Tom Gillett

Tom Gillett advises clients on a wide range of environmental law, with a focus on chemicals regulation and product regimes (including REACH, biocides, food contact, product standards and CE/UKCA marking) in both the EU and the UK.
 
With a background in complex and technical contentious environmental law (including contaminated land, pollution incidents, environmental permitting and waste regulation), Tom is well placed to help clients navigate regulatory investigations, appeals and tribunal hearings, as well as to advise on regulatory compliance, data sharing, consortium management, and supply chain due diligence.
 
The Legal 500 UK, 2022, quotes one client as saying "I have worked with Tom Gillett and have found him to be diligent and knowledgeable in this developing area. As well as providing clear advice on a one to one basis, I also find his contributions in seminars and panel discussions useful and valuable."
 
Tom trained with a leading UK law firm in its Environment team. Prior to the completion of his legal training, Tom worked for environmental NGOs and the European Commission's Joint Research Centre, which provides independent scientific advice and support to EU policy, based in Ispra (Italy).

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2018

Qualifications

  • L.P.C. with M.Sc., Law, Business and Management
  • G.D.L.
  • B.A. and M.A., European Studies with French and Italian

Education

  • University of Bath
  • BPP Law School
  • University of Law (London)

3 Contributions by Tom Gillett

UK REACH (Assimilated Regulation (EC) 1907/2006): snapshot of scope, registration, supply chain duties, evaluation/authorisation/restrictions, enforcement, assimilated law status, Northern Ireland (Windsor Framework) application, divergence and recent developments
PRACTICE NOTES
UK REACH (Assimilated Regulation (EC) 1907/2006): snapshot of scope, registration, supply chain duties, evaluation/authorisation/restrictions, enforcement, assimilated law status, Northern Ireland (Windsor Framework) application, divergence and recent developments
Assimilated Regulation (EC) 1907/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 December 2006 concerning the Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (UK REACH) In force from 1 January 2021 Transposition deadline: N/A Amending documents: TBC Annex amendments: TBC Subject: Environment; chemical products What is UK REACH? 'REACH' is the shortened title for Regulation (EC) 1907/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council, which covers the registration, evaluation, authorisation and restriction of chemicals. Before REACH, there were worries that the risks from chemicals used and sold in the EU were not being sufficiently controlled or examined, and that the entire responsibility for doing so sat with public authorities. REACH set out to tackle this by moving the duty to demonstrate understanding and to manage chemical risks appropriately to those manufacturing and/or importing chemicals and goods that contain them (i.e. industry). In addition, REACH aims to: secure a high level of protection of human health and the environment enable the free movement of substances on the EU market strengthen the competitiveness and innovation of the EU chemicals industry, and ...
Environment
UK REACH and Waste: Exclusions, End-of-Waste, By-products, Assimilated Law, Devolved Arrangements, SCIP, and the Windsor Framework
PRACTICE NOTES
UK REACH and Waste: Exclusions, End-of-Waste, By-products, Assimilated Law, Devolved Arrangements, SCIP, and the Windsor Framework
Introduction to UK REACH ‘REACH’ is the shortened name for Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council, which governs the registration, evaluation, authorisation and restriction of chemicals. Before REACH came into effect, there were concerns that the risks arising from chemicals placed on the EU market were not being properly controlled or thoroughly investigated, and that the entire responsibility for this fell on public authorities. REACH set out to remedy these issues by moving the onus for demonstrating understanding of, and effectively managing, chemical risks to those manufacturing and/or importing chemicals and articles containing them (i.e. industry). In addition, REACH seeks to: secure a high degree of protection for human health and the environment enable the free movement of substances within the EU market enhance the competitiveness and innovation of the EU chemicals industry promote alternative methods for assessing hazardous properties of substances, such as quantitative structure–activity relationships At 11 pm (UK time) on 31 December 2020, REACH was copied onto the UK statute book as ‘retained direct EU legislation’ under the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018...
Environment
UK REACH registration: GB regime, Northern Ireland under EU REACH (Windsor Framework), assimilated law, scope, exemptions, transitional and joint submissions, dossier duties, and 2025 fees.
PRACTICE NOTES
UK REACH registration: GB regime, Northern Ireland under EU REACH (Windsor Framework), assimilated law, scope, exemptions, transitional and joint submissions, dossier duties, and 2025 fees.
Introduction to UK REACH REACH is the shorthand for Regulation (EC) 1907/2006 of the European Parliament and the Council, covering the registration, evaluation, authorisation and restriction of chemicals. Before REACH, there were concerns that the risks from chemicals placed on the EU market were not being sufficiently managed or investigated, and that the entire burden fell on public authorities. REACH sought to correct this by shifting responsibility to those who manufacture and/or import chemicals and articles containing them, requiring industry to demonstrate understanding of hazards and to manage risks appropriately. ensure a high level of protection for human health and the environment facilitate the free movement of substances within the EU market boost the competitiveness and innovation of the EU chemicals sector encourage alternative methods to assess hazardous properties, such as quantitative structure-activity relationships At 11 pm (UK time) on 31 December 2020, REACH was transposed onto the UK statute book as retained direct EU legislation under the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018...
Environment
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