
PART 1
1 
These Regulations may be cited as The Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 and subject to regulation 28 shall come into operation on 1st January 2007.
2 
These Regulations shall apply to the whole of the territory of Northern Ireland as required under The Protection of Water Against Agricultural Nitrate Pollution Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2004.
3 

(1) The Interpretation Act (Northern Ireland) 1954 shall apply to these Regulations as it applies to an Act of the Assembly.
(2) In these Regulations:
 “action programme” means measures regarding the protection of water against pollution caused by nitrates from agricultural sources as set out in Article 5 and Annex III of the Directive;
 “agricultural area” means any land suitable for agricultural activities, including any common land used for grazing and excludes areas under farm roads, paths, buildings, woods, dense scrub, rivers, streams, ponds, lakes, sandpits, quarries, areas of peat cutting, bare rock, areas of forestry and areas fenced off or inaccessible other than forests where the use of the same is ancillary to the farming of land for other agricultural purposes;
 “agricultural land” has the same meaning as in the Agriculture Act (Northern Ireland) 1949;
 “Appeals Commission” means the Water Appeals Commission for Northern Ireland established under Article 7(1) of the Water and Sewerage Services (Northern Ireland) Order 1973;
 “authorised person” means a person authorised by the Department under Article 72 of the Order in respect of fulfilling its functions;
 “chemical fertiliser” means any fertiliser containing a nitrogen compound which is manufactured or blended by an industrial process;
 “controller” means in relation to a holding, the person charged with management of the holding for the calendar year in question and in the absence of written agreement to the contrary, the owner of the agricultural area will be taken to be charged with its management;
 “crop requirement” means the amount of nitrogen fertiliser which is reasonable to apply to land in any year for the purpose of promoting the growth of the crop having regard to the foreseeable nitrogen supply to the crop from the soil and from other sources, including any previous applications of livestock and other organic manure and any chemical fertilisers estimated as described in the fertiliser technical standards and regulation 9 of these Regulations;
 “Department” means the Department of the Environment;
 “Departments” mean the Department of the Environment and the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development acting jointly;
 “Directive” means Council Directive 91/676/EEC of 12 December 1991 concerning the protection of waters against pollution caused by nitrates from agricultural sources;
 “derogated holding” means a holding over which a derogation has been granted; 
 “derogation” means a derogation from the limit of livestock manure that can be applied to land each year as provided for in paragraph 2(b) of Annex III of Council Directive 91/676/EEC granted by the Commission Decision 2007/863/EC and approved by the Department which is valid for one calendar year;
 “derogation application” means an application for derogation submitted by the controller using a form provided by the Department;
 “dirty water” means a low dry matter waste made up of water contaminated by manure, urine, effluent, milk and cleaning materials with a Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) no greater than 2000 mg/litre and total nitrogen and dry matter contents as set out in Schedule 1 Table 2;
 “environment” means any or all of the following media, namely the air, water and land;
 “farmyard manure” means a mixture of bedding material and animal excreta in solid form arising from the housing of cattle, sheep and other livestock, excluding poultry manure, but including spent mushroom compost and the stackable solids fraction from mechanical separation of slurry excluding pig slurry;
 “fertiliser technical standards” means the ‘DEFRA Fertiliser Recommendations for Agricultural and Horticultural Crops (RB209) 2000 7th edition’ (as may from time to time be re-issued) and any supplementary guidance, and any other DEFRA publication substituting the standards set out in RB209 and any supplementary guidance;
 “fertilisation account” means an account prepared in accordance with regulation 10A(5)(b); 
 “fertilisation plan” means a plan prepared in accordance with regulation 10A(4)(d);
 “grassland” means any land on which the vegetation consists predominantly of grass species;
 “grassland holding” means a  holding where 80% or more of the agricultural area available for manure application is cultivated with grass; 
 “grazing livestock” means cattle (with the exclusion of veal calves), sheep, deer, goats and horses;
 “holding” in relation to a controller means all the agricultural area managed by that controller;
 “lake” means a body of standing inland surface water;
 “land application” means the addition of materials to agricultural land whether by spreading on the surface of the land, injection into the land, placing below the surface of the land or mixing with the surface layers of the land but does not include the direct deposition of manure onto land by animals;
 “livestock” means any animal kept for use or profit;
 “livestock manure” save for the purposes of regulation 14 means waste products excreted by livestock, or a mixture of litter and waste products excreted by livestock, even in processed form;
 “nitrogen compound” means any nitrogen-containing substance except for gaseous molecular nitrogen;
 “nitrogen fertiliser” means any substance, including chemical fertiliser, containing a nitrogen compound utilised on land to enhance growth of vegetation;
 “notice” means notice in writing;
 “organic manure” means
(a) livestock manure, and
(b) nitrogen fertiliser, not being livestock manure or chemical fertiliser, derived from organic matter, and includes sewage sludge, residues from fish farms and other organic wastes;
 “Phosphorus Regulations” means the Phosphorus (Use in Agriculture) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006.
 “pig enterprise” means any enterprise with more than 10 breeding sow places or 150 finishing pig places;
 “poultry enterprise” means any enterprise with more than 500 places;
 “public” means such persons as appear to the Departments—
(a) to be representative of those carrying on any business which—
(i) is, or is likely to be, directly affected by the action programme; or
(ii) relies upon the water environment; or
(b) to have an interest in the protection of the water environment;
 “scientific case” means a reasoned case, as set out in guidance issued on these Regulations, designed to demonstrate that the proposed deviation from the values set out in Schedule 1 Tables 1, 2 or 3 of these Regulations will have no worse effect on the environment than that caused by using the aforementioned values;
 “silage effluent” has the same meaning as in regulation 1(1) of the Control of Pollution (Silage, Slurry and Agricultural Fuel Oil) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003;
 “slurry” means (a) excreta produced by livestock whilst in a yard or building or (b) a mixture of such excreta with bedding, rainwater, seepage, washings or any other extraneous material from a building or yard used by livestock or in which livestock manure is stored or (c) any other organic manure or any combination of these, of a consistency that allows it to be pumped or discharged by gravity at any stage in the handling process and includes dirty water that is stored with slurry or mixed with slurry;
 “soil fertility status” means the soil reserves available for uptake by the next crop estimated as described in the fertiliser technical standards;
 “steeply sloping land” means land which has an average incline of 20% or more;
 “the Order” means the Waste and Contaminated Land (Northern Ireland) Order 1997;
 “underground strata” has the same meaning as in Article 2(2) of the Water (Northern Ireland) Order 1999;
 “water pollution” means the discharge, directly or indirectly, of nitrogen compounds from agricultural sources into the aquatic environment, the results of which are such to cause hazards to human health, harm to living resources and to aquatic ecosystems, damage to amenities or interference with other legitimate uses of water;
 “waterlogged” means soil where water appears on the surface of the land when pressure is added;
 “waterway” has the same meaning as in Article 2(2) of the Water (Northern Ireland) Order 1999.
(3) Other expressions used in these Regulations have the same meaning as in the Directive.
PART 2
4 
The controller of a holding shall not knowingly or otherwise cause directly or indirectly the entry of nitrogen fertiliser into any waterway or water contained in any underground strata.
5 
In complying with any duty under these Regulations, the owner and/or controller of a holding shall have regard to any guidance which may be issued from time to time by the Department or Departments for the purposes of these Regulations and, in accordance with Article 4 of the Directive, the Code of Good Agricultural Practice as may be amended from time to time.
PART 3
6 

