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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Cox Skips Ltd, R (on the application of) v The First Secretary of State & Anor [2006] EWHC 2626 (Admin) (26 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2006/2626.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2626 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF COX SKIPS LIMITED | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
(1) THE FIRST SECRETARY OF STATE | ||
(2) WEST SUSSEX COUNTY COUNCIL | (DEFENDANTS) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS REBECCA HAYNES AND MR ALAN BATES (JUDGMENT ONLY) (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the FIRST DEFENDANT
MR ROBERT WALTON (instructed by West Sussex CC) appeared on behalf of the SECOND DEFENDANT
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
"The delivery, sorting and temporary storage of waste materials arising from construction, building, demolition, gardening and landscape industries, excluding special wastes and liquid wastes."
"Erection of a building and lockable storage containers to accommodate the composite use the subject of the Lawful Development Certificate issued by West Sussex County Council on 1 March 1996 under reference TH/39/95; provision of a new security fencing and sliding gates to delineate the site the subject of the same Lawful Development Certificate."
"The proposed building and site shall only be used for the purposes of a waste transfer station for materials arising from construction, building, demolition, gardening and landscape industries excluding special wastes and liquid wastes, in accordance with the Certificate of Lawful Use issued by West Sussex County Council on 1 March 1996 ... and for no other purpose within or outside any use class specified in the schedule to the TCP (Use Classes) Order 1987 ...
Reason: to accord with the terms of the submitted application and to enable the County Planning Authority to control the development in the interests of the local environment."
"Continued use of the existing lawful waste recycling facility to accommodate stable waste, along with a skip to temporarily store asbestos sheeting and guttering classified as special waste; all in addition to the categories of waste set out in the Lawful Development Certificate issued by West Sussex County Council ... on 1 March 1996 ..."
"The site shall be used only for the purposes of a waste transfer and recycling facility in accordance with the terms of this permission and the Certificate of Lawful Use issued by West Sussex County Council on 1 March 1996 ... and for no other purposes within or outside any use class specified in the schedule to the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1997 ... unless a specific planning permission is granted for any other use.
Reason: to accord with the terms of the submitted application and to enable control of the development in the interests of the local environment."
I am told that the site has since been used in accordance with that conditional planning permission.
"... whether the removal of limitations on the categories of waste accepted at the site would have unacceptably harmful impacts on the living conditions of local residents, the safety and convenience of road users, with particular regard to traffic generation, noise and disturbance, and the safety of materials carried into and out of the site."
"10. Whereas the Environment Agency are able to exercise considerable control and supervision over the site operations, the guidance given in PPG10 and PPS23 is that the waste management regime should work in parallel with the planning regime. The two areas of legislation should complement each other, both over the degree of control and the matters which give rise to concern. In broad terms, planning controls are more relevant or appropriate in the wider area away from the site; the Environment Agency, through the waste management licence, is not able to give protection to broader environmental interests in the surrounding area. The letter from the Environment Agency of 8 March 2004 acknowledges that, recognising that prevention of serious detriment to the environment is a joint responsibility with the planning authority. That is, it is both appropriate and necessary that the detailed and specific concerns addressed by the waste management licence are augmented by appropriate planning controls.
11. In the broadest terms, whereas the site is not within an area of protected landscape, it is close to an area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, a strategic gap for planning processes, and it is reasonably close to residential properties. That is, it is not on a typical industrial type location in an urban area. There is the possibility that new types of waste could require novel handling methods which would have their own different range of environmental impacts. I accept that these may be no more harmful than the present range of operations or may even have less impact. Nevertheless, different waste streams may require different methods of handling, either in the types of vehicles used to transport the waste, the machinery used to handle it on site, and the containers used for storage prior to removal from the site. It may be that the installed plant already on site could successfully deal with new types of waste, but this may not be always so.
12. Although the waste management licence accepts a capacity of 260,000 tonnes per year, it was agreed at the inquiry that the installed capacity is about 130,000 tonnes, and that it is currently processing some 64,000 tonnes. That is, within the limitation of the current waste management licence there is scope for considerable growth in the amount of waste handled at this site, with a commensurate growth in traffic and potential implications for other issues of planning concern.
13. In my view it is appropriate for the planning authority to retain control over the types of waste handled here because of the associated implications of noise, movement or other off-site impacts not adequately controlled by the waste management licence. The Environment Agency's letter of 8 March 2004 specifically recognises that off-site implications for new waste streams, such as traffic movements, must be a matter considered through planning controls. That is, I do not accept that the waste management licence alone offers a rigorous or wide enough regime to safeguard the amenities of the local residents or the environmental impacts associated with the site operations over the wider area. Future expansion should be open to examination for, amongst other matters, the likely traffic impact. Therefore, I do not consider that removing all planning controls over the waste types to be handled would be appropriate.
14. Following the precautionary principle, it is entirely appropriate that each broad change in the nature of the operation here is subject to consideration under the planning regime, in order that the wider environmental and traffic impacts may be assessed. In my view it is essential that the local planning authority should be able to assess the likely impact for each new waste type. I do not consider that this imposes an undue burden upon the operator as the history of handling recent revisions to operations on the site shows that these have generally been responded to within a reasonable time by the county planning authority. Neither do I consider that these unspecified and unforeseen potential risks can be adequately predicted and addressed through the imposition of planning conditions, especially in view of the changing technology and any potential changes to the regulatory regime in the future. Accordingly, I propose to dismiss Appeal A."
" For the purposes of this Schedule, the following objectives are relevant objectives in relation to the disposal or recovery of waste—
(a) ensuring that waste is recovered or disposed of without endangering human health and without using processes or methods which could harm the environment and in particular without—
(i) risk to water, air, soil, plants or animals; or
(ii) causing nuisance through noise or odours; or
(iii) adversely affecting the countryside or places of special interest."
"It is our understanding that the prevention of serious detriment to the environment, along with the other relevant objectives for disposal or recovery of waste set out in the Waste Framework Directive is a joint responsibility of the Environment Agency and the Planning Authority. In addition, as the Planning Authority and the Agency both also have additional separate responsibilities, it is appropriate for the planning authority to impose controls on waste types accepted at the site, perhaps by generic types of waste that have similar hazards and properties."
I add in parenthesis here that the Environment Agency repeated that view in a subsequent letter of 17 March 2004, adding that the detail of the acceptable waste types can be controlled through the waste management licence.
"However, the Agency does not control traffic movements, this being a matter which is dealt with through the planning controls."