
1 

(1) These Regulations may be cited as the Environmental Protection (Controls on Injurious Substances) Regulations 1999 and shall come into force on 29th December 1999.
(2) These Regulations extend to Great Britain.
2 

(1) In these Regulations—
 “controlled substance or preparation” means a substance or preparation containing one or more of the substances listed in the Schedule to these Regulations;
 “professional and industrial use” includes use on railways, in electric power transmission and telecommunications, for fencing and in harbours and waterways;
 “treated wood” means wood that has been treated with a controlled substance or preparation that contained:
(a) benzo-a-pyrene at a concentration of greater than 0.05% by mass; or
(b) water extractable phenols at a concentration of greater than 3% by mass.
(2) Unless the context otherwise requires, expressions used in these Regulations which are also used in Council Directive 76/769/EEC on the approximation of the laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States relating to restrictions on the marketing and use of certain dangerous substances and preparations, as amended for the fourteenth time by European Parliament and Council Directive 94/60/EC, shall have the meaning they bear in that Directive.
3 

(1) Subject to paragraphs (2) to (4), no person shall place treated wood on the market.
(2) Treated wood may be placed on the market for the first time for professional and industrial use: provided that the controlled substance or preparation with which it was treated contained—
(a) benzo-a-pyrene at a concentration of less than 0.05% by mass;
(b) water extractable phenols at a concentration of less than 3% by mass.
(3) Old treated wood may be placed on the second hand market.
(4) Treated wood may be placed on the market for research and development or analysis purposes.
4 

(1) Subject to paragraph (3), no person shall use treated wood other than for—
(a) a professional or industrial use; or
(b) research and development or analysis purposes.
(2) Subject to paragraph (3), no person shall use treated wood—
(a) inside any building;
(b) for the manufacture of containers intended for the purposes of growing plants or for any retreatment of such containers;
(c) for the manufacture of packaging which may come into contact with raw, intermediate or finished products intended for human or animal consumption;
(d) for the manufacture of materials other than packaging which may contaminate raw, intermediate or finished products intended for human or animal consumption;
(e) for any re-treatment of packaging or materials referred to in sub-paragraphs (c) and (d);
(f) in playgrounds and in other outdoor places of public pleasure; or
(g) in other situations where there is a risk that it may come into contact with skin.
(3) Paragraphs (1) and (2)(g) shall not apply to old treated wood.
5 
Any person who contravenes regulation 3(1), regulation 4(1) or regulation 4(2), or causes or permits another person to contravene any of those provisions, shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable, on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum and, on conviction on indictment, to a fine.
6 
In regulation 5 of the Environmental Protection (Controls on Hexachloroethane) Regulations 1998 for “level 5 on the standard scale” there is substituted “the statutory maximum”.
Signed by authority of the Secretary of State
Michael Meacher
Minister of State,
Department of the Environment, Transport and the Regions
6th December 1999
SCHEDULE
Regulation 2(1)


Substance EINECS Number CAS Number
Creosote 232-287-5 8001-58-9
Creosote oil 263-047-8 61789-28-4
Distillates (coal tar), naphthalene oils 283-484-8 84650-04-4
Creosote oil, acenaphthene fraction 292-605-3 90640-84-9
Distillates (coal tar), upper 266-026-1 65996-91-0
Anthracene oil 292-602-7 90640-80-5
Tar acids, Coal, Crude 266-019-3 65996-85-2
Creosote, wood 232-419-1 8021-3-4
Low temperature tar oil, alkaline 310-191-5 122384-78-5