(1) The land application of chemical fertiliser to grassland shall not be permitted between 15 September in any year and 31 January of the following year.
(2) The land application of chemical fertiliser to any land shall not be permitted between 15 September in any year and 31 January of the following year for crops other than grass unless there is a demonstrable crop requirement between those dates.
(3) The land application of organic manure, excluding farmyard manure and dirty water, to any land shall not be permitted between 15 October in any year and 31 January of the following year.
(4) The land application of any manure, including dirty water, to a derogated holding shall not be permitted between 15 October in any year and 31 January of the following year where the fertiliser plan indicates a proposal to disturb the soil as part of grass cultivation.
7 

(1) The land application of nitrogen fertiliser shall be done in an accurate and uniform manner and, other than for dirty water, in accordance with paragraphs (2) to (8).
(2) The land application of nitrogen fertiliser shall not be permitted when: -
(a) soil is waterlogged; or
(b) land is flooded or likely to flood; or
(c) the soil has been frozen for 12 hours or longer in the preceding 24 hours; or
(d) land is snow-covered; or
(e) heavy rain is forecast within 48 hours; or
(f) the land is steeply sloping land where, taking into account factors such as proximity to waterways, soil condition, ground cover and rainfall there is a significant risk of causing water pollution.
(3) The land application of nitrogen fertiliser shall not be permitted on any land in a location or manner which would make it likely that the nitrogen fertiliser will directly enter a waterway or water contained in any underground strata.
(4) The land application of chemical fertiliser shall not be permitted within 1.5 m of any waterway.
(5) The land application of organic manures shall not be permitted within: –
(a) 20m of lakes; or
(b) 50m of a borehole, spring or well; or
(c) 250m of a borehole used for a public water supply; or
(d) 15m of exposed cavernous or karstified limestone features (such as swallow–holes and collapse features); or
(e) 10m of any waterway, other than lakes, including open areas of water, open field drains or any drain which has been backfilled to the surface with permeable material such as stone/aggregate; except that
(f) the distance for (e) may be reduced to 3m of any waterway where the land has an average incline less than 10% towards the waterway and where:
(i) organic manures are spread by bandspreaders, trailing hose or trailing shoe or soil injection; or
(ii) the adjoining area is less than 1 hectare in size or not more than 50m in width.
(6) The maximum land application of solid organic manure shall be 50 tonnes per hectare at any one time provided this does not exceed the limits set out in regulation 9(1) and 10(3) and a period of at least 3 weeks shall be left between such land applications.
(7) The maximum land application of slurry shall be 50 m3/ha at any one time provided this does not exceed the limits set out in regulation 9(1) and 10(3) and a period of at least 3 weeks shall be left between such land applications.
(8) The land application of slurry shall only be permitted by spreading close to the ground using inverted splash plate spreading, bandspreading, trailing hose, trailing shoe, soil injection or soil incorporation methods.
8 

(1) Subject to regulations 7(2) and 7(3), the land application of dirty water to any land shall be permitted throughout the year, provided that it is done in a uniform and accurate manner.
(2) The maximum land application of dirty water shall be 50 m3/ha at any one time and a period of at least 2 weeks shall be left between such land applications.
(3) The land application of dirty water shall not be permitted within: –
(a) 20m of lakes; or
(b) 50m of a borehole, spring or well; or
(c) 250m of a borehole used for a public water supply; or
(d) 15m of exposed cavernous or karstified limestone features (such as swallow–holes and collapse features); or
(e) 10m of any waterway, other than lakes, including open areas of water, open field drains or any drain which has been backfilled to the surface with permeable material such as stone/aggregate; except that
(f) the distance for (e) may be reduced to 3m of any waterway where the land has an average incline less than 10% towards the waterway and where:
(i) organic manures are spread by bandspreaders, trailing hose or trailing shoe or soil injection; or
(ii) the adjoining area is less than 1 hectare in size or not more than 50m in width.
(4) The land application of dirty water shall only take place by spreading close to the ground using inverted splash plate spreading, bandspreading, trailing hose, trailing shoe, soil injection or soil incorporation methods and by irrigation.
9 

