What’s new in law

Recent significant changes to legislation administered by the EPA.

See the list of legislation administered by EPA.

March 2024

Environment Protection Legislation Amendment (Stronger Regulation and Penalties) Act 2024

The Environment Protection Legislation Amendment (Stronger Regulation and Penalties) Act 2024 (EPLA Act) was passed by Parliament on 21 March 2024. All but one provision of the EPLA Act commenced on assent, on 3 April 2024.

The EPLA Act increases certain penalties and strengthens protections for the environment. It is over 80 pages long and amends eight Acts and three regulations. The major amendments are to the:

Protection of the Environment Administration Act 1991 to:

  • Specify matters in relation to climate change, including changes to reflect the court decision in the Bushfire Survivors for Climate Action case:
    • Clarifying that the EPA’s objective to reduce risks to human health and prevent the degradation of the environment includes taking action in relation to climate change;
    • Providing an example of climate change in relation to developing objectives, guidelines, and policies to ensure environment protection.
  • Specify that the EPA can enter into arrangements, including commercial arrangements, in relation to carbon neutrality and achieving net zero emissions.
  • Allow the funds for penalty notices issued by EPA officers to be paid into the Environment Protection Authority Fund.
  • Limiting the liability for the Crown and personal liability of protected persons when using new powers about public warning statements, provided persons have acted in good faith.

Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 (POEO Act) to:

  • Increase maximum court penalties for:
    • Tier 1 offences to $10 million for corporations and $2 million for individuals for wilful offences;
    • Tier 2 offences involving asbestos to $4 million for companies and $1 million for individuals, including failing to comply with the requirements of a resource recovery order;
    • Other common Tier 2 offences.
  • Increase penalty notice amounts including:
    • Doubling common penalty notice offences to $30,000 for corporations and $15,000 for individuals;
    • 50% higher penalties for second and subsequent offences for some penalty notice offences;
    • Doubling fines for general littering of small items;
    • Removing the differential for penalty notices issued by the EPA and councils for the same offence.
  • Simplify the process for making a protection of the environment policy.
  • Enable the EPA to issue preliminary investigation notices to determine if either of the following circumstances may exist or have existed at a premises: a substance that poses a potential risk of harm to human health or the environment or a pollution incident.
  • Introduce the new offence of small-scale illegal dumping, with higher penalties for depositing waste or litter in sensitive places.
  • Ensure clean-up notices can be easily issued in relation to deposited litter or waste.
  • Empower authorised officers to issue verbal directions to remove litter or waste.
  • Define additional offences as repeat waste offences, including offences for resource recovery orders and exemptions, non-compliance with clean-up notices in relation to waste and leaks, spillages, and other escapes that involve waste.
  • Enable the EPA to issue recall notices for substances, with the approval of the Minister, including where a substance poses a potential risk of harm to human health or the environment. A recall notice can require supply chain participants to do various things including ceasing to supply a substance or recovering a supplied substance. Supply chain participants are also able to initiate voluntary recalls.
  • Enable the EPA to issue public warning statements about activities, persons, substances, or complaints of concern.
  • Allow the EPA to apply to the Land and Environment Court for an order prohibiting a person from involvement in schedules activities or from holding or applying for a licence.
  • Remove the protected document provisions for voluntary environmental audits in Part 6.3.

Amendments are also made to the Contaminated Land Management Act 1997 (CLM Act), Dangerous Goods (Road and Rail Transport) Act 2008 (DG Act), Land and Environment Court Act 1979 (LEC Act), Pesticides Act 1999, Plastic Reduction and Circular Economy Act 2021 (PRCE Act), Protection from Harmful Radiation Act 1990 (Radiation Act), including:

