Powered by Lexis+®
Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom
CASE STUDY

“LexisNexis is great as I can find the answers I am looking for really quickly. I believe that nothing should be more than 6 clicks away - and the products from LexisNexis deliver on this standard”

Avensure

Access all documents on Contaminated Land Regime

Contaminated Land Regime meaning

/kənˈtamɪneɪtɪd/ /lant/ /reɪˈʒiːm/
What does Contaminated Land Regime mean?
The contaminated land regime is the framework used by regulators to identify land affected by contamination and to secure risk‑based remediation and cost recovery. In England and Wales and in Scotland it refers to the statutory scheme in part iia of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 (in force from 2000 onwards), supported by regulations and statutory guidance. Part IIA defines “contaminated land” by reference to significant harm or significant pollution of controlled waters, places primary responsibility on local authorities to inspect and determine sites, and enables remediation by voluntary arrangements or remediation notices. Liability follows the polluter‑pays principle: Class A “appropriate persons” (polluters) are pursued before Class B (current owners/occupiers), with detailed exclusion and apportionment rules. Certain “special sites” are regulated by the Environment Agency (England), Natural Resources Wales (Wales) or the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA). Authorities must maintain public registers and may recover reasonable remediation costs. In Northern Ireland, the analogous regime in Part III of the Waste and Contaminated Land (Northern Ireland) Order 1997 has not been commenced; contaminated land is addressed principally through planning, waste and pollution control powers. In Ireland, there is no standalone contaminated land regime; issues are managed through planning, waste and water legislation and...
Speed up all aspects of your legal work with tools that help you to work faster and smarter. Win cases, close deals and grow your business–all whilst saving time and reducing risk.

View the related Checklists about Contaminated Land Regime

CHECKLISTS
Contaminated Land Liability Transfer in Transactions: Asset and Share Sales, NewCo Structures, Exclusion Tests and Agreements under EPA 1990 Part IIA

Is land contamination an issue? According to the Law Society’s practice note on contaminated land, solicitors ought to assess potential contamination in every conveyancing matter they handle. It explains that, while only a minority of deals will be materially affected, practitioners must remain alert to possible environmental liabilities and think carefully about the enquiries and specialist support their clients might need—see Practice Note: Land contamination—Law Society practice note on contaminated land. Notably, the note summarises the contaminated land framework set out in Part IIA of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 (EPA 1990), including a concise explanation of who bears responsibility for remediation of contaminated land. Beyond clean-up obligations imposed under the EPA 1990, Pt IIA, contamination can also give rise to the following liabilities: clean-up duties under other regulatory schemes, eg environmental damage, works notices, or environmental permitting regimes civil claims, eg nuisance, negligence, or breach of contract criminal exposure, eg non-compliance with a remediation notice Refer to Practice Note: Environmental...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Practice Notes about Contaminated Land Regime

PRACTICE NOTES
Contaminated land remediation notices: prosecution, penalties, defences, civil injunctions, and authority-led remediation with cost recovery for non-compliance

Consequences of non-compliance If any requirement in a remediation notice remains unmet, the enforcing authority will need to decide whether to: prosecute commence civil proceedings carry out the remediation work itself Prosecution for non-compliance Offence Failing, without reasonable excuse, to comply with any requirement in a remediation notice is an offence. A person may therefore be prosecuted even where there has only been partial compliance with the notice. Whether someone has a reasonable excuse for non-compliance is a question of fact to be determined by the specific circumstances of the case...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
Water pollution liabilities and enforcement in England and Wales: offences, permitting, agricultural controls, nuisance claims, penalties and remediation, including corporate and officer liability

Water pollution Polluted water can kill fish and other aquatic life, harm habitats, threaten drinking supplies, lower water quality and foul beaches. Many kinds of contaminant can enter waters—chemicals, microplastics, petrol, oils and fats, ammonia in sewage, mine waste, nitrates from farming and solid waste. Definitions of water ‘Controlled waters’ Relevant territorial waters (seawater to three nautical miles) Coastal waters (eg tidal waters) Inland freshwaters (rivers, streams, watercourses, lakes and ponds) Groundwaters (water stored in rock layers beneath soil) Section 104 of the Water Resources Act 1991 (WRA 1991) ‘Surface water’ Inland waters (all standing or flowing surface water, except groundwater) Transitional waters (partly saline estuaries substantially influenced by freshwater flows) Coastal waters (water up to one mile seaward) The Water Environment (Water Framework Directive) (England and Wales) Regulations 2017, SI 2017/407, Sch 1 ‘Groundwater’ — all water below the ground surface...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
UK Corporation Tax: Land Remediation Relief for Contaminated and Derelict Land—Eligibility, 150% Deductions, Tax Credits, Exclusions and 2024–2025 Policy Developments

What is land remediation relief? (LRR) LRR provides corporation tax relief on expenditure incurred in remediating contaminated land or in bringing derelict sites back into use. In 2009, the regime was broadened to address market failure by returning long-term derelict land to use, bringing such sites back into use. An incentive applies where land, whose development has been affected by various kinds of continuing dereliction, is brought back into productive use. The extension was intended to correct market failure by encouraging activity on sites blighted by ongoing dereliction. The relief was at risk of being discontinued after 2012; however, the 2012 Budget confirmed it would continue. The October 2024 HM Treasury Corporate Tax Roadmap, published alongside Autumn Budget 2024, notes the new Labour government’s commitment to a brownfield-first approach, prioritising the development of previously used land wherever possible. Given the time since the last review of LRR, and the potential for it to help progress the government’s objectives, the Roadmap announced that a consultation would be launched to...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Precedents about Contaminated Land Regime

PRECEDENTS
Property sale clauses: seller retains contaminated land liabilities; indemnity and allocation under Part IIA EPA 1990 (England and Wales)

1 Definitions Within this clause [ 1 ] the following meanings apply: Contaminated Land Regime • Part IIA of the Environmental Protection Act 1990, as amended from time to time, and the Statutory Guidance Contamination • the existence or build-up of any Hazardous Substances at, in, on or under the Property [ at or prior to the Completion Date ] [ at any time whether before or after the Completion Date ] Environment • any or all of the following media, namely air, land, water (including surface water and groundwater) and any living organisms (including man) or systems sustained by those media Environmental Law • all applicable laws, statutes, secondary legislation, common law, directives, regulations, codes of practice and guidance notes that have legal effect [ and are in force at the Completion Date ] in ...

Read More Right Arrow