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1 week ago |
planningresource.co.uk | Tess Colley
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1 week ago |
endsreport.com | Tess Colley
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2 weeks ago |
endsreport.com | Tess Colley
Need to activate your subscription? If your company or university has a corporate subscription simply register your email address here to gain access
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3 weeks ago |
planningresource.co.uk | Tess Colley
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Email address
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Stay signed in
If you haven’t got access, please take a trial below.
If you a PlanningResource only subscriber, or on a free trial, you will have to upgrade to a bundle subscription to get access.
Please email [email protected] or call 01452 835 820.
*For bespoke corporate packages please email [email protected] or call us on 01452 835820.
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3 weeks ago |
endsreport.com | Jamie Carpenter |Tess Colley
Need to activate your subscription? If your company or university has a corporate subscription simply register your email address here to gain access
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4 weeks ago |
endsreport.com | Tess Colley
Last week an ENDS TV expert panel discussed the chemical cocktails killing England’s rivers - and the emerging contaminants that regulators, policy-makers, and business need to be aware of. You can now register - for free - to watch the episode on demand, which also features exclusive ENDS footage documenting the chemical crisis facing waterways in Merseyside. Here’s what you need to know.
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1 month ago |
endsreport.com | Tess Colley
Highways run-off has been shown to contain a broad spectrum of highly polluting substances, from suspended solids, microplastics, toxic organic compounds and toxic metals. Now, data obtained by ENDS through Freedom of Information legislation has revealed the locations of the outfalls which are classed in the National Highway’s Water Quality Plan as having a potentially ‘high risk’ or ‘very high risk’ of channelling polluted run-off from major roads into waterways.
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1 month ago |
endsreport.com | Tess Colley |Jamie Carpenter
Discharges of highway run-off contain a broad spectrum of highly polluting substances, from suspended solids, microplastics, toxic organic compounds, and toxic metals. Data obtained by ENDS through Freedom of Information legislation has revealed the locations of the outfalls on major roads which are classed in the National Highway’s Water Quality Plan as having a potentially ‘high risk’ or ‘very high risk’ of channelling polluted run-off from major roads into waterways.
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1 month ago |
endsreport.com | Tess Colley |Jamie Carpenter
Discharges of highway run-off contain a broad spectrum of highly polluting substances, from suspended solids, microplastics, toxic organic compounds, and toxic metals. These pollutants come from multiple sources, including vehicle tyres, heavy metal-laden dust from brakes and clutches, windscreen fluid, combustion emissions and unburned fuel.
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1 month ago |
endsreport.com | Tess Colley
The government published its much-anticipated Planning and Infrastructure Bill earlier this month. The legislation is intended to deliver a more ‘strategic’ approach to addressing environmental harms from development, introducing a new levy-based Nature Restoration Fund (NRF) and associated environmental delivery plans (EDPs).