of its calculations of capitalisation. This list is updated by March each year with the figures calculated on the basis of capitalisation at December 31. In addition, Consob integrates the information in September each year, on the basis of turnover figures resulting from the financial statements of the previous year.
It should also be noted that the Company does not fall within the Corporate Governance Code's definitions of "large company" and "concentrated ownership company."
Avio's corporate governance system is structured according to a traditional management and control model and consists of the following bodies:
Avio's Governance also consists of the following internal committees of Avio's Board of Directors: (i) the Control and Risks Committee; (ii) the Sustainability Committee; (iii) the Appointments and Remuneration Committee; and (iv) the Planning and Scenarios Committee.
Accounting control is required, as per the applicable regulations, by an audit firm enrolled in Consob's special register. In accordance with Legislative Decree No. 231/2001, a Supervisory Board was also appointed to oversee the correct functioning of the Organisation, Management and Control Model of the Company, pursuant to Legislative Decree No. 231/2001 and subsequent amendments.
Avio implements and complies with the Corporate Governance Code, approved by the Corporate Governance Committee of Borsa Italiana in January 2020, with the supplements and adjustments for Groups with the features indicated in this report (available on Borsa Italiana's website: http://www.borsaitaliana.it).

At the Report's approval date, Avio's share capital amounted to Euro 90,964,212.90, consisting of 26,359,346 ordinary shares without par value. On March 11, 2022, Avio had 1,035,233 ordinary treasury shares with no voting rights pursuant to Article 2357-ter of the Civil Code, equal to approx. 3.9274% of the share capital. The shares are listed on Euronext Milan, STAR Segment, organised and managed by Borsa Italiana.
| SHARE CAPITAL STRUCTURE | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLASS OF SHARES |
NO. OF SHARES |
% OF SHARE CAPITAL |
MARKET LISTING |
RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS |
|||||||
| Ordinary Shares | 26,359,346 | 100% | Borsa Italiana STAR Segment |
The ordinary shares are to bearer, indivisible, freely transferable and confer to the owners equal rights. In particular, each ordinary share attributes the right to one vote at the Ordinary and Extraordinary Shareholders' Meeting of the Company, as well as additional equity and administrative rights pursuant to the By-Laws and statutory law. |
|||||||
| Multi-votes shares |
- | - | - | - | |||||||
| Shares with limited voting rights |
- | - | - | - | |||||||
| Shares without voting rights |
- | - | - | - | |||||||
| Other | - | - | - | - |
At the Report's approval date, the following financial instruments that grant the right to subscribe newly issued Avio ordinary shares had been issued.

| OTHER FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WARRANTS | MARKET LISTING |
NO. OF INSTRUMENTS OUTSTANDING |
CLASS OF SHARES FOR EXERCISE |
NO. OF SHARES FOR EXERCISE |
||||||
| "Avio S.p.A Market Warrants."1 |
Not admitted to trading |
800,000 | Ordinary Shares | 800,000 |
Avio S.p.A. shares and Sponsor Warrants are issued in de-materialised form pursuant to Articles 83-bis and subs. of the CFA.
At the Report's Approval date, there were no restrictions to the free transfer of Avio ordinary shares imposed by statutory clauses or conditions of issue.
There are no limits to holding shares of the Company, nor any clauses to restrict becoming a shareholder.
The ordinary shares of the Company are traded within the management system authorized pursuant to the CFA.
At the Report approval date, the Company is an SME; therefore, pursuant to Article 120, paragraph 2 of the CFA, the significance threshold for the purposes of the communication obligations of significant shareholdings is equal to 5% of the voting share capital.
With Consob Resolution No. 21236 of April 9, 2020, Consob reduced for a period of three months starting from the entry into force of the resolution, the thresholds of the initial holdings for disclosure pursuant to Article 120, paragraph 2 and 2-bis, of the CFA, establishing for SMEs the threshold of 3%. With resolution No. 21672 of January 13, 2021, Consob has newly extended until April 13, 2021, the transitional regime of enhanced transparency on the subject of changes in major shareholdings and the disclosure of investment objectives for companies with a particularly broad shareholder base (as defined in Article 120 of the CFA).
As from April 14, 2021 investors must comply with the provisions of the ordinary transparency regulations, according to which the obligation to disclose changes in the significant shareholdings held in the aforementioned Italian companies listed on the Stock Exchange is triggered when the 3% threshold is exceeded for companies with medium-high capitalisation, qualified as "non-SMEs", and when the 5% threshold is exceeded for companies with low capitalization, qualified as "SMEs". Obligations relating to exceeding subsequent thresholds remain unchanged. With regard to transparency on investment target statements, as of April 14, 2021, the reporting requirement will be triggered when the 10% threshold is exceeded, and
1 The Avio S.p.A. Sponsor Warrants may be exercised subsequently to the Effective Merger Date, within 10 years from such date, on condition that the official Avio post-Merger ordinary share price is equal or greater than Euro 13 on at least one open trading day.

no longer the 5% threshold that was temporarily introduced by the enhanced transparency regime.
Based on the communications received as per Article 120 of the CFA and the internal company assessments concerning the effect of the dilution from the conversion of the special shares and market warrants of Avio, the shareholders who, at the Report approval date, have holdings of above 5% of the voting share capital of the Issuer, directly or indirectly, including through nominees, trusts and subsidiaries, are reported in the table below:
| Shareholder | % of ordinary share capital | % of voting share capital |
||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leonardo S.p.A. | 29.63 | 30.84 | ||
| Space Holding S.p.A. | 4.84 | 5.04 | ||
| InOrbit | 4.07 | 4.24 | ||
| Servizi CGN S.r.l. | 4.00 | 4.16 | ||
| Delfin | 3.79 | 3.94 |
The Company has not issued shares which confer special controlling rights.
At the Report approval date, the Company had not adopted any employee share ownership system.
Each ordinary share attributes voting rights without limitations.
At the Report's approval date, the Company is not aware of any shareholder agreements.

At the Report approval date, various agreements on the space programmes in which the Avio Group operates as sub-contractor and prime contractor were in place.
Some of the aforementioned agreements entered into by the Incorporated Company and other Avio Group companies with the European Space Agency, the Italian Space Agency and Arianespace S.A. and launcher market operators may entail, inter alia, clauses to govern the effects of a change in Avio's ownership structure (so-called "change of control" clauses), based on which (i) Avio may be required to notify a change in its ownership structure to its counterparties and (ii) contractual counterparties may be entitled to amend certain contractual rights and/or terminate the relevant agreements and/or request the transfer of specific knowhow.
Pursuant to Article 14 of the By-Laws, if Avio's shares are subject to a public purchase offer/change of control bid, the Board of Directors reserves the right to resolve, with no need for Shareholders' Meetings' authorisation, on (i) the performance of any action or transaction, including looking for higher and competitive bids and/or (ii) the implementation of decisions adopted before the publication of the notice pursuant to Article 102 of the CFA and not yet fully or partly implemented, also where the activities referred to under points (i) and (ii) above may hinder the objectives of the bid.
In compliance with Article 5 of the By-Laws, the Board of Directors was granted - pursuant to Article 2443, paragraph 1, of the Civil Code - for the maximum period of five years from the date of registration of the By-Laws on the Companies' Registry, powers to increase the share capital in a non-divisible manner, against payment and with exclusion of the pre-emption right, in accordance with Article 2441, paragraph 4, clause one, of the Civil Code, for a maximum amount of Euro 9,076,167, through the issue in one or more tranches of a maximum number of ordinary or preferential shares or, in any case, with rights other than those enshrined in already issued shares or shares and financial instruments provided for by Article 2349 of the Civil Code, equal to 2,316,391, with rights, reserved, (i) in the case of hostile public bids or bids initiated by competitors of the Company, only to entities in which the Italian State directly or indirectly holds at least 20% of the share capital or (ii) in all other cases, to entities identified by the Board of Directors with the favourable vote of at least all Directors in office less one. The unit price of the aforementioned shares (including any premium) shall not be lower than the market value of the shares. The Board motions on the exercise of the power of attorney shall identify the entities to which the options to subscribe the share capital increase/s shall be assigned, shall set the subscription price based on the market value of the shares and a specific deadline for the subscription and shall provide, pursuant to Article 2439, second paragraph, of the Civil Code, that, when the resolved increase is not subscribed by the deadline set, the share capital shall be increased by an amount (excluding any premium) equal to the subscriptions received up to such deadline.
At the Report approval date, the Board had not implemented this power, even partially.

At the Report's approval date, the Shareholders' Meeting of the Company, held on April 29, 2021, resolved to authorise, pursuant to Articles 2357 and 2357-ter of the Civil Code, the purchase of treasury shares of the Company, in one or more tranches, to an extent freely determinable by the Board of Directors for a total maximum value of 10% of the share capital (equal to approximately Euro 9.1 million) and disposals, to be carried out in one or more tranches, of the shares in portfolio, including those purchased in execution of the resolution (already subject to disclosure also pursuant to Article 144-bis of the Issuers' Regulation).
On February 2, 2022, the Board of Directors resolved on:
The main objectives that the Issuer's Board of Directors intends to pursue through the purchase and disposal of treasury shares are the following:
Therefore, through the appointment of the independent intermediary Equita Sim S.p.A. (in line with the appointment resolved by the Board of Directors on February 3, 2022), the Company purchased between February 4, 2022 and March 11, 2022 a further 364,000 ordinary shares (equal to 1.3809% of the share capital) on the Italian Stock Exchange, STAR segment, at the average unitary price of Euro 10.6750, for a total value of Euro 3,885,714.38.
Therefore, the total number of treasury shares held by Avio at March 11, 2022 was 1,035,233.00 ordinary shares (equal to 3.9274% of the share capital), at an average unit price of Euro 12.5244 for a total value of Euro 12,965,669.26.

At the Report approval date, the Company was not subject to management and co-ordination.
At the Report approval date, the Company was not controlled by any entity pursuant to Article 93 of the CFA.
***
The information required by Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter i) of the CFA ("the agreements between the Company and Directors ......which provide indemnity in the case of resignation or dismissal from office without just cause or termination of employment following a public purchase offer") is illustrated in the Remuneration Policy and Report, published as per Article 123-ter of the CFA and Article 84 quater of the Issuers' Regulation.
The information required by Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter l) of the CFA) relating to the "applicable regulations concerning the appointment and replacement of Directors (.....), in addition to the amendment of the By-Laws if differing from applicable law and regulations" is illustrated in the section of the Report concerning the Board of Directors (Section 4.1).
Avio has formally adopted the Corporate Governance Code, which is accessible to the public on the website of the Corporate Governance Committee at https://www.borsaitaliana.it/comitato-corporate-governance/codice/2020.pdf
The Company's Board of Directors adopted the principles contained in the Code, also aligning its governance system to regulatory provisions.
With respect to the non-adoption of one or more recommendations of the Code, see the detail of the various sections of this Report.
The Issuer and its strategic subsidiaries are not subject to non-Italian legal provisions that influence the Issuer's corporate governance structure.
In accordance with current regulations for companies with listed shares on regulated markets and as per the recommendations of the Corporate Governance Code, the Board of Directors is central to the governance system.
Avio intends to contribute to precise ESG - Environmental, Social and Governance objectives through a progressive improvement of its performance, correlated to business objectives.
In this regard, during the year, Avio started up a process for the definition of a sustainability policy with the objective of strengthening and implementing the values of ethics, integrity and responsibility in respect of people, the environment and society as a whole, in order to integrate sustainability into the strategy and management of its business, defining with the different company departments the objectives to be enhanced in a sustainability plan aligned to a Group business plan.

Moreover, it is committed to managing dialogue with all its shareholders through fair, transparent and differentiated forms of engagement, believing that establishing and maintaining a constant and ongoing relationship with all the main stakeholders is in its own specific interest, as well as a duty towards the market.
In this sense, on March 3, 2022, Avio's Board of Directors approved an ad hoc policy in order to conform the rules of corporate governance and the management of the dialogue with the Shareholders to the principles established by the Corporate Governance Code. In fact, the Policy intends to pursue the objective of raising the level of transparency and involvement of investors, as promoted by the Shareholder Rights Directive II with reference to institutional investors and asset managers, as a functional instrument to guarantee the sustainable success of Avio, which is substantiated by the creation of long-term value to the benefit of Shareholders, taking into account the interests of all other stakeholders and the impacts that its operations may have at an environmental, social and economic level.
Article 14 of By-Laws establishes that the Board shall have the widest powers of ordinary and extraordinary administration of the Company, with the power to carry out all acts it deems appropriate for attaining the corporate scope, with the sole exception of those attributed exclusively by law to the Shareholders' Meeting. The Board of Directors, in accordance with Article 2365, paragraph 2 of the Civil Code is also empowered to pass the following resolutions, without prejudice to the concurrent competence of the Shareholders' Meeting. (i) the opening and closing of secondary offices; (ii) the reduction of the share capital as a result of a return of shares; (iii) updating the By-Laws in accordance with the law; (iv) transfer of the registered office within Italy; (vi) the indication of which Directors may represent the Company. (vi) the indication of which Directors may represent the Company.
As per Article 11.1 of the By-Laws, the Board of Directors shall appoint a Chairperson from its membership, if the Ordinary Shareholders' Meeting has not already done so. The Board is also entitled to appoint a Secretary, who may also be external to the Company, upon a proposal from the individual chairing the meeting.
Under Article 12.2 of the By-Laws, within the limits of the Law and the By-Laws, the Board of Directors may delegate part of its powers to an Executive Committee, determining the limits of such mandate as well as the number of members of the committee and its operating procedures. The Board may appoint one or more Chief Executive Officers, granting them the relevant powers. Moreover, the Board of Directors may also establish one or more committees with advisory, investigating, proposing or control functions, vested with the powers set out by the Board of Directors. The Board of Directors may also appoint General Managers, defining their powers and granting power of attorney to third parties for certain acts or categories of acts.
Pursuant to Article 12.1 of the By-Laws, the matters and the activities on which the Italian Government has a right to object pursuant to the Golden Power Regulation applicable to the companies operating in the defence and national security sectors fall under the exclusive remit of the Board of Directors and may not be delegated.
As per Article 11 of the By-Laws, Avio is managed by a Board of Directors consisting of 9 (nine) members or 11 (eleven) members, as decided by the Shareholders' Meeting. The Directors remain in office for 3 (three) years, unless a lesser term is set out by the appointment motion, with the term concluding on the date of the Shareholders' Meeting called to approve the financial statements pertaining to the last financial year of their term, and may be

reappointed.
All Directors shall possess the eligibility and standing requirements provided for by law and other applicable provisions, as well as the integrity requirements provided for by Italian Ministerial Decree No. 162 of March 30, 2000 and the applicable legislation in force. Pursuant to Article 147-ter, paragraph 4 of the CFA, at least two Directors must also possess the independence requirements set out therein.
As per applicable legislative and regulatory provisions for listed companies, Article 11 of the By-Laws establishes that the Shareholders' Meeting appoints the Board of Directors on the basis of slates presented by the shareholders, in accordance with the procedure outlined below, except where otherwise established by obligatory laws or regulations.
Shareholders can present a slate for the appointment of Directors, in addition to the departing Board of Directors, who, alone or together with other presenting shareholders, have a shareholding at least equal to that determined by Consob in accordance with applicable provisions and regulations. Ownership of the minimum shareholding is determined according to the shares that are registered in favour of the shareholder on the day in which the slates are filed with the issuer; certification can also be presented subsequent to the filing provided that it is within the deadline for the publication of the slates.
The slates are filed at the registered office, and subsequently published, in accordance with the methods and the deadlines provided for by applicable law.
The slates provide for a number of candidates of no less than 2 (two) and not exceeding the number of Directors to be appointed, each linked to a progressive number. Each slate shall contain and expressly indicate at least 2 (two) Directors considered as per applicable laws and the Corporate Governance Code. The slates containing 3 (three) or more candidates may not be composed of candidates only from the same gender (male or female); these slates should include a number of candidates of the under-represented gender to guarantee the composition of the Board of Directors in accordance with legal and regulatory provisions in relation to gender equality (male or female) rules, rounded upwards.
Each slate must include as an attachment, at the risk of ineligibility: (i) the curriculum vitae of the candidates; (ii) a declaration in which all the candidates accept the candidature, and attest, under their own responsibility, that no grounds for ineligibility and incompatibility exist, as well as the existence of the requirements prescribed by applicable law and the By-Laws for the office of Director of the Company and including the declaration on the possession of the independence requirements; (iii) the identity of the shareholders who have submitted the slates and the total percentage of shares held; (iv) any additional or differing declaration, information, and/or documents provided for by applicable law and regulations.
Each Shareholder may not - even through a nominee or a trust - submit, or contribute to submitting, more than one slate or vote upon different slates. Moreover, each candidate may be included only in one slate, under penalty of ineligibility.
At the end of the voting process, the candidates of the two slates that have obtained the highest number of votes shall be elected, on the basis of the following criteria: (i) from the slate obtaining the majority of votes cast (the "Majority Slate"), a number of Directors equal to the total number of the members to be appointed less 3 (three) shall be taken; and (ii) from the slate obtaining the second highest number of votes cast (the "Minority Slate") and not linked even indirectly with the Shareholders that submitted or voted the slate that achieved the highest number of votes, 3 (three) Directors shall be taken, including at least one Independent Director, according to the progressive order of the candidates on the slate.

