Article 1U.K.

For the granting of export refunds, pearled grains and hulled grains of cereals shall be those which possess the characteristics listed in Annex I.

Article 2U.K.

Regulation (EEC) No 821/68 is repealed.

References to the repealed Regulation shall be construed as references to this Regulation and shall be read in accordance with the correlation table in Annex III.

Article 3U.K.

This Regulation shall enter into force on the 20th day following its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.

It shall apply from 1 July 2008.

This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.

Done at Brussels, 6 June 2008.

For the Commission

The President

José Manuel Barroso

ANNEX IU.K.

A.DEFINITION OF ‘HULLED GRAINS’ (SHELLED OR HUSKED) AND ‘PEARLED GRAINS’U.K.

I.‘Hulled grains’ includes shelled and husked grainsU.K.

1.Shelled grains:U.K.

are cereal grains which have a large part of the pericarp removed or bracted cereal grains (see Explanatory Notes to tariff heading No 10.03: grains) with the bracts removed which cling to the pericarp (as for example with bearded barley) or which enclose the pericap so firmly that the bracts cannot be detached by threshing etc. (as with oats).

2.Husked grainsU.K.

are grains (in the case of barley, with the bracts removed) which have the major part of the pericarp and tegument (testa) removed.

II.‘Pearled grains’ includeU.K.

1.First class grains:U.K.
2.Second class grains:U.K.

grains which correspond to the definition under II.1(a).

B.SIEVE ANALYSISU.K.

I.ApparatusU.K.

1.Set of sieves with round hole (diameter 200 mm, diameter of holes: 4,0 to 1,0 mm, at 0,25 mm intervals);U.K.
2.Sieving apparatus — sieving should be done by hand; sieving aids (rubber cubes of 20 mm side);U.K.
3.Precision scales.U.K.

II.MethodU.K.

Normally the pearled barley is passed through six different sieves; the set of sieves is closed at the top and bottom with the sieve with the largest holes placed at the top; the top and bottom sieves should be empty after sieving.

Two samples of pearled barley of a checked weight of between 50 and 100 grams are sifted by hand for at least five minutes, with the aid of the rubber cubes.

Sieving consists of taking hold of the set of sieves with the hand and shaking it, more or less horizontally, 120 times per minute, each shake travelling about 70 mm. This to-and-fro movement is interrupted every minute by a triple circular movement. The sieved residues are weighed to the nearest 0,1 g and expressed as a percentage of the sieved product which shall be weighed to the nearest whole number, and the average calculated.

The average of the percentages of the sieved residues should be added progressively, starting with the value 0 % in respect of the residue from the empty sieve with the largest holes. The added percentages Σ (%) and the sizes of the holes in the corresponding sieves are plotted in co-ordinated axes on millimetric paper, the Σ (%) in ordinates and the diameters of the holes, in mm, in abscissae.

The median value (dm) is the hole width expressed in hundredths of mm for Σ (%) = 50, and is read off the graph obtained by joining the points by straight lines.