
Article 1 
This Regulation establishes an integrated pollutant release and transfer register for the United Kingdom (hereinafter ‘the United Kingdom PRTR’) in the form of a publicly accessible electronic database and lays down rules for its functioning, in order to implement the UNECE Protocol on Pollutant Release and Transfer Registers (hereinafter ‘the Protocol’) and facilitate public participation in environmental decision-making, as well as contributing to the prevention and reduction of pollution of the environment.
Article 2 
For the purposes of this Regulation the following definitions shall apply:

((1)) ‘the public’ means one or more natural or legal persons, and, in accordance with national legislation or practice, their associations, organisations or groups;
((2)) ‘competent authority’ means the national authority or authorities, or any other competent body or bodies, designated by the appropriate authority;
((3)) ‘installation’ means a stationary technical unit where one or more activities listed in Annex I are carried out, and any other directly associated activities which have a technical connection with the activities carried out on that site and which could have an effect on emissions and pollution;
((4)) ‘facility’ means one or more installations on the same site that are operated by the same natural or legal person;
((5)) ‘site’ means the geographical location of the facility;
((6)) ‘operator’ means any natural or legal person who operates or controls the facility or, where this is provided for in national legislation, to whom decisive economic power over the technical functioning of the facility has been delegated;
((7)) ‘reporting year’ means the calendar year for which data on releases of pollutants and off-site transfers must be gathered;
((8)) ‘substance’ means any chemical element and its compounds, with the exception of radioactive substances;
((9)) ‘pollutant’ means a substance or a group of substances that may be harmful to the environment or to human health on account of its properties and of its introduction into the environment;
((10)) ‘release’ means any introduction of pollutants into the environment as a result of any human activity, whether deliberate or accidental, routine or non-routine, including spilling, emitting, discharging, injecting, disposing or dumping, or through sewer systems without final waste-water treatment;
((11)) ‘off-site transfer’ means the movement beyond the boundaries of a facility of waste destined for recovery or disposal and of pollutants in urban waste water destined for waste-water treatment;
((12)) ‘diffuse sources’ means the many smaller or scattered sources from which pollutants may be released to land, air or water, whose combined impact on those media may be significant and for which it is impractical to collect reports from each individual source;
((13)) “waste” has the meaning given—
(a) in relation to England and Wales, in regulation 2(1) of the Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2016;
(b) in relation to Scotland, in regulation 2(1) of the Pollution Prevention and Control (Scotland) Regulations 2012;
(c) in relation to Northern Ireland, in regulation 2(1) of the Pollution Prevention and Control (Industrial Emissions) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2013;
((14)) “hazardous waste” has the meaning given—
(a) in relation to England and Wales, in regulation 6 of the Hazardous Waste (England and Wales) Regulations 2005;
(b) in relation to Scotland, in regulation 2(1) of the Pollution Prevention and Control (Scotland) Regulations 2012;
(c) in relation to Northern Ireland, in regulation 2(1) of the Pollution Prevention and Control (Industrial Emissions) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2013;
((15)) “urban waste water” has the meaning given—
(a) in relation to England and Wales, in regulation 2(1) of the Urban Waste Water Treatment (England and Wales) Regulations 1994;
(b) in relation to Scotland, in regulation 2(1) of the Urban Waste Water Treatment (Scotland) Regulations 1994;
(c) in relation to Northern Ireland, in regulation 2(1) of the Urban Waste Water Treatment Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2007;
((16)) “disposal” has the meaning given—
(a) in relation to England and Wales, in regulation 2(1) of the Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2016;
(b) in relation to Scotland, in regulation 2(1) of the Waste Management Licensing (Scotland) Regulations 2011;
(c) in relation to Northern Ireland, in regulation 1(3) of the Waste Management Licensing Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003;
((17)) “recovery” has the meaning given—
(a) in relation to England and Wales, in regulation 2(1) of the Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2016;
(b) in relation to Scotland, in regulation 2(1) of the Waste Management Licensing (Scotland) Regulations 2011;
(c) in relation to Northern Ireland, in regulation 1(3) of the Waste Management Licensing Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003;
((18)) “appropriate authority” means—
(a) in relation to England, the Secretary of State;
(b) in relation to Wales, the Welsh Ministers;
(c) in relation to Scotland, the Scottish Ministers;
(d) in relation to Northern Ireland, the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs.
((19)) A reference in Annex 3 to a provision of a Directive is to be read as a reference to that provision in so far as it has been transposed into the law of any part of the United Kingdom.
Article 3 
The United Kingdom PRTR shall include information on:

