Guidance: Plant health news
Please contact the Forestry Commission’s Cross-Border Plant Health Service for more information.
Please contact the Forestry Commission’s Cross-Border Plant Health Service for more information.
There are many things you can do to prevent or minimise the introduction, establishment, spread and impacts of tree pests and diseases, including:
The damage to our trees, woods and forests from insect pests and organisms such as bacteria and fungi is significant. The rapid increase in movements of goods and people between countries has increased the risk of spreading pests and diseases. They can travel hidden in plants, plant products, packaging, wood, vehicles and holidaymakers’ luggage – even in the soil carried on shoes.
Some of these pests and diseases do little harm in their native environments, where predators, environmental factors and co-evolution with their host plants keep them in check. However, they can cause significant damage to trees and plants in other countries where those limiting factors are not present. Some single species of insect, fungus or bacterium can damage or kill dozens of different plant species, including trees. As well as causing economic losses for the forestry, timber and plant-based industries, they can disrupt other sectors, such as tourism, and threaten woodland biodiversity, ecosystems and native species.
Sign up for, and read previous editions of, the Forestry Commission’s Tree Health News newsletter.
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Make a general enquiry about tree, woodland and forest health in England
For the rest of the UK, see:
You can also find more information on scientific research into tree pests and diseases.
Updated: The online version of the notification form has been updated.
You must complete and submit a notification form for each new consignment of firewood for import.
You can notify the Forestry Commission of solid fuel (firewood) imports online. You should enrol on the scheme first.
You’ll get a unique reference number for your consignment. Use this number in any correspondence with us.
Print the form and complete it manually, then post to:
Plant Health Service
Forestry Commission
Silvan House
231 Corstorphine Road
Edinburgh
EH12 7AT
Or, you can download and complete the form electronically or scan your manually completed form and email it to plant.health@forestry.gsi.gov.uk
Read the full guide on importing firewood into Great Britain.
Read Forestry Commission guidance on trading in timber and timber products before you apply to become a registered trader.
Make sure your application is received by us as soon as possible and, in any event, before you begin to trade in any of the material mentioned in this form.
Keep a record of the information you entered on this form.
Remember to sign and date the back page.
You can also request an application pack or further information by emailing plant.health@forestry.gsi.gov.uk, or calling 0300 067 5155.
Post your application form to:
Forestry Commission
Plant Health Service
Silvan House
231 Corstorphine Road
Edinburgh
EH12 7AT
If you import regulated wood material and are registered with the Forestry Commission to do so, you can apply for a credit account.
You must meet UK landing requirements if you’re importing regulated wood material in order to prevent the introduction of harmful pests.
Find out which wood and timber materials are regulated.
Depending on the tree species from which the wood was sourced, the associated pest or disease risk, the wood product type and the country of origin, you must meet a number of phytosanitary (plant health) requirements and get the product verified by a phytosanitary certificate, which should be issued in the country of export.
As imports of regulated material must undergo a plant health inspection upon arrival before being released, you or your agent must be registered with us and notify us in advance of landing.
Download the form to apply for registration.
Once your material lands in Great Britain (GB), it’s your responsibility. To avoid difficulties, delays or financial loss caused by breach of the landing requirements, we strongly advise that you or your agent include a clause in the supplier’s contract to ensure that they meet landing requirements, and are bound to meet any costs incurred as a result of any failure to do so.
You or your appointed agent must complete a Notice of Landing form, which you must use to arrange a timber import inspection.
You cannot land material unless you give advance notice of at least 4 working hours to an inspector for air cargo, and 3 working days for any other case.
Notification of landing and import inspection are statutory requirements. If you fail to comply then you may get a fine, and the clearing of your consignment will be delayed.
You must present phytosanitary documents to an inspector, within 3 days of any wood or timber material landing, except in the case of material imported by post, in which case you must fix certificates to the outside of the package.