(1) Save where regulation 10A applies the amount  of total nitrogen in livestock manure applied to the agricultural area of a holding, both by land application and by the animals themselves, shall not exceed 170kg N/ha/year when calculated in accordance with paragraphs (3) and (4).
(2) For each holding, the total available nitrogen in organic manures and chemical fertiliser, excluding livestock manures, applied to grassland, shall be in proportion to the crop requirement of the holding, and shall not exceed the amounts as defined in Schedule 1 Table 4, when calculated in accordance with paragraphs (5), (6) and (7).
(3) The total nitrogen from livestock manure from animals kept on the holding will be calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Table 1.
(4) The total nitrogen from imported livestock manures will be calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Table 2 for slurry and Schedule 1 Table 3 for solid livestock manures.
(5) The total nitrogen content per tonne of other organic manures, excluding livestock manure, shall be as declared in accordance with the Waste Management Licensing Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003 and any amending Regulations.
(6) The amount of nitrogen available to a crop from chemical fertiliser, in the year of application of that fertiliser, is the percentage specified in Schedule 1 Table 6.
(7) Except in the case of livestock manure, the amount of nitrogen available to a crop from organic manure in the year of its application is the percentage specified in Schedule 1 Table 6, in relation to cattle and other livestock manure.
(8) Any controller wishing to deviate from the values set out in Schedule 1 Tables 1, 2 or 3 must present a scientific case in order to obtain prior approval from the Department, and the Department shall only grant such approval where it is satisfied that a scientific case has been established.
(9) A controller may appeal the decision by the Department in paragraph (8) in accordance with the procedure set out in regulation 23.
10 

(1) Subject to paragraphs (2) and (3), in relation to a holding the quantity of nitrogen fertiliser added to land other than grassland both by land application and by the animals themselves each year shall not exceed the crop requirements for nitrogen calculated in accordance with paragraphs (4) to (8).
(2) The amount of nitrogen fertiliser applied to land other than grassland both by land application and by the animals themselves shall not exceed the recommendations contained in the fertiliser technical standards.
(3) Save where regulation 10A applies the amount  of total nitrogen in livestock manure applied to the agricultural area of the holding, both by land application and by the animals themselves, shall not exceed 170kg N/ha/year when calculated in accordance with paragraphs (4) and (5).
(4) The total nitrogen from livestock manure from animals kept on the holding will be calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Table 1.
(5) The total nitrogen from imported livestock manures will be calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Table 2 for slurry and Schedule1 Table 3 for solid livestock manures.
(6) The total nitrogen content per tonne of other organic manures, excluding livestock manure, shall be as declared in accordance with the Waste Management Licensing Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003 and any amending Regulations.
(7) The amount of nitrogen available to a crop from livestock manures or chemical fertiliser in the year of application of that fertiliser is the percentage specified in Schedule 1 Table 6.
(8) Except in the case of livestock manure, the amount of nitrogen available to a crop from organic manure in the year of its application is the percentage specified in Schedule 1 Table 6, in relation to cattle and other livestock manure.
(9) Any controller wishing to deviate from the values set out in Schedule 1 Tables 1, 2 or 3 must present a scientific case in order to obtain prior approval from the Department, and the Department shall only grant such approval where it is satisfied that a scientific case has been established.
(10) A controller may appeal the decision by the Department in paragraph (9) in accordance with the procedure set out in regulation 23.
10A. 

(1) Where the Department approves a derogation for a grassland holding in accordance with this regulation, the total nitrogen in livestock manure from grazing livestock applied to that derogated holding shall not exceed 250kg N/ha/year when calculated in accordance with regulation 9(3) and (4).
(2) For the purposes of this provision “applied” means applied both by land application and by the animals themselves.
(3) With regards to derogation applications, the following provisions apply—
(a) Save for 2008 derogation applications, a controller seeking a derogation shall submit a derogation application annually accompanied by a fertilisation account in accordance with 10A(5) to the Department no later than 1 March for that calendar year.
(b) A controller seeking a derogation for the year 2008 shall submit a derogation application within 28 days of these Regulations coming into operation.
(c) The Department shall grant or refuse a derogation application within 28 days from its receipt and where no response is received prior to the expiry of that period the derogation shall be deemed to have been granted.
(d) The deemed approval of a derogation application shall not preclude service by the Department of a notice under regulation 22.
(e) The controller may appeal the refusal by the Department of the derogation application under paragraph (c) in accordance with the procedure set out in regulation 23.
(4) With regards to fertilisation plans, the following provisions apply—
(a) The controller of a derogated holding shall prepare and keep a fertilisation plan describing crop rotation and the planned application of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilisers to its agricultural area.
(b) Save for the year 2008, fertilisation plans shall be made available on the derogated holding every year no later than 1 March for that calendar year.
(c) Fertilisation plans for the year 2008 shall be made available on the derogated holding by the operational date of the Regulations.
(d) Fertilisation plans shall include:
(i) the number of livestock on the derogated holding;
(ii) a description of livestock housing and manure storage systems, including the volume of livestock manure storage available on the derogated holding;
(iii) the amount of nitrogen from livestock manure produced on the derogated holding calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Table 1;
(iv) the amount of phosphorus from livestock manure produced on the derogated holding calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Table 7;
(v) the crop rotation and area of each crop, including a sketch map indicating the location of the area of each crop;
(vi) the derogated holding’s foreseeable nitrogen and phosphorus crop requirement in accordance with fertiliser technical standards;
(vii) the quantity of each type of organic manure moved on or off the derogated holding;
(viii) the results of soil analysis relating to nitrogen and phosphorus soil status if available;
(ix) the amount of nitrogen from nitrogen fertilisers applied in each area of the derogated holding under the same cropping regime and soil type calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Tables 1 to 6;
(x) the amount of nitrogen from other organic manure, excluding livestock manures, applied in each area of the derogated holding under the same cropping regime and soil type, as declared under regulation 9(5) and calculated in accordance with regulation 9(7);
(xi) the amount of phosphorus from phosphorus fertilisers applied in each area of the derogated holding under the same cropping regime and soil type calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Table 7 of these Regulations and Schedule 2 Table 1 of the Phosphorus Regulations; and
(xii) the amount of phosphorus from other organic manure, excluding livestock manures, applied in each area of the derogated holding under the same cropping regime, as declared in accordance with regulation 2(3) of the Phosphorus Regulations.
(e) Where changes in agricultural practices necessitate changes in the fertilisation plan of a derogated holding the controller shall revise the plan within seven days of such changes taking effect.
(5) With regards to fertilisation accounts—
(a) the controller of a derogated holding shall submit fertilisation accounts for the calendar year to the Department by 1 March of the following year; and
(b) fertilisation accounts shall include:
(i) an account of the nitrogen crop requirement of the derogated holding;
(ii) an account of the nitrogen fertiliser applied to the derogated holding;
(iii) information relating to the derogated holding’s management of dirty water; and
(iv) information to allow the calculation of the derogated holding’s phosphorus balance.
(6) At least every four years the controller of a derogated holding shall undertake nitrogen and phosphorus soil analysis of every four hectares of the agricultural area of the derogated holding under the same cropping regime and soil type.
(7) The phosphorus balance of a derogated holding calculated in accordance with Schedule 1 Tables 8 and 9 shall not exceed a surplus of 10kg phosphorus per hectare per year.
PART 4
11 