((a)) releases of pollutants referred to in Article 5(1)(a) that must be reported by the operators of the facilities carrying out the activities listed in Annex I;
((b)) off-site transfers of waste referred to in Article 5(1)(b) and of pollutants in urban waste water referred to in Article 5(1)(c), that must be reported by the operators of the facilities carrying out the activities listed in Annex I;
((c)) releases of pollutants from diffuse sources referred to in Article 8(1), where available.
Article 4 

1. The Secretary of State shall publish the United Kingdom PRTR, presenting the data in both aggregated and non-aggregated forms, so that releases and transfers can be searched for and identified by:
(a) facility, including the facility's parent company where applicable, and its geographical location, including the river basin;
(b) activity;
(c) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(d) pollutant or waste, as appropriate;
(e) each environmental medium (air, water, land) into which the pollutant is released;
(f) off-site transfers of waste and their destination, as appropriate;
(g) off-site transfers of pollutants in urban waste water;
(h) diffuse sources;
(i) facility owner or operator.
2. The United Kingdom PRTR shall be designed for maximum ease of public access to allow the information, under normal operating conditions, to be continuously and readily accessible on the Internet and by other electronic means. Its design shall take into account the possibility of its future expansion and shall include all data reported for previous reporting years, up to at least the last ten previous reporting years.
3. The United Kingdom PRTR shall include links to the following:
(a) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(b) other relevant existing, publicly accessible databases on subject matters related to PRTRs, including national PRTRs of other Parties to the Protocol and, where feasible, those of other countries;
(c) facilities' websites if they exist and links are volunteered by the facilities.
Article 5 

1. The operator of each facility that undertakes one or more of the activities specified in Annex I above the applicable capacity thresholds specified therein shall report the amounts annually to its competent authority, along with an indication of whether the information is based on measurement, calculation or estimation, of the following:
(a) releases to air, water and land of any pollutant specified in Annex II for which the applicable threshold value specified in Annex II is exceeded;
(b) off-site transfers of hazardous waste exceeding 2 tonnes per year or of non hazardous waste exceeding 2 000 tonnes per year, for any operations of recovery or disposal with the exception of the disposal operations of land treatment and deep injection referred to in Article 6, indicating with ‘R’ or ‘D’ respectively whether the waste is destined for recovery or disposal and, for transboundary movements of hazardous waste, the name and address of the recoverer or the disposer of the waste and the actual recovery or disposal site;
(c) off-site transfers of any pollutant specified in Annex II in urban waste water destined for waste-water treatment for which the threshold value specified in Annex II, column 1b is exceeded.
The operator of each facility that undertakes one or more of the activities specified in Annex I, above the applicable capacity thresholds specified therein, must send to its competent authority the information identifying the facility in accordance with the format referred to in Decision (EU) 2019/1741 unless that information is already available to the competent authority.In the case of data indicated as being based on measurement or calculation the analytical method and/or the method of calculation shall be reported.The releases referred to in Annex II reported under point (a) of this paragraph shall include all releases from all sources included in Annex I at the site of the facility.
2. The information referred to in paragraph 1 shall include information on releases and transfers resulting as totals of all deliberate, accidental, routine and non-routine activities.In providing this information operators shall specify, where available, any data that relate to accidental releases.
3. The operator of each facility shall collect with appropriate frequency the information needed to determine which of the facility's releases and off-site transfers are subject to reporting requirements under paragraph 1.
4. When preparing the report, the operator concerned shall use the best available information, which may include monitoring data, emission factors, mass balance equations, indirect monitoring or other calculations, engineering judgements and other methods in line with Article 9(1) and in accordance with internationally approved methodologies, where these are available.
5. The operator of each facility concerned shall keep available for the competent authorities of the appropriate authority the records of the data from which the reported information was derived for a period of five years, starting from the end of the reporting year concerned. These records shall also describe the methodology used for data gathering.
(6. A competent authority must provide all necessary information to its appropriate authority to ensure that the obligations placed upon the appropriate authority in this Regulation can be met.
Article 6 
Waste which is subject to ‘land treatment’ or ‘deep injection’ disposal operations, as specified in Annex 1 to Directive 2008/98/EC, shall be reported as a release to land only by the operator of the facility originating the waste.
Article 7 

