Detailed guide: Animal gatherings: licences

Updated: Linked to fees document

When you need an animal gatherings licence

If you want to hold an animal gathering, the premises must have an Animal Gatherings Order (AGO) licence from Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA).

An animal gathering is when certain species of animals (see below) are brought together from different places:

  • to be sold
  • to be sent elsewhere (for example, for slaughter)
  • for show or exhibition
  • to be inspected for breed characteristics (for example, to assess pedigree status)

The animal species include:

  • cattle (excluding bison and yak)
  • sheep
  • pigs
  • deer
  • goats

Gatherings of poultry and other captive birds are not licensed in the same way but must be registered. See the bird gathering general licence.

You must have an animal gathering licence if your gathering involves poultry/captive birds and any of the animals listed above.

It’s an offence to hold an animal gathering without a licence.

When you don’t need a licence

You don’t need a licence to hold an animal gathering if:

  • all the animals brought to the premises come from one holding
  • animals are dispersed from one holding

Get an animal gatherings licence

Complete the application for a licence to hold an animal gathering form (AGO01) and a plan of the proposed site.

You can get help with the AGO01 form from APHA.

Send the completed forms to APHA.

Once you have submitted the form, APHA will arrange a visit by a veterinary inspector to discuss your application and inspect the premises.

Your licence will be posted to you if the veterinary inspector is satisfied that the licence conditions will be met.

Your licence lasts for 1 year. It’s your responsibility to reapply if you need to renew the license.

Fees

For further information on fees, see the Animal Gathering Order section in the fees document.

Give notice

At least 14 days before you hold each animal gathering under your licence, you must tell APHA and your local council:

  • the times when the licensed premises will be open to receive animals
  • the purpose of the animal gathering

You don’t need to do this if the dates were included your application form.

Animal gatherings licence conditions

You must make sure that you comply with the conditions in your licence. These conditions are listed on the application form and include the following:

  • you take all reasonable steps to prevent the spread of disease during animal gatherings (biosecurity measures) – see
    biosecurity advice for animal gatherings
    (PDF, 788KB, 6 pages)

  • you appoint a biosecurity officer to make sure licence conditions are upheld (this can be the licence holder)
  • there is a fence around the licensed area to prevent animals escaping
  • animals only enter or leave the animal area in a vehicle (they must only be loaded onto and off vehicles in the animal area)
  • no animals arrive after a period of 48 hours from the start time the licensed premises advertised they will be open for receiving animals. You can ask APHA to extend this period in some circumstances
  • you keep records to allow tracing of animals
  • you comply with animal welfare rules and do not allow sick or injured animals to be presented for sale
  • you have documented operational procedures including contingency plans for adverse events such as power or lighting failure, inability to effectively cleanse and disinfect, transport failure, animal welfare incidents
  • you have a contingency plan for what you would do if notifiable disease were suspected during a gathering. As a minimum, this must be based on the AGO04 plan available.

How often animal gatherings can take place and for how long

You must make sure that it’s at least 27 days since the last animal left the premises and all equipment has been cleaned and disinfected.

The 27 day rule doesn’t apply if the area is entirely paved with a material that can be, and is, effectively cleaned and disinfected inbetween animal gatherings. Accepted materials include:

  • cement
  • concrete
  • asphalt
  • other impermeable materials

Records you must keep

You must record:

  • names and addresses of all staff working in the animal area
  • whether staff have contact with livestock anywhere else
  • the origin of the animals involved in each gathering
  • the destination of the animals or, if not available, details about the buyer
  • details about any vehicles used to transport the animals so that they can be traced if necessary

Records must be up to date and must be kept for 6 months.

You must report the movements of animals so these can be recorded on the national animal movement databases:

Facilities needed at premises

If the licensed animal area is paved, you must make sure that the floor and all fixtures and fittings in animal areas:

  • are in a good state of repair
  • can be cleaned and disinfected after each gathering

There must be a separate area for cleaning and disinfecting vehicles used to transport animals. This area must be suitable for cleaning and disinfecting after each gathering.

If you need to move animals between areas, the areas must be one of the following:

  • adjoining
  • connected by designated walkways

Animal gatherings for slaughter

If you’re holding a gathering for slaughter involving animals that haven’t served standstill on a farm it must be held on a paved animal area. Gatherings for slaughter can’t be held as part of any other type of animal gathering.

