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.