A series of lectures on climate change given by Sir Mark Walport at Science and Discovery Centres across the UK.
Mar172014
Mar172014
A series of lectures on climate change given by Sir Mark Walport at Science and Discovery Centres across the UK.
Mar132014
Updated: Updated waste movement form.
The regulations apply from the point of loading the waste until it has been fully recovered or disposed of at the destination facility. If you fail to follow them, you may be committing a criminal offence and risk prosecution, financial penalties and/or imprisonment.
The controls that apply to your waste shipment will depend on the:
Knowing this information will allow you to decide if your waste shipment:
International Waste Shipments (IWS) or transfrontier shipments of waste are other terms for exporting and importing waste – they mean the same thing.
If you produce, carry, import, keep or dispose of waste you have responsibilities. You have a legal duty of care to make sure your waste is handled safely and only passed to people who are authorised to receive it.
Everyone involved in the shipment must ensure that any waste is managed without endangering human health and in an environmentally sound manner.
Follow these steps to work out the controls that apply to your waste shipment and what forms you need to complete.
You must first find out if the material to be exported or imported is classed as waste by any country involved in the journey. If so, then waste shipment controls apply to the whole journey. To help you decide if your material is waste, see:
You must then work out if the intended journey and destination for your waste is legal. All exports or imports of waste to or from European Union (EU) countries are governed by the EU Waste Shipments Regulation. Wherever else you ship waste, you must comply with the requirements of this regulation and import controls of any countries outside the EU. This includes any countries through which the waste will pass or dock during transport.
See list of:
Where the competent authorities disagree on whether something is waste, it will be classed as waste.
The terms ‘disposal’ and ‘recovery’ are defined in the EU Waste Framework Directive.
Importing and exporting waste for recovery is possible, depending on country controls, waste type and destination.
Exports or imports of waste for disposal are prohibited, save for a few exceptions described in the UK plan for waste shipments. In these exceptions notification controls will always apply.
You must match your waste to one of the description codes listed in the annexes to the Waste Shipments Regulation. You may find it easier to use the consolidated waste list – it has all the annexes in one document.
You must include the correct code in any forms you complete for shipping your waste. If there is no code for your waste, you must describe it as ‘not listed’.
The controls are in Article 18, notification or prohibition. The general rules are outlined below but you must confirm control with the destination country.
Article 18 controls generally apply to waste listed under a single entry in annex III, IIIB or the mixtures of wastes listed in annex IIIA.
Notification controls apply to all other wastes.
Article 18 controls generally apply to waste listed under a single entry in annex III or the mixtures of wastes listed in annex IIIA.
Notification controls apply to all other wastes.
Certain wastes listed in annex V are prohibited from export including hazardous waste and household waste. Check the EU (green list) regulations which set out the controls that apply to waste listed in annex III and IIIA according to each non-OECD country.
If you export wastes such as packaging, batteries, end of life vehicles or waste electrical and electronic equipment, there is additional producer responsibility legislation which you may need to comply with.
You should now know if your waste shipment is subject to Article 18, notification controls or prohibition.
Alternatively use the waste export controls tool to work out the correct code and control for your shipment. Be aware that it is a guide only. Before shipping always check the controls with the transit and destination countries or their government departments, customs inspectorates or official waste regulatory bodies.
You must:
To export from England, you must:
and be one of:
IWS online will enable you to:
When you use the system for the first time you will need to register for a user account.
You can phone the Environment Agency on 03708 506 506 (call charges apply) if you need help.
You cannot use this system for recording annex VII forms.
Pre-processing or storing waste at a site overseas before moving it to a place of final recovery is called an ‘interim operation’. The Waste Shipment Regulation specifies 5 interim operations using these codes:
R = recovery, D = disposal
If your waste is destined for an interim operation you must provide details of the waste treatment operation, and where it will take place, on the notification document. You will also need to complete the
before your waste moves.
This makes sure there’s enough money available for the Environment Agency to deal with the waste if the shipment is not completed, including the cost of returning the exported waste. The approved guarantee or insurance must be sufficient to cover:
Any competent authority may ask for a copy of your financial guarantee or insurance arrangements. For exports from England and all non-EU imports, your financial guarantee or equivalent insurance must be approved by the Environment Agency. Use the financial guarantee form to apply. Your financial guarantee must be approved before shipments can commence.
