The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has published its report on the environmental enforcement performance of local authorities in 2023. 

The report shows that the scale of environmental enforcement work carried out by local authorities in 2023 was significant.

212,000 environmental inspections

Across the 31 local authorities, 547 staff handled more than 70,000 environmental complaints, carried out more than 212,000 environmental inspections, undertook 17,000 enforcement actions and initiated 470 prosecutions.

The EPA's Local Authority Performance Framework measures and reports on performance against National Enforcement Priorities, focused on improving environmental compliance and achieving positive outcomes for water quality, air quality and waste management.

The EPA’s assessment of local authority environmental enforcement performance in 2023 found that eight local authorities achieved a Strong or Excellent score in 17 or more of the 20 National Enforcement Priorities (NEPs). These were Kildare, Meath, Dublin City, Monaghan, Carlow, Cork County, Donegal and Wicklow County Councils.

For the second consecutive year, Kildare County Council were the only local authority that achieved a Strong or Excellent score across all 20 NEPs.

Meath County Council achieved an Excellent score in 15 NEPs and a Strong score in four more NEPs, which was the highest level of Excellent scores of all local authorities. Dublin City Council achieved a Strong or Excellent score in 16 of the 17 NEPs that apply to their functional area.

Six local authorities failed to achieve a Strong or Excellent score in 10 or more of the 20 NEPs. These were Westmeath, Galway City, Waterford, Wexford, Sligo and Kilkenny County Councils. This level of performance is not good enough and needs to improve.

Dr Tom Ryan, director of the EPA’s Office of Environmental Enforcement, said: “The effective enforcement of environmental law is essential to identify polluters and non-compliant operators, and to hold them to account. Local authority leadership is critical in delivering better environmental outcomes through the prioritisation of environmental enforcement and the appropriate allocation of resources.”

Water enforcement

Agriculture continues to have a significant impact on water quality, resulting in excess levels of nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) to enter our waterways. Patrick Byrne, programme manager of the EPA’s Office of Environmental Enforcement, said: “While the number of local authority farm inspections increased by 9% to 1,137 in 2023, the number is still too low.

"More farm inspections and follow-up enforcement is needed to reach the National Agricultural Inspection Programme target of 4,500 farms inspected in 2025, to improve water quality. 

"We’re calling on local authorities to use their full suite of enforcement powers to drive compliance with the Good Agricultural Practice (GAP) Regulations and improve water quality.”

Air and noise enforcement

In 2023, local authorities assigned a much lower level of resources to air and noise enforcement (8%) than waste enforcement (63%) and water enforcement (29%). While Ireland’s air quality met EU standards in 2023, it did not meet the health-based WHO guidelines and there were concerning localised issues which led to poor air quality.

A strong inspection campaign of solid fuel producers and retailers is needed by local authorities, to make sure only approved solid fuels are available for sale and to protect public health from harmful air pollutants.

In 2023, many local authorities made little progress on implementing their Noise Action Plans (NAPs), aimed at reducing people’s exposure to transport noise. Greater action is needed to reduce the impact of noise pollution on people’s health and wellbeing. 

Local authorities, in collaboration with transport infrastructure bodies, need to focus implementation of NAPs on the priority areas identified using strategic noise mapping.

Waste enforcement

Waste generation continues to grow and recycling rates for municipal and plastic packaging waste streams need to increase urgently to achieve 2025 targets. For household and commercial waste, waste collectors are required to provide a three-bin waste segregation service. Local authorities must target areas with low use of the three-bin service where provided, to maximise waste recovery.

Local authorities need to target waste enforcement actions to drive compliance with the new national by-product criteria for greenfield soil & stone and waste recovery levy regulations, to reduce construction and demolition (C&D) waste.

The 'Local Authority Environmental Enforcement Performance Report 2023' is available on the EPA website.