  • Clarifying provisions about certificates of analysts that are prepared for the EPA (CLM Act, Pesticides Act, POEO Act)
  • Increasing maximum penalties for harm offences (Pesticides Act, Radiation Act)
  • Increasing the jurisdictional limit of the Local Court (CLM Act, DG Act, Pesticides Act, POEO Act)
  • Simplifying the process for calculating monetary benefits for the purposes of monetary benefit orders (CLM Act, Pesticides Act, Radiation Act, POEO Act)
  • Clarifying the jurisdiction of the Land and Environment Court to hear certain dangerous goods matters (LEC Act)
  • Clarifying the factors that can be considered when assessing if a person is a fit and proper person to hold a licence, etc. (Pesticides Act, Radiation Act, POEO Act)
  • Clarifying requirements for serving documents (CLM Act, DG Act, Pesticides Act, PRCE Act, Radiation Act, POEO Act)
  • Increased maximum penalties that can be imposed by regulations (DG Act, Pesticides Act)
  • Including or clarifying regulation-making powers (Pesticides Act, Radiation Act, POEO Act), including in relation to:
    • Requirements for purchases of pesticides to provide evidence of training and recording that information shown by purchasers (Pesticides Act)
    • Regulated activities or otherwise dealing with regulated material, radiation apparatus, and harmful non-ionising radiation (Radiation Act)
    • Waste classifiers accreditation scheme and fees for licence variations (POEO Act)

Environment Legislation Amendment (Hazardous Chemicals) Act 2024

The Environmental Legislation Amendment (Hazardous Chemicals) Act 2024, (Hazardous Chemicals Act) which implements a new national standard for the environmental risk management of industrial chemicals, was passed by Parliament on 13 March 2024 and the provisions of the Hazardous Chemicals Act commenced on assent, on 25 March 2024. The regulation of environmentally hazardous chemicals will now occur through the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 (POEO Act) and key provisions from the Environmentally Hazardous Chemicals Act 1985 (EHC Act) and regulation will be transferred to the POEO Act, allowing for the repeal of the EHC Act

Key changes in the Act include:

  • Applying the Commonwealth’s new Industrial Chemicals Environmental Management Standard (IChEMS) register in NSW
  • Enabling the EPA to publish chemical use notices requiring information about the use and manufacture of chemicals to be given to the EPA
  • Creating new offences relating to compliance with the NSW IChEMS register and chemical use notices
  • Introducing new scheduled activities for ‘environmentally hazardous chemicals’ under the POEO Act, requiring users of high-risk industrial chemicals to be licensed by the EPA
  • Converting existing environmentally hazardous chemicals licences under the EHC Act to environment protection licences under the POEO Act
  • Extending authorised officers powers to apply to environmentally hazardous chemicals 
  • Consequential changes resulting from the repeal of the EHC Act

February 2024

Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Amendment (Waste Facility Contributions) Regulation 2024

The Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Amendment (Waste Facility Contributions) Regulation 2024 commences on 1 March 2024. It amends the Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Regulation 2014 to remove Kyogle local government area from the Regional Levy Area for the purposes of the waste levy until 30 June 2027. This implements a NSW Government election commitment.

November 2023

Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Amendment (Mixed Waste Organic Outputs) Regulation 2023

The Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Amendment (Mixed Waste Organic Outputs) Regulation 2023 (Amending Regulation) amended the Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Regulation 2014 (Waste Regulation) to extend the repeal date of clause 21A of the Waste Regulation from 1 November 2023 to 1 September 2024.

The Amending Regulation enables the EPA to extend, until 1 September 2024, exemptions from the waste levy contributions otherwise payable under section 88 of the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 for approved alternative waste disposal facilities (AWTs) processing specified amounts of mixed waste organic outputs.

The Amending Regulation commenced on 27 October 2023. By publication in the NSW Government Gazette No 509 of 1 November 2023, the EPA approved waste levy exemptions for four AWTs.

October 2023

Radiation Control Amendment Act 2023 and the Radiation Control Amendment Regulation 2023

The Radiation Control Amendment Act 2023 (the amending Act) amends the Radiation Control Act 1990 (the Act)to implement the recommendations of a 2021 statutory review of the Act.

The amending Act introduces reforms to ensure that radiation is managed safely to protect human health and the environment, and that the people who deal with radiation are more accountable for its safe management. The amending Act:

  • Amends the title of the Act to now be known as the Protection from Harmful Radiation Act 1990 and the Radiation Control Regulation 2013 (the Regulation) to the Protection from Harmful Radiation Regulation 2013.
  • Improves life cycle management of radiation sources, including requiring licensing for transport and end-of-life management.
  • Increases penalties for certain offences and EPA powers to recover costs.
  • Introduces a specific commitment to the principles of ecologically sustainable development to the objects of the Act.
  • Modernises the governance and membership of the Radiation Advisory Council.

