YHEEMG, 15 th November 2006 Environmental Regulation Update.
-
Upload
allen-geer -
Category
Documents
-
view
216 -
download
0
Transcript of YHEEMG, 15 th November 2006 Environmental Regulation Update.
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Environmental Regulation Update
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Janet Murfin’s background
• Soil science training, chemical industry background (BSc, MSc, CSci, M Inst Soil Sci)
• Environmental regulatory and technical consultancy • PPC experience from keeping sites out of regulations,
helping them go into Low Impact regulations, full PPC applications and Site Reports, through to Surrender Site Reports and decommissioning advice
• Just finished environmental aspects of COMAH Top Tier safety report; other industrial environmental services eg waste minimisation club; contaminated land on working sites, ADMS and odour
• Set up and run own business from scratch, used to looking at regulatory impact holistically in business terms
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
What’s presentation about?
• This isn’t about a list of forthcoming environmental regulations and what they contain
• We all know that there’s too much, it takes too long to interpret, it’s too complicated
• This is about the bigger picture on environmental regulation – how it works at the moment; what that means for our working lives; and how we can make changes to make the regs BETTER
• Particularly relevant to REACh
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Contents (Examples based on my experiences of PPC)
• How regulations are made in the UK
• Consistency of EU regulations across Europe
• Consistency of interpretation/ application within the England & Wales
• Getting changes made, and why
• A few thoughts on REACh
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
How regulations made in UK
EU Directive
UK parliament
Enabling legislation
Statutory Instruments/ Regulations
Guidance on interpretation of the regulations(can be mountains of paperwork)
Committees of senior civil servants and EU politicians, some tech. input
Very limited debate in parliament
SI’s are meat of proposal, often very widely drawn
Guidance needed to interpret – often outsourced to large consultancies
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Consistency of EU regulation
• Hot topic!
• Not every country implements every law, if they have existing coverage (except UK?)
• PPC permit in UK vs Germany
• Cost of PPC permit in France
• On balance, every country complains about PPC, but we probably have biggest paperwork burden
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• The biggest influence on how eg PPC regulations are interpreted is the technical guidance issued by EA
• This has cut out a lot of the individualistic interpretation on the major issues eg IPC
• But the most important influence is your individual relationship with your Inspector
• Not all inspectors are the same (EA and HSE both)
Consistency of application of regulations
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Confident inspector – technical background, industry experience, able to make logical decisions on environmental risk, brings in specialists when needed
• Unconfident inspector – inappropriate/ little technical background, less “real world” experience, refers back to paperwork all the time, afraid to ask for specialist help
Differences between Inspectors
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• A confident inspector is able to make pragmatic decisions on environmental risk: they can appreciate when something is low risk/ negligible, and tell you that it’s not important (it helps to confirm this via email though)
• An unconfident inspector is worried about everything – they don’t have the confidence to dismiss low risks, so you end up having to spend a lot of time and money looking at unimportant issues
• For the unconfident, one man’s “proportionate regulation” is another man’s “turning a blind eye”
How it affects us
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• The way to keep your inspector happy is to be OPEN
• Discuss any changes to your permitted application (or monitoring programme) beforehand, get their approval
• Keep them involved, and use their expertise• Make a structured, logical case for why you
think something should happen (especially if you think their interpretation is wrong)
Dealing with a confident inspector
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Get everything in writing, ideally at the time of a meeting– Unconfident inspectors often change their
mind after a meeting on site, once they’ve had a chance to re-read the guidance
– This can be very frustrating for businesses who think they have agreed a course of action, only to find it has become much more complex and expensive
Dealing with an unconfident inspector (1)
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Make your case logically – insist that they make their case logically too
• Don’t let them use “because I say so”, and ask for copies of documents they refer to
• Ask for specialist technical help on-site or off-site if you feel it’s needed
• If you have the contacts, discuss issues informally with another inspector
• Where in place, use the Sector Co-ordinator, as they see many businesses and have a wider perspective
Dealing with an unconfident inspector (2)
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Wrong technical background– Some rural areas with limited number of
industrial specialists are using “frogs and logs” people for PPC permit holders
• Personal lack of confidence– Depends on the individual, can also affect ex-
industry people when new to the EA (new boy syndrome)
• Fuller explanations required for the unconfident
Reasons for unconfident inspectors
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Very patchy at ground level• Inspector has a big say in important issues
(partly because of complexity of regulations)• Regional variations also exist, in my experience,
although that can be down to different budgets/ recruitment policies
• EA/HSE could do better – we need to give feedback (our feedback in industry/ consultancy is no money/ no repeat business!)
Consistency of application?
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Getting changes made
EU Directive
UK parliament
Enabling legislation
Statutory Instruments/ Regulations
Guidance on interpretation of the regulations(can be mountains of paperwork)
Big consultancies, govt departments, specialist individuals
Not much point – enabling legislation is a “shell”
SI changes – get in early first time round; or later changes
Guidance needed to interpret – often outsourced to large consultancies
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• EU have announced their intention to stop churning out directives, and look at effects of existing ones (but have you seen the size of the directive pipeline?)
