York-based farming business J E Hartley, which produces frozen vegetables to some of the country’s biggest retailers and manufacturers, has offered to pay £23,640 to the Yorkshire Dales Rivers Trust after spreading waste sludge on land illegally – even though no environmental harm was done.
The company, of Roth Hill Lane, Thorganby, repeatedly spread waste sludge on its land between March 2016 and February 2022 without permission.
Since March 2016 the company had held a permit for spreading its own waste on its land. It operates an anaerobic digestion plant on site which produces a proportion of the company’s energy, and it is the waste sludge from this plant that the company spreads on land.
Under the conditions of the permit, the company must make an application each time it wishes to spread waste, to say where it intends to spread waste, what type of waste, how much and when. Every application must also include evidence to show that there is an agricultural benefit from the spreading of waste.
The Environment Agency then considers each application and decides if there is agricultural benefit and whether it can go ahead.
Records showed that spreading took place every year from 2013 to 2021 in varying quantities from 2,664 tonnes to as much as 10,530 tonnes. However, only four applications for spreading were made during this period and all were refused, needing additional information.
Therefore, the company avoided paying applications fees which ranged from £760 to £1,718 each time.
No environmental harm has been identified from the spreading carried out by the company.
Claire Barrow, Area Environment Manager for North Yorkshire at the Environment Agency, said: “It is vital that companies are aware of their environmental obligations. In this case JE Hartley Limited recognised that they had failed to comply with their environmental permit and we deemed it appropriate to accept an Enforcement Undertaking offer, which ensured that all avoided application costs were donated to a project that will enhance, restore and protect England’s natural environment.”