Disposal of animal products

All animal by-products must be disposed of, including:

  • feeding stuffs
  • bedding
  • excreta
  • any other contaminants derived from animals

They must be disposed of in one of the following ways:

  • destroyed
  • disposed of so that animals don’t have access to them
  • treated to remove the risk of disease transmission

The disposal method must be documented.

When the animal gathering is over

When each animal gathering held under your licence is over you must make sure that equipment and paved areas are cleaned and disinfected after all the animals have left the site and before the next animal gathering.

Penalties

If you hold an animal gathering without a licence or fail to comply with the licence conditions you may be prosecuted.

You may also have your licence suspended or withdrawn and may be subject to additional monitoring by APHA or the local council.




Detailed guide: How to get paid under an agreement: Environmental Stewardship

Updated: Deadline for late applications and amendments has passed.

Making a claim

The deadline for Natural England to receive Environmental Stewardship (ES) revenue claims and amendments was 11 June 2018. Natural England will not accept any further revenue claims in 2018.

The extension of the Countryside Stewardship payment claim deadline does not apply to ES claims.

Claims for capital works under HLS

Contact Natural England to request a capital works claim form. You can claim:

  • throughout the year when you complete work as specified in your agreement
  • for capital works for educational access visits

You’ll need to complete the HLS VAT declaration form if you are not registered for VAT with HM Revenue and Customs.

Getting paid

Natural England and RPA aim to make:

  • partial payments by December 2018
  • end of year payments by June 2019

RPA will make payments into your bank account. To update RPA on your bank account details, call 03000 200 301.

Changes to your agreement

You must notify Natural England in writing before you make any changes to your agreement. This is in addition to completing your claim form. Check your agreement’s handbook for details of the requirements and deadlines for making changes.

Your payments may be affected if you do not meet the requirements and deadlines in your handbook.

Contact

Natural England – contact the office for your county.

Rural Payments Agency – call the helpline on 03000 200 301.




Detailed guide: Gangmaster licensing appeals: challenge a licence decision

Updated: Update email address

What you can appeal against

You need a licence if you are involved in supplying workers for agriculture, horticulture, shellfish gathering or food processing and packaging.

It is illegal to provide this labour (eg as an employment agency) without one.

You can appeal to a tribunal if:

  • you are refused a licence
  • your licence is revoked
  • extra conditions are added to your licence
  • your request to transfer the licence is turned down

When you appeal, the licensing decision will normally be put on hold until the tribunal has considered your case.

The tribunal is independent of the government. A judge will listen to both sides of the argument before reaching a decision.

Time limits for appealing

You must normally appeal within 20 working days of receiving the decision from the GLAA.

If your licence is revoked with immediate effect, you have to appeal within 10 working days.

If you miss the time limit, you can apply for more time to appeal. The tribunal will decide if it can still take your case.

How to appeal

Use the notice of appeal form and guidance leaflet.

Clearly state why you want to appeal against the decision.

Include any supporting documents, like the GLAA’s decision. Mark each one as a ‘copy’.

Send the form to gangmastersappeals@justice.gov.uk or:

England, Wales and Scotland

Gangmaster Licensing Appeals

Alexandra House

14-22 The Parsonage

Manchester

M3 2JA

Telephone: 0161 833 6123 or 0161 833 6118
Fax: 0870 739 4433

Northern Ireland

Office of the Industrial Tribunals and the Fair Employment Tribunal

Killymeal House

2 Cromeac Quay

Ormeau Road

Belfast

BT7 2JD

Phone: 028 9032 7666
Fax: 028 9025 0100

Help and advice

You can get advice on your appeal from a:

Tribunal staff can give you general guidance on how the process works, but cannot give you legal advice.

What happens next

In most cases:

  • the GLAA will reply to your appeal within 20 working days
  • the tribunal will send you a copy of this reply
  • you will be asked how you want your appeal to be decided

You can ask for your appeal to be decided:

  • at a hearing in your local area – where you can put your case in person
  • without a hearing – using only the documents in the case

The tribunal may ask for more information or documents before the hearing or before it makes its decision.

The tribunal hearing

If you do have a hearing it will take place in a court or tribunal building.