(1) Subject to paragraphs (2) and (3) and regulations 14 and 16, the capacity of storage facilities for livestock manure of a holding shall be sufficient and adequate to provide for the storage of all the livestock manure which is likely to require storage on the holding for such period as may be necessary to ensure compliance with these Regulations and the avoidance of water pollution.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1), the controller shall have due regard to the storage capacity likely to be needed by the holding during periods of adverse weather conditions when, due to extended periods of wet weather, frozen ground or otherwise, the application to land of livestock manure is not permitted.
(3) Subject to regulation 12, the total livestock manure storage capacity on holdings shall be sufficient for at least 22 weeks storage.
(4) All storage facilities for livestock manure and silage effluent shall be maintained free of structural defect, shall be of such standard as is necessary to prevent run-off or seepage, directly or indirectly, into a waterway or water contained in any underground strata and where applicable shall comply with The Control of Pollution (Silage, Slurry and Agricultural Fuel Oil) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003 and any amending Regulations.
12 

(1) Subject to paragraph (2), on holdings where there is a pig or poultry enterprise there shall be a storage requirement of 26 weeks.
(2) Holdings with less than 10 breeding sow places or 150 finishing pig places and holdings with less than 500 poultry places shall require 22 weeks storage.
(3) Holdings where there is a pig and/or poultry enterprise and another livestock enterprise shall require 26 weeks storage for the pig and/or poultry enterprise and 22 weeks storage for the other livestock enterprise.
13 

(1) Prior to field storage or land application farmyard manure should be stored in a midden which shall have adequate effluent collection facilities.
(2) Farmyard manure may be stored in the field where land application will take place subject to a maximum limit of 180 days.
(3) Where stored in a field, farmyard manure must not be stored in the same location of the field in consecutive years.
(4) Farmyard manure must be stored in a compact heap and such heaps must not be placed within:
(a) 50m of lakes; or
(b) 20m of any waterway, including open areas of water, open field drains or any drain which has been backfilled to the surface with permeable material such as stone/aggregate; or
(c) 50m around a borehole, spring or well; or
(d) 250m from any borehole used for a public water supply; or
(e) 50m of exposed cavernous or karstified limestone features (such as swallow-holes and collapse features).
14 

(1) Poultry litter may be stored in a field or midden where land application will take place subject to a maximum limit of 180 days.
(2) Where poultry litter is stored in a midden it shall have adequate effluent collection facilities prior to field storage or land application.
(3) Where stored in a field, poultry litter must be stored in a compact heap but not in the same location of a field in consecutive years and must be covered with an impermeable membrane within 24 hours of placement in a field.
(4) Compact heaps of poultry litter must not be placed within:
(a) 50m of lakes; or
(b) 20m of any waterway, including open areas of water, open field drains or any drain which has been backfilled to the surface with permeable material such as stone/aggregate; or
(c) 50m around a borehole, spring or well; or
(d) 250m from any borehole used for public water supply; or
(e) 50m of exposed cavernous or karstified limestone features (such as swallow-holes and collapse features).
(5) In this regulation, poultry litter means a mixture of bedding material and poultry manure arising from the housing of poultry and with a dry matter content not less than 55%.
(6) This regulation will apply from the operative date of these Regulations until 31 December 2010.
15 
Provision for the safe storage of dirty water should be available for those periods when weather and ground conditions, as set out in regulation 7(2), are unsuitable for land application.
16 

