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20,000 UK businesses eligible for Plastic Packaging Tax – are you one of them?

Manufacturers or importers of 10 or more tonnes of plastic packaging, containing less than 30% recycled material, over a 12-month period should be registered for the tax, with the liability date fast approaching on the 1st May 2023.

The Plastic Packaging Tax (PPT) came into force in the UK on 1st April 2022 and applies at a rate of £200/tonne on plastic packaging with less than 30% recycled plastic, manufactured or imported into the UK, including packaging on goods which are imported.

It is estimated that 20,000 businesses across a broad range of sectors will be affected and those that fall within the regime will need to submit quarterly returns to HMRC detailing weights of plastic packaging components imported, and that which contain 30% or more recycled content, or is exempted because it is used for medicinal products, or for other reasons.

Imports of packaging which already contains goods, such as plastic bottles filled with drinks or plastic packaging around goods, are also potentially subject to the tax with some exclusions. 

Exclusions apply to filled packaging components with a primary storage function, such as glasses cases or DVD cases; and where the packaging is an integral part of the goods.

PPT is not charged on plastic packaging which is designed to be reused for the presentation of goods such as shop fittings or sales stands.

Businesses will need to conduct regular checks to ensure plastic packaging does not fall below the 30% threshold or else face fines. This means keeping a record of all checks conducted as well as completing plastic packaging tax returns over the accounting periods if the business is liable to pay the tax.

We have found many importers and manufacturers are not aware of this new tax, even though it has already been introduced. Are you compliant and have you taken action to avoid potential penalties?

Registration is required if:

At any time after 1st April 2022 a business expects to import or manufacture at least 10 tonnes of plastic packaging in the following 30 days. In that case registration is required within 30 days of the first day that this condition is met; or

A business has manufactured or imported at least 10 tonnes of plastic packaging in a 12-month period ending on the last day of a calendar month. In that case the business becomes liable for PPT from the first day of the next month and must register by the first day of the subsequent month.

In the first year of the tax, a business only needs to register for the tax when the amount of plastic packaging exceeds 10 tonnes in a 12-month period from 1st April 2022.

If either of these conditions is satisfied, registration is required even if a business’ packaging is not chargeable and it does not have to pay any tax.

RESOURCES

Check if you are liable and need to register for Plastic Packaging Tax
Register for Plastic Packaging Tax

To discuss your PPT situation, exemptions and compliance, EMAIL Andy Fitchett, our brokerage manager, who can take you through the implications.  We have, within our extended group, expertise and specialist business analysts that can help and advise you on this evolving situation and we can introduce you directly to the best solution for your business needs.

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<strong>New EU border controls threaten cross-channel delays</strong>

Almost 60% of all UK-EU trade passes through the UK short straits and ensuring their operational stability is key to facilitating and maximising international trade, but EU border controls due to take effect next May threaten to impact their resilience and sustainability.

The European Entry/Exit System (EES) will replace wet stamping of passports and require Britons to register biometrics including facial and fingerprint scans on their first border crossing into the EU, and then be scanned on subsequent crossings.

Britons travelling to the European continent have been warned to expect huge delays at ferry ports and the Channel Tunnel from May 2023, with the launch of the scheme expected to be chaotic.

The technology the EU is implementing to support the EES rollout was designed for airports and railway stations, where passengers approach individually in queues and under French laws, the information must be gathered in the presence of a border official and cannot be subcontracted.

The head of EU exit for the Dover Harbour Board, told MPs last year that there is no such thing as an eGate for a car, and there is no such thing as an eGate process for people travelling as a group. They’re all one-at-a-time processes, which means that at British exit ports, EES would require car passengers and commercial vehicle drivers to exit their vehicles at French border controls to undertake passport checks; in addition to compromising the safety of drivers, it would also delay just-in-time supply chains.

The port of Dover has voiced fears - that are supported by Logistics UK and other freight trade associations - that EES will not work in a ferry port where there could be hundreds of cars waiting to get onto ferries and with up to 10,000 lorries crossing every day, any disruption to processing cars for departure, could lead to prolonged freight delays.

Experts suggest that EES could extend passenger processing times, currently averaging 90 seconds per car by a few minutes, which Imperial College forecasts would trigger 29-mile queues.

The Port of Dover, ferry operators, Logistics UK and the British Ports Association (BPA) are lobbying the government to address the looming threats to traffic fluidity from the EU Entry Exit System (EES) and support new border control infrastructure.

Metro are at the forefront of UK/EU customs brokerage solutions, with our automated CuDoS declaration platform and a dedicated team of customs experts, reacting swiftly to any changes in the UK’s trading relationship with the EU.