The hearing will be attended by:

  • an employment judge (known as an ‘appointed person’) – who will decide on your case
  • a representative from the GLAA
  • you and your representative – if you have one

The hearing may also be attended by members of the public or the press.

You can represent yourself, or ask someone to speak for you – such as a lawyer, consultant, colleague, friend or relative.

You or your representative will have the chance to:

  • present your case to the judge
  • call witnesses
  • ask questions
  • present documents

The judge and the representative from the GLAA may also ask you questions.

The judge may tell you their decision at the end of the hearing or send you decision in writing afterwards.

The tribunal’s decision

The tribunal will normally send you a written copy of its decision within 4 weeks.

The decision may tell you when it will come into effect. If it doesn’t give a specific date, then this will be 5 working days after the decision was sent to you.

This tribunal’s decision is usually final – you can’t appeal to another tribunal.

If you still want to challenge the decision, speak to a solicitor as soon as possible about how to apply for judicial review.

Previous decisions

Search the list of appeal results to see how judges made decisions in previous cases.

Legislation and rules

You can find the licensing rules and the right to appeal to the tribunal in the Gangmasters (Licensing) Act 2004.

More detailed rules on how your case will be handled are contained in The Gangmasters (Appeals) Regulations 2006.




Detailed guide: Catchment Sensitive Farming: reduce water and air pollution

Updated: CSF is also working to improve air quality.

Catchment Sensitive Farming (CSF) raises awareness of diffuse pollution from agriculture by giving free training and advice to farmers in selected areas in England. The aim of the advice is to improve the environmental performance of farms.

Advice is only available in high priority areas for water quality. These areas will contribute most to meeting Water Framework Directive and National Emissions Ceiling Directive objectives. To find priority areas and local data on MAGIC:

  • select ‘Countryside Stewardship Targeting & Scoring Layers’, then ‘Water’, then ‘Countryside Stewardship Water Quality Priority Areas (England)’ in the Table of Contents
  • enter place or postcode in ‘Map search’
  • use the ‘Identify’ tool under ‘Feature Tools’ to get local data

CSF is a project run by Natural England in partnership with the Environment Agency and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. It’s staffed by trained, qualified and experienced advisors. The advice is confidential and not disclosed to other parties.

CSF complies with Article 22 of Commission Regulation (EU) No 702/2014 on how it gives advice. The amount of aid given for advisory services is limited to 1,500 euros per farmer per advisory theme.

Countryside Stewardship

CSF supports farmers applying for Mid Tier capital grants to improve water and air quality in priority areas.

Some Mid Tier capital items require written support from a Catchment Sensitive Farming officer (CSFO) as part of an application’s evidence requirement. Check the capital item requirements to find out when this is necessary.

Endorsement of a Mid Tier application by a CSFO will increase the chance of its success. Applicants who require this support should contact CSF to discuss a pre-application visit.

Training and advice

All CSF training and advice aims to give practical and cost-effective solutions to improve water and air quality through:

  • workshops
  • demonstrations
  • farm walks
  • farm events
  • one-to-one advice

You should be in one of the high priority areas for water quality to qualify for training and advice. Contact your Catchment Sensitive Farming officer for more information.

Training topics

Topics are tailored to the area and farming sector but include:

  • manure management
  • nutrient management
  • soil condition
  • pesticide management
  • farm infrastructure

You’ll also learn about:

Get further CSF information by downloading one of the related publications and documents.

Training events

For details of CSF farm training events, email farm.events@naturalengland.org.uk or telephone 020 8026 8780.

CSF partnerships

CSF is working with partners in the farming and water industries, government agencies and environmental bodies.

National partnerships

CSF works with national partners to run joint events and share best practice:

Long term catchment partnerships

CSF provides advice, training and support through the following partnerships.

