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Preview Email
August 2023
Congratulations. There are no changes to the legislation or other requirements in your legal register.
 
Recent Publications

New publications this month:

DEPARTMENT FOR ENVIRONMENT, FOOD & RURAL AFFAIRS (DEFRA) AND ENVIRONMENT AGENCY

Report packaging data

The platform to be used to report data under the extended producer responsibility (EPR) scheme for packaging launched in August 2023. Small organisations and large organisations, as defined under EPR, must register and report data into the system by the respective deadlines.

 

 

CABINET OFFICE

Plant, plant product, animal product and high risk food of non-animal origin checks delayed again

The Government has announced that sanitary and phytosanitary checks on food, plant and animal produce arriving in Great Britain from the EU will be delayed for a further three months. Controls are now planned to be applied as follows:

  • 31 January 2024: Health certificates will be required on imports of medium risk animal products, plants, plant products and high risk food (and feed) of non-animal origin from the EU.
  • 30 April 2024: Documentary and risk-based identity and physical checks will be introduced on medium risk animal products, plants, plant products and high risk food (and feed) of non-animal origin from the EU.
  • 31 October 2024: Safety and Security declarations for EU imports will apply from this date.

 

 

DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS AND TRADE

UK Sustainability Disclosure Standards

Information is provided on the framework being used to create UK Sustainability Disclosure Standards (UK SDS). UK SDS will be based on the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Sustainability Disclosure Standards and are expected to be in place by July 2024.

 

 

ENVIRONMENT AGENCY

Emergency backup diesel engines on installations: best available techniques (BAT)

BAT are defined for diesel engines within permitted installations that meet the definition of new medium combustion plant, but are operated for less than 500 hours a year and are therefore exempt from emissions limit values. 

 

Change, transfer or cancel your environmental permit

This guidance has been updated to improve its clarity.

 

Electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) covered by the WEEE regulations

This guidance reflects that waste upholstered domestic seating is not covered by the WEEE regulations due to the potential presence of persistent organic pollutants (POPs).

 

Low risk waste positions: tyres, rubber and plastic

Low risk waste position LRWP 35 (Storing and treating redundant athletics tracks, rubber shock pads and waste AstroTurf for reuse) has been withdrawn, as it has been replaced with a Regulatory Position Statement (RPS): Storing and treating artificial turf: RPS 279

 

Regulatory Position Statements (RPSs):

RPS 250: Hazardous waste wood from demolition and refurbishment activities

This RPS was withdrawn on 31 August 2023 and may no longer be relied upon. The activities previously covered by this RPS will now require a suitable waste permit or exemption.

 

The following RPSs were published or updated during August 2023:

  • Use of manufactured topsoil: RPS 190 (updated guidance, may become waste exemption in future)
  • Segregating waste upholstered domestic seating that may contain POPs at HWRCs: RPS 266 (extended deadline for implementation plans, extended scope of wastes)
  • Recovering unused waste plastics coded 16 03 06: RPS 273 (removed references to EWC 15 02 03)
  • Temporary storage of waste coffee pods: RPS 282 (new)

 

 

NORTHERN IRELAND ENVIRONMENT AGENCY, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, ENVIRONMENT AND RURAL AFFAIRS (DAERA), SCOTTISH ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION AGENCY (SEPA) AND NATURAL RESOURCES WALES

GPP 6: Working at construction and demolition sites

This new Guidance for Pollution Prevention (GPP) document is relevant to construction and demolition sites.

 

 

SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT

Scotland's Guiding Principles on the Environment: Statutory Guidance

This document states how officials across the Scottish Government should apply the five guiding environmental principles when developing policy.

 

 

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, ENVIRONMENT AND RURAL AFFAIRS

NIEA Guidance on Single Use Vape Collection and treatment

Guidance is provided on the collection and treatment of single-use vapes. Vapes are within the scope of the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) regime. Vapes must therefore be placed in containers for small mixed WEEE and batteries removed (if easily removed) and placed into the appropriate battery containers.

 

 

TRANSPORT FOR LONDON

Ultra Low Emissions Zone (ULEZ) Expansion

On 29 August 2023, the ULEZ was expanded to cover all London boroughs. Drivers of vehicles within the scope of the scheme that do not meet the emissions standards applied are required to pay a daily charge of £12.50.

The ULEZ scheme now has the same boundaries as the earlier Low Emissions Zone (LEZ). The LEZ continues to apply to lorries, vans or specialist heavy vehicles (all over 3.5 tonnes) and buses, minibuses and coaches (all over 5 tonnes).