If the Majority Slate, or the Minority Slate, depending on the case, does not contain a sufficient number of candidates in order to appoint the number of Directors required for each of them based on the aforementioned criteria, the remaining Directors to be elected shall be taken from the other slate, i.e. either the Minority or the Majority Slate depending on the case - in the progressive order in which they appear.
Consideration is not taken of the slates which have not obtained at least half of the votes required for the presentation of slates.
Should two slates receive the same number of votes, a second vote of the Shareholders' Meeting shall decide by considering only the slates receiving the same number of votes.
If, at the end of the vote, the legal and regulatory provisions applicable from time to time on (male and female) gender parity (including rounding up to the next whole number if the implementation of gender quotas does not result in a whole number), the replacement mechanisms detailed below shall apply.
A) The last of the candidates that would have been elected from the Majority Slate and belonging to the over-represented gender shall be replaced with the first of the non-elected candidates taken from the same slate and belonging to the under-represented gender;
B) Where the replacement under letter A) above does not allow the achievement of the minimum threshold set out by the legal and regulatory provisions applicable from time to time to gender parity (including rounding up to the next whole number if the implementation of gender quotas does not result in a whole number), the last of the candidates that would have been elected in the Minority Slate and belonging to the over-represented gender shall be replaced with the first non-elected candidate taken from the same slate belonging to the underrepresented gender;
C) Where the replacements under letters A) and B) above do not allow the achievement of the minimum threshold set out by legal and statutory regulations applicable from time to time on gender parity (including rounding up to the next whole number if the application of gender quotas does not result in a whole number), the second-last candidate that would have been elected from the Majority Slate and belonging to the over-represented gender shall also be replaced, and so on, from the bottom of the ranking, considering only the candidates that would have been elected taken from the aforementioned slate.
Where, as a result of the mechanism detailed above, no Independent Director is appointed from the Majority Slate, the last non-independent candidate elected from the Majority Slate shall be replaced by the first independent candidate not elected from the aforementioned slate, in progressive order, without prejudice in any case to the compliance with the gender parity provided for by legal and/or regulatory provisions as applicable. If, based on the aforementioned mechanism, no Independent Director is appointed from the Minority Slate, the same procedure shall be followed, mutatis mutandis.
Where only one slate is presented, the Shareholders' Meeting will vote on that slate and, where this slate receives the majority of the votes, all the members of the Board of Directors will be taken from this slate in accordance with applicable law and regulations, including gender equality regulations (rounded upwards where resulting in a fraction).

In the absence of slates, or if only one slate is presented and this does not obtain the majority of votes, or if the number of elected directors on the basis of slates presented is lower than the number of members to be elected, or if the entire Board of Directors is not to be renewed, or if it is not possible for any reason to elect the Board of Directors in the manner provided for in this Article, the members of the Board of Directors will be elected by the Shareholders' Meeting by statutory majority, without the application of slate voting, save for the obligation to maintain the minimum number of Independent Directors established by law and in accordance with the applicable law and regulations in terms of gender equality quotas.
In the event that, for whatever reason, one or more Directors are no longer sitting, the Board of Directors will proceed with co-option, where possible, from among the non-elected candidates from the slate from which the Director leaving office had been elected, according to the progressive numbering of the slate, while maintaining the obligation of a minimum number of Independent Directors as established by law and these By-Laws and in accordance with the applicable law and regulations on gender equality quotas.
In the event of termination of office, for any reason, of more than half of the Directors elected by the Shareholders' Meeting, the entire Board shall be deemed to lapse with effect from the moment in which the Board of Directors has been renewed and the Directors still in office will urgently call the shareholders' meeting for the election of the new Board of Directors.
On February 28, 2020, the Board of Directors, on the proposal of the Appointments and Remuneration Committee, approved a succession plan for the Executive Director.
Avio maintains that the succession plan is an instrument to ensure the consistent management of risk, business continuity and the long-term sustainability of the Company, by governing the process of replacing the Executive Director in the potential situation of early conclusion of office.
In addition, the existence of a succession plan ensures continuity and certainty in business operations as well as the selection of the best possible candidates for the office of Executive Director in order to avoid decisions being taken without the support of a structured process.
Recommendation No. 7, paragraph 1, of Article 2 of the Corporate Governance Code for listed companies adopted by the Corporate Governance Committee in January 2020 (the "Code"), in which Avio S.p.A ("Avio" or the "Company") includes among the circumstances that compromise, or appear to compromise, the independence of a Director or Statutory Auditor the following:
➢ "c) if, directly or indirectly (for example through subsidiary companies or where they are an Executive Director, or as partner of a professional advisory firm or a consultancy company), has, or has had in the three previous years, a significant commercial, financial or professional relationship:
with the Company or its subsidiaries, or its Executive Directors or Senior Management;
with a party that, also together with others through a shareholder agreement, controls the Company; or if the Parent is a company or corporation, with the relevant Executive Directors or Senior Management; and

➢ "d) if he/she receives, or has received in the previous three years, from the Company, one of its subsidiaries or the Parent Company, significant additional remuneration with respect to the fixed remuneration for the office and the remuneration provided for participation in the committees recommended by the Code or provided for by the applicable regulations.
In order to apply the aforementioned provisions, Recommendation No. 7, second paragraph, of the Code requires the Board of Directors to define, at least at the beginning of its term of office and, in any case, prior to the assessment of the independence of Directors and Statutory Auditors, the quantitative and qualitative criteria for assessing the significance of the relationships referred to in letters c) and d) of Recommendation 7, first paragraph, of the Code.
In relation to this, the Recommendation indicates that "In the case of a Director who is also a partner in a professional firm or consulting firm, the Board of Directors assesses the significance of any professional relationships that may affect his/her position and role within the firm or consulting firm, or that otherwise relate to significant transactions of the firm and its group, regardless of the quantitative parameters".
On March 14, 2022, the Board of Directors, with the assistance of the Appointments and Remuneration Committee, approved, for the purposes of assessing the independence of Directors and Statutory Auditors, a Policy containing qualitative and quantitative criteria aimed at pre-determining the significance of the relationships referred to in Article 2, Recommendation 7, letters c) and d), of the Corporate Governance Code
The aforementioned document illustrates the quantitative and qualitative criteria approved by Avio's Board of Directors, with the assistance of the Appointments and Remuneration Committee, to assess the significance of relationships, including economic, that may compromise the independence of Directors/Statutory Auditors (the "Quantitative and Qualitative Criteria" or the "Criteria").
More specifically, with particular reference to quantitative criteria, any commercial, financial or professional relationship that the Director or Statutory Auditor - whose independence is subject to assessment - has or has had during the financial year in which the declaration of independence is made, or in the three financial years prior to the date on which the declaration is made, with the following significant parties are relevant:
(i) with the Company or its subsidiaries, or its Executive Directors or Senior Management;
(ii) with a party that, also together with others through a shareholder agreement, controls the Company; or if the parent is a company or corporation, with the relevant Executive Directors or Senior Management.
For the purposes of Recommendation 7, paragraph one, letter c) of the Corporate Governance Code "significant" is to be deemed:

It should be underlined that, for the purposes of the above, also the relationships with the relevant persons held by close family members are taken into account, i.e.: (i) parents, (ii) children, (iii) the spouse who is not legally separated and (iv) cohabitants.
The "additional remuneration" to be considered in evaluating the independence of a member of the Board of Directors includes the sum of any additional remuneration paid by Avio, one of its subsidiaries or the parent company, even indirectly, with respect to the "fixed remuneration for the office" and "the remuneration for participation in the committees recommended by the Code or by the laws in force".
To this end, the remuneration received in the form of participation in incentive plans linked to company performance is also included.
Additional remuneration is normally to be considered significant - and therefore capable of compromising the independence of the Relevant Person concerned - if the total annual consideration for such relationships exceeds 50% of the total amount of the fixed annual remuneration received by the Relevant Person for the office or for participation in committees.
Even if these quantitative parameters are not exceeded, a relationship of a commercial, financial or professional nature shall be deemed "significant" for the purposes of Recommendation 7, first paragraph, letter c) of the Code if it is deemed by the Board of Directors to be capable of affecting the autonomy of judgement and independence of a Director of Avio in their duties.
Therefore, purely by way of example, in the event that the party is also a partner of a professional firm or consulting company, the Avio Board of Directors - independently of the aforementioned quantitative parameters - may consider as "significant" the professional relations of the firm and/or consulting company with the relevant persons who:
The significance of the aforementioned relationships is assessed taking into account the overall professional activity normally carried out by the party, the tasks normally assigned to them, as well as the importance that these relationships may have for the party in terms of reputation within his own organisation.
The information required by Article 123-bis, paragraph 1, letter l) of the CFA) relating to the "applicable regulations concerning the appointment and replacement of Directors (.....), in addition to the amendment of the By-Laws if differing from applicable law and regulations" is illustrated in the section of the Report concerning the Board of Directors (Section 4.1).

The Shareholders' Meeting of Avio S.p.A. called on May 6, 2020 appointed the Board of Directors, having first resolved on the number of members, their term of office and remuneration. In particular, the Shareholders' Meeting of Avio S.p.A. set the number of the members of the Board of Directors as eleven, establishing their term in office. Subsequently, by implementing the slate voting system provided for by Article 11 of the By-Laws, the Shareholders' Meeting appointed the Board of Directors of Avio with effect from the date of the Shareholders' Meeting (May 6, 2020) until the approval of the Financial Statements at December 31, 2022.
As better specified in the table on page 28 of this Report, Avio's Board of Directors is made up of 11 members, of which (i) 1 executive member; and (ii) 7 independent members.
On August 23, 2021, the Non-Executive and Independent Director and member of Avio's Sustainability Committee, Mr. Stefano Pareglio, resigned due to incompatibilities relating to new professional commitments. On December 21, 2021, the Board of Directors appointed Ms. Marcella Logli as a Non-Executive and Independent Director and member of the Sustainability Committee, replacing Mr. Stefano Pareglio.
| Name | Place and date of birth | Date of appointment |
|---|---|---|
| Monica Auteri (*) | Carbonia (CA), July 4, 1970 | May 6, 2020 |
| Raffaele Cappiello (*) | Rome, September 17, 1968 | May 6, 2020 |
| Letizia Colucci | Foggia, August 6, 1962 | May 6, 2020 |
| Giovanni Gorno Tempini (*) | Brescia, February 18, 1962 | May 6, 2020 |
| Donatella Isaia (*) | Turin, December 21, 1974 | May 6, 2020 |
| Roberto Italia | Rome, July 5, 1966 | May 6, 2020 |
| Marcella Logli (*) | Milan, October 14, 1964 | December 21, 2021 |
| Luigi Pasquali | Rome, October 2, 1957 | May 6, 2020 |
| Elena Pisonero Ruiz (*) | Madrid (Spain), January 17, 1963 | May 6, 2020 |
| Giulio Ranzo | Rome, January 29, 1971 | May 6, 2020 |
| Donatella Sciuto (*) | Varese, January 5, 1962 | May 6, 2020 |
The members of Avio's Board of Directors in office on the Report approval date are listed in the table below.
(*) Independent Director pursuant to Article 148 of the CFA and Article 2 of the Corporate Governance Code.

It should be noted that:
The members of Avio's Board of Directors declared themselves in possession of the standing requirements set out for control members with regulation of the Italian Ministry of Justice pursuant to Article 148, paragraph 4, of the CFA.
A short curriculum vitae of each Director of Avio, detailing the relevant business management skills and experience, is provided below.
Born in Carbonia (CA) on July 4, 1970, she graduated magna cum laude in Political Sciences at LUISS Guido Carli. She obtained a Ph.D. in Economics Analysis, Mathematics and Statistics of Social Phenomena at "La Sapienza" University in Rome and a master's and a Ph. D. in Economics at the George Mason University of Fairfax, Virginia (USA), where she worked as a Graduate Research Assistant from 1998 to 2000. She was a researcher at ISAE (Institute for Studies and Economic Analysis) and obtained a research grant at the Economic Theory and Quantitative Methods Department of "La Sapienza" University. As a post-doc researcher, she has been part of the Political Sciences Department of Roma Tre University since 2007 and is currently Associate Professor of Finance Science.
She held various economic and statistical science teaching positions at both Italian and US universities, including Loyola University in Chicago, Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, the University of L'Aquila, the University of Tuscia, the University of Cagliari, "La Sapienza" University and LUISS Guido Carli. She has collaborated with various bodies and research institutes (including ISAE, the Institute for Finance and Local Economy (IFEL) and the Cittalia trust) as a scientific manager and/or as the author of research reports.
Between 2014 and May 2017, she was a Director of BusItalia - Sita Nord, a company of the Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane Group.
Born in Rome on September 17, 1968. He graduated in Law at the University La Sapienza of Rome with honours. Since 1992, he has been providing legal assistance and consultancy, including representation in court, on corporate, banking, financial and insolvency matters at the legal firm of Prof. Libonati in Rome, also as a partner of the legal firm "Libonati-Jaeger", until 2010 when he founded his own firm in Rome. He is a lecturer in Commercial Law at the School of Specialization for the Legal Profession of the University of Rome La Sapienza (2013/2019) and in Bankruptcy Law for the Master in Bankruptcy Curator at the University of Studies Niccolò Cusano (since 2018). He is a Member of the Financial Banking Arbitrator College of Rome (2015/2021). He has served and continues to serve as an officer in bankruptcy proceedings on behalf of the Bankruptcy Court, the Ministry for Economic Development and the Bank of Italy, including: Extraordinary Administrator of Stefanel S.p.A. in A.S., of Gruppo Cotorossi in A.S., of Gruppo Cogolo in A.S., of Gruppo Altiforni e Ferriere di Servola in A.S., of Cavirivest S.p.A. in A.S. and as Liquidator of Il Manifesto soc coop in lca and Judicial Commissioner of the Preventive Arrangement of Acqua Marcia RE S.p.A. He has held positions as an Independent Director in financial and listed companies. He currently holds the following positions: Independent Director, appointed by the minority

shareholders, of B&C Speakers S.p.A., listed on the Milan Stock Exchange; Independent Director, appointed by the minority shareholders, of AVIO S.p.A., listed on the Milan Stock Exchange; Independent Director, appointed by the minority shareholders, of MFE – MediaforEurope N.V. (formerly Mediaset S.p.A.), listed on the Milan Stock Exchange; Member of the Advisory Committee of Fondo Tessalo - Fondo di Investimento Alternativo Immobiliare di Tipo Chiuso Riservato - managed by DeA Capital Real Estate SGR S.p.A.
Born in Foggia on August 6, 1962, she has consolidated over 30 years of professional experience in the Defence and Space sectors of the Leonardo Group. Graduated in Law from the University Federico II of Naples, she has held positions of responsibility in various companies of the Group. Specifically, she was Head of Corporate Affairs of Alenia Difesa - a branch of Finmeccanica and in this role she was in charge of the establishment of the Joint Venture Alenia Marconi Systems, in which the Civil and Military Radar Systems and the Missile Systems of Alenia Difesa were merged. Subsequently, she assumed the position of Legal and Corporate Management of Alenia Marconi Systems. In the same period, she was entrusted with the responsibility of the due diligence process and of the contribution activities aimed at setting up the MBDA missile Joint Venture. Thereafter she became General Affairs Director of MBDA Italy with responsibility for Legal and Corporate Affairs, Safety and Licensing, Purchasing, Plant Management and Institutional Relations. In 2005, she joined Selex Sistemi Integrati as General Affairs Manager. She was then appointed Deputy General Manager and in the same period she also had responsibility for the project of rationalisation of electronic activities for defence of the Leonardo Group. In 2010, she assumed the role of Co-General Manager with responsibility for all of the Company's central support departments. In 2013 she was appointed Secretary General of Telespazio with responsibility for various central support functions. Currently she is General Manager of Med-Or Foundation, Chairperson of the Board of Directors of MBDA Italy, Board Member of Avio and Board Member of e-GEOS.
Giovanni Gorno Tempini has been Chairperson of the Board of Directors of Cassa Depositi e Prestiti S.p.A. since October 24, 2019, Chairperson of CDP Reti S.p.A. since November 28, 2019, Chairperson of CDP Equity S.p.A. since April 2, 2020 and Chairperson of Fondazione CDP since November 11, 2021. He chairs the Board of Directors of F.I.L.A. - Fabbrica Italiana Lapis ed Affini - and is a member of the Board of Directors of Avio S.p.A., both listed on the Star segment of the Italian Stock Exchange. On March 31, 2021, he joined the Board of Directors of TIM S.p.A. In April 2020, he was appointed as a member of the Committee of Experts on Economic and Social Matters (so-called Colao Committee established by Prime Ministerial Decree of April 10, 2020) at the Presidency of the Council of Ministers. The Committee, convened in order to elaborate the measures and initiatives necessary to face the COVID-19 epidemiological emergency, has drawn up the report "Initiatives for the relaunch of Italy 2020-2022". He is a member of the Scientific Committee of the Aristide Merloni Foundation, of the Board of Assonime, of the General Council of AIFI (Italian Association of Private Equity and Venture Capital) and a member of the Board of ISPI (Institute for International Policy Studies). He teaches at the MBA Program of the SDA Bocconi School of Management and at the L. Bocconi University in Milan, as an adjunct professor. He has also taught at the LIUC University of Castellanza (Varese) and at the Ca' Foscari University of Venice, where he is still an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics. Previously, he was Chairperson of Fondazione Fiera Milano and Board Member of LUISS University (July 2016-July 2019). He was on the Board of Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A. and Willis Towers Watson S.p.A. (April 2016-November 2019), and also on