Isle of Wight

Partners: Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust, Environment Agency
CSFO: Lucy Temple, Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust
Contact: lucy.temple@hiwwt.org.uk, 01983 760016 / 07739 312930

Nene and upper Welland

Partners: River Nene Regional Park, Environment Agency, Anglian Water, Wildlife Trust, Welland Rivers Trust
CSFO: Georgina Wallis, River Nene Regional Park
Contact: georgina@rnrp.org.uk, 01536 526438 / 07921 941734

Yorkshire Dales

Partner: Yorkshire Dales National Park
CSFO: Jane Le Cocq, Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority
Contact: jane.lecocq@yorkshiredales.org.uk, 07818 048748
CSFO: Hannah Fawcett, Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority
Contact: Hannah.Fawcett@yorkshiredales.org.uk, 01969 652391

Nidd

Partners: Nidderdale AONB (Harrogate Borough Council), Yorkshire Water
CSFO: Marian Wilby, Nidderdale AONB
Contact: marian.wilby@harrogate.gov.uk, 01423 712950

Loddon

Partner: Affinity Water (working with South East Water)
CSFO: Amanda Ingham, Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust
Contact: amanda.ingham@hiwwt.org.uk, 01256 381017 or 07796 387872

Hertfordshire and Essex catchments (Roding, Beam & Ingerbourne, Colne & Upper Lee)

Partner: Environment Agency
CSFO: Emma Boyle, Environment Agency
Contact: emma.boyle@environment-agency.gov.uk, 020 8474 7304 or 07760 408196
CSFO: Rosemary Robinson
Contact: rosemary.robinson@naturalengland.org.uk, 07500 793028

Short-term collaborative projects

CSF also collaborates on projects with partners such as rivers trusts, universities and Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs). For example, in collaboration with East Devon AONB we are helping farmers reduce sediment and phosphate loads in the River Axe, a site of special scientific interest and Special Area of Conservation.

Contact

Catchment Sensitive Farming customer services

Natural England
PO Box 247
Cambridge
CB2 2WW




Detailed guide: Animal by-product categories, site approval, hygiene and disposal

Updated: Disposing of small quantities of ABP section updated.

ABPs are animal carcasses, parts of animals, or other materials which come from animals but are not meant for humans to eat.

They can either be destroyed or can be used to make compost, biogas or other products.

ABP categories explained

ABPs are divided into 3 categories, based on the risks they pose.

Category 1 ABPs

Category 1 ABPs are classed as high risk.

They include:

  • carcasses and all body parts of animals suspected of being infected with TSE (transmissible spongiform encephalopathy)
  • carcasses of wild animals suspected of being infected with a disease that humans or animals could contract
  • carcasses of animals used in experiments
  • parts of animals that are contaminated due to illegal treatments
  • international catering waste
  • carcasses and body parts from zoo and circus animals or pets
  • specified risk material (body parts that pose a particular disease risk, eg cows’ spinal cords)

Category 2 ABPs

Category 2 ABPs are classed as high risk.

They include:

  • animals rejected from abattoirs due to having infectious diseases
  • carcasses containing residues from authorised treatments
  • unhatched poultry that has died in its shell
  • carcasses of animals killed for disease control purposes
  • carcasses of dead livestock
  • manure
  • digestive tract content

Category 3 ABPs

Category 3 ABPs are classed as low risk.

They include:

  • carcasses or body parts passed fit for humans to eat, at a slaughterhouse
  • products or foods of animal origin originally meant for human consumption but withdrawn for commercial reasons, not because it’s unfit to eat
  • domestic catering waste
  • shells from shellfish with soft tissue
  • eggs, egg by-products, hatchery by-products and eggshells
  • aquatic animals, aquatic and terrestrial invertebrates
  • hides and skins from slaughterhouses
  • animal hides, skins, hooves, feathers, wool, horns, and hair that had no signs of infectious disease at death
  • processed animal proteins (PAP)

PAP are animal proteins processed from any category 3 ABP except:

  • milk, colostrum or products derived from them
  • eggs and egg products, including eggshells
  • gelatine
  • collagen
  • hydrolysed proteins
  • dicalcium phosphate and tricalcium phosphate of animal origin
  • blood products (although any processed blood would still be subject to this guide)

Getting your site approved or registered

If your site uses ABPs, it needs to be approved by or registered with the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA).

Whether you need approval or registration depends on what your site does and the ABPs you handle there.

Sites that need approval

You need approval if you are using ABPs at a:

How to get your site approved

Complete an application form to get your site approved.

Your application form needs to show:

  • that you know how to set up and operate your plant
  • that you’ve identified the most hazardous risk areas on your site
  • that you have a workable plan to control these risks
  • how you’ll maintain hygiene in common areas like canteens, offices, waste water plants and boilers
  • what you’ll do if cross-contamination occurs
  • how you’ll manage spillages of any ABPs or processed products
  • how you’ll maintain equipment, clean it, and deal with any faults
  • how you’ll train your staff to safely operate the site
  • where you’ll store raw ABP materials and finished products

After you’ve applied, APHA inspectors will then check your site to make sure you’re operating legally.