To learn how we can simplify and automate customs declarations for your businesses, please EMAIL Elliot Carlile to review the options.

manufacturing

Exporting compliance is complex but critical

The United Kingdom has an obligation to ensure that goods, technology or software are not exported into the wrong hands, or breach UK, UN or EU sanctions and anyone who exports goods or technology must comply with strict export control legislation.

Compliance with export control legislation requires the exporter to consider whether they may need an export licence from the Export Control Joint Unit to carry out an activity and, if required, to obtain the licence before any export is made. 

Failure to obtain a licence when one is required or failure to observe the terms of a licence is a criminal offence for which the exporter is likely to be liable and ignorance is not an excuse.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine, up to 200 sanctions a day have been imposed and exporters need to ensure they are compliant with the requirements of any new legislation.

Many commercially available materials, products, technologies and chemicals, could have a military application and be subject to export controls, or may be covered by end-use controls or sanctions.

Controlled items often find their way into countries under bans or sanctions, particularly when exporters have not carried out thorough due diligence on their buyer, or believe they are too small to be a target.  

Non-compliance with export rules may incur financial and reputational damage, with UK fines running to hundreds of thousands of pounds, while in the US they have been known to run into tens of millions of dollars – plus jail sentences. 

There may also be secondary sanctions that apply to any non-domestic firm that decide to trade with sanctioned entities or countries, such as Iran, effectively barring them from trading with the US, who will pursue people who break their rules.

Often, exporters don’t want to know they have compliance issues because they think it will cost them money, but this is a false economy, because our customs experts can help them build a compliance regime that avoids penalties and creates a competitive advantage.

By being compliant our exporters avoid the costs and fines associated with non-compliance, ensuring that their products will not be impounded, and assuring their customers that products are safe to use or to re-export.

Larger firms are starting to use compliance as leverage in supplier negotiations, including clauses in their contracts that put the burden of compliance on to the supplier.

In these circumstances it is critical that the supplier really understands the customer and contract so they can prove due diligence, which may include looking beyond sanctioned entities or countries, to include those that may be more likely to divert goods. 

Exporting firms need to understand the intricacies of their supply chains, including all components and in particular US parts, as their export administration regulations state that if the amount of US-owned material in an end-product exceeds a set limit – i.e. 10% - they may only be re-exported with authorisation from the US Department of Commerce.

Under this rule a complete product could meet the requirements for export from the UK, but its components, or spare parts may exceed the US’ threshold and be blocked. The risk of getting the US compliance wrong is very expensive, and potentially liberty threatening.

If you have questions or concerns about any of the issues highlighted here, or would like to learn how we could simplify your export compliance, EMAIL Andy Fitchett, for the latest updates and market intel. It will ensure any doubt is removed from your global trade, in an ever changing environment.

India factory

New trade system for developing countries

The Department for International Trade launched a new preferential trading scheme on the 15th August 2022. The Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS) is intended to grow free and fair trade with 65 developing nations, with a combined market of more than 3.3 billion.

The DCTS extends tariff cuts to hundreds of products, including clothes and food, from 65 specified developing countries, as part of the UK government’s efforts to replace similar EU schemes.

DCTS will effectively replace the Generalised System of Preferences, which applies import duties at reduced, preferential rates, to nominated countries.

UK Trade minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan said the Developing Countries Trading scheme (DCTS) would extend tariff cuts to hundreds more products exported from developing countries and goes further than the GSP.

The DCTS offers developing countries a simpler and more generous set of trading preferences and simplifies rules such as rules of origin, which dictate what proportion of a product must be made in its country of origin and removes some seasonal tariffs, in a bid to reduce red tape and lower costs, as an incentive to firms to import more goods from developing countries.

Key changes include:

  • Simplified rules of origin, by making product specific and cumulation rules more generous and easier to follow
  • Removal of tariffs on 156 products of strategic interest to developing countries
  • Simplification of tariff schedule by getting rid of nuisance tariffs and some seasonal tariffs
  • Access granted on economic vulnerability and not on international convention
  • Ensuring that goods which are genuinely competitive in the UK market from India and Indonesia do not get preferential tariffs
  • Powers to suspend a country for human rights, labour rights and other violations broadened

Our CuDoS customs brokerage platform is optimised continuously, in line with HMRC regime changes, automating and submitting customs declarations, for simple and compliant preference processing. 

To discuss your trading strategy, access to preferential tariffs and documentary requirements please contact our customs expert, Andy Fitchett, who can talk you through your opportunities and options.