Fine for illegal waste spreading on farmland

Chris Tindall
January 11, 2023

A Lincolnshire food recycling firm has been fined £36,000 for illegally spreading waste on three farmlands.

Whites Recycling pleaded guilty to eight offences, including the breach of environmental permit conditions related to the spreading of waste near Doncaster and also on farmland in Lincolnshire.

Doncaster Magistrates’ Court heard that the company, which holds several O-licences and runs over 60 HGVs, spread liquid waste on fields between March 2018 and December 2019.

Liquid wastes containing nitrogen and phosphates were spread on land by the company at the wrong time of year or in excessive quantities, which posed a risk of pollution to groundwater. In addition, the company pleaded guilty to illegally storing liquid waste in a storage tank between July 2017 and April 2018.

The Environment Agency (EA) said Whites Recycling could spread this waste on farmland where it can be demonstrated that land spreading will result in agricultural or ecological benefit.

It held an environmental permit that allowed it to spread food waste to land, but it was a condition of its permit that it had to notify the EA using a deployment form and the agency must agree to the spreading.

District Judge Young said Whites Recycling was negligent in that it had failed to take reasonable care to put in place and enforce proper systems. The court acknowledged that the company had reviewed its systems and steps had been taken designed to avoid further offending.

About the Author

Chris Tindall

Chris Tindall started writing for the haulage and logistics industry in 2002 and quickly realised there was enough going on to keep him busy for a very long time. He’s covered a broad range of significant issues, including GPS jamming by criminals, platooning, Brexit and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, the lack of safe and secure lorry parks and he helped secure the release of a lorry driver in a Polish jail due to misuse of the European Arrest Warrant.

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