Before you submit your notification application you must have a legally enforceable, written contract with the business that will be recovering or disposing of your notified waste.
This contract must include:
There are additional contractual obligations for exports to certain countries and also where an interim operation is to occur.
The Environment Agency, or any other competent authority with an interest in the notification, may ask for a copy of the contract.
You need this in place before you send in your notification application. Any competent authority concerned may ask for a copy of the insurance arrangements.
You need to pay a charge when notification is made. The Environment Agency will not process your notification without evidence that you have paid the correct amount. Other competent authorities may also impose a charge for considering your notification.
The charge depends on:
| Activity | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of shipments: | 1 | 2 to 5 | 6 to 20 | 21 to 100 | 101 to 500 | 500+ |
| Export for recovery | £1,450 | £1,450 | £2,700 | £4,070 | £7,920 | £14,380 |
| Export for non interim disposal | £1,540 | £1,540 | £3,330 | £5,500 | £10,600 | £19,500 |
| Export for interim disposal | £1,700 | £1,700 | £3,330 | £,6,000 | £12,900 | £24,000 |
| Import for non interim recovery | £1,250 | £1,250 | £2,700 | £4,900 | £10,600 | £19,500 |
| Import for interim recovery | £1,450 | £1,450 | £2,830 | £5,500 | £12,900 | £24,000 |
| Import for non interim disposal | £1,540 | £1,540 | £3,330 | £5,500 | £10,600 | £19,500 |
| Import for interim disposal | £1,700 | £1,700 | £3,330 | £,6,000 | £12,900 | £24,000 |
Charges are payable to the Environment Agency.
The originally signed notification package must be sent to the Environment Agency with the correct fee.
Send your notification package to:
International Waste Shipments Team
Environment Agency
Richard Fairclough House
Knutsford Road
Warrington
WA4 1HT
These timings and stages are for waste moving within the EU. For waste moving outside the EU, the Environment Agency will advise you if any of the stages will take longer.
If your notification package is complete, the Environment Agency will send it to all competent authorities involved within 3 working days of receiving it. They will ask you for further information if your notification package is incomplete.
If you do not hear from the Environment Agency within 30 days of submitting a complete notification, email askshipments@environment-agency.gov.uk.
The competent authority must check they have all the information they need within 3 days of receiving the notification package. They may ask for more details, or ask to see copies of documents such as contracts.
Other competent authorities involved in your waste’s journey will also receive a copy of your notification package and may ask for more information.
Once the competent authority of destination is satisfied that the notification package is complete, they have 3 working days to complete block 19 of the notification document. They will send a copy of this to you and all the competent authorities involved.
Please note that the time taken for a transmitted notification package to arrive by post will vary, depending on the country of destination.
Within 30 days of the notification decision, the competent authorities must decide if they:
Any of the competent authorities involved may object, but only using reasons set out in the Waste Shipment Regulation.
The competent authorities will send you copies of their decisions. If competent authorities of transit countries make no response within 30 days, it’s assumed that they agree to the waste shipment.
Your consent allows you up to 12 months from the date of consent to ship your waste. You can only ship the type and quantity of waste described in the notification, using the destination and route described in your notification.
If the destination site has pre-consent status, your consent may allow you up to 3 years to ship your waste.
Check you have all the consents you need from the competent authorities involved and your financial guarantee is approved and valid.
Create a pre-notification on IWS online – print and sign it then upload it to IWS online.
Send copies to the other competent authorities and the destination waste facility, but not more than 30 days before you intend to ship and no later than 3 working days before shipping.
Check the carriers you intend to use are registered and permitted to carry your waste shipment in each country.
You do not need to send the Environment Agency a copy of your pre-notification if you have uploaded it to IWS online, but you will need to ensure the pre-notification document is completed before the start of the shipment (blocks 2, 5 to 8).
You must complete a movement document and keep a copy for every shipment made under the consented notification. A shipment (which may consist of more than one vehicle or container) starts at the place of loading and continues until the waste is fully recovered at the destination facility.
A copy of the completed movement document and the consented notification document, including annexes, must go with the waste and stay with it throughout the journey.
Shipment data must be added to IWS online upon receipt and then upon the recovery or disposal of the waste.