(1) In calculating the livestock manure storage capacity of a holding, the following farming practices may be taken into account:
(a) the quantity of farmyard manure;
(b) any solids removed from slurry other than pig slurry by means of a slurry separator;
(c) any additional storage available off the holding, by means of a rental agreement; and
(d) any valid contract the holding has with a manure processing facility or demonstrable access to an approved treatment or recovery outlet.
(e) the quantity of poultry litter stored in a field or midden prior to land application in accordance with regulation 14.
(2) Subject to paragraph (4), the livestock manure storage capacity of a holding may be less than the capacity specified in regulation 11 in relation to: –
(a) sheep, deer and goats which are out-wintered at a grassland stocking rate which does not exceed 130 kg nitrogen at any time during the period specified in regulation 6(3) in relation to the application of organic manure as calculated in accordance with paragraph (6); and
(b) livestock (other than dairy cows, sheep, deer and goats) which are out-wintered at a grassland stocking rate which does not exceed 85 kg of nitrogen at any time during the period specified in regulation 6(3) in relation to the application of organic manure, as calculated in accordance with paragraph (6), provided the amount of livestock manure produced on the holding does not exceed 140kg N/ha/year in accordance with regulation 9.
(c) in the case of a mixed holding the nitrogen limit in sub-paragraph (b) shall apply except where the controller of the holding demonstrates to the Department that the livestock out-wintered more appropriately reflects the composition of the livestock applicable in sub-paragraph (a).
(3) The livestock manure storage capacity of a holding shall be calculated in accordance with:
(a) the livestock manure production figures specified in Schedule 1 Table 5; and
(b) any further procedures for calculating such storage capacity which will be specified in guidance relating to these Regulations.
(4) A holding falling within paragraph (2) must ensure that:
(a) out-wintered livestock have free access at all times to the required land area;
(b) land is maintained in good agricultural and environmental condition; and
(c) the reduction in storage capacity is proportionate to the extent of out-wintered livestock on the holding.
(5) Any land used for the purpose of out-wintering under paragraphs (2) and (4) must be under the control of the holding to which the exemption applies.
(6) In this regulation, a grassland stocking rate of 130 kg or 85 kg of nitrogen, as the case may be, means the stocking of grassland on a holding at any time by such numbers and types of livestock as would in the course of a year excrete waste products containing 130 kg or 85 kg of nitrogen, as the case may be, per hectare of the grassland when calculated in accordance with the nitrogen excretion rate for livestock specified in Schedule 1 Table 1.
(7) In this regulation, mixed holding means a holding where there are sheep, deer, goats and other livestock (other than dairy cows).
PART 5
17 
After harvesting a crop of cereals (other than maize), oil seeds or grain legumes (such as peas or beans) the controller shall ensure that from harvest until 1 March in the following year, one of the following conditions is met on the land at any time:
(a) the stubble of the harvested crop remains in the land; or
(b) the land is sown with a crop which will take up nitrogen from the soil; or
(c) the land is left with a rough surface, ploughed or disced, to encourage the infiltration of rain.
18 
In having regard to these Regulations, the following principles of crop management shall apply:
(a) residues of crops harvested late, such as maize and potatoes, shall be left undisturbed until immediately prior to sowing the following Spring; and
(b) where grass leys are grown in rotation with arable crops the first crop should be sown as soon as possible after the grass has been ploughed.
18A 
In addition to the measures mentioned in regulations 17 and 18, where regulation 10A applies the controller of a derogated holding shall carry out the following measures:
(a) temporary grassland shall be ploughed in spring;
(b) ploughed grass on all soil types shall be followed immediately by a crop with high nitrogen demand; and
(c) crop rotation shall not include leguminous or other plants fixing atmospheric nitrogen except for grassland with less than 50% clover and to areas with cereals and pea undersown with grass.
PART 6
19 

(1) On all holdings the controller shall keep sufficient records available for inspection as detailed in  and paragraph (4) .
(2) The records shall be kept so as to allow the following information to be ascertained on an annual basis: -
(a) the controller of the land for the calendar year in question;
(b) the total agricultural area including the size and location of each field;
(c) the cropping regimes and their individual areas;
(d) the soil nitrogen supply index for cropping areas other than grassland as estimated in accordance with the fertiliser technical standards;
(e) the number of livestock kept on the holding, their species and type, and the length of time for which they were kept on the holding;
(f) the capacity of livestock manure storage, and where applicable the details of rented storage, farmyard manure production, out wintered livestock, manure separation and manure processing facilities utilised;
(g) the details of any rental or contractual agreement to demonstrate compliance with regulations 16(1)(c) and 16(1)(d);
(h) the quantity of each type of nitrogen fertiliser moved on or off the holding, the amount of each type of nitrogen fertiliser applied, the certified nitrogen content of the chemical fertiliser, the total nitrogen content per tonne of other organic manures as declared in accordance with regulations 9(5) and 10(6), the date of that movement and, in the case of organic manure, the name and address of the consignee, the consignor and any third party transporter of the manure; and
(i) evidence of the right to graze common land.
(3) Records under paragraph (2) of  this regulation shall be prepared for each calendar year by 30 June of the following year and shall be retained for a period of 5 years from that date.
(4) The controller of a derogated holding shall retain the fertilisation plan and fertilisation account for each calendar year for that derogated holding for 5 years from the date upon which they were prepared or submitted to the Department, whichever is the later.
20 
The controller shall not compile records which are false or misleading to a material extent or furnish any such false or misleading records or any notice or other document for the purposes of these Regulations.
PART 7
21 

(1) The enforcement authority for the purpose of compliance with these Regulations shall be the Department or any person authorised by the Department.
(2) In ensuring compliance with these Regulations an authorised person may have regard to the Code of Good Agricultural Practice and any guidance produced on these Regulations.
(3) A person authorised under Article 72 of the Order may exercise any of the functions under that Article to determine or ensure compliance with these Regulations.
22 