1. The appropriate authorities shall determine, having regard to the requirements set out in paragraphs 2 and 3 of this Article, a date by which operators shall provide all the data referred to in Article 5(1) and (2) and the information referred to in Article 5(3), (4) and (5) to its competent authority.
2. Appropriate authorities outside England and the competent authority in England must provide, each year, to the Secretary of State a report containing all the data referred to in Article 5(1) and (2) in the format and by the dates set out in Decision (EU) 2019/1741. The reporting date shall be, in any case, no later than 11 months after the end of the reporting year.
3. The Secretary of State must incorporate the data reported by the appropriate authorities outside England and the data provided by the competent authority in England into the United Kingdom PRTR within one month of receiving complete reports provided in accordance with paragraph 2.
Article 8 

1. The Secretary of State, shall include in the United Kingdom PRTR information on releases from diffuse sources where such information exists and has already been reported by the appropriate authorities outside England or by the competent authority in England.
2. The information referred to in paragraph 1 shall be organised such as to allow users to search for and identify releases of pollutants from diffuse sources according to an adequate geographical disaggregation and shall include information on the type of methodology used to derive the information.
3. Where it determines that no data on the releases from diffuse sources exist the appropriate authority may, by regulations, make provision for the purpose of this Regulation regarding reporting on releases of relevant pollutants from one or more diffuse sources using, where appropriate, internationally approved methodologies.
Article 9 

1. The operator of each facility subject to the reporting requirements set out in Article 5 shall assure the quality of the information that they report.
2. The competent authorities shall assess the quality of the data provided by the operators of the facilities referred to in paragraph 1, in particular as to their completeness, consistency and credibility.
3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4. The appropriate authority may, by regulations, make provision in respect of the monitoring and reporting of emissions for the purpose of this Regulation. These regulations must be in accordance with internationally approved methodologies, where appropriate.... 
Article 10 

1. The Secretary of State, shall make the United Kingdom PRTR publicly accessible by dissemination free of charge on the Internet ....
2. Where the information contained in the United Kingdom PRTR is not easily accessible to the public by direct electronic means, ... the appropriate authorities shall facilitate electronic access to the United Kingdom PRTR in publicly accessible locations.
Article 11 
Whenever information is considered confidential by an appropriate authority in accordance with Article 4 of Directive 2003/4/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council, in so far as that provision has been transposed into domestic law, the report referred to in Article 7(2) of this Regulation for the reporting year concerned shall indicate separately for each facility which information cannot be made public and provide the reasons for this.
Article 12 

1. The Secretary of State, with the assistance of the other appropriate authorities shall provide the public with early and effective opportunities to participate in the further development of the United Kingdom PRTR, including capacity-building and the preparation of amendments to this Regulation.
2. The public shall have the opportunity to submit any relevant comments, information, analyses or opinions within a reasonable timeframe.
3. The appropriate authorities shall take due account of such input and shall inform the public about the outcome of the public participation.
Article 13 
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Article 14 
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Article 15 
The Secretary of State shall promote awareness of the public of the United Kingdom PRTR and shall ensure that assistance is provided in accessing the United Kingdom PRTR and in understanding and using the information contained in it.
Article 16 
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Article 17 
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Article 18 
The Secretary of State may, by regulations, amend Annex 2 for the following purposes—

