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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> 3C Waste Ltd v Mersey Waste Holdings Ltd & Anor [2006] EWHC 2598 (Comm) (24 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/2598.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2598 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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3C WASTE LIMITED - and - (1) MERSEY WASTE HOLDINGS LIMITED (2) MERSEYSIDE WASTE DISPOSAL AUTHORITY |
Claimant Defendants |
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Derrick Wyatt QC and Stephen Tromans (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the First Defendants
David Hart QC (instructed by Eversheds) for the Second Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Steel:-
Background
i) an assignment to Mersey Waste by virtue of the MWDA transfer scheme of the rights and liabilities of MWDA under the Contract;ii) a waste disposal contract known as "Contract 1" entered into between MWDA and Mersey Waste relating to the disposal of waste collected within the district councils of Merseyside; and
iii) a household waste recycling centre contract known as "Contract 2" for the provision by Mersey Waste of waste reception centres in the Merseyside area.
"IN the event of war invasion hostilities (whether war has been declared or not) national emergency act of terrorism usurpation of power or by requirement of any statute rule regulation order or requisition or from strike lockout or other similar causes beyond the control of the parties hereto this Agreement becomes incapable of performance then the liabilities and obligations on the parties shall be suspended until such time as they are again capable of being performed.
…
(a) NEITHER Cheshire County Council nor Merseyside Waste Disposal Authority shall be bound by any variation to waiver of or addition to this Agreement except as agreed by both parties in writing and signed on their behalf by the Cheshire County Council Secretary and Solicitor to the Clerk to the Merseyside Waste Disposal Authority."
Changes in the law
"Member States shall take measures to ensure that all of the costs involved in the setting up and operation of a landfill site, including, as far as possible the costs of the financial security referred to in Article 8(a)(iv), and the estimated costs of the closure and after-care of the site for a period of at least 30 years shall be covered by the price to be charged by the operator for the disposal of any type of waste in that site."
"The operator of a landfill shall ensure that the charges it makes for the disposal of waste in its landfill covers all of the following:
(a) the costs of setting up and operating the landfill;
(b) the costs of the financial provision required by regulation 4(3)(b) of the [PPC] Regulations; and
(c) the estimated costs for the closure and after-care of the landfill site for a period of at least 30 years from its closure."
The PPC Permit
"The operator shall ensure that the charges it makes for the disposal of waste in the landfill covers all of the following:
(a) the costs of setting up and operating the landfill;
(b) the costs of the financial provision required by condition 2.4.9.4; and
(c) the estimated costs for the closure and after-care of the landfill site for a period of at least 30 years from its closure."
Consequential steps by 3C
The core arguments
Full Cost
Mersey Waste – and emanations of the state
EC Law
i) Article 10 and any national measures taken to implement the Landfill Directive should modify existing contracts to the least extent necessary to ensure the aims of Article 10 are achieved and preclude landfill operators from unilaterally adjusting the rates in existing contracts;ii) a landfill operator can only renounce existing contracts on the ground that the rates payable are inadequate to cover costs if the other party to the contract, having had an appropriate opportunity to examine and assess cost data provided by the landfill operator which demonstrates convincingly that the current contract rate is inadequate, and likely to remain so, refuses for the future to pay a price covering the landfill operator's costs.
The duties and obligations of the parties pursuant to the Contract and/or EC Law
Discussion
"Member States shall take measures to ensure that all of the costs involved in the setting up and operation of a landfill site, including as far as possible the cost of the financial security or its equivalent referred to in Article 8(a)(iv), and the estimated costs of closure and aftercare of the site for a period of at least 30 years shall be covered by the price to be charged by the operator for the disposal of any type of waste in that site. Subject to the requirements of Council Directive 90/313/EEC of 7 June 1990 on the freedom of access to information on the environment, Member States shall ensure transparency in the collection and use of any necessary cost information."
a) The costs include those of "setting up" and "operation". It is not suggested by the Defendants that the Directive only applies to new sites. Thus the construction contended for by them will result in the avoidance on the part of the landfill operator to meet the conditions or requirements of the Directive where existing contracts were sufficient to satisfy the full capacity of a site.
b) Further, where there was additional capacity within the site to absorb new contracts, the burden of meeting the full cost would fall entirely on those entering into new contracts. This would be by way of subsidy of existing contractors.
c) The mechanism for covering costs is by way of the price "for the disposal of any type of waste". The inference is that the rate for any specific form of waste should be the same across the board, regardless of the question of whether the relevant waste was being delivered under a new or old contract.
a) The 1975 Waste Framework Directive recited the policy of encouraging the recovery of waste material to conserve natural resources and recorded the position that the proportion of the costs not covered by the proceeds of treating the waste should be defrayed "in full accordance with the polluter pays principle". Article 15 went on to provide that the costs must be borne inter alios by the previous "holders of the waste".
b) The European Commission's Explanatory Memorandum to the Proposal for the Directive contains the following comments:
"Increased Cost of Landfilling
As reflected in the review of the community strategy on waste management, Member States should ensure that the price charged for the disposal of any type of waste in the landfill covers at a minimum all costs involved in the setting up and operation of the site…. This provision aims at restoring the balance between the cost of the landfilling of waste which at present tend to be too low and the costs of other treatment methods, such as environmentally sound recovery operations, for which the costs are relatively high….
