What is E-PRTR?
The European Regulation on Pollutant Release and Transfer
Register entered into force on the 24 February 2006 (E-PRTR
Regulation). The Regulation requires operators of industries
regulated by SEPA and falling under the activities listed in Annex
I of the Regulation to report their releases and transfers to the
European Commission on an annual basis starting in 2007. The E-PRTR
succeeds the European Pollutant Emission Register (EPER) under
which data were reported for the years 2001 and 2004.
The difference between SPRI and E-PRTR is E-PRTR is a subset of
SPRI sites (What is SPRI). This is
because of several factors: there are more pollutants to be
reported by operators in SPRI, the pollutant thresholds for E-PRTR
are much higher than SPRI and SPRI has lower activity thresholds
for some activities. The E-PRTR thresholds are designed to capture
90% of all European industrial releases whereas the SPRI thresholds
are set to capture 95% of all Scottish industrial releases. This
makes SPRI relevant to Scotland and helps put Scottish releases
into context with industrial releases from the rest of the UK.
The E-PRTR Regulation aims to enhance public access to
environmental information through the establishment of a coherent
and integrated E-PRTR, thereby also contributing to the prevention
and reduction of pollution, delivering data for policy makers and
facilitating public participation in environmental decision-making.
EU member states are required to report releases from all
activities listed in Annex I of the E-PRTR Regulation.
The E-PRTR Regulation is in response to the Protocol on
Pollutant Release and Transfer Registers to the Convention on
Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-making and
Access to Justice on Environmental Matters “the Aarhus Convention”
issued by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UN-ECE). The EU is a signatory to the UN-ECE PRTR Protocol and
therefore is required to develop a European wide register. The UK
is also a signatory to the PRTR Protocol and therefore is required
to develop UK national PRTR. The E-PRTR and UK-PRTR will start in
2009
What is reported to the E-PRTR?
Annex I of the E-PRTR Regulation lists 65 activities. Annex I
enables operators to identify whether they are affected by the
associated reporting obligations. The activities are grouped in 9
activity sectors:
- energy;
- production and processing of metals;
- mineral industry;
- chemical industry;
- waste and waste water management;
- paper and wood production and processing;
- intensive livestock production and aquaculture;
- animal and vegetable products from the food and beverage
sector; and
- other activities.
If an activity specified in Annex I is carried out and the
capacity threshold specified therein is exceeded, there is an
obligation to report releases and off-site transfers; with the
additional condition that certain release threshold values or
threshold values for off-site transfer of pollutants in waste water
destined for treatment or threshold values for waste must also be
exceeded.
For releases of pollutants to air, water and land and for
off-site transfers of pollutants in waste water the corresponding
threshold values are specified for each pollutant in Annex II of
the E-PRTR Regulation. Annex II of the Regulation lists the 91
pollutants that are relevant for reporting under the E-PRTR. The
pollutants are specified by a consecutive number, the CAS number,
where available, and the name of the pollutant.
For off-site transfers of waste the threshold values are 2
tonnes per year for hazardous waste and 2,000 tonnes per year for
non-hazardous waste.
For further information on the E-PRTR please visit the EU’s
EPER
website
and view the
Guidance document.