Most of the amendments to the Act commenced on 24 October 2023, with new licensing requirements commencing 6 months from that date and new court powers, offences and EPA cost recovery provisions commencing on proclamation.

The Radiation Control Amendment Regulation 2023 amends the Regulation, making the following changes:

  • Reinstates the offences relating to disposal of regulated material and transport of radioactive substances until the equivalent offences (sections 33C and 33D) commence under the Act via proclamation. Once sections 33C and 33D of the Act commence, the Regulation offences will be removed.
  • Amends the table in the Regulation that sets out penalty notice offences (Schedule 7) to reflect the changes to the offences in the Act.

For further information, see changes to radiation protection laws.

June 2023

Dangerous Goods (Road and Rail Transport) Amendment (Model Law) Regulation 2023 

The Dangerous Goods (Road and Rail Transport) Amendment (Model Law) Regulation 2023 (Regulation) modifies the Dangerous Goods (Road and Rail Transport) Regulation 2022 (DG Regulation). This change aligns with the recent updates to the Model Subordinate Instrument on the Transport of Dangerous Goods by Road or Rail (MSI) by making amendments following the substitution of edition 7.7 with edition 7.8 of the Australian Code for the Transport of Dangerous Goods by Road and Rail (ADG Code).

The Regulation came into effect on 16 June 2023 and addresses minor drafting errors within the DG Regulation, with a transition period until 1 April 2024, to help industries adapt to the new compliance rules in the ADG Code.

The key updates in the Regulation include:

  • adopting container and packaging definitions from ADG Code 7.8
  • redefining the Infrastructure and Transport Minister’s Meeting as the 'Ministerial Council'
  • adding a transitional provision to ensure industry complies with any changes to ADG Code requirements;
  • allowing prime contractors to keep transport documents in paper or electronic form; and
  • clarifying manufacturer's duties regarding compliance plates on portable tanks, including those made of fibre-reinforced plastic for transporting compressed gases, and penalties for non-compliance.

Additionally, the Regulation rectifies minor drafting errors related to penalty and fee amounts in Schedule 2 of the DG Regulation, such as adjusting penalty notice amounts to reflect higher penalties in the Act for more severe offences. It also specifies that licence application, renewal, and transfer fees in Schedule 1 are payable per vehicle used for transporting dangerous goods.

March 2023

Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Amendment (Waste Contributions) Regulation 2023

The Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Amendment (Waste Contributions) Regulation 2023 amends the Protection of the Environment Operations (Waste) Regulation 2014 to clarify and improve the waste levy framework. The Regulation

  • clarifies how to determine the amount of waste at a waste facility for the purpose of determining when the occupier of the facility must pay the waste levy, in line with the EPA’s current practices (this is specifically in relation to a breach of the authorised amount)
  • provides that the EPA can require an occupier of a waste facility to engage an independent person approved by the EPA to conduct an audit, and prepare a report on, information provided, or required to be provided, in the facility’s waste contribution monthly reports 
  • clarifies that the EPA’s power to make estimations extends to estimations of waste received at a waste facility and expands the circumstances in which the EPA may estimate the amount of waste at, or received at, a waste facility
  • clarifies the definition of ‘scheduled waste disposal facility’ 
  • revises the wording of certain waste levy exemptions 
  • updates the table on operational purposes deductions from the waste levy to remove certain specifications, remove certain kinds of waste and add several new kinds of waste
  • makes a minor amendment and includes savings and transitional provisions.

The amendments on operational purposes deductions commence on 1 June 2023. All other amendments in the Regulation commenced on 2 March 2023.

February 2023

Protection of the Environment Operations Amendment (Waste Storage) Regulation 2023

The Protection of the Environment Operations Amendment (Waste Storage) Regulation 2023 commenced on 24 February 2023. The Regulation amends Schedule 1 to the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 to increase the thresholds for the scheduled activity of waste storage at some Community Recycling Centres and premises receiving waste from Household Chemical Cleanout events. Specifically, the Regulation amends cl 42(3)(a) of Schedule 1 to the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 to allow:

  • Some Community Recycling Centres to store up to 12 tonnes of hazardous waste, restricted solid waste, liquid waste or special waste (other than waste tyres) at any time; and
  • Household Chemical Cleanout events to store up to 80 tonnes of hazardous waste, restricted solid waste, liquid waste or special waste (other than waste tyres) collected during the event without the need for an environment protection licence for ‘waste storage’.

