Fortnightly Bulletin – 25th March 2024
Environmental Monitoring Solutions
Industry's Environmental Partner. Part of the Cura Terrae group.
Guidance
Landfill tax rate increase as part of the Spring Budget
His Majesty’s Treasury has increased the standard rate of disposing waste in landfill to £126.15 per tonne ?from April 2025. The lower rate of landfill tax (for inert waste such as construction rubble), will also rise, to £4.05 per tonne.
Source: Circular online
Monitoring stack emissions: standards for continuous monitoring and sampling
The Environment Agency (EA) released this guidance document on 7 March 2024. It specifies the standards relating to the:
Source: Gov.uk
Packaging data: what to collect for extended producer responsibility (changes to the data you must report from 2024)
There are some changes to the data you must collect and report from 2024 onwards.
These changes are due to take legal effect in all four nations on 1 April 2024, but affect the data that you must submit for the whole of 2024.
These changes affect several areas:
Where the rules are changing, they are explained under separate headers in the relevant sections of the guide.
They do not apply to data you collect and report for 2023.
Source: Gov.uk
Storing and physically treating hazardous metal shredder residues: RPS 274
The EA’s Regulatory Position Statement (RPS) 274 applies to storing and physically treating hazardous metal shredder residues coded and described as:
(An asterisk at the end of an EWC code means the waste is hazardous).
This RPS does not change your legal requirement to have an environmental permit with the correct waste codes when you store or physically treat hazardous metal shredder residues.?However, the EA will not normally take enforcement action against you if you do not comply with this legal requirement, provided that:?
In addition, your activity must not cause (or be likely to cause) pollution of the environmental or harm to human health and must not cause the following:??
You must comply with the following conditions:
You must not:??
The EA intends to review this RPS by 31 December 2024. The RPS can be withdrawn or amended before the review date, if considered necessary. This includes where the activity that this RPS relates to has not changed, and advises to check back from time to time, including at and before the review date, to see if this RPS still applies.??
The RPS will remain in force until it is removed from GOV.UK or is otherwise identified as having been withdrawn.???
Source: Gov.uk?
Monitoring fugitive emissions from shredding waste upholstered domestic seating: RPS 297
The EA’s RPS 297 does not change your legal requirement to make every reasonable effort to avoid contaminating other waste with Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) when you shred waste upholstered domestic seating at a waste treatment site.
This RPS applies to waste treatment sites that are shredding waste upholstered domestic seating where their permit allows them to store and shred this waste under code 20 03 07. However, the EA will not normally take enforcement action against you if you do not comply with this legal requirement, provided that:?
In addition, your activity must not cause (or be likely to cause) pollution of the environmental or harm to human health and must not cause the following:??
You must:
Before you use this RPS, you must contact the EA by emailing [email protected]. Include RPS 297 in the subject line. You must give your:
The EA intends to review this RPS by 28 December 2024. The RPS can be withdrawn or amended before the review date, if considered necessary. This includes where the activity that this RPS relates to has not changed, and advises to check back from time to time, including at and before the review date, to see if this RPS still applies.??
The RPS will remain in force until it is removed from GOV.UK or is otherwise identified as having been withdrawn.???
Source: Gov.uk?
Storing and treating waste fire extinguishers: RPS 132
The EA’s RPS 132 applies to the storage and treatment of waste fire extinguishers before metal recovery. You can only use this regulatory position if supplying and maintaining fire extinguishers is a main activity of your business. Treatment is limited to the manual dismantling and cutting of empty cylinders to prevent further reuse.
However, the EA will not normally take enforcement action against you if you do not comply with this legal requirement, provided that:?
In addition, your activity must not cause (or be likely to cause) pollution of the environmental or harm to human health and must not cause the following:??
You must comply with the following conditions:
Before you use this RPS you must send the EA an environmental permit application by 1 September 2024. You must stop using this RPS if your permit application is either:
You must:
Tell the EA before you use this RPS, email [email protected] with:
You must also:
You must not:
The EA intends to review this RPS by 1 September 2025. The RPS can be withdrawn or amended before the review date, if considered necessary. This includes where the activity that this RPS relates to has not changed, and advises to check back from time to time, including at and before the review date, to see if this RPS still applies.??
The RPS will remain in force until it is removed from GOV.UK or is otherwise identified as having been withdrawn.???
