The UK Pollutant Release and Transfer Register: National Implementation Report 2025
Overview
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Implementation of the Pollutant Release and Transfer Register (PRTR) under the Kiev Protocol – Call for views
October 2024
The UK has a publicly available inventory of pollution from industrial sites and other specified sources. Known as the UK Pollutant Release and Transfer Register (PRTR), this is a searchable database providing information on the pollution from a wide range of industrial sites and for 91 pollutants dating back to 2007.
The UK’s PRTR can be accessed at the following web link: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/uk-pollutant-release-and-transfer-register-prtr-data-sets#.
The PRTR is an environmental database of potentially hazardous chemical substances and/or pollutants released to air, water and soil, and transferred off-site for treatment or disposal. It applies to specific industrial activities which meet or exceed stated pollutant thresholds. This means that an installation whose details are not shown on the PRTR is either not an industrial activity covered by PRTR or it has not reached the stated pollutant specific thresholds.
Further detail on the applicable industrial activities, pollutants and thresholds can be accessed at the following web link: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/uk-pollutant-release-and-transfer-register-prtr-data-sets#pollutants-and-thresholds-list.
The United Kingdom (UK) is a Party to the UN Kiev Protocol on Pollutant Release and Transfer Registers (PRTR) which aims ‘to enhance public access to information through the establishment of coherent, nationwide PRTRs’. The Protocol requires Parties to provide information on pollution sources to members of the public. The UK PRTR website and database are important milestones towards the UK Government’s implementation of the Kiev Protocol on PRTRs.
Parties to the Protocol are requested to prepare a national implementation report which contains information on:
- The legislative, regulatory or other measures that have been taken to implement the provisions of the Kiev Protocol.
- The practical implementation of these measures at the national and regional levels.
Why your views matter
We are seeking views from interested organisations and individuals on the UK’s implementation of the Kiev Protocol on PRTR to inform the implementation report. We invite you to submit your thoughts and ideas with supporting evidence where possible, on the draft implementation report. The Protocol has been included in the supporting documents so that it can be reviewed alongside the National Implementation Report (NIR) for additional context.
Once the call for views has closed, all responses which have been submitted will be reviewed and considered for inclusion into the UK’s report. We will provide a summary of responses which will be published on gov.uk within three months of the closure of the call for views. This document will provide an analysis of all responses received.
You can submit your views on Defra’s citizen space and/or email your views and suggestions on the National Implementation Report (NIR) to PRTR@defra.gov.uk , responses must be submitted by 23.59 on 05 December 2024.
You are welcome to provide additional information or supporting evidence to support your response although we ask that you limit each response to 200 words.
What happens next
Once we have received and reviewed the responses, we will publish a summary and response.
Audiences
- Water/water Industry sector
- Abattoir Operator
- Aggregates sector
- Agricultural Landlords
- Agricultural Valuers
- All Defra staff and ALBs
- All Marine Users
- Angling Organisations and Trade
- Animal welfare campaigners
- AWBs
- Beach Users
- Business/Private Sector
- Charities/Voluntary Organisations
- Coastal local authorities
- Coastal Management sector
- Coastal Members of Parliament
- Commercial Fisheries Organisations
- Consultants
- Consumer Groups
- Devolved Administrations
- Electrical re-use organisations
- Employment Agencies
- Energy sector
- Energy suppliers
- Environmental campaigners
- Environmental Health Officers
- Environmental professional services
- Estate Agents
- Families
- Farmers
- Fisheries Producer Organisations
- Fishermen
- Fishing Focus individual recipients
- Fishing Industry
- Fishing Industry
- Food Business Operators
- Food Industry
- Government Agencies
- Government Departments
- Horse riders
- Horticulture Industry
- House Building Industry
- Households
- IFCAs
- Industries and professional services
- Insurance industry
- Land Agents
- Landowners and their representative bodies
- Legal and Conveyancing Professions
- Leisure industry
- Licensed Gangmasters
- Livestock show ground operators
- Local Authorities
- Local Authorities
- Manufacturers of livestock identifiers
- Manufacturing Industry
- Member of the General Public
- National Park Authorities
- Non-Government Organisation
- Non-Household Customers
- Operators of animal gatherings
- Pet Carriers
- Pet Interest Groups
- Pet Owners
- Policy Teams
- Ports and Harbour Authorities and Estuaries
- Producer Compliance Schemes
- Professional and Membership Organisations/Agencies
- Property Management
- Public Bodies
- Recreation sector
- Retail Industry
- Shellfish Cultivators
- SME businesses
- Stakeholders
- Students
- Tenant Farmers
- Tourism industry
- Trade Unions
- Trading Standards Officers
- Transport Organisations
- Veterinarians
- Vets
- Walkers
- Waste Management Companies
- Waste Producers and Handlers
- Water Abstractors
- Water suppliers
- WEEE Treatment Facilities
Interests
- Air pollution
- Chemicals and pesticides
- Climate change
- Green economy
- Natural environment
- Policy and Delivery
- Sustainable development
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