The Regulation also inserts cl 42(5) into Schedule 1 containing relevant definitions.

The changes to the threshold for Community Recycling Centres only currently applies to 12 high volume sites. These are identified in NSW Government Gazette No 63 of Friday 10 February 2023.

Protection of the Environment Operations Legislation Amendment (Miscellaneous) Regulation 2023

The Regulation makes minor miscellaneous amendments to correct, streamline, and remove redundancies from environment protection legislation. The Regulation

  • makes the EPA the approver of treatment methods for clinical and sharps waste, rather than NSW Health, in Schedule 1 of the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997;
  • fixes cross-references in the Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2022; and,
  • removes duplicate noise labelling requirements for domestic air conditioners and unnecessary noise limits and labelling requirements for ride-on mowers in the Protection of the Environment Operations (Noise Control) Regulation 2017.

Waste Avoidance and Resource Recovery (Container Deposit Scheme) Amendment (Miscellaneous) Regulation 2023

The Waste Avoidance and Resource Recovery (Container Deposit Scheme) Amendment (Miscellaneous) Regulation 2023 commenced on 17 February 2023. The Regulation amends the Waste Avoidance and Resource Recovery (Container Deposit Scheme) Regulation 2017 to remove ambiguity and anomalies, reduce administrative burden and address compliance risks in the NSW container deposit scheme (Scheme) by

  • clarifying that the EPA may impose conditions on a collection point arrangement approval (Approval) to protect human health and the environment and making it an offence to contravene a condition of an Approval
  • clarifying that the ‘holder’ of an Approval includes both the network operator and the collection point operator for the Approval. The EPA may suspend or revoke an Approval if a holder of an Approval contravenes the Approval or Scheme legislation
  • requiring the holder of an Approval to apply to the EPA to vary a condition of the Approval and clarifying the meaning of a ‘condition’
  • excluding glass containers used, rather than designed, to contain only wine or spirituous liquor from the Scheme. This prevents suppliers from placing beverages that fall within the Scheme (such as beer) in glass containers designed to contain wine to circumvent Scheme requirements
  • making it an offence for a collection point operator to fail to cause payment of a refund amount payable by electronic funds transfer within 3 days after a container is counted by a machine used by the collection point operator to count, verify and sort containers
  • specifying that the EPA can refuse a container approval on the ground that the containers concerned will not comply with a condition of approval prescribed by the regulations
  • specifying that the EPA may suspend or revoke a container approval on the ground that the EPA considers the material forming part of the container is not suitable for recycling or reuse or another appropriate method of disposal
  • enabling an application for the transfer of a container approval to be made in the same way as an application for a container approval
  • clarifying that fermented milk and milk with added cultures (such as drinking yoghurt or kefir) fall within scope of the Scheme. This aligns with the QLD and SA container deposit schemes
  • specifying that an ‘alternative waste treatment plant operator’ includes a person who holds an environment protection licence authorising waste processing (non-thermal) treatment
  • declaring the container deposit scheme legislation in the ACT, QLD, NT and WA as corresponding laws for the container deposit scheme. This ensures consumers can claim refunds in NSW for containers acquired in those jurisdictions without committing an offence.

December 2022

Protection of the Environment Operations (Clean Air) Regulation 2022

The Regulation commenced on 16 December 2022 and replaces the Protection of the Environment Operations (Clean Air) Regulation 2021 with changes to

  • require cleaner petrol to be supplied in the low volatility zone for an extra month over summer
  • impose stricter emission limits and controls for volatile organic liquids in storage tanks, loading plant and tank vehicles
  • require plant and activities in Group 3 and Group 4 - which started operating or were upgraded between 1979 and 1997- to comply more stringent air emission standards of Group 5 by 1 November 2027 and Group 6 by 1 November 2030
  • reduce administrative burden by removing or harmonising provisions that are duplicated, outdated or obsolete.

August 2022

Contaminated Land Management Regulation 2022 

The Contaminated Land Management Regulation 2022 has been made and commenced on 26 August 2022.