Source: Gov.uk?
LPG flaring at end-of-life vehicle sites: RPS 202
The EA’s RPS 202 applies to flaring gas from Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) tanks at End-of-Life Vehicle (ELV) sites as part of the depollution process.
This RPS does not change your legal requirement to have an environmental permit with the correct waste codes when you store or treat ELVs.?However, the EA will not normally take enforcement action against you if you do not comply with this legal requirement, provided that:?
In addition, your activity must not cause (or be likely to cause) pollution of the environmental or harm to human health and must not cause the following:??
You must comply with the following conditions:
You must not:??
The EA intends to review this RPS by 1 December 2026. The RPS can be withdrawn or amended before the review date, if considered necessary. This includes where the activity that this RPS relates to has not changed, and advises to check back from time to time, including at and before the review date, to see if this RPS still applies.??
The RPS will remain in force until it is removed from GOV.UK or is otherwise identified as having been withdrawn.???
Source: Gov.uk?
领英推荐
Receiving hazardous waste wood at household waste recycling centres: RPS 249
This RPS took effect on 1 August 2021. The EA will withdraw it by 30 September 2024. This will give the waste wood industry time:
Source: Gov.uk
Articles of Interest
Great British Nuclear to buy two Hitachi sites for new nuclear development
Great British Nuclear (GBN) is buying land for new nuclear development from Hitachi at both Wylfa in Ynys M?n/Anglesey and Oldbury-on-Severn in Gloucestershire.
Earlier this year, the government published their Civil Nuclear Roadmap, setting out plans to boost the UK’s energy security and achieve net zero carbon emissions with up to a quarter of Britain’s energy produced from nuclear power by 2050. Access to nuclear sites is a critical factor in achieving these nuclear ambitions, which included deploying Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) and exploring a further large-scale reactor project after Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C.?
New construction waste reuse hub to open in Wolverhampton Recycling minister opens ring crusher at SWEEEP Kuusakoski site
The Defra minister with responsibility for recycling, Robbie Moore, officially opened SWEEEP Kuusakoski’s £3million ring crusher at its Sittingbourne recycling facility.
The ring crusher pulverises motors and transformers from waste electronics and separates the copper, plastic, ferrous and aluminium. Small, mixed Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) contain POPs waste so any output from the process will also be classified as containing POPs. The ring crusher is capable of separating the plastic into a copper smelter for the POPs compliant destruction.
The ring crusher originated from its parent company Kuusakoski’s Philadelphia site in the United States of America. It was transported in 10 shipping containers, totalling a weight of 120tonnes. Upon arrival, SWEEEP Kuusakoski’s engineering team rebuilt and refurbished the ring crusher within a span of four months.
Source: letsrecycle.com
‘Green Industrial Revolution’: Liverpool unveils proposals for world’s largest tidal project
The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority has unveiled advanced planning proposals for what could potentially become the world’s largest tidal scheme along the river Mersey, anticipated to be operational within a decade.
The multi-billion-pound project is now progressing towards the formal planning consent process. If successful, the project could position Liverpool as a leader in sustainable energy and align with the region’s target of achieving net-zero carbon emissions by 2040.
Recent research found that a resilient and cost-effective transition to 100% renewables in the United Kingdom would require at least 27gigawatts (GW) of wave and tidal energy capacity by 2050.
According to the Marine Energy Council, the cost of generating power from sources such as tidal energy has nearly halved since 2018. The Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) Catapult suggests that prices could potentially be lower than nuclear energy, contingent upon policy support.
Source: edie.net
Circular economy crucial for National Health Service (NHS) to reach net zero, report says
The NHS must phase out single-use medical products and commit to reusing and re-manufacturing equipment to reach its net zero targets and reduce costs, a new report showed.
“The MedTech Spotlight report is a roadmap to accelerating circular economy adoption in healthcare that focuses on the medical technology sector”, the University of Exeter said. The report concludes that “business as usual” is no longer possible.
Professor Peter Hopkinson, Co-director of the National Interdisciplinary Circular Economy Research (NICER) programme’s CE-Hub at the University of Exeter, commented, “Our report identifies pain points and opportunities, and presents comprehensive recommendations to drive sustainable innovation and address the systemic challenges shaping the future of healthcare provision in the UK”.