the Board of FIRC - AIRC, Italian Cancer Research Foundation and Association (May 2016- April 2020).
He has been Industry Advisor for Italy for the Permira Private Equity Fund and Senior Advisor of Partners S.p.A. From May 2010 until July 2015, he served as Chief Executive Officer of Cassa Depositi e Prestiti S.p.A. and CDP Reti S.p.A. (December 2014-July 2015). He also served as Chairperson of Fondo Strategico Italiano (August 2011-July 2015). During his professional career he has also been General Manager and Board Member of the Mittel Group, Vice-Chairperson of Sorin S.p.A., Chairperson of Hopa S.p.A. and member of the Management Board of A2A S.p.A. Between 2001 and 2007, he held various roles within the Intesa San Paolo Group, in particular, from 2001 to 2005, the position of Head of Investment Banking and Structured Finance and Chief Executive Officer of Banca Caboto now Banca IMI) and, from 2006 to 2007, Head of Group Finance and Treasury. Over the years he has served as Chairperson of the "Technical Commission for Finance" of ABI-Associazione Bancaria Italiana and as Director of Borsa Italiana S.p.A., MTS- European Bond Exchange, EuroMTS, ISDA-International Swaps and Derivatives Association and AIFI-Associazione Italiana Private Equity and Venture Capital. He started his career in JP Morgan in 1987 in the Global Markets sector, holding various management positions in Milan and London, with responsibilities in Italy and EMEA. Giovanni Gorno Tempini graduated in Economics and Business at Luigi Bocconi University in Milan in 1987. On April 21, 2021, he was awarded the honour of Grand Officer of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic.
Born in Turin on December 21, 1974. Donatella Isaia has a degree in Education Sciences; she has been a member of the Organising Committee for the XX Olympic Winter Games in Turin. She developed most of her professional experience in Vodafone where she held roles of increasing responsibility within the Human Resources function. She has operated in multiple locations including the UK, India, Romania, Egypt and Hungary, among others; she has been part of the Ghana telecom integration and start-up operations in Qatar. From 2015 to 2019, she was HR & Organisation Director at Vodafone Italia leading the HR strategic agenda and digital transformation. Since January 2021, she has been a member of the TeamSystem Group leadership team in the role of Chief People and Culture Officer.
Donatella is a member of the Board of Directors of the Vodafone Italia Foundation and joined the Board of AVIO S.p.A. in 2020.
Born in Rome on July 5, 1966, Roberto Italia graduated in Economics and Commerce magna cum laude from the LUISS, Rome in 1990 and began working with the STET/Telecom Italia group. After achieving an MBA With Distinction in 1994 from INSEAD, Fontainebleau, he began working in the alternative equity sector, firstly with Warburg Pincus, thereafter with Henderson Private Capital and following that with the European group Cinven. After founding in 2013 Red Black Capital and Space Holding, he promotes and executes growth capital investments in private and listed companies in Continental Europe. He has been the Chief Executive Officer of the Verlinvest Group since 2020. He is a Director at many Italian and overseas companies.

Born in Milan in 1964, one of the first women to graduate in Computer Science (1989) at the University of Milan, she has always been attracted by technological innovation. She began her career at Apple Computer S.p.A., covering various roles in marketing, communication, new business and development of new services, specializing in digital media, Internet technologies and ICT.
She then joined Olivetti Telemedia, where in 1994 she launched the first ISP in Italy, "Italia Online".
She continued in the TELECOMITALIA Group as Dir. Mktg "TIN.it", launching in 1997 the leading national ISP, and the first Virgilio portal.
During her 20 years with the Group, she has held numerous positions, both in the Business field - Dir. Directory System, Dir. Mktg Sanità, Dir. Mktg &Comm. Top Client&Public Sector - and in the Institutional field as EVP - Dir. Institutional Communication and External Relations, Director of the Corporate Shared Value Function (ex CSR) and General Manager of Fondazione TIM.
From 2018 to 2020 she was Chief Digital Officer at Gruppo San Donato, a leader in Italy in the healthcare market.
She has held numerous positions as a member of the councils of Associations and Foundations such as: member of the Council of ValoreD, member of the Council of Anima, member of the National Council of WWF, member of the Board of Directors of the Olivetti Historical Archives Association, member of the Council of the Mangini Bonomi Museum Foundation.
From 2017 to 2021, she served as an Independent Director at Isagro S.p.A.
Born in Rome in 1957, he graduated in Electronic Engineering from "La Sapienza" University in Rome in 1982 and thereafter attended Business Administration and Finance courses at the IRI Management School and SDA- Bocconi. In 1983, he served in the Italian Army as Engineer Corps Officer responsible for the testing of Defence telecommunications systems, as part of his national military service. In 1984, he joined Selenia as System Engineer for air traffic control systems and networks, managing projects in Europe, Australia and the United States, including the refurbishment and expansion of the network in Germany. In 1995, he joined STET/Telecom Italia, in the international strategy and development area, with responsibility for strategic planning projects for telecommunications services. During this period, he was involved in strategic alliance projects with international telecommunications operators (AT&T, DT). In 2000, he was appointed Business Development Director of Atlanet, a Telefonica de Espaíia company specialised in addedvalue services for companies and, in 2002, he was appointed Director of the Telecommunications Division of Alenia Spazio (currently Thales Alenia Space Italia), with development, marketing and management responsibilities for satellite telecommunication system programmes for Defence and Security, commercial applications and broadband development. In 2005, he was appointed General Manager of Telespazio, becoming its Chief Executive Officer from February 2013. In June 2008, he was appointed Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer of Thales Alenia Space Italia and became Deputy CEO of Thales Alenia Space. He is a member of the Board of Directors of Avio S.p.A. and Thales Alenia Space, as well as a member of the federation of Italian Aerospace, Defence and Security

Companies (AIAD). He is the Chairperson of the Board of Directors of Thales Alenia Space Italia S.p.A. and Vice-Chairperson of the Eurospace Council (International Association of the European Aerospace Industry).
Born in Madrid on January 17, 1963. An economist and executive with 35 years of international experience, providing a broad, strategic and transformative vision, she believes in people-centered leadership. Generating innovative and integrative solutions, communicating them appropriately and, of course, technology are her main attributes and skillsets. She believes in lifelong learning, through experience in various industries and positions, good conversations and executive education in the most prestigious international business schools. In 2018, she founded Relathia, a platform to share ideas and knowledge to jointly address the challenges of our society in the 21st century, and Taldig, a company that provides strategic consulting to leaders eager to transform their organizations. Today, she is a Board member as an Independent Director in Solaria, a Spanish renewable energy company, IBEX35 listed, being its Audit Com. Chairperson; in Avio, a leading Italian space company, Chairperson of the Sustainability Committee; and in Bruegel, the Brussels-based economic think tank. She has always had a voluntary participation in different advisory committees (Unicef Spain, Real Instituto Elcano) and collaborates regularly with business schools (INSEAD, ESADE, EOI). Throughout her professional career, she has taken on responsibilities in different areas, both in the private sector (Chairperson of Hispasat, partner of KMPG) and in the Spanish public sector (Secretary of State for Commerce, Tourism and Small and Medium Enterprises, Member of the National Parliament and Ambassador to the OECD in Paris).
Born in Rome on January 29, 1971, he graduated in Civil Engineering from the La Sapienza University of Rome in 1995, while in 2000 completing a joint Research Doctorate with the University of California San Diego (USA), at which he was a Graduate Research Assistant between 1996 and

Donatella Sciuto is Vice-Rector of the Milan Polytechnic. She is the Ordinary Professor of Processing Systems at the Electronics, Information and Bioengineering Department.
She gained a degree in Electronic Engineering from Milan Polytechnic and a Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Colorado, Boulder. She has received a master's in Business and Administration (CEGA) from the Business Management School of Bocconi University.
She was appointed IEEE Fellow for her scientific contribution in "embedded systems design".
Since 2013, she has been a member of the Superior Council of the Bank of Italy and Chairperson of the Supervisory Council of the Milan Branch. Since 2017, she has been an independent member of the Board of Directors of AVIO S.p.A and Raiway S.p.A. and since 2021 of Fila SpA.
She has been a member of the Supervisory Board of the Human Technopole Foundation since 2018 and on the Board of the Italian Technological Institute since 2022.
She was Chair of the Council on Electronic Design Automation of IEEE (the largest technological professional organisation in the world) from 2011 to 2013. She was named IBM Women Leaders in AI in 2021 and Inspiring Fifty Italy in 2018.

| Board of Directors | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Office | Members | Year of birth |
Date first appointment (*) |
In office from |
In office until |
Slate (presenters) (**) |
Slate (BoD/m) (***) |
Exec. | Non Exec. |
Ind. Code |
Ind. CFA |
No. other offices (****) |
Participation (*) |
| Chairperson | Roberto Italia |
1966 | 1.12.2016 | B.o.D. 10.04.2017 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
B.o.D. | B.o.D. | X | 7 | 7/7 | |||
| Chief Executive Officer |
Giulio Ranzo |
1971 | 1.12.2016 | B.o.D. 10.04.2017 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
B.o.D. | B.o.D. | X | 3 | 7/7 | |||
| Director | Monica Auteri |
1970 | 1.12.2016 | B.o.D. 10.04.2017 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
B.o.D. | B.o.D. | X | X | - | 7/7 | ||
| Director | Raffaele Cappiello |
1968 | 6.5.2020 | B.o.D. 6.05.2020 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
Shareholders | m | X | X | 3 | 7/7 | ||
| Director | Letizia Colucci |
1962 | 6.05.2020 | B.o.D. 6.05.2020 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
B.o.D. | B.o.D. | X | 3 | 7/7 | |||
| Director | Giovanni Gorno Tempini |
1962 | 1.12.2016 | B.o.D. 10.04.2017 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
B.o.D. | B.o.D. | X | X | 6 | 6/7 | ||
| Director | Donatella Isaia |
1974 | 6.05.2020 | B.o.D. 6.05.2020 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
Shareholders | m | X | X | 2 | 7/7 | ||
| Director | Marcella Logli |
1964 | 21.12.2021 | B.o.D. 21.12.2021 |
Next Shareholders' |
X | X | 0 | 0/7 |

| ** | Meeting (April 28, 2022) |
||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Director | Luigi Pasquali |
1957 | 1.12.2016 | B.o.D. 10.04.2017 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
B.o.D. | B.o.D. | X | 6 | 7/7 | |||
| Director | Elena Pisonero Ruiz |
1963 | 6.05.2020 | B.o.D. 6.05.2020 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
B.o.D. | B.o.D. | X | X | 2 | 7/7 | ||
| Director | Donatella Sciuto |
1962 | 1.12.2016 | B.o.D. 10.04.2017 |
Approv. 2022 Accounts |
B.o.D. | B.o.D. | X | X | 4 | 6/7 | ||
| --------------------------------DIRECTORS LEAVING OFFICE DURING THE YEAR -------------------------------- | |||||||||||||
| Director | Stefano Pareglio |
1963 | 06/05/2020 | B.o.D. 06/05/2020 |
August 23, 2021 |
B.o.D. | m | X | X | 1 | 4/7 |
Quorum required for the presentation of slates by minority shareholders for the election of one or more members (as per Article 147ter CFA): 4.5%
The following symbols must be indicated in the "Office" column:
• This symbol indicates the Director in charge of the Internal Control and Risk Management System.
○ This symbol indicates the Lead Independent Director (LID).
* The first appointment of each Director refers to the date on which the Director was appointed for the first time to the Board of the Issuer.
(**) This column indicates whether the slate from which each Director is selected was presented by shareholders (indicating "Shareholders") or by the BoD (indicating "BoD").
(***) This column indicates whether the slate from which each Director is selected derives from the "BoD slate" (indicating "BoD slate"), or the "minority" slate (indicating "m").
(****) This column indicates the number of offices a Director or Statutory Auditor holds in other listed companies or large enterprises. The Corporate Governance Report indicates all offices held.
(*****) This column indicates the attendance of the Director in relation to the number of BoD meetings (indicates the number attended compared to the total they could have attended; e.g. 6/8; 8/8 etc.).
(******) Director co-opted by the Board of Directors


| Control and Risks Committee |
Appointments and Remuneration Committee |
Planning and Scenarios Committee |
Sustainability Committee |
||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Office/Category | Members | (*) | (**) | (*) | (**) | (*) | (**) | (*) | (**) |
| The Chairperson of the BoD |
Roberto Italia |
2/2 | M | 8/8 | M | ||||
| E.D. | Giulio Ranzo |
2/2 | M | ||||||
| Independent Director |
Monica Auteri |
8/8 | M | ||||||
| Independent Director |
Raffaele Cappiello |
7/7 | M | ||||||
| Director | Letizia Colucci |
6/7 | M | ||||||
| Independent Director |
Giovanni Gorno Tempini |
7/8 | P | 2/2 | M | ||||
| Independent Director |
Donatella Isaia |
8/8 | M | ||||||
| Independent Director |
Marcella Logli |
- | M | ||||||
| Director | Luigi Pasquali |
2/2 | M | ||||||
| Independent Director |
Elena Pisonero Ruiz |
8/8 | P | ||||||
| Independent Director |
Donatella Sciuto |
7/7 | P |
B.o.D.

| --------------------------------DIRECTORS LEAVING OFFICE DURING THE YEAR --------------------- ----------- |
|||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Independent Stefano 6/8 M Director Pareglio |
|||||||||
| the year: | Number of meetings held in 7 8 2 8 |
||||||||
| NOTES | () This column indicates the percentage of attendance of the Director in relation to the Committee meetings (indicates the number of meetings attended compared to the amount they could have attended; e.g. 6/8; 8/8 etc.). (*) This column indicates the position of the Director on the Committee: "C": Chairperson; "M": member. |

National and European Law ensure and promote diversity in age, gender and nationality, and expertise among the members of company administrative boards.
Specifically, Directive 2014/95/EU enacting amendments to Directive 2013/34/EU as regards the communication of non-financial information and information on diversity, was implemented in Italy through Legislative Decree No. 254 of December 30, 2016. The Directive envisaged that the Corporate Governance and Ownership Structure Report referred to in Article 123-bis of the CFA provides information concerning the diversity policies adopted in accordance with the comply or explain principle.
In addition, pursuant to Article 147-ter, paragraph 1-ter of the CFA (introduced by Law No. 120 of July 12, 2011 and recently amended with Law No. 160 of December 27, 2019), the by-laws of listed companies must provide that, for six consecutive mandates, Directors are elected on the basis of a criterion which ensures gender balance.
Consequently, in accordance with the provisions of Principle VII of the Corporate Governance Code, Avio has applied diversity criteria, including gender criteria, to the composition of the Board of Directors, in line with the priority objective of ensuring sufficient skills and professionalism in its members.
Pursuant to Article 11.6 of the Avio By-Laws and Recommendation 8, Article 2 of the Corporate Governance Code, slates containing 3 (three) or more candidates may not be composed of candidates only from the same gender (male or female); these slates should include a number of candidates of the under-represented gender to guarantee the composition of the Board of Directors in accordance with legal and regulatory provisions in relation to gender equality (male and female), provided that should the application of the gender equality quota not result in a full number, this should be rounded up to the next unit.
Recommendation 22 of the Corporate Governance Code recommends that a self-assessment of the functioning of the Board and its Committees be conducted at least every three years in preparation for the renewal of the Board, taking into account the following general principles regarding diversity with respect to its composition: (i) age, length of service and international experience; (ii) gender parity; (iii) diversity of professional and managerial skills and recommends, in large companies other than those with concentrated ownership that the selfassessment be conducted annually. Although Avio does not fall into the category of large companies, the self-assessment is conducted on an annual basis.
It should also be noted that, in order to implement the provisions of applicable law, the Board of Directors of March 15, 2018, approved the "Diversity Policies". These Policies were subsequently updated with Board of Directors' motion in the meetings of March 14, 2019, February 28, 2020, March 19, 2021 and latterly on March 14, 2022.

