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Waste firm fined £510,000 for illegally storing tonnes of rubbish | |
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2019-01-28 | |
发布年 | 2019 |
语种 | 英语 |
国家 | 英国 |
领域 | 资源环境 |
正文(英文) | Press release Waste firm fined £510,000 for illegally storing tonnes of rubbishA haulage company has been fined £510,000 and its company director has been ordered to do unpaid work after they admitted illegally storing baled waste. In 2014 and 2015, Winters Haulage Limited used a site next to Royston Sewage Treatment Works (STW) on the Hertfordshire/Cambridgeshire border to illegally store thousands of tonnes of baled combustible waste known as refuse derived fuel (RDF), posing a significant fire risk. Some waste was also buried at the site and stockpiled at another nearby location. At Cambridge Magistrates’ Court this week, District Judge Ken Sheraton said company director Liam Patrick Winters was “certainly reckless”, ordering him to carry out 180 hours of unpaid work as part of a 12 month community order. He was also ordered to pay £8,850 in costs. Judge Sheraton said Winters Haulage’s actions were deliberate and the company had no systems in place to prevent the offences. Of the £510,000 fine, £450,000 was the money saved or avoided by committing the offences. The company was also ordered to pay costs of £30,000. After the hearing, Environment Agency team leader Phil Henderson said:
The Court heard that Winters, aged 41, was responsible for Winters Haulage Ltd (now in liquidation), a waste management company which was based at Hunting Gate, Hitchin. The company had operated at the Hitchin address under an environmental permit, but operated the Royston site without a permit, which is required by law. When the Environment Agency told them to clear the site some of the waste was taken to a Biffa landfill site and some to the company’s Hitchin site (one of two large waste transfer stations operated by the company at the time) but the necessary accompanying waste transfer notes were either absent or incorrect. More waste was also left illegally at a nearby location known as Kings Ride, near Therfield, which was also not a permitted site. It was later discovered that some of the baled waste, known as RDF, had been buried at the Royston site close to the STW. Rebecca Vanstone, prosecuting for the Environment Agency, told the court that “burial of waste would never have been permitted”. The site is above a sensitive chalk aquifer and landfilling waste can only be authorised under a specific permit which requires the site to be engineered to strict standards to protect the environment. There was no evidence of contamination of the groundwater, Ms Vanstone told the court, but there would be a time delay while contaminants travelled to the groundwater so there was “a possibility of harm in the future”. Mitigating for Liam Winters, Mike Magee told the court that early in 2014 Seneca Environmental Solutions Ltd, which runs an RDF production facility in Wembley, indicated that it could offer Winters Haulage a service to deal with its baled waste for transfer to Europe. However, Seneca was unable to take round bales as were produced by Winters at their Hitchin site. Winters used the Royston site to store the waste as a temporary measure until the RDF contract “kicked in”. Mr Magee said “Mr Winters never intended to undermine the statutory regime”. The Environment Agency served a statutory notice on the company stating that the site should be cleared, however the company failed to comply, despite having 4 months to clear it. Acting on information received, Environment Agency officers also visited a racehorse training site west of Royston known as King’s Ride, near Therfield. They saw 6 long rows of green-wrapped bales in a field and estimated there to be 450 bales. Some were ripped and revealed their contents to be mixed waste. The occupier and Winters Haulage were advised that the waste would have to be removed and the company later produced waste transfer notes stating that it had been taken to the company’s Hitchin site. During the investigation waste transfer notes for waste taken from Hitchin to Royston showed 60% was RDF, 30% was card and paper and 10% plastic. However, Ms Vanstone told the court that “the waste was mixed waste and there were no bales found that contained separate waste”. RDF (Refuse Derived Fuel) is residual waste that is often used as a fuel and can contain plastics, cloth, materials, and treated and untreated wood and is commonly baled using plastic wrapping which can degrade during periods of storage. Potentially polluting liquid can leak out and pollute the environment. Discrepancies in waste transfer notes, the use of number plate recognition equipment to track lorry movements of waste and officer observations all led to the conclusion that the company was acting illegally. Winters told investigating officers there were several clerical errors in relation to waste transfer notes which he had been unaware of. He said he did not know they needed a permit for the Royston site and did not think storing materials next to a sewage works was a bad place to store. He said there was no fire risk. After that conversation the company still moved bales from the Royston site without transfer notes. Officers became suspicious after the Royston site was finally cleared and the level of the land appeared to have changed, in some places by up to 1.5 metres. The ground was excavated and waste was discovered buried. In some areas landfill gas (hydrogen sulphide) was found. It was also discovered that the chalk bedrock had been excavated by up to 3.1 metres. Winters told officers that no waste was deliberately buried but that some may have been accidentally buried after some bales had split and the ground had been re-profiled to allow access due to the harsh weather conditions. On behalf of Liam Winters Mr Magee told the court “it was never his instruction to bury the waste”. The court heard that the site had not yet been remediated and it was estimated to cost the landowner, Anglian Water Group, £1.9 million to clean the site up to its previous condition. Cambridge Fire and Rescue Service assessed a risk of fire at the site and a plan was drawn up due to the risk of dense acrid fumes from a fire posing a threat to public safety. A Cambridgeshire County Council Emergency Plan was created involving 11 public organisations as the site was within 2.5km of schools, nurseries, sheltered accommodation, children’s homes, care and residential homes - all of which could have been at risk. The risk of polluting the groundwater would have been moderate to high from firefighting water run-off. An Environment Agency analytical chemist concluded that toxic substances could have been produced by a fire. Liam Winters pleaded guilty to:
Winters Haulage pleaded guilty to:
Published 28 January 2019
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来源平台 | gov.uk - environment agency |
文献类型 | 新闻 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/105796 |
专题 | 资源环境科学 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | admin. Waste firm fined £510,000 for illegally storing tonnes of rubbish. 2019. |
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