Source: Circular magazine
Prosecutions and Fines
As a reminder, the EA will prosecute large organisations, as well as small-scale organisations, that do not adhere to environmental legislation. ?Below are a few historical prosecutions that highlight the need for duty of care obligations to be carried out.
Construction company fined £185,000 for polluting brook at East Midlands site
In March 2023 the EA successfully prosecuted a construction company for polluting a local brook whilst engaged as contractors at the East Midlands Gateway development site.
At Nottingham Magistrates’ Court on 1 March 2023, the construction company admitted causing pollution and was fined £160,000 and ordered to pay prosecution costs of £25,577.79.
The court was told that the company were contractors at the site near Kegworth when Hemington Brook became highly turbid and discoloured with clay solids.
A biological survey revealed that the discharge of contaminated run off from the site had caused “gross and chronic” pollution adversely affecting invertebrates.
A member of the public alerted the Environment Agency when the brook started “running red with silt pollution” on or before 27 September 2019.
Source: Gov.UK
Tyre Company hit with £100,000 fine for breaking rules in Northants
A company which flouted the rules to store highly flammable tyres on a Northamptonshire site has been fined £100,000 and ordered to pay costs of £7,463.
The company exceeded the amount of waste they were legally allowed to deposit at another site in Daventry. In total around 250,000 of waste tyres were deposited at the site.
The accepting site in Daventry, had two exemptions to store waste and mechanically treat end-of-life tyres. However, it did not have an environmental permit to store or treat large numbers of tyres on site and was required to keep these to a minimum (40tonnes of tyres stored over seven days).
EA officers discovered that the company had deposited thousands of tyres over the course of a year. They did this without checking that the site was authorised to accept those tyres.
The EA first became aware that the company regularly deposited tyres unlawfully at the accepting site in February 2021. When checked by the EA, the company’s records show that this illegal activity had happened between January 2020 until late February 2021.
Source: Gov.uk
EA enforcement undertakings
An enforcement undertaking is a voluntary offer made by an offender to:
If the EA accept an offer, it becomes a legally binding agreement between the EA and the business or person making the offer.
A large waste management company with multiple sites across the country made a reactive offer to the EA, which was accepted. The offence was operating without or other than in accordance with an environmental permit (groundwater activity) – Regulation 38(1), and to pollution of groundwater at a facility near Peterborough during February 2020 and March 2020.
This was a reactive offer. The actions the offeror has taken or will take are to:
The company will contribute £25,000 to Rockingham Forest Trust.
Source: Gov.uk
Consultations
Draft risk management evaluation of a substance proposed as a persistent organic pollutant (POP) 2024
DEFRA is requesting comments on a draft risk management evaluation for chlorpyrifos, a chemical substance proposed as a POP to the United Nations’s Stockholm Convention.
For more information on chlorpyrifos and how to respond to the request for comments, click on the link below.
Source: Gov.uk
Future regulatory regime for Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) ratings providers
ESG ratings are assessments of ESG matters, which increasingly drive investment decisions in financial markets. The consultation paper, which was open from 30 March 2023 to 30 June 2023, set out proposals for the scope of such a regulatory regime. At the Spring Budget 2024, the Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt, announced the government will regulate the provision of ESG ratings, where these assessments of ESG factors are used for investment decisions and influence capital allocation. This will improve clarity and trust in ESG ratings. A full consultation response and legislative steps will follow later this year.
Source: Gov.uk
Events
Natural Capital: Practical Application
26th March 2024 12:00 – 13:00
This webinar will focus on sharing lessons learned from applying natural capital approaches to delivering nature-positive projects on the ground. ?The webinar will include insights from a selection of case study projects on how using a natural approach informed design, planning and delivery.
To take part, click on the link below to register.
Source: IEMA
Edie’s Scope 3 Emissions Workshop
14th June 2024
Edie’s Scope 3 Emissions Workshop helps sustainability, energy and supply chain professionals tackle one of the most critical aspects of the net-zero transition – calculating, reporting, and minimising value chain emissions.
Taking place at the IET London:Savoy Place on Friday 14 June, this full-day event creates the time and space for professionals to identify new ideas and actions when it comes to effectively engaging with suppliers and taking control of Scope 3 emissions.
Click on the link below to register.
Source: edie.net