The Policies are targeted at (i) guaranteeing a better knowledge of the needs and requests of stakeholders; (ii) reducing the risk of homologation of the opinions of the members of the corporate boards; (iii) making the decision-making process more effective and thorough; (iv) enriching the discussion within the corporate boards thanks to expertise, of a general strategic or specific technical nature, formed outside Avio; (v) nurturing dialogue, a distinctive prerequisite for a well-considered and conscious decision; (vi) allowing the members of the corporate boards to constructively question the decisions of management as well as (vii) encouraging turnover within the corporate boards.
In any case it should be noted that Avio closely focuses on the issues of diversity and inclusion irrespective of that set out in the primary regulation.
Copies of the Codes are available on the website www.avio.com, "Corporate Governance" section.
At the Report approval date, the Board of Directors has not defined the criteria relating to the maximum number of offices of administration and control in other companies that may be considered compatible with the proper carrying out of their duties as directors of Avio. In view of the renewal of the corporate boards, on February 28, 2020 the Board of Directors, after hearing the opinion of the Appointments and Remuneration Committee and taking into account the results of its self-assessment, approved a guidance opinion on the size and composition of the Board, also establishing the limit to the accumulation of offices, in line with the provisions of the Corporate Governance Code, which recommends that candidates for the office of Director only accept such office if they deem they can devote the necessary time to the diligent performance of their duties, also taking into account the commitment related to their professional and working activities, the number of offices held in other companies listed on regulated markets (including foreign markets), in financial, banking or insurance companies or large companies. Pursuant to Recommendation 15 of the Corporate Governance Code, it is only recommended for large companies (which does not include Avio) that the Board of Directors expresses its opinion on the maximum number of offices on the Boards of Directors or Boards of Statutory Auditors in other listed or large companies that may be considered compatible with the effective performance of the office of Director of the Company, taking into account the commitment deriving from the role held.
The Board's self-assessment process for 2021 confirmed the positive assessment in terms of the functioning of the Board and its Committee, also with regards to this aspect.
The company intends to comply with the recommendations contained in Principle XII of the Corporate Governance Code, relating to the obligation of the members of the Board of Directors to accept the office of Director only when they believe they can dedicate the necessary time to diligently carry out their duties, also taking into account their work and professional commitments and offices held in financial, banking and insurance companies or companies of significant size listed on regulated markets (including abroad).

If Directors believe that they cannot devote the necessary time to the diligent performance of their duties, they shall promptly inform the Board of Directors, which shall evaluate the situation in light of the specific case and/or the Company's interest. As a result of these assessments, the Board of Directors calls upon the Director to take the ensuing decisions, subject to the power of this Board to agree to any justified waivers.
In relation to the offices held by the Directors of the Issuer at the Report approval date in financial, banking and insurance companies or of significant size listed on regulated markets (including abroad), other than the Issuer, reference should be made to the table below.
| Name | Company | Office in the Company | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Luigi Pasquali | Telespazio S.p.A. | Chief Executive Officer | In office |
| Thales Alenia Space S.a.s. | Member of the Supervisory Board |
In office | |
| Thales Alenia Space Italia S.p.A. | Chairperson | In office | |
| AIAD (the Italian Federation for Aerospace, Defence and Security) |
Director | In office | |
| ESOA (International Ass.) | Board Member | In office | |
| Eurospace (International Ass.) | Vice Chairman of Council | In office | |
| Monica Auteri | - | - | - |
| Giulio Ranzo | Europropulsion S.A. (*) | Director | In office |
| Regulus S.A. (*) | Director | In office | |
| Arianespace S.A | Director | In office | |
| Arianespace Participation S.A | Permanent Representative of the Director |
In office | |
| Roberto Italia | Billy's Sp. Zoo. | Director | In office |
| Lastminute.com Group B.V. | Director | In office | |
| Red Black Capital S.A. | Director | In office | |
| Red Black Alternative Investment S.A. |
Director | In office | |
| Space Holding S.r.l. | Director | In office | |
| Verlinvest S.A. | Chief Executive Officer | In office | |
| Sula Vineyards Limited | Director | In office | |
| Giovanni Gorno Tempini | Cassa Depositi e Prestiti S.p.A. | Chairperson of the Board of Directors |
In office |

| CDP Reti S.p.A. | Chairperson of the Board of Directors |
In office | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CDP Equity S.p.A. | Chairperson of the Board of Directors |
In office | |
| F.I.L.A. - Fabbrica Italiana Lapis ed Affini S.P.A. |
Chairperson of the Board of Directors |
In office | |
| TIM S.p.A. | Member of the Board of Directors |
In office | |
| AIRC/FIRC (Italian Cancer Research Institute) |
Director | In office | |
| Donatella Sciuto | Bank of Italy | Member of the Superior Council | In office |
| Rayway S.p.A. | Independent Director | In office | |
| Fila S.p.A. | Non-Executive Director | In office | |
| Autostrade Tech S.p.A. | Member of the Board of Directors |
In office | |
| Letizia Colucci | MBDA Italy | Chairperson of the Board of Directors |
In office |
| Fondazione Med-Or | General Manager | In office | |
| e-GEOS | Member of the Board of Directors |
In office | |
| Elena Pisonero | Solaria | Member of the Board of Directors |
In office |
| Bruegel | Member of the Board of Directors |
||
| In office | |||
| Marcella Logli | Fondazione Emilio Carlo Mangini | Member of the Board of Directors |
In office |
| Raffaele Cappiello | B&C Speakers S.p.A. | Independent Director | In office |
| MFE MediaForEurope NV (formerly Mediaset S.p.A.) |
Independent Director | In office | |
| Fondo Tessalo | Member of the Executive Committee |
In office | |
| Donatella Isaia | Fondazione Vodafone Italia | Member of the Board of Directors |
In office |

The Directors received an induction that enabled them to acquire adequate knowledge of the sector in which the Issuer operates, of corporate dynamics, of the principles of correct risk management, as well as of the regulatory and governance reference framework, in compliance with Recommendation 12(d) at Article 3 of the Corporate Governance Code.
As per Article 13 of the By-Laws, the Board of Directors shall meet either at the Company's registered office or at another location, as long as in Italy.
The Board of Directors is called by the Chairperson or, in his/her absence, by the Vice-Chairperson if appointed, or whenever the Chief Executive Officer submits a relevant written request, detailing the issues on the agenda, with notice to be sent - by registered letter, telegram, fax or e-mail with acknowledgement of receipt - to the domicile of each Director and Statutory Auditor at least 5 (five) days before the date set for the meeting; in the event of urgency, the Board of Directors can be called on the date prior to that set for the meeting. The meetings of the Board of Directors and its motions are valid, even without formal calling, where all the Directors and Statutory Auditors in office are present. If the absence of the Chairperson, the meeting shall be chaired by the eldest Vice-Chairperson, if appointed, or, in his/her absence, by the eldest Chief Executive Officer, where appointed or, in his/her absence, by the Director appointed by the majority of attendees.
Meetings of the Board of Directors may also be held by audio or video conference, provided that: (i) the Chairperson and the Secretary, if appointed, are present in the same location, who will write and sign the minutes, verifying that the meeting was held in that location; (ii) the Chairperson of the meeting is able to verify the identity of the participants, direct the course of the meeting and witness and announce the results of the vote; (iii) that the person taking the minutes is able to adequately observe the events of the meeting that is the subject of the minutes; and (iv) that participants are able to follow the discussion and the simultaneous voting on the matters on the agenda, as well as view, receive or transmit documents.
In addition to the powers expressly reserved to the Board of Directors pursuant to the law and the By-Laws, the regulation applicable on the Report approval date provides that the Board of Directors shall:



The Board of Directors carries out the aforementioned tasks, as well as the other tasks assigned by the Corporate Governance Code, by making use - where envisaged by the Corporate Governance Code and/or by the respective organisational regulations - of the support of the committees set up.
In implementation of the above and at the Reporting date, the Board of Directors has, inter alia:
− positively assessed the suitability of the organisational, administrative and general accounting structure of the Company and of the subsidiaries with strategic importance (which have been identified by principally referring to dimensional criteria (turnover) or by considering the particularity of the market where the subsidiary operates, in Spacelab S.p.A. (formerly ELV S.p.A.), Regulus sa, Secosvim S.r.l. and Avio Guyane Société par actions simplifiée à associé unique, with particular reference to the internal control and risk management system; this assessment was carried out on the basis of information and

evidence gathered with the support of the preliminary activity performed by the Control and Risks Committee and with the contribution of the Company's management and the Internal Audit Manager;

In 2021, the Board of Directors met 7 times, with meetings lasting an average of approximately 2 hours 30 minutes, on the following dates: January 27, 2021, March 19, 2021, May 11, 2021, July 22, 2021, September 10, 2021, November 8, 2021 and December 21, 2021 with the participation of approximately 99% of the Directors, on average. As regards the current financial year, 4 meetings are scheduled. The tables at the end of Section 4.2.1 show each Director's attendance at meetings of the Board and its Committees held from January 1, 2021 through December 31, 2021.
The timeliness and completeness of pre-meeting information is ensured by the Chairperson through the distribution to Directors of documentation relating to items placed on the agenda in the days immediately prior to the date scheduled for the Board meeting and, in particular, generally at the same time as the call notice in accordance with the Board of Directors' Regulations. This deadline of sending documents 3 days before the meeting, as set out in the Regulations of the Board of Directors, has always been respected (in FY 2021, accounting documents for the period were sent with an average notice of 3 days). On some occasions, for reasons of confidentiality and urgency, it was only possible to provide information on some items on the agenda during the Board meeting itself. On these occasions, the items were still discussed preliminarily within the spheres of responsibility of the committees established by the Board and in any case, the Chairperson ensured that adequate insights were provided during the Board sessions. The Board's self-assessment process for the financial year 2021 has confirmed the term's substantial appropriateness.

In order to provide appropriate insights on the items on the agenda, participants at Board meetings during 2021 included, among others: the Chief Financial Officer, the General Counsel, the Internal Audit Manager, the Communications and External Relations Manager, the Chairperson of the Supervisory Board as well as those Departments identified in the minutes of the Board's meetings with reference to specific items on the agenda.
On March 14, 2022, the Board concluded the periodic self-assessment process on the adequacy of the Board and that of its Committees in terms of composition and functioning. The selfassessment process was carried out without the assistance of consulting firms.
In order to comply with the provisions of Recommendations 21 and 22 of Article 4 of the Corporate Governance Code, the Board of Directors made a positive assessment on the activities carried out in 2021, on the size, composition and functioning of the Board and its Committees, based on the results of the self-assessment questionnaires sent to the Directors.
In addition to analysing the activities of the Board of Directors and of its Committees undertaken during the year 2021, the self-assessment also provided deeper insight into potential areas for improvement.
Among the significant aspects that emerged from the board evaluation, the positive picture regarding the qualitative-quantitative profile of the Board of Directors and the dynamics that take place within it, both in relations with Management and with the Board of Statutory Auditors, was substantially confirmed. A review of the self-assessment questionnaires also shows that the Board of Directors, as a whole, contributes to the Company's strategy. In addition, the expansion of the number of members of the Board of Directors from 9 to 11 has allowed for a more appropriate distribution with the establishment of the Sustainability Committee and the integration of specific expertise on the subject.
It should be noted that Recommendation 22 of the Corporate Governance Code recommends that the self-assessment be conducted at least every three years in view of the renewal of the Board of Directors and recommends, in large companies other than those with concentrated ownership that the self-assessment be conducted annually. Although Avio does not fall into the category of large companies, the self-assessment is conducted on an annual basis.

As per Article 12.2 of the By-Laws, the Board may delegate part of its powers to an Executive Committee, determining the limits of the powers of attorney as well as the number of the members and the operating methods, appointing one or more Chief Executive Officers and granting relevant powers to them, without prejudice to the fact that the delegated bodies shall report to the Board of Directors and the Board of Statutory Auditors on a quarterly basis. Moreover, the Board of Directors may also establish one or more committees with advisory, investigating, proposing or control functions, vested with the powers set out by the Board of Directors. In these cases, the Board of Directors also sets out the composition and the operating methods of the committees established. The Board of Directors may also appoint General Managers, defining their powers and granting power of attorney to third parties for certain acts or categories of acts.
As per Article 12.3 of the By-Laws and on the favourable opinion of the Strategic Activities Committee, the Board of Directors can appoint an Executive responsible for strategic activities. The company's Chief Executive Officer, after consultation with the Appointments and Remuneration Committee, will be responsible for the appointment and revocation of Executives who, according to the Company's organisational structure, report directly to the Chief Executive Officer and for Directors with Executive powers in the Company's subsidiaries.
As per Article 12.4 of the By-Laws, the Chairperson of the Board of Directors and the Vice Chair/s, if appointed, jointly and severally represent the Company before third parties and in legal proceedings (with the power to appoint lawyers and legal representatives in disputes). The Company may also be represented by Directors who have been granted powers by the Board of Directors, as well as by General Managers, proxies and lawyers within the limits of the powers granted to them.
On May 7, 2020, the Board approved the appointment of Mr. Giulio Ranzo as Chief Executive Officer of the Issuer and granted him the powers described below.
The Chief Executive Officer is the main party responsible for the management of the Issuer.
The Chief Executive Officer is granted the following system of powers and proxies, to be exercised severally, without prejudice to the limitations provided for by the Law, the By-Laws and this resolution:

promote and support legal actions in the name of the Company, both as the plaintiff or the defendant in any judicial, civil, criminal, administrative, tax or arbitral court and at any stage, state and degree of judgment and, therefore, also before the higher courts and any other or special judiciary, as well as in judgments of revocation and third-party opposition, appeal, foreclosure and disposal at any stage and degree of execution, to file civil actions in criminal proceedings in which the Company is the injured party, to appoint and revoke lawyers and defence lawyers including experts; to settle disputes and appoint arbitrators, including out-of-court mediators;




amount of Euro 20 million for each individual act, and up to the amount of Euro 20 million in relation to a series of acts carried out under the same transaction;

The Chief Executive Officer, by virtue of his office, is vested with the broadest powers for the protection of health and safety at the workplace (Legislative Decree No. 81/2008), the environment, privacy protection and the processing of personal data (Legislative Decree No. 196/2003), permits, approvals, authorisations, concessions, licences and the like, necessary for the exercise of company activities and, therefore, to deal with the implementation of the resolutions adopted by the Board of Directors on the abovementioned matters, including by appointing special or general attorneys-in-fact.
He/she is vested with the title of "Employer" and "Principal" pursuant to and in accordance with the Consolidated Law on Safety (Legislative Decree No. 81/2008), with full and effective powers, including:

The Chief Executive Officer is also assigned the following powers and responsibilities:
with the express power to reconcile and settle, and with the power to delegate and appoint attorneys-in-fact and representatives and, moreover, to identify as part of the "Plant Operators" Organisation as per Legislative Decree No. 105/2015 and subsequent amendments and additions, and to confer upon them all the necessary and suitable powers, including the power of expenditure.
The powers attributed to the Chief Executive Officer, in possession of the necessary legal requirements, also encompass the Company's representation in all the obligations envisaged by Law No. 185 of July 9, 1990 and subsequent amendments and additions, which regulates the import, export and transit of military equipment, and the implementing regulation referred to in Ministerial Decree No. 19 of January 7, 2013 including, inter alia, but not limited to, the right to sign the following documents:
The abovementioned powers and rights, all in relation to Law No. 185 of July 9, 1990 and its implementing regulation are solely and exclusively attributed to the Chief Executive Officer, with the right to sub-delegate – through a notarial power of attorney - solely to persons residing in Italy and who are in possession of the necessary legal requirements.
The following matters do not fall within the powers as conferred above to the Chief Executive Officer:

equipment and (ii) intangible fixed assets, including costs for participation in international collaboration programmes;
The Chief Executive Officer of Avio is not in an interlocking directorate situation.
On May 7, 2020, the Board appointed Mr. Roberto Italia as the Chairperson of Avio's Board of Directors.
The Chairperson of Avio's Board of Directors is not a controlling shareholder of the Issuer.
As per Article 12.2 of the By-Laws, the Board may delegate part of its powers to an Executive Committee, determining the limits of the powers of attorney as well as the number of the members and the operating methods, appointing one or more Chief Executive Officers and granting relevant powers to them, without prejudice to the fact that the delegated bodies shall report to the Board of Directors and the Board of Statutory Auditors on a quarterly basis.
As per Article 2389, paragraph 1 of the Civil Code, the remuneration of the Executive Committee members is to be decided by the Shareholders' Meeting.
At the Report approval date, an Executive Committee had not been established.