(a) to adapt it to scientific or technical progress;
(b) to adapt it as a result of the adoption by the Meeting of the Parties to the Protocol of any amendment to the Annexes to the Protocol.
Article 18a 
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Article 19 

(1. Regulations made by the Secretary of State or the Welsh Ministers under this Regulation are to be made by statutory instrument.
(2. For regulations made by the Scottish Ministers under this Regulation, see section 27 of the Interpretation and Legislative Reform (Scotland) Act 2010.
(3. Any power of the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs to make regulations under this Regulation is exercisable by statutory rule for the purposes of the Statutory Rules (Northern Ireland) Order 1979.
(4. A statutory instrument containing regulations made by the Secretary of State under this Regulation is subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of either House of Parliament.
(5. A statutory instrument containing regulations made by the Welsh Ministers under this Regulation is subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of the National Assembly for Wales.
(6. Regulations made by the Scottish Ministers under this Regulation are subject to the negative procedure (see section 28 of the Interpretation and Legislative Reform (Scotland) Act 2010).
(7. Regulations made by the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs under this Regulation are subject to negative resolution within the meaning of section 41(6) of the Interpretation Act (Northern Ireland) 1954 as if they were a statutory instrument within the meaning of that Act.
(8. Such regulations may—
(a) contain consequential, incidental, supplementary, transitional or saving provision (including provision amending, repealing or revoking enactments (which has the meaning given by section 20(1) of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018));
(b) make different provision for different purposes.
(9. For the purposes of regulations made under Article 8(3) or 9(4), the Secretary of State is the appropriate authority if consent is given by—
(a) for regulations applying in relation to Wales, the Welsh Ministers;
(b) for regulations applying in relation to Scotland, the Scottish Ministers;
(c) for regulations applying in relation to Northern Ireland, the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs.
(10. The Secretary of State may only make regulations for the purposes of Article 18 in relation to the whole of the United Kingdom.
(11. The Secretary of State may not make regulations in accordance with paragraph 10 without the consent of—
(a) in relation to Wales, the Welsh Ministers;
(b) in relation to Scotland, the Scottish Ministers;
(c) in relation to Northern Ireland, the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs.
(12. Where any of the parties mentioned in paragraph 11(a) to (c) requests that the Secretary of State make regulations under this Regulation, the Secretary of State must have regard to that request.
Article 20 
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Article 21 
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Article 22 
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....
ANNEX I

No Activity Capacity threshold
1. Energy sector 
(a) Mineral oil and gas refineries *
(b) Installations for gasification and liquefaction *
(c) Thermal power stations and other combustion installations With a heat input of 50 megawatts (MW)
(d) Coke ovens *
(e) Coal rolling mills With a capacity of 1 tonne per hour
(f) Installations for the manufacture of coal products and solid smokeless fuel *
2. Production and processing of metals 
(a) Metal ore (including sulphide ore) roasting or sintering installations *
(b) Installations for the production of pig iron or steel (primary or secondary melting) including continuous casting With a capacity of 2,5 tonnes per hour
(c) Installations for the processing of ferrous metals: 

(i) Hot-rolling mills
 With a capacity of 20 tonnes of crude steel per hour

(ii) Smitheries with hammers
 With an energy of 50 kilojoules per hammer, where the calorific power used exceeds 20 MW

(iii) Application of protective fused metal coats
 With an input of 2 tonnes of crude steel per hour
(d) Ferrous metal foundries With a production capacity of 20 tonnes per day
(e) Installations: 

(i) For the production of non-ferrous crude metals from ore, concentrates or secondary raw materials by metallurgical, chemical or electrolytic processes
 *

(ii) For the smelting, including the alloying, of non-ferrous metals, including recovered products (refining, foundry casting, etc.)
 With a melting capacity of 4 tonnes per day for lead and cadmium or 20 tonnes per day for all other metals
(f) Installations for surface treatment of metals and plastic materials using an electrolytic or chemical process Where the volume of the treatment vats equals 30 m3
3. Mineral industry 
(a) Underground mining and related operations *
(b) Opencast mining and quarrying Where the surface of the area effectively under extractive operation equals 25 hectares
(c) Installations for the production of: 