(1) Where the Department is of the opinion that a controller is in breach or is likely to be in breach of these Regulations or has breached these Regulations in such circumstances which make it likely that the breach will continue or be repeated, the Department may serve a notice on the controller in accordance with this regulation.
(2) A notice served in accordance with paragraph (1) shall:
(a) require the controller upon whom it is served to carry out such works or to take reasonable precautions and other steps as the Department considers appropriate to remedy, or to prevent the continuation or repetition of, any contravention to which the notice relates;
(b) state the period within which any such requirement is to be complied with; and
(c) inform the controller on whom the notice is served of their right to appeal under regulation 23(1).
(3) Subject to paragraph (4), the period for compliance stated in the notice as per paragraph (2)(b) shall be such as is reasonable in the circumstances and shall not in any case be less than 28 days.
(4) A notice under paragraph (2) may be appealed in accordance with regulation 23 and such an appeal shall suspend the period of compliance under paragraph (2)(b).
(5) The Department may at any time: —
(a) withdraw the notice;
(b) extend the period for compliance;
(c) with the consent of the person on whom the notice is served, modify the requirement of the notice.
23 
Appeals under regulations 9(9), 10(10) , 10A(3)(e)  and 22(4) shall be determined by the Appeals Commission in accordance with the procedure set down in Article 8 of the Water and Sewerage Services (Northern Ireland) Order 1973 and for the purposes of appeals under these Regulations references to the Department in Article 8 shall have the same meaning as under these Regulations.
24 

(1) It shall be an offence to fail to comply without reasonable excuse with regulation 4, 6(3), 6(4),  7(2), 7(3), 7(6), 7(7), 8(2), 9(1) ... , 10(3), 10A(1), 10A(6) and 10A(7).
(2) It shall be an offence to fail to comply with regulation 6(1), 6(2), 7(1), 7(4), 7(5), 7(8), 8(1), 8(3), 8(4), 9(2), 9(8), 10(1), 10(2), 10(9), 10A(4), 10A(5),  11(1), 11(3), 11(4), 12, 13, 14(1)-(4), 15, 17, 18, 18A,  19 and 20 of these Regulations.
(3) It shall be an offence for a controller to fail without reasonable cause to comply with the conditions of a notice issued under regulation 22.
25 
A controller... guilty of an offence under regulation 24 shall be liable:
(a) on summary conviction, to a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale together with a fine of an amount equal to one-tenth of that level for each day upon which the offence continues after the conviction; or
(b) on conviction on indictment to a fine or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years or both.
PART 8
26 

(1) The Departments shall prepare at four-yearly intervals a report in accordance with Article 10 of the Directive.
(2) The Departments shall submit a report to the European Commission within 6 months of the reporting cycle which ends on 31 December 2007 and every four years thereafter.
(3) The Department shall prepare and submit a report to the European Commission in accordance with Article 10 of the Commission Decision.
27 

(1) The Departments shall, every four years, in consultation with the public, review this action programme and, if appropriate, publish a revised action programme for the protection of water against nitrates from agricultural sources.
(2) An action programme shall include such measures necessary as required by Article 5 of the Directive and shall contain a review of the action programme most recently made and of such additional measures as may be required.
(3) The Departments shall:—
(a) ensure that the public is given early and effective opportunity to participate in the preparation, review or revision of an action programme required by Article 5 of the Directive; and
(b) in doing so shall—
(i) ensure that the public is informed by public notices or other appropriate means such as electronic media, about any proposals for the preparation, review or revision of an action programme;
(ii) ensure that the information about the proposals referred to in paragraph (3)(a), is made available to the public, including information about the right to participate in decision making in relation to those proposals;
(iii) ensure that the public is entitled to make comments before any decision is made on the establishment, review or revision of an action programme;
(iv) in making any such decision, take due account of the results of the public participation; and
(v) having examined the comments made by the public, make reasonable efforts to inform the public of the decisions taken and the reasons and considerations on which these decisions are based, including information on the public participation process.
(4) In carrying out their functions under paragraph (3), the Departments shall ensure that reasonable time is allowed as is sufficient to enable the public to participate effectively.
(5) In carrying out the functions under paragraph (3), where the Departments publish any information, the Departments shall:
(a) do so in a way as they consider appropriate for the purpose of bringing the information to the attention of the public; and
(b) make copies of that information accessible to the public free of charge through their websites or otherwise.
(6) The Departments shall specify in a notice on their websites or otherwise the detailed arrangements made to enable public participation in the preparation, review or revision of an action programme, including: -
(a) the address to which comments in relation to those proposals may be submitted; and
(b) the date by which such comments should be received.
PART 9
28 
The measures contained in these Regulations shall come into operation in accordance with regulation 1 except that:
(a) Regulation 6(3) will apply in the case of a holding without the prescribed storage capacity in place as required under regulations 11(3) and 12(1) to 12(3) from the date on which the prescribed storage capacity as required under regulation 11(3) and 12(1) to 12(3) is put in place or at the latest by 31 December 2008;
(b) Regulations 11(3) and 12(1) to 12(3) will apply from the date on which the prescribed storage capacity is put in place or at the latest by 31 December 2008;
(c) Regulation 14(1) will apply from the operational date of these Regulations until 31 December 2008 only;
(d) A notice served under regulation 4 of The Action Programme for Nitrate Vulnerable Zones Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1999 prior to their revocation in accordance with regulation 30 shall be deemed to be a notice served under these Regulations with the coming into operation of these Regulations.
29 

(1) The Control of Pollution (Silage, Slurry and Agricultural Fuel Oil) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003 are amended as follows:
(a) Before regulation 2(1) insert “2(1A) The definitions of “agricultural area”, “dirty water”, “controller”, “holding” and “slurry” shall have the same meaning as in regulation 3(2) of the Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006.”
(b) Delete from regulation 2(1) the definition of “slurry”.
(c) Schedule 2 shall be amended as follows:Delete paragraph 6 and replace with the following:“
6. 