The Chief Executive Officer reported to the Board at each board meeting, on the activities carried out in accordance with the powers conferred by the Board. In particular, the Chief Executive Officer at each Board meeting and regardless of the time period since the last meeting, briefed upon the activities carried out and the main operations executed by the Company and its subsidiaries, even where not requiring prior approval by the Board of Directors.
At the Report approval date, there were no Executive Directors other than the Chief Executive Officer.
None of the Non-Executive Directors therefore i) hold the office of Chief Executive Officer or Executive Chairperson in a strategic subsidiary of the Issuer or ii) hold management positions at the Issuer, in a strategic subsidiary or in the parent company.
On May 6, 2020, the Shareholders' Meeting of Avio S.p.A appointed 7 (seven) Directors considered independent as per Article 148, paragraph 3 of the CFA, in addition to recommendation 7 of the Corporate Governance Code.
In accordance with this criterion, on May 7, 2020, as announced to the market on the same date, the Board assessed the independence as per Article 148, paragraph 3 of the CFA and Article 2 of the Corporate Governance Code of the non-Executive members of the Board of Directors.
Subsequently, this check was made, on an annual basis, on March 14, 2022.
The Board of Statutory Auditors confirmed the correct application of the assessment criteria and procedures adopted by the Board to evaluate the independence of its members.
On May 6, 2020, the Shareholder's Meeting appointed the new Board of Directors of the parent company Avio S.p.A., which in turn, on May 7, 2020, decided upon the internal appointments and the granting of the powers required to complete company operations.
Avio's Independent Directors met in the absence of the other Directors on March 14, 2022, to consider the following matters:

On August 23, 2021, the Non-Executive and Independent Director and member of Avio's Sustainability Committee, Mr. Stefano Pareglio, resigned due to incompatibilities relating to new professional commitments. On December 21, 2021, the Board of Directors appointed Ms. Marcella Logli as a Non-Executive and Independent Director and member of the Sustainability Committee, replacing Mr. Stefano Pareglio.
At the Report approval date, the Board did not appoint any Independent Director as Lead Independent Director pursuant to Recommendation 14 of the Code, given that the circumstances that require his/her appointment pursuant to the Corporate Governance Code did not apply.
The Company has adopted the following policies: (i) Inside Information Processing Policy, approved by the Board of Directors on March 3, 2022; and (ii) Internal Dealing Policy, as latterly updated by the Board of Directors' motion on September 13, 2017.
Copies of both codes are available on the website www.avio.com, "Corporate Governance" section.
The Inside Information Processing Policy governs, in compliance with the Regulation (EC) No. 596/2014 of the European Parliament and Council of April 16, 2014 concerning market abuse and the relative delegative and Executive regulations (the MAR Regulation): (i) the management and handling of inside information, as well as the procedures to be complied with, both inside and outside the Company, in order to disclose the aforementioned information; and (ii) the creation and management of the list of individuals who, due to their work or processional activities or duties performed, have access to inside information on an occasional or regular basis ("Insider Register").
Moreover, this incorporates certain Consob recommendations concerning the processing of inside information contained in the Guidelines published by Consob on October 13, 2018 and Legislative Decree No. 10/2018 introduced by Legislative Decree No. 107 of August 10, 2018, enacting the "National Regulation Adjustment Rules to the MAR Regulation provisions".
The Internal Dealing Policy regulates disclosure obligations in respect of Consob, the Issuer and the public, and the rules of conduct connected to the execution of transactions involving financial instruments issued by the Issuer, by persons who exercise administrative, control or management functions at the Issuer and by persons closely connected to them (as defined by Article 19 of the MAR Regulation).
The essential elements of the Inside Information Processing Policy and the internal dealing code of conduct, applicable at the Report's date of approval, are briefly illustrated below.

Inside Information, as per Article 7, paragraph 1, letter a) of the MAR Regulation, is taken to mean information: (i) of a precise nature, namely that (a) such refers to a set of circumstances which exists or may reasonably be expected to come into existence or an event which has occurred or may reasonably be expected to occur, and (b) is specific enough to enable conclusions to be drawn on the possible effect of the set of circumstances or event referred to in subparagraph (a) on the prices of the financial instruments issued by the Company (as identified by the applicable regulation);(ii) that has not been made public; (iii) that directly or indirectly concerns the Issuer or the companies directly or indirectly controlled by the Issuer or the Financial Instruments of the Issuer; and (iv) that, if made public, may have a significant effect on the prices of the Financial Instruments of the Issuer or that a reasonable investor would use as one of the elements on which to base investment decisions.
In this regard, in the case of an extensive process undertaken to achieve, or which results in, a particular circumstance or a particular event, this future circumstance or future event, in addition to the interim steps taken as part of the process linked to the achievement or the occurrence of the circumstance or future event, may be considered as information of a precise nature.
Those required to comply with the procedures outlined in the Inside Information Processing Policy are: (i) the members of the administrative and control bodies, in addition to employees of the Company and the subsidiaries (ii) any natural or legal persons who, because of their work or professional activities or duties, have access on a regular or occasional basis to significant and/or inside information concerning the Company and its subsidiaries.
The Policy's addressees - as identified above - must maintain the complete confidentiality of the significant and/or inside information of which they are aware. All inside information must be processed with the necessary care to ensure that its circulation within the Company does not threaten its confidential nature, unless such is announced to the market according to the means established by the Policy and the applicable regulation. The same obligation applies to the processing of significant information, until it is disclosed to the public according to the manner prescribed by the Policy and the applicable procedure (as becoming inside information or as considered by the competent bodies of the Company as necessary or appropriate), or until it no longer may be considered as significant. The addresses must also promptly inform the competent functions with regards to information within their respective scope concerning any act, event or omission which may constitute a violation of the Policy.

Subject to Article 184 and subsequent of the CFA, in addition to Articles 14 and 15 of the MAR Regulation, the addressees may not: (a) acquire, sell or otherwise execute operations on Financial Instruments issued by the Company (including the cancellation of amendment of orders where the order has been sent before the interested party came into possession of Inside Information), on their own behalf or on behalf of third parties, directly or indirectly, utilizing Inside Information; (b) advise or induce others, on the basis of Inside Information, to carry out any operations at point (a); (c) communicate to third parties Inside Information outside of the normal exercise of their duties, profession, function or office; in particular it is absolutely prohibited to provide interviews to press organisations or declarations in general which contain inside information concerning the Company and its subsidiaries, not yet communicated to the market as per the Policy. The communication to third parties of advice or inducements as per letter (b) is considered as unlawful communication of Inside Information where the person communicating the advice or inducement knows or should know that such is based on Inside Information.
The Company has set up the Inside Information Management Function (IIMF) in the form of a committee comprising the Chief Executive Officer, the CFO, the Investor Relator, the Head of the organisational function in which the information was generated, the Communications Manager and the Information Referent, identified in the person of the General Counsel, responsible for managing and applying the Code.
The Board of Directors, in addition, established the Insider Register and Relevant Information Register (RIL), setting out the policy for the maintenance of these lists and appointing the Disclosure Officer as the person responsible for its maintenance and updating in order to ensure easy consultation and the simplified extraction of data.
The RIL is managed according to the means established for the Insider Register, with a number of adjustments (and remaining in the register until the significant information no longer qualifies as Confidential).
In accordance with the provisions of the MAR Regulation and the CFA and the relative Executive regulations, the Internal Dealing Policy imposes upon the "Managers" and the "Covered Persons" stringent communication obligations to the Issuer and Consob with regards to transactions concerning company shares (or other associated financial instruments (the "Significant Transactions"), carried out by, or on behalf of, such persons and/or closely related persons, excluding transactions whose overall amount does not reach Euro 20,000.00 by year-end (the "Relevant Amount"). In particular, once the Relevant Amount is exceeded:
− with regards to Managers and closely related persons thereto, all of the transactions subsequently carried out by year-end should be communicated;

− with regards to Covered Persons and closely related persons thereto, transactions whose total value does not exceed Euro 20,000.00 by year-end need not be disclosed.
In accordance with the Internal Dealing Policy:
The Managers and the closely related persons are required to communicate to Consob the Significant Transactions carried out by them or on their behalf within 3 working days from the execution of such transactions. The Covered Persons communicate to Consob and publish the information concerning Significant Transactions carried out by them or closely related persons thereto by the end of the fifteenth day of the month subsequent to the transaction's execution.
Where the Managers and the Covered Persons intend to utilise the Company to communicate to Consob the Significant Transactions, they should inform the Company of such, respectively, within 2 working days from the execution date of the transaction and by the end of the tenth day subsequent to the transaction's execution. The Company communicates to the public the Significant Transactions communicated to them, respectively, by 3 working days from the transaction's execution and by the end of the open trading day subsequent to that in which they received the information from the Covered Persons.
Finally, the Internal Dealing Policy prohibits Managers from executing - on their own behalf or on behalf of third parties, directly or indirectly, transactions on Avio financial instruments and associated financial instruments in the 30 calendar days before the announcement ("black-out period): (i) of the preliminary results (or, where the Company does not approve the preliminary results, the statutory financial statements and the consolidated financial statements); (ii) the half-year report; (iii) additional periodic financial disclosure to the annual and half-year financial report.

The Board of Directors approved the appointment of General Counsel Mr. Giorgio Martellino as the Internal Dealing Policy contact person.
In accordance with the Corporate Governance Code, which recommends that listed companies appoint internal committees to the Board of Directors, with expertise regarding specific matters, Article 12.2 of the By-Laws assigns the Board of Directors the option to set up internal committees with consultation, proposal or control functions, in accordance with the applicable legislative and regulatory provisions.
At the Report approval date, a Control and Risks Committee was set up by the Issuer as per Article 6 of the Corporate Governance Code, whose functioning is governed by the regulation adopted with Board of Directors motion of May 11, 2017, September 10, 2021, and latterly updated in the Committee's meeting of March 11, 2022.
At the Report approval date the Issuer had also set up a Sustainability Committee, with oversight of the activities related to sustainability, as well as an Appointments and Remuneration Committee, in compliance with the provisions of Articles 4 and 5 of the CG Code.
In addition, after assessing the Company's organisational needs, its operations and the size of the Board of Directors, the Company deemed it appropriate to set up, on a voluntary basis, the Planning and Scenarios Committee, even though the latter is not among the internal committees of the Board of Directors recommended by the CG Code.
The Board of Directors meeting of May 14, 2020 resolved:
On August 23, 2021, the Non-Executive and Independent Director and member of Avio's Sustainability Committee, Mr. Stefano Pareglio, resigned due to incompatibilities relating to new professional commitments. On December 21, 2021, the Board of Directors appointed Ms. Marcella Logli as a Non-Executive and Independent Director and member of the Sustainability Committee, replacing Mr. Stefano Pareglio.

The Board of Directors motion of September 14, 2020 established the Planning and Scenarios Committee and:
Regulations for internal committees to the Board of Directors provide that meetings are to be minuted, that the committee's Chairperson is to provide information to the next appropriate Board meeting and that, in addition to the Board of Statutory Auditors, other external parties including other members of the Board of Directors or of the Avio structure, may participate in meetings by invitation and for individual items on the agenda. We note that the Board of Statutory Auditors takes part in the meetings of the Control and Risks Committee, the Appointments and Remuneration Committee and the Sustainability Committee.
At the Report approval date, none of the functions of one or more committees provided for by the Code had been reserved to the Board as a whole, under the co-ordination of the Chairperson (Recommendation 16, Article 3 of the Code).
The main features of the committees comprising Avio's governance structure at the Report approval date are described below.
On May 14, 2020, the Board of Directors of Avio S.p.A., in accordance with the recommendations of the Corporate Governance Code, resolved to establish the Appointments and Remuneration Committee.
During 2021, 8 meetings were held (average duration of 2 hours). The meeting attendance of Committee members is reported in the table at the bottom of Section 4.2.1 of this Report.
The Committee has its own regulations governing its operation and duties, most recently updated on March 10, 2022.
The Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors, the Chief Executive Officer, the General Counsel, the Human Resources Manager, the Chief Financial Officer, in addition to consultants supporting the Company on specific projects reviewed by the Committee, usually attended the Appointments and Remuneration Committee meetings, on its invitation.
The entire Board of Statutory Auditors has always participated in the work of the Appointments and Remuneration Committee.

The Appointments and Remuneration Committee, therefore, was assigned both the duties and functions provided for by Article 4 of the Corporate Governance Code with respect to the appointment of Directors, and the duties and functions pursuant to Article 5 of the Corporate Governance Code with respect to their remuneration.
In accordance with the regulation governing the functioning of the Appointments and Remuneration Committee, it comprises three Non-Executive Directors, the majority of whom independent as per the applicable regulation and the Corporate Governance Code, from among whom the Chairperson is selected.
The following duties are assigned to the Appointments and Remuneration Committee:
The Committee, in exercising its duties, may access the information and departments necessary to complete their tasks, as well as utilise, at the expense of Avio, of external consultants and to the extent of the budget approved by the Board of Directors. In accordance with the Corporate Governance Code, if the Committee intends to use the services of a consultant in order to obtain information on market practices regarding remuneration policies, the Committee shall verify in advance that the consultant is not in a situation that compromises its independent judgement.

The Committee promptly exchanges information that is relevant for implementing its duties with other bodies and functions of the Company performing important tasks concerning financial and remuneration policy.
The Chairperson of the Committee reports to the next appropriate Board of Directors' meeting on the meetings held by the Committee and on the proposals and guidelines formulated in the most appropriate manner.
In line with Recommendation 26, Article 5 of the Corporate Governance Code, no Director participates in meetings of the Appointments and Remuneration Committee in which proposals are formulated to the Board of Directors concerning Directors' remuneration.
Pursuant to the Corporate Governance Code and the Control and Risk Committee regulation, the Control and Risks Committee comprises at least three Non-Executive Directors, the majority of whom independent as per the Corporate Governance Code; the Chairperson of the Committee is chosen from among these latter members. Furthermore, at least one member of the Control and Risks Committee must have adequate accounting and financial experience, to be evaluated by the Board of Directors on appointment.
In 2021, the Control and Risks Committee held 7 meetings (average duration of 2 hours). The meeting attendance percentage of Committee members is reported in the table at the bottom of Section 4.2 of this Report.
The Committee has its own regulations governing its operation and duties, most recently updated on March 11, 2022.
The entire Board of Statutory Auditors always participated in the work of the Control and Risks Committee.
On the invitation of the Committee's Chairperson, non-members participated in certain meetings for individual items on the agenda, in particular, the Internal Audit Manager, the Director in charge of the Internal Control and Risk Management System, the CFO, representatives of the Independent Audit Firm, the General Counsel, also in his capacity of Risk Manager, the Chairperson of the Supervisory Board, representatives of the Legal and Corporate Affairs Department and the consultants called into the various meetings for a process of interaction and dialogue.

In accordance with the Control and Risks Committee regulation, the Committee supports the Board of Directors, with appropriate investigative activity, in their assessments and decisions concerning the Internal Control and Risk Management System, and with regards to the approval of the periodic financial reports.
The Control and Risks Committee in accordance with the Corporate Governance Code, in assisting the Board of Directors:
a) defines the guidelines for the Internal Control and Risk Management System in line with the Company's strategy and assess, at least annually, the adequacy of the system considering the particular characteristics of the Company and the risk profile assumed, as well as its efficacy;
b) appoints and dismisses the Internal Audit Manager, defining his or her remuneration in line with corporate policies, ensuring that he or she is provided with adequate resources to carry out his or her tasks. Should the Internal Audit Function, as a whole or in segments, be entrusted to an entity external to the Company, this external entity must meet the appropriate requirements of professionalism, independence and organisation and adequate justification for this choice must be provided in the Corporate Governance Report;
c) approves, at least annually, the work plan drawn up by the Internal Audit Manager, after consultation with the control board and the Chief Executive Officer;
d) evaluates the appropriateness of measures to guarantee the effectiveness and impartiality of judgement of the other corporate functions indicated in Recommendation 32, lett. e), checking for adequate professional standing and resources;
e) assigns to the control body or to a board specifically set up for this purpose the supervisory functions pursuant to Article 6, paragraph 1, letter b) of Legislative Decree No. 231/2001. Where this board is not the control body, the Board of Directors assesses the advisability of appointing to the board at least one Non-Executive Director and/or one member of the control body and/or the holder of the Company's legal or control functions, in order to ensure coordination between the various parties involved in the Internal Control and Risk Management System.
f) following consultation with the control body, assess the conclusions set out by the legal auditor in any letter of recommendations and in the additional report addressed to the control body;
g) describes, in the Corporate Governance Report, the main features of the Internal Control and Risk Management System and the methods of coordination between the parties involved, indicating the models and national and international reference best practices, expressing its overall assessment of the adequacy of the system and outlining the choices made in relation to the composition of the Supervisory Board as per letter e) above.

The Control and Risks Committee in addition issues a prior opinion to the Board of Directors:
The Control and Risks Committee, in assisting the Board of Directors:
a) evaluates, having consulted with the Executive Officer for Financial Reporting, the independent audit firm and the Board of Statutory auditors, the correct application of the accounting policies and, in the case of groups, their uniformity in the preparation of the consolidated financial statements;
b) assesses the suitability of periodic financial and non-financial information to correctly represent the Company's business model, strategies, impact of its activities and performance, co-ordinating with any committee as per recommendation 1, letter a);
c) examines the periodic non-financial information relevant to the Internal Control and Risk Management System;
d) expressing opinions on specific aspects concerning the identification of the main corporate risks and supporting the assessments and decisions of the Board of Directors relating to the management of risks arising from prejudicial events of which the Board has become aware;
e) examines the periodic reports and those of particular relevance prepared by the Internal Audit function;
f) monitor the independence, adequacy, efficacy and efficiency of the Internal Audit department;
g) entrusts the Internal Audit department with verifications on specific operational areas, simultaneously communicating such to the Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors;
h) reports, at least quarterly, on the approval of the annual and half-yearly accounts and of the additional periodic financial information (quarterly reports), to the Board of Directors on the work carried out and on the adequacy of the Internal Control and Risk Management System.
In addition to that stated above, the Control and Risks Committee is also assigned the duties allocated to the competent Related Party Transactions Committee as per the RPT Policy, except with regards to remuneration related matters. Equivalent controls are applied, as provided for by Article 14 of the RPT Policy, in the case of significant related party transactions where the Control and Risks Committee is not composed of at least three Directors considered independent as per the CFA and the Corporate Governance Code.
In executing its functions, the Control and Risks Committee may access all information and departments necessary for the undertaking of its duties and may also utilise external consultants at Avio's expense, within the limits of the budget approved by the Board of Directors, except in the case where it acts as the Related Party Transactions Committee in transactions with related parties defined as "Significant Transactions" by the RPT Policy. In this case, no expenditure limits are applicable pursuant to the applicable regulations and the RPT Policy.