(i) Cement clinker in rotary kilns
 With a production capacity of 500 tonnes per day

(ii) Lime in rotary kilns
 With a production capacity of 50 tonnes per day

(iii) Cement clinker or lime in other furnaces
 With a production capacity of 50 tonnes per day
(d) Installations for the production of asbestos and the manufacture of asbestos-based products *
(e) Installations for the manufacture of glass, including glass fibre With a melting capacity of 20 tonnes per day
(f) Installations for melting mineral substances, including the production of mineral fibres With a melting capacity of 20 tonnes per day
(g) Installations for the manufacture of ceramic products by firing, in particular roofing tiles, bricks, refractory bricks, tiles, stoneware or porcelain With a production capacity of 75 tonnes per day, or with a kiln capacity of 4 m3 and with a setting density per kiln of 300 kg/m3
4. Chemical industry 
(a) Chemical installations for the production on an industrial scale of basic organic chemicals, such as:
((i)) Simple hydrocarbons (linear or cyclic, saturated or unsaturated, aliphatic or aromatic)
((ii)) Oxygen-containing hydrocarbons such as alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters, acetates, ethers, peroxides, epoxy resins
((iii)) Sulphurous hydrocarbons
((iv)) Nitrogenous hydrocarbons such as amines, amides, nitrous compounds, nitro compounds or nitrate compounds, nitriles, cyanates, isocyanates
((v)) Phosphorus-containing hydrocarbons
((vi)) Halogenic hydrocarbons
((vii)) Organometallic compounds
((viii)) Basic plastic materials (polymers, synthetic fibres and cellulose-based fibres)
((ix)) Synthetic rubbers
((x)) Dyes and pigments
((xi)) Surface-active agents and surfactants *
(b) Chemical installations for the production on an industrial scale of basic inorganic chemicals, such as:
((i)) Gases, such as ammonia, chlorine or hydrogen chloride, fluorine or hydrogen fluoride, carbon oxides, sulphur compounds, nitrogen oxides, hydrogen, sulphur dioxide, carbonyl chloride
((ii)) Acids, such as chromic acid, hydrofluoric acid, phosphoric acid, nitric acid, hydrochloric acid, sulphuric acid, oleum, sulphurous acids
((iii)) Bases, such as ammonium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide
((iv)) Salts, such as ammonium chloride, potassium chlorate, potassium carbonate, sodium carbonate, perborate, silver nitrate
((v)) Non-metals, metal oxides or other inorganic compounds such as calcium carbide, silicon, silicon carbide *
(c) Chemical installations for the production on an industrial scale of phosphorous-, nitrogen- or potassium-based fertilisers (simple or compound fertilisers) *
(d) Chemical installations for the production on an industrial scale of basic plant health products and of biocides *
(e) Installations using a chemical or biological process for the production on an industrial scale of basic pharmaceutical products *
(f) Installations for the production on an industrial scale of explosives and pyrotechnic products *
5. Waste and wastewater management 
(a) Installations for the recovery or disposal of hazardous waste Receiving 10 tonnes per day
(b) Installations for the incineration of non-hazardous waste in the scope of Directive 2000/76/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 4 December 2000 on the incineration of waste With a capacity of 3 tonnes per hour
(c) Installations for the disposal of non-hazardous waste With a capacity of 50 tonnes per day
(d) Landfills (excluding landfills of inert waste and landfills, which were definitely closed before 16.7.2001 or for which the after-care phase required by the competent authorities according to Article 13 of Council Directive 1999/31/EC of 26 April 1999 on the landfill of waste has expired) Receiving 10 tonnes per day or with a total capacity of 25 000 tonnes
(e) Installations for the disposal or recycling of animal carcasses and animal waste With a treatment capacity of 10 tonnes per day
(f) Urban waste-water treatment plants With a capacity of 100 000 population equivalents
(g) Independently operated industrial waste-water treatment plants which serve one or more activities of this annex With a capacity of 10 000 m3 per day
6. Paper and wood production and processing 
(a) Industrial plants for the production of pulp from timber or similar fibrous materials *
(b) Industrial plants for the production of paper and board and other primary wood products (such as chipboard, fibreboard and plywood) With a production capacity of 20 tonnes per day
(c) Industrial plants for the preservation of wood and wood products with chemicals With a production capacity of 50 m3 per day
7. Intensive livestock production and aquaculture 
(a) Installations for the intensive rearing of poultry or pigs 
((i)) With 40 000 places for poultry
((ii)) With 2 000 places for production pigs (over 30 kg)
((iii)) With 750 places for sows
(b) Intensive aquaculture With a production capacity of 1 000 tonnes of fish or shellfish per year
8. Animal and vegetable products from the food and beverage sector 
(a) Slaughterhouses With a carcass production capacity of 50 tonnes per day
(b) Treatment and processing intended for the production of food and beverage products from: 