A vehicle checker has been provided online.

 

 
Offences

North Yorkshire Farming business enters into enforcement undertaking following waste offence

A York-based business that produces frozen vegetables has offered to pay a five-figure sum to the Yorkshire Dales Rivers Trust after spreading waste sludge on land illegally.

Since March 2016, the company had held a permit for spreading its own waste on its land. It operates an anaerobic digestion plant on site that produces a proportion of the company’s energy. It is the waste sludge from the anaerobic digestion plant that the company spreads on land.

Under the conditions of the permit, the company must make an application each time it wishes to spread waste, to say where it intends to spread waste, what type of waste, how much and when. Every application must also include evidence to show that there is an agricultural benefit from the spreading of waste. The Environment Agency then considers each application and decides if there is agricultural benefit and whether it can go ahead.

Records showed that spreading took place every year from 2013 to 2021 in varying quantities from 2,664 tonnes to as much as 10,530 tonnes. However, only four applications for spreading were made during this period and all were refused, needing additional information. The company was found not to have permission for spreading between March 2016 and February 2022. The company avoided paying application fees which ranged from £760 to £1,718 each time the sludge was spread.

Enforcement Undertaking

The company, J E Hartley Limited, submitted an Enforcement Undertaking to the Environment Agency. An Enforcement Undertaking is a voluntary offer made by companies and individuals to make amends for their offending.

The enforcement undertaking consisted of a payment of £23,640 to the Yorkshire Dales Rivers Trust. The offer from JE Hartley Limited also outlined that it will revise its land spreading procedures and would not spread without permissions in place and would cover the Environment Agency’s costs.

The Environment Agency accepted the undertaking. No environmental harm has been identified from the spreading.

 

 

United Utilities fined for abstracting excessive quantities of water

United Utilities Water Limited has been fined after illegally abstracting 22 billion litres of water from boreholes in Lancashire.

The over abstraction caused additional stress on the environment during a period of very dry weather in 2018 and led to a significant decline in the water level available in the Fylde Aquifer. The aquifer, which helps to support healthy river flows and is an important public water source, will take years to recover.

The case follows an investigation by the Environment Agency that found United Utilities had taken more water than allowed by five of their abstraction licences in the Franklaw and Broughton Borehole Complex.

Penalty

United Utilities Water Limited was fined £800,000.

 

 

Suspended sentence for owner of illegal skip hire business

The owner of a skip-hire company in north Kent has been convicted of illegally handling waste on the banks of the River Thames.

The company, Selbys Ltd, was found to have taken in construction, demolition and household waste in rented premises in the Darent Industrial Estate for 11 months across 2021 and 2022. Another of the man’s company’s, M&R Skip Hire, held an environmental permit on the site before being wound up. An earlier suspension notice served on M&R Skip Hire for environmental concerns had the site on the Environment Agency’s radar.

Environment Agency officers later found out Selbys Ltd, the new firm, was touting for custom on Facebook, with the advert falsely claiming the business was legitimate. After believing waste was being handled illegally on the industrial estate in late 2020, investigators made a series of visits to confirm their suspicions. Officers found the site stacked with large piles of waste like wood and plastic, along with a significant amount of crushed waste, known as trommel fines.

The size of the piled waste at the site had caused the aggregate to spill over onto the adjoining flood defence. The Environment Agency later said the weight of the waste on the embankment could have meant a ‘realistic risk’ of it failing, that might have led to evacuation of the entire industrial estate in the event of a flood. The defence provided flood protection from the rivers Thames and Darent that ran alongside the industrial units.

Officers also found evidence Selbys was burning waste. In February 2022, some of the waste caught fire by itself, leading to London Fire Brigade spending a day putting the flames out. In the same month, investigators gained a restriction order from a court that closed the site, based on their concerns about the environmental damage the  business was causing through excess dust, and worries about the fire-risk and damage to the flood defence.

Breaches

The man admitted to breaching Regulation 12(1) and Regulation 38(1) to Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2016:

  • Regulation 12(1) prohibits persons from operating regulated facilities, water discharge activities or groundwater activities except under and in accordance with an environmental permit.
  • Regulation 38(1) makes it an offence to contravene Regulation 12(1) or to knowingly cause or knowingly permit this contravention.

Penalty

The man was sentenced to 8 months in prison, suspended for 18 months, 60 hours of unpaid work and a victim surcharge of £156.

 

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