(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (2), the capacity of storage facilities for slurry of a holding shall be sufficient and adequate to provide for the storage of all the slurry which is likely to require storage on the holding for such period as may be necessary to ensure compliance with the Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006.
(2) The matters to which regard is to be had under sub-paragraph (1) are—
(a) the likely quantities of rainfall (including any fall of snow, hail or sleet) which may fall or drain into the slurry storage tank during the likely maximum storage period;
(b) the need to make provision for not less than 750 millimetres of freeboard in the case of a tank with walls made of earth and 300 millimetres of freeboard in all other cases; and
(c) soil quality in the vicinity of the slurry storage tank.”
(2) The Waste Management Licensing Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003 Schedule 2 shall be amended as follows—
(a) in Part I, paragraph 9, substitute sub-paragraph (3)(c) with “where the Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 applies treatment shall be carried out in accordance with those Regulations”;
(b) in Part I, paragraph 10, substitute sub-paragraph (1)(c) with “where the Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 applies the spreading shall be carried out in accordance with those Regulations”;
(c) in Part I, paragraph 11, substitute sub-paragraph (3)(e) with “where the Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 applies the spreading shall be carried out in accordance with those Regulations”;
(d) in Part I, paragraph 25, sub-paragraph (1) substitute “sub-paragraphs (2) to (4A)” for “sub-paragraphs (2) to (4)”;
(e) in Part I, paragraph 25, delete sub-paragraph (4A);
(f) in Part I, delete paragraph 47A, sub-paragraph (1) and replace with the following:“
47A. 

(1) The treatment of land used for agriculture with agricultural waste where such treatment results in benefit to agriculture or ecological improvement if—
(a) the waste consists only of liquid milk;
(b) before the treatment the waste is diluted with not less than an equal quantity of water or slurry;
(c) in any period of 30 days the land is treated with no more than 50 cubic metres (tonnes) of diluted waste per hectare; and
(d) the treatment shall be carried out in accordance with the Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006.”
(g) in Part I, delete paragraph 47B and replace with the following:“
47B. 
The deposit of agricultural waste consisting of plant tissue at the place of production if—
(a) there is no more than 250 cubic metres (tonnes) in any one deposit;
(b) the deposit is not immediately adjacent to any other deposit made in reliance on this exemption; and
(c) the deposit shall be carried out in accordance with the Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006.”
(h) in Part III, substitute paragraph 2(b) with “for exempt activities to which the Nitrates Action Programme Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 apply the exempt activity shall be carried out in accordance with those Regulations.”
30 

(1) In accordance with the Protection of Water Against Agricultural Nitrate Pollution Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2004 the following statutory provisions shall be revoked in their entirety upon the coming into operation of these Regulations:
(a) The Action Programme for Nitrate Vulnerable Zones Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1999; and
(b) The Protection of Water Against Agricultural Nitrate Pollution Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2003.
(2) The Protection of Water Against Agricultural Nitrate Pollution (Amendment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2005 shall be revoked in their entirety upon the coming into operation of these Regulations.
Sealed with the Official Seal of the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development on 1st December 2006.
David Small
A senior officer of the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development
Sealed with the Official Seal of the Department of the Environment on 1st December 2006.
Wesley Shannon
A senior officer of the Department of the Environment

SCHEDULE 1
The nitrogen excretion rate for livestock
Unit of livestock category Production period or Age range Body Weight kg Occupancy % of year Annual Nitrogen Production kg N
Cattle    
Dairy Cow  575 100 91
Dairy heifer replacement >2 years old 500 100 54
Beef suckler cow > 2 years old 500 100 54
Bull beef 6-13.5 months 300 60 23
Grower fattener > 2 years old 500 100 54
Grower fattener 12-24 months 400 100 47
Grower fattener 6-12 months 180 50 12
Calf 0-6 months 100 50 7
Calf to 12 months 12 months 180 100 19
Sheep    
Adult ewe/ram >1 year old 50-70 100 9
Lamb 0-6 months 4-40 50 1.2
Lamb 6-12 months 30-50 50 3.2
Lamb to 1 year 12 months 4-50 100 4.4
Pigs    
Maiden gilt  90-130 100 13.0
Boar  130-250 100 16
1 sow place, includes litter to 7 kg 12 months 130-225 100 19.5
Weaner 3-7.5 weeks 7-18 90 3.0
Grower, dry meal 7.5-11 weeks 18-35 90 6.1
Light cutter, meal fed 11-20 weeks 35-85 90 9.4
Baconer, dry meal fed 11-23 weeks 35-105 90 10.5
Baconer, liquid fed @ 4:1 11-23 weeks 35-105 90 10.5
Poultry    
1000 Laying hens  2200 98 607
1000 Broiler places 40 days 2000 73 255
1000 Broiler breeders 0-60 weeks 4000 91 878
1000 Broiler breeders (Laying) 18-60 weeks 4000 87.5 945
1000 Broiler breeder replacements 0-18 weeks 2000 46 142
1000 Replacement pullets 17 weeks 1600 38 113
1000 Turkeys (male) 140 days 12000 80 1284
1000 Turkeys (female) 120 days 8000 80 871
1000 Ducks 50 days 3400 85 834
Goat    9
Deer (red) 6mths – 2 years   13
Deer (red) >2 years   25
Deer (fallow) 6mths – 2 years   7
Deer (fallow)  > 2 years   13
Deer (sika) 6mths – 2 years   6
Deer (sika) > 2 years   10
Horse > 3 years old   50
Horse 2-3 years old   44
Horse 1-2 years old   36
Horse foal < 1 year old   25
Donkey / small pony    30








Total nitrogen content of slurry and dirty water on a fresh weight basis
Livestock type DM content (%) Total nitrogen (kg/ m3)
Dairy Cattle 2 1.5
 6 3.0
 10 4.0
Beef Cattle 2 1.0
 6 2.3
 10 3.5
Pigs 2 3.0
 4 4.0
 6 5.0
Separated cattle slurries (liquid portion)  
Strainer box 1.5 1.5
Weeping wall 3 2
Mechanical separator 4 3
  
