The Official Controls (Plant Health) (Frequency of Checks) Regulations 2022
In accordance with Article 144(7) of the Official Controls Regulation, before making these Regulations the Secretary of State has consulted such bodies and persons as appear to the Secretary of State to be representative of the interests likely to be substantially affected by these Regulations and such other bodies or persons as the Secretary of State considers appropriate.
Citation, commencement and extent1.
(1)
These Regulations may be cited as the Official Controls (Plant Health) (Frequency of Checks) Regulations 2022 and come into force on 22nd July 2022.
(2)
They extend to England and Wales, and Scotland.
PART 1Rules relating to frequency of checks
Interpretation2.
(1)
In this Part—
(a)
“the appropriate computerised information management system” means the system for official controls referred to in Article 131 of the Official Controls Regulation;
(b)
“border control post” means a border control post in England, Scotland or Wales, which has been designated pursuant to Article 59(1) of the Official Controls Regulation for the purposes of official controls performed for the verification of compliance with the plant health rules;
(c)
(d)
“consignment” means a consignment of plants, plant products or other objects;
(e)
“financial year” means the period of twelve months ending with 31st March in any year;
(f)
“frequency rate”, in relation to physical checks and identity checks, means the minimum percentage of consignments arriving at a border control post in Great Britain during any given financial year in respect of which physical checks and identity checks must be carried out by a plant health inspector, being the percentage determined in accordance with regulations 3 and 4;
(g)
(h)
“plant health inspector” means—
(i)
in relation to England, an official plant health officer appointed by the Secretary of State or the Forestry Commissioners;
(ii)
in relation to Scotland, an official plant health officer appointed by the Scottish Ministers;
(iii)
in relation to Wales, an official plant health officer appointed by the Welsh Ministers;
(i)
(j)
“plant health rule” means a rule of a kind mentioned in Article 1(2)(g) of the Official Controls Regulation, and “the plant health rules” means all such rules.
(2)
Words and expressions not defined in this Part which appear in the Plant Health Regulation have the same meaning in this Part as in the Plant Health Regulation.
Determination of the frequency rate of physical checks and identity checks3.
(1)
This regulation applies to plants, plant products or other objects of a description specified in Part A of Annex 11, or in Annex 12, to the Commission Regulation which—
(a)
originate in a country other than a relevant third country; or
(b)
(2)
The appropriate authority must determine the frequency rate of physical checks and identity checks of goods to which this regulation applies by reference to the third country from which the goods originate, and having regard to information of a kind specified in paragraph (4).
(3)
The appropriate authority must publish online the frequency rates determined under paragraph (2), and may from time to time publish a revised frequency rate.
(4)
The information referred to in paragraph (2) is—
(a)
available scientific assessments;
(b)
data and information collected through the appropriate computerised information management system referred to in Article 131 of the Official Controls Regulation;
(c)
information relating to the risk to plant health associated with the plants, plant products or other objects, in particular, the matters specified in paragraph (5) (insofar as they apply).
(5)
The matters referred to in paragraph (4)(c) are—
(a)
whether the plant, plant product or other object has been processed, and if so, the method and (if necessary) the degree of processing to which it is likely to have been subjected prior to its export to Great Britain;
(b)
whether the manner of storage or means of transport of the plant, plant product or other object prior to and during its export to Great Britain, or after its import into Great Britain, is likely to prevent a GB regulated non-quarantine pest from establishing or spreading;
(c)
the intended use of the plant or plant product following its entry into Great Britain and, in particular, whether it is intended for—
(i)
consumption or use other than planting, without further processing;
(ii)
processing before consumption or further distribution; or
(iii)
planting;
(d)
in the case of plants for planting (including seeds), whether the plant—
(i)
is a woody plant;
(ii)
appears from its packaging, labelling or elsewhere to be intended for direct supply to final users not involved in professional plant production;
(iii)
is intended to be grown for direct production of other commodities (propagation) or for increasing the number of the same plant for planting for commercial use; or
(iv)
is intended to be an indoor plant.
(e)
in the case of seeds, whether they—
(i)
are intended for marketing within Great Britain;
(ii)
are intended to be used for trial or official testing purposes; or
(iii)
have been subjected to testing, and the level of any such testing.
(6)
Subject to regulation 4(2), a plant health inspector must select goods to which this regulation applies for the performance of physical checks and identity checks at, as a minimum, the frequency rate determined pursuant to paragraph (2) in relation to plants, plant products or other objects of the kind in question.