Economic Considerations
….The static costs [……..] by the Directive depend on the way landfill sites are actually operated. A landfill site that is already properly managed is likely to incur little or no compliance costs. On the contrary unregulated or illegal landfill sites whose building and operating costs by definition are practically zero are bound to demand some financial resources to comply with the proposed measures. According to a recent study the European average cost of landfill and municipal waste is about 32Ecu per tonne in urban sites and 20Ecu in rural sites (1993 prices). This difference is accounted for by the cost of land which is by far the most important cost element."
c) The Revised Community Strategy on Waste Management contains the following paragraphs:
"51. Frequently the cost of waste disposal does not reflect the true costs of the environmental damage caused. For instance, the costs of the whole lifetime of the landfill - 100 years or more – are often not taken into consideration. Low prices for waste disposal offer no incentive to recovery operations or the free treatment of waste. Therefore the Member States should in the long run ensure that the price to be paid for these operations remain more transparent. In particular, the objective should be that the price accurately reflects the full cost of disposal for example as regards the closure and after care of a facility. …."
d) The Resolution of the Council of Ministers approving the strategy recites as follows:
"13. Believes that in accordance with the polluter pays principle and the principle of shared responsibility all economic actors including producers, importers, distributors and consumers bear their specific share of responsibility as regards the prevention, recovery and disposal of waste…."
e) The recital of the Directives itself is instructive: -
"18. Whereas, because of the particular features of the landfill method of waste disposal, it is necessary to introduce a specific permit procedure for all classes of landfill…and whereas the landfill site's compliance with such a permit must be verified in the course of an inspection by the competent authority before the start of disposal operations…
26. Whereas the future conditions of operation of existing landfill should be regulated in order to take the necessary measures. Within a specified period of time, for their adaptation to this Directive on the basis of a site conditioning plan…"
a) applies to all sites unless already closed,
b) contemplates that only those landfill sites which are able to comply with the technical and environmental requirements of the Directive will obtain a permit and remain operative,
c) imposes a regime intended to ensure parity of treatment in regard to polluters, taking full account of external cost.
i) It means that a site to which deliveries is only made under an existing contract are immune.ii) It means that a site which accepts deliveries under both an old and a new contract will have a vast disparity between the prices charged.
iii) Further, in the event that the new tonnage is only a small fraction of the total deliveries, that fraction will nonetheless bear almost the entirety of the operating and closure costs.
Scope of the implementing regulations
a) The Regulations do not apply to any landfill which finally ceased to accept waste before the 16 July 2001: reg. 4.
b) Landfill permits may be granted by the Environment Agency which must specify the total quantity that is authorised to be deposited and includes requirements for compliance with Regulation 11 (which deals with the costs of disposal): reg. 8.
c) The operator of a landfill site should ensure that the "charges" it makes cover the costs of setting up, operation and closure: reg. 11.
a) The express terms of the Regulations do not depart in any material manner from the Directive.
b) It is trite law that the transposing measure will be construed in a manner which reflects the underlying objective of the Directive.
"A contract providing for the disposal of waste at an existing landfill shall be adjusted to the extent necessary to enable the landfill operator to ensure that the charges made for the disposal of waste cover all of the costs of the landfill…
Such adjustment shall take place by agreement of the parties within [specified period] of the Environment Agency disclosing to the customer of the landfill operator the cost information collected for the purpose of verifying compliance with Regulation 11…
Failing adjustment within the [specified period] there shall be implied into the contract a term that the price shall be fixed at a level which covers all of the costs … etc…"
Impact on the Contract
"It follows that in applying national law whether the provisions in question were adopted before or after the directive, the national court called upon to interpret it is required to do so, as far as possible, in the light of the wording and the purpose of the directive in order to achieve the result pursued by the latter and thereby comply with the third paragraph of Article 189 of the treaty."
i) The operation of an implied term.ii) Alternatively, the conclusion that the contract was frustrated.
iii) In the further alternative, the operation of the force majeure clause.
A yet further alternative to the effect that there was an "amendment of the contract by EC Law" was not in the event pursued.
Force Majeure
Other issues
Items within full cost
A) Revenue from Electricity Generation
The Defendants contend that, in assessing full cost, the income of 3C from electricity generation through utilisation of landfill gas should be set-off. This is challenged by 3C on the basis that Article 10 is concerned with establishing a minimum price by reference to gross costs, there being no reference to revenue. In the alternative 3C contend that only the proceeds deriving from waste "treatment" are allowable by way of set-off and the gas is not given off in the course of treatment.
3C's contention, in the context of ensuring that costs are covered by way of a minimum charge, is a surprising one. I do not accept it:-
(a) The original framework Directive (75/442/EEC) made express reference both in the preamble and in the body of the relevant article to the cost being "less any proceeds derived from treating the waste" and justified this as being "in accordance with the polluter pays principle."
(b) The Directive was amended in 1991 and the words "less any proceeds derived from treating the waste" were indeed removed from the relevant article but the statement of principle was maintained in the preamble.
(c) Accordingly this does not demonstrate, as 3C argued, a deliberate alteration to the policy in regard to the proceeds of treatment.
(d) While I recognise the distinction maintained in the legislation between a disposal operation and a recovery operation, it strikes me as clear that for the purposes of establishing full cost, the one must be set off against the other.
(e) "Treatment" is defined as "the physical, thermal, chemical or biological processes, including sorting, that change the characteristics of the waste in order to reduce its volume or hazardous nature, facilitate handling or enhance recovery."
The relevant operation of burning methane from biogradeable waste to produce electricity falls, in my judgment, squarely within that definition.
B) Revenue
It is submitted that "the cost" should include an element of profit. I reject this submission as a matter of construction. Such is not a "cost".
C) Overheads
I did not understand there was any live issue here. It became accepted that any relevant overhead was deductible.