The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Clampdown as Scotland used as dumping ground

Heaps of rubbish are among waste crimes investigat­ed by Sepa

- AILEEN ROBERTSON arobertson@thecourier.co.uk

Huge piles of junk blighting the countrysid­e could have been brought from elsewhere in the UK to be illegally dumped in Scotland.

Heaps of rubbish found at an undisclose­d location in Fife are among waste crimes being investigat­ed in a clampdown led by the Scottish Environmen­t Protection Agency (Sepa).

Illegal dumping is estimated to cost the UK economy £600 million a year.

Sepa has revealed waste from England, Wales and Northern Ireland is being brought into Scotland by hauliers.

The environmen­tal watchdog is leading the £3.8m LIFE SMART Waste project, which is a multi-agency initiative co-funded by the European Union.

“Intelligen­ce gathered by the LIFE SMART Waste project indicates that waste is being hauled from England and Wales and illegally deposited in Scotland,” said Kath McDowall, unit manager in Sepa’s Waste Crime Investigat­ions Team.

She added: “There are also indication­s of serious and organised crime group involvemen­t in the transport, sale and disposal of illegal waste – so it’s vital that we work with partners across the UK to tackle this issue.

“Waste crime will not be tolerated and Sepa will, with its partners, pursue and take proportion­ate action against those who seek to profit from waste crime.”

Police forces across Britain, along with English, Welsh and Northern Irish environmen­t agencies, have joined forces for the clampdown.

Among the other agencies involved are the British Transport Police, Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency, Office of the Traffic Commission­er for Scotland, HM Revenue and Customs and the Scottish Business Resilience Centre.

The Freight Transport Associatio­n, Road Haulage Associatio­n, Transport Associatio­n and British Internatio­nal Freight Associatio­n are also on board.

Included in the drive is a focus on metal theft, which is estimated to cost the UK at least £220m a year.

Since September 2016, it has been illegal in Scotland to trade scrap metal for cash or accept scrap metal without verifying the identity of the seller. Similar laws are in place across the rest of the UK.

Detective Inspector Arlene Wilson of the British Transport Police said: “Criminals often believe they can escape the law by crossing the border into another jurisdicti­on. But with multiagenc­y partners working together and sharing intelligen­ce across the UK, this just isn’t the case.”

 ??  ?? Sepa is investigat­ing after finding indication­s that there is an organised crime group involved in the dumping.
Sepa is investigat­ing after finding indication­s that there is an organised crime group involved in the dumping.

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