These Regulations, which apply in relation to England only, provide for the execution and enforcement of Regulation (EC) No 183/2005 of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down requirements for feed hygiene (OJ No. L25, 8.2.2005, p.1), (“Regulation 183/2005”) and Regulation (EC) No 178/2002 of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down the general principles and requirements of food law, establishing the European Food Safety Authority and laying down procedures in matters of food safety (OJ No. L31, 1.2.2002, p.1), (“Regulation 178/2002”), and also make provision as to administration generally, in particular so as to give effect to Regulation (EC) No 882/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council on official controls performed to ensure the verification of compliance with feed and food law, animal health and animal welfare rules (OJ No. L191, 28.5.2004, p.1), (“Regulation 882/2004”).
Part 2 of these Regulations deals with the execution and enforcement of Regulation 183/2005, which repeals Council Directive 95/69/EC and Commission Directive 98/51/EC. (Those Directives were largely implemented in the United Kingdom by the Feeding Stuffs (Establishments and Intermediaries) Regulations 1999 (S.I.1999/1872)). Regulation 183/2005 provides that almost all businesses producing, trading in or using animal feed should be either registered, or as the case may be approved, by the competent authorities. The excepted activities to which Regulation 183/2005, and consequently Part 2 of these Regulations, do not apply, are set out in Article 2 of the EC Regulation and include —
the private domestic production of feed for animals not kept for consumption, or kept for private domestic consumption only;
the feeding of non food-producing animals;
the feeding of animals kept for private domestic consumption or for direct supply, by the producer, of small quantities of primary products to the final consumer or to local retailers;
the direct supply, by the producer, of small quantities of primary produced feed to local farms for use on those farms;
the retailing of pet food.
In particular provision is made in Part 2 to —
designate the competent authorities for the purposes of the various functions mentioned in Regulation 183/2005 (regulation 4);
identify those provisions of Regulation 183/2005 where failure to comply gives rise to an offence, and attach penalties to those offences (regulation 5);
set out the requirements which must be observed by anyone —
notifying the enforcement authority with a view to registering a feed business establishment (regulation 6);
making a declaration of compliance with the conditions of Regulation 183/2005 (regulation 7); or
applying for approval of a feed business establishment (regulation 8);
lay down the procedures to be followed by an enforcement authority when —
suspending the registration or approval of a feed business establishment (regulation 9);
lifting the suspension of a registration or approval (regulation 10); or
revoking the registration or approval of a feed business establishment (regulation 11);
set out the requirements to be observed by anyone applying for an amendment to a registration or approval (regulation 12);
provide for a right of appeal against decisions relating to registrations or approvals taken by enforcement authorities (regulation 13); and
specify the fees payable by an applicant for approval or amendment to an approval (regulation 14 and Schedule 2).
These Regulations in Part 3 revoke and re-enact with minor amendments the provisions formerly contained in the Feeding Stuffs (Safety Requirements for Feed for Food-Producing Animals) Regulations 2004 (S.I. 2004/3254) which provided for the execution and enforcement of the feed safety requirements of Regulation 178/2002.
The provisions in Part 3 apply only to feed for food-producing animals, and make it an offence to contravene various specified provisions of Regulation 178/2002 (regulation 15). Those specified provisions are —
Article 12, which specifies the conditions under which feed may be exported from member States to countries outside the European Community;
Article 15, which prohibits the marketing or feeding of unsafe feed;
Article 16, which stipulates that feed must not be advertised, labelled, packaged or otherwise presented in such a way as to mislead consumers;
Article 18, which requires a feed businesses to have systems in place that enable it to identify the person from whom it acquired a product and the person to whom it supplied any product; and
Article 20, which sets out the various responsibilities of feed business operators, including the duty to withdraw or recall unsafe feed, to destroy it if considered necessary by the competent authority, and to pass on all relevant information and co-operate generally with the competent authority and others in the interests of feed safety.
These Regulations in Part 4 provide for the administration and enforcement of the law relating to animal feed contained in a number of pieces of legislation as listed in Schedule 1. In so doing these Regulations revoke the Feeding Stuffs (Enforcement) Regulations 1999 (S.I. 1999/2325), re-enact with amendments most of the provisions contained in those Regulations, and introduce further provisions needed to comply with the requirements of Regulation 882/2004. That EC Regulation repealed Council Directive 95/53/EC fixing the principles governing the organisation of official inspections in the field of animal nutrition, a Directive that was implemented in part by S.I. 1999/2325 mentioned above.
In particular Part 4 —
makes provision for the serving of an improvement notice where a feed business appears to the enforcement authority to be falling short of compliance with feed law (regulation 17);
provides for a right of appeal to the magistrates' court against an improvement notice, and sets out the procedures to be followed (regulation 18);
allows for the decision of a magistrates' court under certain provisions of these Regulations to be appealed to the Crown court (regulation 19);
specifies that where an appeal is lodged against an improvement notice, the period specified in the notice ceases to run while the appeal is in progress (regulation 20);
provides for the circumstances in which a feed business prohibition order may be imposed by a court, and the procedures to be followed (regulation 21);
provides for the service of an emergency prohibition notice by the enforcement authority, to be confirmed or not as the case may be by the court within a specified period (regulation 22);
specifies the penalties applicable to offences in relation to improvement notices, prohibition orders, emergency prohibition notices and emergency prohibition orders (regulation 23);
makes provision for the necessary powers to enable authorised officers of enforcement authorities to enter premises, inspect animal feeds, plant and equipment, documentary records etc, and take samples of feed and copies of records (regulation 24);
provides authorised officers with the power to seize and detain animal feed which appears not to comply with feed law, and sets out the procedure to be followed in bringing the matter before the magistrates' court (regulation 25);
specifies the procedures to be followed when serving notice under these Regulations (regulation 26);
sets out certain offences relating to the exercise of an authorised officer’s powers, including obstruction or impersonation of an officer, or disclosure of confidential information by an officer (regulation 27); and
makes provision for the recovery by an enforcement authority of expenditure incurred in consequence of a feed business’s non-compliance with feed law (regulation 28).
In Part 4, these Regulations additionally —
apply, as modified, various provisions of the Feeding Stuffs (Sampling and Analysis) Regulations 1999 (S.I. 1999/1663), (regulation 29);
lay down procedures relating to the analysis of a feed sample taken by an authorised officer (regulation 30), and to secondary sampling by the laboratory of the Government Chemist (regulation 31);
make further general provisions relating to sampling and analysis including the offence of tampering with a sample (regulation 32);
specify the circumstances in which the Secretary of State may appoint persons to act in place of authorised officers (regulation 33(1)), and place conditions on an authorised officer acting outside his area (regulation 33(2));
provide for limitations on the liability of an authorised officer or agricultural analyst (regulation 34);
make provisions relating to various defences to offences under these Regulations (regulation 35);
provide for the potential personal liability of officers of corporate bodies or partners in Scottish partnerships that contravene these Regulations (regulation 36);
specify the place where legal proceedings may be taken and the time limits for the initiation of prosecutions (regulation 37); and
revoke those Regulations or parts of Regulations listed in Schedule 3 (regulation 38).
A full regulatory impact assessment of the effect that this instrument will have on the costs of business has been prepared and placed in the library of each House of Parliament. Copies may be obtained from the Animal Feed Unit of the Food Standards Agency, Aviation House, 125 Kingsway, London WC2B, 6NH.