|
Contaminated land - enforcement |
|
|
There have been two important cases involving liability for contaminated
land. One saw a marked retreat from being able to enforce the
contaminated land regime, whilst the other had an opposite outcome.
The Circular Facilities case involved a landmark action being brought by
an LA against a developer who had built a housing development on a
former brickwork site. The LA required remediation work to be carried out
after the buildings had been completed. However, after lengthy and
bitterly fought litigation, the case was settled out of court with the LA
withdrawing the remediation notice. Reports indicate that the LA withdrew
because of financial considerations; indeed, the LA has reckoned that it
was easier to deal with necessary remediation work itself rather than
press on with the unknown costs of yet more litigation. In addition, the
rules on disclosure of evidence can make it difficult for an LA to prove
that a developer had the requisite knowledge (especially if over 20 years
have elapsed) and thus the outcome of legal action will often be
uncertain. In short, an attempt to follow up a remediation notice by legal
action has failed – and this in litigation was largely seen as trail-blazing.
Accordingly, the retreat by the LA is being interpreted by many as an
admission that the remediation regime is unenforceable.
As a counter-balance to the collapse of that litigation, it is also worth
noting that the High Court has found National Grid Gas liable under the
contaminated land regime for contamination caused by its predecessors
(a liability that could cost £1bn in total, and which will be relevant to other
industries and organisations that had been nationalised or privatised).
But, whatever the success of that litigation, the fact remains that the
remediation regime in respect of local developments (as with the housing
estate, above) is proving to be toothless and ineffective. In simple terms,
LAs generally do not have the technical expertise, or financial resources,
to take on the larger developers. Source: www.practicallaw.com/4-202-3960 (subscription service).
|
|
July 2006 |