Reddem asbestos waste site fine: compliance lessons for demolition engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on The Construction Index
30 Second Briefing
Demolition contractor Reddem Ltd has been fined £4,000, with £4,000 costs and a £1,600 victim surcharge, for operating an illegal asbestos waste site at The Old Gas Works Yard in Wooler, Northumberland, without an environmental permit. Environment Agency and HSE inspections in June 2023 found nine skips with asbestos-containing demolition waste stored in open containers, contrary to requirements for double-bagging and sealed, enclosed skips. More than 40 tonnes of asbestos material were subsequently removed to a permitted facility, signalling continued strict enforcement of asbestos handling and waste permitting rules on demolition projects.
Technical Brief
- Asbestos on demolition sites must be double-bagged and stored in sealed, fully enclosed skips.
- The firm pleaded guilty to operating an illegal waste site and to keeping/treating asbestos waste unsafely.
- Asbestos was reportedly bulked into large containers on site before onward transport, increasing disturbance risk.
- A local resident’s repeated observations of suspected asbestos loads triggered the initial Health & Safety Executive report.
- On 23 June 2023 an HSE inspector served a prohibition notice specifically for asbestos disturbance activities.
- Environment Agency officers the same day ordered activities to stop and formally required the land not be disturbed pending inspection.
- Joint HSE–Environment Agency inspection on 30 June 2023 sampled six skips; all samples tested positive for asbestos.
- More than 40 tonnes of asbestos-containing material were subsequently removed to a permitted disposal facility under regulatory oversight.
- Case underlines that demolition waste consolidation yards function as regulated waste sites and require full environmental permitting controls.
Our Take
Asbestos-related items in our Hazards coverage are relatively few compared with other safety stories, so enforcement at The Old Gas Works Yard in Northumberland stands out against a backdrop that is more often dominated by ground instability, inrush and general construction safety incidents.
The joint involvement of the Environment Agency and HSE in this UK case signals that demolition contractors handling asbestos-contaminated spoil are likely to face both environmental and workplace-safety scrutiny, which can complicate project timelines and disposal logistics if waste routing is not fully compliant.
Removal of more than 40 tonnes of asbestos-bearing material from an unpermitted yard implies that even medium-sized demolition operations can accumulate significant hazardous stockpiles quickly, reinforcing the need for contractors to secure permitted outlets and traceable waste chains before starting strip-out works.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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