Sites that must register

You need to register your site if you use:

  • blood or blood products, except if you’re using them in feed
  • medical devices like heart valves
  • hides, skins, wool, hair, pig bristles, feathers, down or related materials
  • commercial game trophies or taxidermy pieces
  • chemicals derived from plant or animal fats
  • bee-keeping by-products
  • bones, horns, hooves and related materials
  • milk, milk-based and milk-derived products
  • colostrum (milk from animals) and colostrum-based products
  • ABPs for feeding zoo or circus animals, or other wild animals
  • ABP samples for research or diagnostic tests (unless this is for education)

You also have to register your site if it’s a:

  • collection centre (any site where dead stock is collected for use as feed for carnivores)
  • site that mixes components for organic fertilisers or soil improvers
  • cosmetics manufacturing site
  • landfill site
  • pet cemetery
  • medical or veterinary supply factory

You also must register if you’re:

  • a trader selling untreated agricultural wool or hair
  • an animal keeper who gets hides and skins from your animals returned after slaughter
  • handling ABPs as trade samples, or for exhibition and artistic uses
  • a haulier or transporter who doesn’t work for an APHA-approved site or an FSA approved food or feed business

How to register your site

To get your site registered complete form AB117 and post it to APHA.

When you don’t need registration or approval

You don’t need to be registered to:

  • run a farm, breeding farm or a shop which produces ABPs
  • supply other farms with colostrum (milk from animals) for feeding
  • dispose of category 2 and 3 materials on your site, if they came from surgery on a live animal (eg horns from calves)
  • collect and transport manure between 2 places on the same farm, or between farmers within the UK
  • make game trophies or taxidermy pieces that aren’t to be sold commercially
  • use ABP samples for education, eg at a school, college, or university

ABP hygiene on your site

If you want to use different categories of ABPs on one site, you must:

  • keep unprocessed ABPs in category-specific rooms, divided by floor-to-ceiling walls or partitions
  • keep raw ABP material separate from any processed final products

If you run a category 3 processing, handling or storage plant, you must do one of the following:

  • keep any category 1 and category 2 materials in a separate building, that’s both:
    • divided from the category 3 plant by floor-to-ceiling walls or partitions
    • accessed by a dedicated entrance and exit
  • prove to AHPA inspectors that you’re using an equally effective method to separate category 1 and 2 material from your category 3 plant

Cleaning your site and vehicles

You must clean and disinfect your site and any containers or vehicles used for storing or transporting ABPs.

You should:

  • make and enforce a cleaning plan for all areas of the site
  • regularly inspect the site and all equipment to make sure they’re clean, and record the results
  • have a waste-water disposal system
  • disinfect vehicles fully, including the wheels, before they enter clean areas of your site
  • make sure finished products are not contaminated by splashes or run-off
  • have a pest control programme as protection against insects, rats, birds, and other pests

ABP safety and your staff

You must:

  • control the movement of staff between areas that use different ABP materials
  • make sure all clothing and footwear are disinfected after use
  • make sure staff change protective clothing when moving between areas that use different categories of ABP
  • use colour-coded protective clothing to identify staff working in clean or unclean areas
  • clean and disinfect common areas like toilets, changing rooms, and canteens
  • train staff so that they are familiar with your plant’s safety procedures and keep a record of the training
  • keep a list of any staff who own livestock in case a notifiable disease breaks out

ABP safety and your equipment

Your equipment can spread diseases if you don’t clean and disinfect it.

You should:

  • check all equipment regularly to make sure it works
  • use trained maintenance staff to fix any broken equipment
  • only use each piece of equipment for a single category of ABP, and colour-code accordingly
  • limit the movement of equipment between clean and unclean parts of your site
  • wash and disinfect equipment, especially if you’re moving it between clean and unclean sectors
  • use caustic decontamination for equipment that you’re moving from category 1 processing sites to category 2 or 3

Loading and unloading ABPs

When you’re getting your site approved or registered, inspectors will check your loading and unloading method is safe.

Generally, loading and unloading must be done inside, in a covered area, but inspectors may allow other methods.