(7)
In this regulation—
“indoor plant” means a plant which appears from its packaging, labelling or by other means to be intended for direct supply to final users for indoor use or use in an aquarium;
“relevant third country” has the meaning given in paragraph 2 of Annex 6 to the Official Controls Regulation, and for this purpose “territory subject to special transitional import arrangements” is to be construed in accordance with sub-paragraph (b) of its definition in that paragraph;
“woody plant” means a plant which has a woody or partly woody stem, and includes all trees, forest reproductive material (other than seed), shrubs and palms, and those vines and perennial herbs with woody or partly woody stems; and for this purpose “perennial herbs” means herbs for which the average life exceeds two years.
Annual review and modification of the frequency rate of physical checks and identity checks4.
(1)
The appropriate authority must annually review the frequency rates determined pursuant to regulation 3(2), and, following the review, may increase or decrease any such frequency rate if it considers it appropriate to do so having regard to information of a kind specified in regulation 3(4).
(2)
The competent authority may (without prejudice to paragraph (1)) at any time increase the frequency rate of a physical check of plants, plant products or other objects of a particular kind if it considers—
(a)
that the plant, plant product or other object of the kind in question poses a serious risk of a plant pest establishing or spreading in view of—
(i)
a new threat of a plant pest from a particular third country; or
(ii)
frequent interceptions of a controlled plant pest on a plant, plant product or other object of the kind in question from a particular third country; or
(b)
that the increased frequency rate is appropriate in view of—
(i)
information collected by the appropriate authority in accordance with Article 125(1) of the Official Controls Regulation; or
(ii)
the outcome of controls performed in accordance with Article 120(1) of the Official Controls Regulation by experts appointed by the appropriate authority.
(3)
Where the risk, information or outcome of controls referred to in paragraph (2) no longer justifies the increased frequency rate applied under that paragraph, the competent authority must reduce the frequency rates of physical checks and identity checks to the frequency rates determined pursuant to regulation 3(2) in relation to plants, plant products or other objects of the kind in question.
(4)
In this regulation—
“the competent authority” means—
(a)
(b)
(c)
“controlled plant pest” means—
(a)
a plant pest of a description specified in Annex 2, 2A, 3 or 4 to the Commission Regulation; or
(b)
a plant pest subject to any of the plant health rules, including a potential quarantine plant pest;
“potential quarantine plant pest” means a plant pest which is not a GB quarantine pest or a provisional GB quarantine pest within the meaning respectively given in Article 2(32) and (40) of the Plant Health Regulation, but in relation to which the appropriate authority considers—
(a)
the criteria set out in subsection 1 of section 3 of Annex 1 to that Regulation are met; or
(b)
there is a material risk, on the basis of an assessment of available scientific information and other evidence, and pending further information or assessments relating to the pest, that the criteria set out in subsection 2 of that section are met.
Selection of consignments for physical checks5.
(1)
A plant health inspector must select a third country consignment for a physical check in one of the following ways—
(a)
the selection of a consignment generated by the appropriate computerised information management system;
(b)
the selection of a consignment of plants, plant products or other objects of the same category and origin as those in any consignment selected as described in sub-paragraph (a);
(c)
the selection of a consignment which a plant health inspector suspects—
(i)
is likely to be, or has been, brought into Great Britain in contravention of a plant health rule; or
(ii)
may not otherwise comply with a plant health rule.
(2)
(3)
In this regulation, “third country consignment” means a consignment that is introduced into Great Britain from a third country.
PART 2Official controls: Amendment of secondary legislation
The Official Controls, Plant Health, Seeds and Seed Potatoes (Amendment etc.) Regulations 20216.
Part 1 of these Regulations makes provision for a regime to determine the frequency rates of physical checks and identity checks of consignments of certain plants, plant products and other objects entering Great Britain from a third country, including for the modification of those frequency rates. The plants, plant products and other objects are those for which a phytosanitary certificate is required for entry into Great Britain and which have been assessed as posing an actual or potential threat to plant biosecurity.
Part 2 revokes Part 6 of the Official Controls, Plant Health, Seeds and Seed Potatoes (Amendment etc.) Regulations 2021 (S.I. 2021/426).
A full impact assessment has not been produced for this instrument as no, or no significant impact on the private or voluntary sector is foreseen.