United Kingdom
Environmental Compliance Software Built for UK Regulations
Track permits under the Environmental Permitting Regulations 2016, manage Part 2A contaminated land assessments, monitor discharge consents and maintain full audit trails - all while keeping your data GDPR-compliant.
Meeting Environment Agency Compliance Requirements
The Environment Agency (EA) is the principal environmental regulator in England, responsible for issuing environmental permits, monitoring compliance and enforcing environmental law. Operators must demonstrate ongoing compliance through regular monitoring, record-keeping and reporting. Failure to comply with permit conditions can result in enforcement notices, suspension or revocation of permits, prosecution and unlimited fines.
The EA conducts risk-based inspections using the Compliance Classification Scheme (CCS). Every permitted site receives a compliance band rating based on the number and severity of breaches detected. Sites with poor compliance ratings face more frequent inspections and higher subsistence charges, making proactive compliance management both a legal and financial imperative.
Key obligations include maintaining monitoring data in an accessible format, submitting annual returns by specified deadlines, reporting incidents within 24 hours and keeping records of waste transfers under the duty of care regime. EnviroLog centralises all of these requirements into a single platform, ensuring nothing falls through the cracks.
Civil Sanctions and Enforcement
Since 2010, the EA has had the power to impose civil sanctions as an alternative to criminal prosecution. These include compliance notices, restoration notices, variable monetary penalties (VMPs) up to an unlimited amount and enforcement undertakings. The EA published its enforcement and sanctions policy in 2019, making clear that it will use its full range of enforcement tools against non-compliant operators. A well-documented compliance history - the kind EnviroLog creates automatically - is your strongest defence in any enforcement action.
UK Soil Guideline Values (SGVs) and C4SLs
The UK uses a tiered approach to contaminated land assessment. Soil Guideline Values (SGVs), published by the Environment Agency, provide scientifically based generic assessment criteria for individual contaminants. These are complemented by Category 4 Screening Levels (C4SLs), introduced by Defra in 2014, which define levels of contamination below which land is considered to pose no significant possibility of significant harm.
For consultants and site owners conducting Part 2A assessments or planning-led investigations under the NPPF, comparing laboratory results against these values is a critical first step. EnviroLog integrates UK SGVs and C4SLs directly into its lab result analysis module, automatically flagging exceedances and generating the comparison tables required for risk assessment reports.
Published SGVs cover arsenic, cadmium, chromium (VI), lead, mercury, nickel, selenium and inorganic cyanide for residential and commercial land uses. C4SLs have been published for arsenic, benzene, benzo(a)pyrene, cadmium, chromium (VI), lead, mercury and PFOS. Where no SGV or C4SL exists, practitioners typically use Generic Assessment Criteria (GAC) from the Chartered Institute of Environmental Health (CIEH) or Land Quality Management (LQM).
Use our free Contamination Threshold Lookup Tool to cross-reference UK SGVs and C4SLs against standards from other jurisdictions including Canada (CCME, BC CSR), the US (EPA RSLs), Australia (NEPM HILs) and the Netherlands (Dutch Intervention Values).
When Do UK Standards Apply?
UK Soil Guideline Values apply in two primary contexts. First, under Part 2A of the Environmental Protection Act 1990, local authorities use SGVs and C4SLs when determining whether land meets the legal definition of "contaminated land." Second, under the planning regime, developers must demonstrate that proposed developments are suitable for their intended use, with contamination assessment guided by the NPPF and BS 10175:2011+A2:2017 (Investigation of Potentially Contaminated Sites - Code of Practice).
The choice of assessment criteria depends on the land use scenario: residential with home-grown produce, residential without home-grown produce, allotments, commercial or public open space. EnviroLog lets you select the appropriate land use scenario for each site and automatically applies the correct screening values across all logged contaminants.
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) and Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA)
For large-scale projects in England and Wales, the Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Assessment) Regulations 2017 require an Environmental Impact Assessment for Schedule 1 developments (mandatory EIA) and Schedule 2 developments (screening required). EnviroLog helps EIA practitioners track mitigation commitments from Environmental Statements, monitor compliance with planning conditions and maintain the monitoring data that planning authorities increasingly require as part of EIA follow-up programmes.
Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control
Industrial installations regulated under the Industrial Emissions Directive (as transposed into UK law through the EPR 2016) must apply Best Available Techniques (BAT). BAT Reference Documents (BREFs) set emission levels and monitoring requirements that permitted sites must meet. EnviroLog tracks your installation's performance against BAT-Associated Emission Levels (BAT-AELs), flagging any readings that approach or exceed permitted thresholds before they become compliance breaches.
Scotland and Northern Ireland
While the core regulatory principles are similar across the UK, Scotland (regulated by SEPA) and Northern Ireland (regulated by NIEA) have their own regulatory instruments. EnviroLog supports multi-jurisdiction operations, allowing you to track compliance against the Contaminated Land (Scotland) Regulations 2000, the Waste Management Licensing (Scotland) Regulations 2011 and the corresponding Northern Ireland regulations alongside your English and Welsh permits.