(i) Animal raw materials (other than milk)
 With a finished product production capacity of 75 tonnes per day

(ii) Vegetable raw materials
 With a finished product production capacity of 300 tonnes per day (average value on a quarterly basis)
(c) Treatment and processing of milk With a capacity to receive 200 tonnes of milk per day (average value on an annual basis)
9. Other activities 
(a) Plants for the pre-treatment (operations such as washing, bleaching, mercerisation) or dyeing of fibres or textiles With a treatment capacity of 10 tonnes per day
(b) Plants for the tanning of hides and skins With a treatment capacity of 12 tonnes of finished product per day
(c) Installations for the surface treatment of substances, objects or products using organic solvents, in particular for dressing, printing, coating, degreasing, waterproofing, sizing, painting, cleaning or impregnating With a consumption capacity of 150 kg per hour or 200 tonnes per year
(d) Installations for the production of carbon (hard-burnt coal) or electro-graphite by means of incineration or graphitisation *
(e) Installations for the building of, and painting or removal of paint from ships With a capacity for ships 100 m long




ANNEX II

No CAS number Pollutant Threshold for releases(column 1)
to air(column 1a)kg/year to water(column 1b)kg/year to land(column 1c)kg/year
1 74-82-8 Methane (CH4) 100 000 — —
2 630-08-0 Carbon monoxide (CO) 500 000 — —
3 124-38-9 Carbon dioxide (CO2) 100 million — —
4  Hydro-fluorocarbons (HFCs) 100 — —
5 10024-97-2 Nitrous oxide (N2O) 10 000 — —
6 7664-41-7 Ammonia (NH3) 10 000 — —
7  Non-methane volatile organic compounds (NMVOC) 100 000 — —
8  Nitrogen oxides (NOx/NO2) 100 000 — —
9  Perfluorocarbons (PFCs) 100 — —
10 2551-62-4 Sulphur hexafluoride (SF6) 50 — —
11  Sulphur oxides (SOx/SO2) 150 000 — —
12  Total nitrogen — 50 000 50 000
13  Total phosphorus — 5 000 5 000
14  Hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) 1 — —
15  Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) 1 — —
16  Halons 1 — —
17  Arsenic and compounds (as As) 20 5 5
18  Cadmium and compounds (as Cd) 10 5 5
19  Chromium and compounds (as Cr) 100 50 50
20  Copper and compounds (as Cu) 100 50 50
21  Mercury and compounds (as Hg) 10 1 1
22  Nickel and compounds (as Ni) 50 20 20
23  Lead and compounds (as Pb) 200 20 20
24  Zinc and compounds (as Zn) 200 100 100
25 15972-60-8 Alachlor — 1 1
26 309-00-2 Aldrin 1 1 1
27 1912-24-9 Atrazine — 1 1
28 57-74-9 Chlordane 1 1 1
29 143-50-0 Chlordecone 1 1 1
30 470-90-6 Chlorfenvinphos — 1 1
31 85535-84-8 Chloro-alkanes, C10-C13 — 1 1