• UK – various red tape initiatives at sub-cabinet level, including Better Regulation Executive
• Mechanism to amend SIs and guidance in place and working
Change is happening already
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Amendment SIs at 2 or 3 per year since 2000• Have listened to industry – eg Low Impact
guidelines are much improved, includes more sites
• Consultations via EA website (a bit of a pain to look at regularly); but they don’t always acknowledge your submissions
• Also DEFRA consultations via their website
Examples of change - PPC
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• These people are desperate for information, but are far removed from the sharp end, work in a VIP bubble
• Used to living on the “tax dollar”, and don’t always appreciate the need for a business to be profitable
• Short-term viewpoint – next funding round, is my committee safe
• Close to politicians, so tend to think in terms of number of people complaining (aka no of votes) rather than the strength or logic of an argument
• But it can be worthwhile to speak to them individually
Better Regulation Executive (1)
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Better Regulation Executive (2)
Alistair McGlone, our BRE day tripper,
with Darrell Nash, Albion Dyestuffs
Safety boots!
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• It’s easy to be cynical – for example, when the UK Govt decided to look at red tape, they set up a committee and staff it with civil servants…
• But a few of my reasons are:– get annoyed by injustices compared to other
countries– bad science really winds me up– it will save time and money later– someone has to do it, and it might as well be people
who know (a bit) what they’re talking about
Why bother to get changes made?
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Example – the hard way – H8 PPC Surrender Site Reports, consultation closed 1st October 2004
• Submitted 11,000 word document (got a bit grumpy!)
• Worth it in the end – guidance did not go through (although don’t think it was just me)
• Feedback on our most recent SSR using our in-house methodology – hydrogeologists thought it was good
Getting change can be hard
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
REACh
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• REACh is the biggest piece of environmental regulation since IPPC
• It makes IPPC look tiny in comparison• The effects will be enormously wide-ranging: not
just chemical businesses (reasonably prepared) but every type of manufacturer will be affected (and ultimately every individual in the country)
• The Law of Unintended Consequences will operate, as usual
A few thoughts on REACh
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• 10th October – HSE named as UK Competent Authority (about a year late)
• On same day, yet another disagreement within EU – Environment Committee overrules European Parliament
• Final EU vote due in November 2006 – will they reach agreement?
• This is all supposed to be in member states’ law by April/ May 2007 - short timescale
• Also regulations and guidance needed for UK
Current REACh timetable
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Nobody knows
• Based on PPC experience, UK regs may be wider/ more detailed than EU Directive
• Also may be completely new regulations rather than building on existing law
• If you meet anybody who thinks they know, keep smiling, and back slowly out of the room…
What will UK REACh regulations look like?
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• REACh could be based on 3 existing groups of legislation:– NONS (notification of new substance)
regulations, or Biocide / Pesticide Directive legislation for existing substance registration
– CHIP for MSDS regulation and effects on supply chain
• However, it could equally be a completely new set of rules superseding old ones
REACh and existing regulations
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• This is very worrying, as how to interpret the law is now in the detailed regulations and interpretative guidance, not in the enabling legislation
• The complexity of REACh is staggering – again, difficult to interpret and understand
• As professionals, we need to be aware of problems/ mistakes/ errors, and be prepared to stand up and be counted
Lack of time to implement REACh
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Make a list of everything you use now which is a chemical or formulation
• And I mean EVERYTHING – biocides, cleaning fluids, pesticides, lubricating fluids, welding fluxes, metal dips, solvents, paints, you name it
• Check with your suppliers that they will support that chemical, and the substance it’s used in, AND THE APPLICATION/ USE needs to be supported
• May need to get your suppliers to check with their suppliers
What to do about REACh now
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• The end users of chemicals are underprepared: – metal treatment places, metal bashers using
dip pots, specialist fluxes and solders– Food companies – disinfectants (even though
biocide are registered, will surfactants be supported?)
– Plastic manufacturers – plastic additives, moulding agents
– Paper mills – process additives, bleaches etc
Not just for the chemical industry
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Why are chemicals so important anyway?
• Apart from usual arguments showing that chemicals give us all a fantastically high standard of living, technology beyond our grandparent’s wildest dreams, secure water and food supplies, the main argument is we can’t read the future– we don’t know what we might need, and we don’t know when we might need it
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Potential effects of REACh
• Limited/ greatly reduced choice of chemicals for formulators and manufacturers
• Reduced range of products which can be used in EU
• New diseases happening all the time – bird flu or SARS, anyone
• We need a biodiversity equivalent – chemodiversity, for health and wealth
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• Political consensus at EU level keeps changing
• Likely to be implemented into UK law in a great hurry
• Flaws in regulations inevitable• Long term consequences may be
extremely serious• We should comment/ make changes
where possible
REACh Conclusions
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
• We may have to put up with a tidal wave of EU directives for some time
• But there is hope in the way the regulators are responding to feedback
• We can all influence how UK environmental regulation works, to make it better for everybody in the future
• And if a (then) one-woman band can do it, so can you!
Future of Environmental Regulation in the UK
YHEEMG, 15th November 2006
Thank you very much
• Any questions?
• Contact tel: 01422 24 22 22
• Mobile: 07900 21 21 26
• www.ttenvironmental.co.uk
• Email: [email protected]