Loading and unloading ABPs next to the building

If you can’t drive a vehicle inside your building, you may be allowed to load and unload by docking with the building.

This means that a vehicle or container backs up to the building and empties or fills through a covered dock. This must not be open to the outside.

Docking is more likely to be approved when the materials you’re transporting won’t spill, eg a carcass is safer than liquid waste.

Unloading ABPs in outside yards

Inspectors may allow certain ABPs to be unloaded in outside yards, if the materials are:

  • moved into the building immediately
  • stored in covered and leak-proof containers or sealed packages
  • dry, eg fresh whole carcasses, fully salted hides, skins, horns, hooves

They’ll also check that:

  • your yard is made from concrete or another material that won’t let liquid seep through and contaminate the ground
  • materials are not unloaded anywhere else on your site besides this yard

Loading ABPs in outside yards

If you want to load ABP materials in outside yards, inspectors will make sure:

  • materials are held outside for the shortest possible amount of time, ideally loaded on the day of dispatch
  • your containers are leak-proof and securely covered immediately after loading
  • the ground under and around the container is made from concrete or another material that won’t let liquid seep through
  • the ground can be cleaned and disinfected, and has a fall to a foul drain

Keeping records and labelling

If you’re moving consignments of ABPs or derived products, you must have a commercial document.

The commercial document must list:

  • a detailed description of the contents, including category and quantity
  • the date of transport
  • an address of origin and destination, and contact names at both
  • approval or registration numbers for the factory or vehicle
  • the signature of whoever is responsible for the contents
  • ear numbers and details of species, where carcasses have been taken from farms

You should keep a copy of the commercial document for at least 2 years.

Keeping records of consignments

You must keep a record of any consignments of ABPs or derived products that enter or exit your premises.

You can do this using your commercial document or a logbook – you should record:

  • the date you sent or received the consignment
  • a description of the material you sent or received including its category
  • the weight, volume and quantity of the material
  • the place where you sent the material or the place it came from

See
an example of a logbook
(MS Word Document, 49KB)

.

Labelling

When labelling ABP vehicles or containers you should measure quantity by:

  • weight
  • number of containers, with estimates of their average weight
  • number, for example ‘85 tripes’
  • volume, for example ‘20,000 litres of bovine blood’

Vehicles, containers, or packaging must also have a label attached that says what category of ABP the contents are.

You must use these wordings:

  • category 1 material – ‘for disposal only’
  • category 2 material – ‘not for animal consumption’
  • category 3 material – ‘not for human consumption’

Disposing of ABPs

Category 1

You can only dispose of category 1 ABPs by:

  • incineration or co-incineration at an approved plant
  • processing using processing methods 1-5 followed by permanent marking using GTH, then incineration or co-incineration
  • pressure sterilisation (apart from possible TSE cases or animals killed under TSE eradication laws) followed by permanent marking, then landfill
  • using them as fuel for combustion at an approved combustion plant
  • sending them for burial at an authorised landfill, if they are international catering waste

Category 2

You can only dispose of category 2 ABPs by:

  • incinerating or co-incinerating without processing or with prior processing, when resulting material has to be marked with glyceroltriheptanoate (GTH)
  • sending them to authorised landfill after processing by pressure sterilisation and marking with GTH
  • making them into organic fertilisers/ soil improvers, after processing and marking with GTH
  • composting or anaerobic digestion after processing by pressure sterilisation and marking with GTH (milk, milk products, eggs, egg products, digestive tract content, manure do not need processing, providing no risk of spreading serious transmissible disease)
  • applying them to land, in the case of manure, digestive tract content, milk, milk products and colostrum, this can be done without processing
  • using them in composting or anaerobic digestion, if they are materials coming from aquatic animals ensiled
  • using them as fuel for combustion
  • using them for manufacture of certain cosmetic products, medical devices and safe industrial or technical uses

Category 3

You can only dispose of category 3 ABPs by:

Disposing of small quantities of ABPs

If you are a retail business producing a total weight of less than 20kg of raw or partially cooked meat, fish or shellfish waste per week, you can send this waste to landfill each week.

There is no need to register with APHA, however you do need to keep records of the type and approximate weight of ABP sent to landfill each week.

This is a weekly limit, not an average limit over a number of weeks.