Dirty Water <1 0.3

Total nitrogen contained in 1 tonne of solid organic manures
Livestock type DM content (%) Total nitrogen (kg)
Poultry manure  
 Broilers 60 30.0
 Layers 30 16.0
 Turkeys 60 30.0
 Ducks 25 6.5
Cattle FYM 25 6.0
Sheep FYM 25 6.0
Pig FYM 25 7.0
Annual nitrogen application standards for grassland crops
 Year *Dairy Cattle *Other Livestock
Balance of crop nitrogen requirement (kg N/ha/year) (e.g. from chemical fertiliser or organic nitrogen supply other than livestock manure) 2007 289 239
2009 281 231
2010 272 222
This table does not imply any departure from regulation 9(2) or 10(3) which prohibit the application to the agricultural area on a holding of livestock manure in amounts which exceed 170kg N/ha/year, including that deposited by the animals themselves.  Where the 250kg N/ha/year derogation under regulation 10A is granted to a controller the nitrogen application standards for 2010 shall apply to the derogated holding.
* The Dairy Cattle figures (dairy cows and heifer replacements) apply where it can be demonstrated that more than 50% of the livestock manure applied to the agricultural area, both by land application and by the animals themselves arises from dairy cattle. In all other cases the figures for Other Livestock will apply.
Livestock manure production figures
Type of livestock Slurry produced per animal per week (m3)
Cattle V
Dairy cow 575kg 0.37
Suckler Cow 500kg 0.23
Cattle > 2 years 500kg 0.23
Cattle 1 – 2 years 400kg 0.18
Cattle 0.5 – 1 year 180kg 0.09
Calf 100kg 0.05
Sheep
Adult ewe 65kg 0.03
Fattening Lamb 35kg 0.01
Pigs
Gilt 90 – 130kg 0.05
1 Sow & litter 130 – 225kg 0.08
1 Weaner (Stage 1) 7 – 18kg 0.01
1 Grower (Stage 2) 18 – 35kg 0.02
1 Finisher meal fed (Stage 3) 35 – 105kg 0.03
1 Finisher liquid fed (Stage 3) 35 – 105kg 0.05
Poultry
1000 laying hens 0.81

Nitrogen availability in livestock manures and chemical fertilisers
Fertiliser Availability (%) in year of application
 Nitrogen
 From 1 Jan 07 From 1 Jan 09 From 1 Jan 10
Chemical 100 100 100
Pig Manure 35 45 50
Poultry litter 20 24 30
Farmyard manure 20 25 30
Cattle and other livestock manure 30 35 40

Table 7 – Regulations 10A(4)(d)(iv) and (xi)
Stock Type P kg excretion per annum
Dairy cows 16.6
Suckler Cows 10.1
Breeding Bull 10.1
Cattle over 2 years 10.1
Cattle 1-2 years 7.9
Bull beef (0-13 months) 7.5
Calves 6 months to 1 year 3.0
Calves under 6 months 1.7
Adult ewe/ram 1.0
Fattening lamb 0.3
Boars 4.2
Maiden Gilt 5.7
Sow and litter up to weaning 8.7
Pigs 18 kg -35 kg 2.0
Pigs 18 kg – 105 kg 5.3
Pigs 35 kg -105 kg 3.3
Broilers (1000) 189.7
Male turkeys (1000) 534.1
Female turkeys (1000) 250.7
Fattening ducks (1000) 392.4
Broiler breeders (1000) 319.3
Pullets (1000) 41.1
Layers (1000) 237.6
Horse (>3 years old) 9
Horse (2-3 years old) 8
Horse (1-2 years old) 6
Horse foal (< 1 year old) 3
Donkey/small pony 5
Goat 1
Deer (red) 6 months - 2 years 2
Deer (red) > 2 years 4
Deer (fallow) 6 months - 2 years 1
Deer (fallow) > 2 years 2
Deer (sika) 6 months - 2 years 1
Deer (sika) > 2 years 2

Table 8 – Regulation 10A(7)
Agricultural Product Phosphorus content % fresh weight
Concentrates 0.58 or actual declared content
Cattle 0.66
Milk 0.10
Sheep 0.54
Wool 0.04
Pigs 0.50
Poultry 0.58
Eggs 0.22
Potatoes 0.41
Oats 0.29
Barley 0.34
Wheat 0.28
Straw 0.10
Silage 0.06
Hay 0.30

Table 9 – Regulation 10A(7)
Agricultural Product Dry Matter % Phosphorus content (kg P/m3)
Dairy Slurry 2 0.26
 6 0.52
 10 0.87
Beef Cattle 2 0.26
 6 0.52
 10 0.87
Pig Slurry 2 0.44
 4 0.87
 6 1.31
Separated cattle slurries (liquid portion)  
Strainer box 1.5 0.13
Weeping wall 3 0.22
Mechanical separator 4 0.52
 Dry Matter % Phosphorus content (kg P/t)
Cattle FYM 25 1.53
Pig FYM 25 3.05
Sheep FYM 25 0.87
Duck manure 25 2.40
Layer manure 30 5.67
Broiler / turkey 60 10.91


The phosphorus balance will be the difference between phosphorus inputs to the farm less the total of phosphorus outputs leaving the farm. It is calculated per unit area of agricultural land on the holding and is based upon the following:
Inputs include: P in chemical fertiliser (quantity and P content)
 P in feedstuffs (quantity and P content)
 P in any organic manure imported onto farm (quantity and P content – use standard values for P content)
less 
Outputs include: P in produce – for example meat, milk and crops (use standard values for P content of each product)
 P exported in organic manures (quantity and P content)The balance is inputs less outputs divided by the agricultural area for each calendar year.Note: inputs of phosphorus to agricultural land in precipitation and losses of phosphorus from the farm to surface or groundwaters are excluded from the balance calculation.