32 2921-88-2 Chlorpyrifos — 1 1
33 50-29-3 DDT 1 1 1
34 107-06-2 1,2-dichloroethane (EDC) 1 000 10 10
35 75-09-2 Dichloromethane (DCM) 1 000 10 10
36 60-57-1 Dieldrin 1 1 1
37 330-54-1 Diuron — 1 1
38 115-29-7 Endosulphan — 1 1
39 72-20-8 Endrin 1 1 1
40  Halogenated organic compounds (as AOX) — 1 000 1 000
41 76-44-8 Heptachlor 1 1 1
42 118-74-1 Hexachlorobenzene (HCB) 10 1 1
43 87-68-3 Hexachlorobutadiene (HCBD) — 1 1
44 608-73-1 1,2,3,4,5,6-hexachlorocyclohexane(HCH) 10 1 1
45 58-89-9 Lindane 1 1 1
46 2385-85-5 Mirex 1 1 1
47  PCDD + PCDF (dioxins + furans) (as Teq) 0,0001 0,0001 0,0001
48 608-93-5 Pentachlorobenzene 1 1 1
49 87-86-5 Pentachlorophenol (PCP) 10 1 1
50 1336-36-3 Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) 0,1 0,1 0,1
51 122-34-9 Simazine — 1 1
52 127-18-4 Tetrachloroethylene (PER) 2 000 10 —
53 56-23-5 Tetrachloromethane (TCM) 100 1 —
54 12002-48-1 Trichlorobenzenes (TCBs) (all isomers) 10 1 —
55 71-55-6 1,1,1-trichloroethane 100 — —
56 79-34-5 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane 50 — —
57 79-01-6 Trichloroethylene 2 000 10 —
58 67-66-3 Trichloromethane 500 10 —
59 8001-35-2 Toxaphene 1 1 1
60 75-01-4 Vinyl chloride 1 000 10 10
61 120-12-7 Anthracene 50 1 1
62 71-43-2 Benzene 1 000 200(as BTEX) 200(as BTEX)
63  Brominated diphenylethers (PBDE) — 1 1
64  Nonylphenol and Nonylphenol ethoxylates (NP/NPEs) — 1 1
65 100-41-4 Ethyl benzene — 200(as BTEX) 200(as BTEX)
66 75-21-8 Ethylene oxide 1 000 10 10
67 34123-59-6 Isoproturon — 1 1
68 91-20-3 Naphthalene 100 10 10
69  Organotin compounds(as total Sn) — 50 50
70 117-81-7 Di-(2-ethyl hexyl) phthalate (DEHP) 10 1 1
71 108-95-2 Phenols (as total C) — 20 20
72  Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) 50 5 5
73 108-88-3 Toluene — 200(as BTEX) 200(as BTEX)
74  Tributyltin and compounds — 1 1
75  Triphenyltin and compounds — 1 1
76  Total organic carbon (TOC) (as total C or COD/3) — 50 000 —
77 1582-09-8 Trifluralin — 1 1
78 1330-20-7 Xylenes — 200(as BTEX) 200(as BTEX)
79  Chlorides (as total Cl) — 2 million 2 million
80  Chlorine and inorganic compounds (as HCl) 10 000 — —
81 1332-21-4 Asbestos 1 1 1
82  Cyanides (as total CN) — 50 50
83  Fluorides (as total F) — 2 000 2 000
84  Fluorine and inorganic compounds (as HF) 5 000 — —
85 74-90-8 Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) 200 — —
86  Particulate matter (PM10) 50 000 — —
87 1806-26-4 Octylphenols and Octylphenol ethoxylates — 1 —
88 206-44-0 Fluoranthene — 1 —
89 465-73-6 Isodrin — 1 —
90 36355-1-8 Hexabromobiphenyl 0,1 0,1 0,1
91 191-24-2 Benzo(g,h,i)perylene  1 

















ANNEX III