The Regulation supports the EPA’s ongoing administration of the Contaminated Land Management Act 1997 by

  • providing for the recovery of the EPA’s administrative costs associated with orders and proposals made under the Act,
  • supporting the administration of the site auditor scheme with new provisions enabling the EPA to waive or refund accreditation fees in certain circumstances,
  • updates the particulars for annual returns submitted by site auditors,
  • prescribing certain offences as penalty notice offences with amendments to align penalty notice amounts with environment protection legislation, and 
  • requiring certain EPA guidelines about financial assurances and a protocol for monetary benefits are observed.

Protection of the Environment Operations (Clean Air) Amendment Regulation 2022

The Protection of the Environment Operations (Clean Air) Amendment Regulation 2022 commenced on 19 August 2022. The Amendment Regulation extends the repeal date of the Protection of the Environment Operations (Clean Air) Regulation 2021 from 1 September 2022 to 16 December 2022. This allows the EPA further time to consider and address issues arising from public consultation on a draft replacement regulation.   

Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2022

 

The Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2022 (the Regulation) commences on 1 September 2022 and replaces the Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2021 which will be repealed on that date. For existing licensed activities, changes made by the Regulation to Schedule 1 of the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 will commence 9 months after the commencement date of 1 September 2022, allowing licensees affected by the changes time to take any required action.  

The Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2022 continues key provisions of the Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2021 and also:

  • introduces an application fee for environment protection licences based on the complexity and the scale of the activities proposed to be authorised by the licence in order to recover the EPA’s costs when assessing licence applications and preparing new licences;
  • amends the definition of ‘extractive activities’ in Schedule 1 of the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 to ensure that extractive activities that pose a risk to the environment are appropriately regulated and to require a licence where the extractive activity involves, over the period of 1 year, the extraction of:
    • more than 30, 000 tonnes of extractive materials (where 0.65 cubic metres of extractive material that is wet is taken to weigh 1 tonne), or
    • more than 30, 000 cubic metres if the activity is maintenance dredging of a navigation channel for vessels carried out by or on behalf of a public authority;
  • introduces two sub-categories of activity within the scheduled activity of ‘petroleum products and fuel production’ and makes corresponding changes to licensing fee thresholds for each, so that regulation is proportionate to the environmental risk of these activities;
  • excludes bivalve molluscs and seaweed propagules from the scheduled activity of ‘aquaculture and mariculture’;
  • introduces an additional administrative fee based on a new production capacity threshold for the scheduled activity of ‘bird accommodation’, applying to facilities that have the capacity to accommodate more than 3000 tonnes of live weight;
  • refines the licensing fee thresholds in Schedule 1 of the Regulation to better align with the definitions of activities requiring a licence in Schedule 1 of the POEO Act;
  • clarifies that a pollution incident response management plan is only required to be tested following an incident that caused or threatened to cause material harm to the environment;
  • makes changes to certain penalty notice provisions;
  • expands the matters that are required to be tested using approved methods to include the presence or concentration of any matter, noise emissions and odour;
  • clarifies the National Pollutant Inventory reporting and emissions estimation processes;
  • expands the matters prescribed as water pollution to include animal excreta, manure or urine; and
  • prescribes the EPA’s Financial Assurance Policy and the Guideline on Estimating Financial Assurance (published in the NSW Government Gazette in June 2022) as the guidelines which the EPA must observe for the content of licence conditions requiring financial assurances and for determining the required amount of financial assurance.

Dangerous Goods (Road and Rail Transport) Regulation 2022

The Dangerous Goods (Road and Rail Transport) Regulation 2022 commenced on 19 August 2022, replacing the Dangerous Goods (Road and Rail Transport) Regulation 2014.

The new Regulation implements the national Model Laws and:

  • makes changes to clarify and strengthen safety, maintenance and incident reporting requirements,
  • clarifies the powers of the EPA and Safe Work NSW to make determinations related to the transport of dangerous goods by road or rail,
  • prescribes certain offences as penalty notice offences and prescribes penalty notice amounts,
  • prescribes minor increases to licence and other fees and provides for adjustment of fees for inflation in accordance with the NSW Consumer Price Index from 2023–24, and
  • makes machinery and minor changes to formatting and language.

July 2022

Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Amendment (Thermal Energy from Waste) Regulation 2022

The Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Amendment (Thermal Energy from Waste) Regulation 2022 (EfW Regulation) commenced on 8 July 2022 and inserts a new Part 3A into Chapter 8 of the Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2021 (General Regulation).