If the waste has left England but is then rejected by another competent authority, it may need to be brought back or transported to a different site for recovery or disposal. You must comply with the requirements of the competent authority concerned. It may be necessary to use your financial guarantee to ensure the waste is recovered in an environmentally sound manner.
If the shipment cannot proceed within 10 working days of the actual date of shipment specified in block 6 of the movement document, the Environment Agency will consider that shipment ‘cancelled’. Other competent authorities may have different rules on when a shipment is cancelled. You must tell all the competent authorities involved.
Once cancelled you cannot change the shipment date or reuse the shipment number.
Before you can request an increase in the shipments permitted on a notification, you must:
You may need to pay extra – check the charges table.
You may get a refund from the Environment Agency if:
You must apply for a refund within 12 months of the notification’s date of consent. If consent has not yet expired it will be withdrawn.
You may do this before your existing consent expires.
Before you arrange to import any waste you should contact the competent authority of the country of export to find out what their procedures and requirements are.
For each shipment of waste that arrives, the recovery/disposal facility must complete block 18 of the
.
They must state:
You must:
If a shipment of waste arrives at your site in England without the notification and movement documents, or it cannot be completed in accordance with the documents, you must:
You must treat the waste as specified in the notification document. You have one year from the date of receiving the waste to do this unless your environmental permit requires it to be done sooner. Within 30 days of completing the treatment, the recovery/disposal facility must fill in block 19 of the
with the:
You must:
You will need to follow different actions where an interim operation occurs.
The notification expires when:
When all the waste has been correctly recovered or disposed of, you can ask the competent authority to release the financial guarantee.
You must keep all documents about the waste shipment and treatment for at least 3 years from the date the shipment starts.
If you operate a waste recovery site with a permit and regularly receive shipments of the same waste, you may benefit from having a pre-consent. The advantages are that:
Recovery facilities in England can apply using the pre-consent form.
Overseas recovery facilities must apply to the competent authority of the country in which they are located.
Check your ‘green list’ waste for contamination.
A waste which you may think is ‘green list’ may need prior notification and consent, or may be prohibited if it is:
You can export ‘green list’ waste without permission from, or payment of fees to, the competent authorities of the countries involved in the shipment, unless more stringent controls are required by the importing country. It is your responsibility to check all the requirements that apply.
Contact details must be in full – include the contact name, company registered number if applicable, address, email and telephone number. Business confidentiality is not a reason for omitting these details.
The exporter in block 1 is the person who arranges the shipment and signs the declaration in block 12 to say that you have a contract in place. If you are a broker/dealer based in the European Union (EU), you must be registered with the Environment Agency, the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) or Natural Resources Wales if you arrange waste shipments from Great Britain. If you are a broker or dealer based outside the EU, you must be registered and also have a personal or business address in the UK.
The importer or consignee in block 2 may be the recovery facility or a broker/dealer who is under the jurisdiction of the country of destination and has legal control over the waste when it arrives there.
The recovery facility in block 7 must be the facility where the waste will be recovered. If the recovery operation is R12 or R13, you must also provide information about the facilities where further operations will take place.
The appropriate codes for block 8 can be found in annex II of the EU Waste Framework Directive. If the recovery operation is R12 or R13, you must also provide information on further operations.
Mar132014
Updated: The In-service testing handbook has been updated to version 3.3
The in-service testing (IST) handbook is a culmination of the IST group 1 and 2 report and the IST group 3 report. It is designed to provide stakeholders who are undertaking sample testing with an understanding of the sampling methodology, test processes, assessment methods and final assessment criteria. The handbook includes details of IST test stations that have been approved by the Office for Product Safety and Standards for the in-service testing of gas and electricity meters.
The handbook is a working document and amendments will be made when necessary as the implementation of IST develops over time.
If you wish to speak to a member of staff please contact:
Office for Product Safety and Standards
Stanton Avenue
Teddington
Middlesex
TW11 0JZ
Email
philip.martin@beis.gov.uk
Reception
020 8943 7272
Mar132014
Presentation by Sir Mark Walport at the National Farmers Union (NFU) annual conference.
Mar52014
Updated: Update on scheme – phase 1 complete.
This document explains how the Environment Agency, Devon County Council and Exeter City Council are working together to design and build a scheme which will reduce flood risk to the city of Exeter.