Illegal tyre waste operation company and director ordered to pay £69,000

 

Waste crime

A Powys-based company and its director have been ordered to pay £69,000 in fines and costs after being found guilty of serious breaches of environmental law.

The case centred on the unlawful operation of a waste site and the illegal disposal of waste tyres at multiple locations across Powys.

Natural Resources Wales (NRW) said the offences posed a risk to the local environment and undermined legitimate waste businesses operating within the law.

Between January and June 2022, Benji and Co Limited and its director, Peter Rees, stored and treated tyres without the required environmental permit at Gwern Tyddyn, Llanidloes.

While between March and December 2022, baled tyres were deposited on land at Newhouse Farm in Aberhafesp, Rhossllyn in Nantmel, and Llys Fynydd in Llanidloes, without a valid permit.

NRW says officers observed more than 200 tyre bales, over 1,000 loose tyres, and an estimated 40 tonnes of shredded tyre waste at the site, which posed a ‘significant fire risk’.

Benji and Co Limited and Peter Rees were sentenced at Welshpool Magistrates’ Court after previously pleading guilty.

The company was fined £10,000 for each of four offences, totalling £40,000. It was also ordered to pay £15,000 in prosecution costs.

Peter Rees was fined £10,000 for his role in the offences after pleading guilty to consenting to, being complicit in, or neglecting his duties in connection with the company’s unlawful activity between January and June 2022. Both the company and Rees were required to pay a £2,000 victim surcharge each.

Commenting on the sentencing, Jeremy Goddard, team leader for the waste and enforcement team, mid Wales, of NRW, said: “This case highlights the importance of following environmental rules. Permits and exemptions exist to protect people, nature and the wider environment.”

“Ignoring them puts communities and the environment at risk and undermines the integrity of the waste management system. We will always take action where we find serious non-compliance.”

Privacy Overview
Circular Online

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is temporarily stored in your browser and helps our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

More information about our Cookie Policy

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly necessary cookies allow core website functionality and the website cannot be used properly without them. These cookies include session cookies and persistent cookies.

Session cookies keep track of your current visit and how you navigate the site. They only last for the duration of your visit and are deleted from your device when you close your browser.

Persistent cookies last after you’ve closed your Internet browser and enable our website to recognise you as a repeat visitor and remember your actions and preferences when you return.

Functional cookies

Third party cookies include performance cookies and targeting cookies.

Performance cookies collect information about how you use a website, e.g. which pages you go to most often, and if you get error messages from web pages. These cookies don’t collect information that identifies you personally as a visitor, although they might collect the IP address of the device you use to access the site.

Targeting cookies collect information about your browsing habits. They are usually placed by advertising networks such as Google. The cookies remember that you have visited a website and this information is shared with other organisations such as media publishers.

Keeping these cookies enabled helps us to improve our website and display content that is more relevant to you and your interests across the Google content network.

Send this to a friend