Offence

The EfW Regulation implements the Energy from Waste Infrastructure Plan by making it an offence to carry out the thermal treatment of waste if

  1. It involves or results in energy recovery from the waste, and
  2. An environment protection licence is required for any scheduled activity at the premises

The offence extends to any work carried out to enable the thermal energy from waste activity to be carried out at the premises.

The maximum penalties for the offences are

  • For a corporation – 400 penalty units, and a further 400 penalty units per day for each day the offence continues
  • For an individual – 200 penalty units, and a further 200 penalty units per day for each day the offence continues.

Exceptions

The following exceptions apply to the prohibition on energy from waste

  • Eligible waste fuels: the prohibition does not apply to the thermal treatment of a fuel
    • Defined in Part 1 of the Eligible Waste Fuel Guidelines as published by the EPA in the Gazette from time to time, and
    • Listed in section 3 of the NSW Energy from Waste Policy Statement as published by the EPA in the Gazette from time to time.
  • Designated precincts: the prohibition does not apply to the following precincts
    • the Parkes Activation Precinct
    • the Richmond Valley Jobs Precinct
    • the Southern Goulburn Mulwaree Precinct
    • the West Lithgow Precinct
  • Existing activities: the prohibition does not apply if the activity was lawfully able to be, and was first, carried out before 8 July 2022, and was an established and operating activity immediately before that date.

The prohibition also does not apply in relation to certain types of thermal treatment.

It also doesn’t apply where the thermal treatment of waste is to replace a less environmentally sound fuel (being coal, coal-derived solid fuel or petroleum-based liquid fuel, but excluding liquified petroleum gas, natural gas and liquified natural gas). For this exception to apply, the thermal treatment of waste must also satisfy the following

  • the fuel was, or was lawfully able to be, thermally treated immediately before 8 July 2022
  • if the fuel was thermally treated at the premises in the 12 month period immediately before 8 July 2022 - at least 90% of the energy recovered from that thermal treatment (including any energy subsequently generated from that energy) was used in, or to power, industrial or manufacturing processes at the premises during that period; and
  • at least 90% of the energy recovered from thermally treating the waste (including any energy subsequently generated from that energy) is used in, or to power, industrial or manufacturing processes at the premises annually.

See Part 3A of Chapter 8 of the General Regulation for further information on the prohibition and the exceptions.

See energy recovery facilities.

March 2022

Environment Legislation Amendment Act 2022

The Environment Legislation Amendment Act 2022 commenced on 4 March 2022.

The Environment Legislation Amendment Act 2022 varies the following environmental Acts to ensure those responsible for contamination and pollution can be made to clean it up or manage it into the future.

Contaminated Land Management Act 1997 to

  • extend existing financial assurance provisions to ongoing maintenance orders and restrictive and public positive covenants as these instruments are used for managing residual contamination
  • allow the EPA to issue a clean-up or prevention notice as soon as it is notified of contamination, so that it can take immediate action to prevent further contamination and clean-up of the site.
  • increase maximum penalties to align with similar offences and court orders to those available under the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997

Pesticides Act 1999 to:

  • enable the EPA to make a pesticide control order without the Minister’s approval, to support the regulatory independence of the EPA and act quickly to ensure the safe use and disposal of restricted pesticides.
  • align the available court orders with those available under the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 so that a broader suite of orders can be utilised in sentencing convicted offenders for pesticides crimes.

Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997to:

  • extend regulatory requirements and considerations to current and former directors and related corporate bodies to ensure businesses that set up and dissolve companies to deflect accountability can be held responsible.
  • extend liability for illegal waste dumping to vehicle owners to ensure illegal dumpers are held to account.
  • increase protections for officers investigating environmental offences so that they can carry out their jobs safely.
  • expand regulatory powers and tools to ensure those responsible for contamination and pollution can be made to clean it up or manage it into the future, including the ability to act against multiple people that contributed to pollution.
  • new and increased maximum penalties to align with similar offences and highlight the severity of those crimes, particularly relating to false or misleading conduct and providing false or misleading information.
  • enable conditions of suspended, revoked or surrendered licences to be transferred or enforced through a restriction or public positive covenant on land covered by the licence.