The Control and Risks Committee promptly exchanges information that is relevant for implementing its duties with other bodies and functions of the Company performing important tasks concerning internal control and risk management.
Subject to the provisions of the preceding paragraph (f), the Chairperson of the Control and Risk Committee reports to the next appropriate Board of Directors' meeting on the meetings held by this Control and Risks Committee and on the proposals and guidelines formulated in the most appropriate manner.
In accordance with the Corporate Governance Code and the Sustainability Committee regulation, the Sustainability Committee comprises at least three Non-Executive Directors, the majority of whom independent as per the Corporate Governance Code; the Chairperson of the Committee is chosen from among these latter members.
The Board of Directors shall appoint and replace the members and Chairperson of the Committee.
The Committee, on the proposal of the Chairperson, appoints a secretary, who may be a nonmember, with responsibility to draft the minutes of the meetings. Normally the designation will favour the appointment of the Company's Chief Legal Officer if present.
During 2021, the Sustainability Committee met 8 times (average duration approx. 2 hours). The meeting attendance percentage of Committee members is reported in the table at the bottom of Section 4.2 of this Report.
The meetings of the Sustainability Committee were also attended by non-members, in particular, the Company's General Counsel, Mr. Giorgio Martellino and Letizia Macrì, Deputy Legal Affairs and Head of NFD and Sustainability.
The entire Board of Statutory Auditors has always participated in the work of the Sustainability Committee.
The Committee has its own regulations governing its operation and duties, most recently updated on March 10, 2022.
Pursuant to the regulations of the Sustainability Committee and the Code, the Committee assists the Board of Directors with investigative, propositional and advisory functions in the assessments and decisions on sustainability issues falling within the remit of the Board of Directors:
In this regard, the Committee is granted the following powers:
a. examines and evaluates (a) policies based on the principles of sustainable business, which take into account the evolution of reference scenarios and identify opportunities and create value over time in the medium to long term for stakeholders, such as (i) ethics; (ii) environmental protection, with particular reference to the issue of climate change; (iii) socioeconomic progress and the enhancement of the territories where the Company operates; (iv)

the creation of economic development based on innovation and responsible industrialization (v) and the health, safety and welfare of people; (vi) the protection of human rights and the enhancement of differences and equality in the treatment of people;
b. examines the general outline of the Consolidated Non-Financial Statement (hereafter also "NFS") and the articulation of its contents, as well as the completeness and transparency of the information provided through the NFS, providing observations to the Board of Directors called upon to approve this document; examines and monitors the implementation of a Group sustainability plan, which sets out the strategic priorities, commitments, objectives, also of a quantitative nature, for the development of the economic, environmental and social responsibility of the Company, in line with the UN SDGs and the objectives of the business plan and the financial reporting;
c. examines the implementation of the sustainability policy in the business initiatives, to be also included in the Remuneration Policy and Report, based on the indications of the Board of Directors;
d. monitors sustainability initiatives and the Company's participation in them, with a view to consolidating the Company's reputation on the international front, also with reference to the development of relations with institutions, organisations and research centres with recognised expertise in sustainability matters;
e. strengthens the dissemination of the culture of sustainability among employees, shareholders, business partners, customers and, more generally, stakeholders through the examination and monitoring of a stakeholder engagement plan in line with the defined objectives and targets;
f. monitors the Company's positioning with respect to the financial markets on sustainability issues, with particular reference to the relationship with ESG rating agencies and participation and inclusion in ethical sustainability indices;
g. at the Board's request, expresses an opinion on other sustainability issues;
h. performs any additional tasks assigned to it by the Corporate Governance Code or by the Board of Directors.
The Committee, in the undertaking of their functions may access all information and departments necessary for the undertaking of their duties as well as utilise external consultants, within the terms established by the Board of Directors; the Committee defines an annual expense budget which it submits to the Board of Directors. The Company ensures adequate financial resources to the Committee for the undertaking of their duties within the budget limits approved by the Board.

The Chairperson of the Committee reports to the next appropriate Board of Directors' meeting on the meetings held by the Committee and on the proposals and guidelines formulated in the most appropriate manner.
Although not one of the internal committees of the Board of Directors recommended by the Corporate Governance Code, the Planning and Scenarios Committee was formed on September 14, 2020, on a voluntary basis by the Board of Directors and has an advisory role in making Board decisions related to the following matters:
During 2021, 2 meetings were held (average duration of 1 hour). The meeting attendance of Committee members is reported in the table at the bottom of Section 4.2.1 of this Report.
With regards to the information concerning this section, reference should be made to the relevant parts of the Report on the remuneration policy and compensation paid published in accordance with Article 123-ter of the CFA on the website www.avio.com, "Corporate Governance" section.
The Board of Directors, having consulted the Control and Risks Committee:

For the purposes of the above evaluations, in the year 2021 the Control and Risks Committee has particularly examined:
Avio continued the redefinition of its integrated risk management system to provide management, the Board of Directors and corporate boards in general with a better identification, classification, measurement, management and monitoring of corporate risks. Specifically, the Board of Directors approved the Enterprise Risk Management (hereafter ERM) Plan in the meeting of March 19, 2021, following the positive assessment of the Control and Risks Committee and after having consulted the Board of Statutory Auditors. During 2022, the update of the ERM will be submitted to the approval of Avio's Board of Directors, subject to the opinion of the Control and Risks Committee.
The Internal Control and Risk Management System of the Avio Group concerns the set of rules, procedures and organisational structures which enable the identification, measurement, management and monitoring of the principal risks. This system is integrated into the more general organisational and corporate governance structures adopted by the issuer and gives due consideration to benchmark models and existing best practices at national and international level. The Internal Control and Risk Management System contributes to conducting business in line with the objectives defined by the Board of Directors, favouring the undertaking of fully knowledgeable decisions. This ensures the safeguarding of company assets, the efficiency and efficacy of the corporate processes, in addition to the reliability of disclosure to the corporate boards and the market and compliance with law and regulations, in addition to the By-Laws and the internal procedures.
In creating its Internal Control and Risk Management System, the Avio Group focused extensively on best practice and in particular the "Enterprise Risk Management-Integrated Framework" ("ERM Integrated Framework") international standard, drawn up and updated by the US "Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission" (COSO) body; this framework is known also as the "COSO Report" or "COSO ERM".
The structural elements of the internal control and risk management environment are the Ethics Code, which sets out the key values and principles of the Company's ethical approach, in addition to the conduct rules; the system of powers and duties through general and special powers of attorney, as per the assigned responsibilities; the Company operating procedures; the IT systems supporting both operating and production activities and the accounting and

financial processes. In terms of compliance, the Company has adopted an Organisational Model as per Legislative Decree No. 231/2001, which has been continuously updated, and a control system as per Law 262/2005 for financial disclosure (for further details, reference should be made to that outlined in terms of the "Principal characteristics of the risk management and internal control system in relation to the financial disclosure process").
The Internal Control and Risk Management System of the Company on financial reporting is defined as the set of activities to identify and evaluate actions or events whose occurrence or absence could partially or totally compromise the achievement of the financial information's objectives of integrity, accuracy, reliability and timeliness. It forms part of the overall Internal Control and Risk Management System.
This system aims to guarantee that the administrative – accounting procedures adopted and their application are adequate to ensure a process capable of producing timely and reliable accounting and financial information, in accordance with applicable accounting standards.
The Internal Control and Risk Management System on financial disclosure is created in line with the frameworks, as commonly accepted and issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission – COSO Report, integrated in terms of the IT aspects by the Control Objectives for Information Technology – COBIT, and is periodically assessed and reviewed in terms of the controls put in place to minimise risks to the Company.
The administrative-accounting procedures take into account that in the analysis of risk errors occur, whether intentional or not, in the processes for the drafting of financial disclosure. Therefore, for the creation of this system the risk areas which could arise in terms of compromising the reliability of the financial disclosure are identified and assessed.
On the basis of the identification and the assessment of the risk areas, the components of the internal control system with regards to financial disclosure were analysed through:
In accordance with the applicable regulation, the features of the system adopted, with particular regard to (a) the risk management and internal control phases in relation to the financial disclosure process and (b) the roles and functions involved and the means for coordinating the relative parties, are outlined below.

The internal control system is divided into the following macro-phases:
The breakdown of individual macro-phases is shown below:
a) Identification and assessment of risks on financial reporting:
Risks are identified with regards to the financial statement declarations (existence and occurrence, completeness, rights and obligations, correctness, valuations and recording, presentation and disclosure) and other control objectives, such as - for example - compliance with the authorisation limits, the segregation of incompatible duties, controls on physical safety and the existence of assets, the controls on security; documentation and traceability of transactions. The identification of risks includes also the risk of fraudulent activities, i.e. intentional acts undertaken to falsely represent the economic-equity-financial situation at financial statement level or to misappropriate company assets.
b) Identification of the control of identified risks
On the basis of the risk assessment, specific control activities were identified to mitigate risk, broken down into the following macro-categories:
In order to verify and guarantee the operability of the internal control system on financial disclosure, specific monitoring activities on the operation of controls are in place, both by the "process owners" and by third parties independent of the operability of the processes (Internal Audit). Fraud prevention controls are among the controls monitored.

In order to ensure adequate monitoring of the system, the "design" of its components are subject to systematic assessment and, in any case, on the occurrence of significant events. The operability of the controls indicated by the administrative-accounting system procedures is assessed half-yearly through specific tests.
Any deficiencies both in the design and operability of the controls are reported to the process owners and to the Executive Officer for financial reporting to plan remedy actions - whose effective implementation is verified.
The Executive Officer for financial reporting, together with the Chief Executive Officer, issues the declaration required by Article 154-bis, paragraph 5 of the CFA.
The Internal Control and Risk Management System involves, each for their specific remit:

Article 154-bis of the CFA envisages the introduction of the "Executive officer for financial reporting" within the corporate organisation of companies with listed shares. Appointed by the Board of Directors in agreement with the Chief Executive Officer, he is responsible for designing, implementing, and approving the Accounting and Administrative Control Model, as well as for assessing its application by issuing a statement concerning the interim, annual and consolidated financial statements.
The Executive Officer is also responsible for drawing up suitable administrative and accounting procedures for the preparation of the annual and consolidated financial statements and for providing subsidiaries, considered as relevant for the preparation of the Group's consolidated report, with instructions for performing appropriate assessments of their own accounting control systems.
In order to ensure compliance with recommendation 32 of the Corporate Governance Code, the Board of Directors appointed, on January 19, 2017, with effect from the Effective Merger Date, Giulio Ranzo as Chief Executive Officer in charge of the creation and maintenance of an effective Internal Control and Risk Management System (the "Chief Executive Officer"). This appointment was confirmed by Avio's Board of Directors on April 10, 2017 and subsequently on May 7, 2020.
The Director in charge of the Internal Control and Risk Management System, in accordance with Recommendation 34 of the Corporate Governance Code:

On May 14, 2020, the Board of Directors renewed the concession to outsource the Internal Audit Function to the Company Protiviti S.r.l. for the three year period 2020-2022 (until approval of the 2022 Annual Accounts), considering it to suitably possess the requisites of professional standing, independence and organisation, and appointed Francesco Paolucci as Internal Audit Manager for the purposes of performing the activities set out in Recommendation 36 of the Corporate Governance Code, awarding him remuneration in line with corporate policies.
The internal audit function is not connected to any operational area and reports hierarchically to the Board of Directors, and functionally to the Control and Risks Committee.
The duties of the internal audit manager are the following:
For these purposes, the Internal Audit Manager has direct access to all information useful for the execution of office.

In particular, during the year 2021 and the Board of Directors' meetings already held in 2022, the Internal Audit Manager:
At the Report approval date:

− The 231 Model was last updated on May 11, 2021 in order to incorporate, among other things, the regulatory changes introduced by Law No. 157 of December 25, 2019, which converted with amendments Decree-Law No. 124/2019 ("Fiscal Decree"). The Fiscal Decree provided for the insertion into Legislative Decree No. 231/2001 of the new Article 25-quinquiesdecies, pursuant to which certain criminal offences provided for in Legislative Decree No. 74/2000 (so-called Fiscal Offences) become part of the "catalogue of offences envisaged by the 231 Model".
The 231 Model comprises a General Section and 12 Special Sections.
The General Section essentially concerns the Supervisory Board and the communication of information to this latter, in addition to the reporting of the Supervisory Board to the corporate boards; the training of personnel, circulation of the 231 Model within and outside the Company and the system governing non-compliance with the Model's provisions.
The Special sections relating to a similar number of offences envisaged in the decree and abstractly applicable to the corporate environment are: "Offences in relations with Government Departments, Crimes against the Administration of Justice and Organised Crime"; "Corporate Offences"; "Corruption between private parties", "Crimes for the Purpose of Terrorism or the Subversion of the Democratic Order"; "Crimes against Individuals and Crimes relating to Immigration and Alien Status"; "Transnational Offences"; "Crimes of Manslaughter or Serious Personal Injury or Grievous Bodily Harm committed in violation of the rules on occupational health and safety"; Environmental Offences"; "Crimes against Industry and Commerce and Copyright Infringement Offences"; "Computer Crimes and Unlawful Processing of Data"; "Self-laundering Crimes" and "Administrative market abuse offences and illicit acts"; "Fiscal Offences".
A presentation on the 231 Model adopted by the Company may be viewed on the Company's website: www.avio.com, Corporate Governance section.
Furthermore, it should be noted that the Company has adopted a special Whistleblowing Policy within the framework of the application of the 231 Model. This policy incorporates legal provisions contained in Law No. 179 of November 30, 2017, implementing the "Provisions for the protection of whistleblowers reporting offences or irregularities that become known to them within the bounds of a private or public employment contract".
Specifically, the policy focuses on the handling of reports through which company employees can report possible fraud, an offence, an unlawful act or any irregular conduct committed by other persons belonging to the Company. The aim of the reporting is to enable the Company to address the reported problem as soon as possible, disclosing risky or harmful situations and contributing toward preventing and counteracting any unlawful acts.
In order to guarantee the anonymity of the reporter, the Company has equipped itself with an IT tool for the transmission of the above mentioned reports.

On June 15, 2017, the Shareholders' Meeting of the Company appointed, for financial years 2017-2025, the Independent Audit Firm Deloitte & Touche S.p.A..
During the year, the Board, having consulted the Board of Statutory Auditors, assessed the results set out by the Independent Auditors.
In accordance with Article 16 of the By-Laws, the Board of Directors appoints, upon obligatory approval of the Board of Statutory Auditors, the Executive Officer for Financial Reporting pursuant to Article 154-bis of the CFA, providing him/her with adequate means and powers to carry out the role. The Executive Officer for Financial Reporting must be of a professional standard such as to have qualified experience of at least 3 (three) years in the exercise of administration and control activities, or in Executive or consultancy functions, with listed companies and/or relative groups of companies, or companies, entities and enterprises of large and significant size, including the preparation and control of accounting and corporate documents. The Executive Officer must also meet the requirements of good standing as provided for Statutory Auditors by the applicable legal provisions.
On January 19, 2017, the Board of Directors of Avio S.p.A. appointed Alessandro Agosti as the Executive officer for financial reporting in accordance with Article 154-bis of the CFA, with effect from the Effective Merger Date. This appointment, having verified the above-stated professional standing requirements, was confirmed by the Board of Directors of the Issuer on April 10, 2017, having received the opinion of the Board of Statutory Auditors.
As per Article 154-bis of the CFA, the Executive Officer is required to: (i) declare that the deeds and communications of the Company communicated to the market and concerning accounting disclosure (including interim) of the Company corresponds to the underlying accounting records and entries; (ii) prepare appropriate administrative and accounting policies for the drafting of the statutory and consolidated financial statements, in addition to any other communications of a financial nature; and (iii) jointly with the Chief Executive Officer declare through a specific report attached to the statutory financial statements, the condensed half-year financial statements and the consolidated financial statements, among others, the adequacy and effective application of the procedures at point (ii), during the period to which the documents refer and declare, in addition, the correspondence of such to the accounting records and entries and their suitability to provide a true and fair view of the Company financial statements and any companies included in the consolidation, assigning for this purpose the following powers:
(a) Full access to all information considered relevant for the execution of duties, both at the Company and at any parent companies;

In order to permit the Board of Directors to properly execute its supervisory powers, the Executive Responsible, in addition, reports at least quarterly to the Board with regards to activities carried out, in addition to any emerging critical issues.
* * *
At the Report approval date, with reference to the Internal Control and Risk Management System, in addition to the Control and Risks Committee and the Director in charge of the Internal Control and Risk Management System and the Head of Internal Audit, there is also a Risk Manager with specific tasks relating to internal control and risk management.
The Company specified in detail, in the Avio and Group Internal Control and Risk Management System Guidelines, the roles and duties of those involved in the internal control and risk management system, in addition to the means for the coordination of those involved.
In this regard, it should be noted that the Company promotes meetings between these different parties for the coordination and exchange of information. In particular, the entire Board of Statutory Auditors is consistently invited to participate at the Control and Risks Committee meetings, and moreover, the Director in charge of the Internal Control and Risk Management System, the Internal Audit Manager, the CFO, the General Counsel and Risk Manager as well as representatives of the Independent Audit Firm and members of the Legal and Corporate Affairs Department participated at some meetings for individual items on the Agenda, on the invitation of the Committee's Chairperson.
With the same purpose of coordination on matters of common interest, the Company's Board of Statutory Auditors, the Control and Risks Committee and the Supervisory Board, as per Legislative Decree No. 231/01, organised and held joint meetings during the financial year.

