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When you need a licence, when you can burn and how to burn safely.
Restrictions on burning crop residues, and the rules you must follow when you burn to protect the environment and avoid causing nuisance.
How to get your site approved, the category your site falls into, the type of incinerator you need and how it must be maintained.
The U4 exemption allows you to use waste plant material or untreated wood as fuel in a small appliance to produce heat or power.
The D8 exemption allows you to burn plant tissue waste, wood packaging and packing material waste at a port when a Plant Health Notice has been issued, to prevent the spread of plant diseases.
The D7 exemption allows you to burn plant tissue and untreated wood waste from joinery or manufacturing in the open air.
The rules about having garden bonfires, burning domestic waste, complaining about a neighbour's bonfire, fines
The D6 exemption allows you to dispose of small amounts of specific waste that have been produced on site in an incinerator.
When you can exceed the burning and storage limits in waste exemption D7 to burn trees and plants affected by disease or pests in the open.
When you can burn waste wood, particle board, straw, manure and poultry litter in the open after an animal disease outbreak.
This guidance gives best practice guidance to National Health Service (NHS) organisations in planning, preparing and responding to incidents and emergencies that give rise to burn injuries regardless of cause, source or nature.
How to get relief from excise duty on oil used in certain ways using the Industrial Relief Scheme, also known as the Tied Oils Scheme.
This document contains a synopsis of causation occurring in burns.
How to account for VAT if you’re a contractor or subcontractor installing energy-saving materials and grant-funded heating equipment.
This project looks to develop policy on controlled burns and to establish workable guidelines on when controlled burn may be appropriate.
A man who was jailed for illegally importing and burning waste in Essex has been ordered to pay costs of £85,000.
Find out when you can use rebated diesel, biodiesel or kerosene in vehicles and other machinery.
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