The amendments align powers across the Contaminated Land Management Act 1997, the Pesticides Act 1999, the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 and the Radiation Control Act 1990 to recover monetary benefits from current and former directors and related corporate bodies of a company convicted of an environmental offence, where those related entities have benefitted financially from the offence.

The amendments also amend and align powers across the Contaminated Land Management Act 1997, the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 and the Radiation Control Act 1990 to require the EPA to consider the financial capacity of a person when determining if a financial assurance is required.

November 2021

Plastic Reduction and Circular Economy Act 2021

The Plastic Reduction and Circular Economy Act 2021 was assented to on 29 November 2021. The Act creates legislative frameworks to prohibit the  supply of problematic and unnecessary plastics,  set design standards for items for environmental, human health or economic reasons, and set product stewardship requirements for brand owners of regulated products.

The Act will commence in the following phases:

  • From 1 June 2022, the supply of lightweight plastic bags will be banned
  • From 1 November 2022, the supply of plastic single-use straws, cutlery, stirrers, plates and bowls, and cotton buds, and expanded polystyrene food service items will be banned
  • From 1 November 2022, the first design standard will prevent the supply of rinse-off personal care items containing microbeads. 

The Act contains a range of new offences, including offences for:

  • supplying a prohibited plastic item or an item that fails to comply with a design standard, while carrying on a business
  • providing false or misleading information in connection with the supply of a prohibited plastic item or an item to which a design standard applies.

The Act also contains offences relating to the product stewardship framework, however, these will have no work to do until regulations are made.

The offences for supplying a prohibited plastic item or an item that fails to comply with a design standard only applies in the course of ‘carrying on a business’. This term is defined in the Act and includes carrying on an activity for commercial, charitable, sporting, educational or community purposes, as well as carrying on a not-for-profit business, a partnership or a sole trader.

There are a range of enforcement tools and investigation powers under the Act for the EPA as the regulator. A broad exemption framework is provided under the Act to address both specific and general circumstances, including exemptions for the supply of single use plastic drinking straws for a disability or other medical reasons.

Regulations to support the administration of the Act and prescribe regulated products under the new Product Stewardship scheme are yet to be implemented.

For more information on the Act and the NSW Plastic Action Plan, see NSW Plastics Plan.

September 2021

Protection of the Environment Operations (Clean Air) Regulation 2021

The Protection of the Environment Operations (Clean Air) Regulation 2021 commences on 1 September and remakes the Protection of the Environment Operations (Clean Air) Regulation 2010 with minor administrative changes to

  • repeal provisions dealing with cruise ship fuels. Air emissions from cruise ship fuel are now controlled by the Commonwealth’s Protection of the Sea (Prevention of Pollution from Ships) Act 1983,
  • update agency names, clause numbering and repeal ‘spent’ provisions.

The Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2021

The Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2021 commences on 1 September 2021 and remakes the Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2009 with minor administrative changes such as updates to agency names, clause numbering and repeal of spent provisions.

March 2021

The Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Amendment (PFAS Firefighting Foam) Regulation 2021

The Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Amendment (PFAS Firefighting Foam) Regulation 2021 amends the Protection of the Environment Operations (General) Regulation 2009 to introduce new measures to minimise and manage the potential risks to human health and the environment posed by PFAS firefighting foam, including:

  • banning the discharge of PFAS firefighting foam for the purposes of firefighting training or demonstration;
  • restricting the discharge of PFAS firefighting foam from a portable fire extinguisher and prescribed long-chain PFAS firefighting foam unless discharged by a relevant authority to respond to a catastrophic or potentially catastrophic fire, or by a person to respond to a fire on a watercraft; and
  • restricting the sale of portable fire extinguishers containing PFAS firefighting foam unless sold to a relevant authority, the owner or master of a vessel, or a person with an exemption to discharge PFAS firefighting foam from a portable fire extinguisher.

The EPA may grant exemptions from a requirement in the Regulation, if necessary.

The commencement of the requirements will be staged over a 19-month period, starting with the ban on the discharge of PFAS firefighting foam for training and demonstration purposes on 1 April 2021. The other requirements will take effect from 26 September 2022.

For more information about the changes made by the Regulation, please visit the Regulation of PFAS firefighting foams page on the EPA website.

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