Finally, the Board of Statutory Auditors periodically meets with the Executive Officer for financial reporting, the Independent Audit Firm and the various company functions affected by the processes and procedures that must be specifically audited by the Board of Statutory Auditors, including those relating to the Internal Control and Risk Management System.
At the Report approval date, the Issuer has put in place a Related Parties Transactions Policy adopted, in compliance with Article 2391-bis of the Civil Code and the RPT Regulation, by the Board of Directors on January 19, 2017, subsequently updated with Board of Directors' motion of November 8, 2021, having received the favourable opinion of the Control and Risks Committee and the Appointments and Remuneration Committee.
The Related Parties Policy, the full text of which may be viewed on the Company's website www.avio.com in the "Corporate Governance" section, defines the guidelines and criteria for identifying Related Party Transactions and outlines roles, responsibilities and operating procedures aimed to ensure suitable reporting transparency and relative procedural and substantive correctness for these transactions.
In particular, the RPT Policy:

Article 13 of the RPT Policy establishes that it does not apply in the cases of the exemptions established under the RPT Regulation, subject to the conditions set out therein, and, in particular: (i) to the Shareholders' motions referred to in the first paragraph of Article 2389 of the Civil Code, concerning the remuneration of the members of the Board of Directors, or any decisions on the remuneration of the senior Directors included in the total amount previously determined by Avio's Shareholders' Meeting pursuant to Article 2389, third paragraph, of the Civil Code; (ii) to the Shareholders' motions referred to in Article 2402 of the Civil Code pertaining to the remuneration payable to members of the Company's Board of Statutory Auditors; (iii) to Minor Transactions. The provisions of the RPT Policy shall also not apply to transactions resolved by Avio and addressed to all shareholders on equal terms. In addition, subject to the disclosure obligations under the RPT Regulation and the relative circumstances, the Policy does not apply to (a) financial instrument-based remuneration plans approved by the Shareholders' Meeting of the Company in accordance with Article 114-bis of the CFA and the relative executory operations; (b) motions, other than those at paragraph (i) above considering the remuneration of Senior Directors, in addition to other Senior Executives (at the conditions established by the RPT Policy), (c) Ordinary Transactions concluded at Market or Standard conditions; and (d) Transactions with or between Subsidiaries, even jointly-held, by the Company, in addition to Transactions with associates of the Company, where other related parties of the Company do not have a significant interest (as defined by the RPT Policy) in the subsidiaries or associates acting as counterparties in the transaction.
With specific regards to the means for the approval and execution of individual categories of Related Party Transactions, the RPT Policy makes a distinction between:
(a) Significant Transactions, in relation to which the RPT Policy establishes, among other issues, that: (i) the approval of these transactions lies within the exclusive competence of the Board of Directors; (ii) the Chief Executive Officer ensures the involvement during negotiations and investigations of a Committee comprising at least 3 Independent Directors, possibly with the same membership of the Control and Risks Committee or the

Appointments and Remuneration Committee, according to the type of Related Party Transaction; (iii) the Board of Directors considers the transaction having received a prior favourable reasoned opinion from the above Committee with regards to the interest of the Issuer in completion of the transaction, in addition to the benefit and substantial correctness of the relative conditions, subject to the option for the Board of Directors to approve the Significant Transaction also in the presence of a contrary opinion of the above-stated Committee, on condition that its completion is authorised by the Shareholders' Meeting through the "whitewash" mechanism set out in the RPT Regulation; and
(b) Less Significant Transactions, in relation to which the RPT Policy establishes, among other issues, that (i) the Board of Directors or the Executive Bodies, depending on the case, approve these transactions following receipt of the reasoned and non-binding opinion of a Committee comprising Directors, the majority of whom independent (possibly with the same membership as the Control and Risks Committee or the Appointments and Remuneration Committee, according to the type of Related Party Transaction); and (ii) the Chief Executive Officer ensures that there is an adequate flow of information to this Committee.
Where, with regards to a certain transaction, the Control and Risks Committee (or, depending on the case, the Appointments and Remuneration Committee) does not satisfy the composition requirements under the RPT Regulation, the equivalent controls under the RPT Policy in line with the RPT Regulation are applied, including the replacement, on the basis of age, with other Directors on the Board and in possession of these requirements.
In accordance with Article 10, paragraph 1 of the RPT Procedure, during the period between the Effective Merger Date and the approval of the financial statements for the second year subsequent to that in which the Merger becomes effective, Avio may apply to Significant Transactions the policy established for Less Significant Transactions, subject to the obligation to publish a disclosure document in accordance with Article 5 of the RPT Regulation.
With regards to related party transactions carried out in 2021, reference should be made to the Company's financial statements.
As per Article 17 of the By-Laws, the Board of Statutory Auditors is composed of 3 (three) Statutory Auditors and 2 (two) Alternate Auditors, elected by the Shareholders' Meeting on the basis of slates presented by shareholders, in accordance with the procedures set out below, subject to any differing and additional provisions provided for by mandatory laws or regulations.
Slates for the election of Statutory Auditors may be presented by shareholders who, at the time of presentation of the slate, hold - alone or together with other shareholders - a shareholding that is at least equal to that determined by Consob in accordance with applicable laws and regulations (equal, at the Report approval date, to 4.5% of Avio's share capital).

Ownership of the minimum shareholding is determined according to the shares that are registered in favour of the shareholder on the day in which the slates are filed with the issuer; certification can also be presented subsequent to the filing provided that it is within the deadline for the publication of the slates.
The slates are filed at the registered office and subsequently published in accordance with the methods and the deadlines provided for by applicable law.
The slates must include the names of one or more candidates for the position of Statutory Auditor and one or more candidates for the position of Alternate Auditor. The names of the candidates are divided between each section (Statutory Auditors section, Alternate Auditors section) by progressive numbering and in any event with a number not exceeding the Board members to be elected. The slates, if they contain, in both sections, a number of candidates equal to or greater than 3 (three), must contain a number of candidates in both sections to ensure that the composition of the Board of Statutory Auditors, both for Statutory Auditors and Alternate Auditors, complies with the legal and regulatory provisions that are in force in relation to gender equality (male and female), provided that if the application of the criterion for the gender equality quota does not result in a full number, this should be rounded up to the next unit.
The following documents must be attached to each slate, at the risk of ineligibility: (i) information on the identity of shareholders who have presented them, with an indication of the total percentage of shares held; (ii) a declaration by shareholders other than those who hold, even jointly, a controlling or majority shareholding, attesting to the absence of any relationship with these latter in accordance with applicable law; (iii) detailed information about the personal and professional characteristics of the candidates, as well as a declaration by the candidates certifying that they meet the statutory requirements, and acceptance of the candidature, accompanied by a list of administrative and control positions held with other companies; (iv) any additional or differing declaration, information, and/or documents provided for by applicable law and regulations.
Individual Shareholders, shareholders belonging to the same group or members of a shareholder agreement pursuant to Article 122 of the CFA, may not present or be involved in the presentation, even through nominees or trust companies, of more than one slate or vote on other slates; in addition, each candidate may only be present on one slate, at the risk of being declared ineligible.
In the case where only one slate is filed at the expiry date of the term for presentation of the slates, or slates are only presented by related shareholders pursuant to the applicable directives, slates can be presented up to the third day subsequent to such date. In this case, the percentage threshold established for the presentation of the slate is reduced by half.
The procedure for electing statutory auditors is as follows: (i) from the slate that obtained the largest number of votes ("Majority Slate") taken in the progressive order in which they appear in the slate, 2 (two) statutory auditors and one alternate auditor; (ii) from the slate that obtained the second largest number of votes and are not connected, even indirectly, with the shareholders who presented or voted for the Majority Slate in accordance with the applicable

provisions and taken in the progressive order in which they appear on the slate, the third statutory auditor will be chosen ("Minority Statutory Auditor"), who will chair the Board of Statutory Auditors, and the second alternate auditor ("Minority Alternate Auditor").
In the case of an equal number of votes between one or more slates from which the Board of Statutory Auditors is elected, a fresh ballot shall take place, considering only the slates receiving the same number of votes and, in any case, ensuring compliance with the gender parity regulation (including rounding up to the next full number where application of the gender parity rule does not produce a full number).
Where the result of voting does not satisfy the applicable gender equality law and regulations that are in force (including the rounding up to the next unit if the application of the criterion for the gender equality quota does not result in a full number), the candidate for the office of standing or alternate auditor from the over-represented gender elected as last in progressive order from the Majority Slate will be excluded and will be replaced by the next candidate for the office of Statutory or Alternate Auditor from the same slate belonging to the other gender.
Where only one slate is presented, the Shareholders' Meeting will vote on that slate and, where this slate receives the majority of the votes, 3 (three) Statutory Auditors and 2 (two) Alternate Auditors will be taken from this slate in accordance with applicable law and regulations, including gender parity regulations, which includes rounding up where necessary in relation to the under-represented gender.
They are appointed for a period of (3) three years (and may be re-elected), which concludes on the date of the Shareholders' Meeting called for the approval of the financial statements relating to the final year in office.
Subject to compliance with the applicable law and regulations in force in relation to gender equality, in cases where, for whatever reason, (i) a statutory auditor from the Majority Slate leaves office, the alternate auditor elected from the Majority Slate will take their place, (ii) a Minority Statutory Auditor leaves office, they will be replaced by the Minority Alternate Auditor who will assume the Chair. Where the replacements made pursuant to this Article do not permit the formation of a Board of Statutory Auditors that complies with the applicable regulations on gender parity, he/she shall be replaced by the alternate auditor from the other slate, where this enables a composition in line with applicable gender parity regulations, provided that the Minority Statutory Auditor may only be replaced by the Minority Alternate Auditor.
In the absence of slates, or where it is not possible for whatever reason to appoint the Board of Statutory Auditors with the procedures provided for in this Article, the three Statutory Auditors and the two Alternate Auditors will be appointed by the Shareholders' Meeting through the majority provided for by law, in accordance with the laws and regulations in force also in relation to the gender equality quota (including the rounding up to the next unit if the application of the criterion for the gender equality quota does not result in a full number).

As per Article 17 of the By-Laws, the Board of Statutory Auditors is composed of 3 (three) Statutory Auditors and 2 (two) Alternate Auditors, elected by the Shareholders' Meeting on the basis of slates presented by shareholders, in accordance with the procedures set out in the By-Laws, subject to any differing and additional provisions provided for by mandatory laws or regulations.
The Avio S.p.A. Shareholders' Meeting of May 6, 2020 appointed the Board of Statutory Auditors and established the relative remuneration, until the Shareholders' Meeting to be called to approve the 2022 Annual Accounts.
The members of Avio's Board of Statutory Auditors in office at the Report approval date are listed in the table below.
| Name | Office | Place and date of birth | Date of appointment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vito Di Battista | Chairperson | Lecce, January 10, 1952 | May 6, 2020 |
| Mario Matteo Busso | Statutory Auditor | Turin, March 1, 1951 | May 6, 2020 |
| Michela Zeme | Statutory Auditor | Mede (PV), January 2, 1969 | May 6, 2020 |
| Sara Fornasiero | Alternate Auditor | Merate (LC), September 9, 1968 | May 6, 2020 |
| Roberto Cassader | Alternate Auditor | Milan, September 16, 1965 | May 6, 2020 |
As per Article 144-novies of the Issuers' Regulation and the Corporate Governance Code (as amended in July 2018), the fulfilment of the above requirements by the members of the Board of Statutory Auditors was assessed, with the outcomes communicated to the Board of Directors who, following appointment, communicate such in a press release and, subsequently, on an annual basis, in the corporate governance report.
In particular, the Board of Statutory Auditors complied with the provisions of Rule Q.1.1. "Selfassessment of the Board of Statutory Auditors" included in the document "Conduct rules for Boards of Statutory Auditors of listed companies" issued by the Italian Accounting Profession (Consiglio Nazionale dei Dottori Commercialisti e degli Esperti Contabili) in April 2018, carrying out a selfassessment to verify the suitability of its members and the adequate composition of the board, with reference to the requirements of professional standing, competence, good-standing and independence required by applicable regulations. This check indicated that, with reference to the year 2021, all the members of the Board of Statutory Auditors in office satisfy the necessary requisites for the performance of their office.

A brief curriculum vitae of each member of the Board of Statutory Auditors in office at the Report approval date outlining their business management expertise and experience is presented below.
Born in Lecce on January 10, 1952, Vito Di Battista has a degree in business administration from the Bocconi University. Accountant and Auditor, he provides tax consultancy to industrial and financial companies, including listed companies. He is currently Chairperson of the Board of Directors of IBL Real Estate SRL and Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer of Angelini Finanziaria S.p.A. In the past he was a member of the Supervisory Committee of Banca Popolare Andriese in a.s., Banca di Credito Cooperativo di Pachino in a.s. and Banca di Credito Cooperativo "S. Apollonia" di Ariccia in a.s. He was Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors of Bancaperta S.p.A. and Cassa di Risparmio di Fano S.p.A.; Director of Istituto Bancario del Lavoro S.p.A. and Cuki Group S.p.A.; Chairperson of the Board of Directors of Atlantide S.p.A., a supervised financial intermediary; Statutory Auditor of the Fondenergia complementary pension fund; member of the Board of Directors of Ned community.
Born in Turin on March 1, 1951, Mario M. Busso is an Accountant, Auditor and Independent Director. He holds a degree in economics and commerce and holds a master's degree in Business Administration. He began his professional career at Industrial National Bank in the USA, was a Partner at Arthur Andersen, a member of the Andersen Worldwide Advisory Council and the Italian Partner Affair Group. For the Deloitte network, he was the Partner in charge of the FSI Audit Division and a member of the Audit Management Team. He has gained significant experience in auditing and certification of financial statements in multinational companies listed on the main stock exchanges in Italy, USA, UK and Spain.
He holds positions of administration and control in companies of public interest, listed or regulated by the relevant Authorities. In this role, he has extensive experience in Corporate Governance, having refined his knowledge of both the Consolidated Texts of the Consolidated Finance Act and the Consolidated Banking Act, and the Self-Governance Code of Conduct adopted by Borsa Italiana.
His participation in the work of the Board of Directors has covered all the typical governance duties: Partner of the independent audit firm, Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors, Independent Director and Chairperson of the internal Board committees.
He currently holds the following positions: Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors of Terna, Cepav1 and Cepav2 Consorzio Eni Alta Velocità, International Energy Services; Statutory Auditor of Avio, Liftt, Way, Quasar and Compagnia Sanpaolo; Independent Director of Circolo Stampa and Accademia Nazionale Dottori Commercialisti.

He has held the following positions: Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors of Saipem, Ersel Sim, IOR; Statutory Auditor of Ersel Investimenti, Banca di Azzoaglio, Fondamenta Sgr, Permicro; Independent Director of FCA Bank.
Born in Mede (PV) on January 2, 1969, Michela Zeme graduated in Business Administration at the University Luigi Bocconi in Milan. She works as an Accountant and Auditor in Milan. She has significant professional experience in tax and corporate matters, related to tax and corporate issues of Italian Companies and Groups in the industrial, financial, insurance and banking sectors. She is in charge of the "Governance of listed companies" for the AIDC Milan Study Centre; a member of the Reflection Group "Corporate Governance of SMEs" of Nedcommunity and a Co.Vi.Soc. Inspector - the Supervisory Commission for professional soccer companies of the F.I.G.C.. She holds positions on Boards of Directors and Boards of Statutory Auditors of listed companies and financial institutions. She is an Independent Director of EQUITA GROUP S.P.A., a listed company, of which she is Chairperson of the Control and Risks Committee and a member of the Remuneration Committee, and of EQUITA CAPITAL SGR S.P.A., a listed company of which he is a member of the Remuneration Committee. She holds the position of Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors of Neprix S.r.l., Neprix Agency S.r.l., Abilio S.p.A., belonging to the Unlimited Bank Group, Yada Energia S.r.l., belonging to the A2A Group. She is a Statutory Auditor of Masi Agricola, a company listed on Euronext Growth Milan, Nuo S.p.A. and Milanosesto.
She is a member of the Supervisory Board of EUREGIO PLUS SGR S.P.A., a company in which the Autonomous Provinces of Bolzano and Trento and the Autonomous Region of Trentino Alto Adige hold an interest.
Born in Merate (LC) on September 9, 1968, Sara Fornasiero graduated in Economics and Business at the Cattolica del Sacro Cuore University in Milan. Auditor and Accountant, she is Advisor in the field of sustainability and corporate governance of leading groups, including listed. Member of the Governance of Listed Companies and Compliance and Organisational Models Committees of the Milan Ordine dei Dottori Commercialisti e degli Esperti Contabili. She is Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors and of the Supervisory and Control Board of Arnoldo Mondadori Editore S.p.A., Statutory Auditor and Chairperson of the Supervisory Board of Bricoman Italia S.r.l. (Adeo Group), Statutory Auditor of MBDA Italia S.p.A., Leonardo Logistics S.p.A., Statutory Auditor and member of the Supervisory Board of Alenia Aermacchi S.p.A., Statutory Auditor and member of the Supervisory Board of Atos Italia S.p.A.

