
1 
These Regulations—
(a) may be cited as the Marine Licensing (Application Fees) Regulations 2014; and
(b) come into force on 6th April 2014.
2 
In these Regulations—
 “the Act” means the Marine and Coastal Access Act 2009;
 “the 2011 Regulations” means the Marine Licensing (Application Fees) Regulations 2011;
 “activity” means a licensable marine activity; and
 “licence” means a marine licence granted under section 71(1)(a) or (b) of the Act.
3 
These Regulations apply in relation to any application for a licence in relation to which the Secretary of State is the appropriate licensing authority under section 113 of the Act, other than any activity relating to an activity falling within the subject-matter of—
(a) the Petroleum Act 1998; or
(b) Part 1 (gas importation or storage), 4 (provisions relating to oil and gas) or 4A (works detrimental to navigation) of the Energy Act 2008.
4 

(1) Subject to paragraph (2), the fee payable for determining an application for a licence is calculated by multiplying the total number of hours worked by £94.
(2) Where the fee that would otherwise be payable under paragraph (1), taken together with the fee (if any) charged under section 67(5) of the Act, would exceed the specified maximum, the amount payable in respect of both such fees taken together is the maximum (“cap”) specified in relation to an application of the kind in question.
(3) The cap applicable in respect of an application falling within any band specified in the first column of paragraph 1 of the Schedule (and of a kind described in the second column of that paragraph) is specified in relation to that band in the third column of that paragraph.
(4) For the purposes of paragraph (1), the total number of hours worked may be expressed as a fraction where—
(a) less than one hour is worked; or
(b) the total amount of time worked is more than one hour but cannot be expressed as a whole number in hours.
5 

(1) All fees are payable on demand to the Secretary of State.
(2) Payment of any fee may be made by electronic means.
(3) Payment of a fee is not received until the Secretary of State has received cleared funds for the full amount due.
(4) Any unpaid fee may be recovered by the Secretary of State as a civil debt.
6 

(1) The Secretary of State may require a licensee to pay a deposit of such amount as the Secretary of State may determine on account of the fee payable.
(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the amount of the deposit must be calculated by reference to the estimated duration of the work likely to be required in relation to the application and the hourly rate payable.
(3) In relation to any application which falls within Band 3 in the Schedule, the amount of the deposit may not exceed £10,000.
(4) If an application fails to comply with a requirement to pay a deposit made under paragraph (1), the Secretary of State may—
(a) refuse to proceed with the application, or
(b) refuse to proceed with it until the deposit is paid in full.
7 

(1) The Secretary of State must refund any payment made in excess of the fee payable, but fees paid are not otherwise refundable.
(2) The Secretary of State may waive or reduce any fee if the Secretary of State sees fit.
8 
Subject to regulation 9, the 2011 Regulations are revoked.
9 

(1) Paragraph (2) applies in respect of any licence application that was received by the Secretary of State before 6th April 2014 but which was not determined by the Secretary of State before that date.
(2) The 2011 Regulations continue to have effect in relation to the application, subject to the exception in paragraph (3) and the modification in paragraph (4).
(3) Where the application falls within the description in Band 1 or Band 2 in the Schedule to the 2011 Regulations and the amount of the fee, if it were determined in accordance with the 2011 Regulations, would be greater than the amount of the fee if it were determined in accordance with these Regulations, the fee is to be determined in accordance with these Regulations.
(4) The fee in respect of an application falling within the description in Band 3 in the Schedule to the 2011 Regulations is to be determined as if, for “£80 per hour or part thereof”, there were substituted “£80 per hour or part thereof worked before 6th April 2014 and £94 per hour or part thereof worked on or after that date”.
(5) For the purposes of paragraph (1), an application is not received until an applicant has supplied such information or produced such articles as in the opinion of the Secretary of State may be necessary or expedient to enable the Secretary of State to determine the application.
George Eustice
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State
Department for Environmental, Food and Rural Affairs
13th March 2014
SCHEDULE
Regulation 4(3)
1 
The bands and (where specified) the caps are as follows—

Band Description of application Cap
Band 1 Any application relating to:(a) the burial of a body at sea;(b) erecting scaffolding for discrete maintenance projects;(c) removing poles, girders, joists and objects of a similar nature unattached to the seabed or any structure;(d) resurfacing a slipway;(e) repairing joints of any structure; or(f) any activity of a similarly minor nature. £175
  
Bands 2A-2E Any application which does not fall, or does not fall exclusively, within the description in Band 1 and relates to a specified activity or activities which has, or (in the case of more than one activity) taken together have, an estimated cost falling within one of the following ranges— 
  
Band 2A £0 to £4,999 £450
Band 2B £5,000 to £19,999 £700
  
Band 2C £20,000 to £49,999 £1,400
  
Band 2D £50,000 to £199,999 £2,200
  
Band 2E £200,000 to £999,999 £2,700
  
Band 3 Any application which does not fall, or does not fall exclusively, within the description in Band 1 and does not fall within any description in Band 2A to 2E. None.
2 

(1) In paragraph 1, “specified activity” means any activity falling within item 1 (deposits within the UK marine licensing area etc), 7 (construction, alteration or improvement of works etc) or 8 (use of vehicle to remove substances etc) of section 66(1) of the Act, but does not include any such activity where it is—
(a) to be carried out in the course of an Annex I project;
(b) to be carried out in the course of an Annex II project, if it is likely because of its size, nature or location to have significant effects on the environment;
(c) a plan or project likely (either alone or in combination with other plans or projects) to have a significant effect on a European site;
(d) capable of affecting (other than insignificantly)—
(i) the protected features of an MCZ; or
(ii) any ecological or geomorphological process on which the conservation of any protected feature of an MCZ is (wholly or in part) dependent;
(e) likely to have a significant effect on a Ramsar site; or
(f) an activity with respect to which an environmental impact assessment is required by virtue of regulation 5 (requirement of assessment by agreement) of the EIA Regulations.
(2) In paragraph 2(1)(a) and (b)—
(a) “Annex I project” means a project of a type specified in Annex I to Council Directive 2011/92/EU on the assessment of the effects of certain public and private projects on the environment; and
(b) “Annex II project” means a project of a type specified in Annex II to that Directive.
(3) In paragraph 2(1)(c)—
 “European site” means a European site within the meaning of regulation 8(1) of the Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2010 or a European offshore marine site within the meaning of regulation 15 of the Offshore Marine Conservation (Natural Habitats, &c.) Regulations 2007; and
 “plan or project” has the same meaning as in Council Directive 92/43/EEC on the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora.
(4) In paragraph 2(1)(d)—
(a) “an MCZ” means a marine conservation zone from time to time designated by an order made under section 116 of the Act; and
(b) “protected feature” has the meaning given by section 147(1) of the Act.
(5) In paragraph 2(1)(e) “Ramsar site” means a site designated under paragraph 1 of Article 2 of the Ramsar Convention by the Secretary of State, the Scottish Ministers, the Welsh Ministers or, in Northern Ireland, the Department of the Environment.
(6) In paragraph 2(1)(f)—
(a) “EIA Regulations” means the Marine Works (Environmental Impact Assessment) Regulations 2007; and
(b) “environmental impact assessment” means an assessment under Part 3 of the EIA Regulations.