Legislation requiring large
construction projects to formally set out how they will deal with waste is to be
repealed despite half of the responses to a Defra consultation being against
the proposals
The environment department
has confirmed that from 1 December the Site Waste Management Plans Regulations
(2008) will be scrapped in line with the government’s drive to cut “red
tape”. Under the Regulations, construction or demolition projects worth
£300,000 or more must complete a site waste management plan (SWMP) detailing
how waste will be managed at all stages of the project. The aim was to
encourage firms to minimise waste and boost levels of reuse, reclamation and
recycling.
CRS’s Head of Environment
commented ‘ It’s not that waste management is not cost effective, just the
opposite, construction companies will minimise and recycle waste based on cost.
In the current market the valve of ‘waste’ such as metals means that value
rather than legal requirement is the main driver for environmental projects’
The announcement of the
repeal came in the government’s formal response to a consultation. The 169
consultation responses were equally split for and against the repeal of the
Regulations – 49% each, with 2% of responses “neutral”.
Of the 70 contractors that
responded, 41 were in favour of the scrapping of the legislation, while 29 were
against. Meanwhile, more private businesses from the construction sector,
developers and local authorities were against scrapping the rules than were in
favour of them being repealed.
According to Defra’s
calculations, repealing the legislation will save the construction sector a total
of £3.9 million a year. However, the impact assessment calculation was based on
the administrative savings from not completing a plan, and more than two-thirds
of respondents to the consultation confirmed that they would continue to use
SWMPs even if they were no longer mandatory.
In light of such feedback,
Defra’s concludes that scrapping the Regulations will have a minimal impact on
the construction sector’s efforts to cut waste. “Repealing the Regulations will
provide a cost saving to business, while giving the option of retaining SWMP as
a tool that can be applied to any project to help identify savings,” states its
consultation response.
Defra stated that the
legislation was “ineffective”, but critics of the move, including the UK
Environmental Law Association, argued that Defra should consider how
enforcement could be improved rather than repealing the Regulations.
Source: Environmentalist
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