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Scott23367  
#1 Posted : 08 August 2015 17:10:47(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
Scott23367

Can anyone advise...

Within farming if you have asbestos sheets and you decide to upgrade sheds, can you bury it on your own premises and maintain a register of where it has been place?

A couple of years ago I had a discussion with HSE who advised if double bagged and location recorded this would be fine.

I can't find any legislation to suggest this is possible or not, any thoughts are welcome.
Safety Man 1  
#2 Posted : 08 August 2015 19:17:06(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Safety Man 1

I would find that strange as you would need to break theses in pieces to double bag therefore the asbestos fibres would become airborne
bob youel  
#3 Posted : 08 August 2015 21:19:54(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
bob youel

this is an EA area and not a HSE area [ I find it unusual that the HSE even talked about asbestos in this way] so speak to them and I would be surprised that this practice is acceptable
chris42  
#4 Posted : 09 August 2015 08:48:30(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
chris42

You need a licence to store waste even your own.
johnmurray  
#5 Posted : 09 August 2015 09:58:36(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

Scott23367  
#6 Posted : 09 August 2015 12:17:39(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
Scott23367

Hi All,

Thanks very much for your input, I'll see what I can get from SEPA on this.
boblewis  
#7 Posted : 09 August 2015 17:23:33(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

There is a chain of thought that argues that it is ultimately safer to securely bury material in the place it is currently located provided the LA registers the land area used as Contaminated. I have experience of the EA and LA accepting the practice on what was already a contaminated site. The decision also saved on valuable hazardous waste tip space as there was also fibrous material present within the soils around the site.
johnmurray  
#8 Posted : 10 August 2015 07:47:58(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

http://asbestosindustryn...tos-buried-on-farm-land/

And then there is the view from the press.....I'll pay attention to Booker when he buries it in his garden!

http://www.telegraph.co....r-asbestos-clean-up.html
boblewis  
#9 Posted : 10 August 2015 11:41:33(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

Both of the practices set out in these links I would condemn

1) The landowner was clearly undertaking work for gain with a view to selling the land for development. He failed to make any consultations prior to the act and deliberately and fraudulently misinformed his buyer

2) The notion that it could be crushed for farm roads is clearly a ridiculous idea as ultimately fibres will be released from the further crushed material. But many demolition contractors at the fly end of the scale do crush brick and ACM together in order to lose the tip charges and still take money from clients for proper disposal. Hence why you should view and check all transfer and consignment notes.

I am talking of properly registered contaminated land and the limitations that imposes.
Safety Witch  
#10 Posted : 11 August 2015 19:10:10(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Safety Witch

The short answer is no you can't.

As stated you would need to be a licensed disposal site.
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