The changing landscape

Members of IEMA’s policy team outline the key issues facing sustainability professionals in 2023 and beyond
What's in store? Ben Goodwin, IEMA’s head of policy A month has already passed since we said goodbye to 2022 and began looking forward to the many challenges and opportunities in store for us in 2023.Continue reading this with an IEMA membership
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Transform articles
Forever with us: the problem with PFAS
As PFAS seep into the public consciousness (and bloodstream), Chris Seekings reports on what’s being done to regulate them
International Paint Ltd, whose parent company is AkzoNobel, has been found guilty of causing pollution to the Yealm estuary with hazardous substances, including tributyltin (TBT), copper, mercury and arsenic, leading to a £650,000 fine.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) must do more to tackle investment funds that have misled customers with exaggerated sustainability claims, and not punish victims, a cross-party group of MPs has said.
Most UK businesses strongly support environmental regulation, with just one-fifth believing that the current rules are excessive, a new survey has found.
Neil Howe takes an in-depth look at the potential impact of the Retained EU Law Bill
IEMA’s deputy CEO, Martin Baxter, outlines the key regulations and standards to look out for in 2023
A landfill site in Glasgow has been served with a civil penalty fine of £6,200 following a breach of its environmental permit which resulted in the release of odours that affected local communities over a period of eight days in June 2021 and saw 138 complaints.
