The Environment Agency (EA) has confirmed that almost all of its proposed fee increases, including a 14% rise in International Waste Shipment (IWS) charges, have now taken effect following its April 2025 consultation.

The consultation, Charges Proposal: Cost of Service, sought views on changes across a wide range of regulated activities to ensure cost recovery amid rising operational and administrative costs.
The EA received 244 responses, with 152 respondents opposing the above-inflation increases. Despite this, the Agency confirmed in its 1 August 2025 response that the majority of proposals will proceed unchanged.
It pointed to inflationary pressures and wider fiscal constraints as the main reasons for the increases.
The updated charges apply to activities covered under the Environment Agency Charging Scheme 2022 and the Waste Charging Scheme 2018, including:
- Environmental permits
- Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE)
- Waste batteries and accumulators
- Waste carriers, brokers and dealers
- International waste shipments
- Transfrontier shipment of radioactive waste and spent fuel
The new charges came into effect on 1 August 2025.
Several respondents expressed concern over both the scale and timing of the increases.
The RDF Industry Group, which represents exporters of Refuse-Derived Fuel, highlighted the immediate implementation of the IWS fee hike as particularly problematic.
Andy Jones, Chair of the RDF Industry Group, said:
“We were surprised to see the new charges take effect immediately on the day the consultation response was released and we urge the EA to reconsider this.
This gives operators no time to adjust or communicate these additional costs to their customers, which is particularly challenging in a sector where pricing and contracts are often agreed months in advance.”
Sources consult.environment-agency.gov.uk www.gov.uk/government