You must accompany each consignment with either a phytosanitary certificate alone or with another phytosanitary certificate for re-export (where appropriate), or an industry or mill certificate.
The Customs document relating to each consignment of relevant material must include:
These certificates state that the controlled material:
You must provide these if, after a phytosanitary certificate has been issued in the country of origin, the consignment has been stored, repacked or split in another third country before being exported to GB.
Under arrangements agreed between the EU and the plant protection organisations in Canada and the US, the Forestry Commission has adopted GB derogations that allow for the use of industry and mill certificates instead of phytosanitary certificates for kiln-dried and heat-treated material.
All imports of regulated material must be inspected and cleared by a plant health inspector. These inspections are entirely independent of any checks by Border Force or HMRC.
Plant health inspectors usually operate Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm (although local arrangements may be in place). Our objective is to inspect goods either on the day we’re notified that they’re ready for examination, or on the next working day.
You should aim to provide as much notice as possible if you want your goods to be cleared quickly. Customs clearance won’t be given until the satisfactory completion of a plant health inspection.
Plant health checks are made at approved points of entry into GB. To gain approved status, a port or airport authority must provide certain minimum conditions necessary to ensure that inspections can be carried out efficiently and safely and, in the event that it becomes necessary, relevant material can be treated or destroyed.
Key points to note:
Plant health legislation provides for approved traders to gain Forestry Commission and HMRC clearance at inland inspection premises instead of at a point of entry.
Eligibility for approved premises status depends on the ability of the applicant to meet certain minimum standards set independently by HMRC and the Forestry Commission. We require a safe working environment for inspectors, with adequate lighting and space to look at every piece of material, if required.
In the absence of fumigant gas-checking facilities supported by trained operators for containerised material, the inspector is likely to insist that containers be devanned at your risk and cost.
Key points to note:
Inspections are required to determine whether:
The inspector will examine the relevant document to ensure it complies with the regulations. Subject to agreement between EU Member States, it’s possible for consignments to be subjected to a documentary check only in the Member State of first entry into the EU, with the identity and physical checks being carried out in the Member State of destination. This must be arranged in advance and the customs and plant health authorities in both Member States must agree this arrangement, either on a case-by-case basis or on general terms (for example, for one kind of commodity, or a named importer).
The person responsible for the consignment in the Member State of first entry into the EU must complete a Plant Health Movement document in the form set out in the Plant Health (Forestry) Order 2005.
Before inspection of the relevant material when it arrives in GB, you must be in receipt of a Plant Health Movement document, otherwise the material won’t be released.
If you import wood and wood products, you must meet certain identification requirements. The material must agree with the description given in the documentation accompanying it (for example, phytosanitary certificate or officially approved industry certificate, ship’s manifest or shipping specification sheets) so that it can’t be confused with any other material. For example, lot or bill of landing numbers on the packs must be listed on the phytosanitary or industry certificate.
The inspector will carry out an examination of all or a representative sample of the consignment to ensure it complies with the appropriate special requirements, such as whether it’s bark-free or has been treated in some way (eg kiln dried). If the wood has been kiln dried or heat treated, it must be clearly marked with ‘KD’ or ‘HT’ or another internationally recognised mark.
Any wood, including wood packaging material or dunnage, from unidentified tree species will be subject to control at the discretion of an inspector.
It’s a statutory requirement that phytosanitary certificates accurately describe the volume of material to which they relate. Sometimes certificates declare types of wood not subject to inspection. Where it’s possible to identify the volume and identity/lot/numbers of material from the certificate, we won’t demand a fee for that part of the consignment. However, if it’s not possible to segregate uncontrolled goods, we’ll need to inspect the whole consignment and will charge accordingly.
You or the person or organisation notifying us of the need for an inspection – or presenting the phytosanitary certificates to us – will be held responsible for the payment of fees unless you make special arrangements for payment. A Certificate of Clearance (forms PHF28) will be issued when we receive payment for an inspection.