Among other things, she currently holds the position of Lead Independent Director, Chairperson of the Control and Risks Committee, of the Remuneration Committee and of the Related Party Transactions Committee of Landi Renzo S.p.A. (a company listed in the STAR Segment) and Chairperson/member of the Supervisory Board pursuant to Legislative Decree No. 231/01 in several companies. She has practiced, at the KPMG Network in Italy (1993- 2015), statutory audit, Mergers & Acquisitions, forensic accounting, and consulting in the areas of sustainability, Internal Audit, Compliance (L.262/05 and Legislative Decree No. 231/01), and Risk Management. She has participated in KPMG international sustainability working groups (2001-2013), organises seminars and carries out teaching and training activities on sustainability, corporate governance, risk management, forensic accounting, also in French and English. She is co-coordinator of the Reflection Group Women, Diversity & Disruption of Nedcommunity, an association of Non-Executive and Independent Directors.
Born in Milan on September 16, 1965, he graduated in Economics and Business in 1990 at the Cattolica del Sacro Cuore University of Milan. He has been a member of the Monza Ordine dei Dottori Commercialisti e degli Esperti Contabili since 1994 and a member of the Register of Auditors since 1999.
He is currently Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors of, among others, Servizi Italia S.p.A. (listed), Isagro S.p.A. and F2i TLC 2 S.p.A. and Statutory Auditor of, among others, Webuild S.p.A. (listed), EI Towers S.p.A., FC Internazionale S.p.A. and Leonardo Logistics S.p.A.. In the past, he was also Statutory Auditor of Coca Cola Italia S.r.l., Lidl Italia S.r.l. and Rigamonti Salumificio S.p.A..
He provides tax and corporate consulting for companies operating mainly in the international arena, and business valuations.

| Board of Statutory Auditors | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Office | Members | Year of birth | Date first appointment (*) |
In office from | In office until | Slate (M/m) (**) |
Ind. Code | Attendance at Board meetings (***) |
No. other offices (****) |
| Chairperson | Vito Di Battista | 1952 | 06.05.2020 | May 6, 2020 | Approv. 2022 Accounts |
X | 14/14 | 2 | |
| Statutory Auditor Auditor |
Mario Matteo Busso | 1951 | 06.05.2020 | May 6, 2020 | Approv. 2022 Accounts |
X | 14/14 | 9 | |
| Statutory Auditor Auditor |
Michela Zeme | 1969 | 06.05.2020 | May 6, 2020 | Approv. 2022 Accounts |
X | 14/14 | 9 | |
| Statutory Auditor alternate |
Sara Fornasiero | 1968 | 06.05.2020 | May 6, 2020 | Approv. 2022 Accounts |
X | N/A | 9 | |
| Statutory Auditor alternate |
Roberto Cassader | 1965 | 06.05.2020 | May 6, 2020 | Approv. 2022 Accounts |
X | N/A | 14 |
Indicate the number of meetings held in the Year:
(*) The first appointment of each Statutory Auditor refers to the date on which the Statutory Auditor was appointed for the first time to the Board of Statutory Auditors of the Issuer.
(**) This column indicates whether the slate from which each Statutory Auditor is selected is a "majority" slate" (indicating "M"), or a "minority" slate (indicating "m"),
(***) This column indicates the percentage of attendance of the Statutory Auditors in relation to the number of meetings of the Board of Statutory Auditors (indicates the number of meetings attended compared to the amount they could have attended; e.g. 6/8; 8/8 etc.).
(****) This column indicates the number of offices of Director or Statutory Auditor in accordance with Article 148-bis of the CFA and the relative enacting provisions in the Consob Issuers' Regulation. The complete list of offices held is published by Consob on its website pursuant to Article 144- quinquiesdecies of the Consob Issuers' Regulation.

The remuneration of the Statutory Auditors was established by the Shareholders' Meeting on appointment.
The remuneration of the Board of Statutory Auditors in office was established by the Shareholders' Meeting of May 6, 2020, setting annual remuneration of Euro 50,000.00 for the Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors and of Euro 35,000.00 for each Statutory Auditor, gross of tax withholdings.
The remuneration matured in 2021 is, in any case, detailed in the Remuneration Policy and Report.
In 2021 and until the approval of this report, the Board of Statutory Auditors met on 14 occasions, with an average meeting duration of approx. 2 hours 30 minutes.
The attendance of the Statutory Auditors at the meetings in 2021 is shown in the table above.
In accordance with the recommendations of the Corporate Governance Code, the Board of Statutory Auditors oversees the financial disclosure and auditing process, in particular with regards to the provision of non-audit services.
The Board of Statutory Auditors, in executing its activities, coordinated with the Internal Audit Manager and with the Control and Risks Committee through continuous attendance of the Committee's meetings, at which the Internal Audit Manager usually also attended. In addition, the Chairperson of the Board of Statutory Auditors, or a differing Statutory Auditor in his place, participated at all meetings of the Committees set up within the Board of Directors.
In addition, it worked with the Supervisory Board appointed in accordance with Legislative Decree No. 231/2001. The Board of Statutory Auditors liaised with the Director in charge of the Internal Control and Risk Management System. The Board of Statutory Auditors, finally, attended the Appointments and Remuneration Committee meetings.
The Board of Statutory Auditors, as part of the supervision of implementation of the corporate governance rules, verified the correct application of the assessment criteria and procedures adopted by the Board to evaluate the independence of its members. The outcome of these controls was communicated to the market.
In accordance with the provisions of point 4.2.2. of this Report, the provisions of the Corporate Governance Code and Article 148, paragraph 1-bis of the CFA, Avio has applied the diversity and gender criteria to the composition of the Board of Statutory Auditors, in line with the priority objective of ensuring sufficient skills and levels of professional standing in its members.
In fact, as per Article 17.4 of the By-Laws of Avio, the slates for the appointment of Statutory Auditors must contain, in both sections, a number of candidates equal to or greater than 3 (three) to ensure that the composition of the Board of Statutory Auditors, both for statutory auditors and alternate auditors, complies with the legal and regulatory provisions that are in

force in relation to gender equality (male and female), provided that if the application of the criterion for the gender equality quota does not result in a full number, this should be rounded up to the next unit.
Moreover, in accordance with the provisions of Article 144-novies, paragraph 1-bis of the Issuers' Regulation and the Rules of Conduct of the Board of Statutory Auditors of listed companies issued by the Italian Accounting Profession (Consiglio Nazionale dei Dottori Commercialisti ed Esperti Contabili), the Board of Statutory Auditors carried out a self-evaluation of its members and forwarded the outcome of these checks to the Board of Directors' meeting held most recently on March 14, 2021.
With regards to the Diversity Policy applied to the Board of Statutory Auditors, reference should be made to paragraph 4.2.2.
* * *
The Statutory Auditors received an induction that enabled them to acquire adequate knowledge of the sector in which the Issuer operates, of corporate dynamics, of the principles of correct risk management, as well as of the regulatory and governance reference framework, in compliance with Recommendation 12(d) of the Corporate Governance Code.
The Company, in accordance with Principle 4 of the Code, considers the Shareholders' Meeting as an important opportunity for the interfacing of shareholders and Directors and, consequently, adopts measures supporting participation at the Shareholders' Meeting and the exercise of voting rights by shareholders. In this regard, Article 8 of the By-Laws (in accordance with Article 2369 of the Civil Code) establishes, except for other indications within the notice, that the Shareholders' Meetings are held in single call and Article 10.4 (in accordance with Article 135-undecies of the CFA) establishes that the Company may appoint, for each Shareholders' Meeting, through appropriate indication in the call notice, a party ("Designated Agent of the Company") to whom shareholders can confer proxy, with voting instructions on all or any proposals on the Agenda, in accordance with the legally established terms and means.
The Company has created a specific "Investors" section of its website, which is easily identifiable and accessible and makes available information concerning the Company of importance to its shareholders, allowing them to knowledgeably exercise their rights. The Company has also created a section in the website dedicated to "corporate governance", containing an array of documentation, including this Report and its previous versions.
Relations with institutional investors are instead handled by the Investor Relator.
The duty of the Investor Relator is to constantly ensure that senior management are updated on the financial market disclosure obligations and, in particular, those concerning investors.

The Investor Relator represents, therefore, the point of contact between the Issuer and the market and has the duty to liaise with company structures to maintain and incentivise compliance with corporate disclosure regulations. Investor relation activities are shared with and supported by management.
Avio's Board of Directors meeting on May 7, 2020 appointed Mr. Agosti Alessandro as Investor Relator, in order to manage the dialogue and relationships with institutional investors and the market.
Moreover, pursuant to Recommendation 3 of the CG Code, the Issuer's Board of Directors upon proposal of the Chairperson in agreement with the Chief Executive Officer - as well as subject to the favourable opinion of the Control and Risks Committee - adopted, on March 3, 2022, a Policy for the management of the dialogue with the shareholders, also taking into account the commitment policies adopted and communicated to the public by institutional investors and active managers and in line with Recommendation 3 of the CG Code.
The Policy is available on the Company's website at www.avio.com in the section ["Corporate Governance - Shareholder Communication Policy"], and aims at favouring Avio's transparency towards the financial community and the markets, through the construction, maintenance and development of an active relationship of trust with the investors. It also aims to safeguard, at all times, the legitimate interests and requests of the Company, which the Board of Directors is able to take into account in the pursuit of its role of strategic guidance and monitoring of management performance, with the ultimate objective of guiding the Company towards its sustainable success, in line with what is recommended in Article 1 of the CG Code.
As per Article 8 of the By-Laws, the Shareholders' Meeting deliberates upon matters reserved to it by law and the By-Laws. Shareholders' Meeting motions, taken in accordance with law and the By-Laws, are binding on all shareholders. The Shareholders' Meeting meets in single call and is constituted and passes motions by statutory majority, except where otherwise indicated in the call notice.
[As per Article 8.3 of the By-Laws, the Related Party Transactions Policy of the Company may establish (i) that the Board of Directors approves the "significant transactions", as defined by the RPT Regulation, despite an opinion to the contrary issued by the Independent Directors Committee responsible for issuing an opinion on the above-mentioned transactions, provided that the execution of such transactions are authorised by the Shareholders' Meeting in accordance with Art. 2364, paragraph 1, No. 5 of the Civil Code. In this case, the Shareholders' Meeting decides by statutory majority, providing, where the unrelated shareholders attending the Shareholders' Meeting represent at least 10% of the share capital with voting rights, the majority of unrelated shareholders voting at the Shareholders' Meeting are not in opposition; and (ii) that the Board of Directors or the Executive bodies may consider, availing of the exemptions under the policy and in compliance with the conditions stated therein, execution by the Company, directly or through its subsidiaries, of urgent related party transactions which are not within the scope of the Shareholders' Meeting, nor require the latter's authorisation.

As per Article 10 of the By-Laws, those with voting rights have a right to attend the Shareholders' Meeting. The right to attend the Shareholders' Meeting and the right to vote is verified by a notice to the Company, made by the authorised intermediary in accordance with law, based on the accounting records at the end of the seventh trading day prior to the date fixed for the Shareholders' Meeting in single call, and submitted to the Company in accordance with law.
Those with Shareholders' Meeting voting rights may be represented by a proxy appointed in writing or by means of an electronic document signed in compliance with the applicable regulation. The proxy notification to the Company may be sent by Registered Letter or electronically by means of a message addressed to the certified email address indicated in the notice itself or by using the appropriate section of the Company's website, according to that indicated in the call notice.
For each Shareholders' Meeting, the Company may designate, through notification in the call notice, a person to whom shareholders can confer proxy, with voting instructions on all or some of the proposals on the agenda, in the terms and manner provided by law.
The Shareholders' Meeting is chaired by the Chairperson of the Board of Directors, or, in his/her absence or impediment, the eldest Vice Chairperson where appointed or, in his/her absence or impediment, the eldest Chief Executive Officer present, where appointed, or, in his/her absence or impediment, an individual appointed by the Shareholders' Meeting. The Chairperson shall be assisted by a Secretary, even a non-Director and/or non-shareholder, elected on his proposal by a majority of those present. In the Extraordinary Shareholders' Meeting and, in any case, when the Chairperson considers it appropriate, the functions of the Secretary shall be carried out by a Notary appointed by the Chairperson.
The Shareholders' Meeting may be held in several locations, via audio/video link, on the condition that a collective approach is taken and the principles of good faith and of equal treatment of shareholders are upheld and, in particular, provided that: (a) the Chairperson of the Shareholders' Meeting may (i) ascertain the identity and right to attend of all present, (ii) govern the business of the meeting, in addition to (iii) verify and declare the voting results; (b) the minutes-taker is able to adequately note all the matters pertaining to the Shareholders' Meeting; (c) attendees may participate in the discussions and vote simultaneously on the matters on the Agenda; (d) this method is contained in the call notice of the Shareholders' Meeting which also indicates the locations. The meeting shall be considered to have been held in the place where there are, simultaneously, the Chairperson and the person taking the minutes.
On June 17, 2015, the Shareholders' Meeting of Avio S.p.A. approved the adoption of a Shareholders' Meeting regulation governing the Shareholders' Meeting's business and permitting an orderly and efficient hosting of such meetings, guaranteeing at the same time each shareholder the right to take the floor on matters under discussion, as suggested by the Self-Governance Code. This Shareholders' Meeting regulation shall remain in force also subsequently to the Effective Merger Date.

The Shareholders' Meeting regulation, among other matters, establishes that:
In 2021, the Shareholders' Meeting met on May 6, 2021, in single call, with the attendance of approx. 63.021% of the share capital, approving the 2020 Annual Accounts. The Shareholders' Meeting also expressed its consultative vote on the first and second section of the Remuneration Report (today, the "Report on the remuneration policy and compensation paid") as per Article 123-ter of the CFA.
The Board of Directors, through the Chairperson, at the above Shareholders' Meeting (at which, in addition the Chairperson, the following Directors were present: Messrs. Giulio Ranzo, Donatella Sciuto, Vittorio Rabajoli, Maria Rosaria Bonifacio and Monica Auteri and Statutory Auditors, Riccardo Raul Bauer, Chairperson, and Maurizio Salom (Statutory) Auditors) reported on the activities carried out and scheduled, also following the submission of questions by a number of shareholders. The document containing the statutory financial

statements and consolidated financial statements, together with the accompanying reports, in addition to the reports of the Directors on the matters on the agenda, were provided on entry in order to ensure Shareholders of adequate disclosure with regards to the matters necessary to take into consideration, with due consideration, for the decisions to be taken. This documentation, together with the results of voting, was also made available and may be accessed on the Company's website www.avio.com, Investors Section, Shareholders' Meetings, 2021. The Appointments and Remuneration Committee decided not to report to the Shareholders' Meeting upon the means of exercise of its functions, considering that this information has already been outlined in the Report on the remuneration policy and compensation paid made available to the shareholders before the Shareholders' Meeting.
In 2021, there were no significant changes in the market capitalisation of the shares of the Company or in the composition of its shareholders, such as to consider it necessary to assess the possibility to propose to the Shareholders' Meeting changes to the By-Laws in relation to the percentages established for the exercise of the shares and to the protection of minority shareholders.
The Company has adopted an Anti-corruption Code with the Board of Directors' motion of March 14, 2019 to counter corruption and prevent the risks of illegal practices at any working level and in any geographic area, both through the dissemination and promotion of ethical values and principles and through the effective provision of rules of conduct and the implementation of control processes, in line with the requirements established by applicable laws and international best practices.
The Company has adopted a Cybersecurity Policy in the more general interest of protecting the Company's tangible and intangible assets and to guarantee confidentiality, integrity and availability of the same within the Company as well as to guarantee an adequate level of protection of information and cyber-security of networks and IT systems.
It should also be noted that during 2019, the Company joined the Business Integrity Forum (BIF), an initiative of Transparency International Italia, which brings together large Italian companies already involved in the issues of integrity and transparency, and which through the BIF are committed to preventing and combating corruption in business practices by adopting and circulating anti-corruption tools and practices and encouraging an improved culture of legality.
In particular, for the Company, membership of the Forum has the precise objective of continuing to raise awareness of the issues important to the Company, relating to transparency, integrity and corporate social responsibility, expressing its support for the fight against corruption in order to make an impact at system level.

There were no additional changes to the corporate governance structure since year-end further to those reported above.
The recommendations for 2021 contained in the letter of December 3, 2021 of the Chairperson of the Corporate Governance Committee concerning the issue of corporate governance were brought to the attention of the Control and Risks Committee in the meeting of March 2, 2022 and the Board of Directors meeting of March 3, 2022.
The Board's self-assessment questionnaire took into account the recommendations made by the Corporate Governance Committee in December 2021 and contained in the Corporate Governance Committee Chairperson's Letter dated December 3, 2021. On this occasion, the Board of Directors, taking account of the recommendations, decided that almost all recommendations had been implemented by Avio and will not undertake further initiatives to those already implemented or underway, since it is compliant with these and, for the moment, will not undertake specific actions for the reasons indicated in the corresponding paragraphs of the Corporate Governance and Ownership Structure Report and of the Remuneration Policy and Report.
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