Inspection fees include separate charges for documentary, identity and plant health checks:
| Type of check | Volume | Fee |
|---|---|---|
| Documentary checks | Per consignment | £7.20 |
| Identity checks | For each load of up to 30m3, forming part of the consignment contained in one truck, railway wagon, or comparable container – per consignment | £7.20 |
| Identity checks for bulk loads | Less than 100m3 | £7.20 |
| Identity checks for bulk loads | 100m3 or more | £14.40 |
| Plant health checks | Per consignment of wood (other than in the form of shavings, chips or sawdust) – up to 100m3 | £31.20 |
| Plant health checks | Per consignment of wood (other than in the form of shavings, chips or sawdust) – over 100m3, each additional m3 or part thereof | £0.25 |
| Reduced frequency of inspection plant health checks of Acer saccharum* (hard maple, sugar maple or rock maple) | Up to 100m3 originating in Canada | £23.40 |
| Reduced frequency of inspection plant health checks of Acer saccharum* (hard maple, sugar maple or rock maple) | Above 100m3 originating in Canada – for each additional m3 or part thereof originating in Canada | £0.20 |
| Plant health checks – per consignment of isolated bark and wood in the form of shavings, chips or sawdust | Up to 25,000kg | £31.20 |
| Plant health checks – per consignment of isolated bark and wood in the form of shavings, chips or sawdust | Above 25,000kg – each additional 1,000kg or part thereof | £0.49 |
Maximum inspection fee – £98
NOTE: goods can be subject to reduced levels of physical inspection set by the European Commission and are based on risk (ie on a random sample of consignments rather than each one).
Where inspections are permitted at ‘approved places inland’, you will be charged a fee of £30 (based on an average 1.5 hours’ additional travel required to perform an inland inspection) in addition to the fees detailed above.
On satisfactory completion of the inspection, the inspector will issue a Certificate of Clearance (form PHF28), which you must present to HMRC together with the normal customs entry declaration. You must also declare that the consignment contains produce of phytosanitary relevance.
If you haven’t met the landing requirements, you’ll be required to take remedial action. The inspector may also take samples from the material for analysis at Forest Research. Where this is considered necessary, you’ll be served a Statutory Notice prohibiting the removal of the consignment while remedial action or tests are completed.
Any remedial work, which may involve destruction, re-export or treatment, must be carried out to our specification, and satisfaction and under our surveillance. We will charge for this additional monitoring work.
In certain instances, for example where the work required has not been carried out by the due date, we may do the work ourselves, or contract another person to do it and charge accordingly. Where treatment of the material is appropriate, we won’t issue a Certificate of Clearance (PHF28) until we’re satisfied that the material has been treated to the required specification, and poses no further risk to plant health.
Due to the variable factors involved (for example, the size of consignment, the volume affected, and the type of remedial treatment required), the charge is time-based as follows:
the first hour, including travelling and office time – £37
each 15 minutes or part thereof thereafter -£9.25
if office time is required after a site visit – £9.25
We aim to keep this cost to a minimum by remaining onsite only long enough to ensure that treatment is being carried out properly and to its specification. However, it will be necessary to inspect the material on completion of the treatment to ensure that it has been effective. Where possible, we plan for these visits to coincide with the notified timing of treatment. It will be important, therefore, to ensure that you keep us informed of any changes to agreed arrangements.
The fee for this monitoring work becomes due on completion of the remedial work and must be paid before a Certificate of Clearance (form PHF28) is issued. Alternatively, you’ll be issued with an invoice which you may pay through your credit account, if you have one, or by BACS or cheque.
You can be found guilty of a range of offences, such as making false statements to procure a phytosanitary certificate. The full range of offences can be found in Part 9 of the Plant Health (Forestry) Order. If you’re found guilty of an offence under the Order then you shall be liable to a fine of any amount (see the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2015, which came into force on 11 March 2015.
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